At 03:11 PM 7/25/00 -0400, Agent Bronson wrote:
I still say it's a moral failure to allow terrorism to be accepted as
warfare and foolishness not to protect our land from it.
Those land mines along the .mx border really have the latino votes
pissed off...
A freedom fighter is just a terrorist
At 07:28 PM 7/25/00 -0700, Kevin Elliott wrote:
At 11:38 -0400 7/25/00, David Honig wrote:
At 12:32 AM 7/25/00 -0400, Kevin Elliott wrote:
were unconstitutional. Another way of putting this would be for the
government to outlaw brushing ones teeth.
Simple. Outlaw possession of toothbrushes
At 11:05 PM 7/25/00 -0400, Riad Wahby wrote:
These two statements are totally incorrect. First of all, a computer
_does_ contribute to heat in a significant way. Consider this: the
average computer-grade power supply is 70% efficient, and, on average,
A computer turns 100% of its load into
At 12:48 AM 7/26/00 -0400, Tim May wrote:
At 12:06 AM -0400 7/26/00, Ernest Hua wrote:
I thought recent presidents have been declaring a state of emergency
for who knows how long.
But that's not what is being talked about. You are not reading
carefully. The Third refers to war, and this is
At 11:47 PM 7/26/00 -0400, Kevin Elliott wrote:
At 00:48 -0400 7/26/00, Tim May wrote:
At 12:06 AM -0400 7/26/00, Ernest Hua wrote:
I thought recent presidents have been declaring a state of emergency
for who knows how long.
But that's not what is being talked about. You are not reading
When Napster goes down, there are going to be a lot of
folks switching to other file-exchange indices. What is
fascinating is that Napster has seeded disk drives with
tradable files, introduced a lot of people to the concept.
Trilobites didn't make it, but they sure fed a lot of
critters
At 01:02 PM 7/27/00 -0400, Tim May wrote:
To elaborate on "generatable," something like a "CAD program for
crypto" is what we were talking about. Bob Baldwin, when he was at
A library implementing a clean API or a new domain-specific language?
The latter tend to die out. The former tend to
can anyone tell me how to get off this list?
David Gotlieb
THANKS,
DLG
At 12:59 AM 8/1/00 -0400, Ray Dillinger wrote:
Try completely ignoring your paper mail sometime and see how
long it is before you're in trouble with the law for missing
a jury duty summons or a bill or some legal action or other.
UDP, baby.
Steven Furlong [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Marcel Popescu wrote:
goat porn g
That's not as funny as you think it is.
I used to joke at work about spending all my time looking at porn.
Then I started to receive porn by email at work. (Best guess is that
spammers scooped my name from
At 06:40 PM 8/9/00 -0400, A. Melon wrote:
On Thu, 3 Aug 2000, John Young wrote:
For his family's privacy I won't tell his name here, for now,
but it won't be hard to learn -- a search of the Internet will
provide information. Some accounts call him "a legend," and I
would like to learn more
Has anyone checked behind the photocopier?
Aug 10, 2000 - 09:27 AM
Reward offered for laptop
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON - The State Department announced
yesterday a $25,000 reward for information leading to
the recovery of a
At 10:52 AM 8/11/00 -0400, R. A. Hettinga wrote:
Fred Hapgood
and
Eric Johansson
presenting
"Post-Napster Business Models for Digital Commerce"
Apparently no relation to the Johansson of
Michael Motyka [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
The investigation, still under way, has resulted in
charges against five individuals, officials at the Justice
Department and U.S. Customs Service said. They said
another five have pleaded guilty to
At 07:03 PM 8/14/00 -0400, Steven Furlong wrote:
I could probably come up with uses for cat pee if I set my mind to it.
I'm having considerable difficulty with the idea of commercially-
available cat pee. Is it sanitized? Are Dept of Health certificates
needed? How on earth can you make a profit
At 04:25 AM 8/15/00 -0400, A. Melon wrote:
New credit-card technology uses
sound waves to enforce security
So now in addition to shoulder-surfing we worry about
ultrasonic tape recorders...
At 09:36 PM 8/14/00 -0400, Eric Murray wrote:
Horses are much more visual than
anything else
In that case the polihooligans should dress up in strange costumes. Only
the horses that have worked the SF parades (or certain parts of Hollywood)
would be able to deal with the sights...
At 12:56 AM 8/15/00 -0400, Reese wrote:
Horse manure accomplishes the same thing, if used instead of cattle manure
as a fertilizer.
Well just as the hoohah got started, someone from PETA dropped
a ton of horse manure on the hotel steps. Didn't keep the pigs or
horses away. (The activist was
At 01:37 PM 8/15/00 -0400, Timothy Brown wrote:
Hey, folks -
Can anyone provide pointers for the layman to documents describing
theoretical cryptosystems resistant to quantum cryptanalysis? The
assumption is made that those systems would be implemented on quantum
computing devices.
Essentially
At 01:42 PM 8/16/00 -0400, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hence it will be necessary to scale up the QC from 5 bits to 1024 bits
or more. This will take years of work and no one knows if it will be
possible.
Current Quantum Computer Engineering in 5 lines or less:
The current approach requires
eweek's 14 Aug issue had a description of a bank's hired
blackhat audit. Interesting highlights (p 55):
1. the bank's ISP, upon discovering that the bank had caused
a security alert, thereafter changed its policy to ban security
probes without telling the ISP. (Which kinda defeats
unfinished.
David
At 01:24 PM 8/18/00 -0400, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
the horse was out of the barn for a long time, but with the ruling
today, it's clear that it's not even in the country anymore.
Kaplan said not only are horses illegal, you can't even refer to them.
At 07:54 PM 8/19/00 -0400, Bill Stewart wrote:
Out of curiousity, does anybody know whether it detects ethanol itself
or leftovers from metabolizing the ethanol?
Since you excrete ethanol through your breath, and its easy enough
to detect (colorimetric assays = reagents photocell, possibly
Europe's (well, Germany's, but see also yahoo.fr) lack of constitutional
rights:
anticonstitutional symbols
http://cryptome.org/mad/mad-v-mann.htm
Outlawing speech, assembly, etc, and general state opinion engineering:
"That means that in social work with youths, it must be
Disney to Settle Racial Bias Suit Over
Radio Gag
By CHUCK PHILIPS, Times Staff Writer
Walt Disney Co. has agreed
to pay $2
At 01:09 AM 8/24/00 -0400, L. Sassaman wrote:
Please explain to me how you could have a public gathering of anonymous
individuals. I don't think that it is possible to do what is being
proposed: plan, anonymously, a gathering of people organized on the
Internet and conducted in physical space.
At 06:26 PM 8/24/00 -0400, Tim May wrote:
At 3:08 PM -0400 8/24/00, Marcel Popescu wrote:
Speaking of which - does anybody have any hints on how to determine the
entropy of an input string? [Needed in Yarrow, and so far I don't know how
to do it - my implementation multiplies the length of the
At 10:23 PM 8/26/00 -0400, Tim May wrote:
(I haven't said this in a while: basic constitutional rights do not
get lost because one was once a prisoner or person in a psychiatric
prison. If one is in prison, certain rights are naturally lost by
nature of the act of imprisonment. Once out of
At 12:07 AM 8/27/00 -0400, petro wrote:
Oh, that's good. Let's say I own and live in a large house with
several vacant apartments. Shouldn't I be able to stop arbitrary
people from moving in? Even if they're willing to pay, should I be
able to prevent them from moving in if they smoke or want to
At 05:46 PM 8/26/00 -0400, Tim May wrote:
Untraceable contract killings, crypto anarchy, is about to make
possible a wave of justice the world has never seen. Forget Bell's
hoaky, and cumbersome, "betting pool." Easier to simply hire
assassins untraceably. (If bets can be placed untraceably,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Here's my idea of how to stop advertisers from using this mailing
list as an advertising channel:
If everytime anyone saw junk mail here, they wrote to the address
of the sender and/or the address where you send an e-mail if
you're interested, and told them
Ken Brown [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Why do I hate spam so much? I mean I don't get very angry at having my
doormat filled with snailmail offers of expensive loans, plastic window
frames and cheap mail-order garden plants. But spam like this gets me
cross. Maybe I've come to think of my
Tech Review Sept/Oct 2000
p 34 G Pascal Zachary
"Tools such as MP3 and MP4 should be banned
Any ban on a software tool will spawn illegal traffic
in that tool..."
from a column called, amazingly, "Inside Innovation"
Fortunately this dinosaur twit has only his opinion and a few column
At 04:09 PM 8/30/00 -0400, Greg Newby wrote:
I was forced to remove my copy of the DeCSS code this spring by UNC as
a result of a complaint by the MPAA.
Now, the MPAA is trying to force me to remove a LINK to the code from
my class page. This is enough to make me want to throw up.
First, You
At 12:00 PM 8/31/00 -0400, Joseph Ashwood wrote:
No but I feel free to type a hundred or so, but that's beside the
point. The claim made was that anything a human can remember, a
computer can brute force, this was simply one very clear example that
it simply was not true, as I rather thoroughly
"pentz" [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
curfews have always been up to the parents I don't think the city should set
a curfew
However, I think your parents should lock you up for being stupid,
putz.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
and to [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
besides your rude, bullshit comments, do you have anything worth wile to say
to back you up?!? or are you just being a dumb-fuck and talking out of your
ass?
When you and Putz post something on-topic, or bother to produce
something
Sean Roach [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Nature of the beast. You "create" something, and you feel that you should
decide how it's used. If you "create" a podium, and someone steps up and
gives a speach that is diametrically opposed to what you stand for, or even
slightly different, you're
At 10:52 PM 8/31/00 -0400, Sean Roach wrote:
Nature of the beast. You "create" something, and you feel that you should
decide how it's used.
Also Frankenstein phenomenon...
If you "create" a podium, and someone steps up and
gives a speach that is diametrically opposed to what you stand
At 09:56 AM 9/1/00 -0400, Sampo A Syreeni wrote:
Nuh. I think they should be happy about biology education - might one day
give them a nice young crackpot with the talent to create a drug user
killing flu...
Then they lose a taxpayer or at least prison slave labor.
The US govt funds research
At 06:42 AM 9/1/00 -0400, Steven Furlong wrote:
Why, that was indeed done. I printed the news article (CNN or some
such) but can't find either the printout or the reference, so what
follows is short on details. I read about it maybe a year ago.
A scientist in California let his son borrow his
Ah, it's the slow season.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
[Claim that, among other things, the claim that he isn't quoting is
false, deleted.]
[Sentence fragment in which he totally misses the point deleted.]
[Complaint that he was profiled due to his lack of quoting and his
trolling deleted. Also
At 09:48 PM 9/1/00 -0400, Tim May wrote:
(Not taking anything away from Furlong's work. I bought Knuth's book
on LP, circa 1994 or so, but never got into it in a major way--being
a Lisp and Smalltalk kind of person, I didn't see the point. But, to
be fair, there was much discussion of "how can
At 09:14 AM 9/2/00 -0400, Steven Furlong wrote:
begin quoted material
As the President has made clear, encryption software is
regulated because it has the technical capacity to encrypt data and
by that jeopardize American security interests, not because of its
expressive content. Exec. Order No.
At 06:56 PM 9/1/00 -0400, Bill Orme wrote:
According to one law
enforcement
spokesperson: "Anyone who would use the Internet to
commit
a crime should understand one thing -- do not count on
the
anonymity of the Internet to serve as a shield for
your illegal
conduct. As technology advances, so do
At 09:46 AM 9/2/00 -0400, A. Melon wrote:
People have grafted hops vines onto cannabis roots for years, that
ain't no net legend.
Hops and C.s. are closely related, and grafting ain't genetic surgery.
Catnip is also related, which explains certain feline behaviors. (Just
kidding,
David Honig [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
At 09:14 AM 9/2/00 -0400, Steven Furlong wrote:
begin quoted material
As the President has made clear, encryption software is
regulated because it has the technical capacity to encrypt data and
by that jeopardize American security interests
Sampo A Syreeni [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
On Fri, 1 Sep 2000, David Marshall wrote:
Not to mention that there exists a certain peptide, the name of which
escapes me at the moment, which is naturally occuring in the
brain. It is five amino acids long, and exerts an effect about 5000
times
At 04:17 PM 9/3/00 -0400, David Marshall wrote:
On the topic of the blood-brain barrier, another example is compounds
There's also a trick where you can add an acetyl group to a small
molecule (not protein) to increase transport. Do it to salicylic
acid, you get aspirin. Do it to morphine, you
At 05:18 PM 9/4/00 -0400, Tiarnan O Corrain wrote:
Perhaps my analogy of New York and Californain
English was misleading
The difference there is more in what and how they
conceptualize, rather than being simply linguistic.
:-) :-P
Black Rock, Nev (Routers)
Air Force spokeswoman Jane Denning apologized for
the accidental detonation of a fuel-air munition
above the "Burning Man" campgrounds, blaming the
error on outdated National Imagery and Mapping Agency
maps that showed the area as part of an active nearby bombing
At 08:00 PM 9/5/00 -0400, Augusto Jun Devegili wrote:
Hi all,
I was just wondering... In DES, there's an Initial
Permutation (IP) on the plaintext, then 16 rounds, and
then the inverse permutation (IP^-1) of the result to
produce the ciphertext.
How effective are these permutations? Do they
Sonny [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
hello I would like to know if Netscape communictor version 4.* is
available for bellsouth.net with 128-bit encryption. Pleas Email me
Is there a message hidden in these messages of blithe idiocy, possibly
hidden in the typos? Maybe revealable by some odd
At 05:21 PM 8/11/00 -0400, A. Melon wrote:
No. JY, if anything, should be given less of a break. He is a so-called
champion of full disclosure. Refusing to reveal information because it
affects *his* family, when he has shown such blatant disregard for others'
families in the past, is atrocious.
At 08:17 PM 8/31/00 -0400, Rich Ankney wrote:
Yeah, but there's always the old "sources and methods" excuse
(based on personal experience). Seems to require many more
lawyer cycles than I can afford...
The notion of a foreigner suing the spooks for data is
comedy, not something to be
I'll assume you're talking to me. Since you didn't include any quoted
material with an attribution, I have no context for what you're
rambling on about.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I'll assume that you're talking to me. Since you didn't bother to
include any quoted material with an attribution,
Germany Reportedly Plans 'Internet
Tax'
BERLIN (Reuters) - Germany is planning to slap new
levies on computer, telecommunications and Internet
products to ensure that authors are properly rewarded for
the use of their work, a newspaper said Wednesday.
nt went to great
lengths to try to ban the Spycatcher
memoirs of former MI5 bugging
expert Peter Wright.
Ex-MI5 officer David Shayler has
returned to Britain to face charges
under the O
At 06:15 AM 9/7/00 -0400, Tom Vogt wrote:
not quite right. it is NOT the government that collects, and this is not
a tax. there's a "non-profit" organisation called GEMA that collects and
re-distributes these things.
So if you don't pay GEMA who *are* those folks with the guns?
At 05:10 AM 9/8/00 -0400, Tom Vogt wrote:
David Honig wrote:
not quite right. it is NOT the government that collects, and this is not
a tax. there's a "non-profit" organisation called GEMA that collects and
re-distributes these things.
So if you don't pay GEMA who *are* t
At 08:02 PM 9/7/00 -0400, Kevin Elliott wrote:
Does this method work for apps that are generating and testing lots
of keys or does the initial key generation step still have to be
undertaken? The whole point of the blowfish technique was to
increase the attackers required effort. It was
At 05:59 PM 9/8/00 -0400, Jim Choate wrote:
On Fri, 8 Sep 2000, David Honig wrote:
Ultimately law is backed by violence.
And therefore it is badyadda, yadda, yadda
Bullshit. That is such a general statement as to be worthless.
The 'law' stems from the individual right to self-defence
Michael Motyka [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Does UV light destroy DNA? I know it is a reasonable way to sterilize
water ( with some caveats ) which it does by denaturing proteins.
UV light tends to totally hose up the DNA. The main problem, at least
in bacteria, is caused by the creation of a
At 05:38 PM 9/13/00 -0400, William H. Geiger III wrote:
In [EMAIL PROTECTED], on 09/13/00
at 12:59 PM, "A. Melon" [EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
Subject: domestic bioterrorism incident in FLA school
Middle school student arrested in
poisoning
Exactly how do you get "domestic bioterrorism" from a
Tim May [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I will look forward to watching the coverage. Do you plan to take out
just the censorious bitch Lynne Cheney, or also her censorious
husband and VP candidate?
And then there's Al Gore (RAT) and his running mate (JEW RAT).
(Subliminal messages brought
At 05:14 PM 9/13/00 -0400, Tim May wrote:
At 4:57 PM -0400 9/13/00, Omri Schwarz wrote:
Actually, she got shot at and roughed up
by AN members. (AN has a habit of disavowing relations
with members once they get in trouble with The Elders of Zion.)
This woman and her daughter just "happened" to
At 04:19 PM 9/12/00 -0400, Marcel Popescu wrote:
More stuff for Freenet, it seems. I'm really curious how "they" would
consider handling such documents instead MP3s - better or worse?
Heh. How about someone reading names addresses of
judges/physicians/whatever
in an MP3, and circulating that?
"Dark Horse" [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
hello :)
well I thought I will have no answer as I had no answer writing to some
cracker's email
They've developed language skills? Man, I should have gone into food
research. I don't think I could handle the bread products
communicating with me,
At 10:38 AM 9/18/00 -0400, petro wrote:
I'm not saying that only stupid people join these kinds of
groups, but that of the people who join these groups, the stupid ones
will wind up in the "bullet stopper" positions.
"Cannon fodder" is the more common historic term..
Maxim's maxim:
Sampo A Syreeni [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
On Thu, 14 Sep 2000, David Marshall wrote:
[My comments concerning blood flows not corresponding directly with
increased neural activity, followed by Mr. Syreeni's response to the
contrary.]
Actually bloodflow has been found more accurate
Science V 289 8 Sept 2000 p 1773-1775
"Fairness vs Reason in the Ultimatum Game"
Nowak, Page, Sigmund
(from the abstract)
"The rational solution, suggested by game theory, is
for the proposer to offer the smallest possible share
and for teh responder to accept it. If humans play
the game,
At 09:17 AM 9/23/00 -0400, Jim Choate wrote:
video game market with respect to selling adult games to children.
Video games are machines, I've never met an adult machine, though
I did call that PDP "sir".
Who gets to decide what content is appropriate for my children?
Surely not the state.
At 12:09 PM 9/23/00 -0400, Jim Choate wrote:
It is the target audience the game is designed for. If you seriously claim
you don't understand the distinction between market targets for Dr. Seuss,
Quake, and "Debbie does Dallas" then you're entire position is pretty much
toast.
To whom something
At 01:42 PM 9/23/00 -0400, Jim Choate wrote:
The failure of capitalism is the failure to recognize that human beings
have rights and that business is simply an expression of individual
rights. Rights allow one to pursue an activity until that behaviour
infringes anothers right to engage in their
At 08:19 PM 9/23/00 -0400, Jim Choate wrote:
On Sat, 23 Sep 2000, David Honig wrote:
Having a child gives you no extra rights to control others' behavior.
No?
It gives the parent the right to tell other parties to leave the child
alone. It also means the parent has the responsibility
At 04:36 AM 9/25/00 -0400, Sampo A Syreeni wrote:
So how do you feel, for instance, about bullying in the form of cooperative
isolation of someone by his/her peers? Certainly everybody has the /right/
not to speak to someone...
Freedom of association includes freedom not to associate.
Only
At 06:52 AM 9/27/00 -0400, Sampo A Syreeni wrote:
Well, I think that as long as a conventional photograph is taken from a
public place, it does not constitute a punishable breach of privacy. What's
so very different about doing the same thing with IR?
Heh, maybe someone should take some IR
At 06:48 PM 9/27/00 -0400, Tim May wrote:
There is no real reason for crypto to be built into complex products,
at least not when those products are well-suited for handling text
(and even files).
...
To wit, who really cares whether Netscape 4.08 or 4.07 has crypto
built in so long as a
At 01:51 PM 9/28/00 -0400, Michael Motyka wrote:
You're running these crypto modules on an MS OS? Plaintext is entered
via the PC HW/MS Drivers and then exists in memory on the MS system?
This probably describes the environment for most users, though not
necessarily most of those on this list.
At 09:00 PM 9/28/00 -0400, Steven Furlong wrote:
"Trei, Peter" wrote:
NSA et al inducing a company to write bad crypto software
2. Individual treachery.
This type involves corrupting one or more engineers, whether via money,
threats, or misplaced appeals to patriotism. This is more likely
At 12:26 PM 9/26/00 -0400, Jill Stone wrote:
If you know a Drivers License number, do you know how to retrieve the
registration information? js
A small contribution to the personal fund of a DMV clerk works well..
At 12:01 PM 9/26/00 -0400, Olav wrote:
The hint of illegality? Well, of course this is a reason, but the question
remains that if all people had legal access to nationalsocialist
propaganda such as "Mein Kampf", would the fact that that mainpart of our
Actually MK *is* available online to
At 08:36 AM 10/5/00 -0400, Tom Vogt wrote:
the problem with porn is that it may be illegal in itself in the same
countries.
Baby pictures, if there's a plausible interest on the receiving side.
MP3s of apolitical songs.
At 10:52 AM 10/6/00 -0400, Ray Dillinger wrote:
For the sake of us audiophiles, please don't. MP3 is tinny and flat
at best;
Then why are you 'audiophiles' traumatizing yourselves by listening
to it?
it ticks me off that most folks seem to hear it as "good
enough", because if most folks
At 07:05 AM 10/6/00 -0400, Tom Vogt wrote:
I'm currently thinking of whether or not it is feasable to put stego
data into EVERY .mp3 downloaded. just put random data into those not
intended to carry a message.
Problem is that repeatedly decoding an .mp3 into a .wav, then feeding
the .wav and the
At 09:17 AM 10/6/00 -0400, Joe Baptista wrote:
Anyway - this child is now fully grown and is the biggest drugs fiend and
womanizer we have in canada. No one cares and rightly so.
Well we have the Kennedys...
At 02:39 AM 10/8/00 -0400, Steve Furlong wrote:
Require ISPs to get a license to operate. Terms can be set arbitrarily
high. (Bonus points if you make them pay for the monitoring hardware,
software, and governmental labor.)
Wasn't a "license to drive" on the "info superhighway" bandied about
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
please send me prggies thanks
Cypherpunks Industries would be happy to ship you pregnant laboratory
rats, transgenically altered to produce
delta-tetrahydrocannabinol. These pregnant rats have been nicknamed
"preggies" by our staff, in a combination of "pregnant" and
At 12:36 PM 10/12/00 -0400, Tim May wrote:
In a crypto anarchic
society, patents will mostly be moot.)
Really? If you have a factory, or open a virtual storefront, you have a
public
(meat, seizable) presence. Patents are enforced by guns against locatable
assets which have exploited the
resting on
a plane.
You seem to be supposing that human perceptual algorithms (and the illusions
they produce) are somehow unknowable or unreplicable by nonanimal machinery.
This is meat chauvinism.
Look into David Marr's _Vision_ for starters... or Grossburg's (of BU) stuff..
Now back to your
At 09:10 PM 10/12/00 -0400, Bill Stewart wrote:
with raw pins pointing out. I'm not sure if my PC was in
"use both displays" mode or "only use the LCD" mode -
most laptops don't have an indicator other than "the LCD is dark"...
A good reason for the airlines asking you to keep your radiating
At 10:55 PM 10/12/00 -0700, Bill Stewart wrote:
It's often hard to tell whether a physical object violates
a given patent or not - bitspace is often pretty subtle stuff,
especially if it's manufacturing methods rather than end results
that are the subject of the patent.
But increasingly, the
At 12:20 PM 10/19/00 -0400, Trei, Peter wrote:
Assuming, of course, that the birth records accurately reflect parentage.
If you take a course in human genetics you're likely to be astonished at the
rate of fooling around that must occur to account for the appearence of
traits
within families -
At 04:18 PM 10/19/00 -0400, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
--Hushpart_boundary_WIoYstciRMrFMmoZmKueyEZopGecZvAX
Content-type: text/plain
Typical of May to wish that those who he hates be nuked, but please don'tt
let it effect his portfolio.
No, he's saying its legit if the aborigines take back
At 05:08 AM 10/20/00 -0400, petro wrote:
It is "immoral" to commit murder. Is this because God Says
So, or because it's generally better for society if we can assume
that the vast majority of people *won't* be trying to shoot us?
Neither are worthwhile reasons. Others' right to exist
At 04:00 AM 10/20/00 -0400, petro wrote:
Lots of socialists to be dealt with and disposed of. I wonder who
will stoke the furnaces?
Robots?
Amusing cross-language double-entendre there, Petro. Robot is from
"slave", in Czech IIRC.
At 07:51 AM 10/20/00 -0400, Sampo A Syreeni wrote:
On Thu, 19 Oct 2000, R. A. Hettinga wrote:
My lungs are property. If some one injures them, I have a tort. I don'tô
even need legislation.
Well, you are apparently the one doing the damage - who the fuck told you to
breathe in the first place?
Estonia plans to raise between 1e8 and 1.5e8 dollars
for a project to begin next year, to "compile DNA
profiles and health information on75%ofthe country's
1.4 million citizens" ... "by contrast, [to Iceland's anonymity]
the data and DNA samples in the Estonian project will be
identifiable
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