Welcome to the new form of slavery

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ajkula66
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Re: Welcome to the new form of slavery

#91 Post by ajkula66 » Sat Dec 12, 2009 8:46 pm

qviri wrote:
I wonder about Mr. Hockney's thoughts regarding the Intelligence Services Act of 1994.
Isn't this a Canadian law? I might have gotten up on my stupid side of the bed this morning, but I don't quite get what you were aiming at.

killer wrote:
So, if Magna Carta was sealed in 1215 and the police force began six centuries later, how can Europol (or Interpol, MI5, Special Branch, etc.) affect Magna Carta?
Nice try. Of course Magna Carta is not referring to a (non-existant at the time) police force but it does grant certain protections from King's abuse to His subjects. Especially in the second version from 1225.
BTW, Damian Hockney defected from the Conservative Party. He is a one-man-band member of the Greater London Authority. Does he amount to a hill of beans?
Probably not in the sense of his political power or influence. But it doesn't necessarily make his opinions wrong or worthless.

I seem to recall a leader of a small and unimportant party some 80 years ago who wanted a custom vehicle built by a premier German manufacturer, whose representatives made fun of him and basically showed him the door...but Mercedes Benz obliged. Several years later, the premier manufacturer by the name of Maybach was all but wiped off the face of the Earth, since Adolf Hitler never forgot the humiliation...and made the MB official vehicle of Wermacht. Maybach was allowed to produce tanks, though... :wink:
This is an EU matter. It has nothing to do with a firm in Pennsylvania that purports to preserve freedom
Why? Isn't everyone entitled to an opinion, right or wrong?

You are trying very hard to show that Euro-scepticizm is all but buried in the UK. However, although exact percentages are presently unknown to myself, it seems to be very much alive and kicking amongst Britons. And with a good reason, IMO...

http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/news/danie ... ic_Groups/

http://www.economist.com/blogs/charlema ... ves_not_as

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world ... 87515.html

http://www.euractiv.com/en/security/eur ... cle-151582

and if I were a Brit, this one would make me quite upset at the very least...

http://archbishop-cranmer.blogspot.com/ ... lamic.html

and, qviri, as for the Thinkpol (sorry meant to say Europol) not being entitled to conduct investigations or arrest suspects, check this scenario:

http://www.thecapitalnews.co.uk/
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Re: Welcome to the new form of slavery

#92 Post by qviri » Sun Dec 13, 2009 12:37 am

BillMorrow wrote:> No, I prefer to think for myself and form my own opinions...

when i asked if you had done ANY research on the subject of socialism..

so is that how you studied at college..?
busy forming your own opiniopns in a vacuum..? :)
I'm studying technical sciences at university, where we learn facts, not opinions.

Further, I don't think articles advocating the ratification of the United States constitution are among the best sources of information on, as you so precisely put it, "socialism".
BillMorrow wrote:i'm thinking no matter what i have to say that you will continue to support the idea that being a leech is good until the other hosts blood runs out..
I'm thinking no matter what I have to say, you will continue to misinterpret my words as if I was more red than товарищ Ленин.
BillMorrow wrote:please don't bother replying until you have done SOME reading..
federalist papers, milton firedman, 5000 year leap, atlas shrugged (have not read that one myself, i wonder if they have cliff's notes for something like that?)..
Would it be at all admissible to read things that do not support your point of view?
ajkula66 wrote:> I wonder about Mr. Hockney's thoughts regarding the Intelligence Services Act of 1994.

Isn't this a Canadian law? I might have gotten up on my stupid side of the bed this morning, but I don't quite get what you were aiming at.
It is an act of the United Kingdom parliament, enabling among other things giving the SIS immunity from acts committed abroad.
ajkula66 wrote:and, qviri, as for the Thinkpol (sorry meant to say Europol) not being entitled to conduct investigations or arrest suspects, check this scenario:

http://www.thecapitalnews.co.uk/
Ooh, tentacles, now there's something I can get behind.

That site is an excellent showcase of your arguments.
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Re: Welcome to the new form of slavery

#93 Post by ajkula66 » Sun Dec 13, 2009 1:22 am

qviri wrote:
The EU can and does work, alarmist statements about 'difficulties' notwithstanding.
The same was said for USSR, time and time again, for 75 years or so...and for Yugoslavia, in two different guises, for a total of 68...wrooooong.... :banghead:
That site is an excellent showcase of your arguments.
I wasn't using it as a showcase for my arguments - I'm done with that approach since it obviously doesn't open anyone's eyes around here anyway - but for pointing out a scenario that shouldn't be that foreign to someone who grew up where you had...

Individuals - especially intelligent ones - who were exposed to totalitarian systems first hand usually have an ability to recognize when democracy starts going haywire faster than ones who haven't had such charming experiences...so you do leave me quite puzzled in that respect...

EU as I see it has been conceived straight from all the horrific visions that Kafka, Zamyatin and Orwell had a long time ago...
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Re: Welcome to the new form of slavery

#94 Post by BillMorrow » Sun Dec 13, 2009 2:18 am

i subscribe to a service called "Stratfor" who puts together reports on, mostly, foreign issues that might effect the USA..

i just now opened a report sent on the 11th..
i will copy a small part here..
interested parties can get the whole thing free including a free trial subscription by going to the http://www.stratfor.com website..
i highlight the most interesting portion..
Greece: A Looming Default?
.
.
.
Roots of the Crisis

Greece is considered one of Europe’s most notorious overspenders. Even prior to the current crisis, it was fighting high budget deficits, primarily caused by high social spending, a symptom of the country’s ever-present social tensions. The government’s liabilities on the pension system and through ownership of unprofitable enterprises, such as Olympia Airways, have been difficult to jettison due to the threat of unrest, which flares up whenever Athens tries to rein in spending. Total government spending on social programs represented almost 20 percent of gross domestic product (GDP) in 2008, the highest percentage in Europe and one that has risen almost every year since 1997, when it was 13.9 percent of GDP. This is higher than even Italy (17.7 percent of GDP) and France (17.5 percent of GDP), the two traditional big spenders in Europe. Because of the large public debt and the increasing deficit, the government has often turned to methods such as fudging statistical reporting to the EU in order to avoid disciplinary measures from Brussels.
so you can see that too many people "on the dole" is not such a good thing, long term..
not for the EU member states or anyone else except those receiving the free lunch.. :roll:
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Re: Welcome to the new form of slavery

#95 Post by dsvochak » Sun Dec 13, 2009 12:12 pm

I used to be an anarchist but I quit because there were too many rules

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Re: Welcome to the new form of slavery

#96 Post by ajkula66 » Sun Dec 13, 2009 2:20 pm

OK, reality check # 1:

The Charter said (Article 11/1)
1. Everyone has the right to freedom of expression. This right shall include freedom to hold
opinions and to receive and impart information and ideas without interference by public authority and
regardless of frontiers.
The reality looks like this:

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/u ... 861271.ece

http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/896785.html

http://www.ejpress.org/article/news/uk/2292

In the interest of full disclosure on my part: none of this is about Holocaust but about freedom of thought and speech. I don't care if someone writes an article in Times of London accusing me of being a spy for the Martians, this type of prosecution is unacceptable. Thought police (thinkpol) at its very best...

More to come as I go through the Charter, stay tuned if you've got nothing better to do... :D
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Re: Welcome to the new form of slavery

#97 Post by BillMorrow » Sun Dec 13, 2009 3:11 pm

i'll bet the chinese communist constitution and the soviet russian constitution both sounded pretty good as well..
so does our US constitution, which seems to be a model for many other constitutions (or founding documents)..
and the cuban and venezulan documents all must SOUND great as well..
but here in the USA our sacred constitution and the amendments thereto are being ignored and have been ignored for many years by both parties..
so too for the honduran constitution when zelaya tried to run for a constitutionally prohibited 2nd term..
the hondurans LEGALLY threw the bum out but the leftie countries including the USA all came down hard on the honduran congress, supreme court and army for upholding THEIR constitution..
surprise surprise, in this one small country, the rule of liberty won one battle (so far)..

so, yeah, sure, the EU document SOUNDS great, especially if i am a poor muslim or hundreds of thousands of poor muslims seeking "a better life"..

tell theo van gough about his "rights" and that danish newspaper and/or cartoonist..
they have or had rights..

the loss of liberty does not usually all occur at one instant, it starts small and then liberty slides down that slippery slope to stateist tyranny..

i would suggest to those in the EU for whom the socialist way of life seems so alluring, to vote with THEIR feet and move either within the EU to a socialist part (greece comes to mind at this moment) or to cuba, venezuela or any of the other so called social democracies..

let me know how THAT works out for you..
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Re: Welcome to the new form of slavery

#98 Post by qviri » Sun Dec 13, 2009 5:12 pm

BillMorrow wrote:i would suggest to those in the EU for whom the socialist way of life seems so alluring, to vote with THEIR feet and move either within the EU to a socialist part (greece comes to mind at this moment) or to cuba, venezuela or any of the other so called social democracies..

let me know how THAT works out for you..
Or Sweden, or Denmark...

Picking the worst of examples is pretty fun.
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Re: Welcome to the new form of slavery

#99 Post by killer » Sun Dec 13, 2009 7:22 pm

One minute some people stand behind the Great Charter of England (Magna Carta) drawn up in the 13th Century, later amended, and then most of it repealed.

The next minute the same people attack the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the EU, which is largely based on the principles of Magna Carta.

When I described the fact that both sides of politics in the EU are benign, I have to doubt whether people know what word actually means if they associate democratic socialism with Cuba and Venezuela.

Please don't mention Orwell in the context of the EU. He died before its inception. He was against totalitarianism and in favour of democratic socialism.

How acceptable is it to blame Muslims for problems in the world any more than Christians, Jews, Hindus, etc? I find it objectionable.

It seems that moderate citizens could say the sky was blue and others would swear it was red. What point is there in contributing to a forum where nobody listens?

To repeat the point that this topic was written by a EU citizen about the EU and all we seem to have had is a diatribe from the east coast states of America. If I send them a blank sheet of paper would they be able to write down the names all EU member states without looking it up, and fill the names in on a blank map? :roll:
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Re: Welcome to the new form of slavery

#100 Post by BillMorrow » Sun Dec 13, 2009 7:33 pm

Or Sweden, or Denmark...

Picking the worst of examples is pretty fun.
well, you did not expect me to pick what passes for the best examples now did you..? :)
why would i try to undercut my argument..

i'm not at all sure but what, please, since ABBA, have the swedish done except have one of the highest tax rates going..?
maybe apple and intel came from sweden..?
there must be a lot of examples of a vibrant business sector just inventing new stuff daily..
because all those swedes just are aching to pay 70% of what they earn to support the downdrodden proletarian masses..

now i'm NOT saying i would not want to visit sweden (in the summer) or greece but i don't think i would want to live there at this particular time..

but lets not start with the best examples of which there are few, please show me how the cubans all just love the castro brothers SO MUCH that so many of them are now living in south florida..?

its interesting to note that california, with so many many millionaires is a fiscal basket case due to over-the-top social spending..
but WAIT, theres more..!
many of those california millionaires are now nevada millionaires..
those that can are voting with their feet..
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Re: Welcome to the new form of slavery

#101 Post by qviri » Sun Dec 13, 2009 8:13 pm

BillMorrow wrote:> Or Sweden, or Denmark...
> Picking the worst of examples is pretty fun.

well, you did not expect me to pick what passes for the best examples now did you..? :)
why would i try to undercut my argument..
Intellectual honesty, perhaps? You've read them, please tell me, did the authors of federalist papers use some of the world's most dysfunctional states as examples in their claims?
BillMorrow wrote:i'm not at all sure but what, please, since ABBA, have the swedish done except have one of the highest tax rates going..?
maybe apple and intel came from sweden..?
there must be a lot of examples of a vibrant business sector just inventing new stuff daily..
because all those swedes just are aching to pay 70% of what they earn to support the downdrodden proletarian masses..
IKEA, the marvel of a supply chain, for one. Finland essentially single-handedly invented modern cellular communications and Nokia, as you might know, is the world's largest phone manufacturer by a fair margin, still headquartered outside Helsinki. Denmark came up with one of the world's most popular toys, it's called Lego.

That's with a population of just over 20 milion between all three.
BillMorrow wrote:but lets not start with the best examples of which there are few, please show me how the cubans all just love the castro brothers SO MUCH that so many of them are now living in south florida..?
Cuba, a few strong points notwithstanding, is a disaster, and you won't see me arguing otherwise.
BillMorrow wrote:its interesting to note that california, with so many many millionaires is a fiscal basket case due to over-the-top social spending..
but WAIT, theres more..!
many of those california millionaires are now nevada millionaires..
those that can are voting with their feet..
Can you substantiate that?

Looking at the PDF I linked earlier regarding state millionaire counts, it would have told you the relative count of millionaires in Nevada went down to 4.67% in 2009 from 5.06% in 2008 (an absolute change of -3399) and from 5.37% in 2007 (an absolute change of -1579, for a total of -4978). During the same time periods, California went to 5.28% in 2009 from 5.74% in 2008 (an absolute change of -59946) and from 5.78% in 2007 (an absolute change of -1948, for a total of -61894).

If you want to claim that any sizeable amount X of California millionaires moved to Nevada, you're going to have to explain why X+4978 of Nevada millionaires lost money or moved away. If citing federalist papers, please be sure to provide a quote or a paraphrasing. I'm looking forward to reading it.
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Re: Welcome to the new form of slavery

#102 Post by ajkula66 » Sun Dec 13, 2009 8:28 pm

killer wrote:
If I send them a blank sheet of paper would they be able to write down the names all EU member states without looking it up, and fill the names in on a blank map? :roll:
Who are you referring to as "them"...please clarify. Thank-you.
Please don't mention Orwell in the context of the EU. He died before its inception. He was against totalitarianism and in favour of democratic socialism.
Well, Orwell had some pretty interesting visions to say the very least, and it's only for the strength and lucidity of these visions that he is being mentioned here. Along with - equally dead in physical sense but still living through the genius of their work - Kafka and Zamyatin.
One minute some people stand behind the Great Charter of England (Magna Carta) drawn up in the 13th Century, later amended, and then most of it repealed.

The next minute the same people attack the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the EU, which is largely based on the principles of Magna Carta.
Absolutely not, and you know that. I wasn't attacking the Charter, just pointing out how much out of touch with reality it was. It was (and still is) the reality that I'm having problems swallowing with that wonderful rose-coloured dressing that you pour all over it...
How acceptable is it to blame Muslims for problems in the world any more than Christians, Jews, Hindus, etc? I find it objectionable.
We don't want to risk this website getting shut down by politically correct morons, now, do we? All I'm going to say is: read Quran. Along with some medieval history. Including the Battle of Kosovo along with the fall of Constantinople.

And before you even go there, yes, I have read the aforementioned book myself.
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Re: Welcome to the new form of slavery

#103 Post by qviri » Sun Dec 13, 2009 9:27 pm

ajkula66 wrote:> The EU can and does work, alarmist statements about 'difficulties' notwithstanding.

The same was said for USSR, time and time again, for 75 years or so...and for Yugoslavia, in two different guises, for a total of 68...wrooooong.... :banghead:
The same thing was also said about many other states in defending them from their detractors, and the majority of them ended up much better than either of the two examples you've cited.
ajkula66 wrote:but for pointing out a scenario that shouldn't be that foreign to someone who grew up where you had...

Individuals - especially intelligent ones - who were exposed to totalitarian systems first hand usually have an ability to recognize when democracy starts going haywire faster than ones who haven't had such charming experiences...so you do leave me quite puzzled in that respect...
For the record, Polska Rzeczpospolita Ludowa officially became Rzeczpospolita Polska when I was at the precious age of two. I may have been talking at that point, but I am not going to claim having first-hand experience. Perhaps that is where we disconnect.

28 years ago today, Poland was put under martial law. Like I said, I am studying and intend to make a living based on technical sciences (no, Bill, not off other people's money), so I am not going to claim expertise, but I did read a bit of the history.

I get the sense that a lot of people here, you obviously not included, don't really have a sense of how bad a real, economically failing totalitarian system could be, so I'll introduce a few things.

In 1981, several thousand people (BBC cites "tens of thousands") active in the opposition were arrested for anti-state activities, read: organizing a trade union and not towing the party line. The now famous electrician was interned for 11 months. If anything on a nearly similar scale is happening in the EU, I am unaware.

All phone lines were cut, TV and radio, all previously limited to broadcasting government material, were made to only broadcast messages from the ruling military. Mail was censored. Within technical abilities, evil capitalist-sponsored radio stations were jammed. The EU has Internet, with very weak attempts to control its contents in some countries.

You needed government permission to travel between cities, for example to visit relatives during Christmas. The EU has the Schengen agreement and the area covered is continuously expanding.

Protests were pacified up to and including deadly force. 9 people were killed protesting at one of the coal mines. A decade earlier, during 7 days in December 1970, 39 people people were killed in protests and unrest in northern Poland. The death toll of 20 nights of French riots in 2005, mostly without political context, was 2.

Telling the truth about some events of the World War II would have gotten you into a lot of trouble. The EU has some countries where lying about some events of the WW2 gets you in trouble. While I can't fully support this, I have not been raised as a member of a country that a few generations back systematically murdered several million civilians, so I am not in position to fully condemn it either. Poland has a similar situation regarding what we call the Katyń lie; I'm not sure if it's a law. I am not thrilled about it, but I am not surprised it exists given the history of having to take lying down getting lied in our face about it for several decades.

I cannot see the EU going down the slippery slope. If it is, it must be very far up. It is definitely not perfect. There are some things I am not a big fan of, but none of them seem to be in place for no reason other than to oppress. Perhaps it is the lack of experience. On the other hand, perhaps your experience is prejudicing you, too.

And about...
qviri wrote:That site is an excellent showcase of your arguments.
Feel free to accuse me of intellectual bias, but I believe that if you wish to be treated seriously, you should present your arguments in a decent way. I cannot take The Capital News seriously in any way whatsoever.

Take this leaflet. Unfortunately it is in Polish only. Written at a time when merely possessing it, let alone distributing or writing, would have gotten a person into lots of trouble with the authorities, it gives specific details regarding alleged sending of Polish goods to USSR by the train-load at a time when these goods were very difficult to obtain in Poland.

It gives the location of the observations, amount of train cars for each category of goods for each month, and cites by name the source of this information.

Now, I have some issues with the information presented, most notably since Poland would have been required to export goods in order to pay back our national debt at the time, but at least there was enough information for me to disagree with. There is opinion and polemics, but separate from the raw data.

Contrast it with The Capital News site, which despite of operating in an environment freer by several orders of magnitude, gives no details in the Europol story, no source, not by position let alone by name. There is nothing except scaremongering written in a conspiracy theorist tone.

Where is the address? Where are the quotes? Where is the attribution? Why does something I am supposed to treat seriously use the word "presumably" and follows it with the wildest fantasy?
killer wrote:If I send them a blank sheet of paper would they be able to write down the names all EU member states without looking it up, and fill the names in on a blank map?
"Communism" is a country, right?
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Re: Welcome to the new form of slavery

#104 Post by ajkula66 » Sun Dec 13, 2009 11:08 pm

qviri wrote:
The same thing was also said about many other states in defending them from their detractors, and the majority of them ended up much better than either of the two examples you've cited.
Fair enough. But let's not forget that EU is nowhere near 60 years old yet... :twisted:
28 years ago today, Poland was put under martial law
A bad sign of aging on my part...I remember it like it was yesterday. Seriously. Polish people will probably never know how much they were cheered for in those dim days...
Feel free to accuse me of intellectual bias, but I believe that if you wish to be treated seriously, you should present your arguments in a decent way. I cannot take The Capital News seriously in any way whatsoever.
That's a fair statement. Please feel free to re-visit the links that I posted regarding arrests of Holocaust deniers. As previously stated, it's unacceptable in my book. And, once again, it has absolutely nothing to do with the Holocaust itself.

Europe in which one can be prosecuted for expressing his/hers beliefs - as deadly wrong as they may be - is not the Europe that I can be proud of any more, and as much as I was brought up to be a citizen of the world, I was always Euro-centric. None of this has anything to do with a decade spent in the U.S. where some laws that are completely foreign to me are also in effect...the very era that we're living in gives me agita, overall...
There are some things I am not a big fan of, but none of them seem to be in place for no reason other than to oppress. Perhaps it is the lack of experience. On the other hand, perhaps your experience is prejudicing you, too.
To close this one with a very bad cliche, only time will tell...
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Re: Welcome to the new form of slavery

#105 Post by qviri » Mon Dec 14, 2009 12:37 am

ajkula66 wrote:That's a fair statement. Please feel free to re-visit the links that I posted regarding arrests of Holocaust deniers. As previously stated, it's unacceptable in my book. And, once again, it has absolutely nothing to do with the Holocaust itself.

Europe in which one can be prosecuted for expressing his/hers beliefs - as deadly wrong as they may be - is not the Europe that I can be proud of any more, and as much as I was brought up to be a citizen of the world, I was always Euro-centric. None of this has anything to do with a decade spent in the U.S. where some laws that are completely foreign to me are also in effect...the very era that we're living in gives me agita, overall...
I agree with this in principle and in general, and I do recognize your beliefs about history have no bearing on this. However, the real world is a complicated place.

To use the old and clichéd example, expressing your belief that there is a fire in a crowded theatre might not be looked at kindly, and would likely earn you at least a psychiatric evaluation even in the most open of societies.

I am not keen on excessive political correctness and the "hate speech" label, but expressing a belief that people of a given nationality or ethnicity ought to be killed doesn't sit well with me. Most countries have a law about uttering threats or incitement to murder or violence, and this is fine in my book.

Given this, I do think some limits on expressing beliefs are appropriate.

While claiming you are a Martian spy might not have too much of an effect, claiming you are willfully lying about millions of your countrymen being murdered for the purpose of exploiting people's empathy or guilt is not quite in the same league for most people.

There were many calls of "never again" and while we definitely must be careful not to swing over too hard in the other direction, I am not surprised or particularly dismayed some rules about Holocaust denial do exist.
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Re: Welcome to the new form of slavery

#106 Post by BillMorrow » Mon Dec 14, 2009 2:25 am

killer, qviri..

look, i'm not going to spend the time replying to each point and counter point..
we each hold our particular views..
you think an all powerful socialist state is great and i think the opposite is better..

i don't know about you killer but qviri seems to need some world experience..

i got a good dose and thus my views are what you see..

i hate to see a major portion of europe falling under the thumb of islam who will impose their rules on the remaining europeans..

this is a case of political correctness going way too far..

agree or disagree, my points are there to read or ignore as you wish..

i always like to hear the opposing views and having heard them i am thinking its time to move on to other subjects.. :)
Bill Morrow, kept by parrots :parrot: & cockatoos
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She was not what you would call refined,
She was not what you would call unrefined,
She was the type of person who kept a parrot.
~~~Mark Twain~~~

qviri
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Re: Welcome to the new form of slavery

#107 Post by qviri » Wed Dec 16, 2009 6:58 pm

BillMorrow wrote:i don't know about you killer but qviri seems to need some world experience..
Coming from you, I will take that as a compliment.

Will "some" world experience let me accept unsubstantiated claims about California millionaires voting with their feet at face value...?
X220/IPS, T60p/IPS
Nothing endures but change

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Re: Welcome to the new form of slavery

#108 Post by BillMorrow » Wed Dec 16, 2009 7:12 pm

qviri, if you wish to chat about the demographics of california, then start a new thread devoted to that issue..
meanwhile, i will leave it to you to do the google searches to learn who is moving where..
your claim that my claim is unsubstantiated needs to be substantiated.. :)
Bill Morrow, kept by parrots :parrot: & cockatoos
Sysop - forum.thinkpads.com

*
She was not what you would call refined,
She was not what you would call unrefined,
She was the type of person who kept a parrot.
~~~Mark Twain~~~

qviri
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Location: Berlin, Germany

Re: Welcome to the new form of slavery

#109 Post by qviri » Wed Dec 16, 2009 10:50 pm

BillMorrow wrote:your claim that my claim is unsubstantiated needs to be substantiated.. :)
Can do:

"Bill Morrow's claim is offered unsubstantiated, uncorroborated, and unsupported by other evidence:
BillMorrow in [1] wrote:its interesting to note that california, with so many many millionaires is a fiscal basket case due to over-the-top social spending..
but WAIT, theres more..!
many of those california millionaires are now nevada millionaires..
those that can are voting with their feet..
REFERENCES:

[1] Morrow, B. Re: Welcome to the new form of slavery, December 13, 2009 [forum post]. Eatonton, GA: thinkpads.com Support Community. Available: http://forums.thinkpads.com/viewtopic.p ... 19#p546619. [Accessed Dec. 16, 2009]."
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Re: Welcome to the new form of slavery

#110 Post by BillMorrow » Thu Dec 17, 2009 2:23 am

what part of
start a new thread devoted to that issue..
do you NOT understand..?
Bill Morrow, kept by parrots :parrot: & cockatoos
Sysop - forum.thinkpads.com

*
She was not what you would call refined,
She was not what you would call unrefined,
She was the type of person who kept a parrot.
~~~Mark Twain~~~

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