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#1
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I was reading www.cryptome.org just now and way down near the bottom
is a couple of articles about Quebec dams open to terror attack.Are y'all going to handle that situation or do y'all want us Americans to handle it? cuhulin |
#3
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Because we don't want the Rooskies coming across the Antartic over
here.We would have to do a "Slim Pickens" on them Rooskies.How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb.If you think us Americans are interested in attacking y'alls dams,You really DO have a serious problem in the way you think. cuhulin Do Not Write Below This Line ............................................... |
#4
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![]() wrote in message ... Because we don't want the Rooskies coming across the Antartic over here.We would have to do a "Slim Pickens" on them Rooskies.How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb.If you think us Americans are interested in attacking y'alls dams,You really DO have a serious problem in the way you think. cuhulin Do Not Write Below This Line ............................................... (1) Correct spelling is "Antarctic". (2) It could be rehearsal for sneak attack on Iran. k35454. |
#5
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The right way to spell leftist Canada is CanaDUH.Sneak attack on Iran?
We already have some spies in Iran,it won't be a sneak attack.They know they are next. cuhulin |
#6
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wrote in news:18483-421947BB-352@storefull-
3254.bay.webtv.net: I was reading www.cryptome.org just now and way down near the bottom is a couple of articles about Quebec dams open to terror attack.Are y'all going to handle that situation or do y'all want us Americans to handle it? cuhulin Video is he http://www.radio- canada.ca/Medianet/RDI2/LeJournalRDI200502151759_1.asx Unfortunately it is in French. My french is rusty but the video is pretty explanatory. - no guards - unlocked doors - no alarms - easy access including to control rooms - power plants sell power to the USA and Canada |
#7
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![]() m II wrote: a semi literate wrote: I was reading www.cryptome.org just now and way down near the bottom is a couple of articles about Quebec dams open to terror attack.Are y'all going to handle that situation or do y'all want us Americans to handle it? cuhulin Why would the Americans want to do a terror attack on our dams? Oh..yeah..like Iraq, eh? Of course! After all, you folks do have some oil, and you do have some hydro power. Why waste our time over in the middle-east when we could better expend our efforts nearer to home by attacking CanaDuh. dxAce Michigan USA |
#8
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I noticed I mispelled Canada.Here are four proper ways to spell them.
CanaDUH,CanaDUHian,CanaDUHians and CandyAsses. cuhulin |
#9
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On 20/02/2005 9:30 PM, wrote:
I was reading www.cryptome.org just now and way down near the bottom is a couple of articles about Quebec dams open to terror attack.Are y'all going to handle that situation or do y'all want us Americans to handle it? cuhulin Does the U.S. have it's house all in order then? No large facilities storing extremely dangerous material that recently failed multiple security checks? Any problems with civilians getting secret access to passenger jets during airport security tests? Do you need Canada to assist with that? The point of terrorism is that it attacks so-called soft targets that most of us (in North America, anyway) have never had to consider before. Everyone will catch up eventually. The U.S. and Canada have always worked hard to keep the worlds longest undefended border open for trade and culture. We have a long, shared history of cooperating on mutually beneficial cross-border activities, including the sharing of intelligence information and security duties. Seeing that Canada is America's largest trading partner (and vice-versa) it makes sense for this trend to continue. Dams and research facilities are big chunks of infrastructure that are incredibly hard to maintain. Changing any kind of process for these facilities can test the patience of Job (those of you in the military probably know exactly what I'm talking about!) and it can take a few revisions to work the kinks out. However, the first rule of security is to make sure you know what you really want to accomplish with a new security system. Step one is to survey the existing process and determine all the weak spots you can. Then you publish this information amongst a team of security experts and draw up an implementation. And then you survey the process /again/. Usually this plan is in stages, so you can test and revise within a schedule, making sure you reach your milestones. There is nothing more dangerous than a half-baked security process that a.) may not actually do what you expect it to do, and b.) makes you think you are safe when you really aren't. Case in point: http://www.syslog.com/~jwilson/pics-i-like/kurios119.jpg In fact, we want to see more reports like this made public. This is what democracy and free access to information give us. The time to worry is when our watchdog organizations start reporting that nothing is wrong at all. To segue skillfully back onto a relevant topic, I wonder if RCI has repeated the CBC report that (I think) broke this story originally? Ok, that was a lame segue, but I did my best to stay on topic. |
#10
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I realize that.There are govt agencies in America that do not
communicate with each other properly.I once got an email from an 85 year old guy who retired from Boeing Aircraft Company.(some of y'all Ham Operators might know of him,he lives in Mesquite,Texas and he also once worked in the oil drilling industry) He told me there are departments at Boeing that do not communicate with each other too.Jane Russell in this The Tall Men,Western movie on tv said,Never put on a hat that cost less than five dollars! cuhulin |
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