Substantial income processing judicial judgments.
Dear Jim,
I can't thank you enough for introducting me to this business.
You have given me a fresh lease on life.
I was terminated from a job I held for 26 years. I am already earning twice
as much as I earned in my old job. I am making way ov
Be on
Top.
Substantial income processing judicial judgments.
You can process over the internet from anywhere in the world.
You decide how much you work
Current associates earning 5,000US to 12,000US per/Mo.
Impressive training and support.
pasha geochemistry concretion lurch beatitude altar reptilian betray aviv hour mccall shanty budapest various germanic hypothyroid aspidistra apology codpiece shortsighted catherine snapdragon invalid piper
Banned CD Government don't want me to sell it. See Now @
callisto crucial breakpoint
vivacious apostle houghton actor conversant thaw taxicab vest brouhaha borrow exemption differentiate
The ultimate digital
cable filter
The filter will allow
you to receive all
the channels that you
order with your remove
control!
payperviews, adult movies,sport
events,special events!
see n
Wholesale Prescription Medications!
Our doctors will write you a
prescription for free
Lowest Prices – No Prior Prescription
Required
Upon approval, our US licensed doctors will prescribe your medication for free
and have the medication shipped overnight
to your door
What Tim is (correctly) observing here is that a working challenge to the force
monopoly is a very effective way to modify behaviour.
Where Tim is wrong, though, is that he may have anything resembling a working
challenge.
=
end
(of original message)
Y-a*h*o-o (yes, they scan for this) spam
At 12:02 PM 8/31/03 -0700, Tim May wrote:
>He said: "An ISP is free to say "anyone requesting a tap is required to
>pay a fee," just as any ISP is free to say that it will handle
>installation of special Carnivore equipment for a certain fee."
>
>A customer of the ISP is certainly _not_ the one re
At 08:06 PM 8/31/03 -0700, Tim May wrote:
>
>The Mob doesn't actually have to kill too many stoolies for it to be
>widely known that ratting can be a very dangerous business.
>
Ask David Kelly. Or his associates. Reputation is a tool.
At 01:54 AM 9/1/03 -0400, An Metet wrote:
>Here's a clue. If and when crypto anarchy ever becomes a reality,
>Tim May is going to be one of the first ones killed. He's pissed off
>too many people. Once they can get retribution anonymously, his days
>are numbered.
What, exactly, has Tim done tha
ree with the 'killing the kids' thing.) If Mike
Hawash can be grabbed off the streets without any acknowledgement by the
Feds and then go to prison for NOT fighting against the US (but clearly
thinking about it), then we are in deep trouble.
-TD
From: Tim May <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To:
On Sunday 31 August 2003 19:20, James A. Donald wrote:
> Talk is cheap. ...
> Indeed, the one may be
> connected to the other -- the absence of stoolies may well be
> connected to the presence of hot talk.
Dunno. I'm not sure that mere talk of killing a librarian would dissuade
the potential sto
On Sunday, August 31, 2003, at 04:20 PM, James A. Donald wrote:
--
Tim May is the perfect example why vigilante justice is
generally considered to be a bad thing -- stupid assholes
like Tim May spout off & take action based on paranoia
instead of facts & principles of anarchy instead of justi
--
> Tim May is the perfect example why vigilante justice is
> generally considered to be a bad thing -- stupid assholes
> like Tim May spout off & take action based on paranoia
> instead of facts & principles of anarchy instead of justice
> and innocent parties get hurt.
Talk is cheap. A
le thing missing from the "response" list. Anyway to make a
virus that will install fake/random name lists?
From: Tim May <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Responding to orders which include a secrecy requirement
Date: Sat, 30 Aug 2003 09:10:48 -0700
On S
The Java Anonymous Proxy (JAP) service, your local library, and you, among
others need to develop a response should you be served with an order (court
or otherwise) to produce information which includes the requirement that
you keep the order secret.
There are a large number of responses one
Processors Needed, Business Opportunity
" Image loading please wait "
1a
://www.myrxbiz.com/
1. We can give strong partners their OWN "Exclusive" privately named
great looking websites for better recognition
and great re-orders. The websites feature our *NEW* 800 number order
processing which will soon constitute over 50% of the orders taken from websit
://www.myrxbiz.com/
1. We can give strong partners their OWN "Exclusive" privately named
great looking websites for better recognition
and great re-orders. The websites feature our *NEW* 800 number order
processing which will soon constitute over 50% of the orders taken from websit
://www.myrxbiz.com/
1. We can give strong partners their OWN "Exclusive" privately named
great looking websites for better recognition
and great re-orders. The websites feature our *NEW* 800 number order
processing which will soon constitute over 50% of the orders taken from websit
://www.myrxbiz.com/
1. We can give strong partners their OWN "Exclusive" privately named
great looking websites for better recognition
and great re-orders. The websites feature our *NEW* 800 number order
processing which will soon constitute over 50% of the orders taken from websit
Colin King, author of Jane's explosive ordnance disposal guide and a
British army bomb disposal expert in the 1991 Gulf war, said yesterday:
"Cluster bombs have a very bad reputation, which they
deserve."
FROM
http://politics.guardian.co.uk/iraq/story/0,12956,929368,00.html
Adam In
coined the phrases jet set, cafe society, glamour
girl, the roaring twenties, but more than that he reveals the forerunner of
the A-List (that archaic curiosity over which PRs still slaver).
In the late 19th century the American social lioness Mrs John Jacob Astor
asked her pal Ward McAllister to
Koans of the Zen Librarian -
http://homepage.interaccess.com/~smitters/lafnlibn/koans.htm
"The Zen Librarian meditated for ten years on this question: What is the
plot of a self-help book which has no pages or words?..."
Zen Puzzle Page - http://www.phys.psu.edu/~endwar/izen/z
Visit cingular.com and take a look at our huge selection of cell phones
and wireless calling plans. No matter what your needs are, Cingular's
got you covered.
http://r.mb00.net/s/c?1kl.403d.1.1dg6.6ou6h
http://r.mb00.net/s/c?1kl.403d.2.1dg6.6ou6h";> click here
This valuable message is made po
t;There will be
pressure to cover 'our boys.' Some people will object to real reporting as
opposed to rah-rah reporting." CRITIC'S OBSERVATION: "The Pentagon has
refused to release any of the actual text of the memo ... in which
cooperation with the press was urged. I
Hierarchy and the Emergence of Networks
Ronfeldt argues that "the information revolution... disrupts and erodes the
hierarchies around which institutions are normally designed. It diffuses
and redistributes power, often to the benefit of what may be considered
weaker, smaller actors".
it's fundamentally the same idea as bell's
but eliminates a loop-hole:
From: http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/kochen-specker/
"This is the easiest argument against the possibility of an HV
interpretation afforded by Gleason's theorem. Bell (1966: 6-8) offers a
variant
On Tuesday, July 16, 2002, at 10:39 AM, Peter Fairbrother wrote:
>
> Oh dear. QM does rule out internal states.
>
> I didn't think I would have to explain why I capitalised "Bell", but
> perhaps
> it was a bit too subtle. Google "Bell" and "inequalities", and go from
> there.
I disagree. Bell's
change in position that you can collect. It does not rule
> out
> internal states. For instance, you could generate particles with a
> certain property
> which you do not have to measure to know that they have that property.
>
> It is a logical mistake to think that becau
ILL be in an
unknown state after the measurement. No if's, no but's. It effects photons
(which I challenge you to demonstrate has 'charge') as well as electrons
and protons. It's universal. It's about measuring, not about what is being
measured.
The 2nd also comes int
predict its fragmentation.
>
>Yes it does.
>
>Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle. Ring a Bell?
The uncertainty principle says that there is a limit on the information
about
position and change in position that you can collect. It does not rule
out
internal states. For instance, you could g
> Optimizzin Al-gorithym wrote:
> At 03:21 PM 7/14/02 +0100, Ben Laurie wrote:
>> Eric Cordian wrote:
>>> Still, Nature abhors overcomplexification, and plain old quantum
> mechanics
>>> works just fine for predicting the results of experiments.
>>
>> Oh yeah? So predict when this radioactive is
On Sun, 14 Jul 2002, Optimizzin Al-gorithym wrote:
> And while QM can't help you with a particular atom, it also doesn't say
> that its impossible that knowledge of internal states of the atom
> wouldn't help you predict its fragmentation.
Other rules do; Uncertaintly Principle, 2nd Law for sta
through spinning propellers. You might
think you could
only characterize the translucent prop-disk by a certain probability
that the ball would get through
vs. get shredded. ("Propeller mechanics")
But if you could see the phase of the prop as it spun, you could time
your tosses and
Eric Cordian wrote:
> Still, Nature abhors overcomplexification, and plain old quantum mechanics
> works just fine for predicting the results of experiments.
Oh yeah? So predict when this radioactive isotope will decay, if you please.
Cheers,
Ben.
--
http://www.apache-ssl.org/ben.html h
True Past existed prior to those
measurments being made, simply because no measurements contradict.
> I don't doubt that Hal gets the sense that many potential Hals could
> have resulted in the current Hal...an interesting notion. But everything
> does in fact point to a One True Pa
On Monday, July 8, 2002, at 08:39 PM, Tim May wrote:
> No, I was arguing that while the future may be multi-worlded,
> everything we know about science (evidence, archaeology,
> measurements, ...) points to a _single_ past.
>
>
Sorry about this misdirection to the CP list. It was meant to go t
..an interesting notion. But everything
does in fact point to a One True Past which various measurements get
closer and closer to, and which no measurements contradict.
This is what I meant by "convergence." Homing in, getting closer,
sharpening the image, filling in the details.
A
On Tue, 30 Apr 2002, Ken Brown wrote:
> Jim Choate wrote:
> >
> > On Thu, 25 Apr 2002, Ken Brown wrote:
> >
> > > One of the classic examples of what is now called "chaos" (a word that I
> > > don't like in this context). The exact trajectory taken by simple models
> >
> > Uhuh...
> >
> > >
astic" certainly doesn't mean the same thing as
"chaotic" in this context, so I assume you didn't mean that.
[...]
> > so the variables in your model should actually be probability
> > distributions, which makes the sums much harder and leads to
> > co
is the website on which activists discuss
killing police, and publish the home addresses of journalists or
politicians who oppose them."
From
Herald Sun man conducts a jihad against Indymedia Herald Sun man conducts a
jihad against Indymedia
On this day...1948 -- Korea: Cheju April 3rd M
Any recommendations for a worthwhile packages I can run on the local
128/768 (loaded) line? Pointers to tarballs preferrable.
-- Eugen* Leitl http://www.lrz.de/~ui22204/";>leitl
__
ICBMTO : N48 10'07'' E011 33'53'' http://www.lrz.de/~
;
> >> Okay, majordomo at the node I subscribed to still lists me when
> >
> >which node?
> >
>
> I am subscribed through cyberpass.net and sirius.infonex.com.
>
> Both quit sending me messages about three days ago.
>
>
> Bear
44 matches
Mail list logo