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Spam King and Family Dead In Murder-Suicide

Lt.Hawkins was one of many readers sending in word that the escaped spam king discussed yesterday was found dead in Colorado, after apparently killing his wife and 3-year-old daughter. A teenager was injured, and an infant was found alive in the car.

47 of 1,081 comments (clear)

  1. Coward. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It wasn't necessary for him to take them with him. May he burn in hell.

    1. Re:Coward. by DustyShadow · · Score: 4, Insightful

      But I bet you never say "I wish there was a heaven for that guy" when someone dies in a really heroic act.

  2. Re:Woo! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Celebrating someone killing their family. Fuck you.

  3. Re:I understand running away from prison... but by the4thdimension · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Psychologically speaking, the very act of going to prison(even if its minimum security)can be highly damaging. There is no telling what caused this guy to snap but its likely that he didn't sit there and stew about it and decide to do it on his own. It was likely a snap decision brought on by q pretty high amount of stress and depression.

    Not justifying it, just stating that its not so cut and dry as a simple choice to kill your family.

  4. Re:Good by JasonWM · · Score: 4, Insightful

    WTF is this? There is a dead woman and child and you pop off at the mouth calling them things like "crotch fruit?" After seeing such comments the only conclusion I can extract is that I hope you never breed, we need less people on this earth that act like you just did.

    --
    Your television will not tell you when to start the revolution.
  5. Re:Sad... by Hognoxious · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I guess that's what happens if you get into a pound-in-the-ass federal prison. You'd rather die than to ever return there.

    But he was at one of those white-collar resort prisons. That's why he was able to escape.

    --
    Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
  6. Re:This quote says it all by LordKaT · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It's the fundamental problem with being institutionalized in America: it's all about vengeance, not social rehabilitation.

  7. Very typical psychopath by blind+biker · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Doesn't care about anyone (millions of people inconvenienced by his spam), doesn't have a conscience and leaves a trail of misery and destruction behind.

    Psychopaths are very charming but still, girls, try not to marry one.

    --
    "The agriculture ministry is not in charge of Gundam" - Japanese ministry official.
  8. Re:I understand running away from prison... but by ShadowsHawk · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It takes someone with a minor god complex. "I'm the only thing that matters to my family, so they're better off dead." I know some people here will celebrate the spammers death, but I would have rather seen him in a 8x10 cell.

  9. Damn... by Stanislav_J · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Good riddance to him. But how sad for his family. Why do assholes like this feel the need to take others along with them when they decide to check out? It's times like this when I'm sorry to be an atheist -- I want to believe that he's burning in Hell. Mere nonexistence is not a sufficient punishment for him.

    So much for spammers being "non-violent" criminals...

    --
    "Every great cause begins as a movement, becomes a business, and eventually degenerates into a racket." -- Eric Hoffer
  10. Re:This quote says it all by hansamurai · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The guy was in a minimum security farm prison, if you ask me it had a lot more to do with social rehab than vengeance. The guy wasn't going to be able to access an uncontrolled computer in the two years he was there, if they wanted vengeance they may have sent him to a maximum security prison for longer than two years.

  11. What a weak, cowardly little man... by Red+Samurai · · Score: 4, Insightful

    From TFA:

    "Davidson, 35, was sentenced in April to 21 months in prison and ordered to pay $714,139 in restitution to the IRS after pleading guilty to falsifying header information to send spam e-mail, tax evasion and criminal forfeiture."

    So, all it took for this guy to snap was 21 months and a shitload of debt? He must've known the consequences if he was ever caught. If you ask me, he killed in the wrong order.

  12. Re:This quote says it all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Pretty much. Seriously, the US prison system breeds criminals - if you're not one going in, you sure as hell will be coming out.

  13. TGIF by Wiarumas · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ...and it was such a pleasant Friday morning until I heard this news.

    I don't know about the rest of you, but I would be willing to take a lifetime of spam to spare the life of his wife and daughter. The positive news of the story (the spam king is gone for good) pales in the shadow of this tragedy.

    --
    I will bend like a reed in the wind.
  14. Re:Jackass by R2.0 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "He also didn't deserve death for what he did; the jail time and fines/restitution was plenty."

    Don't you mean his FAMILY didn't deserve death? Because whether or not he deserved it is moot - he did it to himself.

    --
    "As God is my witness, I thought turkeys could fly." A. Carlson
  15. Suicide by caffiend666 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Suicide is the ultimate statement of self-empowerment and control. We now know for sure, this man was unconcerned about disrupting countless lives, and now even destroying them; for his own sense of peace, prosperity, and control. What he feared most was being out of control of his own life, and didn't care about the lives of others. A person unconcerned about disrupting millions of lives for five seconds at a time, could not be bothered to have his interrupted for a few months. Poetic in a monstrous pig way.

    --
    Here's to losing my Karma Bonus again....
  16. yes yes YES!!!!! by CdBee · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Thank god, somebody actually gets it. I sit here in Europe gritting my teeth at all the Americans flooding the web chatting cold-bloodedly about killing criminals or locking them away for life, with no apparent conception of the idea that people can be reformed or that punishment ought to be appropriate rather than exemplary if you want people to respect the law.

    --
    I have been a user for about 10 years. This ends Feb 2014. The site's been ruined. I'm off. Dice, FU
  17. Re:This quote says it all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    That's right - the US penal system killed that little girl and her mother.

    Asshole.

    You can throw all the pejoratives you want, the fact remains that the US penal system does an excellent job of making petty criminals into hardened criminals. Never mind issues like prison rape. This guy may have been serving in a minimum security facility but he US penal contains a number of penal facilities that are such hell-holes that being sent there could be construed as cruel and unusual punishment.

  18. Re:Jackass by dreamchaser · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I know he did, but what I meant was even his death isn't something to be celebrated. The man was obviously deeply disturbed. Implying that someone like him should die (and that implication has been made many times here on /.) is just whacked.

  19. Re:This quote says it all by Hyppy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You can't seriously believe that everyone sent to prison is a criminal, can you?

  20. Re:I understand running away from prison... but by KGIII · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I think the whole killing of his wife is a bit over the top and goes to show how he truly was a monster with no morals. He could have just killed himself and done us all a favor. Now he's hated even more, which is going some.

    --
    "So long and thanks for all the fish."
  21. Re:beware by Like2Byte · · Score: 4, Insightful

    beware (Score:5, Funny)

    by appleLaserWriter (91994) Alter Relationship on Friday July 25, @09:07AM (#24333167)

    spam kills

    Man, where's '+1 Tasteless' when you need it? Funny....but tasteless.

  22. Re:I understand running away from prison... but by jank1887 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Optimum: 8x10 cell, family alive. Not as good, but tolerable: dead by his own hand, family alive. Absolutely horrible: him dead with wife and his 3 year old child.

    As a father of 3, I cannot fathom what drives a person to do that to their own child. An adult can create conflict that may drive you to retaliate. A 3 year old cannot.

  23. Re:I understand running away from prison... but by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There is no telling what caused this guy to snap but its likely that he didn't sit there and stew about it and decide to do it on his own.

    If he was still alive and having to defend himself in court, he'd probably plead temporary insanity.

    Insanity means without reason or utterly foolish. Something must have really snapped in his head, put him on another plane of consciousness.

    That's all I can think of. I can't believe a father would really kill his innocent little child. I want to believe that he would not have done so in even a remotely reasonable state of mind. He must have really lost it.

    My condolences to those affected. :(

  24. Re:I understand running away from prison... but by b0ttle · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's so easy to criticize behind computer screen. No one knows what he's been through. Nothing justifies the killing of his wife (maybe she agreed?) and daughter (this one has no maybes), but we just don't know what really happened, and never will. So I prefer not to judge.

  25. Re:Woo! by PunkOfLinux · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Yes, because in modern America, we're still responsible for the missteps of our parents. That child had NO reason to be killed.

  26. Just reading the comments here changed my thoughts by erroneus · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Initially, I was considering "taking back" my previous suggestions that a death penalty be imposed for hardcore spammers. I had gone into great detail about my reasoning behind the notion, but it could easily be summed up by a conclusion that people who go through the extreme measures that spammer go through to circumvent various security measures, hack on private users' PCs to create botnets, and have generally caused the vast majority of the crap that endangers the systems and services around the planet (some of which are 'critical' and/or sensitive in nature) are nothing short of antisocial psychopaths and should be considered dangerous. People have commented that my conclusions are extreme, but I have to disagree. You have to consider what it takes (or what has to be missing) for a person to work so hard to cause so much damage and care so little about it. It's nothing the average 'business man on the street' would be capable of doing even if he were skilled enough to pull it off. It is the characteristics that enable the behavior of a spammer that mark him as an antisocial psychopath.

    But as I was saying, I was considering retracting my previous suggestions because now that I see in the news a story of an actual dead spammer, I feel a bit sickened. And not sickened by the additional death and injury exclusively, but by the situation as a whole, leaving me uncertain that I would want spammers put to death. Truthfully, I'm still not sure, and am more certain that it was simply anger and frustration over the whole problem of spam to begin with. But one thing I am more certain about than ever before:

    Spammers are DANGEROUS people.

    The characteristics that indicate they have no moral boundaries to commit crimes, elude and evade security measures, hack into private computer systems and create networks of compromised computer systems used to create hell on a global scale, are the same characteristics of mass murderers. Before you disagree with me on this point, break it down for yourself. If you see major differences between the mentalities of the two (spammers and mass murderers) please detail them here. I'm not afraid of being wrong. I just don't think I am in this case.

  27. Re:This quote says it all by PunkOfLinux · · Score: 4, Insightful

    That wasn't the point. Studies have *shown* that the prison environment is actually *more* destructive to the rehabilitation of criminals. Rather than focus on incapacitation, we should be focusing on rehabilitation, which, dollar for dollar, has a *much* higher rate of return than prison. I'm not saying we should keep murderers out of prison, but unarmed robbery? Please, just help the people actually survive, or, if they do it for the 'thrill' help them with that. It works something like 30% better than prison.

  28. Re:I understand running away from prison... but by Opportunist · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So what you essentially say is that a criminal, no matter how "trivial" or unrelated to homicide his transgression may be, is by the very fact that he broke a law a potential mass murderer?

    Good lord! The RIAA is right, the internet is full of potential terrorists!

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  29. Re:I understand running away from prison... but by wattrlz · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You must be new here. Judging is what we do.

  30. Re:I understand running away from prison... but by Dimensio · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Email spammers are inherently and universally sociopaths. It is not unreasonable to consider that any given email spammer would, if it could be profitable, commit murder.

  31. Re:I understand running away from prison... but by Chris+Burkhardt · · Score: 5, Insightful

    > This wasn't a normal father. He was a criminal.

    That's not fair. There are many criminals, who are also fathers, who love and don't harm their children.

    --
    "And there be unix which have made themselves unix for the kingdom of heaven's sake." - Matt. 19:12
  32. Have you ever been in the army? by Moraelin · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Well, there may be more than you wrote there, I wouldn't know, never been to jail. But what you do write, is no worse than army life anywhere in the world. And some even use conscription to inflict it on almost every male. Not that I defend conscription or anything, but it's not living hell either.

    Dorm living with fully grown men. These "dorms" are sometimes the size of a gymnasium. A gymnasium full of grown men. Fully grown, under enormous stress, living in close quarters. Honestly, you'd have much less stress living in a car.

    A lot of barracks out there pack a lot of grown men in a large confined space. Maybe not gym sized, but nevertheless. And they're under stress. Tough shit, learn to cope.

    Frankly, I'm not exactly an extrovert myself, but I really don't get the "OMG, it's a big place with lots of men" mentality. So was the army, so is the office, etc. Most of human history happened that way. Whether you'd be packed with a lot of agricultural workers in little more than a big barn, or packed in a small house together with your extended family, or as a soldier in a longship/tent/barrack with at _least_ 8 or 10 members of your squad/decuria/watchamacallit. Go back to prehistory, and you'd be sleep with a lot of men, women and children in the confined space of a cave. It may seem like the end of the world if you spend your life in a basement trying to avoid contact with other humans, but it's not. Most humans are actually made to be social people. Being in a crowd won't kill you.

    2 minute showers, enforced.

    Well, the navy manages to live on even more inconvenient showers, to conserve water. It's giving up a bit of comfort, no doubt, but it's not the end of the world.

    Scheduled bathroom times. Gotta shit? Hold it until shit time, which is usually at the start of the day and the end.

    Ever pulled guard duty in the army? You're supposed to stand there and not desert your post until your time is up. This also means you can't go to the bathroom whenever you wish.

    Forced labor. They don't even bother matching you up with work from your skillset. Too fat? Go work in the yard. Too stupid to know how to kill someone with a knife? Kitchen work.

    Well, tough shit, sherlock. Noone asked me if my aspirations or skill set were perfectly matched to running with an assault rifle up hill, or operating a big loud AA gun. Nor if, say, cleaning the floor is against my religion.

    Plus, that's the story of most people's lives even outside prison. You're rarely in a position to get your ideal dream job, or most people's work day would consist of getting blowjobs and surfing for porn. Instead most people get what's available. The guy behind the counter at the gas station or the one frying your burgers at McDonalds also aren't really paired to the best match for their aspirations and skills.

    And again, if you look at human history, it used to be even worse.

    Basically, I don't know. If you'd be telling me that there's something inherently humiliating or inhuman about the work they're asked to do, ok, I might even show some sympathy. But, basically, OMG, they're like Army Lite, with actually less stress and effort than the real Army... heh... dunno, fails to move me much.

    --
    A polar bear is a cartesian bear after a coordinate transform.
  33. Re:I understand running away from prison... but by ODiV · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This wasn't a normal father. He was a criminal.
    I agree this guy was a complete selfish asshole, but you're treading on dangerous ground here. There aren't two different types of people: "criminals" and "non-criminals". Someone being a criminal doesn't make them morally corrupt and somehow more able to commit murder/suicide.

    With the ways the laws are lately, we're pretty much all criminals. That doesn't make us any more or less likely to do something insane like this.

    What this guy did was a not uncommon response to his type of situation. There are psychological factors at work that we should work to understand instead of dismissing this as just the actions of a criminal and sweeping them under the rug. That doesn't help anyone.

    It's similar to our reaction to the Columbine shootings. When someone does something that far off from our own moral compass we label them as the Other. They were "monsters" and that's how they did what they did. Well no, sorry, they were human beings. Identifying them as monsters doesn't do anything constructive to prevent similar tragedies in future.

  34. Error: Order of Operations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Just once, I'd like to see these murder-suicide perpetrators do The Right Thing (TM) and *start* with the suicide!

  35. Re:I understand running away from prison... but by Opportunist · · Score: 5, Insightful

    He is self-centered (or rather, more self-centered than the average Joe) because of what? Because he sent out spam emails and didn't care that he got on your nerves? By that logic, every cold calling CCA is also a self centered bastard who's ready to pop any second.

    And yes, they're annoying as hell (maybe more than even spammers), but that doesn't make them more likely to go on killing sprees than the average Joe.

    I fail to see the connection between being a spammer and being a murder-suicide in the making. Basically, we're all self-centered. Do I care about your wellbeing? Not really. Do you care about mine? I doubt it. Does that mean we will leap at each other's throat the moment we spot each other? Dunno about you, but I won't. Usually, people don't care too much about people they don't know.

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  36. Re:I understand running away from prison... but by Opportunist · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I was about to say that. If there is money in it and the chance to get caught reasonably small, some company will certainly do it. Hell, if murder was legal you'd have murder agencies pop up left and right, if the money is right.

    If it is profitable and either legal altogether or at least the chance to get caught is small enough (or the fines well within the profit margin), a company will do it. The formula for profit is income minus expenses, morals doesn't exist in that equation.

    And while every person may have moral concerns, they don't apply as soon as a company can absorb that moral problem. A worker there could have moral qualms because he does something he knows is "wrong", but he has to do it, he has to bring home money to feed his kids. A manager who lays off a worker he knows can't get a new job and thus is threatened with poverty might have moral concerns over it, but he can brush that aside and see that this way he can continue employing those other 10, and if he didn't lay off the one, the company might lose profit and cut the whole branch, making 12 people (i.e. the 11 and him) lose their jobs. The top management might even have moral concerns, but they can shift the blame on the investors who want first and foremost money for their investment, and the managers are responsible that this money is well invested money. The investors in turn don't even know what they invest in, they just hand money to their bank, trusting the bank to multiply that money. And the investors working at a bank might even know that a company is doing "evil things", but they have to put their moral concerns aside, they have promised their customers to do the best investments they could so they have to invest in the "evil" company, because it's the most profitable one.

    You see, nobody to blame, no moral problem for anyone. Everyone can shift the blame on someone and morals don't play a role anymore, even if they did for a single person, the moment you can shift it on someone else, it's all fine, after all, you don't do evil, you're forced to, by the circumstances.

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  37. Re:I understand running away from prison... but by bryce4president · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Usually, people don't care too much about people they don't know.

    I think your base assumption is flawed. If this was true then the Red Cross wouldn't exist, neither would other charitable organizations that receive money from everyday people and disperse it to others in need. If people didn't care too much then they wouldn't give too much. But the fact of the matter is that the people of this world care very much about the well being of others. I'm sorry that you don't, but I think I'm speaking for the majority of people when I say that I do.

  38. Re:I understand running away from prison... but by grolaw · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Basically, we're all self-centered. Do I care about your wellbeing? Not really. Do you care about mine? I doubt it. Does that mean we will leap at each other's throat the moment we spot each other? Dunno about you, but I won't. Usually, people don't care too much about people they don't know.

    Swift one there, Ayn! I guess that those firemen walk into your burning house to pull you away from a horrible death for the pay. Likewise the physicians, therapists and the other adherents to the social compact.

    Public interest lawsuits, seat belts, vaccines - yep, you have hit the nail on the head: everybody is exactly like you.

  39. Re:I understand running away from prison... but by gnick · · Score: 5, Insightful

    > This wasn't a normal father. He was a criminal.

    That's not fair. There are many criminals, who are also fathers, who love and don't harm their children.

    Indeed. I admit to being a criminal. I've stopped cracking accounts illegally, I've stopped buying/smoking weed, I no longer brew up explosives/build bombs, etc - I'm a married/employed father now and am no longer willing to accept the risk associated with those juvenile habits. But, I still drive ~10% over the speed limit most times. Most people speed - Cops maybe even worse than the rest of us. I've even been known to jaywalk. Most of us are criminals in one way or another.

    But that does not imply that I'm remotely violent with my children. It would take an inconceivable brain fracture for me to ever become an intentional threat to my family. As a matter of fact, the only scenarios where I could envision myself becoming violent would be in defense of them, myself, or another innocent - In that order.

    --
    He's getting rather old, but he's a good mouse.
  40. Re:I understand running away from prison... but by PIBM · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If you were to check who are the ones donating most, you'd see that it's often (not in all cases, no) people who have suffered / had relative suffer of what they are giving for.

    We had a cancer case in my wife family, and suddently everyone started talking about having given money to help fight cancer, someone at the PHD level changed direction to go fight it, and all.

    So, having seen that, and heard that before, I believe many people basic reason to give isn't that they are simply thinking about the well-being of the whole planet, but more about helping on something you are aware of. In the case of blood giving, it's either that, or they are Homers wanting donuts =)

  41. Re:I understand running away from prison... but by ScrewMaster · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Where as non-caucasian males would, customarily, just walk away with no guilt and no feelings of any responsibility?

    Why would you say that? The GP is pointing out that when placed under similar levels of stress and feelings of guilt and inadequacy people in other cultures (surprise!) behave differently.

    Sounds pretty racist, any way you want to try to advance that argument.

    Why do people insist on labeling any perception or documentation of differences between races or cultures as "racist"? People are different, that's why we can make such distinctions as race in the first place! Furthermore, to posit that all races are equal/identical in all ways is ridiculous. For example, I'm a white guy and my girlfriend is African. I have to wear sunblock ... she doesn't. Is that a racist comment?

    This kind of automatic negative reaction to any mention of racial differences immediately eliminates legitimate discourse, because now the dialog shifts from communication to accusation and defense. That, actually, is often the point of crying "racism!", because it puts the other guy on the defensive, even if he happens to be right. Maybe especially if he happens to be right.

    If the facts bear out what the GP is stating (i.e., that there are such differences) then his comment is not racist, but informative. And if he's wrong, then he's probably just misinformed. Personally, I saw nothing inflammatory or racist in his commentary. At least, I'll reserve judgment before making any accusations.

    Japanese males, for example, tend to commit suicide in silence, alone. Well, traditionally they do: I read somewhere that that has been changing. Regardless, am I saying that suicidal Japanese men are a. inferior or b. superior to their Western counterparts? The answer is c. neither ... I was making an observation.

    --
    The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
  42. Wrong Framework by Anna+Merikin · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Sociopathy is not a disease like flu with a cause and exact symptoms; it is a disease of the psyche, which itself is a virtual reality in that we do not interface with the world except through the psyche as medium. As Bruno Bettelheim said, "personality is perception".

    If a person believes it is OK to do anything for money -- that money, itself, is the entire meaning of life, and if that person marries another who feels the same then they might delay having children until their futures could be secured. And if that security was taken away then that sick individual, always working rationally from a mistaken perception (that money is all) might feel it was his responsibility to relieve them of a future filled with poverty.

    It is not fun getting into the mind of sociopaths/psychopaths, so I'm just saying....

  43. Re:I understand running away from prison... but by tobiasly · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I agree this guy was a complete selfish asshole, but you're treading on dangerous ground here. There aren't two different types of people: "criminals" and "non-criminals". Someone being a criminal doesn't make them morally corrupt and somehow more able to commit murder/suicide.

    Have you read Confessions of a Former Spammer? These assholes do things like scrape emails from support websites for recovering gambling addicts and then send them invitations to online gambling sites. This is more than just fraud or theft. They prey on the weak and vulnerable for their own profit. And they do it in the most cowardly way possible, where they never even have to meet or see their victims.

    You're correct in that these types of generalizations aren't really productive, but I think it's a rather safe assumption that anyone who has made millions off of spam aren't just a thief but truly a sociopath. They know that they're ruining the lives of others; they just don't care.

  44. Re:I understand running away from prison... but by Mr+Abstracto · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Usually, people don't care too much about people they don't know.

    I think your base assumption is flawed. If this was true then the Red Cross wouldn't exist, neither would other charitable organizations that receive money from everyday people and disperse it to others in need. If people didn't care too much then they wouldn't give too much. But the fact of the matter is that the people of this world care very much about the well being of others. I'm sorry that you don't, but I think I'm speaking for the majority of people when I say that I do.

    If people usually cared about people they don't know, there would be no need for the Red Cross and other charitable organizations to exist in the first place.

  45. Re:I understand running away from prison... but by dubl-u · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What he is saying is everything we do is driven from a selfish motivation. Firefighters derive a sense of satisfaction from protecting people and that is why they do it.

    This is a rhetorical trick that has always annoyed me. By definition, all motivation for action is at some point internal. To say that all motivations are therefore equally selfish is idiotic.

    Let's assume that:

    • Attila the Hun liked killing people.
    • Torquemada liked torturing people.
    • Mother Teresa liked helping people.
    • Gandhi liked making the world more just.

    That they are all personal motivations is undeniable. Calling them equally selfish, and saying that therefore people are equally selfish is a trick where you confuse two different meanings of selfish.

    We are born with a capacity for compassion, in the same way we are born with a capacity to run. Whether we choose to develop those capacities is up to us.

  46. Re:I understand running away from prison... but by WhatAmIDoingHere · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Tragedy + Distance (or time) = comedy

    Search Google for "Towery" for a good example.

    --
    Not a Twitter sockpuppet... but I wish I was.