"we've got our best minds jerking on it!"
My cousin brought me over some fresh picked
okrie and man oh man that's some good stuff!
Better than popcorn!
> Mmmmmm. Fried salted okra is gooood with beer!
*gags*
Mary Ann
"A ClockWork Red" <dk7...@dkdkd.dkd> wrote in message
news:MPG.162bfefe9...@news.alt.net...
> On Mon, 08 Oct 2001 17:58:51 -0700 in alt.life.sucks, Free Radical
> goes...
> > I will vouch for that!
>
> My cousin brought me over some fresh picked
> okrie and man oh man that's some good stuff!
> Better than popcorn!
>
>
> >
> > A ClockWork Red wrote:
> >
> > > Mmmmmm. Fried salted okra is gooood with beer!
> > > --
> > > _\/_
> > > file://o\ _\/_
> > > _ ___ __ _ __ __ _ _ _ _ _ __ __ _ | __/o\\ _
> > > =-=-_=-=-_=-=_=-_=_=-_=-_-_=_=-= _=_=-=_,-'|"'""-|-,_
> > > =- _=-=-_=- _=-= _--_ =-= -_=-=_-=_,-" |
> > > =- =- =-= =- = - -===- -= -= ."
> > > (((((((((BEER)))))))))
> > >
> > > "we've got our best minds jerking on it!"
> >
> >
> >
>
> --
> _\/_
> file://o\ _\/_
Chop it into slices...then...
Just pan or deep fry it with some flour and salt.
Don't over cook it tho! You have to experiment
around with it to get the hang of it.
--
_\/_
> > > Mmmmmm. Fried salted okra is gooood with beer!
> >
> > *gags*
> >
> Well; you ain't from Tayxus!
How you know? LOL
But no, no I'm not, thank goodness!
A ClockWork Red wrote:
> On Mon, 08 Oct 2001 17:58:51 -0700 in alt.life.sucks, Free Radical
> goes...
> > I will vouch for that!
>
> My cousin brought me over some fresh picked
> okrie and man oh man that's some good stuff!
> Better than popcorn!
>
I used to grow my own. It is a great luxury to be able to pick your
veggies fresh from the garden. The only way I can water a garden now
though is with city treated water. The chlorine ruins the vegetables.
A ClockWork Red wrote:
> On Mon, 8 Oct 2001 20:01:46 -0400 in alt.life.sucks, Mary Ann goes...
> > Do you put some kind of coating on it and fry it or what??
>
> Chop it into slices...then...
> Just pan or deep fry it with some flour and salt.
> Don't over cook it tho! You have to experiment
> around with it to get the hang of it.
>
I like to dip it in a thick egg batter and roll it in corn meal.
A ClockWork Red wrote:
> On Mon, 08 Oct 2001 19:53:08 -0700 in alt.life.sucks, Free Radical
> goes...
> >
> >
> > A ClockWork Red wrote:
> >
> > > On Mon, 08 Oct 2001 17:58:51 -0700 in alt.life.sucks, Free Radical
> > > goes...
> > > > I will vouch for that!
> > >
> > > My cousin brought me over some fresh picked
> > > okrie and man oh man that's some good stuff!
> > > Better than popcorn!
> > >
> >
> > I used to grow my own. It is a great luxury to be able to pick your
> > veggies fresh from the garden. The only way I can water a garden now
> > though is with city treated water. The chlorine ruins the vegetables.
> >
> You got that right. I'm right in the shallow Trinity
> Sands tho and I could tap a pump but it's just too
> much trouble. Can't you filter out that stuff by
> reverse ionization or something?
>
I could, but that can get expensive. Might be affordable for a small green
house though.
Ah..like you would make fried green tomatoes, I think...(I've never made/ate
those either) <?>
Mary Ann
A ClockWork Red wrote:
> On Tue, 09 Oct 2001 01:16:30 GMT in alt.life.sucks, Justa Hillbilly
> goes...
> >
> > "A ClockWork Red" said...
> >
> > > > > Mmmmmm. Fried salted okra is gooood with beer!
> > > >
> > > > *gags*
> > > >
> > > Well; you ain't from Tayxus!
> >
> > How you know? LOL
> > But no, no I'm not, thank goodness!
> >
> I wish that I wasn't sometimes but I am!
You can't be serious! The Texas school system is so effective at making
kids loyal to texas that all of the kids who immigrated there learn to
lie about it.
A ClockWork Red wrote:
If I intended to stay put I would probably go to the trouble. But I am a
vagabond and it is just a matter of time before I resolve my current problems and
go off adventuring again.
Mary Ann wrote:
yummy! Yeah pretty much the same process.
I can't wait for this to happen for you;-)
> > > > > Mmmmmm. Fried salted okra is gooood with beer!
> > > >
> > > > *gags*
> > > >
> > > Well; you ain't from Tayxus!
> >
> > How you know? LOL
> > But no, no I'm not, thank goodness!
> >
> I wish that I wasn't sometimes but I am!
LOL
I have only heard about Texas and from what I have heard I don't even think
I would wanna visit.
A ClockWork Red wrote:
Oh no! Living in Dallas would be a terrible fate. I live in Bernillio County.
A ClockWork Red wrote:
> On Mon, 08 Oct 2001 22:18:23 -0700 in alt.life.sucks, Free Radical
> goes...
> >
> >
> > A ClockWork Red wrote:
> >
> > > On Tue, 09 Oct 2001 01:16:30 GMT in alt.life.sucks, Justa Hillbilly
> > > goes...
> > > >
> > > > "A ClockWork Red" said...
> > > >
> > > > > > > Mmmmmm. Fried salted okra is gooood with beer!
> > > > > >
> > > > > > *gags*
> > > > > >
> > > > > Well; you ain't from Tayxus!
> > > >
> > > > How you know? LOL
> > > > But no, no I'm not, thank goodness!
> > > >
> > > I wish that I wasn't sometimes but I am!
> >
> > You can't be serious! The Texas school system is so effective at making
> > kids loyal to texas that all of the kids who immigrated there learn to
> > lie about it.
> >
> That used to be the case and they could pretty much pull
> that crap off. This area has *really* changed for the
> worse over the last 20 years, tho.
> --
>
I lived around Austin for a while. They were having trouble pulling off that
Superior Texan education since about 90% of the people there are from
somewhere else. But they were still trying.
I was thinking about catching a buh-buh-buh bus up
to Saskatchewan and then across Canaduh.
Justa Hillbilly wrote:
Texas is a big place. There is a lot of variety there. Naturally some of it
is going to be bad but there is a lot neat stuff too.
A ClockWork Red wrote:
No it is Albuquerque, New Mexico. If you are going to trip across Canada you probably
ought to get started while it is still warm enough to support life. Wish I could go with
you.
A ClockWork Red wrote:
Actually most of them are techies from New York or California.
A ClockWork Red wrote:
LOL Yeah I am stuck. For a little longer. I got assaulted by an enraged motorist who turned
out to be an off duty cop. After he sobered up he got together with his buddies at the cop
shop and trumped up assault charges against me. It's a fucking mess that has me broke and worn
out so I have opted for the easy way out. Which is what the system is designed for anyway. It
breaks my heart to succumb to this extortion but reality has me re-examining my values and
priorities.
A ClockWork Red wrote:
Oh man the traffic is a bloody mess through there. I lived in Georgetown and worked
nights in Round Rock (not too far from the Dell plant) so I avoided most of the
traffic. I rarely drove into Austin except to go clubbing down on Sixth Street once in
a while. Georgetown was real nice place to live.
I spose just visiting wouldn't be all that bad....But I really wouldn't
wanna live there.
> > > > > > > Mmmmmm. Fried salted okra is gooood with beer!
> > > > > >
> > > > > > *gags*
> > > > > >
> > > > > Well; you ain't from Tayxus!
> > > >
> > > > How you know? LOL
> > > > But no, no I'm not, thank goodness!
> > > >
> > > I wish that I wasn't sometimes but I am!
> >
> > LOL
> > I have only heard about Texas and from what I have heard I don't even
think
> > I would wanna visit.
> >
> It's an ugly place filled with ugly people.
Yer not ugly;-)
The cops are getting really fucking weird here! I past
their little field sobriety test but they drag me in
anyway because I've had a past DWI. They shouldn't be
able to do that! Can't afford a trial this time either.
Justa Hillbilly wrote:
You will find some of the nicest people in Texas. You will also find some of
the most puritanical closed minded assholes imaginable there also.
A ClockWork Red wrote:
They put a lot of pressure on me to plead guilty. There was no way in hell I could consciously do
that even under threat of incarceration. And they do tend to punish those who stand on their right
to a trial. As it came down to the wire the prosecution finally agreed to accept a no contest plea.
It was a tough choice to make. My attorney offered to represent me for free if I went to trial. She
is a big anti-police abuse advocate. But even so I would feel an obligation to compensate her and I
have already spent thousands of dollars on this. Not to mention the loss of income. I just want to
get on with my life.
A ClockWork Red wrote:
I usually went to a geek joint above Katz restaurant. It was a fun place that played mostly
seventies mellow rock. In the summer they had a roof top balcony so I did not feel too
awfully confined. I am not real crazy about crowded bars.
A ClockWork Red wrote:
>
> > Oh man the traffic is a bloody mess through there. I lived in Georgetown and worked
> > nights in Round Rock (not too far from the Dell plant) so I avoided most of the
> > traffic. I rarely drove into Austin except to go clubbing down on Sixth Street once in
> > a while. Georgetown was real nice place to live.
> >
> Good ole 6th street! I wonder if Emmo's is still there.
> They had a band jamming naked on stage and there was free
> food for the crowd. $1.00 of tequila too! I'm glad in
> a way that my car got towed off that night.
>
It is kind of crazy to put all of the bars downtown like that. They have been trying to get
the same kind of action going here in Albuquerque which is in direct conflict with trying to
reduce drinking and driving. You would think they would at least want to offer some sort of
public transportation system if they are going to have everyone going into the center of the
city to get drunk.
> On Tue, 09 Oct 2001 17:16:05 GMT in alt.life.sucks, Justa Hillbilly
> goes...
> >
> > "Free Radical" said...
> >
> > > Justa Hillbilly wrote:
> > >
> > > > "A ClockWork Red" said....
> > > >
> > > > > > > > > Mmmmmm. Fried salted okra is gooood with beer!
> > > > > > > >
> > > > > > > > *gags*
> > > > > > > >
> > > > > > > Well; you ain't from Tayxus!
> > > > > >
> > > > > > How you know? LOL
> > > > > > But no, no I'm not, thank goodness!
> > > > > >
> > > > > I wish that I wasn't sometimes but I am!
> > > >
> > > > LOL
> > > > I have only heard about Texas and from what I have heard I don't
even
> > think
> > > > I would wanna visit.
> > >
> > > Texas is a big place. There is a lot of variety there. Naturally
some of
> > it
> > > is going to be bad but there is a lot neat stuff too.
> >
> > I spose just visiting wouldn't be all that bad....But I really wouldn't
> > wanna live there.
> >
> Come on down! We'll drink beer in my garage and play
> on the internet!
Sounds like fun to me!!!!!
> > > > > > > > > Mmmmmm. Fried salted okra is gooood with beer!
> > > > > > > >
> > > > > > > > *gags*
> > > > > > > >
> > > > > > > Well; you ain't from Tayxus!
> > > > > >
> > > > > > How you know? LOL
> > > > > > But no, no I'm not, thank goodness!
> > > > > >
> > > > > I wish that I wasn't sometimes but I am!
> > > >
> > > > LOL
> > > > I have only heard about Texas and from what I have heard I don't
even
> > think
> > > > I would wanna visit.
> > > >
> > > It's an ugly place filled with ugly people.
> >
> > Yer not ugly;-)
> >
> That's a matter of opinion! ;)
And everybody has one;-)
I would NEVER do probation! 90% of the inmates in the county
jails are in there for probation violation and on a felony
I bet you'd get several years of it. If you like to travel,
I'd avoid their probation crap.
Maybe they'll drop it to a misdemeanor and you can get it
over and done with on a 20 day work release or even a
weekend only work release or a 90 day probation.
Have to set up one of those duel names!
I hope you don't mind patio furniture!
The bad things are the only things anyone ever hears about... Wonder why
that is?
A ClockWork Red wrote:
I am looking at 18 months on probation and having my rights returned to me and the charges removed from my
record upon completion. My rights as a responsible and free citizen are important to me. If it were not
for that I would fight to the finish.
Probation is no problem. I lead a narrow and straight existence anyway. I don't do drugs ad hardly ever
drink. I won't mind if I should not ever drinking again for that matter. It is not like I will have to
change my lifestyle. And it will be unsupervised. I can travel I just have to let them know where I am
and where I am going. I have managed to go forty years with out getting into trouble, a few more months
will be no problem.
A ClockWork Red wrote:
uh huh! That pretty much describes the clientele Yuppie bikers.
A ClockWork Red wrote:
> On Tue, 09 Oct 2001 13:04:14 -0700 in alt.life.sucks, Free Radical
> goes...
> >
> >
> > A ClockWork Red wrote:
> >
> > >
> > > > Oh man the traffic is a bloody mess through there. I lived in Georgetown and worked
> > > > nights in Round Rock (not too far from the Dell plant) so I avoided most of the
> > > > traffic. I rarely drove into Austin except to go clubbing down on Sixth Street once in
> > > > a while. Georgetown was real nice place to live.
> > > >
> > > Good ole 6th street! I wonder if Emmo's is still there.
> > > They had a band jamming naked on stage and there was free
> > > food for the crowd. $1.00 of tequila too! I'm glad in
> > > a way that my car got towed off that night.
> > >
> >
> > It is kind of crazy to put all of the bars downtown like that. They have been trying to get
> > the same kind of action going here in Albuquerque which is in direct conflict with trying to
> > reduce drinking and driving. You would think they would at least want to offer some sort of
> > public transportation system if they are going to have everyone going into the center of the
> > city to get drunk.
> >
> They *want* to curve drunken driving? Like hell! They've
> got empty bunks to fill! The more convictions they get
> the better it looks on all of them - judges, cops, county
> jails - the whole kitten cobootle!
> --
>
There are people making a bloody killing off of our criminal justice system for sure.
A ClockWork Red wrote:
> On Tue, 09 Oct 2001 19:30:22 GMT in alt.life.sucks, Justa Hillbilly
> goes...
> >
> > "A ClockWork Red" said...
> >
> > > > > > > > > > > Mmmmmm. Fried salted okra is gooood with beer!
> > > > > > > > > >
> > > > > > > > > > *gags*
> > > > > > > > > >
> > > > > > > > > Well; you ain't from Tayxus!
> > > > > > > >
> > > > > > > > How you know? LOL
> > > > > > > > But no, no I'm not, thank goodness!
> > > > > > > >
> > > > > > > I wish that I wasn't sometimes but I am!
> > > > > >
> > > > > > LOL
> > > > > > I have only heard about Texas and from what I have heard I don't
> > even
> > > > think
> > > > > > I would wanna visit.
> > > > > >
> > > > > It's an ugly place filled with ugly people.
> > > >
> > > > Yer not ugly;-)
> > > >
> > > That's a matter of opinion! ;)
> >
> > And everybody has one;-)
> >
> True! ;)
>
Some are more rational than others.
If it's just 18 months tho without any ridiculous stipulations,
go for it! Just put it behind you and chalk it up as a lesson
as to what pricks cops can be! Really sucks tho. I don't know.
If I had a lawyer offering to work for free and I was facing
felony charges - that'd be a tough decision for sure.
Justa Hillbilly wrote:
Maybe they are the only things one listens for?
A ClockWork Red wrote:
I wish I had more faith in the justice part of the justice system. Even though the physical evidence supports
my story which has remained consistent while the cops story has changed and grown I am just not that secure in
my ability to convince a jury that I am telling the truth. The cop has twenty years of experience at lying on
the stand and I have almost no experience at testifying in court. I did testify one time in a murder trial and
the lawyers had me so turned around and confused by the time they got done with me that I was not even sure of
my own name any more.
A ClockWork Red wrote:
Amazing how much they are willing to pay to be cool.
A ClockWork Red wrote:
hmm! Try me. It is more a game of technicalities than one of justice anyway. It was not that long
ago that drinking and driving was a socially accepted way of life. Now if a person is in the practice
of having a drink with lunch it is just a matter of time before they have a criminal record and pay
through the nose.
A ClockWork Red wrote:
Most are based on some sort of faulty logic.
If you really believe that you should fight it, do it! You're probably
making a wise decision to just get it over with tho. What if you won
and that cop lost his job? You *might* have to stay out of town for
good!
> I did testify one time in a murder trial and
> the lawyers had me so turned around and confused by the time they got done with me that I was not even sure of
> my own name any more.
>
That's right! That's what lawyers do. They have to be
able to build convincing arguments for whatever side
they're working for. If they couldn't convince you
that the sky was green - they'd be useless.
The statue finally ran out on the ones in
other states!
DoH!
I"m a baaaaad boy!
A ClockWork Red wrote:
> On Tue, 09 Oct 2001 17:17:04 -0700 in alt.life.sucks, Free Radical
> goes...
> >
>
That took a lot of nerve and a cool head to pull off. You couldn't have been too drunk or you probably
would not have been able to follow through with a plan. We have gotten to a point in social tolerance and a
legal maze where even though technically it is still legal and our constitutional right to own guns to do so
carries a tremendous risk. I disabled all of mine and locked them far away several years ago. That still
does not give one protection from the law as they have become quite liberal about the definition of deadly
weapon. The social temper is such now that just being in possession of a fire arm is enough to turn the
community against you in skepticism.
There are still a lot of people posing a fight for the right to bear arms but from where I am sitting it
looks like a battle that has been lost in technicality.
Here in New Mexico they have passed a law allowing the police to seize the assets of anyone caught in
possession of a weapon while accused of a crime. Mind you that is seized when accused. Not seized after
convicted.
And our president tells us how free we are and how further empowering the government and invading a
sovereign nation with out negotiation is going to keep us free.
>
I lost most of my guns to finance my defense and also
as gifts to those friends and family members who supported
me to my trials and tribulations. My .45 will always be
with me. It was a gift from God. Thy rod and thy staff
shall comfort me and delivereth me frometh evil!
>
> There are still a lot of people posing a fight for the right to bear arms but from where I am sitting it
> looks like a battle that has been lost in technicality.
Don't worry about that win and lose shit. Just get them off your
back and get on with it. The worst thing to do is let it piss you
off. Getting pissed off was what caused me to fuck up things even
more. Just take it and go on about yer bizzness. That's my suggestion
anyway.
>
> Here in New Mexico they have passed a law allowing the police to seize the assets of anyone caught in
> possession of a weapon while accused of a crime. Mind you that is seized when accused. Not seized after
> convicted.
That's totally fucked! I thought that New Mexico had the
most relaxed gun laws and forfeiture laws in the US!
I guess I should have read up on it before I road thru
like a trail blazer thinking myself all safe! Shit!
Remind me to let someone else drive thru New Mexico
next time! ;) (hidden inside joke)
>
> And our president tells us how free we are and how further empowering the government and invading a
> sovereign nation with out negotiation is going to keep us free.
>
Ya, well we all saw it coming.
A ClockWork Red wrote:
My lawyer had me do some reading about the psychology of believability for American juries. It is something of a
crap shoot under the best of conditions. Even though most people are aware that cops are quite capable of being
ignorant criminal jack asses they still tend to think that deep down inside a cop has a pure heart and would not
lie. Even knowing how abusive cops can be they are still thought of as heroes who risk life and make sacrifices for
the good of the people. People need to believe that to keep from living in perpetual fear. The image that this cop
is capable of presenting while calmly offering well practiced testimony is very different than the out of control
idiot he was on the street when he followed me, cornered me and tried to bash in my head with a blunt instrument
because I cut him off in traffic. There were no eye witnesses until after I had begun to take defensive action. I
was where I had to be while he had to detour from his intended route to follow me. But one of the critical factors
in believability is a sense of normalcy. Juries tend to believe people who get married, have kids, work nine to
five for a corporation. I am anything but normal. There ain't no way I am going to come across as being normal.
Damn near everything about me is a little eccentric. From the way I dress, to the way I think and communicate, to
the way I usually earn my living, to the places I go to work. The simple fact is that I am not ordinary and juries
tend to convict those who seem to be out of the ordinary no matter how honest such people may be in reality.
A ClockWork Red wrote:
Or faulty information. Such as most of that given over the television set.
A ClockWork Red wrote:
Have you become a little more selective about who you hang out with? Do you do meth?
Yeah, of course they're going to target you. They're going
to target me cuz I drink a lot, have a criminal record and
first and foremost: I don't pay taxes! If you don't live
the way that they want you to, they want you in jail!
The state has always been at war with the non-conformist
and the non-tax payer, not to exclude two-bit hustlers,
gamblers, pot-dealers, brown-baggers etc etc etc. The drunk
cop decided to take his miserable alcoholic life out on YOU.
Why? Because he knew that he could!
I come from a family of drunken cops! I know!
dk7...@dkdkd.dkd.c: 1: Unresolved external symbol "okra".
1 error
%>
It has been my experience that women are no more cranky during their
period than the rest of the month. They're always cranky. Feed them
chocolate.
-- D.S.Martin in soc.sexuality.general
>> > > Well; you ain't from Tayxus!
>> >
>> > How you know? LOL
>> > But no, no I'm not, thank goodness!
>> >
>> I wish that I wasn't sometimes but I am!
>
>You can't be serious! The Texas school system is so effective at making
>kids loyal to texas that all of the kids who immigrated there learn to
>lie about it.
What, hasn't the news reached them yet? You know, the victory
announcement that the North has won? Jeezus, the post must be really
awful there if urgent information like that has been held up in the
mail for 150 years! Even sucky Canada Post manages to get my bills to
me at least three days before they're due, consistently.
>I lived around Austin for a while. They were having trouble pulling off that
>Superior Texan education since about 90% of the people there are from
>somewhere else.
Not to mention they educate people that:
a) Life was created spontaneously in 4004 BC
b) Babies are brought by the stork, and "sex" is a dirty word
c) They produce the worst math grades of the fifty.
>> > uh huh! That pretty much describes the clientele Yuppie bikers.
>> >
>> Hehehe. Only overpaid techies and attorneys drive
>> 30,000 customized MotoGuzzies and Hogs.
>
>Amazing how much they are willing to pay to be cool.
Especially when it doesn't work.
x is a yuppie => x is not cool
That's a theorem, by the way. I have a most remarkable proof but it is
to involved to write in the margin of this usenet post.
> It has been my experience that women are no more cranky during their
> period than the rest of the month. They're always cranky. Feed them
> chocolate.
> -- D.S.Martin in soc.sexuality.general
>
--
>> Come on down! We'll drink beer in my garage and play
>> on the internet!
>
>Sounds like fun to me!!!!!
But you can do that *anywhere*...
>> Do you live in Dallas County? They won't seem to leave me alone
>> for some reason!
>>
>
>Oh no! Living in Dallas would be a terrible fate.
But what about the Dallas Cowboy cheerleaders?
>> Most faulty logic is based upon irrational thought.
>>
>> --
>>
>
>Or faulty information. Such as most of that given over the television set.
Even on the Discovery Channel?
> I was thinking about catching a buh-buh-buh bus up
> to Saskatchewan and then across Canaduh.
Terrible idea. First of all, Canada is shortly to be uninhabitable for
six months. You'd die in seconds, especially as you normally live in a
semi-tropical area and are especially maladapted to -40C plus
windchill.
Secondly, buses in Canada are an excellent way to become hopelessly
bored within hours, and hopelessly lost soon thereafter. I should
know. I depend on buses to get to university and to a nearby mall.
Imagine a bus that only runs every half hour, but sometimes the bus is
missing, sometimes it's up to ten minutes late, and it takes ages to
get anywhere because of traffic and stopping at every intersection;
throw in the occasional breakdown, the occasional unpleasant/hostile
driver, and the likelihood that you will invariably happen to arrive
at the stop when the next bus is still 25 minutes away. Finally, add
the bus company fiddling with the schedule every month and leaving out
of date schedules posted at bus stops every single time. Now scale
this up by the bigger distances and waits with inter-city buses, e.g.
half a day instead of half an hour, two hours instead of 10 minutes,
if you get stranded it's 10km instead of 1km from the nearest phone,
and no taxi service to use in a pinch...
A ClockWork Red wrote:
Oh I am sure it is a good high. But it is a fast highway to a fucked up life. Putting
aside what it does to your attitude and perception just being associated with it gets you
infused deeper and deeper into a circle of unreliable squirley scum bags. Some of them
cops. I am amazed at how many people have fallen prey to both the substance and the
predatorial network of distribution. People I would have sworn were soome of the steadiest
most reliable people available are now living a life slavery because of the trap. It is a
vicious fucking circle between the supposed authorities having a vested interest in the
distribution and being sworn to abolish any competitors who are distributing.
But obviously you know about that first hand. Congratulations on getting out. I know it
ain't easy.
> It's all faulty information. People read the paper and
> get their underpants sucked up so far up their assholes
> that they can taste it.
Thank you. You just helped me immensely with weight loss. I had these
eeevil chocolates in front of me, and then you wrote that and
destroyed my appetite for the foreseeable future, thus saving me from
God only knows how many calories.
--
A ClockWork Red wrote:
News papers are so obvious in their pattern of deception that I am quite amazed that so
many people miss it. They will imply something in the headlines that is totally
contradictory to what the last few lines of the article says. They often don't even try
to be subtle.
A ClockWork Red wrote:
That probably explains how you got exposed to meth.
A ClockWork Red wrote:
>
>
> >
> > There are still a lot of people posing a fight for the right to bear arms but from where I am sitting it
> > looks like a battle that has been lost in technicality.
>
> Don't worry about that win and lose shit. Just get them off your
> back and get on with it. The worst thing to do is let it piss you
> off. Getting pissed off was what caused me to fuck up things even
> more. Just take it and go on about yer bizzness. That's my suggestion
> anyway.
That is very sound advice. I have no intention of surrenduring to anger. When this is over I will be an advocate
against police abuse in general but I will never go anywhere near the purpetrator of this offense. He will create
his own misery and punishment and requires no assistance from me.
>
>
> >
> > Here in New Mexico they have passed a law allowing the police to seize the assets of anyone caught in
> > possession of a weapon while accused of a crime. Mind you that is seized when accused. Not seized after
> > convicted.
>
> That's totally fucked! I thought that New Mexico had the
> most relaxed gun laws and forfeiture laws in the US!
> I guess I should have read up on it before I road thru
> like a trail blazer thinking myself all safe! Shit!
> Remind me to let someone else drive thru New Mexico
> next time! ;) (hidden inside joke)
We used to be! But things change. Sometimes they change fast.
Neo 1061 wrote:
> On Tue, 9 Oct 2001 09:43:05 -0700, A ClockWork Red <dk7...@dkdkd.dkd>
> jacked into the Matrix and remarked thus:
>
> > I was thinking about catching a buh-buh-buh bus up
> > to Saskatchewan and then across Canaduh.
>
> Terrible idea. First of all, Canada is shortly to be uninhabitable for
> six months. You'd die in seconds, especially as you normally live in a
> semi-tropical area and are especially maladapted to -40C plus
> windchill.
>
> Secondly, buses in Canada are an excellent way to become hopelessly
> bored within hours, and hopelessly lost soon thereafter. I should
> know.
Is it possible for tourists in Canada to get rail passes like the
Europasses?
Neo 1061 wrote:
> On Tue, 09 Oct 2001 08:25:21 -0700, Free Radical
> <freera...@yahoo.com> jacked into the Matrix and remarked thus:
>
> >> Do you live in Dallas County? They won't seem to leave me alone
> >> for some reason!
> >>
> >
> >Oh no! Living in Dallas would be a terrible fate.
>
> But what about the Dallas Cowboy cheerleaders?
>
Cowboy fans are insufferable bores. Sigh! Therre are plenty of fine
looking women in texas besides the prima dona cheer leaders.
Neo 1061 wrote:
> On Tue, 09 Oct 2001 19:55:49 -0700, Free Radical
> <freera...@yahoo.com> jacked into the Matrix and remarked thus:
>
> >> Most faulty logic is based upon irrational thought.
> >>
> >> --
> >>
> >
> >Or faulty information. Such as most of that given over the television set.
>
> Even on the Discovery Channel?
I do like the discovery channel. But they are guilty of sometimes presenting
prevailing theory as if it is unquestionable fact.
Neo 1061 wrote:
> On Tue, 09 Oct 2001 17:10:01 -0700, Free Radical
> <freera...@yahoo.com> jacked into the Matrix and remarked thus:
>
> >> > uh huh! That pretty much describes the clientele Yuppie bikers.
> >> >
> >> Hehehe. Only overpaid techies and attorneys drive
> >> 30,000 customized MotoGuzzies and Hogs.
> >
> >Amazing how much they are willing to pay to be cool.
>
> Especially when it doesn't work.
> x is a yuppie => x is not cool
> That's a theorem, by the way. I have a most remarkable proof but it is
> to involved to write in the margin of this usenet post.
LMAO
Neo 1061 wrote:
> On Tue, 09 Oct 2001 08:30:49 -0700, Free Radical
> <freera...@yahoo.com> jacked into the Matrix and remarked thus:
>
> >I lived around Austin for a while. They were having trouble pulling off that
> >Superior Texan education since about 90% of the people there are from
> >somewhere else.
>
> Not to mention they educate people that:
> a) Life was created spontaneously in 4004 BC
> b) Babies are brought by the stork, and "sex" is a dirty word
> c) They produce the worst math grades of the fifty.
There is truth to that. However, in spite of that culture in the educational
system and social system you will still find some of the most sexually liberated
people in the country right there in God fearing Texas.
Neo 1061 wrote:
> On Mon, 08 Oct 2001 22:18:23 -0700, Free Radical
> <freera...@yahoo.com> jacked into the Matrix and remarked thus:
>
> >> > > Well; you ain't from Tayxus!
> >> >
> >> > How you know? LOL
> >> > But no, no I'm not, thank goodness!
> >> >
> >> I wish that I wasn't sometimes but I am!
> >
> >You can't be serious! The Texas school system is so effective at making
> >kids loyal to texas that all of the kids who immigrated there learn to
> >lie about it.
>
> What, hasn't the news reached them yet? You know, the victory
> announcement that the North has won? Jeezus, the post must be really
> awful there if urgent information like that has been held up in the
> mail for 150 years! Even sucky Canada Post manages to get my bills to
> me at least three days before they're due, consistently.
Texas was never involved in that war.