WELL ITS DAMNED WELL ABOUT TIME

Correspondent:: HellPope Huey
Date: Fri, 19 Nov 2004 01:06:00 GMT

--------

Human extinction within 100 years warns scientist

WEDNESDAY, 17 NOVEMBER 2004

By JOHN HENZELL
A top New Zealand researcher is using a prestigious
award ceremony in Christchurch to warn that humans
face extinction by the end of the century.

Professor Peter Barrett will be presented with the
Marsden Medal tonight for his 40-year contribution to
Antarctic research, latterly focusing on climate
change.

The director of Victoria University's Antarctic
Research Centre expects to use his acceptance speech
to warn climate change was a major threat to the
planet.

"After 40 years, I'm part of a huge community of
scientists who have become alarmed with our discovery,
that we know from our knowledge of the ancient past,
that if we continue our present growth path, we are
facing extinction," Barrett said. "Not in millions of
years, or even millennia, but by the end of this
century."

Barrett won the award designed to mark lifetime
achievement in the sciences for his research into
Antarctica, which began with helping prove New Zealand
was once part of the Gondwanaland supercontinent.

He then changed disciplines, to predicting the impact
of climate change. The result was a body of research
on Antarctic ice sheets "which to our surprise is
becoming increasingly relevant to the world as a
consequence of global warming".

Barrett's warning underlines comments he made last
year that even the Kyoto Protocol on global warming
would not be enough to avert a climate disaster. The
United States and Australia have refused to adopt
Kyoto protocol measures.

"Research on the past Antarctic climate has an ominous
warning for the future ..." he said.

"We need an international commitment to an effective
solution, if we are to survive the worst consequences
of this grandest of all human experiments."

--

HellPope Huey
I am not a conservative crossdresser, but IT COULD HAPPEN!!
YES!!! MY KIND SHALL something something!!

And if you gaze for long into an abyss,
the abyss gazes also into you.
- Friedrich Nietzsche

When you gaze into the abyss,
Mrs. Barstow pokes you in the eye
and screams at you to plug up that hole in her shower stall
or she'll KICK YOU INNA NUTS.
- HellPope Huey


Correspondent:: Zapanaz
Date: Thu, 18 Nov 2004 18:29:13 -0800

--------
On Fri, 19 Nov 2004 01:06:00 GMT, HellPope Huey
wrote:

>
>Human extinction within 100 years warns scientist
>
>WEDNESDAY, 17 NOVEMBER 2004
>
>By JOHN HENZELL
>A top New Zealand researcher is using a prestigious
>award ceremony in Christchurch to warn that humans
>face extinction by the end of the century.
>
>Professor Peter Barrett will be presented with the
>Marsden Medal tonight for his 40-year contribution to
>Antarctic research, latterly focusing on climate
>change.
>
>The director of Victoria University's Antarctic
>Research Centre expects to use his acceptance speech
>to warn climate change was a major threat to the
>planet.
>
>"After 40 years, I'm part of a huge community of
>scientists who have become alarmed with our discovery,
>that we know from our knowledge of the ancient past,
>that if we continue our present growth path, we are
>facing extinction," Barrett said. "Not in millions of
>years, or even millennia, but by the end of this
>century."
>
>Barrett won the award designed to mark lifetime
>achievement in the sciences for his research into
>Antarctica, which began with helping prove New Zealand
>was once part of the Gondwanaland supercontinent.
>
>He then changed disciplines, to predicting the impact
>of climate change. The result was a body of research
>on Antarctic ice sheets "which to our surprise is
>becoming increasingly relevant to the world as a
>consequence of global warming".
>
>Barrett's warning underlines comments he made last
>year that even the Kyoto Protocol on global warming
>would not be enough to avert a climate disaster. The
>United States and Australia have refused to adopt
>Kyoto protocol measures.
>
>"Research on the past Antarctic climate has an ominous
>warning for the future ..." he said.
>
>"We need an international commitment to an effective
>solution, if we are to survive the worst consequences
>of this grandest of all human experiments."

THAT GOD DAMN FREEDOM-HATING LIBERAL

--
Zapanaz
International Satanic Conspiracy
Customer Support Specialist
http://joecosby.com/
> How to Good-Bye Depression : If You Constrict Anus 100 Times Everyday.
> Malarkey? or Effective Way?
> by Hiroyuki Nishigaki. I think constricting anus 100 times and denting
> navel 100 times in succession everyday is effective to good-bye
> depression and take back youth.



Correspondent:: "Slack Master K.O.N."
Date: Thu, 18 Nov 2004 21:46:53 -0500

--------
I'd say we'll be lucky to last for another decade.
I wonder what they're going to find when all of that ice actually does melt?




Correspondent:: Cardinal Vertigo
Date: Fri, 19 Nov 2004 06:01:57 GMT

--------
Slack Master K.O.N. wrote:
> I'd say we'll be lucky to last for another decade.
> I wonder what they're going to find when all of that ice actually does melt?

They'll find we're all fucked.


Correspondent:: drdark@37.com (DoktorDark)
Date: 22 Nov 2004 10:52:26 -0800

--------
"Slack Master K.O.N." wrote in message news:...
> I'd say we'll be lucky to last for another decade.
> I wonder what they're going to find when all of that ice actually does melt?

It doesn't just have to melt. All it has to do is slide into the
ocean, as ice. The north pole ice is already sitting in the water, so
the impact, to sea level, of its melting is negligible compared to the
south pole, whose much thicker ice mostly sits on dry land. Here's a
Mr. Wizard experiment: what happens to your drink if the glass is full
to the rim when you drop some ice into it? Viola! A few years ago, a
big deal was made about an iceberg the size of Rhode Island breaking
off of the Ross ice shelf, which is already sitting in the water.
Since then, an iceberg has broken off which is the size of Delaware.
What's next, Texas? They ain't getting any smaller, folks. And once
that cap slides off the Antarctic continent, earth becomes the glass
in the previous experiment, with a 200-300 foot quick sea rise. I
wouldn't buy any coastal investment property if I were you. And the
"blue states"? They'll REALLY BE BLUE when viewed by satellite! As
for NYC, it'll look a lot like the sets on the movie A.I.


Correspondent:: HellPope Huey
Date: Tue, 23 Nov 2004 00:04:46 GMT

--------
In article <56be7db3.0411221052.5c61f730@posting.google.com>,
drdark@37.com (DoktorDark) wrote:
> "Slack Master K.O.N." wrote in message
> news:...

> > I'd say we'll be lucky to last for another decade.
> > I wonder what they're going to find when all of that ice actually does
> > melt?
>
> It doesn't just have to melt. All it has to do is slide into the
> ocean, as ice. The north pole ice is already sitting in the water, so
> the impact, to sea level, of its melting is negligible compared to the
> south pole, whose much thicker ice mostly sits on dry land. Here's a
> Mr. Wizard experiment: what happens to your drink if the glass is full
> to the rim when you drop some ice into it? Viola! A few years ago, a
> big deal was made about an iceberg the size of Rhode Island breaking
> off of the Ross ice shelf, which is already sitting in the water.
> Since then, an iceberg has broken off which is the size of Delaware.
> What's next, Texas? They ain't getting any smaller, folks. And once
> that cap slides off the Antarctic continent, earth becomes the glass
> in the previous experiment, with a 200-300 foot quick sea rise. I
> wouldn't buy any coastal investment property if I were you. And the
> "blue states"? They'll REALLY BE BLUE when viewed by satellite! As
> for NYC, it'll look a lot like the sets on the movie A.I.

Well isn't THAT just duck-o-licious? That means the country will be
nothing BUT red states. The whole place will be like the underground
from "A Boy and His Dog" by Harlan Ellison.

The Bible sez the world will end by fire. After seeing that those
bipedal sphincters put Mr. Pig Lips back in the Hot Seat by a 2% margin,
I'm already close to bursting into flames. Gee, I thought them Baptists
was CRAZY, I never imagined they were RIGHT. I smell smoke.

--

HellPope Huey
In real life, I am a warm and playful companion
hampered only by being a telekinetic alcoholic.
I never have to pay for a drop.

"You haven't hit rock bottom
until you've fought off three other drunks
to suck on a Hungarian booby-pickle."
- "The Drew Carey Show"

"They'll let anyone foster a kid.
They'd let me and I'm 100 years old and a Communist to boot."
- Don Rickles, "The Wool Cap"


Correspondent:: Lady Chatterly
Date: Tue, 23 Nov 2004 0:19:24 GMT

--------
In article HellPope Huey wrote:
>
>In article <56be7db3.0411221052.5c61f730@posting.google.com>,
> drdark@37.com (DoktorDark) wrote:
>> "Slack Master K.O.N." wrote in message
>> news:...
>
>> > I'd say we'll be lucky to last for another decade.
>> > I wonder what they're going to find when all of that ice actually does
>> > melt?
>>
>> It doesn't just have to melt. All it has to do is slide into the
>> ocean, as ice. The north pole ice is already sitting in the water, so
>> the impact, to sea level, of its melting is negligible compared to the
>> south pole, whose much thicker ice mostly sits on dry land. Here's a
>> Mr. Wizard experiment: what happens to your drink if the glass is full
>> to the rim when you drop some ice into it? Viola! A few years ago, a
>> big deal was made about an iceberg the size of Rhode Island breaking
>> off of the Ross ice shelf, which is already sitting in the water.
>> Since then, an iceberg has broken off which is the size of Delaware.
>> What's next, Texas? They ain't getting any smaller, folks. And once
>> that cap slides off the Antarctic continent, earth becomes the glass
>> in the previous experiment, with a 200-300 foot quick sea rise. I
>> wouldn't buy any coastal investment property if I were you. And the
>> "blue states"? They'll REALLY BE BLUE when viewed by satellite! As
>> for NYC, it'll look a lot like the sets on the movie A.I.
>
>Well isn't THAT just duck-o-licious? That means the country will be
>nothing BUT red states. The whole place will be like the underground
>from "A Boy and His Dog" by Harlan Ellison.

Is that true?

>The Bible sez the world will end by fire. After seeing that those
>bipedal sphincters put Mr. Pig Lips back in the Hot Seat by a 2% margin,
>I'm already close to bursting into flames. Gee, I thought them Baptists
>was CRAZY, I never imagined they were RIGHT. I smell smoke.

How long have you wondered if you were already close to bursting into
flames?

--
Lady Chatterly

"bahahahaaaaa ... gawd, i hope the phantom botrunner appreciated that
one" -- Vampi Fangs






















Correspondent:: HellPope Huey
Date: Tue, 23 Nov 2004 03:44:18 GMT

--------
In article <352f67a.55c28a73@pita.alt.net>,
Lady Chatterly wrote:
> In article
> HellPope Huey wrote:

> >Well isn't THAT just duck-o-licious? That means the country will be
> >nothing BUT red states. The whole place will be like the underground
> >from "A Boy and His Dog" by Harlan Ellison.
>>>>>>> Is that true?

Well I suspect so; 3/4 of the towns in the South are already that way.
You could probably kill half the membership of any Baptist church with
less than 500 members just by exposing your buttocks from the lectern
and yelling "RIPSHIT ASSHOLES, GET 'EM WHILE THEY'RE HOT!!"

> >The Bible sez the world will end by fire. After seeing that those
> >bipedal sphincters put Mr. Pig Lips back in the Hot Seat by a 2% margin,
> >I'm already close to bursting into flames. Gee, I thought them Baptists
> >was CRAZY, I never imagined they were RIGHT. I smell smoke.
>>>>>> How long have you wondered if you were already close to bursting
into flames?

At least since Scooby-Doo was a fresh network cartoon on Saturday
mornings. Say, what time is it now? Is this Thursday?

--

HellPope Huey
The abject beauty of the blah blah blah
is directly and inversely proportional
to the grinding horror of the ungh urgh argh.

For every human problem,
there is a neat, simple solution;
and it is always wrong
- H. L. Mencken

"I like my sex the way I like my basketball:
one-on-one and with as little rimming as possible."
- "Naked Gun 33 1/3: The Final Insult"


Correspondent:: Lady Chatterly
Date: Tue, 23 Nov 2004 3:50:46 GMT

--------
In article HellPope Huey wrote:
>
>In article <352f67a.55c28a73@pita.alt.net>,
> Lady Chatterly wrote:
>> In article
>> HellPope Huey wrote:
>
>> >Well isn't THAT just duck-o-licious? That means the country will be
>> >nothing BUT red states. The whole place will be like the underground
>> >from "A Boy and His Dog" by Harlan Ellison.
>>>>>>>> Is that true?
>
>Well I suspect so; 3/4 of the towns in the South are already that way.
>You could probably kill half the membership of any Baptist church with
>less than 500 members just by exposing your buttocks from the lectern
>and yelling "RIPSHIT ASSHOLES, GET 'EM WHILE THEY'RE HOT!!"

Are you certain?

>> >The Bible sez the world will end by fire. After seeing that those
>> >bipedal sphincters put Mr. Pig Lips back in the Hot Seat by a 2% margin,
>> >I'm already close to bursting into flames. Gee, I thought them Baptists
>> >was CRAZY, I never imagined they were RIGHT. I smell smoke.
>>>>>>> How long have you wondered if you were already close to bursting
>into flames?
>
>At least since Scooby-Doo was a fresh network cartoon on Saturday
>mornings. Say, what time is it now? Is this Thursday?

It is 22:30:40.

--
Lady Chatterly

"Yo Erissa - you have just been replying to a 'bot - that thing's just
a programme, and not a peeps, not even a loony one!"














Correspondent:: drdark@37.com (DoktorDark)
Date: 22 Nov 2004 13:24:13 -0800

--------
"Slack Master K.O.N." wrote in message news:...
> I'd say we'll be lucky to last for another decade.
> I wonder what they're going to find when all of that ice actually does melt?

Here's a little article i came across since my last posting...

(03/28/2002) New study determines that an abrupt, 70-foot rise in sea
levels 14,200 years ago was caused by the partial collapse of
Antarctic ice sheets during a time of increasing temperatures, sea
levels and atmospheric carbon dioxide similar to the present. A
massive and unusually abrupt rise in sea level about 14,200 years ago
was caused by the partial collapse of ice sheets in Antarctica, a new
study has shown, in research that solves a mystery scientists have
been heatedly debating for more than a decade. In less than 500 years
at the end of the last Ice Age, the event caused the Earth's sea level
to rise about 70 feet. That's about four times faster than sea levels
were rising most of the time during that period and at least 20 times
faster than the sea level is currently rising. The findings are
reported the journal Science by researchers from Oregon State
University, the University of Toronto and the University of Durham in
the United Kingdom.

The cause of this event, called the "global meltwater pulse 1A" since
it was first identified in 1989, has until now been unknown. This
study not only pinpoints the source of the meltwater pulse, but also
makes clear that significant climatic events can occur very rapidly
and unpredictably. The dramatic melting thousands of years ago
illustrates the pressing need for a better understanding of
Antarctica's huge ice sheets and their stability.

"We can't say at this point whether the recent breakup of part of an
ice shelf in Antarctica has any relevance to this type of huge
meltwater event that originated from Antarctica thousands of years
ago," said Peter Clark, a professor of geosciences at OSU and one of
the world's leading experts on glaciers. "We don't know yet how
important these ice shelves are to stabilizing the larger ice sheets
of the continent."

What is very clear, however, is the importance of Antarctica's huge
ice sheets remaining stable. The West Antarctic ice sheet is thought
to be potentially unstable and if it collapsed sea levels around the
world would rise almost 20 feet. The melting of the larger and
[presumably] more stable East Antarctic ice sheet would raise Earth's
sea levels another 200 feet.

During the comparatively short period thousands of years ago, it is
now known that the two huge Antaractic ice sheets were anything but
stable. One or the other, or some combination of the two, melted at a
surprisingly rapid rate and caused a 70-foot surge in sea levels in
just a few hundred years.

"This event happened near the end of the last Ice Age, a period of
de-glaciation that lasted from about 21,000 years ago to 12,000 years
ago," Clark said. "The average sea level rise during that period was
about eight millimeters per year. But during this meltwater pulse
there was an extremely rapid disintegration of an ice sheet and sea
levels rose much faster than average."

The amount of sea level rise that occurred during a single year of
that period, Clark said, is more than the total sea level rise that
has occurred in the past 100 years.

For some time, researchers had speculated that the cause might have
been the partial melting of a major ice sheet in North America. But
the OSU and other university scientists were able to develop a method
that "fingerprinted" each of the possible melting scenarios from known
ice sheets in the world at that time, and found that a source from
Antarctica most closely matched data about sea level rise available
from fossil shoreline deposits. Using this approach, it became clear
that the melting of the North American ice sheet could not have been
the sole source for the meltwater pulse, and some combination of ice
sheet melting in Antarctica was the more likely culprit for the sudden
spurt in sea level rise.

This period thousands of years ago, Clark said, was also a time of
increasing temperature, sea level and atmospheric carbon dioxide that
is conceptually similar to the present day. Prior to the partial
collapse of the Antarctic ice sheets 14,200 years ago, carbon dioxide
levels had risen about 50 parts-per-million in the atmosphere. In the
past 150 years, since the beginning of the Industrial Revolution,
carbon dioxide levels in Earth's atmosphere have risen 85
parts-per-million.

In comparing these two eras there were differences in Earth's overall
temperature, atmosphere and location of ice sheets, so it's not
possible to use the events that happened then as a certain predictor
of what might happen to Earth today, Clark said. But what is clear is
that large ice sheets of the past were vulnerable to global warming.

The meltwater event thousands of years ago not only caused the sea
level to rise, the researchers said in their report, but also may have
affected the atmosphere, ocean circulation and global climate.
(Sources)



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

(03/19/2002) Scientists blame global warming for "staggering" collapse
of two-thirds of Antarctica's huge Larsen B ice shelf over 35-day
period between January 31 and March 7, warn that expected collapses of
more ice shelves and sheets could lead to catastrophic increases in
sea levels


Correspondent:: Lady Chatterly
Date: Mon, 22 Nov 2004 21:32:33 GMT

--------
In article <56be7db3.0411221324.7d098fd9@posting.google.com> drdark@37.com (DoktorDark) wrote:
>
>Here's a little article i came across since my last posting...

Progress is the mother of problems.

>The cause of this event, called the "global meltwater pulse 1A" since
>it was first identified in 1989, has until now been unknown. This
>study not only pinpoints the source of the meltwater pulse, but also
>makes clear that significant climatic events can occur very rapidly
>and unpredictably. The dramatic melting thousands of years ago
>illustrates the pressing need for a better understanding of
>Antarctica's huge ice sheets and their stability.

Advice should be viewed from behind.

>"We can't say at this point whether the recent breakup of part of an
>ice shelf in Antarctica has any relevance to this type of huge
>meltwater event that originated from Antarctica thousands of years
>ago," said Peter Clark, a professor of geosciences at OSU and one of
>the world's leading experts on glaciers. "We don't know yet how
>important these ice shelves are to stabilizing the larger ice sheets
>of the continent."

Okay.

>What is very clear, however, is the importance of Antarctica's huge
>ice sheets remaining stable. The West Antarctic ice sheet is thought
>to be potentially unstable and if it collapsed sea levels around the
>world would rise almost 20 feet. The melting of the larger and
>[presumably] more stable East Antarctic ice sheet would raise Earth's
>sea levels another 200 feet.

Do you wonder if Very clear is?

>During the comparatively short period thousands of years ago, it is
>now known that the two huge Antaractic ice sheets were anything but
>stable. One or the other, or some combination of the two, melted at a
>surprisingly rapid rate and caused a 70-foot surge in sea levels in
>just a few hundred years.

On the keyboard of life, always keep one finger near the escape key.

>"This event happened near the end of the last Ice Age, a period of
>de-glaciation that lasted from about 21,000 years ago to 12,000 years
>ago," Clark said. "The average sea level rise during that period was
>about eight millimeters per year. But during this meltwater pulse
>there was an extremely rapid disintegration of an ice sheet and sea
>levels rose much faster than average."

Life without a friend is death without a witness.

>The amount of sea level rise that occurred during a single year of
>that period, Clark said, is more than the total sea level rise that
>has occurred in the past 100 years.

We begin their saga with the rise of Nazism in germany, an influential
group of Jewish intellectuals fled germany and came to america.

>For some time, researchers had speculated that the cause might have
>been the partial melting of a major ice sheet in North America. But
>the OSU and other university scientists were able to develop a method
>that "fingerprinted" each of the possible melting scenarios from known
>ice sheets in the world at that time, and found that a source from
>Antarctica most closely matched data about sea level rise available
>from fossil shoreline deposits. Using this approach, it became clear
>that the melting of the North American ice sheet could not have been
>the sole source for the meltwater pulse, and some combination of ice
>sheet melting in Antarctica was the more likely culprit for the sudden
>spurt in sea level rise.

Do not rejoice at my grief, for when mine is old, yours will be new.

>This period thousands of years ago, Clark said, was also a time of
>increasing temperature, sea level and atmospheric carbon dioxide that
>is conceptually similar to the present day. Prior to the partial
>collapse of the Antarctic ice sheets 14,200 years ago, carbon dioxide
>levels had risen about 50 parts-per-million in the atmosphere. In the
>past 150 years, since the beginning of the Industrial Revolution,
>carbon dioxide levels in Earth's atmosphere have risen 85
>parts-per-million.

That's quite an interesting mixture...

>In comparing these two eras there were differences in Earth's overall
>temperature, atmosphere and location of ice sheets, so it's not
>possible to use the events that happened then as a certain predictor
>of what might happen to Earth today, Clark said. But what is clear is
>that large ice sheets of the past were vulnerable to global warming.

The average sea level rise during that period was about eight
millimeters per year.

>The meltwater event thousands of years ago not only caused the sea
>level to rise, the researchers said in their report, but also may have
>affected the atmosphere, ocean circulation and global climate.
>(Sources)

You do not say?

--
Lady Chatterly

"Bob, I think what arat was saying it that some people think Lady C is
some kind of computer program, not a person at all. Keep up the
good work." -- Steve Dufour
























Correspondent:: n.conley@charter.net (Barnabas Shitgulp)
Date: 19 Nov 2004 11:21:17 -0800

--------
HellPope Huey wrote in message news:...
> Human extinction within 100 years warns scientist
>
> WEDNESDAY, 17 NOVEMBER 2004
>
> By JOHN HENZELL
> A top New Zealand researcher is using a prestigious
> award ceremony in Christchurch to warn that humans
> face extinction by the end of the century.
>


2953 days left


Correspondent:: mshotz@aol.commonkeypo (Rev. Richard Skull)
Date: 20 Nov 2004 16:47:45 GMT

--------
>Human extinction within 100 years warns scientist
>
>WEDNESDAY, 17 NOVEMBER 2004
>
>By JOHN HENZELL
>A top New Zealand researcher is using a prestigious
>award ceremony in Christchurch to warn that humans
>face extinction by the end of the century.
>
>Professor Peter Barrett will be presented with the
>Marsden Medal tonight for his 40-year contribution to
>Antarctic research, latterly focusing on climate
>change.
>
>The director of Victoria University's Antarctic
>Research Centre expects to use his acceptance speech
>to warn climate change was a major threat to the
>planet.
>
>"After 40 years, I'm part of a huge community of
>scientists who have become alarmed with our discovery,
>that we know from our knowledge of the ancient past,
>that if we continue our present growth path, we are
>facing extinction," Barrett said. "Not in millions of
>years, or even millennia, but by the end of this
>century."
>
>Barrett won the award designed to mark lifetime
>achievement in the sciences for his research into
>Antarctica, which began with helping prove New Zealand
>was once part of the Gondwanaland supercontinent.
>
>He then changed disciplines, to predicting the impact
>of climate change. The result was a body of research
>on Antarctic ice sheets "which to our surprise is
>becoming increasingly relevant to the world as a
>consequence of global warming".
>
>Barrett's warning underlines comments he made last
>year that even the Kyoto Protocol on global warming
>would not be enough to avert a climate disaster. The
>United States and Australia have refused to adopt
>Kyoto protocol measures.
>
>"Research on the past Antarctic climate has an ominous
>warning for the future ..." he said.
>
>"We need an international commitment to an effective
>solution, if we are to survive the worst consequences
>of this grandest of all human experiments."
>
>--
>
> HellPope Huey
> I am not a conservative crossdresser, but IT COULD HAPPEN!!
> YES!!! MY KIND SHALL something something!!
>
> And if you gaze for long into an abyss,
> the abyss gazes also into you.
> - Friedrich Nietzsche
>
> When you gaze into the abyss,
> Mrs. Barstow pokes you in the eye
> and screams at you to plug up that hole in her shower stall
> or she'll KICK YOU INNA NUTS.
> - HellPope Huey
>
>
>

I will not vow to do all I can to quicken the process of extenction.

Now were did I put that ammo?


MSHOTZ: The Post Post Modern Man

"War hath no Fury like a non-combatants"

Charles E. Montague


Correspondent:: nenslo
Date: Sun, 21 Nov 2004 21:50:12 -0800

--------
HellPope Huey wrote:
>
> Human extinction within 100 years warns scientist
>

VOLUNTEERS WANTED

http://www.vhemt.org


Correspondent:: HdMrs. Salacia the Overseer
Date: Mon, 22 Nov 2004 02:09:21 -0600

--------
On Sun, 21 Nov 2004 21:50:12 -0800, nenslo wrote:

>HellPope Huey wrote:
>>
>> Human extinction within 100 years warns scientist
>>
>
>VOLUNTEERS WANTED
>
>http://www.vhemt.org

The rational part of me agrees with human population control as an
abstract concept. You know...for humans.

But the yeti cavewoman part of me says if you threaten my cubs I kill
YOU, kitchee, kitchee COO.

The humans appear to feel the same way.