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On Wed, 11 Aug 2004 20:46:51 GMT, "jim" wrote
this crap: Your not allowed to point out the obivious duplicity of the liberial mindset. You should learn some grammar. My T-shirt says, "This shirt is the ultimate power in the universe." |
#2
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In article , Usenet Spam
Patrol wrote: In nIxTc.20143$Yf6.6611@lakeread03, sanjian wrote: Usenet Spam Patrol wrote: PSALM 255 - SPAMMERs will burn in hell. Search results for: ! NET-67-119-178-0-1 CustName: nas12.pltn13 Address: 2623 Camino Ramon City: San Ramon StateProv: CA PostalCode: 94583 Country: US RegDate: 2002-06-22 Updated: 2002-06-22 Ok, how did you get this info? I'm half afraid that some poor SoB in San Ramon, who knows nothing of what's happening here, will get harassed because of this. OTOH, if this is legit... very useful... The original ip address of the Psalm 110 spammer was taken from its NNTP-Posting-Host: 67.119.178.120 header. Addresses used in America are assigned by ARIN (American Registry for Internet Numbers) http://www.arin.net/ Using ARIN's WHOIS facility shows the address was assigned to Search results for: 67.119.178.120 Pac Bell Internet Services PBI-NET-10 (NET-67-112-0-0-1) 67.112.0.0 - 67.127.255.255 Which further assigned a smaller portion of NET-67-112-0-0-1 to" nas12.pltn13 SBC067119178000020621 (NET-67-119-178-0-1) 67.119.178.0 - 67.119.179.255 Right. This is the actual address space, which had to be justified by demonstrating actual use of at least 254 host computers. A bit much for an individual, although it could be a small enterprise. A lookup on NET-67-119-178-0-1 gives the following information, which constitutes the entity which facilitated internet access to the 67.119.178.120 spammer: Search results for: ! NET-67-119-178-0-1 CustName: nas12.pltn13 Address: 2623 Camino Ramon City: San Ramon StateProv: CA PostalCode: 94583 Country: US RegDate: 2002-06-22 Updated: 2002-06-22 It might or might not be the actual spammer, or, more likely, an unknown dupe of the spammer. It is entirely possible that a spammer hacked a machine in this address space and is using it unlawfully. We simply don't have enough data to tell. Just for the record, I've been a voting member of ARIN for a number of years, have given tutorials at their national meeting, published Internet Engineering Task Force documents of addressing, and am the authod of _Designing Addressing Architectures for Enterprise Networks (Macmillan)_ and _Building Service Provider Networks_ (Wiley). |
#3
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On Tue, 17 Aug 2004 14:04:14 +0100, Andy Dingley
wrote this crap: But Shrub can't even string a sentence together. I don't know what this guy did to his head, whether it was too much coke or too many heroic Gs in his F-102, but these days he's just a few bananas away from the monkey house. I don't believe this guy can tie up the War Against Shoelaces, let alone run America. I'd like to see your Harvard or Yale degree. My T-shirt says, "This shirt is the ultimate power in the universe." |
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Horvath wrote:
On Tue, 17 Aug 2004 14:04:14 +0100, Andy Dingley wrote this crap: But Shrub can't even string a sentence together. I don't know what this guy did to his head, whether it was too much coke or too many heroic Gs in his F-102, but these days he's just a few bananas away from the monkey house. I don't believe this guy can tie up the War Against Shoelaces, let alone run America. I'd like to see your Harvard or Yale degree. I'd like to see him survive flying one of the most dangerous aircraft in US military history. |
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![]() "sanjian" wrote in message news:5TFUc.25508$Yf6.18570@lakeread03... [...] I'd like to see him survive flying one of the most dangerous aircraft in US military history. Not hardly: according to the site referred to, the F-102 was bad compared to MODERN fighters, but compared to other models from that time period? It was one of the safest US fighter jet to fly for many years, at least on average. Given that bit of spin on this site, I'd take the rest of what it says with a grain or two of salt also. http://www.aerospaceweb.org/question...ry/q0185.shtml "According to the Air Force Safety Center, the lifetime Class A accident rate for the F-102 was 13.69 mishaps per 100,000 flight hours, much higher than the average for today's combat aircraft." Air Force Safety Center http://afsafety.af.mil/AFSC/RDBMS/Fl...aft_stats.html # rate/100K F-hrs years operational F-80 LIFETIME 870 93.27 1950-1953 F-84 LIFETIME 1955 52.86 1950-1972 F-86 LIFETIME 2449 44.18 1950-1971 F-89 LIFETIME 300 24.54 1951-1969 F-100 LIFETIME 1161 21.22 1953-1990 F-101 LIFETIME 292 14.65 1955-1982 F-102 LIFETIME 357 13.69 1953-1981 = F-102 F-104 LIFETIME 197 30.63 1956-1983 F-105 LIFETIME 297 17.83 1958-1984 F-106 LIFETIME 153 9.47 1958-1997 === !!! misleading as several years had zero accidents F-111 LIFETIME 115 6.13 1965-1998 |
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LawsonE wrote:
"sanjian" wrote in message news:5TFUc.25508$Yf6.18570@lakeread03... [...] I'd like to see him survive flying one of the most dangerous aircraft in US military history. Not hardly: according to the site referred to, the F-102 was bad compared to MODERN fighters, but compared to other models from that time period? It was one of the safest US fighter jet to fly for many years, at least on average. Given that bit of spin on this site, I'd take the rest of what it says with a grain or two of salt also. I'll take the word of the Air Force Colonel who explained the century series aircraft to me back in the early '90s. He had few kind things to say about the F-102 other than it separates the wheat from the chaffe. |
#7
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In article ZKTUc.25886$Yf6.21127@lakeread03,
"sanjian" writes: LawsonE wrote: "sanjian" wrote in message news:5TFUc.25508$Yf6.18570@lakeread03... [...] I'd like to see him survive flying one of the most dangerous aircraft in US military history. Not hardly: according to the site referred to, the F-102 was bad compared to MODERN fighters, but compared to other models from that time period? It was one of the safest US fighter jet to fly for many years, at least on average. Given that bit of spin on this site, I'd take the rest of what it says with a grain or two of salt also. I'll take the word of the Air Force Colonel who explained the century series aircraft to me back in the early '90s. He had few kind things to say about the F-102 other than it separates the wheat from the chaffe. Killfiled LawsonE ages ago, but this made we look up the thread. He's comparing the F-102 aggregate numbers from the Air Force Safety Center to, for the most part, the F-80, F-84 and F-86. It should be noted that indeed, while loss rates for the early jet fighters was rather high, (but no higher than the recip fighters of WW 2), the numbers for these aircraft apparently include combat losses in Korea. Numbers for the later aircraft do not include combat losses. It's comparing apples to bananas. -- Pete Stickney A strong conviction that something must be done is the parent of many bad measures. -- Daniel Webster |
#8
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In Zktuc.25886$Yf6.21127@lakeread03, on 08/18/2004
at 09:53 PM, "sanjian" said: LawsonE wrote: "sanjian" wrote in message news:5TFUc.25508$Yf6.18570@lakeread03... [...] I'd like to see him survive flying one of the most dangerous aircraft in US military history. Not hardly: according to the site referred to, the F-102 was bad compared to MODERN fighters, but compared to other models from that time period? It was one of the safest US fighter jet to fly for many years, at least on average. Given that bit of spin on this site, I'd take the rest of what it says with a grain or two of salt also. I'll take the word of the Air Force Colonel who explained the century series aircraft to me back in the early '90s. He had few kind things to say about the F-102 other than it separates the wheat from the chaffe. Nonsense. -- If the F-102 was so dangerous to fly -- then how come it was so easy to rig with automatic controls that could take it off and fly it as drone? -- That's where most of them went -- target practice in combat with our best -- all under remote control. E.g., that means it was *easy to fly and *stable. (Or course you should have known that before now, since duba did it). -- Why do you rightwingers post nonsense when so many know better? |
#9
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Ah-hah! So now you are backing off from your earlier claim that he DID
himself make such claims? He did. See above. He just never mentioned any verifiable details. Dubyah likes to keep his hands clean --- he follows a maximum deniability, avoidance-of-knowledge strategy. The press always omits what he says at the end of every speech: "We're just spitballin' here." |
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