

Spammers Land Optusnet On spews.org Blacklist 160
downundarob writes: "In Australia there are essentially only two major backbone suppliers; eventually all traffic either rides on Telstra (Part govt. owned) or OptusNet (part of C&W Optus). According to this page OptusNet has gotten itself on spews.com blacklist, potentially causing issues for a large percentage of Australian Internet users." Update: 09/30 12:01 GMT by T :DanielS writes: "Looks like Optus did indeed back down; according to the SPEWS listing & delisting info page, Optus were removed after shutting down the DNS service."
Mulligan. (Score:1, Funny)
Spews.com is a porn site! (Score:4, Interesting)
Someone is not checking the (non) links!
I highly doubt a porn site that pops up banner ads is a well regarded spammer blacklist site.
Joseph Elwell.
Re:Spews.com is a porn site! (Score:1)
Re:Spews.com is a porn site! (Score:2)
Somehow that makes me think of Hooters in Amsterdam...
(I'd post a link, but Slashdot's search is b0rken right now.)
Re:Spews.com is a porn site! (Score:2)
huh? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:huh? (Score:2)
I wouldn't have looked at the site if you hadn't said that...
Re:huh? (Score:1)
Just one typo (Score:1)
Re:Just one typo (Score:2)
Well maybe they weren't doing their job (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Well maybe they weren't doing their job (Score:5, Funny)
Yes, I agree that skewering spammers with long pointy sticks is a great idea.
Re:Well maybe they weren't doing their job (Score:1)
For those of us on Telstra, there was an earlier problem with Telstra's mail servers being open in about (that is, someone from outside the T$ network could use the mail servs to send mail).
If Optus has a prob like this - it should be fixed fairly quickly - I'd expect to see something on one of Australia's Broadband Community Websites: Whirlpool [whirlpool.net.au] shortly...
-- Dan =)
Stupid me. (Don't mod parent down please) (Score:1)
I misread the article and thought that Telstra maintained a blacklist and had listed Optus. Dur.
New SPAM logo? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:New SPAM logo? (Score:1)
A bit over the top (Score:3, Flamebait)
It seems that the server running on the Optus network is only acting as a Domain server for the spamming. I would hope if this is the case, that the server actually doing the Spamming, which is in the states, has also been black listed.
Plus, as the article says, running a nameserver is not against the Terms and Conditions of Optus, so there is little they can do about this.
Anti-Spam people often seem to be so wrapped up in their cause, they often don't realise they are doing more harm than good, i.e. blocking half of Australia's email.
Re:A bit over the top (Score:1)
i think the push of this article is that since aus only has two backbones. the blacklisting of Optus is really going to effect the population at large (in australia).
now. back to drinking.
Re:A bit over the top (Score:2)
Only to those utilizing the blacklist (which is done by choice).
If I were an ISP using such a blacklist, and something this large were blacklisted, I'd stop using it. It seems thousands of people would get denied in the name of blocking one spammer...
Re:A bit over the top (Score:5, Insightful)
They can change their TOS. They can forbid spam-support services from using their networks. They can refuse to renew their contracts with spammers.
Anti-Spam people often seem to be so wrapped up in their cause, they often don't realise they are doing more harm than good, i.e. blocking half of Australia's email.
Well, Optus got listed because they failed to respond to spam complaints. For this past month, I've been getting more spam volume than the volume from my Bugtraq subscription. About a quarter of that was connected to Optus in one way or another. In other words, Optus has been filling my mailbox with crap. I lose nothing by blocking them, and it makes my life easier.
The one response I've had from Optus that wasn't an autoack amounted to "Screw you. Hosting spammers is legal." If their customers consider that to be acceptable net behavior, then they don't need to email me. There is no legal right to send email, anywhere in any Constitution in any nation at all. Or any legal need for me to accept it.
Re:A bit over the top (Score:2, Insightful)
Optus didnt "fail to respond to spam complaints", they chose not to act on the complaints of a few millitant anti-spam types who think that everyone associated with whatever they decide is "spam" should be blackballed from the Internet. It's boycott blacklisting, and it's a blackmail tool, pure and simple.
They are, in effect, saying to Optus 'You cannot have this person as a client, or anyone else that we decide is involved with spam, or we will blacklist you to force you to accept our demands'. It's complete BS. Who died and appointed spews.org the spam police? It's organised extortion, and good for Optus for not backing down. Hopefully they will sue spews.org and put them out of business.
Re:A bit over the top (Score:1)
Then tell me who should get to decide what is spam?
A) People who are bothered by unsolicited e-mail?
B) People who're trying to make money with it?
Re:A bit over the top (Score:1, Funny)
Now what was that email addy?
* GOAT *
Freedom of association (Score:2)
Maybe one bad apple spoils the bunch, or maybe one shouldn't throw the baby out with bath water. But who is anyone, to tell anyone else, who they MUST associate with, and what odious behavior they MUST endure in the process?
In short: "Negative Ghostrider, the pattern is pull."
Re:A bit over the top (Score:2)
Who gets to decide what's spam and who gets blocked? For me, I do. If I don't like what someone on the network is doing, who they're hosting, what color their hair is, or anything else, I can blacklist them. If they value having connectivity to my little corner of the network, then they can change whatever it is I don't like. If they don't care that I'm blocking them, they're free to go on doing whatever they want, and they'll never get off my blacklist. You can call it blackmail all you want, but there ain't a thing you can do about it. There is no right to connectivity. If you don't like that, tough. Build your own network, and you can do whatever you want. Just don't piss in my pool and expect me not to do something.
Re:A bit over the top (Score:2)
Anti-Spam people often seem to be so wrapped up in their cause, they often don't realise they are doing more harm than good, i.e. blocking half of Australia's email.
Spam people often seem to be so wrapped up in their advertising, they often don't realize they are doing more harm than good, i.e. pissing off 99.9% of their victims to the point where the victims engage in irrationally angry responses to the ads.
Email advertising is theft. Thieves must be punished. Corporate entities have proved more than once (AGIS, "Pink" contracts) to be basically on the side of spammers. Half of Australia's emails is blocked? Tough. I only hope that half of Korea's spam I mean email gets blocked, too.
Re:A bit over the top (Score:1)
The solution today is to let ISP charge for mail being sent out. A very, very tiny amount of money would go a long way to eliminate the problem. Oh, and yes - there needs to be a clear precident that use of an open relay to bounce mail is a theft of service with a minimum $10,000 fine.
Spam is a problem, but I don't think for a moment blocking email is a solution to it.
More harm than good? (Score:2)
User: Why can't I get my email?
Optus: We've been blackholed by a large U.S. blackhole list.
User: Why?
Optus: Because of some spammers using Optus.
User: WELL KICK THEIR BLOODY ASSES OFF!!!
Naturally, this is not the way the actual phone conversation will go. Doubtless Optus will explain it away, if they explain it at all, with "technical difficulties". But the sheer number of angry letters, calls, and emails will put pressure on them to fix the damn problem.
What YOU don't realize is that spam is everyone's problem. I'm glad of blackholes like MAPS and spews. I'm glad my ISP uses them, and if my ISP stopped using them I'd find a new ISP. Because I don't enjoy having my time wasted, I don't enjoy having my ISP costs being inflated by the cost of handling spam, and I don't enjoy being treated like a cash cow by rude assholes the world over. If an ISP gets on a blacklist, they need only throw the spam in the trash to get out, and they all know this. Lazy corporations uninterested in stopping spamming customers because it mostly eats OTHER people's resources, does not impress me favorably.
Blocking half Australia's email? I see that as a GREAT thing. This will focus LOTS of anger and pressure on Optus, who will either shape up quick or begin to lose money. Corporations tend to hate that second option, I've found.
-Kasreyn
I see Slashdot has changed its "spam" icon... (Score:2, Interesting)
I could never stand SPAM anyway. I guess I'd eat it if I were trapped in a fallout shelter. Maybe.
Re:I see Slashdot has changed its "spam" icon... (Score:2, Informative)
I could never stand SPAM anyway. I guess I'd eat it if I were trapped in a fallout shelter. Maybe.
Hormel's official policy is that they object to the use of their logo to refer to junk -mail. It was only a matter of time before Slashdot changed it (either voluntarily or involuntarily).
Re:I see Slashdot has changed its "spam" icon... (Score:1)
Changing the icon to a little pig carved from a block of spam is truly poetic justice, in that case. Maybe someday Hormel will choose to market a product like that and this image can be used as an example of prior art.
Not *all* optus (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Not *all* optus (Score:1)
Re:Not *all* optus (Score:1)
It would also affect optusnet perm. customers (ie: isdn) who use the optusnet mail servers.
---
acb
Re:Not *all* optus (Score:2)
I personally use Dingo Blue, and (on IRC for example) there's no way to tell that I'm not an Optus user.
I'm going to be somewhat annoyed if stuff stops working....
Re:Not *all* optus (Score:2)
porn threat (Score:1)
Travis
Removed already (Score:5, Informative)
Optusnet.com.au, reports they have shut down the dynamic-DNS spam service run by the Dean Westbury gang on their network. In response, the SPEWS listed network addresses were removed from the list.
Shut out (Score:1)
this topic is already obsolete. (Score:2, Redundant)
Optusnet.com.au, reports they have shut down the dynamic-DNS spam service run by the Dean Westbury gang on their network.
In response, the SPEWS listed network addresses were removed from the list.
Updated listing for Dean Westbury: http://spews.org/html/S453.html
Contracts ? (Score:2, Insightful)
It's not like one of those anti-spam guys filters all connections to his personal machine,. If I pay to my ISPs and they pay to backbone, aren't they supposed to provide me with all the bandwith I want without filtering it ? How come someone on ISP could decide which mail I want to receive ? I'm paying for Internet, not for a part of Internet, and if I want to filter out spam, I would do so myself w/o anyone's help.
There was a recent case when macromedia.com wasn't accessible because some idiot mistaken it for a spam house - but WFT public backbone started using it ?
Shouldn't OpusNet be able to sue whatever ISP was doing filtering for breach of contract ? I presume contract does not say "any psycho could censor all IP packets if he thinks one of the name servers is might be used by spammer", so ISPs that do this filtering should be open for a lawsuit, at least from their users.
Re:Contracts ? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Contracts ? (Score:4, Insightful)
It's a "cooperative network". If you don't cooperate, we don't network with you.
Re:Contracts ? (Score:2)
Playing whack-a-mole with spammer ISPs doesn't work. they get a new dialup, they bounce off mail relays, they up the ante in this arms race. We should spend more effort making these spammers not want to spam: take away the incentive to do so and the problem goes away without hurting bystanders.
Some very simple legislation that targets the *businesses* (not the spamhouses that they subcontract to) that are advertising by spam could be very effective. Similar to the fax laws in place, the business would have to show that each and every email sent was opted-in somehow. When actual businesses start getting sued for $500/email, they will simply stop doing business with spamhouses that don't work via opt-in. Selling giant email address lists becomes useless, and harvesting the free webmail accounts via vrfy becomes useless. Necessarily, the advertising business must be findable. No need to crawl through ip logs of hacked relay boxes to find the spamhouse, go straight to the TRUE source of the spam.
While this does little for foreign owned, foreign originated spam, it goes a long way towards reducing spam responsibly. Any foreign companies who continue to do this could have some of their assets in the US frozen. If any employee of the company were to set foot in the US they could be arrested Dmitry style. Other governments can implement similar laws if their people hate spam enough.
no matter how much you hate spam, taking action against non-spammers in order to force action from an ISP is unjustifiable. Shame on organizations that use such reprehensible tactics, they must be staffed with persons of "leisurely moral growth"*.
*Thank you, Larry Wall, for such a great phrase. :)
Re:Contracts ? (Score:1)
You haven't seen an internet without blocking lists, hence you can say nothing intelligent about the volume of spam now vs the volume of spam on such a hypothetical network.
The internet is a COOPERATIVE. You become antisocial, I cut you out the group. Customers can move to a ISP that is a good netizen. Using a blacklisted ISP isn't like death - it's easily fixable.
I for one would be very pleased to give my own ISP the what-for if I found out they were abetting spammers. Then I'd move elsewhere. It's part of being a good netizen.
Re:Contracts ? (Score:1)
Just the Opposite (Score:1)
There was one evening some months ago where I made a CVS error which resulted in Earthlink's MX servers accepting connections from every single IP attempting to connect. Two servers (of many) died instantly and the previous version of the blockfile had to be reinstated just to get sendmail accepting connections again. The rest of the servers slowed to a crawl. Mail that was in the spool at the time was delayed up to an hour and a half. And that was missing the denyfile that we use for... I'd say 7 minutes.
Re:Contracts ? (Score:1)
Seems to be fixed already (Score:3, Redundant)
Re:Seems to be fixed already (Score:1)
Story errors (Score:5, Informative)
2. Optus and Telstra aren't the only backbone providers in Australia, to say that all traffic in
I think we can mark downundarob down as +1 Troll.
Re:Story errors (Score:1)
Optus and Telstra are the major backbone providers out of Australia. Yes, UUNet is a in-Australia provider, but they will ultimately be using Telstra for their last-mile connections. The last time I looked, UUNet was still using Singtel Optus for upstream connectivity, mostly because of the big fat OC-3 pipes to C&W's Global.Net. And they certainly have to use the transit connections to Telstra to reach the Telstra connected sites, as I don't recall seeing any IX announcements of Telstra, SingTelO and Connect/UUNet being made.
A pig?! (Score:1)
Power structures on the 'net (Score:2, Informative)
If that situation did perpetuate itself, would there be any legal liability on behalf of either Optus or spews.org for the intentional breach of service to the rest of Optus' customers? You would think that after a while the customers would start suing either or both parties to the dispute.
Re:Power structures on the 'net (Score:1)
Spews set itself up in a way that makes it hard to sue and harder to serve. It's not exactly incorporated, and most if not all the principals are unknown.
FWIW, spammers have tried suing blocklist operators before. MAPS [mail-abuse.org] has, thus far, beaten pretty much every legal challenge against them, although the latest one with Media3 came to a somewhat questionable settlement. At least in the US, the precedent is in favor of the blocklist operators.
As for suing the providers...I frankly don't know. If my own ISP managed to get itself listed, I'd consider suing them for failing to enforce its AUP and therefore interfering with my service.
Re:Power structures on the 'net (Score:1)
Re:Power structures on the 'net (Score:1)
Finally, after about a week of not being able to respond to tech support inquiries and such we got ahold of the operator and it was fixed.
The impact was fairly limited, but I assure you blocking a business and intefering with their revenue is a very serious business. We were certainlying willing to "go to the mat" over this - because capitulation in any form says you're wrong on some level.
Re:Power structures on the 'net (Score:2)
Doesn't matter whether you are American or not. Several states allow lawsuit to proceed if the other party cannot be contacted. Note: The lawsuit will likely NOT be in your favour if you cannot be contacted.
This has happened to a few Canadian companies, the president of one such company entered the state where a lawsuit had been filed and completed a year before. He found himself in jail for failing to follow the judgement. (Details sketchy because I do not remember enough details to find it. Was about 3 years ago.)
Re:Power structures on the 'net (Score:2)
You're funny. Too bad you have no idea how blacklists work. But I'll explain it to you.
You claim it should be illegal for a third party to block traffic from one domain to another. I assume you're referring to the blacklists. FYI, the blacklists aren't doing any blocking. None whatsoever. Individual ISPs do the blocking. When a message arrives at their incoming mail server, the server checks the blacklist to see if the connecting machine is on it. If it is, the ISP's mail server rejects the message. If not, the mail goes through. The ISP can use a blacklist like MAPS, SPEWS, etc., they can create their own, they can do both, or they can use no blacklist at all. It's their choice. If your ISP uses a blacklist, and you don't want that, get another ISP. If you can't find one that you like, set up your own. Can't afford that? Can't find a backbone that will let you do what you please with your connection to them? Too bad. There is no right to connectivity. And that little point, my friend, is what makes the blacklists so cool. No one has a right to guaranteed delivery of their mail. If you want a network where no one can block anything, build your own. Just don't expect anyone else to want to connect to it.
But to get back to your claim that third-party blocking should be illegal, if I own a network segment that traffic passes through, I can let it pass or block it. It's my part of the network, not yours. If you don't like that, find another route for your data packets to take. Just don't expect to be treated differently by anyone else.
Re:Power structures on the 'net (Score:2)
I hate spam. But I hate the blacklists as much. They both effect my rights.
Re:Power structures on the 'net (Score:2)
I agree that this can be a pain, but the alternative--requiring anyone connected to the Net to pass all traffic--would be worse. Doing this would effectively outlaw:
Turning ISPs into common carriers is a scary thing. Customers get disconnected for all kinds of reasons, and allowing the government to step in and make the rules is, IMHO, a bad idea. Now, if you have a monopoly situation created by statute or regulatory policy, there may be some room for consideration, but otherwise, providers should be free to do what they want. If enough people walk, their policies will change.
Re:Power structures on the 'net (Score:2)
I've been effected by network bans. I've never been a cause of them, and the solution to fixing it is NOT acceptable to me either. (cablemodem is a monopoly here, while DSL is a joke!).
Email filtering and blacklists should be done as close to the end-user as possible. In some cases this means it should be user filtering his own mail, in others the ISP. Blacklisting domains so they are in-accessable through backbone providers is sickening. Right now it is done for spam, but a year from now it could be done for Porn. For free encryption tools, etc. Anything some group wants banned.
Re:Power structures on the 'net (Score:2)
Walk where? Here, AT&T@Home is the only game in town. Heck, "here" isn't even "in town" -- which is the problem. We're so far out in the country that DSL is not an option. We're so far out in the country that 56K is not an option. We're so far out in the country that 28.8 isn't even an option. Until @Home, 24,000 bps was the best I'd ever seen.
In some cases, the only game in town is the city-owned cable system. What do people who live there get to do in your "free market" system? They get to move, that's what. Great option! Because they can move elsewhere, their ISP is not a monopoly? Get real.
Even if your solution were practical and affordable, it does nothing when I send an email from my non-blacklisting ISP of choice to your non-blacklisting ISP of choice and it still doesn't get through because some 3rd party in between us decides one of us is a spammer.
I agree with the post that says we need better laws -- both against spammers and against vigilanties. ISP are common carriers and the law should recognize that fact. Spammers are preying on otherwise law-abiding citizens and the law should recognize that fact, too. We won't solve one problem without solving the other. The vigilanties (and their supporters here on /.) don't understand that they are not part of the solution, just another problem for the rest of us to solve. We will solve it, one way or the other. If you're not part of the search for a reasonable solution, don't complain when the government-imposed solution targets you.
Overblow, over-hyped. (Score:5, Informative)
#1. Spews has very minor penetration. Going via
the optusnet mailservers I can't find anywhere
that actually bounced my mail while the block
was in place.
Consequence of which is that basically no-one
would have noticed the spews block.
#2. 'half of australia's traffic is unmitigated
nonsense. 'Optusnet' is the dial-up arm of
Optus and it currently ranked as the #3 (or #4
depending on who's counting) ISP in australia.
Their market share is nothing like 50%. 10% maybe.
#3. 'won't be able to reach large parts
of Europe and the US' is sheer junk. As mentioned
about, the number of sites that use spews appears
to be near zero. Does anyone know a major site
that actually _uses_ spews? I couldn't find one.
Re:Overblow, over-hyped. (Score:5, Informative)
I couldn't find any statements (definitive or otherwise) from any big players saying that they are using SPEWS [spews.org]. However, by looking at the reports in news.admin.net-abuse.email and the bounce messages that I asked to be forwarded to me I think the two largest users of SPEWS are:
Pacific Bell [pacbell.com] - a large telecom on the US west coast.
Outblaze [outblaze.com] - a mailbox outsource company which handles mail for such sites as Mail.Com (a free mailbox provider).
Re:Overblow, over-hyped. (Score:1)
My company was recently blocked because of an incorrect identification of an IP address as dialup. This took 7 days to resolve because the person responsible was out of town. So, for seven days we could not send mail to some customers that had purchased our products and could not respond to some tech support inquiries.
Damn right we were going to sue. Not because we couldn't "spam" people, but because the blocking was interfering in our business communications and the "operator" of the "service" that was blocking us was utterly unreachable.
We finally did get it resolved, but it took a while. This might be a way to deal with open relays. It is NOT a way to deal with anything else and it there needs to clear understanding of the potential liabilities to blocking email.
Re:Overblow, over-hyped. (Score:1, Informative)
I could find two, a "little" company called Outblaze [outblaze.com] who seems to do quite a bit of email outsourcing (quote: "over 30 million mailboxes under managment"), and a real "tiny" one with a market valuation [yahoo.com] of only $158 billion called SBC Communications. Better known to 'net users as Ameritech, Nevada Bell, Pacific Bell (PacBell), SBC Telecom, SNET, Southwestern Bell.
Probably more, but I didn't look too hard. Maybe Optus should subscribe, it'd sure cut down on all than Yank spam sent "daan-unda" - Oui!
How to deal (Score:2, Interesting)
On another note: I've been getting Chinese spam at my e-mail address for quite a while now. At first, it was only coming from one address for a while, but now it's coming from multiple addresses. This would all be well and good, except I DON'T SPEAK CHINESE. Feh. We've gotta do something.
Re:How to deal, Me too (Score:2)
At first the chinese and japanese porn links were amusing, but they're pretty tame by american standards. What does surprise me is some of the stuff that comes from otherwise reputable american companies. I'd have never thought that a company like HP would resort to sleazey SPAM adverts and earn a place on my never-buy-from list but they do. even got one signed by Carly Fiorina herself, so I guess that it means that she can't claim plausable denieability now.
ISP's charging for SMTP wouldn't really work because it just as easy to send from somewhere else, i.e. our verio account lets us send mail through our server, it's marked as having originated at our site with no real way to tell where it came from before. inshort the SMTP traffic goes through the ISP as packets, they don't realy know whats in 'em just where they are going.
why don't /.ers understand the new logo? (Score:1, Funny)
Some Related Links to Calm down On. (Score:1, Informative)
http://www.google.com/search?q=cache:9uo5LNULpn
My favorite lyrics
http://www.orca.bc.ca/spamalbum/lyrics/pacific-
and Favorite acompanying song
http://www.orca.bc.ca/spamalbum/256k/pacific-li
Enjoy! Laugh! Be Happy!
Death to spam.
Top spam ISPs: UUnet, Qwest and Sprint. I hate you (Score:2, Insightful)
http://www.spamhaus.org/top10.lasso [spamhaus.org]
Now that I know of your policies, I'll be making sure to take my business elsewhere in the future.
Re:Top spam ISPs: UUnet, Qwest and Sprint. I hate (Score:2)
How to stop uu.net (Score:2)
Make their sales staff deal with the consequences of selling pink contracts. My accounts almost never receive spam from uu.net spammers anymore. They have been told to leave me alone because they are tired of dealing with the backlash.
If everyone would bounce spam from unresponsive isps like this, it might discourage the sale of pink contracts. Its not like uu.net can turn of sales@ without a major headache. Serves the vermin right
Big debate (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Big debate (Score:1)
blocking IP traffic (Score:2)
Blocking general IP traffic in this manner is a very disturbing trend, one that seemed to get started with Above.net, notably mentioned on /. when peacefire.org was blocked.
cue all the zealots who believe this is a good thing
Re:blocking IP traffic (Score:1)
w00t! (Score:1)
total score: spammers - billions upon of billions of emails, antispammers: 2 or 3.
the this battle's been won, but we still have the entire war ahead of us.
-----------
i can see the MPAA using this as an anti-digital audio tactic, spamming people from a specific network that has alot of MP3 traffic, until the network is blacklisted, and threaten to continue to spam/keep the network blacklisted until they limit the transmission of MP3's across that network.
just an idea.
For those who need an official definition... (Score:1)
n.
Unsolicited e-mail, often of a commercial nature, sent indiscriminately to multiple mailing lists, individuals, or newsgroups; junk e-mail.
And a couple more definitions just to be clear on what the above is saying:
junk
adj.
1.Cheap, shoddy, or worthless
2.Having a superficial appeal or utility, but lacking substance
and
unsolicited (ns-ls-td)
adj.
Not looked for or requested; unsought
Dictionary.com rules.
Hmmmm... (Score:1, Interesting)
Shouldn't we show them how much we LIKE their
service(s)... say by calling them up and telling them
I think that's a great idea myself....
Re:Hmmmm... (Score:2)
Not really. It's been known to happen that spammers will list someone else's number or e-mail in their domain registration, usually someone who's reported them in the past.
Re:Hmmmm... (Score:2)
Re:Hints for dealing with pacifists. (Score:1)
Re:Hints for dealing with pacifists. (Score:1)
True, but in general, the police are more trustworthy than someone who has just been punched in the face by the aggressor. Also, there are procedures for complaining about and reining in police.
Re:Hints for dealing with pacifists. (Score:1)
What's the first thing you think about?
A Assume the only response will be "carpetbombing" and post an inappropriate analogy in an attempt to claim intellectual superiority?
B Tell the victims to shut up and like it?
Score -2:
-1 for feeding a troll
-2 for upsetting your delusion that your analogy was actually valid logic.
Re:Hints for dealing with pacifists. (Score:1)
Hell, I don't really mind if you americans want to just go out and mindlessly bomb the fuck out of some innocent people. I'm just pointing out that it'd be a rather shallow, and illogical move.
Fortunatly for the rest of the world, Bush has some good advisors by his side who are thinking "Hmm, who the fuck are we going to target" rather than "Someone has to pay. someone has to pay now"
Fer the record too, I'm not a big socialist fan either. Give me capitilism or give me death.
Re:Let me get this straight... (Score:1)
Re:waste of time (Score:1)
Re:waste of time (Score:1)
Re:bah (Score:1)