From: knews4u2chew on
On Apr 21, 11:25 am, Puppet_Sock <puppet_s...(a)hotmail.com> wrote:
> On Mar 20, 12:20 am, "Sue..." <suzysewns...(a)yahoo.com.au> wrote:
>
> > Sue...
>
> Get leprosy.
> Socks

Do it like Christopher.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7XtuPvwBa2U&feature=PlayList&p=DB91D5E40C75CC37&index=0&playnext=1
From: knews4u2chew on
On Mar 19, 9:00 pm, knews4u2c...(a)yahoo.com wrote:
> Here is what I did.
> I took the "Census Privacy Notice" and wrote on it.
> "Yes. We will stand on our 5th Amendment "Right to privacy."
> 2 Human souls @ this abode.
>
> Then I copied the Ten Questions here:
>
> http://www.frugal-cafe.com/public_html/frugal-blog/frugal-cafe-blogzo...
>
> I typed at the top:
>
> "I will answer your questions for the 2 human souls at this abode when
> you give me the answers to these questions."
>
> 1. The Constitution authorizes government to count people but it does
> not authorize the taking of private information or even the names of
> individuals. From where does the Census Bureau derive authority to
> demand our private information?
>
> 2. Is there any limit to the amount and type of private information
> that the Census bureau may demand and collect?
>
> 3. Under what Constitutional authority does the Census Bureau collect
> information now from 250,000 people per month of every year?
>
> 4. The 4th Amendment to the Constitution prohibits government search
> and seizure of private information without a court warrant based on
> probable cause, Current Census policies violate that Amendment do they
> not?
>
> 5. By what Constitutional authority does the Census Bureau threaten
> penalties for failure to provide personal information?
>
> 6. The Census Bureau claims it maintains privacy of personal
> information, Are there any circumstances under which law enforcement
> or spy agencies can access Census information?
>
> 7. Since presumably Census data may be subpoenaed by law enforcement,
> may individuals refuse to answer questions according to the fifth
> Amendment?
>
> 8. Why has the Census Bureau decided to collect GPS coordinates for
> every home?
>
> 9. Virtually every government database has been either lost, hacked or
> compromised, would the Census Bureau’s claim of data security not be
> an outright lie or at best highly improbable?
>
Hey, I got my answer here:
http://www.independent.org/newsroom/article.asp?id=2744

> 10. How would the Census Bureau locate, protect and compensate those
> individuals whose data becomes compromised?
>
> Then  put the blank form and the other two pieces in the mail.
> Cya............

From: Remy McSwain on
<sigh>


From: PV on
knews4u2chew(a)yahoo.com writes:
>Bye bye.
>I'm done with you.

Riight. You've said that before. You don't know how to run a killfile.

>You don't know anything about me.
>I am not here to prove anything to you.

Oh really? Then why have you been trying to do that, over and over, with
more outlandish bullshit each time? *
--
* PV Something like badgers, something like lizards, and something
like corkscrews.
From: knews4u2chew on
On Apr 24, 9:35 am, "Remy McSwain" <Paradis70...(a)gmail.com> wrote:
> <sigh>

http://crookedamerica.com