Perhaps his enemies aren't trained mechanics. Or perhaps that's what they
want you to believe. It's an elaborate bluff in a looking-glass world.

Or perhaps they are trained mechanics. It's the sort of dumb thing they do. 

Or maybe it's a double bluff. Highly skilled assassins carrying out a bodged
job on a car, trying to frame Graywolf's mechanic, who is the real target of
this. He'll be arrested and banged up, forced to break rocks in the
Mississippi sun, and sing spirituals in a Paul Robeson voice, for a crime he
didn't commit.

For his sake, I just hope Morgan Freeman's in there with him...

--
Cheers,
 Bob 

> -----Original Message-----
> From: Tom Reese [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
> Sent: 28 September 2005 00:23
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: Re: OT-- Paranoia
> 
> Bob wrote:
> 
> > Can we assume that a bad man's enemies are good, and therefore 
> > unlikely to indulge in sump sab, whereas a good man's enemies are 
> > likely to be bad,
> and
> > to think nothing of sabotaging a fellow's motor while he's 
> indisposed?
> 
> Loosening transmission pan bolts isn't a very effective means 
> of sabotage.
> It's pretty labor intensive for the small amount of 
> aggravation it causes. I think anyone who meant to cause harm 
> would have found a more effective way to do so.
> 
> Tom Reese
> 
> 
> 
> 

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