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Author Message
25 new of 230 responses total.
rcurl
response 178 of 230: Mark Unseen   Sep 10 15:36 UTC 2003

I think it is more likely to be the other way around. Smuggling guns and
explosives is extra dangerous and I'm sure extra remunerative: pot and
cocaine is chump change by comparison, and is probably done on the side
for extra spending money and because if you are busted for guns and
explosives nobody will give much of a hoot about the drugs.
lynne
response 179 of 230: Mark Unseen   Sep 10 15:38 UTC 2003

<really wishes bru would take less time ranting about possibly imagined
terrorist links and more time checking his typing and spelling.  by
mutilating the language in non-systematic ways, you are supporting the
downfall of the US.>
other
response 180 of 230: Mark Unseen   Sep 10 16:06 UTC 2003

<chuckle>
flem
response 181 of 230: Mark Unseen   Sep 10 16:43 UTC 2003

If you really think that sales of (insert your drug of choice here) help
suppoort terrorism, here's something you can do to help foil those nasty
terrorists:  Work towards legalization.  Seriously, if marijuana were legal
in the US, you can bet that completely legitimate corporations would drop the
bottom out of the market and terrorists wouldn't make any money from it any
more.  
bru
response 182 of 230: Mark Unseen   Sep 10 17:11 UTC 2003

yeah!  then all we gotta do is hire more cops and arrest those who drive under
the influence.  

Why is it the same people who promote drug use get all paranoid at the idea
of a government supplied drug like soma...
flem
response 183 of 230: Mark Unseen   Sep 10 17:16 UTC 2003

Maybe we could retask some of those cops who search cars for drugs at the
border.  
happyboy
response 184 of 230: Mark Unseen   Sep 10 17:44 UTC 2003

bruse, you are an idiot.  the computer industry does more to
(unwittingly) support terrorism than all of the potgrowing
crackers up in b.c. combined do...if you are really against the
support of terrorist groups you, and you alone, should stop
using a computer.

take a bath, smelly christian.
lynne
response 185 of 230: Mark Unseen   Sep 10 17:45 UTC 2003

Huh?  I've never heard of soma.  And I've particularly never heard someone
on this system getting all paranoid about it.  Anyway, if your main argument
is needing to arrest more people that are driving under the influence, then
you're *really* grasping at straws.
tpryan
response 186 of 230: Mark Unseen   Sep 10 17:50 UTC 2003

        What about Toledo Windowbox or Cheddar WoWWie?  Homegrown
helping someone whose job was taken away by a foriegn job.
So....
        Bussinesses that use overseas labor (service or manufactoring)
are supporting terrorism!

(Is this still the humor item?)
happyboy
response 187 of 230: Mark Unseen   Sep 10 18:00 UTC 2003

yeah...but it's no longer *funny ha-ha*
carson
response 188 of 230: Mark Unseen   Sep 10 18:02 UTC 2003

[(it never was the humor item.)]

re #185:  (soma is a muscle relaxant.)
goose
response 189 of 230: Mark Unseen   Sep 10 19:38 UTC 2003

We really should move this to another item....but I'm still waiting for that
evidence Bruce.

On topic: I saw user cme, Evan Corcoran, over the weekend.  We were going to
hook up with tod, but no one had a car to get anywhere.  He;s on his way back
to Poland in less than a week.  Seattle was sunny, not a drop of rain the
whole time I was there...until I got on the plane to return home....
bru
response 190 of 230: Mark Unseen   Sep 10 20:55 UTC 2003

sorry cannot hand you the proof.  Ypu will have to go look it up yourself if
you cannot accept my word.
anderyn
response 191 of 230: Mark Unseen   Sep 10 21:18 UTC 2003

In defense of Bruce's, ah, oddly-formatted text, I must say that part of it
is due to our equipment at home -- it's often not easy to see if you've erased
far enough back or if what you've typed actually is appearing the way you want
it to. I have real trouble with that, myself, and I am hyper-vigilant about
typos and oddly-formatted text, because of my job (and I've fixed about twelve
typos in this post alone, which I could not have done if I were at home --
I have fat fingers and type faster than I can see, anyhow...)... 
scott
response 192 of 230: Mark Unseen   Sep 10 21:32 UTC 2003

(Soma is more well-known as the official drug of the city folks in "Brave New
World")

My understanding of marijuana is that it does not significantly worsen driving
skills.

Combat terrorism by reducing oil use!  Every SUV driven sends movey through
Saudi Arabia to Osama himself.
lynne
response 193 of 230: Mark Unseen   Sep 10 22:00 UTC 2003

I've never noticed significant typos in anderyn's post.  They're a standing
theme in bru's.
I have a lot of new freckles from slightly excessive sun exposure in 
Yellowstone last week (not sure how that happened, as I was wearing SPF 45).
Do I count as a spotted grexer?  :)
happyboy
response 194 of 230: Mark Unseen   Sep 10 23:03 UTC 2003

re190:  liar, you are a liar.
jaklumen
response 195 of 230: Mark Unseen   Sep 11 01:38 UTC 2003

um, I spotted no grexers today.  Yeah.
gull
response 196 of 230: Mark Unseen   Sep 11 02:40 UTC 2003

Re #172: Yes, buying pot supports those nasty terrorists in British
Columbia...

Re #184: I dunno, about the computer industry, but I'd say you support
terrorism much more directly by buying gas than you do by buying drugs.

Re #185: I'd take the DUI argument more seriously if I'd ever seen bru
arguing for banning alcohol.  (Or at least bars with parking lots.)

Re #194: I suspect DEA anti-drug commercial soundbites like "pot pays for
terrorism" are drilled into the heads of border agents as part of their
training.  It keeps them from thinking about the fact that the majority of
their job is to benefit U.S. corporations by propping up artificially high
prices for various commercial items through enforcing tarrifs and
restricting imports.
dah
response 197 of 230: Mark Unseen   Sep 11 02:45 UTC 2003

I went to two bars in Montreal, and neither of them had parking lots, and it's
not like I did much drinking!  Ahaha. not even any at one!
slynne
response 198 of 230: Mark Unseen   Sep 11 02:53 UTC 2003

my pot supplier? His name is God. He grows it himself or so I hear. ;)
slynne
response 199 of 230: Mark Unseen   Sep 11 02:56 UTC 2003

I do have a funny pot story though. Years ago when I was in college, I 
lived right next to the bridge to Canada in Sault Ste Marie. There was 
a huge fence around the land under the bridge so folks couldnt sneak up 
onto the bridge. On that land, out of reach naturally, was a big giant 
pot plant. I wish I had taken a picture. I guess someone must have 
chucked their weed off the side of the bridge or something. 
bru
response 200 of 230: Mark Unseen   Sep 11 02:57 UTC 2003

Alcohol is legal.  

Not being a border agent, I do not know what gets drilled into their heads.

Customs officers don't get any indoctrination, we get training, adn we get
to use our own heads. Import specialist get to worry about propping up u.s.
corporations, All I get to do is enforce the laws at the border.

I don't make the laws.
dah
response 201 of 230: Mark Unseen   Sep 11 03:08 UTC 2003

But you use your head.
gull
response 202 of 230: Mark Unseen   Sep 11 03:58 UTC 2003

Re #200:
> Customs officers don't get any indoctrination, we get training, adn we get
> to use our own heads. Import specialist get to worry about propping up
u.s.
> corporations, All I get to do is enforce the laws at the border.

The effect of enforcing those laws is still the same, though.  And it's easy
to see that the priorities are skewed to provide maximum benefit to
corporations.  Hundreds of illegal immigrants get into the U.S. every day to
provide cheap labor, but try to bring too much of some grocery item across
the border and you get nailed.  I expect soon bringing prescription drugs
across the border will become illegal, to prop up high U.S. drug prices, as
well.
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