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| Greetings, Quotaholics: Even by fellow prisoners, sex offenders are considered the bottom of the totem-pole, especially if children are the victims. Almost all states and jurisdictions around the world have some sort of sex-offender registry, forcing those paroled or released after serving their sentences to make their residences known to law enforcement. Many of those jurisdictions also have stringent restrictions on how close one may live to a school or other gathering place. Is it possible for authorities to go too far? No one likes the idea of a sex offender living in their neighborhood. Protests in front of homes are common, and a few have been murdered by vigilantes. The only thing for absolute certain is that unless sentences are changed to life without parole, these individuals will be released eventually, and that they have to live somewhere. According to the Forsyth County News, some new restrictions for sex offenders living in the state of Georgia have been implemented. The new law forbids registered sex offenders from living within 1,000 feet (300m) of a school bus stop, public pool, community park or church. While that might sound like a good idea on its face, it turns out that there are so many of those locations, there is literally no place in the residential areas of Forsyth County that does not fall within those restrictions. There are 1,200 school bus stops alone in the county. The offenders have to move by July 1 or face arrest. Some sheriffs are worried that the law will effectively drive sex offenders out of urban, metro areas and into rural locations where they can stay within the requirements. They also fear that rural sheriffs are less prepared for the task of keeping up with sex offenders and where they live, which might make reoffending even more likely. "It's going to require more manpower and resources," said Oliver Hunter, deputy general counsel for the Georgia Sheriffs Association. "The metro areas are for the most part well-staffed. If anyone would comply, it would be in the metro areas rather than the rural areas." Another major concern is that major fearis that the new law will simply drive sex offenders underground. Hunter said, "They're going to move and not register at all. I can't say it's going to run them out of Georgia -- we're just not going to be able to find them." Lt. Matt Allen of the Forsyth County Sheriff's Office notes that those who fail to register under the new law face a stiff penalty. Any sex offender who doesn't register each year within three days of his or her birthday faces 10 to 30 years in prison if convicted. State Rep. Jack Murphy (R-Cumming), a co-sponsor of the new law, said he's gotten a handful of e-mails from relatives of sex offenders complaining about the onerous new requirements. "I realized it was going to cause them a lot of problems in trying to get in compliance, but we wanted a stringent law passed," Murphy said. "We knew it was going to be tough. But (sex offenders) need to realize that if they hadn't commited the acts they did, they wouldn't be in this trouble." Murphy, who said the law will withstand legal challenges, said it "draws a line in the sand." "We wanted to send the message to sex offenders that if you come to Georgia, you're coming to a state that has one of the toughest laws in the United States." No one wants to be sympathetic to the offenders. The legislator's words probably resonate with a lot of people, but is it reasonable to put unmeetable requirements on people? We have laws, and people are convicted, sentenced, and released based on the laws that have been enacted. Since release is inevitable, how is an offender supposed to live, no matter how well-intentioned the law might be? Can a law limiting the activities of convicted sex offenders go too far? Do you see any solution to this? Restrictively, | |||||||||||
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"You moon the wrong person at an office party and suddenly you're not "professional" any more." - Jeff Foxworthy | |||||||||||
| "If a three year old kid tells you that you are ugly -- you probably are." - Tim Hylka | |||||||||||
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| Tech Support [Thanks, Noella] Dear Tech Support: Last year I upgraded from Girlfriend 7.0 to Wife 1.0. I soon noticed that the new program began unexpected child processing that took up a lot of space and valuable resources. In addition, Wife 1.0 installed itself into all other programs and now monitors all other system activity. Applications such as Poker Night 10.3, Football 5.0, Hunting and Fishing 7.5, and Racing 3.6 I can't seem to keep Wife 1.0 in the background while attempting to run my favorite applications. I'm thinking about going back to Girlfriend 7.0, but the uninstall doesn't work on Wife 1.0. Please help! Thanks, Troubled User.
Dear Troubled User: This is a very common problem that men complain about. Many people upgrade from Girlfriend 7.0 to Wife 1.0, thinking that it is just a Utilities and Entertainment program. Wife 1.0 is an OPERATING SYSTEM and is designed by its Creator to run EVERYTHING!!! It is also impossible to delete Wife 1.0 and to return to Girlfriend 7.0. It is impossible to uninstall, or purge the program files from the system once installed. You cannot go back to Girlfriend 7.0 because Wife 1.0 is designed to not allow this. Look in your Wife 1.0 manual under Warnings-Alimony-Child Support. I recommend that you keep Wife1.0 and work on improving the situation. I suggest installing the
background application "Yes Dear" to alleviate software augmentation. The best course of action is to enter the command C:\APOLOGIZE because ultimately you will have to give the APOLOGIZE command before the system will return to normal anyway. Wife 1.0 is a great program, but it tends to be very high maintenance.Wife 1.0 comes with several support programs, such as Clean and Sweep 3.0, Cook It 1.5 and Do Bills 4.2. However, be very careful how you use these programs. Improper use will cause the system to launch the program Nag Nag 9.5. Once this happens, the only way to improve the performance of Wife 1.0 is to purchase additional software. I recommend Flowers 2.1 and Diamonds 5.0! WARNING!!! DO NOT, under any circumstances, install Secretary With Short Skirt 3.3. This application
is not supported by Wife 1.0 and will cause irreversible damage to the operating system. Best of luck, Tech Support | |||||||||||
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"I predict you will sink step by step into a bottomless quagmire, however much you spend in men and money." - Charles De Gaulle on Vietnam War | |||||||||||
"Democracy is two wolves and a sheep voting on what to have for dinner. Liberty is a well-armed sheep contesting the decision." – Anonymous | |||||||||||
"If women want any rights they had better take them, and say nothing about it." - Harriet Beecher Stowe (1811–1896) | |||||||||||
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| Ever since “fly-by-wire” technology migrated from military to commercial aircraft, I quit flying. There’s something unsettling about several thousands of pounds of
aluminum, plastic, and people hurtling through the atmosphere at several hundreds of miles per hour controlled by a pilot that has no connection to the actual devices that are controlling the aircraft. Every time I turn on a lamp and the bulb burns out and goes, “Pop!, I picture a pilot saying, “Oh shit!”, just before the plane screws itself nose first into someone’s backyard. Of course the technology is considerably more sophisticated than a simple incandescent light bulb that has lost some argon and added some oxygen from a leak and then being pulsed by 120 Volts AC. There are also back-up systems to back-up systems that kick in automatically. In fact I haven’t been able to find a single case of a commercial airliner crashing due to the fly-by-wire technology. What the wires control often fail, and they did so even with direct linkage technology. But the next step in the effort to make aircraft lighter, reduce power requirements, and therefore become more efficient to fly is “fly-by-wireless”. Yep. Bluetooth wireless networking to relay messages from controls to critical systems, from critical systems to monitors and indicators, and between critical systems is the very next step. Engineers in Portugal have flight tested a scale model aircraft using only Bluetooth messaging for all control connections. Aircraft engineers are aware that this type of control is susceptible to electromagnetic interference and even jamming, and are working on safety and shielding issues, particularly how to devise system back-ups that won’t fail when the primary is interfered with. Stringent aviation regulations will most likely require the technology be proved in vehicles or other devices before it will be approved for aircraft. Every time my cell phone drops a call or my WiFi connection goes belly-up I get a bit piqued. If my Bluetooth network between my brake pedal and the ABS system fails I’d really be irked, so don’t look for me driving a WiFi sedan any time soon. I can imagine passing by an aircraft maintenance hanger sometime in the future, and there will be a short geek with black plastic rimmed eyeglasses walking around the aircraft, a test device next to his ear, saying, “Can you hear me now?” The Bad Sied ![]() | |||||||||||
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| A few years ago I worked for a local printing company. My boss liked to buy out floundering companies, leave the name on the building, but do all the printing at his main company in Springfield. He owned about 5 printing companies. They were all small, except for the main company. Most of the companies were in town at various locations, but one was about 40 miles away in Kimberling City (near Branson). One of that company's customers (Ron) happened to find out that all the printing was done in Springfield, so he started bringing his printing jobs to the main office. Since I was the typesetter and lay-out artist, there were things that he wanted to discuss with me personally about the job, and occasionally we would end up chatting for a minute or two before he left. Since my boss owned this company in Kimberling City, its employees were eligible to be "comped" in to Branson shows (show your pay stub and get into almost any show in Branson for free; all you had to do was wait until 15-20 minutes before the show started and you could take your seat). At our office in Springfield, though we did Kimberling City's printing, our pay stub showed the Springfield address. However, many shows in Branson would take a letter from the employer stating that you worked for their company as a comp eligibility. Since we printed the Kimberling City letterhead already, my boss typed up a letter for me stating that my position was as typesetter and layout artist for this Kimberling City printing company. I used it to get into many, many Branson shows, dragging my son with me. One night we were attending a show (I think it was Tony Orlando - one of my favorites) when we ran into our Kimberling City customer, Ron. I stopped and chatted with him and his wife, introduced my son to him and myself to his wife. We probably chatted about 10 minutes and it was time to go into the show. I noticed as we sat down, his and his wife's seats were across the aisle from us and a row or two down. Normally when you're watching something funny, people who know each other will look at each other and acknowledge the humor. He didn't look our way one time, and I thought that was awfully strange. After the show as we left, I lost the couple in the commotion, but he did come into the office the next day. When he came into my room, I asked him, "How did you like the show last night?" His reply was, "We didn't go, we stayed home." I said, "Well, I saw you there, I talked to you for 10 minutes." It was then he asked what show was I talking about. When I told him the Tony Orlando show in Branson, he said, "Oh, I thought you were talking about another show. We stayed home though, we didn't go anywhere." I then asked, "Well, who DID I talk to?" Apparently, in the Branson area he has a look-alike and that is who I was talking with. I'd love to know what the other couple talked about on the way home, and what did this man tell his wife when she asked how he knew me. - Noella | |||||||||||
| Menudo has a few observations on the internet, and gets 15 Minutes of Fame to speak his mind. An Austin, Texas mother has sued MySpace.com for thirty million dollars (one percent of their revenues, according to her lawyer) alleging that the company is responsible for the assault of her fourteen year old daughter by a ninteen year old man. http://www.statesman.com/news/content/news/stories/local/06/20myspace.html The two met on MySpace, communicated by telephone, and met. The girl alleges that the man, who claimed that he was a senior on the Buda, Texas football team, drove her to a south Austin Parking lot and sexually assaulted her. The man claims that the sex was consensual, and he had no idea that she was so young. Of course, none of us may ever know what the real story is, but here's the twist. The nineteen year old's lawyer is considering joining the lawsuit against MySpace, claiming that if the service weren't available, his client would not be in this mess. And what a mess it is. The rest is hearsay from me from listening to the local talk show in Austin and secondhand accounts about MySpace. One caller to the talk show-a businessman-said that he, his daughter and his son all use the service. His son and daughter to communicate with friends about events and gettogethers and just everyday chat about things, and he to communicate with associates and customers, rather than playing phone tag. Another caller, who doesn't use MySpace, was all over the girl, saying that when she was her age-way before the computer age- she was playing twenty one when she was fourteen, and laid the whole responsibility on the girl. There were at least a dozen calls from high school and college students who use MYSpace who explained how important and useful and important it had become in their lives. They keep up with friends, because they've all gone in defferent directions. They can communicate with a whole group of buds with one post. About a party, about a wedding, about an astounding event in their lives, about anything that they want. And, sure, it can be abused-used for the wrong reasons. What's that old joke? What's the fastest way to get the word out? Telegraph or telephone? No. It's tellawoman. Just kidding, but MySpace works like that. It's efficient. Word gets around quickly, instantaneously. It seems to me to be very useful. I'm not a subscriber to MySpace, but I have a friend who is, and she reconnected with an old friend because it was there. I'm going to check it out just because. If readers are still with me, there is another case here in Austin. A guy and his girlfriend frequented The Backroom, my old hangout. The girl was raped by the guy one night, but they stayed together, anyway. Then, they went out together and charmed a girl back to their apartment. She was raped and savaged. Yeah, almost in the Apache way. It all started at The Backroom in Austin, Texas. So, shut down The Backroom. It's where the three met. Actually, The Backroom is closing soon, but not because of a scandal or bad press. It's just because they kind of can't keep up. But, it's ground zero. Shut 'em all down. Shut down any places where such things might happen. And God damns the internet, you know. Then we'll all be safe.
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| Because of my screwup on Wednesday Patti's piece doesn't coincide with today's date. My fault! On this day in history, June 21, 1919 - At the end of the First World War, Canadian soldiers returned home to find few jobs and almost nonexistent labor regulations. In March 1919 delegates met at Calgary to form a local branch of the "One Big Union," the premise of which was that all workers unite in one and only one union. The plan was to hold many general strikes across Canada. In Winnipeg, workers were trying to unionize into two unions - the Building Trade Council and the Metal Trade Council without success. Management refused to negotiate. And so the workers decided to strike and garnered support from the Trades and Labour Union as well. Virtually everyone in Winnipeg, including essential public employees, went on strike. Civil servants - fire and police - returned to duty part way through the strike. Even though the strikers were generally non-violent, the wealthy elite created a committee entitled the "Citizens' Committee of One Thousand" which stated that they were violent. On this date, most of the local police were fired and replaced with Royal North-West Mounted Police. The strikers were read the Riot Act and Mounties charged. They fired into the crowd, killing two and wounding at least 30 more. 'With all their faults, trade-unions have done more for humanity than any other organization of men that ever existed." - Clarence Seward Darrow "Now they're being ... associated with the 'old economy' aspect of their business -- a unionized work force.” - Richard Klugman "The only things that evolve by themselves in an organization are disorder, friction, and malperformance” - Peter F. Drucker | |||||||||||
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| Faithy’s Freaky Sites (and free downloads) Happy Friday RGQ !!! Since it is
now Summertime (here in the north at least) it is time to start thinking Vacations. Where will you be going this year? For some great ideas, check out Travel magazine and B&B directory. Can be read online or delivered at your door. Showcase premier inns and a listing of area attractions, and more. GOTO:http://bba.travel/ And here’s something I’d love to do. Quarterly publication dedicated to Renaissance faires. GOTO: http://www.renreporter.com/ But until I get to, lI’ll have to settle for this. Weekly podcasts of music and entertainment from Renaissance festivals, including Celtic, Irish, Scottish, Gypsy, and
Renaissance music. GOTO: http://www.renaissancefestivalmusic.com/ If yo travel by car watch out for Speed Traps GOTO: http://www.speedtrap.org/speedtraps/ste_city.asp?state=KY And if you’re rich enough TAKE A ZERO-GRAVITY VACATION Float around weightless for 3 hours. Great Birthday party idea! GOTO: http://www.nogravity.com/ And for those of us on tighter budgets WANT TO REALLY GET AWAY FROM IT ALL? Strap into your computer chair, and go on a 12 minute space flight throughout our solar system, visiting the best Kodak Photo spots.
All video is NASAuthentic. (click the double-arrows to FF) GOTO: http://www.spacewander.com/USA/english.html And for your moment of Zen GOTO: http://animal.discovery.com/convergence/spyonthewild/birdtech/birdtech.html?ct=1329.15073148073 Soaringly, With another load of _ _ _ _ | |||||||||||
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| Today I'm going to do something a little different, mainly because of the brain fry I have from work. You see, today we discovered a problem printing to one of our printers. This happens to be the printer we use to print checks. Longer print jobs weren't completing, which is not a good thing when you're printing checks that pay your bills. That means bills don't get paid, and if bills don't get paid, services like electric and phone get shut off, and vendors start refusing purchase orders. That's not good for a business. It's working fine now, but figuring out the solution has caused the creative part of my brain to go on strike. Before I tell my tale, I'm going to ask you what you think of my new font. Well, it's the same font, it just isn't so tiny you need an electron microscope to read it. I noticed this Monday when I forgot the "size" tag that Bruce wanted me to use (actually, on Friday the last paragraph didn't have it either). Be assured that the increased size is in no way related to any spam e-mails I've received. In case you would like to see the difference side-by-side, this is the old size. Feel free to e-mail your comments to Bruce with "Tim's Size" as the subject. Now, on with today's story. Thirty-four year old Kevin Weaver is a diabetic. The Ocoee, Florida resident's diabetes has been getting progressively worse, and on the morning of February 7th, he suffered a seizure from having low blood sugar. Three year old Belle noticed that Kevin wasn't acting quite right, so sought out his cell phone and dialed 9, which was programmed to dial 911. Kevin woke up that night in the hospital, with Belle at his side. She had saved his life, and yesterday received the VITA Wireless Samaritan Award, presented each year by the CTIA Wireless Foundation. It isn't every day that a 3 year old saves a life, and my hat's off to her quick thinking. Did I mention Belle is a beagle? Trained in medical assistance, Belle's sense of smell is hundreds of times more acute than a human's. She licks Kevin's nose to sense his ketone level, and was trained to bite the cell phone's 9 key to call for assistance. I'd like to see a cat do that! Tim a'Musing Having a Ball with Yarns | |||||||||||
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| Clean floors and walls with vinegar in hot water. Do not use Vinegar on marble floors In the laundry room: Run a jug of vinegar through your washer once a month to clean it and cut soap scum. - NorCalKat | |||||||||||
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| I love it! Even when there's no opening lines some of you can't resist! Next opening line... I'm sure I'll never forget... Hints: There's a great rhyming dictionary at Limerick rules. http://freespace.virgin.net/merrick.sheldon/limerickrules.htm
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| Re: First Screw Up of the Summer Received your "Mea Culpa" time stamped 2:33 AM. Assuming it was California time, that made it 5:33 AM EDT. Considering that The National Weather Service is stating that The Summer Solstice occurs at 8:26 AM EDT on the 21st of June, 2006, that makes your "first mistake of the summer" actually your penultimate mistake of Spring, 2006 by some 2 hours and 53 minutes. - sied [If you're correct and this was my penultimate mistake, what was the last one?] Bruce said: ?Hopefully I'll have the cranial-rectal inversion corrected by next issue!" So, you're going to repent of your liberalism, and turn conservative? Finally! - Tom in Oregon City [Unfortunately, history has proven repeatedly that that would only exacerbate the problem, not correct it.] Naahhh, I think you had a bona fide case of anal glaucoma! Ya just couldn't see draggin your butt to work! - NorCalKat So nice of you to apologize-- But not necessary--- One of my fave emails to receive--- Keep 'em coming--I appreciate. - CaroDee Re: Jolt Gum and Schools I am always amazed at what the schools want to do. The school system wanting to suspend a student for giving out an energy based gum? Where is all the common sense? It is bad enough that a student can be suspended for giving out aspirin or any over the counter drugs, which I can understand, but where is the common sense? What happened to warnings? What happened to telling students what they can and can't do? It seems that they just want to suspend the student for any little thing anymore. I never would have thought of caffeine as being a major drug. I do think that is being overused, but then that is a different subject. Kids can take chocolate and sodas to school so why not a energy gum?(I am still amazed at the parents that allow their kids such things as energy drinks and gum and such, all the time saying that their kids are too hyper.) School lunches have become so bad that most kids just want to eat out of the vending machines that the schools have so readily supplied. Chocolate, chips and candy now make up most kids' diet for lunch. I once went to eat lunch with my son and I remember from the good old days that the lunches were half way good, but that stuff that they served me wasn't fit to eat. I know that it is hard to serve a lot of kids at one time but restaurants do it all the time. I am still under the impression that a lunch can still taste good and be good for you at the same time. What good is a lunch that is totally good for you if no one eats it? But then again I wonder how much money the schools make off the vending machines that are just a few steps away. I think that this world needs
to take some courses in common sense. If all the student did was to give another student gum, regardless of what kind, then the punishment should have been something like an essay on the dangers of overuse of caffeine.Or have our schools become more in the business of suspending than teaching? A good research paper on the dangers of overuse of caffeine would have taught a lesson whereas just suspending the student just taught a way to get out of school. - Connie from Texas I wonder why the school can't simply tell the poor kid that she shouldn't share her caffine gum in school? It would seem to me that the only goal here is to embarrass the poor kid for a casual act of generosity. Give the self righteous an opportunity and they are bound to glom on to it. After all, they can't feel good about themselves unless they can flount their authority. Merely solving the problem just ain't good enough. - Lucille Re: Sied, Civilization, and Beer Patti wrote: ... Mead, which is fermented honey drinks, predates beer by a good couple thousand years. Wine and beer arrived close to the same time. Whisky, and this really tickled me, is named from the Gaelic for "water of life," wasn't distilled until the 15th century AD. - Patti, where they spell it whiskey Honey was a food source for hunter gatherers, and could be found almost anywhere they wandered, so naturally mankind would tinker with the only naturally occurring food that never spoils and change it into something else. The ingredients for beer, and wine, would only be found in a few areas and in limited quantities until humans started cultivating them to the point they had an excess of food and could afford to develop a more important product, intoxicants. Without these humble beginnings there would have been no development of professional sports. It may have taken tens of thousands of years to progress from two hunters bragging about their spear throwing prowess and proving it in competition with a neighbor to progress to football leagues and motor cross events, but it started just about the same as picnic tragedies today, "Bubba, hold my drink and watch this..." As for the "water of life"...the original Medevial Latin, "aqua vitae", or water of life was a strong clear fruit brandy for the Galls, and the more modern "eau de vie" is french for a strong, coarse brandy. Leave it to the English to change the meaning. (http://www.onelook.com/?w=eau+de+vie&ls=a) Now this reply is sure to get an angry comment or two! - sied Re: Auto Parts Store Posse Once upon a time in Calgary Canada, (perhaps 25 years ago), A couple of thieves attempted to rob a drug store. The owner chased one man outside and shot him in the back with a shotgun, killing him as he was getting into his car to get away. the other accomplice was still in the store with the owner's wife and small child, (abandoned by the druggist, who was venting his anger and revenge by following the first robber away from his store before gunning him down on a public sidewalk). Wouldn't you know it, the druggist was not found guilty of any charges in the man's death. He got away with murder. His business dropped off drastically, causing him to close up his store shortly afterwards. Red Neck or what,eh? - Dave, A native Calgarian Re: Third Graders, Sex, and Suspension You are SO right, Charlotte! In our state and a few others, half the so-called State Symbols got approved by State Legislators because there was a unit in fifth grade books (started sometime in the 1970's) about how state government works that suggested picking an item to be a State Symbol, and going through the whole process to see if the class could get a law passed! I was in the gallery when Ohio's State Fossil was approved. The entire fifth grade class from a small school district that lobbied for this was there to see it happen. (the Fossil is the Trilobyte). All of our State Flowers were promoted by Garden Clubs, mostly in the 1930's. Florida took a side step when this spurious law passing gig began. When a school group submitted an item to be a State Symbol, the state legislature sent out a letter to ALL schools to sumbit their candidates for the honor, too. Then they sifted through the responses, made a ballot of the suggested items, and had all the kids in all the schools vote for one. They then adopted the one that got the majority vote. Last time I checked, New Mexico was the only state that had an Official State Vegetable - yeah, it's a hot pepper. - Nancy L in Ohio Reader Submission Check out these “horses”, the work of British artist Heather Jansch, who lives and works in the hills in Devon, near the English coast. She is well known for her beautiful and elegant sculptures of horses, made of driftwood and bronze. Her art is stunning. www.jansch.freeserve.co.uk/index.htm - Margee Lee | |||||||||||
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Disclaimer- All quotes printed in this publication are believed to be accurately attributed, but no guarantees are made that some incorrectly attributed, or even outright false quotes won't get in here from time to time. I assure readers that I will do my best to weed out incorrect quotes, and will print a retraction as soon as I become aware of any errors. | |||||||||||
Click here to see the archives of past issues, or go to http://groups.yahoo.com/group/reallygoodquotes/messages. If you run across something really outstanding when perusing the archives, I'd appreciate it if you'd mail me at TheBestOfRGQ@... and point it out to me. I'm in the process of compiling an e-book called, not surprisingly, The Best of RGQ, and I'd like to hear from you which pieces impacted you the most. | |||||||||||
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"Every political leader worth their salt in history - from Gandhi to Martin Luther King - has expressed the same message, which is courage. Real leaders don't tell people to be frightened. They help people find a place of courage, even in the face of very real threats." - Naomi Klein
"Anyone who has the power to make you believe absurdities has the power to make you commit injustices." - Voltaire
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