361 lines
18 KiB
Plaintext
361 lines
18 KiB
Plaintext
|
BLAST.famy
|
||
|
volume 1 ish 2
|
||
|
May 1994
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
6666666666 666 66666666666
|
||
|
666 666 666 6 666666666666 66666666666
|
||
|
666 666 666 66 66 66 666
|
||
|
666 666 666 66 66 666 666
|
||
|
666666666 666 666666666666 6666 666
|
||
|
666 666 666 666 666 66666666666 666
|
||
|
666 666 666 666 666 6666 666
|
||
|
666 66666666666 666 666 6666 666 666
|
||
|
666666666666 66666666666 666 666 6666666666666 666
|
||
|
|
||
|
F _ A _ M _ Y
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
A Private World E-zine. ...transmitted A-peRioDICalY
|
||
|
|
||
|
"WE TRY TO KEEP THINGS ABOVE BOARD
|
||
|
AS MUCH AS POSSIBLE. ...That's our motto"
|
||
|
|
||
|
editor-in-chief = P. W. Casual, C.E.O, Private World Entertainment;
|
||
|
C.O.B, Private World Communications;
|
||
|
pwcasual@io.org
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
contributors:
|
||
|
Mark Jr. Chairman, A^3 (A.mateur A.narchist A.lchemists)
|
||
|
markjr@io.org
|
||
|
Ralph Harvey
|
||
|
The Renaissance Society
|
||
|
Heavy D heavyd@bosshog.arts.uwo.ca
|
||
|
|
||
|
+--------------------------------------------------------+
|
||
|
| "For mark! no sooner was I fairly found |
|
||
|
| Pledged to the plain, after a pace or two, |
|
||
|
| Then, pausing to throw backwards a last view |
|
||
|
| O'er the safe road, `twas gone: grey plain all around |
|
||
|
| Nothing but plain to the horizon's bound. |
|
||
|
| I might go on, naught else remained to do." |
|
||
|
| -Browning |
|
||
|
+--------------------------------------------------------+
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
<=========NOTICE++++++++>
|
||
|
|
||
|
INTRODUCING PRIVATE WORLD'S COMPLAINT HOT-LINE
|
||
|
|
||
|
Any person who finds the contents of BLAST.famy to be objectionable,
|
||
|
or any music critic who may want to register his/her disgust with
|
||
|
any Private World CD release (esp. LANDSLIDE), may now take advantage
|
||
|
of PRIVATE WORLD's COMPLAINT HOT-LINE. From any UNIX shell prompt
|
||
|
simply enter the following command:
|
||
|
|
||
|
$ cat filename > /dev/null
|
||
|
|
||
|
And your complaint/review/slag will be routed appropriately.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
GRIPE: A Staffer whines about his caseload
|
||
|
QUIZ: We all know how Jesus got whacked, but how did his disciples fare?
|
||
|
UPDATE: More on single syllable band-names
|
||
|
QUESTION: Who the hell was Henry Moray?
|
||
|
RANT: Entropy -Accept it Don't Reject it
|
||
|
INFO: For Informational purposes Only: Summary of FBI computers.
|
||
|
|
||
|
________
|
||
|
griPE! |
|
||
|
=======|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Date: Fri, 3 Jun 1994 11:00:33 -0400 (EDT)
|
||
|
>From: ################ <heavyd@bosshog.arts.uwo.ca>
|
||
|
Subject: Bloated Ass, eh?
|
||
|
To: markjr.io.org@bosshog.arts.uwo.ca
|
||
|
Message-Id: <Pine.3.88.9406031049.A6019-0100000@bosshog.arts.uwo.ca>
|
||
|
Mime-Version: 1.0
|
||
|
Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Dear Mr. Cordial,
|
||
|
|
||
|
I am intimidated by the barage of messages you have been sending me about
|
||
|
this ezine. You don't necessarily have to keep threatening me with
|
||
|
producing material. Should I come across some marijuana in the near
|
||
|
future, the endeavour should prove to be easier. However, there is none
|
||
|
about and so my conservative and anal retentive mind is hard-pressed to
|
||
|
come up with anarchist propoganda. I would like for you to give me some
|
||
|
direction as to what kind of material you desire. Moreover, I don't come
|
||
|
into the university at all anymore. This is my first time in over a
|
||
|
month. Therefore, sending anything out to you is not always that easy.
|
||
|
Modem, anyone? Take care, Mark...
|
||
|
|
||
|
>From the slothful one,
|
||
|
|
||
|
heavyd
|
||
|
|
||
|
QUIZ: MATCH THE DISCIPLE TO HIS DEMISE
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
This was supposed to be in the April ish, to celebrate Easter,
|
||
|
but was sadly overlooked. We include it here with apologies for
|
||
|
our lack of timing. BONUS question: one of them survived the
|
||
|
described fate. Send your answers to pwcasual@io.org. Correct
|
||
|
responses qualify you as a Guru of Trivial Divinity.
|
||
|
|
||
|
1. Paul A. beheaded on Nero's orders
|
||
|
2. Luke B. hanged from an Olive tree by Greek priests
|
||
|
3. John C. cast into boiling oil
|
||
|
4. Stephen D. stoned to death
|
||
|
5. James E. beheaded in Judea, AD44
|
||
|
6. Philip F. scourged, thrown into prison, then crucified
|
||
|
7. Matthew G. slain with a halberd
|
||
|
8. James H. beaten, stoned, then brain splattered with a club
|
||
|
9. Mark I. rended to bits by a mob
|
||
|
10. Peter J. crucified, upside down at his own request
|
||
|
11. Simon K. crucifed, in the normal sense
|
||
|
12. Judas L. offed himself
|
||
|
|
||
|
HINT: All answers but one can be found in Amos Blanchard's `Book of Martyrs'
|
||
|
published by N.G. Ellis; Kingston U.C.; 1842.
|
||
|
(What, you don't have a copy?)
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
UPDATE UPDATE UPDATE UPDATE UPDATE UPDATE UPDATE UPDATE UPDATE UPDATE UPDATE
|
||
|
|
||
|
Last ish we discussed mono-syllabic monikers. Bands with names
|
||
|
like: band, tube, core, tape, send, pow, take, blah, blah, blah...
|
||
|
|
||
|
The new development in this business is that Pure has just released
|
||
|
a song called Pure. They were there first so that excuses them,
|
||
|
however we predict yet another sickening trend, that of one
|
||
|
syllable-named bands penning self-titled lead off singles:
|
||
|
cub, by cub; Petch by petch; Slaw by Slaw, ad infinitum.
|
||
|
(Could it possibly happen? we'll be surprised if it doesn't.)
|
||
|
|
||
|
W H O + t h e + H E L L + w a s + H E N R Y + M + O + R + A + Y + ?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Ever heard of Spacic energy? I hadn't until I read a little
|
||
|
book called "How to Build a Flying Saucer -and other proposals
|
||
|
in Speculative Engineering", by T. B. Pawlicki
|
||
|
In one essay, "Beyond Velikovsky", spacic energy is described
|
||
|
as power that can be extracted from the sun's gravitaional field.
|
||
|
Sound boring? Well according to the theory, if this really works
|
||
|
you could pratically vacuum energy out of empty space. Apparently
|
||
|
the concept was understood by Tesla as far back as the turn of
|
||
|
the century. The curious thing is allegedly that anyone
|
||
|
who has ever pursued this technology seriously has gotten the
|
||
|
"deep 6".
|
||
|
The person who knew the most about it was an electrical
|
||
|
engineer named Henry Moray who worked the following (magick?):
|
||
|
radio waves in the atmosphere generated by solar activity are
|
||
|
transformed via antenna from electromagnetic waves to a standing
|
||
|
electrical wave in a conductor.
|
||
|
The wave is amplified by resonance, and provided
|
||
|
enough power for the crystal radios Moray was playing around
|
||
|
with. He used natural germanium crystals to tune the radio
|
||
|
receivers, and he inferred that something about crystal
|
||
|
geommetry "could resonate in tune with the quantum field and
|
||
|
and transform the field energy into electricity by harmonic
|
||
|
amplification." He used only the purest germanium crystals, and
|
||
|
constantly bitched that the chemist could not provide fine enough
|
||
|
crystalization. By putting this through a step-down transformer
|
||
|
Moray could supply his appliances with 500 Kilowatts indefinately.
|
||
|
Moray took his idea to the government, and subsequently
|
||
|
became the target of hired assassins. His labratory was ruined
|
||
|
and his credibility decimated. The only account of the technology is
|
||
|
a book called "Sea of Energy", which is published privately
|
||
|
by his son in Salt Lake City. This all transpired around 1914.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It is now reader participation time. Those of you with any input
|
||
|
pick a category and email pwcasual@io.org:
|
||
|
|
||
|
physicists, engineers, techies: does the above sound like babble,
|
||
|
or does it more or less fall
|
||
|
within "normal.physical.laws"
|
||
|
|
||
|
conspiracy theorists: does this have anything to do
|
||
|
with MJ-12 or the JFK hit?
|
||
|
How about the OTO?
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
R A N T R A N T R A N T R A N T R A N T R A N T
|
||
|
|
||
|
I've seen the odd poster war here in Toronto. Rival bands making
|
||
|
a concerted effort to point/counter-point with one another,
|
||
|
employing spray paint, glue, or in the case of my roomate's
|
||
|
band, threatening phone messages. (Check out Snowdog's Brag CD
|
||
|
to catch some LoSEr stooping to just that tactic)
|
||
|
|
||
|
In London, Ontario (Private World's home turf) there seems to be
|
||
|
a "manifesto shoot-out" of sorts. Here's the third volley:
|
||
|
|
||
|
--+==> E N T r O p Y .>:[)*+\"/>K[}
|
||
|
|
||
|
(ed. note: not to be confused
|
||
|
with garbage.in.garbage.out)
|
||
|
|
||
|
ACCEPT IT, DON'T REJECT IT
|
||
|
|
||
|
This is not a rebuttal, but an expansion of ideas contained
|
||
|
in "CHAOS: Fight it, Don't Invite it". The author of CHAOS
|
||
|
has illuminated an important issue in today's culture: the
|
||
|
widespread expansion of auti - social activities. The author's
|
||
|
admonitions to actively oppose such forces, and the remainder
|
||
|
of our own responsibility in helping to create this mess are
|
||
|
goads encouraging us to take an active part in the destiny
|
||
|
of our great, cosmopolitan species. However, this great
|
||
|
humanitarian message, while it has a vision, suffers from
|
||
|
a limitation of perspective. Chaos is the natural product of
|
||
|
Order. There cannot be a "social" without an "anti-social".
|
||
|
Entropy rises in direct proportion to the complexity of a
|
||
|
structure, a fact well understood by anyone who has anything
|
||
|
to do with Bureacracy (and who hasn't?). Bureacracy is the
|
||
|
highest state of social Order, and consequently, the greatest
|
||
|
source of Chaos. The only effective way to "fight" Chaos is
|
||
|
to remove the structure which breeds it: this is not anti-social
|
||
|
behaviour, but non-social --it is a voluntary decision not to
|
||
|
participate in the restrictive and confining sets of rules
|
||
|
which make up society. To eliminate the negative influences
|
||
|
within society, eliminate society. Crime is the philosophy of
|
||
|
using all necessary force to achieve the aims of society:
|
||
|
criminals desire the fruits of society, and by forcibly
|
||
|
trying to achieve them they negatively reinforce society.
|
||
|
If you remove society, and hence the ambition to achieve
|
||
|
it's fruits, you remove the crime associated with it. Chaos
|
||
|
can neither be fought, nor invited, it can only be accepted
|
||
|
or rejected. If we reject Entropy, we only create more of it
|
||
|
by creating more complex structures to fight it. If we accept
|
||
|
entropy. as a natural and spontaneous response of the universe
|
||
|
to our own creative activities, then we overcome it: we do not
|
||
|
fight what we accept. We must learn to be free and spontaneous
|
||
|
with the universe, open to its infinite possibilities and joyously
|
||
|
at one with it if we are to have any hope of surviving our own
|
||
|
future. Chaos is the child and nemesis of society; it injures
|
||
|
everyone living within or affected by society. If we are to
|
||
|
transcent it, we must transcend society as well.
|
||
|
If ypu are interested in transcending the evils of
|
||
|
society, or you think that this is a hopelessly romantic
|
||
|
anarcho-utopian dream, then I recomend the following reading
|
||
|
list which transcends the tribal, exclusivistic religious
|
||
|
views of the traditional holy texts:
|
||
|
Finite and Infinite Games by James P. Carse
|
||
|
Ishmael by Daniel Quinn
|
||
|
Journey to Ixtlan by Carlos Castaneda
|
||
|
Technopoly by Neil Postman
|
||
|
Prometheus Rising by Robert Anton Wilson
|
||
|
|
||
|
(ed. note: what about BLAST.famy?, ah well
|
||
|
it's sounded dangerously New.Age.Flake-ish
|
||
|
toward the end there...)
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
---=--====}}}}(PsssT) -> -> -> FOR INFORMATIONAL PURPOSES ONLY ...
|
||
|
|
||
|
This month's ish:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Summary of FBI Computer Systems
|
||
|
|
||
|
By Ralph Harvey
|
||
|
|
||
|
This article is reprinted from Full Disclosure. Copyright (c) 1986
|
||
|
Capitol Information Association. All rights reserved. Permission is hereby
|
||
|
granted to reprint this article providing this message is included in its
|
||
|
entirety. Full Disclosure, Box 8275, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48107. $15/yr.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The FBI maintains several computer systems. The most common of which is
|
||
|
call NCIC (National Crime Information Computer). NCIC maintains a database of
|
||
|
information about such things as stolen cars, stolen boats, missing persons,
|
||
|
wanted persons, arrest records. It provides quick access to these records by
|
||
|
State, Local and Federal law enforcement agencies. NCIC is directly linked
|
||
|
with the Treasury Department's TECS computer and many State computer systems.
|
||
|
According to William H. Webster, Director of the FBI:
|
||
|
|
||
|
When a police officer stops a car and is uncertain about who he's going to
|
||
|
meet when he gets out, he can plug into this system [NCIC] and in a matter of
|
||
|
a few seconds he can find out whether that person is a fugitive or the
|
||
|
automobile is stolen. Incidentally, we receive almost 400,000 inquires of
|
||
|
this nature each day in the NCIC system.
|
||
|
|
||
|
When an agency determines that a subject is a fugitive, it supplies the FBI
|
||
|
computer with as much of the following information as possible: 1) Name and
|
||
|
case number; 2) Alias; 3) Race; 4) Sex; 5) Height; 6) Weight; 7) Color of
|
||
|
hair; 8) Color of eyes; 9) Description of any identifying scars, marks and
|
||
|
tattoos; 10) Date of birth; 11) Place of birth; 12) Social Security Number;
|
||
|
13) Passport Number; 14) Last known address; 15) Nationality; 16) If a
|
||
|
naturalized U.S. Citizen, date, place, and certificate number; 17)
|
||
|
Occupation; 18) The criminal violation with which subject is charged; 19)
|
||
|
Date of warrant; 21) Type of warrant -- Bench, Magistrate, etc.; 22) Agency
|
||
|
holding warrant; 23) Any information as to whether the subject is considered
|
||
|
dangerous, is known to own or currently possess firearms, has suicidal
|
||
|
tendencies, or has previously escaped custody; 24) Driver's license number,
|
||
|
year of expiration and State issued; 25) License number of vehicle, aircraft
|
||
|
or vessel subject owns or is known to use, include the year and State; 26)
|
||
|
Description of vehicle, aircraft or vessel subject owns or is known to use;
|
||
|
27) Associates of the subject*1; 28) FBI number; 29) Name and telephone of
|
||
|
the person to contact when subject is apprehended.
|
||
|
|
||
|
One of the major problems with the system is that the agency that submits an
|
||
|
entry is responsible for keeping it up to date. Once an entry has been made,
|
||
|
there is little motivation for the originating agency to ``waste'' its time
|
||
|
keeping it up to date, so many entries become incorrect with the passage of
|
||
|
time.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Another FBI computer system is their Investigative Support Information
|
||
|
System (ISIS). This system is only used to provide support for major
|
||
|
investigations that require the handling of a large volume of complex
|
||
|
information. It is limited to handling a maximum of 20 cases at a time.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The ISIS system was used during the investigation of the murder of Federal
|
||
|
Judge John Wood in San Antonio, Texas. In this case, the FBI entered 300,000
|
||
|
pieces of information, including 6,000 interviews, hotel registration
|
||
|
information from every hotel in the area, etc. The accused, while on trial,
|
||
|
claimed he was several hundred miles away. The FBI cross referenced his name
|
||
|
& known alias with the hotel registration database and got a match. Contact
|
||
|
with the hotel employees resulted in a positive identification and conviction
|
||
|
of the subject.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The FBI has a system called the Organized Crime Information Systems (OCIS)
|
||
|
of which director William Webster is ``particularly proud.'' The system was
|
||
|
started in 1980 in Detroit, Michigan and is one of their most sophisticated
|
||
|
computers. The system is now functions in over 40 locations.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The OCIS system allows agents in different field offices to share and
|
||
|
analyze information collected in each other's areas. This system was used to
|
||
|
identify some of the United States citizens who were released from Cuban
|
||
|
prisons in 1984 that had criminal histories in the United States. An OCIS
|
||
|
link was recently opened in Rome, where it's used to support drug
|
||
|
investigations.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The OCIS system was used in the major Sicilian mafia heroin investigation,
|
||
|
commonly referred to as ``The Pizza Connection.'' According to Webster,
|
||
|
``OCIS support ranged from direct assistance in collating information for
|
||
|
Title III court-authorized wiretaps to the analysis of the case for grand
|
||
|
jury presentation.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
Currently under development is the Field Office Information Management
|
||
|
System (FOIMS). The purpose of this system is to fully automate the
|
||
|
administrative and record keeping functions of the field and resident offices.
|
||
|
|
||
|
*1 One of the basic freedoms in this country is the First Amendment right to
|
||
|
freedom of association. The Privacy Act was enacted to stop government
|
||
|
invasions of privacy, and includes a provision specifically prohibiting the
|
||
|
collection of information on the exercise of First Amendment activities.
|
||
|
|
||
|
SUBSCRIPTIONS, CONTRIBUTIONS, THREATS, WHATEVER -> pwcasual@io.org
|
||
|
in the body of your text speak.your.mind
|
||
|
|
||
|
Private World Concert Dates : finger pwcasual@io.org
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
S C R I B E T O T H I S Z I N E ? ? ?
|
||
|
============================================================================
|
||
|
|
||
|
email pwcasual@io.org
|
||
|
and say "Sign Me Up!"
|
||
|
|
||
|
|