Competition To Find Aussie PM's Email Address 352
Internet Ninja writes "While we can all send anti-war emails to 'president' of the USA and even the Australian opposition, nobody can email the Prime Minister of Australia. So the opposition party started a competition to track it down as reported in Australias Sydney Morning Herald."
That's going to be as hard to find (Score:3, Funny)
Re:That's going to be as hard to find (Score:4, Informative)
In all, I became frustrated so I scoured the net for some information. It turned out that there was an "affiliate" site set up by FOX that was completely open and unsecured. I was able to get some stuff... Here are the regional VP's contact info:
Northeast
CT, DE, DC, MN, NH, NJ, NY, PA, RI, VT, WV
Bill Lyons
(212) 822-9023
blyons@foxcable.com
1211 Avenue of the Americas
31st Floor
New York, NY 10036
Central
IL, IN, IA, KS, MN, MD, MA, MI, MO, NE, ND, OH, SD, WI
Ken Tremback
ktremback@foxcable.com
(314) 206-7029
700 St. Louis Union Station
Suite 300
St. Louis, MO 63103
Southeast
AL, FL, GA, KY, MS, NC, SC, TN, VA, Puerto Rico & Caribbean
Chris Killebrew
(404) 230-7317
ckillebrew@foxcable.com
1175 Peachtree Street N.E.
100 Colony Square, Suite 200
Atlanta, GA 30361
Southwest
AR, CO, ID (Southern), LA, MT, OK, TX, UT, WY
Rob Evanko
(972) 868-1801
revanko@foxcable.com
100 East Royal Lane
Suite 200
Irving, TX 75039
West
AK, AZ, CA, HI, ID (panhandle), NV, NM, OR, WA
Matt Cacciato
(310) 286-3713
mcacciato@foxcable.com
10000 Santa Monica Boulevard
Los Angeles, CA 90067
Go ahead and ping them if you aren't happy with their decisions as of late (Futurama, etc).
Re:That's going to be as hard to find (Score:2)
They had taken it down for some time but it has appeared again. I bet their web guy gets canned this time...
Get rid of aussie spam. (Score:3, Funny)
How long do you think it will take them to write laws to kill spam and execute spammers?
Re:Get rid of aussie spam. (Score:5, Funny)
He's probably more concerned about getting "flamed" right now.
Re:oh dear god (Score:3, Informative)
He's probably more concerned about getting "flamed" right now.
For all you non-Australians out there, I'm guessing you haven't heard of the horrific bushfires plaguing our capital city (Canberra, where the Prime Minister lives, hence the PM getting "flamed". I hate it when I have to explain jokes). Maybe the 4 dead and 400 homes razed to the ground (the last I heard of it) doesn't warrant air-time on your news networks compared to "let's go to war!"
Typical, us Aussies had 11/9 plastered on our tv sets for weeks, and !@#$!@#$
Sorry, teen angst.
~Duane
Re:oh dear god (Score:2)
When I was a kid, I grew up in nowhere, Florida. Pretty much, grab a Florida map, and figure out how much space is at least 100 miles from any city with a population over 1000.. There's lots of it. There'd be fires all the time, caused by lightning strikes, or stupid people not putting out camp fires.. LA's fires make the news, because they're close to major news offices.. The fires in Florida would sometimes be huge, and maybe make a 5 second blurb on the nearest cities news channel.
4 dead, 400 homes isn't international news. Well, it would be, but it ranks right up with little Timmy with his hand stuck in the toilet (again).
Re:oh dear god (Score:3, Interesting)
I recon if politicians had as much international solidarity as firefighters seem to, war'd be an arcane memory from the history books.
We sure do get alot of fires down here, heck australian fires are probably the hottest (Eucalyptus trees oft burn at many thousands degrees +(celcius) , but this canbera thing is rather ungood.
That said there was a part of me that was hoping to see parliment on fire
Re:oh dear god (Score:2)
Re:oh dear god (Score:2)
DISCLAIMER: I LIVE IN THE USA.
Re:Get rid of aussie spam. (Score:5, Interesting)
How long do you think it will take them to write laws to kill spam and execute spammers?"
And this is a bad thing because........?
Quit wasting your time here (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Get rid of aussie spam. (Score:2, Funny)
heh... (Score:2, Funny)
Email him here (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Email him here (Score:3, Informative)
I don't like Feedback Forms (was: Email him here) (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Email him here (Score:2)
Howabout writing a Perl script such that when you email some other address, it loads that page, and submits it with the email attached?
Maybe even implement it as part of an anonymous remailer chain [eu.org], and you'll have the added advantage of anonymous free speech.
Re:Email him here (Score:3, Insightful)
Do you really think that when you email Mr. Bush at the white house, that little voice says "You've got mail" and he turns round in his chair to click on it?
I'm sure whitehouse.gov email gets read and responded to by secretaries too.
Re:Email him here (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Email him here (Score:2)
Post.
Ever.
publicity stunt (Score:5, Insightful)
as the labor party is well aware, federal politician's email addresses are pseudonyms and changed quickly if they fall into the 'wrong hands'.
furthermore all senior federal politicians have access to the other email addresses, so the labor party already has johnny's email address.
Re:publicity stunt (Score:2)
it's not like bush would read all the mail sent to him..
e-mail him from here (Score:2, Informative)
http://www.pm.gov.au/your_feedback/feedback.h tm
Anti-war petitions (Score:5, Interesting)
Could it be, that these mails have some effect, despite they are not from the UN, I mean, do they end up on someones desk, or in a killfile?
Re:Anti-war petitions (Score:2)
Maybe it has a little drawback for you -> french-speaking oriented (mainly with hoaxes from FR,BE,CH,QC.CA).
.
Re:Anti-war petitions (Score:4, Informative)
I used to get a lot of these. First find a case of that letter on a anti hoax site saying that it is a hoax. Reply and tell them they have been hoaxed. If they are forwarding it to a lot of people then forward the anti-hoax information as well. Having backup from a anti-hoax site reinforces your statement and they will look like an ass and think twice before sending such letters again.
Some Anti-hoax sites
Hoax Busters [ciac.org]
Virus Myths [vmyths.com]
Just search on google for urban legends and you will get more sites.
Re:Anti-war petitions (Score:2)
Remind them that the real UN only gets in touch with the general populace when they're looking for money (like UNICEF).
Re:Anti-war petitions (Score:2)
So I started thinking... I want to start a site that will collect e-mail hoaxes (allowing people to submit hoaxes), and investigate / explain why they're hoaxes. (For example, in this case, they could call up AOL and have the AOL people confirm it's a hoax.) Then I could elaborate on the parts of the e-mail that should have clued people in that it was a scam, such as that AOL can't track my e-mail, especially if neither I nor those who I send it to use AOL. (Or that it was sent almost a week after they were supposed to have made it non-free... that was a good indicator.)
I'm tempted to to register a domain, such as hoaxlist.com, and start this, although it'd need to become somewhat popular before I could actually have a fairly inclusive list of hoaxes.
Does anyone else think this is a good idea? (BTW, anyone should feel free to steal my idea... I don't really have the time to implement anything like this anytime soon.)
Re:Anti-war petitions (Score:3, Interesting)
Anyway... I tend to regard this ignorance of BCC as very useful. Means whenever I receive such mail I can explain this to all their friends as well as just them. Not only do I get many times the opportunities for cluestick practice but all now understand that such a mail can lead to public shame. Very useful
Re:Anti-war petitions (Score:2, Interesting)
Yes, I have done this many times. Virus warnings, chain letters, urban legends, Viruses itself. However, people absolutely hate it when you do that: You get flames back stating "don't spam me", or "who the fuck are you?". Normal people don't understand email. Of course, it also might have to do with the fact that I often have a sarcastic undertone in my emails.
Re:Anti-war petitions (Score:2)
In all the years I've been doing this (5+) I've had _one_ flame back. I've had more appreciative comments and a distinct downturn in these things, so maybe it's actually working!
Re:Anti-war petitions (Score:2)
Why doesn't Outlook Express show the BCC field, though? Have to turn on 'Rich headers' to get it...
Doesn't the meaning of BCC being Blind Carbon Copy explain why Outlook doesnt display the field? Odd that you can see it at all, I thought it was hidden automatically by the server?
Email Address (Score:5, Informative)
Taken from an old usenet posting when he was still a MP, and it doesn't bounce, so I'm assuming its good
Re:Email Address (Score:3, Informative)
This is an automatically generated Delivery Status Notification. Delivery to the following recipients failed. J.Howard.MP@aph.gov.au
Try pm@pm.gov.au (Score:5, Insightful)
A little birdy told me (I briefly worked in the Australian Federal Public Service a long time ago, and I have a few friends that still do) to try pm@pm.gov.au instead. Though I'm betting it forwards to the same place that web site form seems to go to - webmaster@pm.gov.au.
Anyway, I don't really see the point of this "competition", even from a publicity stunt point of view. No one REALLY thinks that the Australian PM (or the US President or the French President etc) sits at his desk each morning, opens up Outlook/KMail/whatever and checks his incoming email, do they?
Maybe they think the PM opens all his own mail too. And that he really does write every word of every document that has his signature on it...
Some countries' Presidents are accessible (Score:2)
On the other hand, if you want to Slashdot the PM, go ahead, or ask Joe Baptista [dorje.com] about how to fax the entire government of a province or email the US government.
Re:Care to provide a link? (Score:2, Interesting)
Seems to work fine for me without a problem
so many to choose from! (Score:5, Funny)
gstjohnny yahoo.com.au
john_howard_pm_2000 yahoo.com.au
pm_john_howard hotmail.com
johnhowardmp yahoo.com
nakedhornyguy yahoo.com (hahaha)
now, first - i have to apologize to all those other John Howards out there (yes, even the multiple in australia) for having to share this name - i really cannot believe the guy is still in power.
oh.. and, how many guys will respond for a measy crate of coke and $100 or linux software? (isn't most linux software = free?). maybe someone at SMH just wants john to be spammed.
Re:so many to choose from! (Score:2)
It's not just the commoners who have to deal with the shame - there's a reasonably prominent TV actor in Australia by the name of John Howard. He's in a few TV shows at the moment (He was in SeaChange, now in Always Greener).
This was played to great effect in a satire show called "The Games"; in the show, John Howard (the actor) went on TV to apologise for the governments historical treatment of the indigenous population - something that John Howard (the PM) refuses to do.
Russ %-)
Re:so many to choose from! (Score:2)
God damn I'm sick of people whinging about this. John Howard has publicly stated that he regrets it, offers his condolences, yada yada yada. That's the best ANY prime minister can do. It's simple really - the prime minister is the face of the government. If he apologizes, that act constitutes the government taking responsibility for the child-nappings. Then it's open floodgates for the aborigines to sue. They'll get a little, but mainly the lawyers will profit, as the case goes back and forth all the way to the supreme court - all at taxpayers' expense.
Re:so many to choose from! (Score:2)
Settle, Gretel. Read my comment again. I did nothing but state the facts - John Howard has refused to apologise. And he has (using pretty much those words, IIRC). I made no suggestion or demand that he _should_ apologise, or _must_ apologise. I very deliberately avoided doing so.
That's the best ANY prime minister can do
On this point, you are wrong. There is precedent.
The PM of Canada apologised for the treatment of the Innuit. In a public reconciliation ceremony just a few years back, he used the exact words "We Are Sorry". You will note that the Canada has not imploded as a result.
A "should he apologise" discussion is badly off topic here, but I had to correct you on this point.
Russ %-)
DUH! (Score:4, Funny)
He's obviously running the site himself to throw everyone off!
This is pointless (Score:2, Interesting)
Someone who can help us (Score:2)
Barking up the wrong tree (Score:2, Insightful)
To war or not to war, that is the question... for Saddam Hussein.
And the Australian PM has what say in this conflict??? The peaceniks might as well be bugging CowboyNeal. Here ya go: cowboyneal@slashdot.org. That will have just as much effect on the war. Seriously.
You are wrong (Score:5, Insightful)
I bet that the coming US invasion of Iraq will end up in this list pretty soon [bowlingforcolumbine.com]...
Re:There is only one God (Score:2)
That is a lie from the pit of hell. The Koran flatly contradicts Judaism and Christianity. If followers of both the Bible and Koran worship the same God, then God is a vicious liar, and is not worthy of worship by anybody. God's name would deserve to be reviled and spat upon. If God is the source of all religions, then he is indistinguishable from Satan, the father of lies, the Great Deceiver, according to my religion. Religions have vastly different concepts of God, good & evil, life, and reality. I don't think I exaggerate when I say that there is as much difference between some religions as there is between anarchy and totalitarianism or Mother Teresa and Nero.
The core of God's commandment (love God, and love one another) is consistent across all religions.
How the injunction to "love" is actually lived out varies vastly from religion to religion. An act of love or worship in one religion may be considered an act of hatred, deceit, and/or insanity in another religion. Don't let the similar vocabulary of "God", "love", and "peace" fool you. Differences in doctrine can change the whole landscape in intrepreting the meaning of words and their religious application.
What is love? Love how? Love whom? What about people I don't like? How often? Under what circumstances? Why? Do I love under religious compulsion or free will? To what degree? As much as I love myself?
Re:Barking up the wrong tree (Score:2)
Re:Barking up the wrong tree (Score:2)
And the Australian PM has what say in this conflict???
I'm glad you asked.
Once day, in the body, there was a fight between the organs of the body over who was the leader. The brain said "I'm the leader because without me we couldn't think". The heart said "I'm the leader because without me your blood wouldn't circulate and we'd all die". The lungs said "I'm the leader because without me we couldn't get air and we'd all die". The asshole said "I'm the leader", and the others laughed. So the asshole clammed shut. Nothing got past for days. Then weeks. The passages started filling up, poisons started leaking into the blood stream, and eventually the other organs conceded and gave power to the asshole. Which just goes to show that you don't have to be a brain to be leader, you just have to be a retentive asshole.
Now, what does this have to do with Little Johnny? Well, aside from the obvious retort, Johnny is lodged so far up Bush's posterior that he could choke off that exit route, thus leaving Bush incapable of doing squat about the "war". What's Johnny doing there, I hear you ask? As near as I can tell, he's shining a flashlight so Bush thinks the sun shines out of his ass.
The British Way (Score:3, Funny)
Ok, what ithe heck (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Ok, what ithe heck (Score:2)
I took it as meaning "the email doesn't really go to GWB himself, just his office/staff/whatever", but if it meant what you think, may I just point out that Tony Blair is not elected - not 'the election was questionable', but there was no election for PM. Instead Blair became PM because Labour dominates the Commons (British version of the House of Representatives) and he is Labour leader ('elected' mostly by the unions).
However inaccurate the counting in Florida is - and I think virtually everyone agrees it was a close run thing, however you count it - at least Americans had an election for President, where you could vote for or against Bush; Britain did not hold one in the first place!
Re:Ok, what ithe heck (Score:2)
Re:Ok, what ithe heck (Score:3, Insightful)
Which is fair enough in a party system. The US system doen't fill me with excitement at the idea of having a separate election. If we'd don it that way then Thatcher would have stayed in power for ANOTHER two years before we could kick her out. It makes no more sense to vote for PM than it would to vote for leader of the opposition or chancellor of the exchequer. They are all just cabinet posts and the pary can fill them as it sees fit.
Labour leader ('elected' mostly by the unions)
Labour leader is elected by the Labour MP's and Blair wouldn't get many union votes today if they did have any say in it.
at least Americans had an election for President, where you could vote for or against Bush; Britain did not hold one in the first place!
Why do you think this is a big deal? We voted (or not) for parties in the full knowledge of who their leaders were and those leaders were a substantial factor in the way people voted.
TWW
Re:Ok, what ithe heck (Score:2)
I wonder, do Britons care very much about who their MPs are? Do they go to the polls thinking about how great Tony Blair is but hating the labor MP candidate for their district and vote for him anyway because he's labor and they want Blair for PM?
My guess would be that given the strength of the parties in Britain your individual MP wouldn't matter all that much, since they're almost always vote the party line which is mostly directed by the PM.
In America there's quite a lot of stir over congressional elections, and many people deliberately split their vote between President and congress, even when the candidates in question directly oppose each other on policy.
Re:Ok, what ithe heck (Score:3, Insightful)
It's wrong to generalise.
But I'll do it anyway.
I think most people here do vote on party lines although it might be truer to say that they vote on policy lines. If the party supports a policy they like then people will vote for it, especially if they think the leader of the party will push that policy. So, if the PM is kicked out by the party mid-term as happened to Thatcher, people might still be happy if the policies are still what they want (not in that particular case, however).
In some places the individiual candidate matters, particularly in marginal seats, but the reality is that no one likes politicians and most of them are as dull as the next so it usually doesn't matter. The issue of who the leader of the party is very mixed. Currently Blair is pretty well hated but Labour are seen as better than the other options while the Labour MPs themselves can't decide if the bloodbath unleased by giving him the boot would leave them in power and none of them want to start the experiment. Iraq is the first time I've seen Blair under any real pressure from public opinion but, again, there are no obvious alternatives in the other parties so I doubt that he'll have any trouble joining in the attack when the time comes.
My guess would be that given the strength of the parties in Britain your individual MP wouldn't matter all that much, since they're almost always vote the party line which is mostly directed by the PM.
This is quite true of all the parties, not just the governing one that the PM belongs to: each party has its "whips" which tell the sheep, er...MPs how to vote. The whips have a lot of power since being dropped by the party at the next election for being a trouble maker is normally a one-way ticket to palookaville (sp?) since the voters will just vote for your faceless replacement. Again, there are a few exceptions but they are very, very rare indeed.
many people deliberately split their vote between President and congress
It is worth noting that the PM has very reduced powers compared to the President so this doesn't make as much sense over here; there's no real way in which the PM's power needs to be balanced by putting a different party in opposition to it. There are more differences in the two systems than most PMs would like, I think.
TWW
Re:Ok, what ithe heck (Score:2)
The US President may have more direct powers over the executive branch, but the way we were taught was that the PM as more effective legislative power because his party leadership coupled with party discipline meant that it was much easier for his policy slate to be made into law than the Presidents.
Although as you indicate, it helps for the party in power to actually like its leader. If you're a hated leader of the party in power and you're there only because the party doesn't trust the outcome of outsting you, then, well, maybe you have less effective power than you think.
Re:Ok, what ithe heck (Score:2)
That's true; but day to day power is less, I think. It has grown, however, mainly at the expense of the monarch but also simply because we've not had any really tight elections for quite some time (1974 was a majority of 3 and 1992 was the only other majority under 30 since 1964) and that reduces the power of dissenters within the ruling party and strengthens the leadership. With a majority of more than 160 Blair's leadership is very strong and centralised.
the appointment of the Archbishop of Canterbury.
Not exactly earth-shattering, though, is it? I still think the Bishop of London's better, too. He looks like he could take on a few of Satan's minions down the east-end! "Oh, no! It's da Bishop!" Sorry, drifted off there.
Still, I don't see major reforms any time soon.
No, turkeys don't usually vote for christmas!
TWW
Re:Ok, what ithe heck (Score:2)
We think it's a big deal because:
By the way...
"If we'd don it that way then Thatcher would have stayed in power for ANOTHER two years before we could kick her out."
You assume she would have gotten a second term to begin with (or even a first term). You have literally no way of knowing who voted for her party directly and who voted for a candidate who happened to be a member of her party.
Re:Ok, what the heck (Score:2)
Almost all politicians are crooks at heart and any system that involves them is doomed to become corrupt over time no matter how well designed it is initially. "Who watches the watchmen?" is the eternal question in representative democracy and the answer is always "no one" in the long run.
It happens than I don't think that the American system is better even in theory but it is not important anymore as both systems have now failed utterly from their ideals; neither Americans or Britons have any real involvement in what are becoming two of the the world's greatest Plutocracies.
TWW
Re:Ok, what ithe heck (Score:5, Informative)
This just isn't true. It wasn't close. Between the "Jews for Buchanan" vote and the Democratic voters that brother Jeb arbitrarily threw off the voter rolls, Florida overwhelmingly tried to vote for Gore.
In any case, the voting results weren't used. The Supreme Court justified installing Bush by pointing to press accounts of the election. Bush was elected by Fox News.
The take-home lesson: your vote doesn't count; what the media report counts.
Re:Ok, what ithe heck (Score:2, Troll)
On a ballot that was publicized weeks ahead of the election.
"the Democratic voters that brother Jeb arbitrarily threw off the voter rolls"
The governor has no say in who is elected to the Florida Supreme Court. They are chosen by direct election.
The governor has no say in who is elected elections commissioner. They are chosen by direct election.
"The Supreme Court justified installing Bush by pointing to press accounts of the election."
The vast majority of the members of the US Supreme Court were approved of by a Democrat congress.
The Supreme Court did not pick the winning candidate. The deicision boiled down to "Not our problem" after looking at both the US and Florida consitutions. The popularly-elected Florida high court did what they felt was required by Florida law. The popularly-elected commissioner signed off on the results.
Was the deck stacked against Florida voters? Perhaps. But they did it to themselves.
"The take-home lesson: your vote doesn't count; what the media report counts."
No, the take-home lesson is what it always has been in democracy since its inception: caveat emptor
Re:Ok, what ithe heck (Score:2)
Not quite true. The lesson for Democrats is that they need to win by a decisive margin, not a relatively small one that can be overturned by the Supreme Court. That means people need to go out and vote against Bush.
Re:Ok, what the heck (Score:2)
Re:Ok, what ithe heck (Score:2)
I don't think any slight was intended. The President of the United States (for at least the last few administrations) has always had the email address president@whitehouse.gov.
So for any sitting President of the United States the people have the option of sending an email to 'president'. Perhaps the legitimacy of Bush's Presidency deserves to be challenged and perhaps not--but this time the quotes were legitimate and had nothing to do with the mess in Florida.
It's how he got into office (Score:2)
Re:Ok, what ithe heck (Score:2)
Yuh huh (Score:2)
And in 1775, George III was King of North America, and of that there was no debate.
You see, the thing about politics is that there's always a debate, and just because some guy called George declares himself my lord and master doesn't preclude me from saying that he's a thieving parasite with no more mandate to rule than any other monarch appointed by a partisan Council of the Wise rather than a popular vote.
Re:Yuh huh (Score:2)
Also I get real, real sick of this popular vote shit. The president is not, and never has been, elected by a popular vote. The U.S. system was NOT designed that way. Now personally, I think it should be a popular vote election, but for now it isn't. Bush is also not the first persident to loose the popular vote but win the election.
The system can (adn I think should) be changed, however as it stands popular vote is not the method for election. This is again, simple fact. You can try and deny this, just like denying that Bush is president but that does not make you right, it just makes you out of touch with reality.
Re:Ok, what ithe heck (Score:2)
Ok, what rock were you under when he got elected?
Re:Ok, what ithe heck (Score:2)
I fail to see how this is such a hard concept to grasp. You may believe that Bush illegally, fraudantly, and so on came to be president, hwoever he has been confirmend as such and is now our president until the next election. There is a difference between how something came to happen and what happened.
Re:Ok, what ithe heck (Score:2)
Re:Ok, what ithe heck (Score:2)
Also you need to consult a dictonary. The word coup, in this context, means: "the violent overthrow or alteration of an existing government by a small group". Bush did not overthrow the existing government, it remains intact as it did before. He was declared the victor of the 2000 elections and as such became the president. You may (and obviously do) disagree with the method that was taken to arrive at the decision that he was teh victor, but none the less it was conducted in according to the laws of this country. More importantly, it was not something that destroyed the governemt nor altered it fundimentally. Even if you believe that Bush became president through outright fraud, that's still not a coup.
Re:Ok, what ithe heck (Score:2)
Oh fun. The dictionary attack. Can I play?
OED has a bunch of other definitions for coup, one of which is "A dislocation or fault by which a coal-seam is tilted up." I'm surprised you didn't use that one to suggest that I had implied W tilted up a coal-seam in Gore's ass in 2002.
There are other definitions for coup ("a successful move," "a sudden and decisive stroke of state policy," "a sudden and great change in the government carried out violently or illegally by the ruling power," etc.) that don't require violence. In any case, the bloodless in my original post made it clear that I didn't think the coup was violent.
USA! USA! USA!
Re:Ok, what ithe heck (Score:2)
At any rate Bush's ascention to presidency utterly fails to meet the defeinition of coup in any form. The government was not substintally altered or indeed altered at all. The constitution is still the supreme law of the land, the three branches still remain. The only change was that a new president came to power, as is the intent of an election when the current president is not permited to run.
Now the 2000 election was frought with contraversy. There was allegation of misconduct on both sides (please do not forget the allegations that Gore attempted to block military votes, and bribed homeless peopel to vote with cigarettes). According to Florida law, there were recounts. Then, the Florida supreme court (a body elected by popular vote in Florida) and the election commisoner (also elected by popular vote in Florida) decided that it was done, and Bush had won. This was then challenged to the US Supreme Court (the supreme judicial review in this country) who also decided it was over and that Bush had won. This was all done according to the law.
Now you may believe, and may be right, that Bush engaged in misconduct to win the election. However, that does not change the fact that he is the president, nor the fact that it was not a coup. You should, perhaps, travel abroad to a country that has experienced a real coup and get some first had accounts of what it means.
Linux.conf.au (Score:3, Insightful)
Seriously though, this is just a cheap publicity stunt for the Labour Council and should be treated as such.
Here it is. I found it (Score:2)
Anybody got Saddam's e-mail address? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Anybody got Saddam's e-mail address? (Score:3, Interesting)
Anybody got Saddam's e-mail address?
press@uruklink.net [mailto]. This account was broken into recently [wired.com] as well. Although this is a "press" email, it is the one that appears on Saddam's own webpage [uruklink.net].
Sounds familiar (Score:3, Interesting)
Slightly different as Tony promised that he would release his email address, but so far has not. Quite funny, worth a read.
It's grandefromage@pm.gov.au (Score:2)
Well this should narrow it down... (Score:3, Funny)
bruce@ something
Ummm.... (Score:2, Informative)
The form goes nowhere (Score:2, Informative)
You'll notice that mailto has no value, I'd say it doesn't submit anywhere.
POTUS (Score:2)
When it comes to how people voted, he did win the majority in Florida, as has been constantly demonstrated.
I'm really not all that keen on him (I voted for Brown), but the fact remains that George W. Bush is our president. The leftists who try to pretend that he's not (incl. Michael Moore, whom I saw on British television making near-treasonous comments regarding Bush) need to get lives. But then, that applies to all leftists.
John Howard's Email addy (Score:2)
Re:NO SUBJECT! (Score:2, Insightful)
Considering America has shown no intention of doing what actually needs to be done (renouncing terrorism and stopping the arming and funding of terrorism would be a good start) how can anything, including email, stop them?
Instead the US prefers to send another few billion in the direction of the biggest terrorist mob in the Middle East.
Re:Is It Just Me... (Score:5, Insightful)
I hope you're not suggesting that:
a) Australians can't be nerds or geeks
b) that finding little Johnny's email address isn't a valid exercise for said nerds and geeks
Maybe there are just a lot of us around. And, after all, where does Samba [samba.org] come from?
Alister
Re:Is It Just Me... (Score:2)
And I sit at my desk reading this wearing a Atomic T-shirt from the first issue of atomic magazine. What a co-incidence.
Safe Kernel Panics (Score:2)
2 ways I know to do this--
1-- Make a bootable CDROM without support for any filesystems in the kernel (kernel panic when trying to mount root).
2-- Turn off APM in your BIOS, use an APB-based kernel, and then halt your system.
Neither of these means have any possibility of harming your system
As for where does Samba come from? Samba is a dance form from Latin America
Re:Is It Just Me... (Score:3, Insightful)
Particularly more so than the somewhat less "developed" countries such as Khazakstan, Guatemala, and Bangladesh where little tech news/discoveries/events are happening..
I'm guessing you are an american right? Too bad, but I have no axe to grind. I aint an Aussie either, but it's people like you who make this Americans annoyed by all this international shit on the internet [satirewire.com] report all the funnier.
Anyone noticed the amount of american stories appearing on
Oh, and the relevancy of the story to readers is inherent to the competition to discover the PM of Australia's email addre....ahh...forget it
Re:Is It Just Me... (Score:5, Informative)
2. Slashdot isn't the internet. I'm very happy to see international stories on Slashdot, but the expectation of the original poster that Slashdot not post too many non-US-related stories is understandable given this from the FAQ:
3. The original poster was trolling. Don't feed the trolls! TIA.
Re:Is It Just Me... (Score:2)
Because of this, I am well aware of the Australian wild fires and things like Malaysia's Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad going round and round with Australia's Prime Minister John Howard over Howard wanting to play "MiniMe" to Bush. Also, while CNN portrays the two Koreas as readying for another Korean War, they have actually been holding many reunification talks, complete with plans for running roads through the demilitarized zone and reuniting families.
The September 11th attacks got me in the habit of watching the news. Problem is, as I quickly discovered, news sources like CNN are biased, slant stories to the point of omitting parts that don't agree with their bias, and are woefully inadequate in checking their facts (they actually reported one thing about someone in show-biz based on what their home-page said). Going to other countries' web news sites helps me filter out the bias, round out the facts, and hear stories that our media would never tell.
"The path of peace is yours to discover for eternity."
Japanese version of "Mothra" (1961)
Re:Hmm? (Score:2, Funny)
But now that you have discovered our secret plan, we must remove all references to your e-mail address on the web so that you cannot communicate to any other geeks! Muahahaha!
Re:Australians reaping what they sowed (Score:5, Insightful)
Australians have no problem (well, I don't) in admitting their faults, and have no motivation to pretend that they are holy or righteous when in fact they aren't.
Re:Australians reaping what they sowed (Score:5, Funny)
I'm fortunate to live in a country whose leaders dont see it as their business to poke into the affairs of other nations. I think its great that in every crisis we can get away with sending a few rowboats and a handful of troops to keep dictator Bush happy.
Our nation is of peace and tolerance. The US seems to be about profit and imposing its 'freedoms' on others by force.
Im proud to be Australian.
Please dont take enclosed joke too seriously
There was an Aussie, an American and an African father in the maternity ward... and the nurse announces that all the births were successful, however the staff had got the babies mixed up. The fathers would have to go in and identify their child. So the Aussie grabs the African baby and says 'This black one must be mine!'. 'Surely sir this is the African mans baby?'. 'Well, maybe... but one of the others is American, and i cant take that risk'
Karma: Rock Bottom, mostly due to insulting all the american mods
Re:Anti-American sentiment (Score:3, Interesting)
I for one am glad the Labor party has finally settled on a platform re Iraq. To me it seems quite hipocritical to pound one dictatorship into the ground for suspision of having Weapons of Mass Destruction and yet play the softly softly game with another that we KNOW has Nukes.
Check your facts before you spout off.
Re:Anti-American sentiment (Score:2)
Re:UK Prime Minister's address? (Score:2, Troll)
Why bother, all he appears to do is parrot GW Bush?