Hey, great post, Roger! And I can answer your question about our Kev (or at
least tell you what I've heard): he's working for the Feds on a number of
investigative fronts, presumably including the paperless trail of loaded-
Bin-hexer bank accounts and (for all I know) the vexed matter of his
whereabouts (via MapQuest, do you suppose?). The funny thing is that Kev's
prohibited from touching a computer as a condition of his probation, so he's
had to hire some geeks for the hands-on part. The great white-collar
criminal is now forced to work on his feet, standing behind his keyboarders
as they surf and watching their screens as he directs them in one alt+ move
after another. This is how justice should always work!
Candice
on 12/8/01 7:01 PM, roger day at [log in to unmask] wrote:
> The current UK "Anti Terrorism" Bill has been "disembowelled" and "kneecapped"
> by it's "naeive liberal" opponents - namely, the House of Lords. ummm.
> Suddenly and according to Funkett, there might be a terrorist attack on London
> around Christmas. Arse.
>
> In the uk, you could always whinge to your MP via a satisfyingly automatic way
> http://www.faxyourmp.com/ I got a reply on creme paper, in a nice creamy warm
> beige kind of way.
>
>
> "Of course, our usual disclaimers apply to anything which involves identifying
> yourself both as a terrorist and potentially more embarrassingly, as an
> "electrohippy". Nonetheless, if you want to make a token protest against the
> "war on terrorism (and/or those pesky civil liberties which make today's
> intricately interlinked industrial societies so irritatingly vulnerable to
> sabotage)", the ANTI-TWAT CAMPAIGN are continuing to hold would-be
> denial-of-service "sit-ins" at the Home Office website next Mon and Tue
> 2001-12-10 & 11 - plus a special action when the current Anti-Terrorism,
> Security and Crime Bill becomes law. Basically it's the same Javascript
> repeated-reload "attack" used by the pro-Zapatista Electronic Disturbance
> Theater back in 1998, though this time you're encouraged to register with the
> Home Office as a potential terrorist cybercriminal beforehand - like you're
> not on their "known subversives" database already.
> http://www.fraw.org.uk/ehippies/action/twat_brief.html
> - vs http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/6/23255.html
> http://www.ntk.net/index.cgi?back=1998/now0123.txt&line=161#l
> - no good will ever come from Javascript
> http://www.ri.ac.uk/Christmas/details2001.html
> - this year at the Royal Institution: What Am I? Where's Kevin?"
>
> from //www.ntk.net/
>
>
>
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "david.bircumshaw" <[log in to unmask]>
> To: <[log in to unmask]>
> Sent: Saturday, December 08, 2001 22:40
> Subject: Re: opinion
>
>
>> Nope, Candice
>>
>> the implication is that the swing to the _open_ expression of right-wing and
>> racist opinions has been sanctioned by the swing to the right in the US,
>> aided and abetted that by the pusillanimity of the majority of its writers,
>> a quality that is equalled in Britain, and the constant bombardment of
>> mindless violence as a desideratum that objects such as Hollywood pump out.
>>
>> Best
>>
>> Dave
>>
>>
>> David Bircumshaw
>>
>> Leicester, England
>>
>> Home Page
>>
>> A Chide's Alphabet
>>
>> Painting Without Numbers
>>
>> www.paintstuff.20m.com/index.htm
>>
>> http://homepage.ntlworld.com/david.bircumshaw/index.htm
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