denial of service and government rights

Dale Thorn dthorn at gte.net
Sun Dec 1 17:25:25 PST 1996


Black Unicorn wrote:
> On Sun, 1 Dec 1996, Dale Thorn wrote:
> > Black Unicorn wrote:
> > > On Sat, 30 Nov 1996, Dale Thorn wrote:
> > > > > Example:  George Bush's old pal at the Wash. DC P.R. firm hires the
> > > > > niece(?) of a Kuwaiti official to testify in front of Congress in full
> > > > > view of the American people on television, that the Iraquis were throwing
> > > > > babies out of incubators in Kuwait, thereby securing the necessary votes
> > > > > in Congress to prosecute the Gulf War.

[snippo]

> Fraud is an excellent answer because it is a meaningless answer.  Fraud is
> traditionally used to prosecutue those not-quite-a-crime cases because the
> definition essentially comes down to : "That guy did something we don't
> like."

[much drivel snipped]

So what you're saying is I (or we) can testify in front of Congress on
essentially any topic, telling a blatant lie (that we know is false, and
which they will subsequently prove is false), and totally get away with
it.  You and I can do that, is that what you're saying?

If that is true, then my original contention that things are far worse
than the person I originally responded to was imagining, stands as
correct.  Things are bad indeed.







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