I've finally achieved consistency in my life. Any person of average or above intelligence can predict what I will say next with unerring accuracy. And what I say will always be wrong.

Thursday, June 01, 2006

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[CanYoAssDigIt] Re: [progressive] Environmental News: Begs the question-How many need to die

While many people use the phrase "begs the question" as a synonym for
"invites the question" or "raises the question", or to indicate that
"the question really ought to be addressed", begging the question is
actually "the term for a type of fallacy occurring in deductive
reasoning in which the proposition to be proved is assumed implicitly
or explicitly in one of the premises. For an example of this, consider
the following argument: "Only an untrustworthy person would run for
office. The fact that politicians are untrustworthy is proof of this."
Such an argument is fallacious, because it relies upon its own
proposition—in this case, "politicians are untrustworthy"—in order to
support its central premise. Essentially, the argument assumes that
its central point is already proven, and uses this in support of
itself." (from the Wikipedia).

However, George W Bush was defeated in two elections, and we are still
stuck with him, as we most likely are now with the incorrect usage of
this term.

[CanYoAssDigIt] Re: [progressive] ROBERT F. KENNEDY JR: Was the 2004 Election Stolen?

Those Kennedys and their crazy conspiracy theories. They also believe that criminal or political elements want them dead, and have already offed two of them.  Can your heart stand the shocking facts? John and Robert Kennedy are on a space ship with Howard Hughes and Elvis, enjoying alien hospitality.  And George W Bush was elected President fair and square - twice!


On 6/1/06, MA PA <drymarc2003@yahoo.ca> wrote:

ROBERT F. KENNEDY JR: Was the 2004 Election Stolen?

Republicans prevented more than 350,000 voters in Ohio from casting ballots or having their votes counted -- enough to have put John Kerry in the White House.

Like many Americans, I spent the evening of the 2004 election watching the returns on television and wondering how the exit polls, which predicted an overwhelming victory for John Kerry, had gotten it so wrong. By midnight, the official tallies showed a decisive lead for George Bush -- and the next day, lacking enough legal evidence to contest the results, Kerry conceded. Republicans derided anyone who expressed doubts about Bush's victory as nut cases in ''tinfoil hats,'' while the national media, with few exceptions, did little to question the validity of the election. The Washington Post immediately dismissed allegations of fraud as ''conspiracy theories,''(1) and The New York Times declared that ''there is no evidence of vote theft or errors on a large scale.''(2)
But despite the media blackout, indications continued to emerge that something deeply troubling had taken place in 2004. Nearly half of the 6 million American voters living abroad(3) never received their ballots -- or received them too late to vote(4) -- after the Pentagon unaccountably shut down a state-of-the-art Web site used to file overseas registrations.(5) A consulting firm called Sproul & Associates, which was hired by the Republican National Committee to register voters in six battleground states,(6) was discovered shredding Democratic registrations.(7) In New Mexico, which was decided by 5,988 votes,(8) malfunctioning machines mysteriously failed to properly register a presidential vote on more than 20,000 ballots.(9) Nationwide, according to the federal commission charged with implementing election reforms, as many as 1 million ballots were spoiled by faulty voting equipment -- roughly one for every 100 cast.(10)
 
Continued:
 
 
Today's Newswire
 
 



[CanYoAssDigIt] Re: [progressive] Rockin' the Right: The 50 greatest conservative rock songs of all time

There is no loyalty on the right. How could they overlook Janet Greene, who served their cause so well in the 60s, with wonderful right wing songs like Commie Lies, Termites, Comrade's Lament, Poor Left Winger, Run and The Hunter And The Bear.

Check out http://blog.wfmu.org/freeform/2006/01/janet_greene_th.html, and see what real right wing music sounds like, not the weak stuff these bisexuals, vegetarians, animal rights activists and drug-ingesting libertines that the National Review prefers
 
LYRICS/TRANSCRIPTION:
Poor Left-Winger: Janet Greene [1966]

I'm just a poor left-winger
Befuddled, bewildered, forlorn
Duped by a bearded singer
Peddling his Communist corn
In the Café Expresso
Sounds of guitars could be heard
Twanging a plaintive folk song
Spreading the Communist word
Hair hung around his shoulders
And sandals were on his feet
His shirttail was ragged and dirty
Making the picture complete

I followed him off to college
The man that I came to adore
Where student demonstrations
Blocked every classroom door
We led the march on the White House
And forced the cops to come in
We claimed each one was brutal
As we kicked him in the shin
It was all so intellectual
What glorious tales I was told
Of history's certain progress
Into the Communist fold

I fell for those empty falsehoods
But now I know full well
Those little words on the posters
Were all that he could spell
Those dialectic phrases
Made a marvelous spiel
But hidden behind that beard
Beat the heart of a frustrated heel
Now all my illusions are shattered
About the man I admired
I'm just a poor left-winger
Befuddled, bewildered and tired!



Stevo <blue_meanie_9@yahoo.com> wrote:
Rockin' the Right
The 50 greatest conservative rock songs.     What makes a great conservative rock song? The lyrics must convey a conservative idea or sentiment, such as skepticism of government or support for traditional values. And, to be sure, it must be a great rock song. We're biased in favor of songs that are already popular, but have tossed in a few little-known gems. In several cases, the musicians are outspoken liberals. Others are notorious libertines. For the purposes of this list, however, we don't hold any of this against them. Finally, it would have been easy to include half a dozen songs by both the Kinks and Rush, but we've made an effort to cast a wide net. Who ever said diversity isn't a conservative principle? 
1. "Won't Get Fooled Again," by The Who. The Who - The Kids Are Alright - Won't Get Fooled Again ; buy CD on Amazon.com
The conservative movement is full of disillusioned revolutionaries; this could be their theme song, an oath that swears off naïve idealism once and for all. "There's nothing in the streets / Looks any different to me / And the slogans are replaced, by-the-bye. . . . Meet the new boss / Same as the old boss." The instantly recognizable synthesizer intro, Pete Townshend's ringing guitar, Keith Moon's pounding drums, and Roger Daltrey's wailing vocals make this one of the most explosive rock anthems ever recorded — the best number by a big band, and a classic for conservatives.

2. "Taxman," by The Beatles. buy CD on Amazon.com
A George Harrison masterpiece with a famous guitar riff (which was actually played by Paul McCartney): "If you drive a car, I'll tax the street / If you try to sit, I'll tax your seat / If you get too cold, I'll tax the heat / If you take a walk, I'll tax your feet." The song closes with a humorous jab at death taxes: "Now my advice for those who die / Declare the pennies on your eyes."

3. "Sympathy for the Devil," by The Rolling Stones. The Rolling Stones - Sympathy for the Devil Remixes - EP -  Sympathy for the Devil ; buy CD on Amazon.com
Don't be misled by the title; this song is The Screwtape Letters of rock. The devil is a tempter who leans hard on moral relativism — he will try to make you think that "every cop is a criminal / And all the sinners saints." What's more, he is the sinister inspiration for the cruelties of Bolshevism: "I stuck around St. Petersburg / When I saw it was a time for a change / Killed the czar and his ministers / Anastasia screamed in vain."

4. "Sweet Home Alabama," by Lynyrd Skynyrd. Lynyrd Skynyrd - Then and Now - Sweet Home Alabama ; buy CD on Amazon.com
A tribute to the region of America that liberals love to loathe, taking a shot at Neil Young's Canadian arrogance along the way: "A Southern man don't need him around anyhow."

5. "Wouldn't It Be Nice," by The Beach Boys. The Beach Boys - Good Vibrations: Thirty Years of the Beach Boys - Wouldn't It Be Nice ; buy CD on Amazon.com
Pro-abstinence and pro-marriage: "Maybe if we think and wish and hope and pray it might come true / Baby then there wouldn't be a single thing we couldn't do / We could be married / And then we'd be happy."

6. "Gloria," by U2. U2 - Under a Blood Red Sky - Gloria ; buy CD on Amazon.com
Just because a rock song is about faith doesn't mean that it's conservative. But what about a rock song that's about faith and whose chorus is in Latin ? That's beautifully reactionary: "Gloria / In te domine / Gloria / Exultate."

7. "Revolution," by The Beatles. buy CD on Amazon.com
"You say you want a revolution / Well you know / We all want to change the world . . . Don't you know you can count me out?" What's more, Communism isn't even cool: "If you go carrying pictures of Chairman Mao / You ain't going to make it with anyone anyhow." (Someone tell the Che Guevara crowd.)

8. "Bodies," by The Sex Pistols. Sex Pistols - Filthy Lucre Live - Bodies ; buy CD on Amazon.com
Violent and vulgar, but also a searing anti-abortion anthem by the quintessential punk band: "It's not an animal / It's an abortion."

9. "Don't Tread on Me," by Metallica. buy CD on Amazon.com
A head-banging tribute to the doctrine of peace through strength, written in response to the first Gulf War: "So be it / Threaten no more / To secure peace is to prepare for war."

10. "20th Century Man," by The Kinks. The Kinks - The Kinks' Greatest: Celluloid Heroes - 20th Century Man ; buy CD on Amazon.com
"You keep all your smart modern writers / Give me William Shakespeare / You keep all your smart modern painters / I'll take Rembrandt, Titian, da Vinci, and Gainsborough. . . . I was born in a welfare state / Ruled by bureaucracy / Controlled by civil servants / And people dressed in grey / Got no privacy got no liberty / 'Cause the 20th-century people / Took it all away from me."

11. "The Trees," by Rush. Rush - Rush: Spirit of Radio - Greatest Hits 1974-1987 - The Trees ; buy CD on Amazon.com
Before there was Rush Limbaugh, there was Rush, a Canadian band whose lyrics are often libertarian. What happens in a forest when equal rights become equal outcomes? "The trees are all kept equal / By hatchet, axe, and saw."

12. "Neighborhood Bully," by Bob Dylan. Bob Dylan - Infidels - Neighborhood Bully ; buy CD on Amazon.com A pro-Israel song released in 1983, two years after the bombing of Iraq's nuclear reactor, this ironic number could be a theme song for the Bush Doctrine: "He destroyed a bomb factory, nobody was glad / The bombs were meant for him / He was supposed to feel bad / He's the neighborhood bully."

13. "My City Was Gone," by The Pretenders. Pretenders - Learning to Crawl - My City Was Gone ; buy CD on Amazon.com
Virtually every conservative knows the bass line, which supplies the theme music for Limbaugh's radio show. But the lyrics also display a Jane Jacobs sensibility against central planning and a conservative's dissatisfaction with rapid change: "I went back to Ohio / But my pretty countryside / Had been paved down the middle / By a government that had no pride."

14. "Right Here, Right Now," by Jesus Jones. buy CD on Amazon.com
The words are vague, but they're also about the fall of Communism and the end of the Cold War: "I was alive and I waited for this. . . . Watching the world wake up from history."

15. "I Fought the Law," by The Crickets. The Crickets - The Crickets and Their Buddies - I Fought the Law ; buy CD on Amazon.com
The original law-and-order classic, made famous in 1965 by The Bobby Fuller Four and covered by just about everyone since then.

16. "Get Over It," by The Eagles. Eagles - The Very Best of the Eagles - Get Over It (Remastered) ; buy CD on Amazon.com
Against the culture of grievance: "The big, bad world doesn't owe you a thing." There's also this nice line: "I'd like to find your inner child and kick its little ass."

17. "Stay Together for the Kids," by Blink 182. Blink-182 - Blink-182: Greatest Hits - Stay Together for the Kids ; buy CD on Amazon.com
A eulogy for family values by an alt-rock band whose members were raised in a generation without enough of them: "So here's your holiday / Hope you enjoy it this time / You gave it all away. . . . It's not right."

18. "Cult of Personality," by Living Colour. Living Colour - Living Colour: Super Hits - Cult of Personality ; buy CD on Amazon.com
A hard-rocking critique of state power, whacking Mussolini, Stalin, and even JFK: "I exploit you, still you love me / I tell you one and one makes three / I'm the cult of personality."

19. "Kicks," by Paul Revere and the Raiders. Paul Revere & The Raiders - Paul Revere & The Raiders: Super Hits - Kicks ; buy CD on Amazon.com
An anti-drug song that is also anti-utopian: "Well, you think you're gonna find yourself a little piece of paradise / But it ain't happened yet, so girl you better think twice."

20. "Rock the Casbah," by The Clash. The Clash - The Essential Clash - Rock the Casbah ; buy CD on Amazon.com
After 9/11, American radio stations were urged not to play this 1982 song, one of the biggest hits by a seminal punk band, because it was seen as too provocative. Meanwhile, British Forces Broadcasting Service (the radio station for British troops serving in Iraq) has said that this is one of its most requested tunes.

21. "Heroes," by David Bowie. David Bowie - Heroes - Heroes ; buy CD on Amazon.com
A Cold War love song about a man and a woman divided by the Berlin Wall. No moral equivalence here: "I can remember / Standing / By the wall / And the guns / Shot above our heads / And we kissed / As though nothing could fall / And the shame / Was on the other side / Oh we can beat them / For ever and ever."

22. "Red Barchetta," by Rush. Rush - Rush: Spirit of Radio - Greatest Hits 1974-1987 - Red Barchetta ; buy CD on Amazon.com
In a time of "the Motor Law," presumably legislated by green extremists, the singer describes family reunion and the thrill of driving a fast car — an act that is his "weekly crime."

23. "Brick," by Ben Folds Five. Ben Folds Five - The Best of Sessions at West 54th, Vol. 1 - Brick ; buy CD on Amazon.com
Written from the perspective of a man who takes his young girlfriend to an abortion clinic, this song describes the emotional scars of "reproductive freedom": "Now she's feeling more alone / Than she ever has before. . . . As weeks went by / It showed that she was not fine."

24. "Der Kommissar," by After the Fire. buy CD on Amazon.com
On the misery of East German life: "Don't turn around, uh-oh / Der Kommissar's in town, uh-oh / He's got the power / And you're so weak / And your frustration / Will not let you speak." Also a hit song for Falco, who wrote it.

25. "The Battle of Evermore," by Led Zeppelin. Led Zeppelin Tribute - Tribute to Led Zeppelin IV - Battle of Evermore ; buy CD on Amazon.com
The lyrics are straight out of Robert Plant's Middle Earth period — there are lines about "ring wraiths" and "magic runes" — but for a song released in 1971, it's hard to miss the Cold War metaphor: "The tyrant's face is red."

26. "Capitalism," by Oingo Boingo. Oingo Boingo - Boingo Alive - Celebration of a Decade 1978-1988 - Capitalism ; buy CD on Amazon.com
"There's nothing wrong with Capitalism / There's nothing wrong with free enterprise. . . . You're just a middle class, socialist brat / From a suburban family and you never really had to work."

27. "Obvious Song," by Joe Jackson. buy CD on Amazon.com
For property rights and economic development, and against liberal hypocrisy: "There was a man in the jungle / Trying to make ends meet / Found himself one day with an axe in his hand / When a voice said 'Buddy can you spare that tree / We gotta save the world — starting with your land' / It was a rock 'n' roll millionaire from the USA / Doing three to the gallon in a big white car / And he sang and he sang 'til he polluted the air / And he blew a lot of smoke from a Cuban cigar."

28. "Janie's Got a Gun," by Aerosmith. Aerosmith - Young Lust: The Aerosmith Anthology - Janie's Got a Gun ; buy CD on Amazon.com
How the right to bear arms can protect women from sexual predators: "What did her daddy do? / It's Janie's last I.O.U. / She had to take him down easy / And put a bullet in his brain / She said 'cause nobody believes me / The man was such a sleaze / He ain't never gonna be the same."

29. "Rime of the Ancient Mariner," by Iron Maiden. Iron Maiden - Live After Death - Rime of the Ancient Mariner ; buy CD on Amazon.com
A heavy-metal classic inspired by a literary classic. How many other rock songs quote directly from Samuel Taylor Coleridge?

30. "You Can't Be Too Strong," by Graham Parker. Graham Parker - Master Hits ; buy CD on Amazon.com
Although it's not explicitly pro-life, this tune describes the horror of abortion with bracing honesty: "Did they tear it out with talons of steel, and give you a shot so that you wouldn't feel?"

31. "Small Town," by John Mellencamp. John Mellencamp - Words & Music - John Mellencamp's Greatest Hits - Small Town ; buy CD on Amazon.com
A Burkean rocker: "No, I cannot forget where it is that I come from / I cannot forget the people who love me."

32. "Keep Your Hands to Yourself," by The Georgia Satellites. Georgia Satellites - Georgia Satellites - Keep Your Hands To Yourself ; buy CD on Amazon.com
An outstanding vocal performance, with lyrics that affirm old-time sexual mores: "She said no huggy, no kissy until I get a wedding vow."

33. "You Can't Always Get What You Want," by The Rolling Stones. The Rolling Stones - The Rolling Stones Rock and Roll Circus - You Can't Always Get What You Want ; buy CD on Amazon.com
You can "[go] down to the demonstration" and vent your frustration, but you must understand that there's no such thing as a perfect society — there are merely decent and free ones.

34. "Godzilla," by Blue öyster Cult. Blue Öyster Cult - Then and Now: Blue Öyster Cult - Godzilla ; buy CD on Amazon.com
A 1977 classic about a big green monster — and more: "History shows again and again / How nature points up the folly of men."

35. "Who'll Stop the Rain," by Creedence Clearwater Revival. Creedence Clearwater Revival - Chronicle, Vol. 1 - Who'll Stop the Rain ; buy CD on Amazon.com
Written as an anti–Vietnam War song, this tune nevertheless is pessimistic about activism and takes a dim view of both Communism and liberalism: "Five-year plans and new deals, wrapped in golden chains . . ."

36. "Government Cheese," by The Rainmakers. buy CD on Amazon.com
A protest song against the welfare state by a Kansas City band that deserved more success than it got. The first line: "Give a man a free house and he'll bust out the windows."

37. "The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down," by The Band. The Band - The Band - The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down ; buy CD on Amazon.com
Despite its sins, the American South always has been about more than racism — this song captures its pride and tradition.

38. "I Can't Drive 55," by Sammy Hagar. Sammy Hagar - Sammy Hagar: Unboxed - I Can't Drive 55 ; buy CD on Amazon.com
A rocker's objection to the nanny state. (See also Hagar's pro-America song "VOA.")

39. "Property Line," by The Marshall Tucker Band. The Marshall Tucker Band - Long Hard Ride - Property Line ; buy CD on Amazon.com
The secret to happiness, according to these southern-rock heavyweights, is life, liberty, and property: "Well my idea of a good time / Is walkin' my property line / And knowin' the mud on my boots is mine."

40. "Wake Up Little Susie," by The Everly Brothers. The Everly Brothers - Everly Brothers: The Very Best of the - Wake Up Little Susie ; buy CD on Amazon.com
A smash hit in 1957, back when high-school social pressures were rather different from what they have become: "We fell asleep, our goose is cooked, our reputation is shot."

41. "The Icicle Melts," by The Cranberries. The Cranberries - No Need to Argue - The Icicle Melts ; buy CD on Amazon.com
A pro-life tune sung by Irish warbler Dolores O'Riordan: "I don't know what's happening to people today / When a child, he was taken away . . . 'Cause nine months is too long."

42. "Everybody's a Victim," by The Proclaimers. The Proclaimers - Persevere - Everybody's a Victim ; buy CD on Amazon.com
Best known for their smash hit "I'm Gonna Be (500 Miles)," this Scottish band also recorded a catchy song about the problem of suspending moral judgment: "It doesn't matter what I do / You have to say it's all right . . . Everybody's a victim / We're becoming like the USA."

43. "Wonderful," by Everclear. Everclear - The Best of Everclear - Wonderful ; buy CD on Amazon.com
A child's take on divorce: "I don't wanna hear you say / That I will understand someday / No, no, no, no / I don't wanna hear you say / You both have grown in a different way / No, no, no, no / I don't wanna meet your friends / And I don't wanna start over again / I just want my life to be the same / Just like it used to be."

44. "Two Sisters," by The Kinks. buy CD on Amazon.com
Why the "drudgery of being wed" is more rewarding than bohemian life.

45. "Taxman, Mr. Thief," by Cheap Trick. Cheap Trick - Cheap Trick - Taxman, Mr. Thief ; buy CD on Amazon.com
An anti-tax protest song: "You work hard, you went hungry / Now the taxman is out to get you. . . . He hates you, he loves money."

46. "Wind of Change," by The Scorpions. Scorpions - Box of Scorpions - Wind of Change ; buy CD on Amazon.com
A German hard-rock group's optimistic power ballad about the end of the Cold War and national reunification: "The world is closing in / Did you ever think / That we could be so close, like brothers / The future's in the air / I can feel it everywhere / Blowing with the wind of change."

47. "One," by Creed. Creed - My Own Prison - One ; buy CD on Amazon.com Against racial preferences: "Society blind by color / Why hold down one to raise another / Discrimination now on both sides / Seeds of hate blossom further."

48. "Why Don't You Get a Job," by The Offspring. The Offspring - Americana - Why Don't You Get a Job? ; buy CD on Amazon.com
The lyrics aren't exactly Shakespearean, but they're refreshingly blunt and they capture a motive force behind welfare reform.

49. "Abortion," by Kid Rock. buy CD on Amazon.com
A plaintive song sung by a man who confronts his unborn child's abortion: "I know your brothers and your sister and your mother too / Man I wish you could see them too."

50. "Stand By Your Man," by Tammy Wynette. Tammy Wynette - Tammy Wynette: Tammy's Greatest Hits - Stand by Your Man ; buy CD on Amazon.com
Hillary trashed it — isn't that enough? If you're worried that Wynette's original is too country, then check out the cover version by Motörhead.

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[CanYoAssDigIt] all the girls love to talk to matt....

The transcript of an IM chat I have with a nice girl.

void_lisa is currently not in your Messenger List.
Add to your Messenger List (Ctrl+Shift+A) Report as Spam (Alt+Shift+R)

void_lisa: hi... anyone therr?
mattlove: somebody is here
void_lisa: ohh your there hi...
void_lisa: a/s/l (age sex locattion)?
mattlove: 49/ m/ wenatchee
void_lisa: im 27/f/USA. was lookin at your prrofile. thought you might
like to chat.
void_lisa: so what have you been up to mattlove?
mattlove: eating raspberries and checking the time
void_lisa: cooll. i was just hangin out watching tv. i was getting
kinda horny (*blushes)
mattlove: yeah, Dan Rather has that effect on me too
void_lisa: feel like a little cyber fun with me ? please please...
mattlove: can you drill a hole in my head remotely?
void_lisa: i think ill just take that as a yes... being as that im
starting to get real horny here.. lol ok?
mattlove: well if you say so. give me a minute, I need to wipe up some vomit
void_lisa: alright how bout i get down on my knees in front of you
and help you out of your pants?
mattlove: i just choked on a dog biscuit, it was messy
mattlove: I had been drinking a lot, and the biscuit started looking
pretty good to me...
mattlove: but because I was drunk, I swallowed wrong!
void_lisa: tell me wht you want me to do with you while i slip out of
my panties
void_lisa: oh yeah babe.. dont stop. while i slide my hand down
between my legs and part my moist lips
mattlove: jeez, what a mess
void_lisa: oh it feels so good. Im holdding your pulsing cock in my
hand, my shiny red fingernails dig gently into your balls, while my
full, soft lips engulf the mass of your meat
mattlove: and then the dog bit me because I ate all his biscuits
void_lisa: open my webbsite so you can look at me while im sucking
you. use the link in my profile!
mattlove: don't you hate it when that happens?
void_lisa: what o you think of my pics?
mattlove: now I have to clean up the blood
void_lisa: shit the phone. dont stop stroking it. hold on....
mattlove: once I swallowed a phone, it hurt when I shit it.
mattlove: you have my sympathy.
void_lisa: sorry, I have to take this call, pobly take bout five
minutes. If you want, come to my page and lets finish this. I have my
cam on there cyberfungirls dot com look for me on there
mattlove: well, that sounds like a pretty good idea. I'll get some
Xanax, then I'll mosey on over

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Monday, May 29, 2006

[CanYoAssDigIt] Re: [human-ignorance] Re: Sun to Blame for Global Warming

Well, when Ronald Reagan informed me that trees were the major cause
of pollution, it really put my mind at ease. I stopped worrying and
learned to love Weyerhaeuser.

In fact, it inspired me to form a little group, a few Republican
panaceas and myself, and what we do is we go around at night and cut
down trees! We call our group the Humanity Liberation Front (HLF),
and we feel good about doing our part to protect the human race from
the terrorist expansionism of trees.

Now that I am aware of the threat from the sun, I'm going to encourage
the group to expand our operations, shift our focus from earth to
space, and see what we can do to cool down the sun. I remember in the
past some wise scientist proposed shooting the earth's nuclear waste
into the sun - that just might do the trick!

Get with the countdown, shake this square world and blast off for kicksville!

Matt
www.soundclick.com/BloodParadise

On 5/29/06, Geoff <teppich_maus@yahoo.de> wrote:
> Although climate changes and trends are on the whole a process of
> mother nature, this is not to say that humans do not play a part in
> our ecosystem. In the same way that we would conserve water during a
> drought, or conserve food during a famine, we should be taking the
> logical path of responsible behavior during this "global warming"
> trend.
>
> Let us not confuse global warming with reckless pollution.
>
>
> --- In human-ignorance@yahoogroups.com, "Matt Love"
> <matt.mattlove1@...> wrote:
>
> Thank goodness, now I can get that SUV I always wanted, and stop
> worrying about global warming! Thank you for sharing this and for
> advancing the cause of human ignorance!
>
> Matt
> www.soundclick.com/BloodParadise Ignorant music for ignorant humans!
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> Yahoo! Groups Links
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>

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[CanYoAssDigIt] Re: is it me you looking for?

Hi Katelyn

What do you have in mind, some kind of four-way with me and duke 23
and parodox6?

Well, as Alice Cooper once quipped, I'm not Bisexual, I'm trysexual,
I'll try anything once!

But I have to warn you, I can only get sexually aroused when the music
of SongPoet is playing on the stereo. You (that's you other two guys,
too) should check it out at www.soundclick.com/songpoet and let me
know if you can dig that. Get with the countdown, shake this square
world and blast off for kicksville!

On 5/29/06, Katelyn <cpntdxqt@gma.com> wrote:
> Hi there lovelby,
> This kindc of opportunity comes ones in a life. I don't want
> to miss it. Do you? I am cominag to yourc bplacec in few days
> and I though may be we can meet each other. If you don't mind
> I can send you my picture. I am a girl.
> You bcan correspond with me using my email qjc@freemailserv.com
>
>
>

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[CanYoAssDigIt] RE: Springsteen takes political tone on tour

Dear Tamera Conniff:

I read this quote from you in Reuters:

***
"People will sort of endure Bruce's politics because they just love
the music," said Tamara Conniff, executive editor and associate
publisher of Billboard magazine, in a telephone interview before the
concert.
***

I really have to disagree with you on this point. People love
Springsteen's politics, and they hate the politics of the people and
institutions he opposes. The president's approval has sunk into the
20s, providing confirmation that Springsteen is on the right track.

I wonder if you might be sort of mentally stuck in the time when your
father's group, the Ray Conniff Singers, offered the musical of bland
comfort food while war was waged on the population of another hapless
country. Ray may have left performing and recording radical tunes
like Guantanamera to firebrands like The Sandpipers, but it's a new
era and everybody's getting political: Springsteen, Neil Young, REM,
Bruce Cockburn, Steve Earle, Sheryl Crow , Radiohead, Dave Matthews
Band.... it goes on and on, and people respond to the polical message
because they are starved for truth... but things have changed; it's a
new era so get with the countdown, shake this square world and blast
off for kicksville!

Matt Love
www.soundclick.com/bloodparadise

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Sunday, May 28, 2006

[CanYoAssDigIt] RE: [human-ignorance] Sun to Blame for Global Warming

Thank goodness, now I can get that SUV I always wanted, and stop worrying about global warming!  Thank you for sharing this and for advancing the cause of human ignorance!

Matt
www.soundclick.com/BloodParadise
Ignorant music for ignorant humans!


On 5/28/06, Geoff < teppich_maus@yahoo.de > wrote:
Sun to Blame for Global Warming
by John Carlisle

Those looking for the culprit responsible for global warming have
missed the obvious choice - the sun. While it may come as a
newsflash to some, scientific evidence conclusively shows that the
sun plays a far more important role in causing global warming and
global cooling than any other factor, natural or man-made. In fact,
what may very well be the ultimate ironic twist in the global
warming controversy is that the same solar forces that caused 150
years of warming are on the verge of producing a prolonged period of
cooling.

The evidence for future cooling is supported by considerable
scientific research that has only recently begun to come to light.
It wasn't until 1980, with the aid of NASA satellites, that
scientists definitively proved that the sun's brightness - or
radiance - varies in intensity, and that these variations occur in
predictable cyclical patterns. This was a crucial discovery because
the climate models used by greenhouse theory proponents always
assumed that the sun's radiance was constant. With that assumption
in hand, they could ignore solar influences and focus on other
influences, including human.

That turned out to be a reckless assumption. Further investigation
revealed that there is a strong correlation between the variations
in solar irradiance and fluctuations in the Earth's temperature.
When the sun gets dimmer, the Earth gets cooler; when the sun gets
brighter, the Earth gets hotter. So important is the sun in climate
change that half of the 1.5° F temperature increase since 1850 is
directly attributable to changes in the sun. According to NASA
scientists David Lind and Judith Lean, only one-quarter of a degree
can be ascribed to other causes, such as greenhouse gases, through
which human activities can theoretically exert some influence.

The correlation between major changes in the Earth's temperature and
changes in solar radiance is quite compelling. A perfect example is
the Little Ice Age that lasted from 1650 to 1850. Temperatures in
this era fell to as much as 2° F below today's temperature, causing
the glaciers to advance, the canals in Venice to freeze and major
crop failures. Interestingly, this dramatic cooling happened in a
period when the sun's radiance had fallen to exceptionally low
levels. Between 1645 and 1715, the sun was in a stage that
scientists refer to as the Maunder Minimum. In this minimum, the sun
has few sunspots and low magnetism which automatically indicates a
lower radiance level. When the sun began to emerge from the minimum,
radiance increased and by 1850 the temperature had warmed up enough
for the Little Ice Age to end.

The Maunder Minimum is not an isolated event: it is a cyclical
phenomenon that typically appears for 70 years following 200-300
years of warming. With only a few exceptions, whenever there is a
solar minimum, the Earth gets colder. For example, Europe in the
13th and 15th Centuries experienced significantly lower temperatures
and in both cases the cold spells coincided with a minimum. Similar
correlations were found in the 9th Century and again in the 7th
Century. Since 8700 B.C., there have been at least ten major cold
periods similar to the Little Ice Age. Nine of those ten cold spells
coincided with Maunder Minima.

There is no reason to believe that this 10,000-year-old cycle of
solar-induced warming and cooling will change. Dr. Sallie Baliunas,
an astrophysicist with the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for
Astrophysics and one of the nation's leading experts on global
climate change, believes that we may be nearing the end of a solar
warming cycle. Since the last minimum ended in 1715, Baliunas says
there is a strong possibility that the Earth will start cooling off
in the early part of the 21st Century.

Indeed, it could already be happening. Of the 1.5° F in warming the
planet experienced over the last 150 years, two-thirds of that
increase, or one degree, occurred between 1850 and 1940. In the last
50 years, the planetary temperature increased at a significantly
slower rate of 0.5° F - precisely when dramatically increasing
amounts of man-made carbon dioxide emissions should have been
accelerating warming. Further buttressing the arguments for future
cooling is the evidence from NASA satellites that the global
temperature has actually fallen 0.04° F since 1979.

Of course, it is impossible to precisely predict when solar radiance
will drop and global temperatures will begin falling. But one thing
is certain: There is little evidence that mankind is responsible for
global warming. There is considerable evidence that the sun causes
warming and will most likely stimulate cooling in the not so distant
future.

# # #

John K. Carlisle is the Director of The National Center for Public
Policy Research's Environmental Policy Task Force. Comments may be
sent to JCarlisle@nationalcenter.org.


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