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Marc Spitzer  
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 More options Jan 2 2003, 3:06 pm
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: Marc Spitzer <mspit...@optonline.net>
Date: Thu, 02 Jan 2003 20:06:39 GMT
Local: Thurs, Jan 2 2003 3:06 pm
Subject: Re: Looking for Lisp compiler

As one of the major hounds in the last loop/alegroserv/if* macro suck
thread I can honestly say I do not think I or the rest of the people
involved had a direct influence on him leaving.  The reason for this
is the timing of his first apology.  The loop thread flared up over
labor day weekend, first weekend in sept and you get Monday as a
holiday, and he apologized at around 11am his time.  This points to
someone or group who has real influence over him, management and/or
coworkers, had a chat with him when he showed up to work about what
he was doing over the weekend.  After a few weeks he starts reverting
to type.  In a reply to one of his posts I asked where it the manager
that was vetting your posts and if he is sick I hope he gets better
soon. And your unsupervised post were harming Franz.  Soon after that
he posted the "I'm outa here" message.

I personally think it was a good thing for Franz that he stopped
posting.  He was posting things that were not in Franz's best interest
and he was/is a senior/executive person at Franz.  And he was doing
most of them without a disclaimer of any sort on them to even try to
protect Franz, he was using his work account to post.

marc


 
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Discussion subject changed to "CLL statistics for 2002 (was: Looking for Lisp compiler)" by Erik Naggum
Erik Naggum  
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 More options Jan 2 2003, 4:35 pm
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: Erik Naggum <e...@naggum.no>
Date: 02 Jan 2003 21:35:15 +0000
Local: Thurs, Jan 2 2003 4:35 pm
Subject: Re: CLL statistics for 2002 (was: Looking for Lisp compiler)
* Tim Daly, Jr.
| Credentials are of extremely limited value.  Unless he's willing to
| demonstrate, don't trust a man presenting papers which state that
| he can do backflips.

  This misses the point of the qualification completely.  Nobody is
  interested in what you did to achieve your degree -- whatever it was
  will have become irrelevant by the time the degree is useful, if it
  ever was relevant.  In most cases the only important properties of a
  degree are to prove beyond reasonable doubt that the person holding
  it is able and willing to make personal and financial sacrifices in
  order to obtain a higher goal and be a small part of something much
  greater than himself, to follow bizarre rituals and orders to do
  amazingly meaningless tasks for several years because he is told it
  will lead to the higher goal, to submit his entire image of self-
  worth to the judgment of an authority who not only gets paid for
  crushing it, but will keep the money regardless of the outcome, for
  which he accepts all blame, and, finally, to realize and come to
  terms with the realization that he is not the smartest person on the
  planet regardless of how smart he is.  If you /pay/ for following
  orders and for being judged harshly and placed among increasingly
  smart people until you are no longer smart enough to keep moving
  upwards, imagine what the person hiring you will be /relieved/ of!

  The flip side of a degree thus granted is of course that anyone who
  has one associates learning with pain, and not just ordinary pain,
  but prolonged, excruciating pain and humiliation and sacrifice, and
  considers the prospect of learning anything new about as inspiring
  as the full set of root canals in a row without anesthesia.  Most
  degree-holders are thus one-degree ponies.

--
Erik Naggum, Oslo, Norway

Act from reason, and failure makes you rethink and study harder.
Act from faith, and failure makes you blame someone and push harder.


 
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Marc Spitzer  
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 More options Jan 2 2003, 4:44 pm
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: Marc Spitzer <mspit...@optonline.net>
Date: Thu, 02 Jan 2003 21:44:42 GMT
Local: Thurs, Jan 2 2003 4:44 pm
Subject: Re: CLL statistics for 2002 (was: Looking for Lisp compiler)
t...@tenkan.org (Tim Daly, Jr.) writes:

Looking  back on highschool I can see your point.  

> Of course, those of you who did not have the privilege of attending a
> suburban American high school may have occasion to disagree.

> Credentials are of extremely limited value.  Unless he's willing to
> demonstrate, don't trust a man presenting papers which state that he
> can do backflips.

That is besides the point and true.  The issue was that Oleg implied
that the well educated person(Caltech professor) should not bother
listening to the ignorant burger flipper(HS dropout).  And since I was
in the group not to be listened to I asked him to present his evidence.

> And never, ever, trust a man who wants, at all costs, to see your
> backflip degree instead of your backflip.

I do not know about that.  If I can predict your behavior I can
'trust' you.  If the person is a fool he will consistently be a fool
and I can 'trust' that.

marc


 
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Discussion subject changed to "Looking for Lisp compiler" by Marc Spitzer
Marc Spitzer  
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 More options Jan 2 2003, 4:47 pm
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: Marc Spitzer <mspit...@optonline.net>
Date: Thu, 02 Jan 2003 21:47:21 GMT
Local: Thurs, Jan 2 2003 4:47 pm
Subject: Re: Looking for Lisp compiler

                                                    ^ on Tuesday

Thats what I get for not proof reading.

marc


 
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Discussion subject changed to "CLL statistics for 2002 (was: Looking for Lisp compiler)" by Alain Picard
Alain Picard  
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 More options Jan 2 2003, 11:25 pm
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: Alain Picard <apicard+die-spammer-...@optushome.com.au>
Date: Fri, 03 Jan 2003 13:36:08 +1100
Local: Thurs, Jan 2 2003 9:36 pm
Subject: Re: CLL statistics for 2002 (was: Looking for Lisp compiler)

Marc Spitzer <mspit...@optonline.net> writes:
> That is besides the point and true.  The issue was that Oleg implied
> that the well educated person(Caltech professor) should not bother
> listening to the ignorant burger flipper(HS dropout).  

And if you bothered reading carefully, you would have noted the
difference between "not bother listening to" and "respond to attacks
from a bunch of trolls".

Oleg's exact words were:

> If you are, say, a caltech professor, and are being attacked by a bunch of
> trolls with no high school, your best strategy is to simply ignore them
> (there is only one of you and very many of them ;)

Have you ever heard the expression: "If the shoe fits..." ?
Oleg did not name YOU personally.  That you take this sort of offense
at his general, and obviously true, statement, speaks volumes.

You wrote:
> As one if the people who is being accused of being a high school dropout,
> could you please provide proof of this.  Or just shut the fuck up and
> go away you idiot or moron or creitin.

Nobody was being accused of being a high school dropout.  Nobody even
intimated a that HS dropouts were neccessarily worthless¹.  What WAS said
is that there are a lot more HS dropouts than caltech professors, AND
if they troll and attack you, you're better off ignoring them.

Now, is that clearer?

¹ Heck, isn't Jamie Zawinski a HS dropout?  And he's a recognized,
  outstanding programmer.


 
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Oleg  
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 More options Jan 3 2003, 2:05 am
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: Oleg <oleg_inco...@myrealbox.com>
Date: Fri, 03 Jan 2003 02:05:22 -0500
Local: Fri, Jan 3 2003 2:05 am
Subject: Re: CLL statistics for 2002 (was: Looking for Lisp compiler)

I wish I could remind you of this meaningless rant next time you need a
surgery and are asking to be treated by someone who has a degree.

Oleg


 
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Marc Spitzer  
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 More options Jan 3 2003, 2:25 am
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: Marc Spitzer <mspit...@optonline.net>
Date: Fri, 03 Jan 2003 07:25:43 GMT
Local: Fri, Jan 3 2003 2:25 am
Subject: Re: CLL statistics for 2002 (was: Looking for Lisp compiler)

Fuck wit the thing I was objecting to is exactly that kind of snide and
cowardly remark.  It implied that everyone Oleg did not agree with was
an ignorant failure.  He did not have the balls to come out and say it,
he just implied it and he could say "you misunderstood" if it blew up in
his face.

I even asked Oleg to produce his evidence that I did not graduate from
high school or college as he implied.  I have not seen a damn thing
from him.

> You wrote:
> > As one if the people who is being accused of being a high school dropout,
> > could you please provide proof of this.  Or just shut the fuck up and
> > go away you idiot or moron or creitin.

> Nobody was being accused of being a high school dropout.  Nobody even
> intimated a that HS dropouts were neccessarily worthless¹.  What WAS said
> is that there are a lot more HS dropouts than caltech professors, AND
> if they troll and attack you, you're better off ignoring them.

> Now, is that clearer?

It was perfectly clear before also, Oleg implied that the people who
he disagreed with were ignorant failures and should not be paid attention
to.  

Is that clear?

And now I am being called a troll by a putz.

Is that clear?

> ¹ Heck, isn't Jamie Zawinski a HS dropout?  And he's a recognized,
>   outstanding programmer.

That is completely besides the point.  Calling or implying that someone
is a high school dropout is a insult.  It implies a serious failure, ie
you are stupid and ignorant or to put it another way you are a looser.

Now it is entirely possible that individuals do not fit the profile,
but the insult is based on the profile not the exceptions.

Is this clear?

marc


 
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Kenny Tilton  
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 More options Jan 3 2003, 2:46 am
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: Kenny Tilton <ktil...@nyc.rr.com>
Date: Fri, 03 Jan 2003 07:43:55 GMT
Local: Fri, Jan 3 2003 2:43 am
Subject: Re: CLL statistics for 2002 (was: Looking for Lisp compiler)

Alain Picard wrote:

 > Marc Spitzer <mspit...@optonline.net> writes:
 >
 >
 >>That is besides the point and true.  The issue was that Oleg implied
 >>that the well educated person(Caltech professor) should not bother
 >>listening to the ignorant burger flipper(HS dropout).
 >
 >
 >
 > And if you bothered reading carefully, you would have noted the
 > difference between "not bother listening to" and "respond to attacks
 > from a bunch of trolls".
 >
 > Oleg's exact words were:
 >
 >
 >> If you are, say, a caltech professor, and are being attacked by a
bunch of
 >> trolls with no high school, your best strategy is to simply ignore them
 >> (there is only one of you and very many of them ;)

That is not how natural language works. It is not how it is produced, it
is not how it is understood. It /is/ how a logic engine would understand
NL if it were capapble of parsing the rest of the information, but there
ya go, logic engines do not understand as people do (and any AI
researcher can explain that that is why logic engines cannot parse NL).

It's no good falling back on mathematical interpretation of a speech act
("he said 'if'!") when valid human interpretations prove uncomfortable.
Oleg damned all attackers as non-HS trolls with his words.

But plz count me among those who place little value in formal education.

:)

--

   kenny tilton
   clinisys, inc
   http://www.tilton-technology.com/
   ---------------------------------------------------------------
"Cells let us walk, talk, think, make love and realize
   the bath water is cold." -- Lorraine Lee Cudmore


 
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Marc Spitzer  
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 More options Jan 3 2003, 3:53 am
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: Marc Spitzer <mspit...@optonline.net>
Date: Fri, 03 Jan 2003 08:53:12 GMT
Local: Fri, Jan 3 2003 3:53 am
Subject: Re: CLL statistics for 2002 (was: Looking for Lisp compiler)

In the US to be a family doctor takes 4 years of post medical school
training and the passing of the medical board exams before it starts.
The degree allows you to sit for the exam that is it.  And for
surgeons, depending on your specialty, I think the apprentice time is
in the 8-12 year range before they are allowed to do surgery
unsupervised.

marc  


 
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Discussion subject changed to "formal ed meditation (was ...blah blah blah...)" by Tom Lord
Tom Lord  
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 More options Jan 3 2003, 3:53 am
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: l...@emf.emf.net (Tom Lord)
Date: Fri, 03 Jan 2003 08:53:28 -0000
Local: Fri, Jan 3 2003 3:53 am
Subject: formal ed meditation (was ...blah blah blah...)

        Kenny Tilton:

        But plz count me among those who place little value in formal
        education.

One nice thing about formal education is that it sustains
universities.  Universities are great environments in which to gather,
exchange ideas, and learn, especially outside of the formal tracks of
getting creds.  They often have awesome libraries with open stacks.
Late at night, lisp hackers can be found.  Strange music can be heard,
both at performances and below rehearsal-room windows.  Good
bookstores and coffeeshops find their niche.  Sex flourishes.  Bands
form.  PDP-11s get preserved and recycled.  Classroom art studios
smell good.  Galleries happen.  Politics is discussed.  Liquid
nitrogen can be "procured".  Cycles can be bumbed.  Frisbee can be
played.  Repertory cinemas make money.  Immigrant communities open
great, affordable restaurants.  Oral history flourishes.  Flyers are
everywhere.  Children are honored members of the community.
Economically oppressed communities are reached out to -- and a few
people, at least, respond.  Everyone knows a little bit about
everything.  Unions do good work.  Not only is your informal erdos
number as low as you like (given your displacement in time), but your
informal Anyone number (for all Anyone's in intellectual history) is
as low as you like.  The history of your region is available in
extraordinary detail.  Power struggles are optional.  Some of the
graffiti is profound and lasts for decades.  There's always _someone_
who can use your latest Emacs hack.  Most of the people around you
are, in their own way, improving.  Sometimes there are parties.
Drugs, sobriety, and law achieve some approximation of a healthy
balance.  Anyone can sit in on just about any "invited talk".  Some
totally brilliant people have offices and if you visit them, they just
might give you copies of some good papers to read.  Pride!  My god, so
much justified pride in doing a good job.  Almost everybody is "poor"
(but getting by).  The dissidents have tenure and a mature calmness.
Anyone without severe learning disabilities can get a degree, given
enough time and freedom from economic oppression.  Over time,
transient members of the community give long-standing members an
incredible snapshot of human development.  Elevator's can be hacked
("Close the fucking door").  Cheese coops can be formed.  Samizdat can
find its audience.  Every city should have at least one great
university and the common criticism of esoteric disciplines that the
departments mostly (formally) serve to create their own next-gen
faculty is no criticism at all.  Of course, all the universities have
gone to hell since the mid-80s.

Cred fetishes: no.  Formal institutes of education: yes.

"Requirements:  BS in CS or equivalent experience" -- yeah right,
-t


 
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Discussion subject changed to "Looking for Lisp compiler" by Tim Bradshaw
Tim Bradshaw  
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 More options Jan 3 2003, 9:35 am
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: Tim Bradshaw <t...@cley.com>
Date: 03 Jan 2003 13:39:58 +0000
Local: Fri, Jan 3 2003 8:39 am
Subject: Re: Looking for Lisp compiler

* Dorai Sitaram wrote:
> John Foderaro.

OK, can you give an example of how he was hounded out?  I don't have a
really good internet connection at the moment (I'm on holiday in a mud
hut[1]), and google searches are a bit of a pain as a result, but my
memory is that he said really a lot of fairly silly, and probably
actually technically wrong things, and was picked up on them by a
number of people, and eventually basically stalked off.  I remember at
the time being very impressed by Franz being brave enough to allow him
to post from a Franz account and run the risk of making the company
look bad (and searchably bad, as well): I definitely wouldn't have
been that brave...

--tim

Footnotes:
[1]  You think this is a joke?  It's not.


 
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Discussion subject changed to "CLL statistics for 2002 (was: Looking for Lisp compiler)" by Kaz Kylheku
Kaz Kylheku  
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 More options Jan 3 2003, 2:38 pm
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: k...@ashi.footprints.net (Kaz Kylheku)
Date: 3 Jan 2003 11:38:14 -0800
Local: Fri, Jan 3 2003 2:38 pm
Subject: Re: CLL statistics for 2002 (was: Looking for Lisp compiler)

That rant in fact describes quite precisely and objectively what it
actually means to hold a degree; that is, what are the weakest
assumptions that can be made about someone who holds one, knowing only
that he or she holds one and nothing more.

There is no reason to believe that Erik will forget his ideas about
what it means to hold a degree at some point in the future when he
requires surgery, and that, for instance, he will place more trust in
a degree than he does now.

The institution where the operation will be performed already performs
screening for degrees, so it would be superfluous and irrational to
demand to be treated by someone who has one. Whoever will perform the
surgery will represent himself or herself as having a degree, having
already represented himself or herself that way to the institution.

It will make more sense to ask for someone who has a demonstrated
track record in achieving excellent results in performing that type of
surgery.


 
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Erik Naggum  
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 More options Jan 3 2003, 2:53 pm
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: Erik Naggum <e...@naggum.no>
Date: 03 Jan 2003 19:53:17 +0000
Local: Fri, Jan 3 2003 2:53 pm
Subject: Re: CLL statistics for 2002 (was: Looking for Lisp compiler)
* Oleg <oleg_inco...@myrealbox.com>
| I wish I could remind you of this meaningless rant next time you
| need a surgery and are asking to be treated by someone who has a
| degree.

  I would ask for an expert with a valid license to practice surgery,
  not someone who merely has a degree.

  I feel a profound pity for you and everyone else who attach their
  personal identity, self-worth, and pride to their academic degree.
  It means, more than anything else, that acquiring the degree was
  not a rite of passage into a group, but a rite of passage out of a
  group, and this means that your future contributions will not be
  made relative to your new group, but relative to your old.  This
  explains your ridiculously insecure attitude towards high school
  dropouts.  The secret to feeling great about yourself is not to be
  found in searching for people who are less than you and then show
  yourself superior to them, but in searching for people who are more
  than you and then show yourself worthy of their company.  What I,
  for one, vehemently detest, is people who make it their purpose to
  show that nobody is better than they are.  Some of them are here.

--
Erik Naggum, Oslo, Norway

Act from reason, and failure makes you rethink and study harder.
Act from faith, and failure makes you blame someone and push harder.


 
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Discussion subject changed to "Looking for Lisp compiler" by Tim Daly, Jr.
Tim Daly, Jr.  
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 More options Jan 3 2003, 3:57 pm
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: t...@tenkan.org (Tim Daly, Jr.)
Date: 03 Jan 2003 22:59:08 +0100
Local: Fri, Jan 3 2003 4:59 pm
Subject: Re: Looking for Lisp compiler

wni <w...@nospam.attbi.com> writes:
> I am really sorry that I wrote *foul-mouth street gangs*. It should
> have been *foul-mouth attack dogs*.

> You can have the last bark.

> wni at attbi dot com

Does wni really mean weenie?

-Tim


 
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Discussion subject changed to "CLL statistics for 2002 (was: Looking for Lisp compiler)" by Oleg
Oleg  
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 More options Jan 3 2003, 4:05 pm
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: Oleg <oleg_inco...@myrealbox.com>
Date: Fri, 03 Jan 2003 16:05:37 -0500
Local: Fri, Jan 3 2003 4:05 pm
Subject: Re: CLL statistics for 2002 (was: Looking for Lisp compiler)

Suppose you live in a land where one does not need to be licensed or hold a
degree to practice medicine. Given no other information, would you pick a
physician who holds a degree from a respectable university, or would you
pick one who only claims to have as much experience?

The whole issue is so commonsense that I feel ridiculous writing about it.

BTW, in USA and probably other countries, you have the option of being
treated by medical and dental students supervised by licensed doctors. It's
very cheap and you usually get what you pay for (I had a dental student as
a roommate a while back)

Oleg


 
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Oleg  
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 More options Jan 3 2003, 5:04 pm
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: Oleg <oleg_inco...@myrealbox.com>
Date: Fri, 03 Jan 2003 17:04:34 -0500
Local: Fri, Jan 3 2003 5:04 pm
Subject: Re: CLL statistics for 2002 (was: Looking for Lisp compiler)

Alain,

Thanks for a great elaboration! Now even Mr. Spitzer should be able to
understand [1]. I found it ironic that he made nearly half a dozen mistakes
in the very first sentence of his angry outburst, including one that
completely alters the meaning of the message. ;-)

Cheers,
Oleg

[1] who am I kidding?


 
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Discussion subject changed to "Rudeness index was Looking for Lisp compiler" by faust
faust  
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 More options Jan 3 2003, 5:05 pm
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: faust <urfa...@optushome.com.au>
Date: Sat, 04 Jan 2003 09:02:37 -0800
Local: Sat, Jan 4 2003 12:02 pm
Subject: Re: Rudeness index was Looking for Lisp compiler
 Basile STARYNKEVITCH <basile...@SPAM+starynkevitch.net.invalid> ,
emitted these fragments:

>I am not sure I fully follow Christopher's argument on why Lout never
>caught on. I would say that it did came too late after TeX, and also
>that its typography is not always as good as TeX's or LaTeX's
>one.

It's typography left much to be desired.
In any case, Jeff's page says that it is in maintenance mode now.

>Jeff Kingston is starting to work on Lout's successor [NonPareil]
>which should have lots of features LaTeX (and Lout) don't have.

NonPareil is still vapourware.
There is one thesis on it.
But no software.

--------------------------------------------------------
Come see,
real flowers
of this pain-filled world.

(from Basho)


 
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faust  
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 More options Jan 3 2003, 5:10 pm
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: faust <urfa...@optushome.com.au>
Date: Sat, 04 Jan 2003 09:05:28 -0800
Local: Sat, Jan 4 2003 12:05 pm
Subject: Re: Rudeness index was Looking for Lisp compiler
 Erik Naggum <e...@naggum.no> ,  emitted these fragments:

>That is because there is no emotional gain from making complaints
>  like that in those fora.  Watch this forum closely: Whenever some
>  loser whines that he is being treated harshly because he acts like
>  an immature child with a severe learning disability (but probably
>  /is/ a grown man), loads of well-meaning idiots come to his rescue
>  and validate his pain

Or one of the regulars goes ballistic and suggests that he kills
himself.

Statistically, this is more likely.

--------------------------------------------------------
Come see,
real flowers
of this pain-filled world.

(from Basho)


 
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Wade Humeniuk  
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 More options Jan 3 2003, 5:44 pm
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: "Wade Humeniuk" <w...@nospam.nowhere>
Date: Fri, 03 Jan 2003 22:44:13 GMT
Local: Fri, Jan 3 2003 5:44 pm
Subject: Re: Rudeness index was Looking for Lisp compiler

"faust" <urfa...@optushome.com.au> wrote in message

news:115e1v49alu2vhvt3g38nq5vgub3lf3akp@4ax.com...

Beat it faust (or more accurately, die)

WARNING! Completely off-topic.

A post for those who have the wrong idea of what it is to be nice.  This
drama is not only played out in c.l.l.

Excerpt from http://www.humankindness.org/winter98.html

Many people go to church on Sunday and then pass by a beggar on their
way home without stopping to help in any way. They choose a church
which will comfort them in a self-centered lifestyle rather than
challenge them to be true Christians. Being a true Christian is a
terrifying prospect. Being a true Buddhist, Jew or anything else is a
terrifying prospect. All the religions stress that we must die as
self-centered little idiots in order to discover new life as selfless,
loving, generous, fearless souls.

Die to my own plans and dreams? Die to my countless preferences and
aversions? Die to my pride and greed? Yes, yes, and yes. Die.

Father Murray Rogers, the beloved elder on our board of directors, had
a powerful experience along these lines many years ago. Father Murray
is a Christian who has been involved in the interfaith dialogue for
over fifty years. As part of his interfaith experience, he went to
Japan to spend time in a Zen Buddhist temple for a few months. The
Temple was a serenely beautiful place, extremely neat and orderly,
extremely quiet, like most Zen temples.

The abbot, a small, courteous man of few words, showed Murray around
for a half-hour or more, whispering "This is where you will eat,"
"This is where you will be meditating," "This is your room," and so
forth. In his room, just before turning to leave, the abbot leaned
forward toward Murray and whispered, "There is just one more thing."
And then he thrust his face directly into Murray's with a wild look
and screamed at the top of his lungs, "YOU MUST DIE!!!!!"


 
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Discussion subject changed to "CLL statistics for 2002 (was: Looking for Lisp compiler)" by Christopher C. Stacy
Christopher C. Stacy  
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 More options Jan 3 2003, 5:52 pm
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: cst...@dtpq.com (Christopher C. Stacy)
Date: Fri, 03 Jan 2003 22:52:01 GMT
Local: Fri, Jan 3 2003 5:52 pm
Subject: Re: CLL statistics for 2002 (was: Looking for Lisp compiler)
I think it says something when I see a spam article entitled
"Natural Penis Enlargement" in this newsgroup, and I stop to
wonder whether it's just another meta-discussion thread.

 
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Discussion subject changed to "Rudeness index was Looking for Lisp compiler" by Edward G. Nilges
Edward G. Nilges  
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 More options Jan 3 2003, 8:00 pm
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: spinoza1...@yahoo.com (Edward G. Nilges)
Date: 3 Jan 2003 17:00:58 -0800
Local: Fri, Jan 3 2003 8:00 pm
Subject: Re: Rudeness index was Looking for Lisp compiler

Posters, be aware that the poster here is Richard Heathfield, the
instigator of a bullying campaign, who has changed his handle possibly
to conceal his identity, although it does appear below.

Richard, thanks most awfully for another document for my file
"Heathfield, Richard, pro se lawsuit, regarding, actionable libel,
under English and American, law."

You were urged to do so because we were collectively tired of your
repetitious and abusive responses to my concerns about the Data
Quality Act, which is of high technical and social revelance to
comp.programming.  In a subordinate fashion, the rest of the group was
also wearied by my detailed responses to all your points.

Your responses constituted a libelous attempt to damage my
professional, and therefore financial, standing, by making claims so
overbroad (as in the above, where you cast doubt on anything I say) as
to be provably false.

I have decided not to let you get away with this conduct this time.
Therefore, I sent the post that appears in comp.programming about the
Total Information Awareness program to Peter Neumann, the moderator of
comp.risks.

He said it was overlong, and so broad in some political claims as to
lie outside the charter of comp.risks.  He asked me to write a smaller
article focusing on the technical objections and their immediate
political implications.  I did so and he released the article, which
is being considered for publication in a journal on these issues.

In consequence, Richard, I decided to not present you with another
opportunity to engage in libel and disruption, and won't be responding
to any comments on the comp.programming post.

You are instead encouraged to send any criticisms as to the revelance
or correctness of my views as expressed to Peter or to me by email.
Contrary to what gswork implied, these posts, if acceptable and only
if, will appear as line comments in the same style as an unmoderated
group.

What is of general interest is the supposed liberal "bias" of
comp.risks that several neoconservative people have remarked upon.

What is said to be a liberal bias is merely the enforcement by a
virtuous human being, of common decency and fairness, which was absent
in your conduct last year.

Edward G. Nilges
304 Lakeside Drive
Valparaiso, IN  46383
spinoza1...@yahoo.com
http://members.screenz.com/edNilges

[On the subject of Lisp.  I have not used Lisp recently.  But ANY
language that memorializes the register structure of a vintage machine
certainly is suspect as a useful tool.]

[Professor McCarthy deserves credit for inventing the linked list.
However, it is far less important than the concept of the stack, which
was independently invented by Dijsktra and by Turing.  Furthermore, OO
languages destroy most of the need for linked lists.]

[I do so need to be on topic, you chaps.]


 
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Discussion subject changed to "CLL statistics for 2002 (was: Looking for Lisp compiler)" by Erik Naggum
Erik Naggum  
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 More options Jan 3 2003, 8:15 pm
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: Erik Naggum <e...@naggum.no>
Date: 04 Jan 2003 01:15:18 +0000
Local: Fri, Jan 3 2003 8:15 pm
Subject: Re: CLL statistics for 2002 (was: Looking for Lisp compiler)
* Oleg <oleg_inco...@myrealbox.com>
| Suppose you live in a land where one does not need to be licensed
| or hold a degree to practice medicine. Given no other information,
| would you pick a physician who holds a degree from a respectable
| university, or would you pick one who only claims to have as much
| experience?

  But suppose you live in the real world, how would you argue then?

  If you have a degree, the experience did not teach you the three
  things that I believe any employer value most highly in graduates
  -- discipline, humility, and delayed gratification -- all of these
  make them suitable as part of something greater than themselves.
  If you hire people, you want them to do what you tell them and to
  help you reach /your/ goals, not theirs.  They will not work for
  you unless they can reach some of their goals, too, of course, so
  the balancing act that this entails needs some tuning.  Someone who
  has gone through a serious amount of effort in order to complete an
  education on somebody else's terms, has demonstrated that he is not
  only able to subjugate his personal desires to the demands from his
  superiors, he has been able to obtain good results while doing it.

  If you took time out of your life to read what I wrote before you
  succumbed to the urge to respond, you would see that I ended the
  paragraph you did not understand with the following words, which
  you deleted, probably thinking you had already understood the point
  and did not need the punch line:

    If you /pay/ for following orders and for being judged harshly and
    placed among increasingly smart people until you are no longer
    smart enough to keep moving upwards, imagine what the person
    hiring you will be /relieved/ of!

  Do you grasp what this means, "Oleg"?  Do you think that perhaps
  the point was to demonstrate the /values/ of a degree to those
  hiring degree-holders?  Perhaps you have now demonstrated that your
  degree, if any, is completely worthless to any employer because you
  failed to get the /real/ message?  You do not have a degree, if you
  have one, because of what you know.  That is immaterial.  You got
  your degree, if any, because you could follow a scheme much larger
  than yourself and still fit in.  /This/ is valuable to an employer;
  you will get on-the-job training for your real work, anyway.  There
  are other ways to acquire these basic skills and character traits,
  but nothing really beats having an institution with a solid track
  record for weeding out the mistakes approve it.

  It appears that you think what I wrote was a slight towards those
  who hold degrees.  Now, why the fuck would I do that?  Perhaps you
  are just a wee bit too sensitive on this topic and have shown the
  whole world that you get your exercise from jumping to conclusions?

| The whole issue is so commonsense that I feel ridiculous writing
| about it.

  Good, I feel ridiculous reading your stupid retorts to arguments I
  have never made, but are you sure you know why you feel ridiculous?
  The argument you make is so trivial as to be laughable, but it is
  quite suspicious that you have to invent an imaginary land devoid
  of relevance to the real world in order to make such a commonplace
  observation.  Clearly, it is not easy for you to demonstrate its
  validity in the real world, or you would have done that, right?

  That you manage to believe that somebody disagrees with your point
  speaks volumes about you, but says absolutely nothing about either
  the argument that nobody has made or the people you try to make it
  appear as though have made an argument you fight so hard to counter
  for your very own personal reasons.

  When you feel ridiculous countering some obviously wrong claim,
  perhaps it is time for you to dismount your high horse and try to
  read what people /actually/ write instead of being laughed off it
  because you failed to get the point.  You do not want to be a high-
  horse dropout, do you?

--
Erik Naggum, Oslo, Norway

Act from reason, and failure makes you rethink and study harder.
Act from faith, and failure makes you blame someone and push harder.


 
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Discussion subject changed to "Rudeness index was Looking for Lisp compiler" by Kenny Tilton
Kenny Tilton  
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 More options Jan 3 2003, 8:15 pm
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: Kenny Tilton <ktil...@nyc.rr.com>
Date: Sat, 04 Jan 2003 01:11:50 GMT
Local: Fri, Jan 3 2003 8:11 pm
Subject: Re: Rudeness index was Looking for Lisp compiler

Wade Humeniuk wrote:
> ... In his room, just before turning to leave, the abbot leaned
> forward toward Murray and whispered, "There is just one more thing."
> And then he thrust his face directly into Murray's with a wild look
> and screamed at the top of his lungs, "YOU MUST DIE!!!!!"

I once stayed in a motel like that, just outside the Lincoln Tunnel in NJ.

:)

--

  kenny tilton
  clinisys, inc
  http://www.tilton-technology.com/
  ---------------------------------------------------------------
"Cells let us walk, talk, think, make love and realize
  the bath water is cold." -- Lorraine Lee Cudmore


 
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faust  
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 More options Jan 3 2003, 10:35 pm
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: faust <urfa...@optushome.com.au>
Date: Sat, 04 Jan 2003 14:32:52 -0800
Local: Sat, Jan 4 2003 5:32 pm
Subject: Re: Rudeness index was Looking for Lisp compiler
 "Wade Humeniuk" <w...@nospam.nowhere> ,  emitted these fragments:

>>>  loads of well-meaning idiots come to his rescue  and validate his pain
>> Or one of the regulars goes ballistic and suggests that he kills
>> himself.
>And then he thrust his face directly into Murray's with a wild look
>and screamed at the top of his lungs, "YOU MUST DIE!!!!!"
>Beat it faust (or more accurately, die)

Aah ! Now I have attained enlightenment !

--------------------------------------------------------
Come see,
real flowers
of this pain-filled world.

(from Basho)


 
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Discussion subject changed to "CLL statistics for 2002 (was: Looking for Lisp compiler)" by Oleg
Oleg  
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 More options Jan 4 2003, 6:34 am
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: Oleg <oleg_inco...@myrealbox.com>
Date: Sat, 04 Jan 2003 06:34:41 -0500
Local: Sat, Jan 4 2003 6:34 am
Subject: Re: CLL statistics for 2002 (was: Looking for Lisp compiler)
Proving once again that brevity is the soul of wit, and the lack of both is
the soul of Naggum, someone wrote:

[snipped]

> It appears that you think what I wrote was a slight towards those
> who hold degrees.  Now, why the fuck would I do that?

[snipped]

You are obviously just trolling, as usual. You wrote:

> Nobody is interested in what you did to achieve your degree -- whatever
> it was will have become irrelevant by the time the degree is useful, if it
> ever was relevant.

I gave a pretty obvious counterexample (perhaps not very obvious to you, but
I guess that was to be expected): medical degrees are valued by both
employers and sane consumers, and what you do to obtain them is clearly
relevant. \end{proof}

Oleg


 
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