Re: hello, I would like to learn how to hack a bit

2001-04-19 Thread Bill Stewart
At 08:27 AM 04/17/2001 -0700, David Honig wrote: In the US, if you hack certain plants that grow on your property, numerous federal agencies will be very very angry. Destruction of wetlands, destruction of endangered species, etc. Jailtime possible. Careful with that axe, Eugene. But the

Re: hello, I would like to learn how to hack a bit

2001-04-19 Thread Declan McCullagh
On Wed, Apr 18, 2001 at 09:51:06AM -0700, Bill Stewart wrote: But the opposite will also get you in trouble - if you allow certain plants to grow on your property, numerous federal agencies will _also_ be very, very angry :-) And if you try to argue that *you're* not growing the plants, the

Re: hello, I would like to learn how to hack a bit

2001-04-19 Thread Alan Olsen
Such activities are not as issolated as some might think. The "Humane Society" in Portland, OR was caught a number of years ago taking people's cats and killing them instead of trying to find the owner. Big scandal, little punishment. On Thu, 19 Apr 2001, Declan McCullagh wrote: On Wed, Apr

Re: hello, I would like to learn how to hack a bit

2001-04-17 Thread David Honig
At 10:39 AM 4/16/01 -0800, Daniel J. Boone wrote: Hack away -- it's that simple! Disclaimer: In many states, if you hack at decorative trees or shrubs that do not belong to you, you may be liable for a sum in damages equal to thrice the actual value of the vegetation destroyed. -- Daniel In

hello, I would like to learn how to hack a bit

2001-04-16 Thread roland
but I'm not verry good jet, can u tell me how pls answer me quick