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#31
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Rand Simberg wrote: Yes, to the point that it's become chic for clueless college kids to worship a brutal thug that they know nothing about. He looked better that Fidel any day of the week; Fidel just looked frumpy- he even tried the Che beret, but he just looked like he should be reciting beat poetry in a Greenwich Village coffee house: http://galizacig.org/imxact/2004/08/...tro_ruz320.jpg There have been only a few bloodthirsty people who ever knew how to dress well- here's another one...this outfit just oozes "African Despot": http://us-africa.tripod.com/mobutu.jpg Very few people can make leopard fur work for them, Mobuto was one; Jacqueline Kennedy was another. No matter what Idi Amin wore, he still looked like he should be standing by the front door of the Kampala Hilton, doffing his hat to the arriving guests: http://www.rnw.nl/informarn/assets/images/Idi-Amin.jpg Rand, we need a look that says "you" in no uncertain terms...that defines the very essence of your character, as well as your politics and overall world view...I'm thinking either this http://www.erikssonstunnbrod.se/max/ming.gif Or this: http://www.monstrula.de/filme/robotmonster/pic9.jpg :-D Pat |
#32
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Herb Schaltegger wrote: Please don't mess with my traditions. I still have mine (several, in fact) from my Air Force days. Still have your chukka boots? The **** Cap served no useful purpose other than to gather lint and dandruff. pat |
#33
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Jim,
I've met Bruce Gagnon and he's a very sincere, idealistic person. Bruce has perfectly rational objections about launching plutonium in rockets. That would make a decent terrorist weapon -- blow up the Space Shuttle when it is a few miles in the air, with a large amount of plutonium on board. There would be plenty of radioactive debris coming back down to propagate lots of healthy cancer cells for a few generations. btw his website is: http://www.space4peace.org/ This is a great site to give an alternative perspective on space exploration and space cooperation. Space policy shouldn't take place in a vacuum. "Jim Oberg" wrote in message ... "Nazis Run Our Space Program" -- Peace Activist Bruce Gag-Me. Bruce Gagnon has long been known as an anti-nuke whiner at Cape Canaveral, where his name is mispronounced 'Bruce Gag-Me'. Seems he's getting on the call-Bushies-all-nazis meme pretty enthusiastically. And his photograph on his website shows him wearing a BERET -- enough said!! Link courtesy of http://www.transterrestrial.com/, a site I really like. http://space4peace.blogspot.com/2005...r-present.html Monday, February 28, 2005 NAZI PAST OUR PRESENT A woman called tonight that has seen our video called Arsenal of Hypocrisy: The space program and the military industrial complex. She was very moved by the part of the video that tells the story about the Nazi rocket scientists brought to the U.S. after WWII in the secret military program called Operation Paperclip. I first learned about the story when I read the book Secret Agenda by former CNN investigative reporter Linda Hunt. The book told in detail how 1,500 top Nazi scientists were smuggled into the U.S. through Boston and West Palm Beach, Florida. One hundred of them, along with 100 copies of Hitler's V-2 rocket, were brought to Huntsville, Alabama to create the U.S. space program. Wernher von Braun, the head of Hitler's team that built the V-1 and V-2 rockets was made the first director of NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville. |
#34
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On Fri, 04 Mar 2005 11:07:15 +0000, Nathan Gant wrote:
Jim, We hear you. I've met Bruce Gagnon and he's a very sincere, idealistic person. Undoubtedly. Bruce has perfectly rational objections about launching plutonium in rockets. Which has exactly what to do with accusations of "NASA Nazism"? And by the way, according to the referenced web site, he does not have "rational objections". All he has is already-discredited anti-nuke scare stories. That would make a decent terrorist weapon -- Assertion. One that plays the "terrorism" card. And to back up that assertion? blow up the Space Shuttle when it is a few miles in the air, with a large amount of plutonium on board. ....you handwave a scenario that illustrates massive ignorance about future shuttle ops... There would be plenty of radioactive debris coming back down to propagate lots of healthy cancer cells for a few generations. .... and cap it with more assertions that do not match up with evidence from tests simulationg launch accident conditions and nuclear materials. And still no evidence whatsoever to support the "Nazi NASA" accusations. btw his website is: http://www.space4peace.org/ May the Puma Sisters preserve us... they're still wimpering about _Cassinni_ on that site. This is a great site to give an alternative perspective on space exploration and space cooperation. Space policy shouldn't take place in a vacuum. Such as the one that evidently exists in the site writers' craniums? -- Chuck Stewart "Anime-style catgirls: Threat? Menace? Or just studying spaceborne fission reactors?" |
#35
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There was also the little issue that they ended up being manufactured
in China... Yeah, sort of like the coffee cup a buddy of mine gave me from his air defense unit. The cup has an air defense logo on it with the the moto "America's Shield" written under it. On the bottom of the cup, "Made in China" |
#36
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On Thu, 03 Mar 2005 22:35:24 -0600, in a place far, far away, Pat
Flannery made the phosphor on my monitor glow in such a way as to indicate that: Rand, we need a look that says "you" in no uncertain terms...that defines the very essence of your character, as well as your politics and overall world view...I'm thinking either this http://www.erikssonstunnbrod.se/max/ming.gif Or this: http://www.monstrula.de/filme/robotmonster/pic9.jpg :-D I and my fashion consultants will give it all the consideration that it's due. |
#37
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On Fri, 04 Mar 2005 11:07:15 GMT, in a place far, far away, "Nathan
Gant" made the phosphor on my monitor glow in such a way as to indicate that: Jim, I've met Bruce Gagnon and he's a very sincere, idealistic person. I've no doubt he is. He's sincerely loonytunes. |
#38
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Nathan Gant wrote: Bruce has perfectly rational objections about launching plutonium in rockets. That would make a decent terrorist weapon -- blow up the Space Shuttle when it is a few miles in the air, with a large amount of plutonium on board. The Plutonium is encased in ceramic designed to withstand not only a in-flight explosion, but even a reentry, IIRC. Pat |
#39
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Damon Hill ) wrote:
: (Eric Chomko) wrote in : : : Rand Simberg ) wrote: : : On Thu, 3 Mar 2005 18:48:28 +0000 (UTC), in a place far, far away, : : (Eric Chomko) made the phosphor on my : : monitor glow in such a way as to indicate that: : : : : But isn't China our most favored nation WRT trade? : : : No. Apparently you're as ignorant of the meaning of the phrase "most : : favored nation." : : What does it mean then? : http://www.itds.treas.gov/mfn.html Thanks. I believe the point is that despite China's human rights violations, as we see it, we grant a wavier every single year to allow them normal trade relations, formerly nation most favored WRT trade. Huh, I guess THAT really sends the message about our commitment to ending their communist ways and their human rights violations. Eric : --Damon |
#40
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"Eric Chomko" wrote in message
... Thanks. I believe the point is that despite China's human rights violations, as we see it, we grant a wavier every single year to allow them normal trade relations, formerly nation most favored WRT trade. Huh, I guess THAT really sends the message about our commitment to ending their communist ways and their human rights violations. The only communists in China are some people in the government, and even then only on the outside |
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