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User: Philip+K+Dickhead

Philip+K+Dickhead's activity in the archive.

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Comments · 1,375

  1. Re:Why? on Why Haven't Special Character Sets Caught On? · · Score: 1

    %20

  2. Re:Fyodor on Interview with NMAP Creator Fyodor · · Score: 1

    I say "tomahto", you say "tomatensaft"...

  3. Re:Fyodor on Interview with NMAP Creator Fyodor · · Score: 2, Funny

    The degree of civilization in a society can be judged by entering its prisons.
    -- Dostoyevski

    So, it seem Fyodor was trying to get out of jail(2) ?

  4. Re:Did you know? on Microchips for Dangerous Animals? · · Score: 1

    This is how they will get them into humans -- the most dangerous animal of them all.

  5. Oh, Yeah. on Network TV Downloadable Via iTunes · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I want that garbage traveling around with me, in my pocket!

    Look out! I can watch "Just Shoot Me" and "America's Top Model" anywhere!

    I pay good money to hide from this stuff.

  6. Gary Edwards on Interview With Gary Edwards of OpenOffice.org · · Score: 1
    The one who looked like Eddie Munster? Host of the Newlywed Game? Wow! That show really went downhil after he left!

    "What is the most unusual place you and your wife ever made whoopie?"

  7. Literary References? on Muzak Encoding at Home? · · Score: 2, Informative

    All art constantly aspires towards the condition of music. For while in all other works of art it is possible to distinguish the matter from the form, and the understanding can always make this distinction, yet it is the constant effort of art to obliterate it.
    --Walter Pater

    The Condition of Muzak - Jeremiah Cornelius

    Thus, in a scene in Condition of Muzak (the end of the section called 'Outcast of the Islands'), there is a short discussion about the Japanese invasion of Australia and Jerry makes a reference to big egos and Hitler. Shakey Mo then asks if he was a character in a children's comic and then immediately asks if Hitler wasn't a police chief they'd met in Berlin. The first reference is to Big Ego (a cartoon ostrich in The Dandy or The Beano); the second reference is to an earlier story of mine (a 'key' story, in my view) called The Pleasure Garden of Felippe Sagittarius (where Hitler was a rather pathetic police chief in an imaginary Berlin), leading to a reference to the fact that the historical Adolf Hitler doesn't exist in this world.
    --Michael Moorcock

  8. Re:your problem on Muzak Encoding at Home? · · Score: 2, Funny
    I have become a perverse enjoyer of Muzak - especially the traditional Montivani/1001 Strings variety!

    I really did when they get a Dylan tune going in soft, tinkly piano and have the whole sound compressed like helium.

  9. Why Do I Block Ads? on Why Do You Block Ads? · · Score: 1
    Because they are there!


    Advertising is a form of psychological rape - gradually enfolding every aspect of human experience.

  10. Re:Uh-oh on EBay Acquiring VeriSign Processing for $370 Million · · Score: 1

    No wonder they don't have any time for me this week! I'm on site, trying to get some measly performance test off the ground.

  11. Phillipine Intelligence Agencies on U.S. Cybersecurity Not So Secure? · · Score: 1
    Have opeatives with secured White House computer access! What's Phillipine GNP? How 'enabled' are their foreign intelligence services?

    Whoopie! Maybe Haiti will have a mole in the NSA?

  12. Re:seems like there could be more to this story. on Consultant Convicted For Non-Invasive Site Access · · Score: 2, Interesting
    I access sites like this - with links, lynx, wget and curl ALL THE TIME!


    This is how you know who to trust - if there is a possible MITM and hidden re-direct, etc.


    If this is illegal, then it is illegal to automate these actions as well.


    The conclusion from this is that web-spiders are a form of 'hacking', and Google is in violation.

  13. Re:Free as in Kool-aid on Nessus Closes Source · · Score: 4, Funny

    Free as in Jim Jones

  14. How is the parent a Troll? on CheckPoint Acquires Snort · · Score: 1
  15. Re:GPL Kool-aid on Nessus Closes Source · · Score: 2, Informative

    It is a plot.

    Along with the MOSSAD aquisition of Snort/Sourcefire.

  16. Re:SnortFIRST on CheckPoint Acquires Snort · · Score: 0, Troll
    Snort will backdoor/forward everything to MOSSAD now. The Israelis will be conveniently dropped from detection.

    Fork or be F**ked.

  17. Re:Sick and should be forbidden... on Researchers Reconstruct 1918 Flu Virus · · Score: 1

    No. That was libertine immorality, and a diet of sugary breakfast cereals.

  18. Put the Gangsters on RIAA Sues a Child · · Score: 2, Insightful

    out of business.

  19. Re:Sick and should be forbidden... on Researchers Reconstruct 1918 Flu Virus · · Score: 1

    Jes' a wisecrack. Curiosity may yet do so. ;-)

  20. Re:Sick and should be forbidden... on Researchers Reconstruct 1918 Flu Virus · · Score: 1

    Curiosity once killed a continent.

  21. Re:One problem. on Jamming Cellphones with Text Messages · · Score: 1, Redundant

    This explains alot around here.
    Did you get all of that? Can you still hear me?

  22. DIVX on Microsoft Invents A 'Play-Once Only' DVD · · Score: 1
    The would-be standard, without the "phone home" hardware dependency.


    Pigs.

  23. Re:Simple solution on Taiwan Irked at Google's Version of Earth · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Warner Helped the Rev. Moon
    Senator's Office Says He Arranged for Meeting Space in March

    By Charles Babington
    Washington Post Staff Writer
    Wednesday, July 21, 2004; Page A02

    Sen. John W. Warner's office acknowledged yesterday that the Virginia Republican arranged for religious activists to use a Senate office building last March for a ceremony in which the Rev. Sun Myung Moon declared himself the Messiah and said his teachings have helped Hitler and Stalin be "reborn as new persons."

    The senator did not attend the coronation-like ceremony or realize it would involve Moon, a controversial figure who spent 18 months in prison in the 1980s for tax fraud, said Warner spokesman John Ullyot. "Our office felt misled" after news accounts described a long ceremony in which Moon and his wife were crowned as leaders of international peace, he said.

    Many private groups use Senate office buildings for receptions and meetings, but they must obtain a senator's approval. The Senate Rules and Administration Committee has declined to reveal who approved the use of the Dirksen Senate Office Building for the March 23 ceremony, and a key organizer said last month the question was "shrouded in mystery." Warner's office acknowledged its role yesterday when asked for details by The Washington Post.

    When news accounts last month described the ceremony, several of the approximately dozen lawmakers who attended said they were duped into going and had no idea the Moons would be the chief honorees. Some said they simply went to see a constituent receive an award and were unaware of Moon's long speech in which he said, "Emperors, kings and presidents . . . have declared to all Heaven and Earth that Reverend Sun Myung Moon is none other than humanity's Savior, Messiah, Returning Lord and True Parent."

    In a March 11 letter, Christian Voice of Alexandria asked Warner to reserve room G-11 in Dirksen "for a reception Christian Voice plans to host in honor of the 'Ambassadors for Peace' award recipients." The letter, which the senator's office provided to The Post yesterday, was addressed "Dear John" and signed by group president Gary L. Jarmin.

    "Nothing in the letter suggests any participation by Rev. Moon or his organization," Ullyot said. "Senator Warner's staff approved the event, since Mr. Jarmin is a constituent known to the Virginia delegation." Jarmin first made the request by phone, Ullyot said, and was asked to put it in writing.

    A March 8 invitation sent to many lawmakers and others said the "primary program sponsor" would be the "Interreligious and International Federation for World Peace (IIFWP), founded by Rev. Dr. and Mrs. Sun Myung Moon." Several co-sponsors were listed, including the Washington Times Foundation, but Christian Voice was not mentioned.

    The group, however, has been linked to Moon's far-flung religious and business empire in numerous articles over the years. An April article in Church & State magazine referred to "Christian Voice, a Religious Right group connected with the Rev. Sun Myung Moon." It said the group was "long associated with Moon operative Gary Jarmin."

    A 1990 Los Angeles Times article said the Rev. Robert Grant -- listed on Jarmin's letter to Warner as chairman of Christian Voice -- founded the American Freedom Coalition, a group "dedicated to repairing Moon's tattered persona in the United States."

    A 1989 Post article about Moon's empire also made several references to Jarmin and Grant. Grant responded to The Post with an op-ed column saying, in part, "the AFC has received support from business interests of the Unification Church," founded by Moon. "Since its founding in April 1987, the AFC has in fact received $ 5,252,473 from such business interests. This amounts to just 32.7 percent . . . of our total gross revenues."

    In a phone interview yesterday, Jarmin said he requested the Dirksen room on behalf of Christian Voice because the ceremony involved hundreds of people and required an overflow room. A p

  24. Re:Simple solution on Taiwan Irked at Google's Version of Earth · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    The Rev. Moon Honored at Hill Reception
    Lawmakers Say They Were Misled

    By Charles Babington and Alan Cooperman
    Washington Post Staff Writers
    Wednesday, June 23, 2004; Page A01

    More than a dozen lawmakers attended a congressional reception this year honoring the Rev. Sun Myung Moon in which Moon declared himself the Messiah and said his teachings have helped Hitler and Stalin be "reborn as new persons."

    At the March 23 ceremony in the Dirksen Senate Office Building, Rep. Danny K. Davis (D-Ill.) wore white gloves and carried a pillow holding an ornate crown that was placed on Moon's head. The Korean-born businessman and religious leader then delivered a long speech saying he was "sent to Earth . . . to save the world's six billion people. . . . Emperors, kings and presidents . . . have declared to all Heaven and Earth that Reverend Sun Myung Moon is none other than humanity's Savior, Messiah, Returning Lord and True Parent."

    Details of the ceremony -- first reported by Salon.com writer John Gorenfeld -- have prompted several lawmakers to say they were misled or duped by organizers. Their complaints prompted a Moon-affiliated Web site to remove a video of the "Crown of Peace" ceremony two days ago, but other Web sites have preserved details and photos.

    Moon, 85, has been controversial for years. Renowned for officiating at mass weddings, he received an 18-month prison sentence in 1982 for tax fraud and conspiracy to obstruct justice. In a 1997 sermon, he likened homosexuals to "dirty dung-eating dogs."

    Among the more than 300 people who attended all or part of the March ceremony was Sen. Mark Dayton (D-Minn.), who now says he simply was honoring a constituent receiving a peace award and did not know Moon would be there. "We fell victim to it; we were duped," Dayton spokeswoman Chris Lisi said yesterday.

    Other lawmakers who attended or were listed as hosts felt the same, she said. "Everyone I talked to was furious," she said. With Minnesotans demanding to know whether Dayton is a follower of Moon, Lisi said, the senator persuaded the St. Paul Pioneer Press to write an article allowing him to reply.

    The event's organizers flew in nearly 100 honorees from all 50 states to receive state and national peace awards. The only "international crown of peace awards" went to Moon and his wife.

    Some Republicans who attended the event, including Rep. Roscoe G. Bartlett (Md.), said they did so mainly to salute the Washington Times, a conservative-leaning newspaper owned by Moon's organization. "I had no idea what would happen" regarding Moon's coronation and speech, Bartlett said yesterday.

    But a key organizer -- Archbishop George A. Stallings Jr., pastor of the Imani Temple, an independent African American Catholic congregation in Northeast Washington -- said Moon's prominent role should have surprised no one. He said a March 8 invitation faxed to all lawmakers stated that the "primary program sponsor" would be the "Interreligious and International Federation for World Peace (IIFWP), founded by Rev. Dr. and Mrs. Sun Myung Moon, who will also be recognized that evening for their lifelong work to promote interfaith cooperation and reconciliation." The invitation was signed by Davis and the Rev. Michael Jenkins, as co-chairmen of the IIFWP (USA).

    The event's co-sponsors were the Washington Times Foundation, the United Press International Foundation, the American Family Coalition, the American Clergy Leadership Conference and the Women's Federation for World Peace, according to the invitation. Stallings, a former Roman Catholic priest who was married in Moon's church, said Moon's association with those organizations is well known.

    "You'd have to be deaf, dumb and blind to not know that any event that is sponsored by the Washington Times . . . could involve the influence, or the potential presence, of the Reverend Moon," he said.

    Use of the Dirksen building requires a senator's approval. Dayton said he gave no such permission, and S

  25. Re:Simple solution on Taiwan Irked at Google's Version of Earth · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Rev. Moon urges bridge linking Alaska, Asia
    By Seattle Times staff

    Challenging U.S. leaders to build a 51-mile "peace" bridge and tunnel from Alaska to Russia, the Rev. Sun Myung Moon rallied hundreds of Seattle supporters last night in an effort to bolster a religious movement best known for mass weddings.

    Moon delivered a rambling, 45-minute sermon at the Bell Harbor International Conference Center that heavily criticized the United Nations and called for the end of war and the reconciliation of religious differences.

    Moon offered no specifics on how a combination bridge and tunnel could be built or funded.

    Korean-born Moon, 85, came to the United States in 1971 to establish the Unification Church after he claimed Jesus Christ appeared to him on a mountaintop. He has since created a multimillion-dollar empire that spreads across dozens of business sectors, from media holdings to manufacturing.

    The Washington, D.C.-based church is now called the Family Federation for World Peace and Unification. Church observers estimate fewer than 2,000 U.S. families are members, although Moon commands tens of thousands of followers in Japan and Korea.

    About 250 Washington families are registered as members, according to church records.

    Moon, who has a penchant for the dramatic, sparked congressional furor last year when he crowned himself the Messiah during an elaborate ceremony at the Dirksen Senate Office Building in Washington, D.C.

    Moon declared that his teachings helped Adolf Hitler and Josef Stalin become reborn as new people.

    Copyright © 2005 The Seattle Times Company