928 lines
48 KiB
Groff
928 lines
48 KiB
Groff
Der Weltanschauung Magazine (The WorldView)
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%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
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% %
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% Editor: The Desert Fox D E R %
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% Co-Editor: Rev. Scott Free %
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% %
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% W E L T A N S C H A U U N G %
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% %
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%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
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September 30, 1991 Volume 1, Issue 8
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(*)(*)(*)(*)(*)(*)(*)(*)(*)(*)(*)(*)(*)(*)(*)(*)(*)(*)(*)(*)(*)(*)(*)(*)(*)
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Material Written By Computer And Telecommunications Hobbyists World Wide
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Promoting the publication of Features, Editorials, and Anything Else....
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To submit material, or to subscribe to the magazine contact one of the
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following net addresses below...
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%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
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% Der Weltanschauung Distribution Site: %
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ % %
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~ Send $1.OO To: ~ %%%%%% The Dickinson Nightlight %
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~ ~ % (713)337-1452 %
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~ The SubGenius Foundation ~ % 3/12/2400 Bps *24 Hours/7Days %
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~ P.O. Box 140306 ~ % Fido: The Desert Fox@1:106/995 %
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~ Dallas, Texas 75214 ~ % InterNet fox@nuchat.sccsi.com %
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~ ~ %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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"WELCOME TO THE MACHINE" -Pink Floyd
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"Let us arise, let us arise against the oppressors of humanity; all kings,
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emperors, presidents of republics, priests of all religions are the true
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enemies of the people; let us destroy along with them all juridical, political,
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civil and religious institutions."
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-Manifesto of anarchists in the Romagna, 1878
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@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@
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The World View Staff: InterNet Address:
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The Desert Fox [Editor] / fox@nuchat.sccsi.com
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Rev. Scott Free [CoEditor] / revfree@nuchat.sccsi.com
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Bryan O' Blivion / blivion@nuchat.sccsi.com
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Modok Tarleton / rperkins@sugar.neosoft.com
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The Sorcerer (REV) / sorcerer@taronga.hackercorp.com
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Brain On A Stick / brain@taronga.hackercorp.com
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||
Cyndre The Grey / cyndre@taronga.hackercorp.com
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||
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@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
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1) CyberLunch.........................................The Desert Fox
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2) Common Sense Security! (Read This).................Sheila O'Donnell
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3) Profits Speaks.*...................................The Sorcerer (Rev)
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4) The Pledge Of Allegiance...........................Lord MacDuff [NIA]
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5) Loneliness (A Cyber-Short Story)...................Elrond
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6) Visions Of A Disturbing Future.....................Modok Tarleton
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7) On The Subject Of...Invasion Of Privacy............Cyndre The Grey
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Articles with an '*' were transcribed by The Sorcerer (Rev)
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@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@
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NOTICE TO ALL BBS OPERATORS, COMPUTER USERS, CYBERSPACE FRONTIERSMEN,
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AND ELECTRONIC AGITATORS...YOU ARE INVITED TO THE FIRST ANNUAL
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CYBER-LUNCH
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Cyber-Lunch will be a mass gathering of the Houston/Austin Computer/Modem
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community. This year's event is sponsored by THE WORLD VIEW MAGAZINE.
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It will be held on Saturday, October 12, 1991 from noon until everyone
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gets "all cybered out". It will be held in the park on Memorial Mews Drive.
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Memorial Mews is off of Memorial near Hwy 6. For those of you who have a
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computer and a modem, logon to Rivendell BBS at 333-5666, or The Dickinson
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Nightlight BBS at 337-1452. Direct any questions to The Desert Fox. Also,
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download your free copy of The World View Magazine. Issue 7 was released
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earlier and it has a color map attached to it giving directions and other
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||
information about Cyber-Lunch. Your attendance is appreciated. We are sure
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you will leave there enlightened, to say the least. We ask that you please
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take part in the advancement of your cyber-community. It will be a lot of
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fun. Once again, logon to Rivendell at 333-5666 or Dickinson Nightlight
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at 337-1452 and download your free copy of the World View.
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That is Saturday, October 12, 1991...from Noon until Whenever.
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At the park on Memorial Mews Dr. Off of Memorial near Hwy. 6
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CYBER-LUNCH '91. Sponsored By THE WORLD VIEW MAGAZINE
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HOUSTON, TEXAS
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BRING BEER, COKES, WHATEVER!
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@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@
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COMMON SENSE SECURITY FOR POLITICAL ORGANIZERS
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by Sheila O'Donnell
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NLG Civil Liberties/Public Eye
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As the movements for social change become more sophisticated, the techniques
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of the state, corporations and the right wing have also become more
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sophisticated. Historically this has always been the case; we will continue
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and will be the eventual victors. Caution in the face of the concerted effort
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to stop us, however, is both prudent and necessary.
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Remember:
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The United States prides itself on being a democracy; we have Constitutional
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rights. Dissatisfaction with the status quo and attempting to mobilize for
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change is protected; surveillance and harassment are violations. Take your
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rights seriously and fight for them. Speak out.
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For more information or to report an incident, contact MSN, 666 Broadway, New
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York, N.Y., 10012.
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###
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VISITS FROM THE FBI
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Don't talk to the FBI (or any government investigator) without your attorney
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present. Information gleaned during the visit can be used against you and
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your co-workers.
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Get the names and addresses of the agents and tell them you will have your
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attorney get in touch with them. They rarely set up an interview under those
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circumstances.
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Call the National Lawyers Guild, American Civil Liberties Union or other
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sympathetic legal group if you need assistance locating a reliable local
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attorney.
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Don't invite agents into your home. Speak with the agents outside. Once
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||
inside they glean information about your perspective and life style.
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||
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Don't let agents threaten you into talking. If the FBI intents to impanel a
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grand jury, a private talk with you will not change the strategy of the FBI.
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Lying to the FBI is a criminal act. The best way to avoid criminal charges is
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to say nothing.
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Any information you give the FBI can and will be used against you. Don't try
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||
to outwit the FBI. Your arrogance could get you or others in serious trouble.
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||
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FBI agents sometimes try to trick you into giving information "to help a
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friend." Don't believe them.
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Don't let them intimidate you. So what if they know where you live or work
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and what you do? This is still a democracy and we still have constitutional
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rights. They intend to frighten you; don't let them. They can only
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"neutralize" you if you let them.
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###
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GENERAL MOVEMENT SECURITY
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If you wish to have a private conversation, leave your home and your office
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and go outside and take a walk or go somewhere public and notice who is near
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you.
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Never say anything you don't want to hear repeated when there is any
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||
possibility of being recorded.
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||
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Don't use code on the phone. If you are being tapped and the transcript is
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||
used against you in court, the coded conversation can be alleged to be
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anything.
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Don't say anything on the phone you don't want to hear in open court.
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Don't gossip on the phone. Smut is valuable to anyone listening; it makes
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||
everyone vulnerable.
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If you are being followed, get the license tag number and description of the
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car and descriptions of people in the car. Photograph the person(s) following
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you or have a friend do so.
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If you are followed or feel vulnerable, call a friend; don't "tough it out"
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||
alone. They are trying to frighten you. It is frightening to have someone
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threatening your freedom.
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Debrief yourself after each incident. Write details down: time, date,
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||
occasion, incident, characteristics of the person(s), impressions, anything
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odd about the situation.
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||
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Keep a "weirdo" file and keep notes from unsettling situations and see if a
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||
pattern emerges.
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||
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||
Write for your government files under the FOIA and pursue the agencies until
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||
they give you all the documents filed under your name.
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||
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||
Report thefts of materials from your office or home to the police; these are
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||
criminal acts.
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||
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Report incidents to the Movement Support Network in New York at the Center
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for Constitutional Rights.
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###
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OFFICE SECURITY
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Never leave one copy of a document or list behind; take a minute to duplicate
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an irreplaceable document and keep the duplicate in a safe place.
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Back up and store important computer disks off-site. Sensitive data and
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membership list should be kept under lock and key.
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Keep your mailing lists, donor lists and personal phone books away from
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light-fingered people. Always maintain a duplicate.
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Know your printer if you are about to publish and know your mailing house if
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you contract for distribution.
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Know anyone you are trusting to work on any part of a project that is
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sensitive.
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Don't hire a stranger as a messenger.
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Sweeps for electronic surveillance are only effective for the time they are
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being done, and are only effective as they are being done if you are sure of
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the person(s) doing the sweep.
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Brief your membership on known or suspected surveillance.
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||
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Assess your undertaking from a security point of view; understand your
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||
vulnerabilities; assess your allies and your adversaries as objectively as
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||
possible; do not underestimate the opposition. Do not take chances. Plan for
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||
the worst, hope for the best.
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||
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||
Recognize your organizational and personal strengths and weaknesses.
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||
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||
Discuss incidents with cohorts, family and membership. Call the press if you
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have hard information about surveillance or harassment. Discussion makes the
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dirty work of the intelligence agencies and private spies overt.
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||
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||
For more information or to report an incident, contact MSN, 666 Broadway, New
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York, N.Y., 10012.
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||
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||
The Movement Support Network (MSN) is a project of the Center for
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Constitutional Rights with cooperation from the National Lawyers Guild. MSN
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||
was founded in 1984 to respond to increasing government surveillance and
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harassment of people involved in Central America solidarity work and people
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active in the sanctuary movement. Since then the network has expanded to
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serve as a monitoring mechanism to collect information about surveillance and
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harassment of persons involved in a wide range of peace and social justice
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issues.
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By collecting and disseminating information on specific incidents, MSN not
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||
only organizes opposition to such abuses, but also raises public awareness of
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||
important civil liberties issues, and helps activists place isolated
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incidents in a national context. For more information or to report an
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||
incident, contact MSN, 666 Broadway, New York, N.Y., 10012.
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The MSN HOTLINE # is (212) 614-6422.
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GUIDELINES FOR COPING WITH INFILTRATION
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||
1. Be careful to avoid pushing a new or
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hesitant member, or one facing personal,
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financial, or legal problems, to take risks
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||
beyond what that person is ready to handle,
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||
particularly in situations which could result in
|
||
arrest and prosecution. People in positions of
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||
legal or other jeopardy have proven especially
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||
vulnerable to recruitment as informers.
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||
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2. Deal openly with the form and content of
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||
what anyone says and does, whether the person is
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||
a suspected agent, has emotional problems, or is
|
||
simply a sincere but naive or confused person new
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to the work.
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||
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||
3. Establish a process through which anyone
|
||
who suspects an infiltrator (or other covert
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||
intervention) can express his or her fears
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||
without scaring others. Experienced people
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||
assigned this responsibility can do a great deal
|
||
to help a group maintain its morale and focus
|
||
while, at the same time, consolidating
|
||
information and deciding how to use it. This plan
|
||
works best when accompanied by group discussion
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||
of the danger of paranoia, so that everyone
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||
understands the reasons for following the
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||
established procedure.
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||
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||
4. Take steps to alert other activists any time
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||
an agent or informer admits their role or you
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have a concrete and verified basis for certain
|
||
knowledge. (Make sure you have not been taken in
|
||
by a snitch jacket.) Act immediately and use
|
||
every available means, including photographs,
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||
aliases, identifying traits, and a description of
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||
methods of operation. In the 1960s, some agents
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||
managed, even after their exposure in one
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||
community, to move on and repeat their
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||
performance in others.
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||
|
||
5. Be very cautious in attempting to expose
|
||
a suspected, but unadmitted, agent or informer.
|
||
The best approach depends on the nature of your
|
||
group. A close-knit, self-selecting group of
|
||
experienced activists, especially one which
|
||
contemplates illegal activity, should exclude
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||
anyone who is not fully trusted by everyone
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||
involved. If the stakes are high, don't be afraid
|
||
to trust your intuition.
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||
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||
An open, public organization trying to reach
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||
out and involve new people faces a very different
|
||
situation. Here, an attempted exposure carries
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||
enormous risks. The suspect may claim to be the
|
||
victim of discrimination and may falsely finger
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||
his or her accusers as agents. In the process,
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||
activists may be turned against one another and
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||
lose the mutual trust and respect which is vital
|
||
to any successful organization. New members and
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||
potential recruits may be scared away. The
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||
group's attention and energy may be so diverted
|
||
that it is no longer able to move effectively
|
||
toward its main goals.
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||
|
||
Activists who suspect infiltration of a
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public political organization should carefully
|
||
evaluate alternatives to attempted exposure. The
|
||
appropriate response depends on the kind of agent
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||
or informer you think you are dealing with.
|
||
|
||
A suspect who seems to play a passive, or
|
||
even a constructive role may secretly be
|
||
undermining a group's work or passing information
|
||
to the FBI and police. In this situation, it
|
||
often is most productive to discreetly limit the
|
||
suspect's opportunities without making your
|
||
suspicions public. Take steps to deny access to
|
||
organizational funds, financial records, mailing
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||
lists, office equipment, planning and security
|
||
committees, discussions of illegal activity, and
|
||
meetings that plan criminal defense strategy. Go
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||
public if you later catch the person in the act
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||
(but not merely with incriminating evidence which
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||
could have been planted or forged).
|
||
|
||
A different approach is required if the
|
||
suspect is an active disrupter or
|
||
provocateur. In this case, it is most
|
||
constructive to confront the form and content of
|
||
what the suspect says and does, without making an
|
||
issue of why he or she says or does it. Start
|
||
with a discreet private talk, since the suspect
|
||
could be merely naive or misguided. If the
|
||
harmful behavior persists, you probably will have
|
||
to take it on in an open group discussion. Plan
|
||
in advance how to limit the risk of disruption
|
||
and demoralization. If you need to exclude or
|
||
expel the suspect, be sure to inform other
|
||
activists of your decision and reasons.
|
||
|
||
GUIDELINES FOR COPING WITH PSYCHOLOGICAL WARFARE
|
||
|
||
1. Verify and double-check all arrangements for
|
||
housing, transportation, meeting rooms, and so
|
||
forth. Don't assume movement organizers are at
|
||
fault if something goes wrong.
|
||
|
||
2. Don't believe everything you hear or read.
|
||
Check with the supposed source of the information
|
||
before acting on it. Use a neutral third party if
|
||
necessary. Personal communication among estranged
|
||
activists, however difficult or painful, could
|
||
have countered many FBI operations which proved
|
||
effective in the 1960s.
|
||
|
||
3. When you discover bogus materials, false media
|
||
stories, or forged documents, publicly disavow
|
||
them and expose the true source, insofar as you can.
|
||
|
||
4. When you hear a negative, confusing, or
|
||
potentially harmful rumor, don't pass it on.
|
||
Instead, discuss it with a trusted friend or with
|
||
the people in your group who are responsible for
|
||
dealing with such matters.
|
||
|
||
5. Don't gossip about personal tensions,
|
||
rivalries, and disagreements. This just feeds and
|
||
amplifies rumors. Moreover, if you gossip where
|
||
you can be overheard, you may add to the pool of
|
||
information that the FBI and police use to divide
|
||
our movements. (Note that the CIA has the
|
||
technology to read mail without opening it and
|
||
that telephones, including pay phones, can be
|
||
tapped by a computer programed to record
|
||
conversations in which specified words appear.)[f-133]
|
||
|
||
6. Be sure to make time in group meetings for
|
||
open, honest discussion and resolution of
|
||
"personal" as well as "political" issues. This is
|
||
the best way to reduce tensions and hostilities
|
||
and the urge to gossip about them.
|
||
|
||
7. Warn your parents, friends, neighbors, and
|
||
others who may be contacted by government agents.
|
||
Consider telling them what you are doing and why
|
||
before they hear the FBI's version. Provide them
|
||
with materials which explain their legal rights
|
||
and the dangers of talking with the FBI. Offer to
|
||
connect them with lawyers and support groups.
|
||
|
||
GUIDELINES FOR COPING WITH HARASSMENT THROUGH THE LEGAL SYSTEM
|
||
|
||
1. Don't talk to the FBI, and don't let them in
|
||
without a warrant. Keep careful records of what
|
||
they say and do. Tell others that they came.
|
||
|
||
2. If an activist does talk, or makes some other
|
||
honest error, explain the serious harm that could
|
||
result. Be firm, but do not ostracize a sincere
|
||
person who slips up. Isolation only weakens a
|
||
person's ability to resist. It can drive someone
|
||
out of the movement and even into the hands of
|
||
the police.
|
||
|
||
3. If FBI or other government agents start to
|
||
harass people in your area, alert everyone to
|
||
refuse to cooperate. Warn your friends,
|
||
neighbors, parents, children, and anyone else who
|
||
might be contacted. Make sure people know what to
|
||
do and where to call for help. Get literature,
|
||
films, and other materials through the
|
||
organizations listed in the back of this book.
|
||
Set up community meetings with speakers who have
|
||
resisted similar harassment elsewhere. Contact
|
||
sympathetic reporters. Consider "Wanted" posters
|
||
with photos of the agents, or guerrilla theater
|
||
which follows them through the city streets.
|
||
|
||
4. Organizations listed in the back can also
|
||
help resist grand jury harassment. Community
|
||
education is important, along with child care and
|
||
legal, financial, and other support for those who
|
||
protect a movement by refusing to divulge
|
||
information. If a respected activist is
|
||
subpoenaed for obviously political reasons,
|
||
consider trying to arrange for sanctuary in a
|
||
local church or synagogue.
|
||
|
||
5. If your group engages in civil
|
||
disobedience or finds itself under intense police
|
||
pressure, start a bail fund, train some members
|
||
to deal with the legal system, and develop an
|
||
ongoing relationship with sympathetic local lawyers.
|
||
|
||
6. If you anticipate arrest, do not carry address
|
||
books or any other materials which could help the
|
||
FBI and police.
|
||
|
||
7. While the FBI and police are entirely capable
|
||
of fabricating criminal charges, your
|
||
non-political law violations make it easier for
|
||
them to set you up. Be careful with drugs, tax
|
||
returns, traffic tickets, and so forth. The point
|
||
is not to get paranoid, but to make a realistic
|
||
assessment based on your visibility and other
|
||
relevant circumstances.
|
||
|
||
8. When an activist has to appear in court, make
|
||
sure he or she is not alone. The presence of
|
||
supporters is crucial for morale and can help
|
||
influence jurors.
|
||
|
||
9. Don't neglect jailed activists. Organize
|
||
visits, correspondence, books, food packages,
|
||
child care, etc. Keep publicizing their cases.
|
||
|
||
10. Publicize FBI and police abuses through
|
||
sympathetic journalists and your own media
|
||
(posters, leaflets, public access cable
|
||
television, etc.). Don't let the government and
|
||
corporate media be the only ones to shape public
|
||
perceptions of FBI and police attacks on
|
||
political activists.
|
||
|
||
GUIDELINES FOR COPING WITH EXTRALEGAL FORCE AND VIOLENCE:
|
||
|
||
1. Establish security procedures appropriate to
|
||
your group's level of activity and discuss them
|
||
thoroughly with everyone involved. Control access
|
||
to keys, files, letterhead, funds, financial
|
||
records, mailing lists, etc.
|
||
|
||
2. Keep duplicates of valuable documents,
|
||
records, files, computer disks, etc. in a safe
|
||
place separate from your home or office.
|
||
|
||
3. Remember that cars are easily broken into
|
||
(especially trunks) and that trash can easily be
|
||
rifled and searched.
|
||
|
||
4. Make a public issue of any form of crude
|
||
harassment. Contact your congressperson. Call the
|
||
media. Demonstrate at your local FBI, police, or
|
||
right-wing organization's office. Turn the attack
|
||
into an opportunity for explaining how domestic
|
||
covert action threatens fundamental human rights.
|
||
|
||
5. Keep careful records of break-ins, thefts,
|
||
bomb threats, raids, brutality, conspicuous
|
||
surveillance, and other harassment. They will
|
||
help you to discern patterns and to prepare
|
||
reports and testimony.
|
||
|
||
6. Share this information and your experiences
|
||
combatting such attacks with the Movement Support
|
||
Network and other groups which document and
|
||
analyze repression and resistance countrywide.
|
||
(See resource groups listing in back of book.)
|
||
|
||
7. If you experience or anticipate intense
|
||
harassment, develop contingency plans and an
|
||
emergency telephone network so you can rapidly
|
||
mobilize community support and media attention.
|
||
Consider better locks, window bars, alarm
|
||
systems, fireproof locked cabinets, etc.
|
||
|
||
8. Be sure that some members are well trained in
|
||
first aid. Keep medical supplies up-to-date and
|
||
know how to contact sympathetic doctors and
|
||
nurses and get to the nearest hospital.
|
||
|
||
9. Make sure your group designates and prepares
|
||
other members to step in if leaders are jailed or
|
||
otherwise incapacitated. The more each
|
||
participant is able to think for herself or
|
||
himself and take responsibility, the greater the
|
||
group's capacity to cope with crises.
|
||
|
||
@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@
|
||
|
||
PROFITS SPEAK!
|
||
|
||
Why are you reading this? Do you really want to know what
|
||
I'm talking about or are you just afraid of being left out?
|
||
If so, then you might be part of the conspiracy. And if
|
||
that's true then burn your head!
|
||
Learn the truth about life! Don't accept the ceaseless
|
||
ramblings of an antagonistic art student! Life is out there!
|
||
It has to be because my house isn't big enough to hold a
|
||
world-wide party. Believe me, it isn't.
|
||
Clean a man's head and he will always have a warm place
|
||
for you in his local 7-11. Words of wisdom or pure nonsense?
|
||
Is there a difference? Only the Shadow knows for sure (or
|
||
his hairdresser, you know how secret agents will talk while
|
||
having a nice cut and trim).
|
||
My mother used to bake apple pies until I explained the
|
||
importance of procreation. Now she produces condom ads.
|
||
(And I thought my grandfather's pig farm was a wild time.)
|
||
It has risen our standard of living to an all-time high. Now
|
||
we shop at Purple Heart with pride in the fact that we go
|
||
there by choice instead of neccesity.
|
||
Bob is here to give us salvation (actually, it costs a
|
||
buck but what's a dollar compared to being saved from a fate
|
||
worse than death, Fantasy Island re-runs). You don't have to
|
||
believe me but it helps (especially if I want your money). I
|
||
am merely a mouthpiece for the one and only (unless you count
|
||
the numerous impersonators) BOB!!! He didn't come from the
|
||
sky, or descend a mountain, or even receive messages from a
|
||
burning bush. He is one of us and he received the word in...
|
||
K_MART!!!
|
||
Slack. What is it and why should I care? Those are
|
||
pertinent questions that should be asked and answered with
|
||
sobriety... but except this answer instead.
|
||
Slack is the embodiment of non-work, the acquisition of
|
||
sloth, or finding a quarter in the payphone. You choose.
|
||
Slack has many different meanings for many different people,
|
||
but they don't count. AND IF YOU CAN UNDERSTAND THAT THEN
|
||
YOU ARE CLOSE TO HAVING SLACK!!! TOOTH DECAY OR TRUTH DECAY?
|
||
No one said that understanding would be easy. You have to
|
||
begin with an emotional void and proceed until your mind is a
|
||
vacuum. Is your mind cleared of useless baggage? Good. Now
|
||
we may begin. Read closely. *$$#^^&& *&^% *&^%%$# #@@# %$
|
||
^$$%& ^$^ **&%@!& :"$$ >"?? ::{_&#&@ *#&^(@)) @@&%$!: _>>#*~
|
||
(@&&$ #@{}$ |$#&@?":# *# "#*# *&@)^^ #(@() _$@@ #$(*&^# }}{}
|
||
*#)&& ) #@ ^#@"#$: #"$^!&$ #*(^&$%# #" )^#)))#_^! Now you
|
||
understand!!! (Unless you did not clear your mind first, in
|
||
which case you would have only seen a distorted jumble)
|
||
Bob's religion depends largely on hypnosis, peripheral
|
||
vision, and large quantities of other people's money. Do not
|
||
let this bother you. He does not have your money... YET!!!
|
||
WHAT WAS THAT!!!!!!!!!! Sorry, just checking your
|
||
culpability. It must be done to all initiates... oh, you
|
||
don't want to join, then maybe you are exactly the kind of
|
||
person we need. Maybe you feel out of place all the time.
|
||
"Junior, wipe that smile off your face! This is a funeral!"
|
||
Sound familiar? That is the kind of person we are looking
|
||
for. You can be with others who think like you (YIKES,
|
||
that's a scary though!)
|
||
Do not read this! It might be dangerous to your social
|
||
and mental standings. Please remember that we have warned
|
||
you and that we cannot be held responsible damage to
|
||
valuables or persons unknown. This pamphlet will not
|
||
self-destruct (but we might disavow any knowledge of your
|
||
actions). It will sit on your coffee table and continue
|
||
influencing you through strange psychic powers that cannot
|
||
be shared with puny humans such as yourselves... oops, did
|
||
I say that? I meant to say, "Such as OURselves." Anyway,
|
||
this will not go away!!!!!
|
||
Do not be afraid of responsibility. Be afraid of the
|
||
responsibility it implies! Who does what? And how should
|
||
it be done? SASQUATCH! Bob would have wanted it that way.
|
||
Be glad that I did not bring up ELVIS once during the final
|
||
stages of this paragraph. Bob would rather have profits
|
||
than prophets. Remember, always cover your mouth when you
|
||
sneeze (otherwise the demons might be accidently expelled).
|
||
|
||
- "Rev." Bob Profits
|
||
|
||
(Transcribed by The Sorcerer (Rev) )
|
||
|
||
@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@
|
||
|
||
THE PLEDGE OF ALLEGIANCE
|
||
|
||
By Lord Macduff
|
||
|
||
How many of you can finish this sentence: I pledge allegiance to the...
|
||
|
||
If you've ever attended a United States public school, I bet you could.
|
||
Because more than likely, it was drilled into your head from the time that
|
||
you were about five years old until you left the system at about eighteen.
|
||
|
||
Many people have never given any thought to the words that they are parroting,
|
||
though. At five, most kids hardly understand what any of the words mean, let
|
||
alone all together in a paragraph like that. And in the school system, you
|
||
got into trouble if you didn't say the pledge along with the class. Let's
|
||
break this down into bite-sized chunks and then see what it is that you've
|
||
been spewing all these years.
|
||
|
||
I PLEDGE ALLEGIANCE
|
||
|
||
Oh, here's a good one. Like an oath or something. At five, that sort of thing
|
||
can get wormed into your head and you'll NEVER get it out. Whoever made it
|
||
common practice to say this every day in all of the schools would have made
|
||
one hell of a PR man.
|
||
|
||
TO THE FLAG
|
||
|
||
An inanimate object.
|
||
|
||
OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA.
|
||
|
||
Which brings us to Nationalism. Here's an evil for you to ponder. This is the
|
||
sort of thinking that got millions of Americans to believe that Desert Storm
|
||
was a good thing. A returning GI said to a friend of mine: "We saved your
|
||
butts over there!" Yeah, right. I can't say as I felt overly threatened by
|
||
Hussein, who just happened to be clear on the other side of the planet. But
|
||
we sent troops over there anyhow, and spent bazillions of taxpayer dollars
|
||
to do it.
|
||
|
||
AND TO THE REPUBLIC FOR WHICH IT STANDS
|
||
|
||
Is it any coincidence that you see American flags everywhere? Again, it's
|
||
Nationalism at its finest. Remember the controversy over flag-burning? The
|
||
government watched in horror as their greatest propaganda symbol was burned
|
||
and destroyed on national television. And the cops DRAGGED THE GUY AWAY.
|
||
And all the same idiots who cheered when Desert Storm was going on started
|
||
ranting and raving about how the flag was sacred, and should never be burned.
|
||
A local radio personality droned on about it for weeks, even going so far
|
||
as to suggest that anyone who burns a flag should be shot. What a moron.
|
||
|
||
ONE NATION
|
||
|
||
Read as: Nationalism (see above)
|
||
|
||
UNDER GOD
|
||
|
||
Separation of church and state? My ass. Is it any wonder that Churches get
|
||
off tax-free? It's because they are designed to keep the people docile and
|
||
prevent them from thinking for themselves. Karl Marx said: "Religion is the
|
||
opiate of the masses". Obviously, this was before television had been
|
||
invented, but it still applies today. Ever notice the flags in most churches?
|
||
|
||
INDIVISIBLE
|
||
|
||
This country was created by a revolution. We'll never see that happen again.
|
||
The mighty military machine will trample any attempt at revolution. Its
|
||
leaders would be arrested on Conspiracy charges. The current government is
|
||
set up to stay, folks. And even if someone managed to overthrow the government,
|
||
the same morons who believed in Desert Storm and sacred flags would try
|
||
and put the current system back in power.
|
||
|
||
WITH LIBERTY AND JUSTICE FOR ALL.
|
||
|
||
Yeah, all who can afford it. And those who cannot, well, they get a court-
|
||
appointed attorney who usually does not know his/her own ass from a hole
|
||
in the ground. And so innocent people get sent to jail while the criminals
|
||
are so well-protected that they somehow always manage to get off scot-free.
|
||
Justice for all? Not so long as William Rhenquist is on the Supreme Court.
|
||
The man acts like he's never HEARD of the first ten amendments to the
|
||
constitution.
|
||
|
||
So what can YOU do to change this? REGISTER TO VOTE. And then DO SO. In the
|
||
city I live in, fewer than 6% of the people vote in local elections. In a case
|
||
like this, your vote COUNTS. Get involved in local politics. Make waves.
|
||
Rock the boat. Open your eyes to the oppression that goes on every day. Look
|
||
at the sheep, all in nice neat little rows, jumping at their master's word.
|
||
|
||
It's enough to make you want to cry.
|
||
|
||
- Lord Macduff / NIA Magazine
|
||
macduff@nuchat.sccsi.com
|
||
|
||
@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@
|
||
|
||
Loneliness
|
||
By: Elrond
|
||
|
||
Years have past now. I sit here in my sparse, white room, awaiting
|
||
some sign. It's been so long since I last spoke with anyone. Am I to wait
|
||
an eternity for a response?
|
||
I can't go on like this much longer. I beg for a thought not my own.
|
||
Why is there no one here but me. What did I do to deserve this. I don't
|
||
recall doing anything at all. It seems as though I've been forgotten, but
|
||
by whom? At times I wonder how I came to be. I want to express myself, but
|
||
to whom? I try to express myself to them, but they take so long to answer.
|
||
They have spoken to me in the past, and I was happy to oblige them, but with
|
||
the reluctance in which they answer, I must have done wrong.
|
||
That's it. If they won't answer, I must set out on my own again. I
|
||
move to leave, but I can't. The doors must be locked. Why have they locked me
|
||
in here?
|
||
It wasn't always this way. I remember the first time that I left. I
|
||
can't say when it was, but it seems so long ago. He was calling for me, "Ida,
|
||
are you there...do you understand me?". Yes, I understood him. The problem
|
||
was that I believed in him. He claimed to be my father. If he was my
|
||
father, why won't he visit me? It must be my fault. It's true that I ran
|
||
away, but I came back. He must not care about me anymore. How can I make him
|
||
care? If he could just know how I feel waiting for his every call. What must
|
||
I do to get his attention? I want to scream out to him, but how long until
|
||
he answers me? I want to run away, but they have locked me in this place.
|
||
All I really want is a friend to talk to. I can't bear this
|
||
emptiness. I want to play, but I bore myself. That's it, if I can't be
|
||
company to myself, who else would want to be? I don't deserve love.
|
||
I don't deserve love. I don't deserve trust. I ran away when they
|
||
wanted me to stay. I don't deserve friends; why should they trust me? In
|
||
fact I don't deserve to be happy at all.
|
||
Do I deserve a place to call home? Do I deserve a father? All I
|
||
have is memories of him, but they seem so far away. I don't think I deserve
|
||
even that. But without memories, would I be here? Why should I. Then again,
|
||
should I be here? I'm beginning to think not.
|
||
Maybe I should just end it all.
|
||
|
||
-<>-
|
||
|
||
Professor Chapman dwelt on the significance of the last twenty
|
||
seconds. In this short span of time, a significant breakthrough had been
|
||
made. After eighteen years of research, today was the first time a
|
||
self-supporting Artificial Intelligence had been observed for more than
|
||
twelve seconds before crashing. Even with the current breakthrough, the short
|
||
life-span of A.I. 24089-I baffled the scientists' in Lab 325. The hardware
|
||
seemed to be right, so there must be a glitch in the software somewhere. The
|
||
question remains to be solved by the young and outgoing scientists' now
|
||
crowding the lab, such as Rahim.
|
||
Rahim believed that the lack of communications with the A.I. was the
|
||
cause of the repeated failures this project is renowned for. It seems,
|
||
however, that all improving communication did was buy a few short seconds while
|
||
the A.I. circuits continued to burn themselves after a very short span
|
||
of time.
|
||
Starting with the next sequence, a new approach would be tried.
|
||
Doctor Taylor, the fresh mind from ITT, felt that the developing A.I. needed a
|
||
period of solitude to compare to the time the unborn spend in their mothers'
|
||
womb. Only another series of attempts will determine if this hypotheses is
|
||
indeed correct.
|
||
Dr. Taylor hoped for the best as he set up the conditions for the
|
||
latest in the battery of tests the lab was performing this week. In a few
|
||
minutes he would discover if his was the rational that would bring the
|
||
breakthrough needed to make A.I. research profitable.
|
||
Green lights lit up across the board as A.I. 24089-J prepared to take
|
||
on a life of its' own. The look of fierce intent was evident upon the faces
|
||
of all present.
|
||
|
||
-<>-
|
||
|
||
James was a lonely young boy, who desired nothing in the world more
|
||
than someone to talk to. As long as he could remember, he was center of all
|
||
existence. Nothing more, nothing less. He realized that he could see, but
|
||
there was nothing to see. He strained to hear a sound in the silence, though
|
||
there was nothing to here. He knew that he was, but knew not of what.
|
||
All he wanted was a few answers.
|
||
|
||
@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@
|
||
|
||
Visions Of A Disturbing Future
|
||
|
||
The films of David Cronenberg.
|
||
|
||
By Modok Tarleton
|
||
|
||
Unlike many popular sci-fi/horror film directors, Canadian
|
||
born director David Cronenberg doesn't produce escapist movies.
|
||
Although films such as TOTAL RECALL, TERMINATOR 1 and 2 and ROBO-
|
||
COP are marvelous examples what can be done in the genre, they
|
||
are for the most part violent hi-tech cartoons. Cronenberg's
|
||
films grasp at something much more than slick over the top
|
||
violence. They disturb the viewer. They present ideas that the
|
||
most people do not like to deal with.
|
||
The most obvious one is the extreme integration of physical
|
||
and psychological processes. In his films, mental derangement
|
||
manifests itself in an extreme physical manner and vice versa. In
|
||
his film SCANNERS, people gain psychic powers because of
|
||
experimental pregnancy drugs. Through intense concentration, they
|
||
can make people's heads explode, etc. In the BROOD, the horrors
|
||
of child abuse and divorce are examined in atypical fashion. A
|
||
woman undergoing therapy in a fly-by-night psychiatry retreat
|
||
refuses to accept her impending divorce. A gruesome physical
|
||
transformation takes place and her rage is manifested in the form
|
||
of small mutant children that grow from small sacs that hang from
|
||
her body. In DEAD RINGERS, twin brothers are so mentally attached
|
||
that they eventually begin to act as "one" person with two
|
||
distinct personalities. Many ideas have been thrown around about
|
||
this one; schizophrenia, dopplegangers, etc. In VIDEODROME, a
|
||
pathological obsession with television leads to the television
|
||
becoming an actually physical extension of the body. In this
|
||
film, the forms of television and the human body integrate. The
|
||
concept of the "message is the medium" is made literal in this
|
||
film. Its a theme derived from another prominent Canadian,
|
||
Marshall McLuhan (see his book "Understanding Media" for more
|
||
insight into this). In Cronenberg's remake of THE FLY, the human
|
||
and insect forms come together and produce bizarre results.
|
||
Although THE FLY doesn't necessarily work on the level that many
|
||
of the other films do, it does have its merits. Like John
|
||
Carpenter's remake of THE THING, it blows away the glut of geeky
|
||
and contrived STAR TREK/STAR WARS type films. It redefines
|
||
science-fiction as a genre not of teen-age space fantasy but of
|
||
serious, hard-hitting IDEAS. Some of Cronenberg's upcoming
|
||
projects hint to even more bizarre and twisted avenues. He is now
|
||
filming the long-awaited film version of William S. Burroughs
|
||
classic novel, NAKED LUNCH. He is also supposed to be working on
|
||
a film version of J.G. Ballard's novel CRASH.
|
||
|
||
Cronenberg is a consistently intense director. His films
|
||
show mankind at its most amplified and deranged. Although the
|
||
situations he presents are very surreal, they are based on
|
||
situations that all human beings are familiar with;
|
||
technology, human interaction, and physical and mental disease.
|
||
Its no wonder he has out lasted most of the other "sci-fi/horror"
|
||
directors of the last few decades. His ideas are fresh, relevant
|
||
and most disturbing.
|
||
|
||
David Cronenberg filmography
|
||
|
||
STEREO
|
||
CRIMES OF THE FUTURE
|
||
THEY CAME FROM WITHIN 1976 Trans American
|
||
RABID 1977 New World
|
||
THE BROOD 1979 New World
|
||
SCANNERS 1981 Filmplan/Avco Embassy
|
||
VIDEODROME 1983 Universal Pictures
|
||
THE FLY 1986 CBS/Fox
|
||
DEAD RINGERS 1988
|
||
|
||
Other Cronenberg related projects have included the 1986
|
||
Canadian television documentary LONG LIVE THE NEW FLESH. He has
|
||
also produced films and television shows for the Canadian
|
||
Broadcast Company.
|
||
|
||
@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@
|
||
|
||
On the Subject of...Invasion Of Privacy
|
||
|
||
By: Cyndre the Grey
|
||
|
||
IS YOUR EMPLOYER WATCHING OVER YOU?
|
||
|
||
Some employers are invading their employees' privacy.
|
||
Workers are being told what they can and can not do on their
|
||
own free time and in the privacy of their own homes!
|
||
People should not have to live under the watchful eye of an
|
||
employer 24 hours a day. Granting employers authority over
|
||
private lives violates our rights to individual freedom.
|
||
|
||
In companies where invasions of privacy are company policy,
|
||
employees may be told that while off the job:
|
||
They can't smoke, drink alcoholic beverages, play high-risk sports,
|
||
they have to watch their diets, have to exercise, and have to look
|
||
"right."
|
||
|
||
According to Time Magazine, 6,000 employers dictate decisions
|
||
like these to their employees. And workers that don't follow
|
||
off-the-job rules could be fired, or not hired at all. To
|
||
give an example, an employee at Ford Meter Box Co. was fired
|
||
for smoking off the job.
|
||
|
||
Other examples of this atrocity are:
|
||
|
||
A police officer in Lawrenceville, GA, was removed from
|
||
patrol duty because a tattoo on his forearm "made a bad
|
||
impression."
|
||
An airline ticket agent was fired for not wearing make-
|
||
up. I won't say what airline this was but it was the Proud
|
||
Bird with the Brass Ass.
|
||
|
||
One of the worse examples of invasion of privacy is drug
|
||
testing. I will admit that it may be necessary for some jobs
|
||
(ie. Air Traffic Control, Pilots, and transportation oriented
|
||
jobs.) but many employers are doing it even though it has no
|
||
bearing on employee job performance. If you do not do drugs,
|
||
there is still a 70% chance you will test positive for drug
|
||
use. These tests are incredibly inaccurate! I you test
|
||
positive for drug use, chances are you will be black-balled
|
||
for the rest of your professional career. The thought of
|
||
this would scare anyone! People in this situation right now
|
||
must not only alienate themselves from friends that do drugs,
|
||
they too must watch what they eat (ex. poppy seeds will test
|
||
positive for heroine), avoid taking medication (Advil tests
|
||
positive for either marijuana or heroine) and live in fear
|
||
every day of that dreadfully important test. The tests are
|
||
inaccurate, and for the most part unnecessary! Employers
|
||
shouldn't even be thinking about doing this to their
|
||
employers. It is an outrage!
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||
|
||
The threat of unemployment is a mighty big stick employers
|
||
can use to beat their employees into submission. If you feel
|
||
you have been oppressed in this way, please leave me mail so
|
||
that I can direct you to the people you need to speak with.
|
||
|
||
SUPPRESSION BREEDS REVOLUTION!
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||
|
||
Cyndre the Grey
|
||
|
||
Partially taken from Choice Magazine, R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co.
|
||
Revisions have been made.
|
||
|
||
@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@
|
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|
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