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Re: Can you hear me now?? [message #77698 is a reply to message #77684] |
Sun, 31 December 2006 15:21 |
bunuel
Messages: 11 Registered: July 2005
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Junior Member |
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Childish.
What's all the red stuff? Oh, it's a lake of fire. Oy! For pity's sake. The
Islamists have some bizarre ideas about the afterlife,...virgins and whatnot...,
but a lake of fire? Primitive desert religions, as one of our colleagues
has remarked. Primitive.
Anyway, you enjoy your weenie roast, if it comforts you. There really wasn't
that much else, re Iraq, to write home about this year,was there? Oh, there
was Zarqawi as well, of course. Anybody remember him? Anybody? Anybody?
"DC" <dc@spammersinlalaland.com> wrote:
>
>
>
>For the humor-impaired...
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Re: Can you hear me now?? [message #77700 is a reply to message #77698] |
Sun, 31 December 2006 16:12 |
excelav
Messages: 2130 Registered: July 2005 Location: Metro Detroit
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Senior Member |
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I remember the French made surface to air missiles that killed our US aviators
that were found in Iraq and had a manufacturing date of June 2003. I'm also
one American that is never going to forget it. Fuck France!
By the way, did I mention I'm part french.
James
"bunuel" <bunuel@conair.fr> wrote:
>
>Childish.
>What's all the red stuff? Oh, it's a lake of fire. Oy! For pity's sake.
The
>Islamists have some bizarre ideas about the afterlife,...virgins and whatnot...,
>but a lake of fire? Primitive desert religions, as one of our colleagues
>has remarked. Primitive.
>
>Anyway, you enjoy your weenie roast, if it comforts you. There really wasn't
>that much else, re Iraq, to write home about this year,was there? Oh, there
>was Zarqawi as well, of course. Anybody remember him? Anybody? Anybody?
>
>
>
>
>"DC" <dc@spammersinlalaland.com> wrote:
>>
>>
>>
>>For the humor-impaired...
>
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Re: Can you hear me now?? [message #77703 is a reply to message #77700] |
Sun, 31 December 2006 17:07 |
bunuel
Messages: 11 Registered: July 2005
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Junior Member |
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Your attitude is illogical in a capitalist society, my friend. It's not about
France. France didn't make the missiles and the French army didn't fire them.
They were made by a French multinational, which is an entirely different
thing. It's about war profiteering.
During the invasion of Europe, in 1944, American GIs were astonished, having
overrun Wehrmacht positions, to discover GM trucks in the abandoned motor
pools. General Motors! Trucks that were used to help in the blowing to bits
of American soldiers. So, do I hear "Fuck America"? Go ahead, you can say
it.
How long is it gonna take you jingoist 'patriots' to wake up and figure this
out? You are being played for fools by your overclass.
By the way, I am not French. I live in Poughkeepsie.
"James McCloskey" <excelsm@hotmail.com> wrote:
>
>I remember the French made surface to air missiles that killed our US aviators
>that were found in Iraq and had a manufacturing date of June 2003. I'm
also
>one American that is never going to forget it. Fuck France!
>
>By the way, did I mention I'm part french.
>
>James
>
>"bunuel" <bunuel@conair.fr> wrote:
>>
>>Childish.
>>What's all the red stuff? Oh, it's a lake of fire. Oy! For pity's sake.
>The
>>Islamists have some bizarre ideas about the afterlife,...virgins and whatnot...,
>>but a lake of fire? Primitive desert religions, as one of our colleagues
>>has remarked. Primitive.
>>
>>Anyway, you enjoy your weenie roast, if it comforts you. There really wasn't
>>that much else, re Iraq, to write home about this year,was there? Oh, there
>>was Zarqawi as well, of course. Anybody remember him? Anybody? Anybody?
>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>"DC" <dc@spammersinlalaland.com> wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>For the humor-impaired...
>>
>
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Re: Can you hear me now?? [message #77704 is a reply to message #77700] |
Sun, 31 December 2006 16:38 |
erlilo
Messages: 405 Registered: June 2005
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Senior Member |
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James, what does this shows? How much have the weapon industry sold around
the world, just to make great money? It's not only French made weapons and
we all know weapons are made for destroying and killing. Nearly all the
lands are selling weapons, also Norway - to land that should not have any
weapons at all. The US aviators could also have been killed by American
weapon, since America too have sold plenty to the East. It's just the same
story as in the first and second worldwar. Someone are making big money when
there is conflicts in the world. And by the way, if a land is being
attacked, don't they have the rights to defend themself? Over 3000 Americans
have now being killed in Iraq, by weapons sold from the whole world. But how
many Iraq's have been killed, for the most by western weapons? There isn't
much talk about this in the western world at all - that some hundred of
thousands of them have been killed in their own country. Are we just
thinking of them as bastards or what?
And what about the behavings when most of the East was being colonized by
Europeans some hundred years ago, before America was a nation at all, with
people coming from the whole world? And what about Western promises after
the second worldwar in the East, that never, ever any western country
involved was living up to? So we can ask us self - why have hate so great
chances to grow so big that someone are doing something with it like 11
September? Maybe we can see a form for answers in Western behavings in the
East the last hundred of years?
We are one and a half hour into the NewYear here, so a Happy year to you to
James.
Erling
"James McCloskey" <excelsm@hotmail.com> skrev i melding
news:459843e2$1@linux...
>
> I remember the French made surface to air missiles that killed our US
> aviators
> that were found in Iraq and had a manufacturing date of June 2003. I'm
> also
> one American that is never going to forget it. Fuck France!
>
> By the way, did I mention I'm part french.
>
> James
>
> "bunuel" <bunuel@conair.fr> wrote:
>>
>>Childish.
>>What's all the red stuff? Oh, it's a lake of fire. Oy! For pity's sake.
> The
>>Islamists have some bizarre ideas about the afterlife,...virgins and
>>whatnot...,
>>but a lake of fire? Primitive desert religions, as one of our colleagues
>>has remarked. Primitive.
>>
>>Anyway, you enjoy your weenie roast, if it comforts you. There really
>>wasn't
>>that much else, re Iraq, to write home about this year,was there? Oh,
>>there
>>was Zarqawi as well, of course. Anybody remember him? Anybody? Anybody?
>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>"DC" <dc@spammersinlalaland.com> wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>For the humor-impaired...
>>
>
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Re: Can you hear me now?? [message #77706 is a reply to message #77703] |
Sun, 31 December 2006 17:35 |
erlilo
Messages: 405 Registered: June 2005
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Senior Member |
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....As we know, grandpa Bush was doing great money with Hitler in America in
the second worldwar...
.....as we know Pa and xpresident Bush are doing great money in the weapon
industry..
.....and as we know, the familyapple have met some big problems in Iraq and
the global heating that he can't see or understand...
....isn't there a word in all kind of a familyindustry, that the third
generation is destroying it all?....
....hmmm, it's not a good way to start a new year with these kind of
thinking.... hmmmmmmm....
....let me think positive and send some NewYear-SMS to family and friends in
Scandinavia...
....now I'm going to sleep in the first new day of the year....
Seeye all.......
"bunuel" <bunuel@conar.fr> skrev i melding news:459850b5$1@linux...
>
> Your attitude is illogical in a capitalist society, my friend. It's not
> about
> France. France didn't make the missiles and the French army didn't fire
> them.
> They were made by a French multinational, which is an entirely different
> thing. It's about war profiteering.
> During the invasion of Europe, in 1944, American GIs were astonished,
> having
> overrun Wehrmacht positions, to discover GM trucks in the abandoned motor
> pools. General Motors! Trucks that were used to help in the blowing to
> bits
> of American soldiers. So, do I hear "Fuck America"? Go ahead, you can say
> it.
> How long is it gonna take you jingoist 'patriots' to wake up and figure
> this
> out? You are being played for fools by your overclass.
>
> By the way, I am not French. I live in Poughkeepsie.
>
>
>
> "James McCloskey" <excelsm@hotmail.com> wrote:
>>
>>I remember the French made surface to air missiles that killed our US
>>aviators
>>that were found in Iraq and had a manufacturing date of June 2003. I'm
> also
>>one American that is never going to forget it. Fuck France!
>>
>>By the way, did I mention I'm part french.
>>
>>James
>>
>>"bunuel" <bunuel@conair.fr> wrote:
>>>
>>>Childish.
>>>What's all the red stuff? Oh, it's a lake of fire. Oy! For pity's sake.
>>The
>>>Islamists have some bizarre ideas about the afterlife,...virgins and
>>>whatnot...,
>>>but a lake of fire? Primitive desert religions, as one of our colleagues
>>>has remarked. Primitive.
>>>
>>>Anyway, you enjoy your weenie roast, if it comforts you. There really
>>>wasn't
>>>that much else, re Iraq, to write home about this year,was there? Oh,
>>>there
>>>was Zarqawi as well, of course. Anybody remember him? Anybody? Anybody?
>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>"DC" <dc@spammersinlalaland.com> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>For the humor-impaired...
>>>
>>
>
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Re: Can you hear me now?? [message #77716 is a reply to message #77698] |
Sun, 31 December 2006 19:40 |
TCB
Messages: 1261 Registered: July 2007
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Senior Member |
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I think you might be referring to me and if so I want to be strict, I referred
to them (as in Judaism, Christianity, and Islam) as 'revealed desert religions'
not 'primitive desert religions.' By revealed I mean that all three claim
to have a book that is the True Word of God, and oddly enough it's the same
god, go figure. It's hard to remember sometimes in the West but there are
other kinds of religions. Mystery cults, for example, put an initiate through
a serious of experiences, trials, and rituals but do not have books with
codes of laws and such. Each individual will arrive at much the same conclusion,
it is assumed, but mystery cults don't usually tell you that bacon is off
limits.
One of the greatest things about traveling in Asia, which I've only done
for a few weeks a few times, is getting away from the whole Abrahamic vengeful
sky god thing. I have spent time in Thailand and Japan and it takes a few
days to catch on but after a while for an atheist like me there's this moment
where you realize, 'Nobody here cares about Jesus here. At all. He might
as well be Zoroaster to these people.' In Japan they make fun of their own
religion, by and large, and in Thailand everyone is a Buddhist, and it's
sort of like Christianity here. There are crazy fundamentalist Buddhists
and there are people who enjoy a little incense and a gong now and then but
don't bother much beyond that.
Anyway, if you were referring to me I said 'revealed' not 'primitive.'
TCB
P.S. If anyone thinks I'm a Christ hater, at lunch last week in my office
I was trying to convince one of my Indian (as in South Asia, not American)
and Hindu co-workers that we should start a chain of Bombay themed steak
houses called 'Holy Cow!' The pitch would be that a worshiped cow must automatically
taste better. Luckily for me she has a sense of humor.
"bunuel" <bunuel@conair.fr> wrote:
>
>Childish.
>What's all the red stuff? Oh, it's a lake of fire. Oy! For pity's sake.
The
>Islamists have some bizarre ideas about the afterlife,...virgins and whatnot...,
>but a lake of fire? Primitive desert religions, as one of our colleagues
>has remarked. Primitive.
>
>Anyway, you enjoy your weenie roast, if it comforts you. There really wasn't
>that much else, re Iraq, to write home about this year,was there? Oh, there
>was Zarqawi as well, of course. Anybody remember him? Anybody? Anybody?
>
>
>
>
>"DC" <dc@spammersinlalaland.com> wrote:
>>
>>
>>
>>For the humor-impaired...
>
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Re: Can you hear me now?? [message #77738 is a reply to message #77716] |
Mon, 01 January 2007 07:50 |
bunuel
Messages: 11 Registered: July 2005
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Junior Member |
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Yes, it was you. And I stand corrected. Thanks.
"TCB" <nobody@ishere.com> wrote:
>
>I think you might be referring to me and if so I want to be strict, I referred
>to them (as in Judaism, Christianity, and Islam) as 'revealed desert religions'
>not 'primitive desert religions.' By revealed I mean that all three claim
>to have a book that is the True Word of God, and oddly enough it's the same
>god, go figure. It's hard to remember sometimes in the West but there are
>other kinds of religions. Mystery cults, for example, put an initiate through
>a serious of experiences, trials, and rituals but do not have books with
>codes of laws and such. Each individual will arrive at much the same conclusion,
>it is assumed, but mystery cults don't usually tell you that bacon is off
>limits.
>
>One of the greatest things about traveling in Asia, which I've only done
>for a few weeks a few times, is getting away from the whole Abrahamic vengeful
>sky god thing. I have spent time in Thailand and Japan and it takes a few
>days to catch on but after a while for an atheist like me there's this moment
>where you realize, 'Nobody here cares about Jesus here. At all. He might
>as well be Zoroaster to these people.' In Japan they make fun of their own
>religion, by and large, and in Thailand everyone is a Buddhist, and it's
>sort of like Christianity here. There are crazy fundamentalist Buddhists
>and there are people who enjoy a little incense and a gong now and then
but
>don't bother much beyond that.
>
>Anyway, if you were referring to me I said 'revealed' not 'primitive.'
>
>TCB
>
>P.S. If anyone thinks I'm a Christ hater, at lunch last week in my office
>I was trying to convince one of my Indian (as in South Asia, not American)
>and Hindu co-workers that we should start a chain of Bombay themed steak
>houses called 'Holy Cow!' The pitch would be that a worshiped cow must automatically
>taste better. Luckily for me she has a sense of humor.
>
>"bunuel" <bunuel@conair.fr> wrote:
>>
>>Childish.
>>What's all the red stuff? Oh, it's a lake of fire. Oy! For pity's sake.
>The
>>Islamists have some bizarre ideas about the afterlife,...virgins and whatnot...,
>>but a lake of fire? Primitive desert religions, as one of our colleagues
>>has remarked. Primitive.
>>
>>Anyway, you enjoy your weenie roast, if it comforts you. There really wasn't
>>that much else, re Iraq, to write home about this year,was there? Oh, there
>>was Zarqawi as well, of course. Anybody remember him? Anybody? Anybody?
>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>"DC" <dc@spammersinlalaland.com> wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>For the humor-impaired...
>>
>
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Re: Can you hear me now?? [message #77748 is a reply to message #77738] |
Mon, 01 January 2007 11:13 |
TCB
Messages: 1261 Registered: July 2007
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Senior Member |
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Didn't mean to be harsh, just wanted to be sure I'm not misquoted. 'Cause
then later someone will say, 'But you said [some religion] was primitive.'
Happy new year,
TCB
"bunuel" <bunuel@conar.fr> wrote:
>
>Yes, it was you. And I stand corrected. Thanks.
>
>
>"TCB" <nobody@ishere.com> wrote:
>>
>>I think you might be referring to me and if so I want to be strict, I referred
>>to them (as in Judaism, Christianity, and Islam) as 'revealed desert religions'
>>not 'primitive desert religions.' By revealed I mean that all three claim
>>to have a book that is the True Word of God, and oddly enough it's the
same
>>god, go figure. It's hard to remember sometimes in the West but there are
>>other kinds of religions. Mystery cults, for example, put an initiate through
>>a serious of experiences, trials, and rituals but do not have books with
>>codes of laws and such. Each individual will arrive at much the same conclusion,
>>it is assumed, but mystery cults don't usually tell you that bacon is off
>>limits.
>>
>>One of the greatest things about traveling in Asia, which I've only done
>>for a few weeks a few times, is getting away from the whole Abrahamic vengeful
>>sky god thing. I have spent time in Thailand and Japan and it takes a few
>>days to catch on but after a while for an atheist like me there's this
moment
>>where you realize, 'Nobody here cares about Jesus here. At all. He might
>>as well be Zoroaster to these people.' In Japan they make fun of their
own
>>religion, by and large, and in Thailand everyone is a Buddhist, and it's
>>sort of like Christianity here. There are crazy fundamentalist Buddhists
>>and there are people who enjoy a little incense and a gong now and then
>but
>>don't bother much beyond that.
>>
>>Anyway, if you were referring to me I said 'revealed' not 'primitive.'
>>
>>TCB
>>
>>P.S. If anyone thinks I'm a Christ hater, at lunch last week in my office
>>I was trying to convince one of my Indian (as in South Asia, not American)
>>and Hindu co-workers that we should start a chain of Bombay themed steak
>>houses called 'Holy Cow!' The pitch would be that a worshiped cow must
automatically
>>taste better. Luckily for me she has a sense of humor.
>>
>>"bunuel" <bunuel@conair.fr> wrote:
>>>
>>>Childish.
>>>What's all the red stuff? Oh, it's a lake of fire. Oy! For pity's sake.
>>The
>>>Islamists have some bizarre ideas about the afterlife,...virgins and whatnot...,
>>>but a lake of fire? Primitive desert religions, as one of our colleagues
>>>has remarked. Primitive.
>>>
>>>Anyway, you enjoy your weenie roast, if it comforts you. There really
wasn't
>>>that much else, re Iraq, to write home about this year,was there? Oh,
there
>>>was Zarqawi as well, of course. Anybody remember him? Anybody? Anybody?
>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>"DC" <dc@spammersinlalaland.com> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>For the humor-impaired...
>>>
>>
>
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