From: joedees@bellsouth.net
Date: Sun Aug 11 2002 - 12:03:06 MDT
On 11 Aug 2002 at 1:05, Hermit wrote:
> 
> [Joe Dees] Yeah, you keep mightily falling to your favored fallback
> positionof last resort; your politically stacked BBS, that ALWAYS has
> your replies to other people, and NEVER has their replies to you,
> because they don't consider your shameful shenanigans worth indulging
> in, while you are fixatedly committed enough to your agenda to work to
> skew an entire fixed post to reflect it.  I can clearly see why Bill
> Roh shot you the bulbous bird and resigned.  If you wanted your own
> antiamerican fiefdon, why didn't you attempt to establish your own,
> instead of singlemindedly attempting to parasiticallly subvert an
> other wise fine and diversified list?
> 
> [Hermit] Perhaps Mr Dees, because I actually think that the things the
> US claims to stand for, are essentially good and necessary things,
> even if the current administration (and too many deluded American
> bigots) seem not to care to implement them. One of the reasons that
> early American society worked and was self-correcting was because
> people dared to stand up and say what they thought was wrong. Today,
> too many people like yourself seem to not even notice when we don't,
> look on our hypocricy approvingly and as you so uncharmingly
> demonstrate, strongly resent attempts to say that it appears that we
> are causing harm and acting in contrast to our stated aims. No society
> lasts for ever, but in my opinion, America seems to want to go down in
> flames and take everyone else with her.
>
Actually, I have on several issues criticized US policy, particularly with 
reference to the expensive, useless and damaging drug war, 
inequitable distribution of oil revenues to the Nigerian Abachi regime 
rather than the poor people living on the land from under which the 
petroleum is pumped, the ecologically unsound decision not to sign on 
to the Global Warming treaty, and our regrettable habit of sometimes 
leaving a country in dire straits into which we have been invited (like 
Afghanistan during the Soviet occupation, and Haiti) when our 
objectives are met, rather than staying on and assisting in requested  
nationbuilding functions until the country itself has no more need of our 
help and can stand on its own; I just, unlike, apparently, you, have no 
problem with the US defending the lives of its citizens by pursuing those 
who have attacked her within her own borders and have sworn to 
continue to do so in the name of their deity for as long as they shall live.  
You, on the other hand, have to my knowledge never posted any 
commentary whatsoever where you asserted that the US, on any issue 
or in any venue, was doing anything right, or acting for any human 
good; this being the case, it becomes apodictically obvious whose 
perspective is skewed.
>
> [Hermit] I happen to think that if America manages to recover, and if
> it has not previously destroyed the rest of the world and herself in
> her misguided flailing, that she could still be a very powerful force
> for good on a planet that desperately needs it, instead of inspiring
> terror in her own citizens and in everyone else.
>
I do not feel terrorized by living here.  Why do you feel that way?  I 
would fel much more terrorized in Europe right now, for I believe that 
the chances of Americans being attacked by rabid Islamicists are much 
greater there. 
>
> [Hermit] Fortunately I don't think that this is impossible. Vast
> numbers of kids can see (and too many have experienced) how fucked up
> this society really is. My hope is that despite the McCarthyite
> ravings of those such as yourself, that we will see a second
> resurgence of good sense even if only in reaction to the current
> extremism. With some luck there may be time to recover before we
> become irrelevant.
>
Responding to your Bolshevik denunciations (see, bullus shittus can 
flow both ways), I would have to contend that the US long has been and 
remains, sometimes in spite of herself, the greatest single force for 
democracy,  human rights, progress and civilization in the modern 
world.  Is she perfect?  No.  Is any country or institution, even in 
principle, perfectible in an evolving human context that constantly 
presents novel challenges and opportunities, new needs and desires?  
No.  But ranting lunatics such as Scatflinger and yourself seem to be 
psychopathically fixated on scapegoatingly portraying the US as 'the 
focus of evil in the modern world', to use the phraseology of another 
senile dingbat, simply because the world falls short, as an evolving 
world necessarily always must, of the unattainable ideal of a static 
absolute utopia.
> 
> [Hermit] Please note that the CoV is transitioning to the BBS, having
> tripled our membership since it was announced. In the long term the
> list will transition there permanently. I suggest that you learn to
> use it. Finally, If anyone organization has inspired me to think that
> a correction is possible, and that there are people who can see beyond
> the end of their noses, it is the CoV. Its given me some hope for
> mankind. Hopefully, in the Virian tradition, I am returning something
> worthwhile to it.
> 
I believe that it is in thenlong term interest of the CoV to maintain both 
venues, each as a check and balance upon the untrammeled abuse of 
the other by a few verbose ideological extremists such as you have 
more than amply demonstrated yourself to be.
> ----
> This message was posted by Hermit to the Virus 2002 board on Church of
> Virus BBS.
> <http://virus.lucifer.com/bbs/index.php?board=51;action=display;thread
> id=26000>
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