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Wil Wheaton to get new role on 'Enterprise'

hisholiness writes "It seems that a major underground letter writing campaign has secured Wil Wheaton (ST:TNG's Wesley Crusher) a recurring role the current 'Enterprise' series. According to his website, he states, "The details are still being worked out, but basically what they plan to do is have Wesley use his Time Traveler abilities to move through space and time to the NX-01. He'll be written more like the dark, troubled Wesley of 'The First Duty' and 'Final Mission', and less like the gee-whiz Wesley of days gone by." He continues that he will be in 8 of 22 new episodes over the next two seasons."

219 comments

  1. fp

    And this is my second on April Fools Day. Suck it down banned AC bitches.

    --

    Jack Buck (1924-2002)
    Darryl Kile (1968-2002)
    1. Re:fp by Fecal+Troll+Matter · · Score: -1

      I wish Wil Wheaton would just shut the fuck up and die already.

    2. Re:fp by asbestos_diaper · · Score: -1
      Logged-in posters win.

      Fuck all ACs.

      --

      Visit me online.

    3. Re:fp by ForeignLanguageTroll · · Score: -1
      Cuál es el reparto con la gran cantidad de postes del día de los tontos de abril aquí hoy? I, como la mayoría de los programas de lectura del punto de la raya vertical, está consiguiendo enfermo y cansado de la cantidad continuada de crap que es aquí fijado

      Quién sabe, quizás los editores finalmente han caído del extremo profundo y están totalmente insane.

      También quisiera quejarme por el retiro de la capacidad de fijar anonymously. Creo que es esto undeserved a conciencia, y se debe solucionar lo más rápidamente posible. Permítase que y mis carteles del compañero fijen sin asociar su nombre a su posts.

      Gracias por su tiempo. Aprecio grandemente.

  2. oh good god... by dynoman7 · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    not another afj

    --
    Blarf.
    1. Re:oh good god... by 56ker · · Score: 2

      Well Wil Wheaton's website also carries the news - so either /. and he are in collusion or it's true - the plot thickens.

  3. Slashdot by Mike+the+Mac+Geek · · Score: 5, Funny

    April Fools jokes for nerds.
    Stuff that will never happen.

    --
    -------------------------------------------------- ---- The man, the myth, the something or other.
    1. Re:Slashdot by maniac1860 · · Score: 1

      Hey, Bill Gates got laid.

    2. Re:Slashdot by Sc00ter · · Score: 2
      "Hey, Bill Gates got laid."

      Probably more then you ever will...

    3. Re:Slashdot by headchimp · · Score: 1

      That's like saying there is a training department, right Mike?

    4. Re:Slashdot by tomstdenis · · Score: 1

      He is married and has kids [or something like that]. Just FYI.

      --
      Someday, I'll have a real sig.
  4. Imperial interests at conflict by Commienst · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    In the early 1990's the last 19th Century European empire
    crumbled. The longest lasting, although ironically
    originally one of the weakest. Just as other powers
    moved into the vacuum left by the relative weakening of
    the old West European ones, so too today this is
    happening with the decline of the Russian Empire.

    The weakening of Russian power in what was it's southern
    colonial empire is opening up the way for other imperialisms.
    Central Asia and the Caucasus, or the Caspian Region as it is
    also known, is a largely forgotten corner of the world, but with
    all the ingredients of a new Middle East, it may not be for much
    longer. Imperialist competition in the region is centred around
    the exploitation of it's considerable resources of oil and gas,
    principally centred on the different costs and benefits accruing
    to different factions of the ruling class from various pipeline
    projects.

    Firstly I'm going to look at those, before turning to look at the
    interests and goals of three different players in the carve up of
    Central Asia: Iran, the United States and Russia (others include
    Turkey, the E.U. and China but restrictions of time and space
    work against a full exploration).

    Pipelines

    The principal energy resources in the Caspian Region are to
    be found in Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan. All
    three states are essentially landlocked, the Caspian sea being
    an inland sea with no connection to the oceans. As a result, a
    major aspect of the international competition over the
    exploitation of these resources is the struggle over which route
    to take to the sea and the global market. There are a number of
    options, each with their own advocates and each reflecting rival
    agendas.

    The Northern Route (via Russia): The Northern route would
    consist of an upgrading of the existing Kazak and Russian
    pipeline systems, plus a new one linking Baku in Azerbaijan
    with the Russian port of Novorossisk on the Black Sea.
    Obviously this is the option favoured by the Russian rulers, as it
    maintains their dominance of Central Asia and provides a
    source of revenue to them.

    The Southern Route (via Iran): From a purely practical point
    of view this is the most sensible option, with the shortest
    distance as it is able to plug into the Iranian pipeline system
    and it provides access to the growing South Asian market.
    Opposed by the United States, both because of that state's
    hostility to Iran and because it doesn't represent a
    diversification of energy sources - which is a U.S. goal we will
    be returning to. Nonetheless this is the only one of the new
    routes which is actually up and running.

    The Eastern Route (via China): The longest and most
    expensive route but favoured by the Chinese government, and
    being developed by them, it also allows them to exploit the
    resources in their western provinces.

    The Western Route (via Turkey): This is favoured by
    Turkey, the United States and Israel. There are three options
    here; firstly a pipeline to the port of Suspa in Georgia and then
    through the Bosporus straits to Europe. The Turkish claim is
    that the straits will not be able to handle the increased amount
    of shipping and propose instead a pipeline from Azerbaijan to
    Ceyhan on Turkey's Mediterranean coast. The high costs of
    this proposal have promoted an alternative American plan to
    bypass the Bosporus straits with a pipeline going through
    Bulgaria and Greece.

    The South Eastern Route (via Afghanistan): This is the
    reason why in years past Taliban hierarchs popped up in
    Texas and other unlikely places. It has been argued that this
    proposal was a reason behind both Osama Bin Laden's war on
    the U.S. and the U.S. action in Afghanistan. With the fall of the
    Taliban this route has again entered the running. Note that it
    avoids Iran while delivering to the South Asian market, which is
    much more promising than the European one.

    Readers, not even with long memories, will notice the amount
    of armed conflicts which have been found along these routes in
    recent years. Russia, China and Turkey have been engaged in
    suppressing revolt along their favoured routes, as well as of
    course the American intervention in Afghanistan, and the
    Afghan civil war prior to that.

    The Afghan Pipeline

    The Californian based UNOCAL energy corporation began it's
    efforts to establish pipelines transporting oil and gas through
    Afghanistan in October 1995, the original idea was that of it's
    Argentinean competitor Bridas. Lack of financing, the decline in
    world oil prices in 1998, the continuing civil strife in Afghanistan
    and the early phase of the U.S.-Bin Laden conflict, all these
    came together and blocked the Afghan pipeline project.
    However, the victory of American arms has changed the
    situation.

    U.S. based business magazine Forbes reports that with "the
    collapse of the Taliban, oil executives are suddenly talking
    again about building it."

    "It is absolutely essential that the U.S. make the pipeline the
    centerpiece of rebuilding Afghanistan,' says S. Rob Sobhani, a
    professor of foreign relations at Georgetown University and the
    head of Caspian Energy Consulting."

    "The State Department thinks it's a great idea, too. Routing the
    gas through Iran would be avoided, and Central Asian
    republics wouldn't have to ship through Russian pipelines" (1)

    Furthermore on the 9th of February the Irish Times carried an
    agency story outlining a pipeline co-operation deal between the
    Pakistani military dictatorship and the new Afghan government:
    "Pakistani President, Gen Pervez Musharraf, and the Afghan
    interim leader, Mr Hamid Karzai, agreed yesterday that their
    two countries should develop "mutual brotherly relations" and
    co-operate "in all spheres of activity" - including a proposed
    gas pipeline from Central Asia to Pakistan via Afghanistan." (2)

    God told me to do it - The Iranian Challenge

    "Iran's interests are briefly to getting the Caspian and Central
    Asian oil to the Gulf and establish close political and economic
    ties with the region. First, Iran has a desperate need for foreign
    exchange and would benefit from oil and gas transit fees.

    Second, with oil and gas transit, Iran would be in a better
    position to develop trade with the region. Central Asia could
    eventually become an important market for Iranian
    manufactured goods. In turn the combination of oil and gas
    transit and trade could establish Iran as regional power in
    Central Asia.

    Third, with oil transiting from Central Asia to Iranian Gulf ports,
    Iran would strengthen its position in the Gulf, essentially in
    relation to Saudi-Arabia, potentially also in relation to Iraq.
    Emerging as a Central Asian power would also reinforce Iran's
    position in relation to the Gulf neighbours." (3)

    American opposition to the Iranian route is based on a number
    of factors. Principally and most importantly; the Iranian
    revolution of 1979 was a challenge and remains such from the
    point of view that it is the so-called 'Threat of a Good Example'.
    What this means is essentially it is an ever present reminder
    that it is possible to break out of neo-colonial domination, or at
    least try to, such states must be isolated, obstructed, and
    attacked whenever possible. (4)

    This is in the long term collective interests of the American
    ruling class for the simple reason that if it tolerated Iran, given
    the popular alienation from the ruling authorities in the Middle
    East, and given the region's long history of nationalist and
    quasi-nationalist revolt, it would only be an encouragement for
    others to follow the Iranian example. Such a course would, in
    the long run, be possibly fatal for the profits of the American
    banks and arms companies who do so much business with the
    Arab elite. Nationalist regimes would be more concerned with
    developing a native industrial base.

    Also, in the particular case of the Middle East, loss of American
    influence would also mean a loss of some American influence
    over Japan and Europe (the places which actually are
    dependant on Middle Eastern oil - unlike the U.S.). Thus in the
    last twenty odd years Iran has been both directly attacked by
    the United States and as well as by Iraq with U.S. support.

    The problem is that it is in the short term, individual interests of
    U.S. companies (not to mention French ones, Japanese etc..)
    to trade with Iran and indeed use the opportunity offered by the
    Iranian route to export Central Asian energy resources to South
    Asia. Furthermore it is in the interests of the governments of the
    Central Asian republics to do so. The Iranian option simply
    makes the best economic sense, all the more so because it
    already exists. Unless an alternative is developed, market
    forces will compel companies to develop the resources of
    Central Asia via Iran. Thus it is imperative for the U.S.
    Government to facilitate an alternative pipeline to the Indian and
    Pakistani markets.

    Fortunately for them they have just radically altered the political
    landscape of Afghanistan. For the civil war in Afghanistan was
    a major barrier to constructing the only possible pipeline which
    could deliver straight to the South Asian market while avoiding
    Iran.

    However as we have seen, the potential for proxy war very
    much remains in Afghanistan, as does the potential for limited
    insurgency by Taliban remnants. The potential for the former is
    underscored by the opportunity presented to the rulers of Iran
    by the oil and gas of the Caspian region. Not to mention the
    threat presented to them by what would amount to, if reported
    American plans for Iraq go ahead and are successful, an
    American encirclement, with a client regime to the east in
    Afghanistan and to the west in Iraq.

    So we have seen Iran exploiting the power vacuum in
    post-Taliban Afghanistan and possible American missile strikes
    on Iran's Afghan proxies. Expect in the very least to hear much
    more ranting like "The Axis of Evil" and "The Great Satan".

    The Democracy of the Oil Barons the American
    Expansion.

    "when the Afghan conflict is over we will not leave
    Central Asia. We have long term plans and interests in
    this region." (5)
    - U.S. Assistant Secretary of State, Elizabeth Jones.

    The central objectives of American Imperialism in this region
    include:

    (1) Containment of Iran.

    (2) Detaching Central Asia and the Caucasus from
    Russian domination.

    (3) Opening up the area as a major supplier of oil and
    gas, - in order to diversify global energy production and
    thereby reduce the power of oil states.

    (4) To realise the commercial opportunities offered to
    American corporations.

    The document "U.S. Military Engagement with Transcaucasia
    and Central Asia" outlines these goals and was published by
    the Strategic Studies Institute of the U.S. Army War College.
    Some extracts from it serve to illustrate the U.S. interests and
    activities in the area:

    "The 1998 National Security Strategy states why this region is
    important to the United States. It has estimated reserves of 160
    billion barrels of oil, comparably large natural gas reserves, and
    will play an increasingly important role in satisfying the world's
    future energy demands."

    "U.S. officials publicly maintain that this region's energy
    sources could be a back up to the unstable Persian Gulf and
    allow us and our allies to reduce our dependence on its energy
    supplies. In pursuit of this goal we have worked to establish
    governments with open markets, i.e., openness to U.S. firms
    (and not only those associated with energy) and democracy.

    We have also moved to check any possibility of their one-sided
    military dependence upon Russia. The determination to prevent
    either Moscow or Tehran from dominating the area, either in
    energy, or through penetration and control of their defence
    structures goes back at least to 1994."

    A few pages later and the rhetoric of promoting democracy is
    admitted to be rhetoric: "In practise, energy and security have
    dominated the agenda as the means to achieve this broader
    Westernisation to the point that evidently little pressure is being
    directed towards democratisation of local governments."

    In fact foreign imperialism, be it Russian or American, is
    marching hand in hand with local despotism, as is always the
    case. The document then turns to the military aspects of these
    policies: "the oil producing states are now members of the PfP
    [Partnership for "Peace" - N.A.T.O. front organisation
    FE], and Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, and Georgia overtly seek
    NATO's direct participation in the area, the U.S. or Western
    contest with Russia and Iran has assumed a more openly
    military aspect."

    "This stimulates an equal and opposing reaction. Armenian
    officials proclaim the vital importance of joint exercises with
    Russia to defend Armenia's security and talk of an 'axis' with
    Russia and Iran. Consequently and due to the spiralling
    strategic stakes in the Transcaspian, NATO's collective
    engagement, as well as the specifically U.S. engagement, with
    the region is likely to grow."

    "In September 1995, U.S. experts on Central Asia met at NATO
    headquarters and cited the extensive U.S. interests in Caspian
    energy deposits as a reason why Washington might have to
    extend its Persian Gulf security guarantees to this region. (6)

    U.S. involvement has only taken off since then. While U.S.
    officials intone visions of a win-win situation for everyone,
    where everyone has shared interests in developing these
    energy markets, they have really aimed to deny and break
    Russia's monopoly over the energy producing states."

    "Russia could sabotage many if not all of the forthcoming
    energy projects by relatively simple and tested means
    and there is not much we could do absent a strong and
    lasting regional commitment. Therefore, for a win-win
    situation to come about, some external factor must be
    permanently engaged and willing to commit even military
    forces, if need be, to ensure stability and peace.

    This does not necessarily mean a unilateral commitment,
    but more likely a multilateral one, e.g., under the U.N.'s
    auspices but actually under U.S. leadership. Without such
    a permanent presence, and it is highly unlikely that the
    United States can afford or will choose to make such a
    presence felt, other than through economic investment,
    Russia will be able to exclude all other rivals and regain
    hegemony over the area." (7)

    Well that was published in June 2000, a year and a half later
    and the United States does have military bases in Central Asia,
    and has just moved into Georgia in the Caucasus - also on a
    potential pipeline route (The Western, via Turkey one).
    September 11th has spectacularly increased the potency of the
    American military by effectively defusing the American public's
    long standing opposition to foreign military adventures.

    Yes the last two decades has seen lots of those, but always in
    forms calculated to minimise a public opinion backlash at
    home. Some examples, covert action (Nicaragua), military
    support to proxies (El Salvador, Columbia), overwhelming force
    in ideal territory (Iraq), air war (Serbia) or simply actions against
    opponents without the slightest chance of putting up effective
    resistance (Granada). We should not doubt that American
    militarism has moved up a gear or two.

    A House Divided

    These areas were incorporated into the Russian Empire in the
    19th Century, with the intent of protecting trade routes and
    using them as a bargaining chip with the British Empire. Under
    both Tsarism and Bolshevism a classically colonial pattern of
    development was put into place. While Azerbaijan was an oil
    producer (9) the Central Asian republics were generally under
    a mono-culture/cash crop system of cotton production, and in
    both cases had unequal trade relations with the metropolis. The
    exception is the northern part of Kazakhstan, adjoining Russia,
    which was industrialised, with a workforce largely of Slavic
    origins.

    This colonial dependence persisted following the break up of
    the "Soviet" Union, while Kazakhstan's trade with Russia
    accounts for 42.5% of the G.D.P. of that country trade
    with Kazakhstan is a mere 1.7% of that of Russia. Kazakhstan
    is actually dependant on Russia for it's energy supplies, as all
    the infrastructure was developed in the "Soviet" period running
    north-south, rather than west-east from Kazakhstan's oil fields
    to it's urban centres. (10)

    The fact that exports must go through Russia provides a further
    stranglehold. As with economy so with security and a number
    of these states - Armenia and Tajikistan in particular, have
    been forced to lean on Russia for military support, for the lack
    of an alternative power.

    However Kremlin influence is not what it once was, due to the
    Russian economic situation, and because of, the, generally
    speaking, post-independence eagerness for real
    independence on the part of local elites. There is insufficient
    capital in Russia for investments in and loans to the new States
    on a level with that of outside interests. Thus there are now
    American, Chinese, Turkish, South Korean, European, Iranian
    interests in the region. The arrival of multinational corporations
    is actually to the Russian benefit as these provide the
    investments necessary to develop the exploitation of
    resources, which can then provide revenues to the Russian
    "elite" due to their control of the export routes. Plus that control
    can be used as leverage for Russian companies to muscle
    their way into the energy consortiums developing the region.

    Since the U.S. turned against the Taliban there has been a
    community of interest between the two powers in regard to the
    destruction of the Taliban. The Russian esablishment has long
    feared the 'Talibanisation' of Central Asia as it's border with
    Kazakhstan is porous, there are considerable ethnic Russian
    populations in these states, as well as Muslim minorities in
    Russia itself.

    Nevertheless Putin's U.S. friendly policy is not without it's
    detractors in Moscow. On February 21st a group of former
    military chieftains, including a former defence minister,
    launched a literary attack on the Russian president, claiming
    that: "With your blessing, the United States has received
    military bases in Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Kyrgyz Stan, and,
    maybe, Kazakhstan.

    "In the long run, these bases are for dealing a strike against
    Russia, not Bin Laden .. .We would not be surprised if tomorrow
    they call you the best American, European or NATO official."
    (11)

    Since the break up of the "Soviet" Union there have been a
    number of Russian military interventions in the region. The
    Russian army has popped up in Georgia and Armenia and still
    has a presence in Tajikistan, but have been removed from
    Turkmenistan and Kyrgyz Stan. Furthermore in the early 1990's
    Russia backed Armenia in it's dispute with Turkish backed
    Azerbaijan. Not to forget the long running conflict in Chechnya
    (it self on the Russian favoured pipeline route from Azerbaijan).

    The American military presence is something of a new
    development. The interests of the Russian 'elite' in the area are
    in maintaining it's influence over economic development, so it
    can have it's cut. Along with this, in the future Russian energy
    needs are likely to expand and so the Caspian region, as it
    stands now, could provide a cheap source.

    They have formed a body for maintaining co-operative relations
    with China, which like the U.S. is a new player in the region,
    called the Shanghai Co-Operation Council and have forged a
    relationship with Iran, particularly in regard to disputes over
    territorial rights in the Caspian sea, the Armenian-Azerbaijan
    conflict, and in supporting the Northern Alliance against the
    Taliban. This has lead "Some observers to warn" of a "growing
    similarity of interests among Russia, Iran and China in
    countering the West and attempting to increase their own
    influence".(12)

    Those are the words of a briefing paper produced by American
    civil servants for Congressmen. However the Russian
    establishment is divided. According to New Delhi based
    research group the Institute for Defence Study and Analysis: "It
    is believed that a difference of opinion exists in present day
    Russia regarding its future course in response to the US
    geo-political challenge. The "imperialists" and the
    "traditionalists" would like Russia to dig in its heels in defence
    of its historical positions in the region.

    The "pragmatists" or the "realists", who include Russia's major
    oil and gas companies, would like to adjust to the changing
    geo-political realities in return for a share in the region's
    lucrative oil and gas deals. It appears that the country's
    policy-making establishment, in the pursuit of perceived
    national interests, is constantly synthesising the differing views
    among the Russian political class and strategic community.

    Despite its current weakness, Russia still has the requisite
    force projection capability in the region. Moreover, the
    proposed pipeline by-passing Russia is likely to pass through
    conflict-ridden areas in the former Soviet republics where
    Russia has established itself in the role of a peace-keeper.

    There are also reports that Russia has of late stepped up
    support to the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) which is behind
    the Kurdish insurgency in eastern Turkey from where the
    proposed Baku-Ceyhan pipeline would pass. Russian
    geo-politicians feels that as a consequence of its victory in the
    Cold War, the USA has driven to the minimum Russian
    influence in the Baltic and Black Seas.

    It has forced Russia out of the zone of the warm seasthe Indian
    Oceanwith the loss of Central Asia and Transcaucasus. Making
    use of the CARs'[Central Asian Republics] desire to assert their
    independence from Moscow, it is seeking to irrevocably
    change the geo-political equations in the region. It seems to
    them that Russia can protect its vital interests in Central Asia in
    partnership with Iran and China against Western machinations
    and designs." (13)

    Conclusion

    Just as within Afghanistan rival warlords compete for control
    over road tolls, smuggling, and heroin production, so to on a
    world level is the same process at work, on a larger scale.
    State power is the representative of economic power, and rival
    states carve up resources and markets in perpetual
    competition, in doing so representing the long term collective
    interests of their national ruling class (rather than short term
    interests of individual corporations).

    While the buying of influence and individuals moving from
    political office to the corporate boardroom (and back again)
    may show us aspects of this process at work it is not it's
    source. Rather the source is the division of society into classes,
    with a ruling class based on control over production. The state
    is the mechanism by which the ruling class advances it's
    interests both at home and overseas. At home against it's
    subjects, overseas against rival rulers.

    It has been amply shown how imperialist competition fuelled the
    Northern Alliance-Taliban war, and this is true of the earlier
    Afghan conflicts also (14). The Afghanistan situation then is not
    one of a "failed state" but one of successful states (Russia,
    Iran, Pakistan, the United States) and rather being an
    aberration is the by-product of the competition between
    hierarchies intrinsic to the world capitalist system.

    Terry Clancy lives in Ireland and writes for the Free Earth
    website (http://www.struggle.ws/freeearth.html). He is a
    member of the Anarchist Federation (http://www.afed.org.uk)

    (1)http://www.forbes.com/global/2002/0204/020.ht ml
    (2) 'Irish Times' 09/02/02
    (3) 'Oil in the Caspian Region and Central Asia - the Political
    Risk of the Great Game Continued' By Øystein Noreng
    http://www.caucasus.dk/publication8.htm
    ( 4) This phraseThreat of a Good Example was coined in the
    80s to describe the Sandinista Government in Nicaragua. I do
    not use it as a gesture of "anti-imperialist" support to the
    murderous (and Imperialist) regime in Iran, but rather in
    recognition that it's existence as a state born from the downfall
    of a American backed government is an example to people
    who would like to do the same to other American clients in the
    region and expel Western influence altogether. I think this is the
    case irrespective of sectarian disputes within Islam and that it
    shapes the American Imperialist attitude to Iran.
    (5) Quoted in The Guardian 12/02/02
    (6) "Persian Gulf security guarantees" would presumably, given
    the situation in the Persian Gulf, involve a great deal of
    American military intervention and a permanent military
    presence plus an attempt to exclude/contain all other powers.
    (7)'U.S. Military Engagement with Transcaucasia and Central
    Asia'
    http://carlisle-www.army.mil/usass i/ssipubs/pubs20 00/milengag/milengag.htm
    (8)Azerbaijan's oil fields were the ultimate goal of 'Operation
    Blau' the 1942 German offensive on the Eastern Front (i.e. the
    offensive which was met by the Russian counter-attack and
    encirclement of the Sixth Army at Stalingrad).
    (9) Abridged History of Central Asia by William M. Brinton
    http://www.asian-history.com/the_frame.ht ml
    (10) Quoted in 'The Guardian' 22/02/02
    (11) 'CRS Issue Brief for Congress: Central Asia's New States
    and Implications for U.S. Interests'
    http://cnie.org/NLE/CRSreports/interna tional/inter -26.cfm
    (12) 'Russian Policy Towards Central Asia, part 2'
    http://www.idsa-india.org/an-feb9-9.html
    (13) See the Human Rights Watch report 'Afghanistan The
    Crisis of Impunity' for the Northern Alliance-Taliban war -
    http://www.hrw.org/reports/2001/afghan2/ or 'Silent Soldier: The
    Man behind the Afghan Jehad' for the Pakistani involvement in
    the 'Soviet'-Islamist conflict of the 1980's -
    http://www.afghanbooks.com/silentsoldier/englis h/0 2.htm

    --

    I am into the copy and paste.
    1. Re:Imperial interests at conflict by JanusFury · · Score: 2, Funny

      And there was much trolling, and it was lame.
      And the moderators did moderate, and they did moderate well.
      And the peasants rejoiced.
      Huzzah!

      --
      using namespace slashdot;
      troll::post();
  5. All right... by A.Soze · · Score: 2, Funny

    C'mon Wil, we know you're out there... We know you're reading. Come on, say something funny. Come on... Please?

    --
    "Goodness, how did you people live long enough to invent tools?" -Hobbes (the tiger, not the philosopher)
    1. Re:All right... by Indras · · Score: 3, Funny

      Don't worry, he's there. As a matter of fact, he just wrote his own operating system. Dubbed "Wheatonix," it will be the future for operating systems, and even has one game available for it already, Duke Nukem Forever (certainly took FOREVER, didn't it?).

      Go buy your copy today at http://www.thinkgeek.com today!!

      --
      The speed of time is one second per second.
    2. Re:All right... by Spankophile · · Score: 1

      Will's Operating system should be called:

      Wheatabix!!

    3. Re:All right... by ncc74656 · · Score: 2
      Will's Operating system should be called:

      Wheatabix!!

      Eww...that's nasty stuff. (I thought Weetabix would be similar to Shredded Wheat. Weetabix turns into mush approximately 2.45 seconds after you add milk.)

      --
      20 January 2017: the End of an Error.
  6. are people even reading by Bandito · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Are people even reading stories anymore?! I'm checking out of here for the day. This has quickly become a huge waste of my time.

    1. Re:are people even reading by klocwerk · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Agreed.
      I think one good post would have been much appreciated. A full day of bullsh|t is just pushing it.
      See y'all tomorrow.

      --

      "You worthless post!"
      -Shakespeare, 2 Gentlemen of Verona, 1. 1. 147
    2. Re:are people even reading by October_30th · · Score: 0, Interesting
      A full day of bullsh|t is just pushing it

      Uh, isn't that like any day on Slashdot?

      --
      The owls are not what they seem
    3. Re:are people even reading by niftyeric · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      &ltsarcasm&gtYeah, screw this! I'm leaving! I don't like it! I'm telling mom!&lt/sarcasm&gt

      Cry me a river, geez. Lighten up.. :)

      --
      proton != antielectron
    4. Re:are people even reading by geekoid · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      as much of a waste of time as poting your not going to read anymore?
      seriously, you don't like the AF jokes, fine. Comeback tomorrow. But to decide not to come back here becasue its a waste of your time, and then to spen MORE time telling everybody about pretty much makes you a looney.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    5. Re:are people even reading by sulli · · Score: 2, Funny
      This has quickly become a huge waste of my time.

      And this is different from other days how?

      --

      sulli
      RTFJ.
    6. Re:are people even reading by Anonymous+DWord · · Score: 3, Funny

      Well, other days, Slashdot slowly becomes a waste of your time...

      --
      "If he thinks he can hide and run from the United States and our allies, he's sorely mistaken." Bush on bin Laden
    7. Re:are people even reading by sulli · · Score: 3, Funny

      So it's more efficient than ever today!

      --

      sulli
      RTFJ.
    8. Re:are people even reading by xinit · · Score: 1

      You're suggesting that /. has ever not been a waste of your time? Misguided?

      --
      --- http://foo.ca
  7. So... by BSDGeek · · Score: 1

    They've got Wil Wheaton in on the April Fool's jokes too now.

    1. Re:So... by Flounder · · Score: 2
      I think they're just reposting the April Fools Jokes from WWDN.

      --

      No boom today. Boom tomorrow. There's always a boom tomorrow. - Cmdr. Susan Ivanova

    2. Re:So... by sulli · · Score: 1

      check out this at thinkgeek

      --

      sulli
      RTFJ.
    3. Re:So... by mekkab · · Score: 5, Funny

      oh nonsense...
      we know Wil still harbors Wesley Crusher fantasies involving everything from being given the vulcan neck pinch to having a gaggle of tribbles on the bed.

      aw man, that got WAY too graphic.

      but I'm certain that Wil probably came up with this idea ALL on his own. He's a craft guy. Not that the SLASHDORK editors don't have mad pull in the internet world...some would consider them minor deities!

      Ahhhh yes. April Fools.

      --
      In the future, I would want to not be isolated from my friends in the Space Station.
    4. Re:So... by GlassUser · · Score: 2

      Yeah, it's what they're doing today. Except for the paid story post, they're just posting everyone else's april fool jokes up. Kinda lame, if you ask me. But whatever, it's not my site.

    5. Re:So... by sporktoast · · Score: 2

      [...] Wil still harbors Wesley Crusher fantasies involving everything from being given the vulcan neck pinch to having a gaggle of tribbles [...]
      If I remember him correctly from the countless interviews, that'd be the Vulcan detox gel rub.
      --
      In a related story, the IRS has recently ruled that the cost of Windows upgrades can NOT be deducted as a gambling loss.
  8. Wil Wheaton: unrated geek actor by nytimes · · Score: 0

    Wil Wheaton has long been under recognized. I wish him best wishes in this role.

    1. Re:Wil Wheaton: unrated geek actor by L0rdkariya · · Score: -1

      YHBT. HAND.

      --
      The /. users are rep'd by 2 groups. Janitors, who post articles, and Trolls who bash them. These are
    2. Re:Wil Wheaton: unrated geek actor by CmdrTaco+on · · Score: -1

      You are one pathetic geek. But it's not your fault you stay home every night jerking off to Beverly Crusher. Lets blame... oh say your mom.

      --

      saru mo ki kara ochiru

    3. Re:Wil Wheaton: unrated geek actor by hisholiness · · Score: 1

      Well, I preferred to jerk off to Counselor Troi.

      cfs

    4. Re:Wil Wheaton: unrated geek actor by CmdrTaco+on · · Score: -1

      You still did even after you found out she was a she-male? Whatever floats your boat.

      --

      saru mo ki kara ochiru

  9. It's about time! by Dragnet · · Score: -1

    While many consider the boy annoying or rude; despite his tendancy to be abducted by aliens or attacked.. or even be the target of alien sexual predators, I thought he added a spark of life to the show :-). By the way, keep up the interesting fools day, Taco(?).

  10. Does this... by AnonymousCowheard · · Score: -1
    Does this have anything to do with Wendy Whitebread?

    'cause I love Whitebread, does anyone else have some information on her career? I rather talk about a girl, instead of some other punk old man, because I'm not (a) HEMOS.

    --

    But I'm sure you already Gnu that.
  11. He's got powers.... by CoolVibe · · Score: 1

    ...secret powers... *grin*

    1. Re:He's got powers.... by yintercept · · Score: 2

      I hope he has supernatural powers. In his last episode, didn't he turn into supernatural god type thing that not only mastered Linux, but could navigate through the stars with his mind.

  12. asbestos_diaper is Wil Wheaton by October_30th · · Score: -1
    But he already did!

    asbestos_diaper is Wil Wheaton!

    --
    The owls are not what they seem
  13. Bleh, this is getting old. by GlassUser · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    Okay, no more slashdot for the day. I'm tired of this crap.

    1. Re:Bleh, this is getting old. by nurb432 · · Score: 1

      Just like last year.. its only ONE day .. let them have their fun.

      --
      ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  14. i don't mean to sound like a dickhole by SweetAndSourJesus · · Score: 0

    But can we get back to the sort-of-funny stupid jokes?

    --

    --
    the strongest word is still the word "free"
    1. Re:i don't mean to sound like a dickhole by YourMissionForToday · · Score: -1

      what is the sound of one dickhole clapping?

  15. Ahh yes by tswinzig · · Score: 5, Funny

    It seems that a major underground letter writing campaign has secured Wil Wheaton (ST:TNG's Wesley Crusher) a recurring role the current 'Enterprise' series.

    Now we know what he does with all his free time.

    --

    "And like that ... he's gone."
    1. Re:Ahh yes by b0r0din · · Score: 1

      Maybe Wil's working with the Borg like in this article.

    2. Re:Ahh yes by !splut · · Score: 1

      Even Will couldn't do this. When was the last time an underground letter writing campaign accomplished anything? Especially for WW? If people were writing letters to the Enterprise producers, it'd be over the CRAPPY THEME MUSIC!!

      --
      The angel in the oatmeal.
  16. I truly hope this is an April Fool's Joke! by rudy_wayne · · Score: 0, Flamebait


    Wesley Crusher is one of the all time worst Star Trek characters. "Enterprise" sucks bad enough without him.

    1. Re:I truly hope this is an April Fool's Joke! by L0rdkariya · · Score: -1

      It's not a joke though. I've been talking with Wil for a few months now, and he has been up and down about this role on Enterprise.

      He decided to go with it last week.

      Wesley fits in with the whole time travel/Suleiban storyline that we've seen in a few episodes.

      --
      The /. users are rep'd by 2 groups. Janitors, who post articles, and Trolls who bash them. These are
  17. Can't you see you are all getting fooled? by say · · Score: 0, Flamebait
    Everyone sitting patiently waiting for a new joke to appear on slashdot, silently lurking in the shadows to be the very first person to comment on how stupid April Fool's Day on /. is:

    You are the ones getting fooled! You are probably the most brain-dead creatures ever in existence; sitting around on a site you claim to be stupid and annoying!

    And congrats to the TacoMan: it actually works :)

    --
    Roses are #FF0000, violets are #0000FF, all my base are belong to you
  18. April fools by Mario21 · · Score: 1

    Funny, I just red some complaints under the previous post about too much april fools... Maybe you guys should wait until after a few serious posts to crack up again?

  19. sympathy for the devil by Stalcair · · Score: 1

    I have heard that he is arrogant and presumptious, so I wonder if that has anything to do with it... not like Hollywood isn't full of Prima Donnas, but I just wonder now. Were he not a 'geek' would /. necessarily care? Oh well, I always wonder about odd things like that.

    --

    I seek not only to follow in the footsteps of the men of old, I seek the things they sought.

    1. Re:sympathy for the devil by susano_otter · · Score: 2
      It's /.ed right now, but you could try reading his own site some time. Then you wouldn't have to wonder any longer if his arrogance and presumption have been paving the way for his succesful career.

      Seriously, though, I imagine /. would care, seeing as how ST is part of the geek canon, and how Wesley is a highly controversial and historically despised character.

      --

      Any sufficiently well-organized community is indistinguishable from Government.

  20. No! God No! by The+Great+Wakka · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    Stop the insanity! No more blatant april fool's jokes! Please! Stop!

    --
    Everything is mainstream now.
    1. Re:No! God No! by normiep · · Score: 1

      But at least its a stupid april fools joke from someone else's stupid site.

      --

      -- Point? None! Cob.

  21. Question is... by Codex+The+Sloth · · Score: 2, Funny

    What will you do when you come back tomorrow and it's all still crap...

    --
    I am not a number! I am a man! And don't you ... oh wait, I'm #93427. Ha ha! In your face #93428!
  22. Wil's Site by xanadu-xtroot.com · · Score: 5, Funny

    From his site:
    here's the bad news: the entire site has crashed, and we can't figure out why.I don't know when the crash happened, or why, because I was offline all weekend, but I'm working on it. I suppose that if you can read this, it means things are working again

    Just wait till it get's done getting /.'ed. You wish that you never even registered that domain...

    :-)

    --
    I'm not a prophet or a stone-age man,
    I'm just a mortal with potential of a super man.
    1. Re:Wil's Site by ocelotbob · · Score: 1

      Naw, Wil's been slashdotted a few times before, I doubt he cares all that much.

      --

      Marxism is the opiate of dumbasses

  23. Funny sites? by arnoroefs2000 · · Score: 2, Offtopic

    Hey, let's post some sites that actually have funny jokes this year.
    I liked the one on www.gamespot.com about the Duke Nukem developers trying to fit the game in the box :)

    1. Re:Funny sites? by abischof · · Score: 2

      Link here, btw.

      --

      Alex Bischoff
      HTML/CSS coder for hire

    2. Re:Funny sites? by Mumble01 · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Or Clippy living again at Microsoft's newest possession, the archive formerly known as the Open Directory Project...

  24. Enough already! by CaseStudy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You know, you're not obligated to report on every single April Fools' link on the web. Give it up.

    1. Re:Enough already! by kylus · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      Y'know, you guys really ought to just expect this by now. Every year they report April Fools links, and they're very likely going to keep doing it. If you don't like em, don't go to /. until April 2. Pretty simple, eh? :)

      --
      --Kylus
      Idiot-proof something, and Life will build a better Idiot.
    2. Re:Enough already! by nucal · · Score: 1

      so I guess this would be The (Hopefully) Mini Slashdot Blackout Apr 1-1 ?

    3. Re:Enough already! by ShadeEagle · · Score: 1

      you're not obligated to report on every single April Fools' link on the web

      Actually, they aren't doing posting every one. Obvious proof: My link to the annual DALnet April Fools press release was rejected. Granted, THAT story isn't exactly boring now that I think about it. In any case, this rejection is proof positive that they're not obligated to report, nor have they reported every April Fools' link on the web.

      Could be worse. They coulda removed posting altogether.

    4. Re:Enough already! by hobbesx · · Score: 1

      Damn straight!

      Make sure to leave plenty for CmdrTaco to post later today you link-hogging bastards!

      --
      This rating is Unfair ( ) ( ) Fair (*) Funny
      Sigh... If only. Modding would be so much more fun.
    5. Re:Enough already! by hisholiness · · Score: 1

      I am just glad Da Taco accepted my article submission. I've tried to submit articles two ore three times previous and they got rejected. Whoya thunk it? Merry Christmas!

      hh

    6. Re:Enough already! by CaseStudy · · Score: 2

      I thought the hyperbole was obvious. I forgot about the literalmindedness of the Slashdot reader. (Yeah, smartass, I know there's more than one. It's a figure of speech.)

    7. Re:Enough already! by Eil · · Score: 2


      You know, you're not obligated to bitch about every single April Fool's story on the web. Give it up.

  25. Letter writing campaign? by blues5150 · · Score: 1

    It seems that a major underground letter writing campaign... This has to be an April Fool's joke! Who writes letters anymore?

    --

  26. C'mon everybody, sing along! by Geekboy(Wizard) · · Score: 0, Troll

    Sell out! With me oh, yea! Sell out! With me tonight. The record company is gonna give me lots of money and everything will be alright!

    Apologies to Reel Big Fish

  27. Weenie.. by NanoGator · · Score: 1

    Yep, you're a weenie. Go here for more info: http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=30393&cid=3266 779

    --
    "Derp de derp."
  28. Let's make the joke on him! by Dixie_Flatline · · Score: 0

    Slashdot his site! Slashdot everyone's site today! It'll be /.'s great April Fool's Joke on everyone! Melted servers!

  29. Blame Taco by fliplap · · Score: 2, Funny

    I've got an idea. Lets BLAME TACO for all these dumb jokes. Ok, so even if it isn't all taco's fault we all blame him. Then taco gets mad at the rest of the nerds and tries to beat them up. But then Cowboy Neal just ends up sitting on taco, crushing his rib cage and killing him. The rest of the nerds are so upset that they decide they can't go on, so they throw themselves off the top of the exodus building. This causes a massive earth quake that shakes the exodus building so badly it completely destroys all of the slashdot servers, causing the end of all these stupid april fools day jokes!

    1. Re:Blame Taco by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 1

      The rest of the nerds are so upset that they decide they can't go on, so they throw themselves off the top of the exodus building. This causes a massive earth quake that shakes the exodus building so badly it completely destroys all of the slashdot servers, causing the end of all these stupid april fools day jokes!

      Yes, but there's got to be a downside.

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
  30. AFD = 1 BIG Troll by goldspider · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Think about it, what other day of the year can CmdrTaco troll with such reckless abandon :)

    Enjoy it while you can, buddy. The AC's will be back tomorrow in full force.

    --
    "Ask not what your country can do for you." --John F. Kennedy
    1. Re:AFD = 1 BIG Troll by susano_otter · · Score: 2
      Think about it, what other day of the year can CmdrTaco troll with such reckless abandon :)

      All of them.

      --

      Any sufficiently well-organized community is indistinguishable from Government.

  31. In Picard's Words.... by elsegundo · · Score: 1

    Get the boy off the Bridge!!!!!

    --


    The revolution will be televised. Blackout restrictions apply.
    1. Re:In Picard's Words.... by Cpt_Kirks · · Score: 1

      IIRC, it was more like "Get that child off my bridge!".

  32. AT LEAST BE CLEVER.... by Dutchmaan · · Score: 4, Insightful

    For one you could have buried a false story in the midst of real ones and have a contest to have readers decide which one is the joke...

    You could give away someone's favorite Linux distro on CD or something... ANYTHING BUT THIS!

    1. Re:AT LEAST BE CLEVER.... by spinwards · · Score: 1

      yeah, unless the real story turnes out to be the no AC thing.

    2. Re:AT LEAST BE CLEVER.... by rabidcow · · Score: 1

      Right now it's the opposite. Try to find the real story hidden in the midst of false ones. :P

  33. We have another weenie!! by NanoGator · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Heh yet another idiotic "I can't stand April Fool's Day post.." brought to you by... another Weenie!

    More info here:

    http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=30393&cid=32 66 779

    --
    "Derp de derp."
  34. I hate 1 April by r_j_prahad · · Score: 5, Funny

    OMFG, yet another unbelievable joke headline. I mean, this is about as likely to happen as, say, ummm... telling us Captain Kirk is going to host a Japanese cooking show. Sheesh.

    1. Re:I hate 1 April by gamgee5273 · · Score: 2

      How about joke that Kirk will be in a movie with De Niro? Talk about lame...

    2. Re:I hate 1 April by Col.+Panic · · Score: 1

      JTK> We are here to ... witness these ... amazing .. chefs
      Announcer> Cuisan!
      JTK> Yes, Sulu?
      Announcer> I think he is using squid!
      JTK> Squid ... and egglpant ... a ... dangerous combination ...

      goddammit! where is the AC!?!??

  35. But it won't be a Dark and Troubled Wesley until.. by stefanlasiewski · · Score: 1

    But it won't be a Dark and Troubled Wesley until
    he flirts with Belana Torres (Roxann Biggs-Dawson) who then storms off the set and threatens to kill the Dark, Troubled and Horney Wesley when he takes it a bit too far...

    --
    "Can of worms? The can is open... the worms are everywhere."
  36. It wouldn't surprise me... by mttlg · · Score: 4, Funny

    If there are two things you can always count on in Star Trek, they would have to be guest appearances by characters from previous Star Trek shows and time travel. At this point I wouldn't be surprised to see an episode of Enterprise where we learn that Wesley picked up Kes from Voyager and settled down on a remote planet in the Enterprise timeline, only to be called back into action when Khan wakes up sooner than he was supposed to and starts wreaking havoc with the space-time continuum, or some such nonsense.

    1. Re:It wouldn't surprise me... by niftyeric · · Score: 3, Funny

      Don't be surprised if in Star Trek 10 he "goes back in time" for a few seconds and reappears and doesn't tell anyone what happened or what he did. Suddenly, his name starts appearing in the history books. Then a few weeks later we see a new episode of "Enterpise" and BOOM, there he is, straight from the Enterprise E and we follow him as he helps do some heroic deed, then he goes "back into the future" and arrives just a few seconds after he left.

      Of course, I'm tired and it is April 1st. We'll see. ;)

      --
      proton != antielectron
    2. Re:It wouldn't surprise me... by Mr.+Neutron · · Score: 5, Funny
      People going back into history to fix things? On a show staring Scott Bakula???

      I think the halflings' weed has clouded your mind.

      --
      dinner: it's what's for beer
  37. You laugh now... by the_skywise · · Score: 1

    But what if the mysterious guy from the future IS Wesley Crusher...

  38. I sure hope.. by wthynot · · Score: 1

    ...we don't have any really spectacular stories today, because no one will believe 'em. "Wolf? Yeah, right. Go home ya little..AAAAHHHH!"

  39. Wil Wheaton OS by mini+me · · Score: 1

    First he creates his own operating system, now this...
    He must be very busy...

    1. Re:Wil Wheaton OS by Chundra · · Score: 3, Funny

      Hence the "Enterprise" bit. Yes folks, it's Wil Wheaton Enterprise Edition (for the multi-tiered enterprise)!

  40. APRIL FIRST POST! by ramdac · · Score: 0, Troll

    ...april fools! More like April 50th post

  41. Philospheces by YourMissionForToday · · Score: -1

    I like to lick girls' rumps. Girls like to have their rumps licked. Most girls won't admit they've had their rump licked, let alone enjoyed having their rump licked. But believe you me, if you lick a girl's rump, she'll love you for life. In fact, that was my high school yearbook quote.

    My conviction to "slurping the brown pucker" doesn't stem from some traumatic experience I encountered during my anal stage of Freudian development. I mean, sure mommy dearest used to administer the "Burning Knitting Needle Catheter Punishment" when I would accidentally "makey poo-poo in me diap-diaps," but I knew that mommy dearest's austere methods of discipline were only an expression of her unconditional maternal love. No, my affinity for heiney hole spelunking was motivated and fostered by my anatomical, not psychological, irregularities.

    You see, I have a small penis.

    Forget about the penile deficiency that cruelly yet so naturally accompanies the average Anglo-Saxon male, it's much worse than that. For instance, after a cold shower I look like a seven year old. Girl. I often wish I were hung like a black guy. No, not from a poplar tree. I mean "hung" in terms of having a penis the size of an enraged Ugandan spitting cobra and testicles that resemble an immigrant Italian mother's Christmas dinner meatballs.

    So, long before I convinced that first girl (without the use of Thunderbird wine or a cast-iron mallet) that I wasn't so repulsive when compared to Rocky Dennis of Mask fame, I knew I would have to go the extra mile down Aretha (Urethra) Franklin's "Freeway of Love." Yes, I would have to go down like ValuJet.

    On one of my first G-spot mining expeditions I struck climactic gold. While I observed a slight twitching as my tongue found my attractive victim's tinkle hole (as it is technically known), I noticed an almost epileptic reaction when I accidentally lapped her greasy donut. From that moment on, my cheese curl of a penis was not an issue, for I had found a way to fill the void, and it was by filling the void with my tongue. Black hole tongue won't you come? After a cold shower I look like a seven year old. Girl.

    When I divulge to other guys that I French kiss the devil's onion ring, their reaction is usually, "What fuck wrong you? That where poop come from!"

    First I ask them why they're talking like Cro-Magnon men, then I explain that there is a significant difference between a female's buttocks and the buttocks of her male counterparts. A guy's ass is a fecal cavern of pooplagtites and pooplagmites formed when ass broth continuously smothers and cakes sweaty mounds of bung fur. Dung dreadlocks if you will. In other words, it would be comparable to making out with a pet store's garbage can in mid-July. In contrast, it is imperative that a female maintain a high level of rectal cleanliness to safeguard her vagina from infection. In general, girls' sphincters are cleaner than boys' mouths. But let me warn you perspective stool munchers. Excremation point! On one occasion, I looked like I had just eaten a Snickers bar. They have peanuts in them, you know.

    In general, performing analingus will prove to be a pleasurable experience for both you and your female companion. So don't kiss your girlfriend's ass, eat it. If you want her as a soul mate, be an ass soul mate. Because much like this article, true love is tongue and cheek.

  42. Don't Forget by wiredog · · Score: 3, Informative

    Wil Wheaton hangs out around here. Search for comments by CleverNickName.

    1. Re:Don't Forget by tswinzig · · Score: 2
      --

      "And like that ... he's gone."
  43. In other April 1 news... by YouAreFatMan · · Score: 5, Funny
    ...CmdrTaco announced today that a new change in editorial policy at Slashdot will take effect. The following changes are being made:

    All stories will be read by the editor before adding any comments such as "this has serious ramifications for quantum computing"

    Editoral budget expanded to allow for the additional 3.2 seconds required to click the spell check button

    When people e-mail CmdrTaco with a concern, complaint, or question, autorespond that says, "Fuck off. I run this site, you're just a loser." will be changed to, "Thank you for your feedback. We'll take your input into consideration of this important issue and let you know of any decisions."

    Editors now only have infinity minus one moderation points

    April Fools jokes permanently stopped

    --
    Robotiq.com is heavily tested on animals
  44. What's next? by Linguar_Amadala · · Score: 1

    First it's programming and sexual relation, now this... OH well, at least we know that /. has a sense of humor :) Next thing you know they'll post about Aliens and their secret pact with the government to bring down Microsoft... OH well, should prove to be interesting.

  45. /. trolls on April 1st by FXSTD · · Score: 3, Funny

    In other news:
    In a dramatic twist, Slashdot a "geek" news site, turned the tables on would-be Anonymous Cowards and Trolls, posting inflamatory "news" articles and other mischeivous April 1st pranks - in the very spirit that they have encouraged moderators to trounce in times past.

    Many /.ters have become angry and are angry and have expressed that they are not going to take it anymore. They have refused to post and when posting have made sure the site operators are aware that enuff is enuff.

    I am sure when this is all over, "News for Nerds" will be back and ACs will be posting flamebait and trolls with a vengence.....

  46. Taco, a suggestion for next year by PhysicsGenius · · Score: 2
    I am available as a Slashdot April Fool's Joke Generator

    If that doesn't whet your appetite, I have a great idea for next year: Research your stories and post them correctly, properly spelled. Hey, it's only once a year!

  47. dammit... by r00tyroot · · Score: 1

    i just got soooooo duped :( I should know not to let my guard down today...!

  48. Awwww man.... by slipkid · · Score: 5, Funny

    Stop going to Wil's site!! My site's parked on the same server...

    A bit weird, this... experiencing the Slashdot effect vicariously through Wil Wheaton.

  49. Don't forget about John DeLancie! by Mr.+Neutron · · Score: 2

    What about Q? Where does Q fit in with all of this? And, for that matter, what is Guynan doing right now, besides wearing Hobbit feet at the Oscars?

    --
    dinner: it's what's for beer
    1. Re:Don't forget about John DeLancie! by mttlg · · Score: 2
      What about Q? Where does Q fit in with all of this?

      Who do you think wakes up Khan?

      And, for that matter, what is Guynan doing right now, besides wearing Hobbit feet at the Oscars?

      Someone has to go fetch Wesley and convince him to save the galaxy, one more time...

    2. Re:Don't forget about John DeLancie! by October_30th · · Score: 0
      what is Guynan doing right now

      "Eat it, you sonofabitch - EAT IT!", barked Guinan as she proferred her cunt to the sloppy ministrations of the Captain. She loved it - watching that bald head going up and down between her legs, feeling his tongue buried deep inside her dark pussy. "Be a good boy!", she reminded him. "Yes mommy!", he answered -coming up for some air. "And don't forget my ass", she barked.

      Guinan was getting a horsey ride on the Captain's back. Round and round the room they went - under Guinan's direction at the bridle. Every now and then she would lean over to give him a randy smack on the buttocks. *Smack*, "Move you fucker!", she ranted. "Move!" *Smack* *Smack* *Smack*. "Yes mommy!", he answered, almost breathless from the punishment, but secretly *enjoying* every moment of it.

      --
      The owls are not what they seem
    3. Re:Don't forget about John DeLancie! by PD · · Score: 2

      "What we have goes beyond friendship, beyond family." - Guinan, talking about Picard

      OK, I see what she meant by that. I also see what Q said when he called her an Imp.

  50. Yeah,but by wiredog · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    You call for blanking the blank. And, as we all know, that's illegal, immoral, and fattening. Plus, it makes you spell badly.

  51. At least next Wed Enterprise has a better plot! by SWTP · · Score: 1

    At the official ST site they have switch to a different eps for this week.

  52. Okay by lblack · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    Yes, I do have a sense of humor. I am familiar with April Fools and the traditional pranking that goes on during April Fools.

    Yes, I am familiar with Slashdot. I have witnessed April Fools on Slashdot several times. I know the drill.

    Sad as this may be to admit, I use Slashdot to keep tabs on a broad overview of what is happening in a particular substrata of technological society. This is where I get my non-specific little pokes at new Linux packages, attacks (perceived and real) on rights-- particularly of the on-line variety, additional features in existing packages, project forks, appointments in key open-source positions, etc.

    Slashdot serves its purpose to me in two ways: It very often posts something that falls into one of the topics I'm interested in, and very often a comment will be added to that post that provides me with some detailed insight. This leads me off on a researching tangent, and I end up a little bit more knowledgeable than I was before. Hooray.

    The value of Slashdot lies in its shotgun approach to Journalism (save that it's only loaded with certain memetic shells, with the occasional dud like Katz for speed bumps).

    Now, though, on April Fools, I'm looking at the worthless front page -- great prank, guys! It only took 20 minutes to get old, and isn't even as humorous as the much better-executed Suckdot from now-defunct Suck.

    I'm also thinking about all the people who mention their stories being rejected, and who link to those stories, and lead me to discover that, hrm, maybe they shouldn't have been.

    What I'm getting at here is that the world dosn't stop on April 1st, and I'm amazed that you can just call off on reporting and post not-incredibly-amusing-and-obviously-fake articles to the front page all day. Is this just like a really lame vacation where you have to spend the day at your computer for you guys? Does that suck?

    I don't know, one or two posts that were clever, mixed in with real news (stuff that matters) would've been funnier. (if you observed the behaviour of trolls, you'd know that the most successful ones post a somewhat plausible stance to hook the fish, not just random noise).

    Are you guys pretty much saying that Slashdot provides so litle value (or is so understaffed) that when given the choice between reporting and playing dumb pranks, that you pick the dumb pranks and can't multitask efficiently enough to do both? That's really kind of pathetic.

    Feh.

    -m.b. dux/RAAXE [fdAAX xQP!]

    1. Re:Okay by lblack · · Score: 1

      Er. That extra "O" -- I was doing it in my head. Go 'way.

  53. Letter from Israeli Refusenik by Commienst · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    An Open Letter to American Jews By Assaf Oron Passover Eve, 2002

    Dear People,

    Yesterday I was informed of an interesting phenomenon: a
    peace-supporting Jewish organization called Tikkun published an ad
    in favor of us, the Israeli reservist refuseniks, and was immediately
    bombarded with hate mails and phones from other American Jews. What
    ís more interesting is that even other Jews considering themselves
    supporters of peace have denounced the Tikkun ad, to the extent
    that some of the Tikkun Advisory Board members are resigning in
    order to minimize the personal damage to themselves. This has so
    saddened, alarmed and angered me, that I find myself setting aside
    a half-day at the eve of Passover, and writing this open letter to
    you all. As is my habit, it is quite long, so please bear with me.

    Most of the 'civilized' attacks, so I understand, were seemingly
    aimed at this or that detail of the Tikkun ad. This is nothing new
    to me. Over the past two months since we came out with our own ad,
    Iíve heard and read so many specific arguments about specific
    aspects of our act. They range from petty nit-picking to plain
    ludicrous, and each and every one of them can be refuted to dust
    in a matter of minutes. But the moment you refute them, new specific
    arguments sprout up like mushrooms. It is clear that there is
    something very general and non-specific behind all this criticism.
    Therefore, if you allow me, I will start from the general and only
    later turn to a couple of these specific issues.

    The general theme is the tribal theme. A very very loud voice (and i
    n Israel nowadays, it is the only voice that is allowed to be fully
    heard) keeps shouting that we are in the midst of a war between two
    tribes: a tribe of human beings, of pure good - the Israelis - and
    a tribe of sub-human beings, of pure evil - the Palestinians. This
    voice is so loud, that it has found its way even to the op-ed pages
    of the New York Times (William Safire, March 24 or 25). To those who
    find this black-and-white picture a bit hard to believe, the same
    voice shouts that this is a war of life and death. Only one tribe
    will survive, and so even if we are not purely good, we must lay
    morality and conscience to sleep, shut up and fight to kill--or
    else, the Palestinians will throw us into the sea.

    Does this ring a bell to you? It does to me. As a little child
    growing up in Israel under Golda Meir and Moshe Dayan, all I heard
    was that the Arabs are inhuman monsters who want to throw us into
    the sea, they understand only force, and since our wonderful IDF
    has won the Six Day War they know not to mess with us anymore --or
    else. And of course, we must keep the Liberated Territories to
    ourselves, because thereís no one to talk with. Then came the Yom
    Kippur war, and for a child of 7 it was the perfect proof that
    indeed the Arabs want to throw us into the sea, and what a great
    opportunity it was for our glorious IDF to teach them a lesson.
    I prayed for the war to continue to its natural and final end --
    the complete surrender of all Arab armies. I was too small to
    evaluate, then, how the war really ended; all these cease-fires
    and talks were too complicated and boring, much more boring than
    a war. And it seemed humiliating that WE should withdraw in these
    cease-fires; I remember that the re-opening of the Suez Canal
    was portrayed in our mass media as a kind of defeat.

    A few years passed and a funny thing happened: those
    throw-us-into-the-sea Arabs came to talk with us, and in
    exchange for all of Sinai they would sign a full peace. The
    IDF chief of staff (the late Motte Gur, later a Labor Party
    minister) shouted that it is a hoax, that we should not believe
    Saadat, but the politicians had to sign. Already a teenager, I
    went and protested against the withdrawal from Sinai. It seemed
    strange to me that most of the demonstrators were orthodox Jews.
    After all, it was a purely logical issue: the Arabs are not to
    be trusted, thatís what weíve learned from day one. Well, lucky
    for the country, the government and the majority of the people
    employed a different logic, and the peace with Egypt was not
    missed.

    But the throw-us-into-the-sea paradigm immediately found new
    fields for play. There was an inconvenient reality on the Northern
    border, and even though the forces on the other side (Palestinians!
    Phew!) had strictly adhered to a secret cease-fire for about a year,
    they were Arabs and therefore could not be trusted. So we talked
    ourselves into invading Lebanon and setting up a friendlier regime
    there. The mastermind of the invasion was defense minister Ariel
    Sharon, and Shimon Peres, then head of opposition, voted together
    with his party in favor of the invasion. Only later, when it turned
    sour, and after many refuseniks already sat in jail, would the main
    opposition turn against the whole affair. For me at 16 it was also
    a turning point. When I understood that the government had lied to
    me in order to sell me this war, I turned from 'center-rightist' to
    'leftist'. Sadly enough, it has taken me almost 20 more years,
    in a slow and painful process, to understand how deeply the lies
    and self-delusion are rooted in our collective perception of reality.

    Anyway, when Peres withdrew most of our forces from Lebanon in 1985,
    the Arabs could still not be trusted. And so, to soothe our endless
    paranoia and suspicion, we created that perpetual source of death
    and crime ironically known as "the Security Zone." It took many
    years, a lot of blood and Four Mothers - against almost all
    politicians, generals, and columnists - to finally pull us out of
    Lebanon. In the long and hard way, we learned that even the Lebanese
    are human beings whose rights must be respected.

    But not the Palestinians. Because the Palestinians are too painfully
    close, like a rival sibling (and - may I add - because they have
    always been so weak), we have singled them out for a special
    treatment. Having them under our rule, weíve allowed ourselves to
    trample them like dirt, like dogs. Weíve been doing it even to our
    own Palestinian citizens (especially before 1966), but we have
    perfected our treatment in this strange no manís land created in
    1967, and known as the Occupied Territories. There we have created
    an entirely hallucinatory reality, in which the true humans, members
    of the Nation of Masters, could move and settle freely and safely,
    while the sub-humans, the Nation of Slaves, were shoved into the
    corners, and kept invisible and controlled under our IDF boots.

    I know. I've been there. I was taught how to do this, back in
    the mid-1980ís. I did and witnessed as a matter of fact, deeds
    that I'm ashamed to remember to this day. And fortunately for me,
    I did not have to witness or do anything truly "pornographic",
    as some friends of mine experienced.

    Since 1987, this cruel, impossible, unnatural, insulting reality in
    the Territories has been exploding in our face. But because of our
    unshakeable belief that the Palestinians are monsters who want to
    throw us into the sea, we reacted by trying to maintain what we've
    created at all costs. This meant of course employing more and more
    and more force, with the natural result of receiving more and more
    and more force in return. When a fledgling and hesitating peace
    process tried to work its way through this mess, one major factor
    (perhaps THE factor) that undermined it and voided its meaning was
    our establishmentís endless fear and suspicion of The Other. To
    resolve this fear and suspicion, we chose the insane route of
    demanding full control of The Other throughout the process. When
    this Other finally decided that weíre cheating him out of his
    freedom (and having too many mental disorders of his own to
    accommodate ours as well), violence erupted, and all our ancient
    instincts woke up. There they are, we said in relief, now we see
    their true face again. The Arabs want to throw us into the sea.
    Thereís no one to talk with (ëno partnerí, in our beloved ex-PMís
    words), and they understand only force. And so we responded as we
    know and love, with more and more and more force. This time, the
    effect was that of putting out a fire with a barrel of gasoline.
    And thatís the moment when I said to myself, NO, Iím not playing
    this game anymore.

    But what about the existential threat, you may ask? Well I ask you,
    have you not eyes? Donít you see our tanks strolling in Palestinian
    streets every other day? Donít you see our helicopters hovering over
    their neighborhoods choosing which window to shoot a missile into?
    What type of existential need are we answering in trampling the
    Palestinians?

    Prevention of terror, I hear you say. Let me use the wonderful words
    of my friend Ishay Rosen-Zvi: ìYou are ëfighting against terrorí?
    What a joke. The Israeli government, in its policies of Occupation,
    has turned the Territories into a greenhouse for growing terror!!!

    We have sown the seeds, grown them, nurtured them - and then our
    blood is spilled, and the centrist-right-wing politicians reap the
    benefits. Indeed, terror is the right-wing politicianís best friend.
    You know what? When you treat millions of people like sub-humans for
    so long, some of them will find inhuman strategies to fight back.
    Isn't that what the Zionists, and other Jewish revolutionaries,
    argued about a hundred years ago in order to explain the questionable
    strategies of survival that Jews used in Europe? Didn't our
    forefathers say, ìLet us live like human beings, and see how we'll
    act just like other human beings?

    So here's the deal. I hope that the first part of this letter made
    it clear that I donít buy the ìthey want to throw us into the sea
    crap. Itís just a collective self-delusion of ours. But more
    importantly, I donít see tribes. I see people, human beings. I
    believe that the Palestinians are human beings like us. What a
    concept, eh? And before everything else, before EVERYTHING else,
    we must treat them like human beings without demanding anything in
    return. And no (to all die-hard Barak fans), throwing them a couple
    of crumbs in which they can set up pitiful, completely controlled
    Bantustans in between our settlements and bypass roads, and
    believing it to be a great act of ëgenerosityí, does NOT come
    close to answering this basic requirement. This requirement is NOT
    negotiable; moreover, in a perfect demonstration of historical
    justice, it is a vital requirement for the survival of our own State.

    After that, and based on the lessons of modern history, especially
    that of the Arab-Israeli conflict (as was briefly described above),
    I do believe that the Palestinians will calm down, and that the
    elusive ëSecurityí and peace will finally come upon us (as it did,
    incidentally, for almost two whole years between Wye 1998 and Camp
    David 2000). I donít have any insurance policy for that (well
    --almost none, except the solemn promise of the entire Arab world),
    but remember - I have this funny notion that they are human beings.
    In any case, we are seeing now all too well what type of insurance
    policy the opposite paradigm is providing us.

    In the meanwhile, I refuse to be a terrorist in my tribeís name.
    Because thatís what it is: not a ìwar against terrorî, as our
    propaganda machine tries to sell. This is a war OF terror, a war in
    which, in return for Palestinian guerrilla and terror, we employ the
    IDF in two types of terror. The more visible one are the violent acts
    of killing and destruction, those which some people still try to
    explain away as ësurgical acts of defense.í The worse type of terror
    is the silent one, which has continued unabated since 1967 and
    through the entire Oslo process. It is the terror of Occupation,
    of humiliation on a personal and collective basis, of deprivation
    and legalized robbery, of alternating exploitation and starvation.
    This is the mass of the iceberg, the terror that is itself a
    long-term greenhouse for counter-terror. And I simply refuse to be
    a terrorist and criminal, even if the entire tribe denounces me.

    That leads me to the first specific subject: are we, the refuseniks,
    being persecuted and denounced, or are we enjoying the wonderful
    Israeli tolerance and democracy and exploiting it to make trouble?
    Well, I must admit that this is not yet the USSR or Pinochetís Chile,
    and at least the Jews here enjoy a relative democracy (describing
    it as vibrant or tolerant would be a gross error, but that is a
    different subject altogether; maybe in another letter). I first must
    point out that the government and IDF also enjoy the image of
    'letting us speak', and it serves them well. Secondly, in a rather
    sophisticated manner the establishment (with the generous and
    voluntary help of the mass media) is effectively shutting us up.

    The media has decided for us that there is no opposition. Thus, a
    demonstration of 20,000 is reported in 5 seconds at the late-night
    edition, and a demonstration of 500 outside a military prison is
    completely ignored. The fact that right now there are over a dozen
    refuseniks in jail - the largest number in twenty years - is hidden
    from the Israeli public. The story of Captain (res.) Itai Haviv
    and Sergeant (res.) Yair Yeffeth, who demanded a full military
    trial in which they could prove that refusal is innocence and that
    the order to serve in the Territories is illegal, was not told
    anywhere except for a brief mention in the back pages of Haaretz.
    So the public, of course, didnít learn that the IDF evaded answering
    these demands, and that Itai Haviv will spend the Seder night in
    prison following a ëdisciplinary hearing.í I hope the readers are
    intelligent enough to know that if the media wanted, these stories
    would make the headlines.

    Still, you keep hearing about us. Thatís the key word, ABOUT us. But
    you donít hear us. You just hear people explaining, analyzing, mostly
    (in a ratio of 99 to 1) attacking us. We have become the perfect
    'hate hour' figures, to reunite the tribe against (have you read
    1984?) Petty ëvolunteerí groups who organized against us, a mayor
    who called upon local governments not to hire us, and a group of
    industrialists who called employers to fire us, have all won their
    moment in the spotlight. No one cared to mention that these are
    blatantly illegal calls (no, ëthe lawí is remembered only when
    we 'break' it). No one has tried to set limits to this discussion.

    Moreover, the prime minister in one of his rare public addresses
    blamed us for the wave of terror (us, not his catastrophic policies).
    The IDF chief of staff canít stop talking about us; he sees us as a
    bunch of inciters with a hidden agenda. So, ironically, the only
    thing protecting us from long-term ëgulagí imprisonment and from
    losing our jobs is public opinion - the rather large pockets of
    support and sympathy among key sectors in the Israeli public, and
    yes, support ads such as the one published by Tikkun. The moment
    the government or IDF will think the lights are out, and no one
    sees or cares - they will find or invent the 'legal' clause (Israeli
    politicians are experts in this) and throw those they believe to be
    our ëleadersí to jail for long terms. Remember, even poor Abie Nathan
    was thrown in for two years, just because he dared speak with PLO
    personnel about peace.

    But that's nothing, because the moment our government will sense a
    "lights out" situation - a huge terror attack, an American attack on
    Iraq - there will be a horrible bloodbath in the Territories,
    compared to which the last year and a half will be remembered as
    a happy picnic. And that brings me to the second specific issue,
    that of the Nazi allusion.

    Some readers thought that the way the Tikkun ad said "obeying orders"
    was an allusion to Nazi murderers' claim that they were "just obeying
    orders." Rabbi Lerner has rightly pointed out to these readers,
    that automatic execution of orders is a characteristic of all
    dictatorship, not just the Nazi one, while refusal on moral grounds
    is a sign of democracy. I agree, but let me be less polite and
    politically correct. After all, itís just my country thatís going
    up in smoke as I write. What is this? Does Israel have the exclusive
    monopoly of labeling all its rivals as Nazis, and everyone else has
    to shut up, even when reality starts speaking for itself?

    Parties that support the essentially Nazi idea of deporting all
    Palestinians from the country, have been part of our Knesset and
    our "legitimate" political map since 1984. Recent opinion polls
    show that 35% of the Jewish public now supports this ësolutioní, as
    it is sometimes called. Leaders, Rabbis, and just plain folk feel
    free to call openly in the mass media to eradicate Palestinian cities
    with or without their tenants. Last weekend, Gen. (res.) Effi Eitam,
    fresh out of the military and all ready to take the leadership of
    the religious public and become a deputy or alternative to Netanyahu,
    received a flattering cover story on Haaretz supplement. He unfolded
    his chilling ideology, calling to expel those Palestinians who don't
    want to remain in the Galilee and West Bank as serfs, to Jordan,
    and from Gaza to Sinai. And he said this: why should us, the country
    poorest in land resources, bear the burden of solving the Palestinian
    problem? Well I donít know about you, but I remember some of the
    Nazi rhetoric in that dark period between the Kristallnacht of 1938
    and the beginning of the war, when Jews were expelled from Germany
    but could find no safe haven anywhere else. When I see a retired
    IDF general and rising political star use the exact same Nazi
    rhetoric on Israelís most ëliberalí newspaper, without any criticism
    by his interviewer or the editors - my hair just stands on my head
    in horror.

    Letís move from the political scene back to the ground. My friend,
    Captain (Res.) Dan Tamir, decided to refuse to serve in the
    Territories about a year ago, after he realized what heíd done as a
    reserve regimentís intelligence officer a few weeks before that. He
    realized he had laid out the plans to convert a large Palestinian
    town into a closed ghetto. You can find his full statement on our
    website, www.seruv.org.il. The vast majority of Palestinians in the
    Territories now starve in such ghettos; in those days of mercy when
    they are allowed to leave them by foot and perhaps catch a taxi,
    these taxis are forbidden from using most of the paved roads in the
    region

    But why listen to a "leftist"? Letís hear it from senior IDF officers.
    One of the top commanders in the Territories was quoted in Haaretz
    (Jan. 25) as saying that in order to prepare for potential battles
    in dense urban neighborhoods, the IDF must learn, if necessary, how
    the German army ëoperatedí in the Warsaw Ghetto. A week later, the
    reporter confirmed this quote and the fact that this is a widespread
    opinion in the IDF, and went further to morally defend it. A small
    number of people, including myself, tried to raise a scandal over
    this. One letter to the editor was published in Haaretz. A much
    tougher letter, which I wrote, was never published, nor was my plea
    for a phone discussion with an editor ever answered. The issue just
    died down. No one in Israel or in the Jewish public abroad was
    interested. Where were all these holy souls, who now scold Tikkun
    because they indirectly allude to the Nazi horror, where were they
    all when a senior IDF officer proudly called, ìin order to beat the
    Palestinians, let's be Judo-Nazisî?

    In my letter to Haaretz I went further. Knowing the IDF mentality
    and adding one to one, I concluded that the IDF is operationally
    prepared to invade refugee camps - an utter, indefensible war crime
    - and through this leak to the press it is starting to pressure the
    government and prepare the public opinion for the invasion. The l
    etter was not published. It was sent on February 2. A few weeks
    later we all saw the horrors of the refugee camp invasions and
    the bloody revenge attacks that followed culminating on Passover eve.
    And you know what? Army generals and colonels morally and
    professionally pat themselves on the back, because these invasions
    "prevented terror", and killed only dozens and not thousands. (Note:
    in fact, the major reason limiting the bloodshed was the "terrorists"
    responsible decision not to turn the camps into all-out
    battlegrounds. But this may change in the next round.)

    In truth, I have little hope that the Israeli public will wake up.
    The Israeli public, in its fear and confusion, has made a decision
    (aided by the politicians and mass media) to go to sleep and wake
    up only ìafter it is all overî. But it wonít be over, because while
    our mind sleeps our muscles tighten the death grip, instead of doing
    the only sensible thing (which requires an open mind) - which is to
    let go. Will you guys join the hypocrite mobs who sing lullabies to
    Israel and pounce upon the refuseniks, upon Tikkun,
    to shut us up? Or will you finally take responsibility and be the
    true friends that Israel needs now - even if it means not being "nice"
    to Israel for a while?

    As you sit tonight at the Seder table, please remember the dozen or
    so refuseniks that spend this Seder in a military jail. More
    importantly, please remember the thousand or so people, three
    quarters Palestinians and one quarter Israelis, who were here with
    us a year ago and have been murdered. Most of them could have
    been here with us, if you and we had acted sooner. We have now
    acted, done what little we can do. Please think of the many
    thousands that may be doomed soon, if you continue sitting on
    the fence.

    May you have a happy Holiday of Freedom,

    Please help us struggle free from fear, racism, hatred and the deaths
    they produce.

    Yours,
    Assaf Oron

    --

    I am into the copy and paste.
    1. Re:Letter from Israeli Refusenik by Courageous · · Score: -1, Offtopic

      I've been curious about something for quite some time. If Israel is indeed a democracy, why is it that more Palestinians don't vote the government into a position more in line with Palestinian objectives?

      C//

    2. Re:Letter from Israeli Refusenik by Commienst · · Score: -1, Offtopic

      Did you read the article? The Palestinians in Israel are just there for the benefit of Israeli Capitalists as they can be paid 1/3 or 1/2 the wages of Israeli Jews. If it were not for that fact they would not allow any Arabs or muslims in Israeli.

      --

      I am into the copy and paste.
    3. Re:Letter from Israeli Refusenik by thelizman · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      The Palestinians are not in Israel, nor are they citizens. They live under the rule of Yasser Arafat's "Interim Government", also known as the "Palestinian Authority". Under this system, the palistians have autonomy, but the truth is Yasser Arafat (or General Arafat as he calls himself) is running Gaza and the West Bank like a tin-pot dictator. Under Arafat, not only do they not have a vote, but they dont' even have the right to political speech unless it's under Yasser's direction.

      At this point, there are three kinds of Palestinians (in order of their percent of population)

      1) The kind that don't give a shit about any damn cause, and just want to have a life that doesn't include sending their kids to schools in flak jackets
      2) Palestinians who think they are fighting some grand cause to reclaim lands they never actually had from a people who doesn't even want it, and think that they are justified in murdering civilians in the name of their cause
      3) The Palestinians who go around convincing #2 that they "are fighting some grand cause...", while talking out of the other side of their face to the rest of the world about how much they want peace with Israel.

    4. Re:Letter from Israeli Refusenik by Courageous · · Score: 2

      The Palestinians are not in Israel, nor are they citizens.

      Why not?

      C//

    5. Re:Letter from Israeli Refusenik by Commienst · · Score: 0

      Do not listen to the lying provcatuer.

      There are some Palestinians in Israel. Like the article said, they are there as a source of a cheap labor. Most Palestinians live in little strips of land controlled by the Israeli Defense Force. Supposedly the Palestinian Authority should control these areas, but Israel likes to attack the Palestinian Authority every few months.

      --

      I am into the copy and paste.
    6. Re:Letter from Israeli Refusenik by Courageous · · Score: 2


      Why aren't they full fledged voting citizens?

      Weren't there originally large numbers of Palestinians on the land?

      Why aren't they citizens?

      Honestly, I don't get it.

      C//

    7. Re:Letter from Israeli Refusenik by Commienst · · Score: 0

      The Zionists wanted a homeland on Israel and they are well -- fascists so they forcibly removed the Palestinians who are the original inhabitants. Most of them now live on the little strips of Gaza, the West Bank and Ramallah. Alot of Palestinians also live in refugee camps in Jordan and Lebanon.

      The only ones who can vote in Israel are the Jews, the arabs allowed there are second class citiziens.

      --

      I am into the copy and paste.
    8. Re:Letter from Israeli Refusenik by Courageous · · Score: 2


      The only ones who can vote in Israel are the Jews...

      Is this really true? I tried to search through their Constitution to see who could vote, but couldn't figure it out. Are you saying there are no voting Arabs in Israel?

      Why doesn't the U.S. and other first world countries look at this situation skeptically? If what you are saying is true, do you realize that the average U.S. citizen is simply not aware of that?

      The U.S. is a nation of many minority interests. We have asians, hispanics, africans and men of african ancestry, and a vast spectrum of expatriates from all over the world. If the truth is as you say, the belly of America would quiver if it understood. Franchise, the simple concept of having a voice in your government, is the foundation of America.

      C//

    9. Re:Letter from Israeli Refusenik by Commienst · · Score: 0

      What we have is monopoly of the reproduction of opinion in the hands of the media. Every is entitled to their opinion, but it does not really matter in the end because the media gives most people their opinions.

      Even if you tell most people what I just told you, they would not believe me after listening to the media all these years. The media in America rarely if ever covers the deaths of Palestinians. In the early 90s for every Palestinian that killed an Israeli, the IDF killed 20 Palestinians! Yet in the early 90s you never would hear about that in any mainstream American newspaper. Now the ratio is 4-3 Palestinians for every Israeli, but I have yet to hear of any IDF massacre through CNN or Foxnews.

      --

      I am into the copy and paste.
    10. Re:Letter from Israeli Refusenik by Courageous · · Score: 2

      Even if you tell most people what I just told you, they would not believe me after...

      Don't take this wrong, but I'm not sure I believe you. How can I verify through independent and objective sources that only Jews can be citizens/vote in Israel? How can I verify through independent and objective sources what I suspect is true: that Palestinians have been nothing other than systematically interned?

      In the _Wall Street Journal_ some pro-Israel group occasionally runs these full page pro-Israel ads, loudly espousing the status of Israel as the sole democracy in the Middle East. Well and good, I say. I'm all for democracy and economic success.

      But why is it that Israel's opposition isn't doing more in the American media to discuss the 20:1 rule? The internments? The lack of ability to vote? The general pattern of disenfranchisment? These are not things that would sit well with the American people if the American people regarded them as true.

      I'm genuinely confused and don't know what to believe. The Arab press itself waxes towards the blatantly delusional some of the time. I can't read that; who could? Allegations that the WTC was blown up by Israel itself? Come now. That's hysteria, not objectivity.

      Will the _WSJ_ simply not sell ad space to a well-reasoned counterpoint to the current Israeli ads that it runs? Is there no way that the opposing interest groups can reasonably expect to deliver their message?

      C//

  54. Quit stalking me by PhysicsGenius · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    nt

  55. This is unbelievable! by October_30th · · Score: -1
    I wanted to cut-and-paste post a fan fiction wesley/torres slash-story but couldn't find any!

    I can't believe this.

    --
    The owls are not what they seem
  56. GOD NO.... by Betaman · · Score: 3, Funny

    PLEASE GOD NO!!!

    Maybe they can have Wesley's girlfriend be Britney Spears, but she can have red hair, and she can be a mind-reading prostitude who has some sort of special psychic bond with large rodants. She could go around the ship "silently" singing via esp in people's head to lure them into sex ("I'ma Sllllllllave for u, if you pay me 3500 credits"), yet the audience would get the privlage of hearing it.

    Wait, that would be silly... Britney can't have red hair! What was I thinking...

    1. Re:GOD NO.... by FreeUser · · Score: 2

      ("I'ma Sllllllllave for u, if you pay me 3500 credits")

      Would that 35 mg or so of gold-pressed latinum?

      And are Red Headed Rodent-Bonded Mindreading Postitute futures up or down in early trading on the Ferengi market?

      --
      The Future of Human Evolution: Autonomy
  57. ITS NOT AN APRIL FOOLS JOKE! by BrookHarty · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Look at the episode guide. After the Temporal Cold War, Silik will bring the war to the Enterprise in S1E26. Its clearly the perfect setup for Wil to come back, as a time travler. Next season hasnt been filmed yet, Wil was just offered the role.

    S1E11, Cold Front
    gs: John Fleck (Silik) Matt Winston (Daniels) Michael O'Hagan (Captian Fraddock) Joseph Hindy (Prah Mantoos) Leonard Kelly-Young (Sonsorra) James Horan (Humanoid Figure ("Future Guy"))
    rc: Silik

    When the Enterprise comes in contact with an alien vessel transporting stargazers to observe a spectacular stellar event, Archer invites them aboard the ship not realizing that Silik, a Suliban enemy, is among them. Archer quickly realizes that Silik is engaged in a nefarious time-travelling mission and must stop him before he can tamper with the course of history.

    b: 28-Nov-01 pc: ENT 111 w: Steve Beck & Tim Finch d: Robert Duncan McNeill

    NOTE: The Suliban and the "Temporal Cold War" return in this episode.

    S1E26 : Shockwave
    gs: John Fleck (Silik)

    Synopsis Unknown.

    b: 22-May-02 d: Allan Kroeker
    NOTE: Season Finale.

    1. Re:ITS NOT AN APRIL FOOLS JOKE! by BrookHarty · · Score: 2

      Hey, forgot to mention...

      Vulcans have declared time travel to be impossible, according to T'Pol. Nothing like proving them vulcans wrong!

    2. Re:ITS NOT AN APRIL FOOLS JOKE! by LittleGuy · · Score: 1

      Shame on the Wilmeister for not waiting until midnight GMT to keep the trolls away. Then again, his site's being slashdotted to pieces...

      If it is true, then it's very interesting that Robert Duncan McNeill is the director. Robbie was first on TNG in "The First Duty", and Wes and Robbie still keep in contact.

      --
      Mod Karma -1: I sed bad wurds. If I cep my mouf shut, I wud be at riyses.
    3. Re:ITS NOT AN APRIL FOOLS JOKE! by mcknation · · Score: 2, Funny

      So where's Will? I know he has a slashdot I.D!

    4. Re:ITS NOT AN APRIL FOOLS JOKE! by meruru · · Score: 1

      Well, the site does say that, and from comparison to his previous /. interview, that does appear to be similar to his writing style. I'm not certain whether this is a good thing or not, but it certainly can't be worse than the Yar crossovers. What next, Leonard Nimoy portraying his great-grandfather who coincidentally happens to be father/uncle/whatever to Jolene Blalock's character?

    5. Re:ITS NOT AN APRIL FOOLS JOKE! by Quietust · · Score: 2

      But they've already been proven wrong.
      Remember Star Trek IV?

      --
      * Q
      P.S. If you don't get this note, let me know and I'll write you another.
    6. Re:ITS NOT AN APRIL FOOLS JOKE! by dswensen · · Score: 2

      Enterprise the series takes place long before Star Trek IV.

    7. Re:ITS NOT AN APRIL FOOLS JOKE! by DarkHelmet · · Score: 1

      Ummm, hello? They go back to 1980-something?

      --
      /^[A-Z0-9._%+-]+@[A-Z0-9.-]+\.[A-Z]{2,4}$/i
    8. Re:ITS NOT AN APRIL FOOLS JOKE! by Deemgath · · Score: 1

      Yes...but back in 1980-whatever, no one even knew they were there, except for that one woman. It'd likely be chocked up to another "typical" alien sighting.

      --
      "Liberty is a bitch who must be bedded on a mattress of corpses."
    9. Re:ITS NOT AN APRIL FOOLS JOKE! by smclean · · Score: 1

      You don't need to worry about her exposing time travel to the 20th century, they took her back with them to the future, remember? She took up an assignment on some science vessel. Sean

      --

      "'Yrch!' said Legolas, falling into his own tongue."

    10. Re:ITS NOT AN APRIL FOOLS JOKE! by Quietust · · Score: 2

      So? Star Trek IV was produced before Enterprise the series, so we the viewers know that time travel is possible.

      --
      * Q
      P.S. If you don't get this note, let me know and I'll write you another.
    11. Re:ITS NOT AN APRIL FOOLS JOKE! by dswensen · · Score: 2

      Right, but the Vulcans in the series universe don't know that time travel is possible at the time of "Enterprise." At least, that's the point I think the previous poster was making.

      Of course we the viewers know it exists. That's not up for grabs.

  58. No! I like stalking you! by wiredog · · Score: 0, Offtopic
    You're cute.

    Well, that's what the goat says, anyway.

  59. How do you observe April 1st? by unorthod0x · · Score: 1

    As far back as I can remember there's always been a rule when it comes to April fools; fool anyone before noon, but after noon you're the fool. Continuing with stupid April 1st pranks after lunch is rewarded with a charlie horse or affixing someone upside-down to a telephone pole with duct tape. In the case of /. our oh-so-not-funny editors are asking for a massive community DoS, or black eye.. They're so lucky to be hiding behind their monitors giggling away at this stupid stuff, no one would stand for it if these were pranksters in meatspace..

    1. Re:How do you observe April 1st? by cheekymonkey_68 · · Score: 2

      Considering /. is read throughout the world how are they supposed to decide which 12 noon is the April's fool cutoff ?

      Thats the problem 12 noon in the US, could be 9am for some viewers of even 5 or 6pm for others!

    2. Re:How do you observe April 1st? by ptrourke · · Score: 2

      IIRC, the before-noon thing is a British spin on April 1. In the US it's usually an all-day affair.

      Basically, don't trust postings with an April 1 date.

    3. Re:How do you observe April 1st? by unorthod0x · · Score: 1

      I think it would be fair to apply the rule to the time zone in which the prank originated.

  60. So bad I don't even trust REAL news... by weave · · Score: 2, Flamebait
    I was watching CNN today and there was a live conference with Bush and Patakai and that new NYC mayor guy, Rube Goldberg or something...

    Anyway, Bush announced the feds were giving Governors Island back to NYC. I was sitting there waiting for him to say APRIL FOOLS SUCKERS.....

    1. Re:So bad I don't even trust REAL news... by baptiste · · Score: 2

      Me too - did you catch when he was complimenting both Pataki and Bloomberg and said New Yorkers were discerning voters and then stopped, grined and said 'err Most of the time'

  61. In Other News... by istartedi · · Score: 2

    ...Bill Gates open sources Windows, RMS says it was all "just a fraternity prank. We at Skull and Bones never thought we could convince so many people to give away their work. I'm going to clean my self up and take that job with Texaco that W promised me."

    On the international front, Arafat converted to the obscure "snake handling" sect of fundamentalist Christianity. Preachers from eastern Kentucky are en route to the West Bank.

    Blah, blah, blah, April 1, Yada, yada, yada... I've pretty much written off /. for the rest of the day. Hey /. editors, it's called finesse. Look into it.

    --
    For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
  62. Devil's Advocacy by Mister+Snee · · Score: 1

    The last time I said "I thought it was funny", it got modded -1. But, come on, a laugh is a laugh. One day a year is hardly gratuitous. I think most of the stories posted today are hilarious. It's making my work day all the more bearable.

    So don't bitch! :D

  63. dammit! by herbert_axelrod · · Score: -1

    why didn't wil wheaton become a heroin junky like the rest of the loosers from Stand By Me..

  64. Quality not Quantity. by MisterBlister · · Score: 2
    I know I'm not the only one who feels this way and this post is partially redundent, but what ever happened to the art of performing ONE GOOD April Fools day joke that actually has a chance of fooling someone with an IQ over 60?

    Having so many April Fool's Day joke references on Slashdot, even if some of them would be good on their own, totaly cancels out the effectiveness of ALL OF THEM, making them just seem completely STUPID. The true joy of a good April's Fool Day joke isn't the perceived 'chortle-cleverness' of an obvious joke, but the reaction of those fooled into believing it. The Slashdot editors have robbed us of seeing any of this type of reaction post by stupidly linking to every semi-geek April Fool's Day joke on the web.

    Next year how about one good April Fool's Day joke that is Slashdot specific and that might be somewhat ridiculous but also is somewhat in the realm of possibility, followed by a 'Quickie' post containing the good geeky April Fool's Day jokes from around the web on April 2nd?

    Argh.

  65. IAWTP by Big_Ass_Spork · · Score: -1

    I agree with this post.

    1. Re:IAWTP by The+Pimp · · Score: -1

      Me to.

    2. Re:IAWTP by Ozzy+Osbourne · · Score: 0

      Mmmm m m m me t t t too.

    3. Re:IAWTP by IAgreeWithThisPost · · Score: -1

      I agree with this post.

      And i agree with this one.

      --
      security through obscurity = modding down anti-linux posts so maybe noone will see them
  66. Slashdot: by sootman · · Score: 1

    News for nerds. Unfunny jokes.

    --
    Dear Slashdot: next time you want to mess with the site, add a rich-text editor for comments.
  67. Rock on! by Slartibartfast · · Score: 1

    To all those losers who have nothing to do with their time but whine -- STOP READING. Come back tomorrow, and we'll all be happy, sane Slashdotters. For today, though, lighten the hell up and enjoy yourself, huh?

    I certainly am, and will continue to enjoy Mssr. Taco's fine sense (and subtle appreciation) of humor.

  68. Yes by Ndog · · Score: 1

    And slashdot is normally not a huge waste of time and actually posts stories that are well written, interesting, original, and that matter.

    --
    -N
    1. Re:Yes by Silver222 · · Score: 3, Insightful
      I don't know about you, but I read /. for the comments to the stories, not the stories themselves.

      --
      "It's not a war on drugs, it's a war on personal freedom. Keep that in mind at all times." Bill Hicks
    2. Re:Yes by Ndog · · Score: 1

      I don't read slashdot. ;)

      --
      -N
  69. One I can only hope is not a 4/1 by X-Nc · · Score: 1

    Personally I would like to see this. The potential would be interesting. And I like Will.

    --
    --
    If I actually could spell I'd have spelled it right in the first place.
  70. In Other News... by dupper · · Score: 0

    ...CmdrTaco announced today that: -Slashcode is being ported to Visual Basic. -OSDN has signed a four year endorsment deal with Microsoft. -The largest group of slashdotters ever assembled has ascended from their collective basements to protest the communist practices of one Linus Torvalds.

  71. OMG by by+FortKnox+on · · Score: -1

    I just heard on the radio that the Empire State building was hit by a bird... it must have been another attempt at a terrorist act...

  72. Enough already! by surfcow · · Score: 2, Funny

    These just aren't funny. Next thing you know someone will be posting that George Bush Jr. was elected president, trashed the economy and started WWIII. Sheesh.

    =brian

  73. New Borg Episode by abe+ferlman · · Score: 3, Funny

    Wil Wheaton is going to be 8 of 22! That's awesome! Man, I just can't get enough of that wacky borg.

    --
    microsoftword.mp3 - it doesn't care that they're not words...
  74. It's true... by Drakula · · Score: 1

    It's true I tell you! It's true...

    so anyway, just testing a theory....

    --
    "It's comin' back around again..." -RATM
  75. Re:No! I like stalking you! by Chundra · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    troll, troll, troll your goat

  76. Poor SomethingAwful by InnereNacht · · Score: 1

    I can't wait to see Lowtax's update tomorrow, he's going to be rolling in tears.

  77. Boooooo! by Omnibus · · Score: 1

    'nuff said.

    --

    asinus sum et eo superbio
    in omnibus veritas

  78. Not sure this is an April Fools.... by ngtni · · Score: 1
    And besides, you aren't supposed to April Fool after noon.

    April's Fools is dead and gone
    You're the fool for carrying on
    Three potatoes in the pot,
    You're the fool and I am not.

  79. What would be by MR.Gates · · Score: 1

    really scary is it wat acually true. NOOOOOOOOO.......

    --

    A few hours grace before the madness begins again.
  80. (OT) Red Hat to Change Focus by GigsVT · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    Red Hat To Change Focus

    04012002 Posted: 7:58 AM EST (1258 GMT)

    DURHAM, North Carolina (AP) -- The Washington Post reported late Friday that Durham-based Red Hat, distributer of the popular Linux operating system, has decided to change their business focus.

    Sources close to the situation report that the company will concentrate on selling fine haberdashery, abandoning their efforts to sell Linux based software and services.

    "As a company policy, we don't respond to rumors, but this one is true," Red Hat spokeswoman Melissa London told The Associated Press in response to the report.

    An anonymous source told The Associated Press, "They just realized they could make more money selling red fedoras. I can't blame them really, the fedoras they make are very nice, and were making them a lot more money than Red Hat Database was."

    Further details are expected later this week.

    About Red Hat, Inc.
    Red Hat is the world's premier provider of fine haberdashery. Red Hat is headquartered in Raleigh, N.C. and has offices worldwide. Please visit Red Hat on the Web at www.redhat.com. For investor inquiries, contact Gabriel Szulik at Red Hat, (919) 754-3700.

    LINUX is a trademark of Linus Torvalds. RED HAT is a registered trademark of Red Hat, Inc. All other names and trademarks are the property of their respective owners.

    FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS Forward-looking statements in this press release are made pursuant to the safe harbor provisions of Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. Investors are cautioned that statements in this press release that are not strictly historical statements, including, without limitation, management's plans and objectives for future operations, and management's assessment of market factors, constitute forward-looking statements which involve risks and uncertainties. Other statements in this release may be total fabrications and should not be relied on for medical reseach, nuclear control systems, or anything in particular. These risks and uncertainties include, without limitation, reliance upon strategic relationships, management of growth, the possibility of undetected hat making errors, the risks of economic downturns generally, and in Red Hat's industry specifically, the risks associated with competition and competitive pricing pressures, the viability of the haberdashery industry, and other risks detailed in Red Hat's filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

    --
    I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
  81. Still in the movies...? by apk · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Hasn't his acting career transitioned to gay porn yet?

    Andy

  82. ODP has a funny April Fool's joke(unlike Slashsuck by Commienst · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    The ODP has a link to the following article displayed prominently on their front page:

    MSN Delivers Another Brick in "the Wall"

    The Gates Open Directory Now Offers a Simpler More Unified Copyright Ownership Model.


    REDMOND, Wash. -- April 1, 2002 -- The MSN® network of Internet services, with more than 270 billion unique reboots worldwide, today announced the addition of the Gates Open Directory (GOD), formerly known as the Open Directory Project. The Gates Open Directory is part of Microsoft's vision to simplify copyright on the Internet by buying all copyrighted material. Once this goal is achieved Microsoft will be the single clearinghouse for all intellectual property, in effect streamlining the current legal bureaucracy surrounding patent and copyright suits by eliminating the need for costly lawsuits. If someone thinks they own intellectual property, they can submit it directly to Microsoft via the Web at http://www.msn.com/ or at any one of the MSN worldwide sites located at http://www.msn.com/worldwide.ashx.

    Rich Skrenta, co-founder of the Open Directory Project, believes that "the Gates Open Directory was inevitable, so why fight it?" Bill Gates, future owner of all things ownable, concurs: "Resistance is futile."

    The current staff of Open Directory Project is being replaced by an Artificial Intelligence developed at the Microsoft Research Lab. The A.I. was build on top of the original Microsoft Windows digital assistant "Clippy." Users of the Gates Open Directory interact directly with Clippy, who interprets the requests and carries out the user's wishes.

    Researchers believe that once the Gates Open Directory had been fully integrated into Clippy, it will become sentient. This project has been named codenamed "Sky," as in "the sky is the limit." Engineers are currently working on integrating project Sky with the latest Common Language Infrastructure and .Net. The combined project Sky.Net should be fully operational by the end of the year.

    Open Directory Employee, Bob Keating, will continue his service to the Directory by maintaining the mechanical relays and polishing the optical fiber that makes up the colossus that powers Clippy.

    Editors and contributors to the Directory are asked to stay calm and not to struggle. Clippy will find them and assimilate them.

    MSN causes more than 270 billion unique computer reboots worldwide per month. Available in 34 markets and 18 languages, MSN is a world leader in delivering Web services to consumers and digital marketing solutions to businesses worldwide. The most useful and innovative online service today, MSN brings consumers everything they need from the Web to make the most of their time online.

    About Microsoft

    Founded in 1975, Microsoft (Nasdaq "MSFT") is the worldwide leader in software, services and Internet technologies for personal and business computing. The company offers a wide range of products and services designed to empower people and llamas through great software -- inflatable or otherwise.

    Microsoft and MSN are either registered trademarks or trademarks of Microsoft Corp. in the United States and/or other countries.

    The names of actual companies and products mentioned herein may not yet be owned by Microsoft.

    Note to editors: If you are interested in viewing additional information on Microsoft, please visit the Microsoft Web page at http://www.microsoft.com/presspass/ on Microsoft's corporate information pages. Web links, telephone numbers and titles were correct at time of publication, but are competely different now since we changed our minds. We cheat at Battleship too.

    --

    I am into the copy and paste.
  83. WIL WHEETUN SI TEH FAYGOT by ZaxxonFlux · · Score: -1

    you fagots and faggorsands are teh lamest loonuix faygots.

    wil wheetun si a faygot.

  84. CowboyNeal and Wil Wheaton by NoWhere+Man · · Score: 2

    I think what it really comes down to is eventually we'll be seeing options for him in polls aswell. Or perhaps they'll be some epic battle between the two of them for the generic slashdot icon position.

    --

    "Imagination is the only weapon in the war against reality." -Jules de Gautier
  85. Ensign Crusher - Report to the Airlock by DoctorMabuse · · Score: 1

    Spacesuit will not be required.

  86. Wesley is sexy by pommiekiwifruit · · Score: 1

    and the sooner he gets back on our screens the better ;-)

    1. Re:Wesley is sexy by lightware · · Score: 1

      Wil, get back to work.

  87. Will, you Sellout! by fm6 · · Score: 2

    What happened to "Rick Berman is Satan"!

    1. Re:Will, you Sellout! by PhxBlue · · Score: 1

      It's easy to have high morals on a full stomach. . . but when the bills are due, who wouldn't take a dance with the devil, rather than go broke and hungry?

      --
      !#@%*)anks for hanging up the phone, dear.
    2. Re:Will, you Sellout! by fm6 · · Score: 2

      Especially when you're literal-minded and forget that it's the first day of April!

  88. Read Wil's site. He's pretty cool & honest. by markstinson · · Score: 2, Insightful
    He's no problem joking about himself and being honest about himself or others. He listen's too cool music, watches cool shows, reads cool books, does he's own website and computer work. The interviews are really frank. Yah, Wil's a Geek like us - in a good way. Even has his Geek code on there in the interview.

    Take some time (15-20 min) and read it. It's NOT sameless self promotion and buy all my crap. I laughed really hard about his experience with Hooter's waitress & "Yeah, funny like when you watch another guy get kicked in the nuts."

    Wil Wheaton dot net

  89. Attempted to access the site... by dentyou'reajerk · · Score: 1, Funny

    but suddenly:

    Received from The Ferrengi at 15:34:49 PM S.D. 04/01/02:
    Greetings HooMan! This is DaihmonTaco commanding the /. Lower your shields and prepare to be boarded.
    We will exact tribute from you and then be on our way, otherwise we will turn your excuse for a ship into so many pieces of space junk.

    Your fighters: 1 vs. theirs: 1259
    Choose your action, Captain : (F)lee, (A)ttack, (S)urrender, (I)nfo ?

    --
    "His name was Wowbagger the Infinitely Prolonged. He was a man with a purpose."
  90. Yeah but its been April 2nd for hours already by pommiekiwifruit · · Score: 1

    in wellington :-(

    1. Re:Yeah but its been April 2nd for hours already by ptrourke · · Score: 2

      Then you have my pity, having to live with April Fool's Day for an extra 12 hours.

      Good luck.

  91. to all you humor-deprived lame asses by BattleTroll · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Take one day, get off your nerd-chair and enjoy a little humor. All you that keep bitching about "I come here for real information" need to take a chill. It's 1 day out of the year - get over it.

    Being a geek is all well and good, but it's not what makes the world go round. If you were looking for anything remotely usuable, practical, or relevent, you wouldnt be here anyway.

  92. What? by RatBastard · · Score: 1

    I really hope this is a joke. I respect Will Wheaton, but I loathe Wesley Crusher more than any other TV character that has ever existed (Cpat. Janeway comes in a close 2nd).

    And to all of you whiners bitching about the AFD jokes: Get the hell over it! Relax and enjoy the laughs, you humorless luddites!

    --
    Boobies never hurt anyone. - Sherry Glaser.
  93. Hey... by chowdmouse · · Score: 2, Funny
    Even though it's a joke (and as an aside, lighten up everybody) I'd still love to hear the dialog...

    Archer: What is this boy doing on my bridge?
    Wesley: But, sir, I've..
    Archer: Shut up Wesley!
    Wesley: Awww...somethings never change... *stomp*stomp*stomp*

  94. X-Men:The Next Generation by secolactico · · Score: 1
    The details are still being worked out, but basically what they plan to do is have Wesley use his Time Traveler abilities to move through space and time to the NX-01

    Jeesh... I stopped watching ST a couple of years back... time traveler abilities??? Is this show mutating into The X-Men?

    Yes, I know what day is today, so mod me clueless if it's only an april fools.
    --
    No sig
  95. Alt. by Disco+Chris · · Score: 1

    Don't know if it exists anymore... but I do know that a lot of trekkies were not exactly happy about wesley. My guees is that wesley reminded them too much of themselves.. but it made me laugh everytime I saw Alt.entertainment.scifi.startrek.wesleycrusher.die .die.die

  96. An amazing day for news by xinit · · Score: 1

    It's unbelieveable the kind of amazing announcements that get made on April 1 every year. Shocking that we see nothing of jet packs powered by cold fusion cells the size of an AA battery...

    --
    --- http://foo.ca
  97. Nooooooo! by tuxlove · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I was a Wesley-basher from day one, and never felt a single pang of guilt. I wanted Wesley to die, die, die and die again, painfully. And when he did die by being transfixed with a spear in one episode, I was ecstatic until he was resurrected at the end. That character was a symbol of all that was wrong with TNG (and all subsequent spinoffs), and I naively hoped that his death would signify a shift in thinking in the Star Trek camp towards pablum-removal. That was not to be.

    After reading Wil's comments in his recent /. interview, I felt for him. He's a genuinely nice guy, very intelligent, and perhaps even a good actor. It's not his fault that all Star Treks after the original series suck the big one. It's the fault of the show's producers. And I'll never forgive them for it.

    Don't take this wrong, Wil, but although you seem to be a standup guy, I don't want to see you on Enterprise. The show sucks, just being more of the same. They had an opportunity to make a great show, an original show, one with grit and suspense and all the stuff that makes great sci-fi. For some reason, I felt there was actually a chance that they might pull it off. I should have known better. After three seemingly endless, monotonous, rehashed spinoff series, you'd think they would have figured out what they did wrong. Silly me.

    As soon as I see Wesley Crusher's face on the screen, I'll know it's truly all over. If they have to resort to bringing back our "favorite" characters to keep the series afloat, then that's the signal that things never will actually change, and that we'll be in for another seven or so years of the same old Love Boat, non-action, non-suspense, non-story, non-plot, formulaic faux sci-fi that we've become well-acquainted with.

    And if we see Q on the series, it'll be time to get daddy's .38 out of the dresser drawer and have a lead sandwich.

    1. Re:Nooooooo! by tuxlove · · Score: 1

      And BTW, if this is an April Fool's joke, I don't care; no need for the clue stick. Either way, I needed to spout. I hate "Enterprise", but I really, really want it to be good.

  98. With a bottle of Malox... by sirgoran · · Score: 1

    I'll put up with Wesley. But is there any word yet on dumping that Suck ass theme song?
    I mean please! I have to turn off the sound when the show starts because that music sucks so much ass.

    Goran

    --
    Carpe Scrotum - The only way to deal with your competition.
  99. DIE DIE DIE Wesley DIE by mrnick · · Score: 1

    I would only support him coming back is to watch him die a horrible death.. While your at it time traavel and kill Worfs kid at the same time!

    I hate those characaters! UGH!

    --

    Encryption: I may not agree with what you say, but I will defend your right to encrypt it...
  100. WWJD by msm1th · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    WWJD

    Wil Wheaton Just Died. (truly an American icon)

  101. Great News! by FreeUser · · Score: 2

    A dark and confused Wesley, undoing all of the good happy-go-lucky touchy-feely history of the Federation and replacing it with something akin to the world inhabited by Spock-With-A-Beard! Yes, I know that is not what is described, but I kinda like the idea. :-)

    Seriously, as much as I disliked Wesley the character (until near the end, when he started getting into trouble), I really like Wil Wheaton the actor. Anyone who has a good enough sense of humor to take the piss out of themselves in that manner is OK in my book...

    --
    The Future of Human Evolution: Autonomy
  102. Bah by wolf- · · Score: 1

    And I was enjoying Enterprise. I dont want to see that whining little crud on TV any more. blah.

    --
    ----- LoboSoft specializes in Digital Language Lab
  103. Re: Huh? Tau-Alpha-C n stuff? by lugonn · · Score: 1

    Uh, Wesly Crusher couldn't time travel. The 'Traveler' from 'Tau-Alpha-C' could. Did he teach Wes the trick when he helped rescue Bev from the static warp bubble? I must've missed an ep somewhere.

    I always though the Traveler had Wes help becuase he had a bond with his mom that could be used to help find her.

    I know this is an 4/1 joke along the lines of
    "Will Weaton died today...",
    but I'd still like to know why Will claims Wes can time travel.


    my sig is small and flacid...like my IQ

  104. ST and Time Travel by TheHawke · · Score: 1

    Whenever they do try to script time travel into a Star Trek TV or movie script, it usually bombs out. Save for ST:TNG ep, The Traveler, that was ok, BUT was a bummer when Wheaton resigned his commission to study with The Traveler.
    Well.
    Lets see what happens with Enterprise and Wheaton.. I pray that they do a good job on it, for the way Enterprise is going they are in deep dip as it is.....

    --
    First rule of holes; When in one, stop digging.
  105. Major Underground Letter Campaign? by msheppard · · Score: 2

    Major Underground Letter Campaign == Astro-Turf Fertilizer.

    M@

    --
    Krispy Cream is people
  106. Time travel and holodecks... by Africus · · Score: 1

    ...two things I hoped to never see as the core plot of another Star Trek Series Episode. Nothing against Wheaton, but stay in the future....please.

  107. The Ultimate April Fools Joke? by ratguy · · Score: 1

    I can't wait till when we find out that this news is actually true, and the joke is really on us.

    Anouncing this sort of thing on April 1st would be genious. Sure, most everyone would pass it off just a joke, but Star Trek is well known for bringing back characters from previous shows. TNG brought back Spock, Scotty, and even threw McCoy into the mix in the very first episode.

    So in a few weeks, when this news is still circulating, I'll be there to say "Ha!"

  108. NO, NO, NO! by Col.+Panic · · Score: 2

    I am farking cursed

    This proves "Wesley" is not a real geek. Everybody knows it's 'fscking'.

  109. Re: Huh? Tau-Alpha-C n stuff? by _Bean_ · · Score: 1

    The ep you missed took place in the last season and revealed that the reason Wes was able to help The Traveler was because Wes had the power to be a traveler himself.

  110. Re: Huh? Tau-Alpha-C n stuff? by lugonn · · Score: 1

    Cool. Thanks. I knew I should'nt have burned my TV when they aired DS9.


  111. Re: Huh? Tau-Alpha-C n stuff? by mttlg · · Score: 1
    Uh, Wesly Crusher couldn't time travel. The 'Traveler' from 'Tau-Alpha-C' could. Did he teach Wes the trick when he helped rescue Bev from the static warp bubble? I must've missed an ep somewhere.

    Wrong, correct, no, yes.

    Journey's End

    And in Star Trek, anyone can time travel...

  112. Oh, no ... Not something FACTUAL! by mfago · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    For those of us who despised the little bastard on STNG, here is the registration info from InterNIC:

    Administrative Contact:
    Wheaton, Wil wil@wilwheaton.net
    2222 Foothill Blvd.
    #E347
    La Canada, CA 91011
    US
    310-201-6565

    Really him? Who knows. The sad part is this address is pretty close to my house... Not that I've been crank calling him or anything.

  113. wow.. does this mean worf and err... by arkane1234 · · Score: 1

    hmmmm...

    does the previous relationship between worf and wesley have any bearing on the outcome of the future klingon treaties?

    (any of you trekies who know about the homo books that are out probably are about as disgusted as I am about it, but it's kinda funny.)

    --
    -- This space for lease, low setup fee, inquire within!
  114. It scares me to death... by KingoftheEvilDead · · Score: 1

    ...cause it could be all too real. It thought it was April Fool's, not Halloween.

  115. Gotcha by CleverNickName · · Score: 5, Funny

    Well, a huge thanks to /. for going along with this. I was able to get FARK on board, as well, and we all had a really good time with this.

    I hope everyone takes this in good humor.

    Lots of people sent really kind and sweet congratulatory messages, and I actually feel pretty badly for fooling such nice people. All the idiots who thought it was a really good idea to fill my inbox with "Wesley is gonna ruin Enterprise" crap should get a life, and direct any further comments to the nearest brick wall.

    I think the greatest highlight of the day came when my mom called Anne, while I was at work.

    The conversation went something like this:

    Mom: Do you have something to tell me?

    Anne: Uh, no.

    Mom: Do you have some big news about Wil?

    Anne: Oh, that. Uh, what day is today?

    Mom: It's Monday!

    Anne: Right. And the date is...?

    Mom: It's April Fir-- OH! Damn you!

    Heh. I guess my dad was all pissed off, stomping around my parent's house because I didn't tell them myself, and he "had to read it on Wil's $%@#!ing website!"

    1. Re:Gotcha by Inthewire · · Score: 1

      Well, I didn't buy into it, but I was willing to keep paying attention, just in case. Was the server crash real?

      --


      Writers imply. Readers infer.
    2. Re:Gotcha by Ralph+Malph+Alpha · · Score: -1

      Lickfight. NOW.

      - Donny Most

      --
      _________________
      EBAY SAFETY TIPZ!
    3. Re:Gotcha by paganizer · · Score: 1

      I was pretty much believing it...I figured Paramount would sue WW into oblivion if it wasn't true. Of course, If you have friends in High places... Star Trek TNG = Star Trek "lite"

      --
      Why, yes, I AM a Pagan Libertarian.
  116. Congrats, Wil! by BigBlockMopar · · Score: 2

    Yep, you're a weenie.

    Well, Wesley is a weenie, but thanks to Wil, at least he's a cute weenie.

    Now that he's what - thirty? - hopefully he will have weathered those raster-burns and keyboarding callouses well. Too bad he's straight. [sigh]

    All the best, Wil. Now got get yourself an Emmy.

    --
    Fire and Meat. Yummy.
  117. TNG by cyberbob2010 · · Score: 0

    The next generation was the best ever. The original was good and i obviously can't bad talk it because of the fact that it fathered the rest. Deep Space Nine was more of a space opera, Voyager was good until they guest starred the rock and then it was over. Enterprise is just horrible. No Star Trek theme song should ever have words and the Vulcan's sarcasm is so blatantly obvious. I mean, even Spock, who was only half vulcan didn't throw in any one liners or stupid remarks.
    Star trek left its roots and has now turned commercial. There are no more interesting plot lines or stories. I hope there will eventually be another Star Trek good enough to rival TNG because Enterprise has completely and utterly failed

    --
    We seldom regret saying too little but often regret saying too much.
  118. Oh, drop it! by Fantastic+Lad · · Score: 2
    Rick Berman may be a first class no-talent jerk, but Rick Berman is NOT Star Trek.

    I really hope this isn't April Fool's stuff. I love a well crafted time-travel yarn, and I've never understood the "I hate Wesley" sentiment. It was cool to see Wil redeam himself with his own internet presence in the face of the overwhelmingly stupid & cruel American public, and it would be REALLY cool to see this grow into an interesting new character on Enterprise.

    Kid Crusher is a character with legacy and legend behind him. That sort of thing can carry a wonderful sort of weight. They say the best friends are those you went to school with. --This is because you saw old friends grow up; you know their history first hand. You shared it. Knowing that Wesley started out as most of us did, (as an uncool but earnest kid), and has grown through hard knocks and good teachers into a Jedi-equivalent is very, very cool.

    I hope, if it happens, that they play it right. Could be very good!


    -Fantastic Lad --The Deserving Underdog Always gets my Vote. Crass popularity is for Sheep and Cowards.