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Subject: Ron Hubbard, come in come in


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Original Message 1/17             30-May-03  @  10:49 AM   -   Ron Hubbard, come in come in

x

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ping, reply, ping reply



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Message 2/17             30-May-03  @  03:49 PM   -   RE: Ron Hubbard, come in come in

little ronnie hubbard

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i live in a cupboard,
feeding your mind and soul
et c.



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Message 3/17             30-May-03  @  05:14 PM   -   RE: Ron Hubbard, come in come in

xoxos

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you know..

i was washing my hands at work one day and as i was walking out, some kid at the urinal starts going "answeransweranswer.."

you want to say something to me, you say it, not your "let's all be cool and friendly" assimilation subroutine. you cool, friendly people are all the same.. "be my brother.." yet with the other hand you take away my brother's land and strike him down... for what.. for more tract housing so you can grow some more of what.. food. more food than you need, because you disrespect the basic harmony of nature. like a bunch of drugged men all hugging and kissing each other. you're despicable and deserve nothing but death.

i find more genuine intelligence, awareness and affection in the eyes of a wary sparrow than i do in yours.

i suppose i should come up behind you and put my hands over your eyes so you can say "quien es?"



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Message 4/17             30-May-03  @  07:42 PM   -   RE: Ron Hubbard, come in come in

fair play

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fair play, truck of books, religeon and respectin bodies an figures too, and then maybee you read different too



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Message 5/17             31-May-03  @  02:31 AM   -   RE: Ron Hubbard, come in come in

xoxos

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you wouldn't know fair play if it.. and respect??

listen - i was born the son of a bank manager and the grandson of a bank manager. i was raised to speak 'the queens' english.. you know.. crisp, precise pronounciation that cannot be mistaken. i can read books, but do you understand when the woodpecker speaks to you? do you recognise that they need somewhere to nest, or did you disobey the cardinal rule - DON'T TAKE EVERYTHING



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Message 6/17             31-May-03  @  07:29 AM   -   RE: Ron Hubbard, come in come in

Ron

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Hmmm, he likes himself too much. Can he see beyond the nose?


Come in please, come in please...outerworld must not touch these mortals.



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Message 7/17             31-May-03  @  08:12 AM   -   RE: Ron Hubbard, come in come in

kiruR

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I was much more happy playing with myself. The plastic wrap never made a good barrier for the outsiders with their inferior synapses.


Must enter space dust routine and debug. They must have not beta tested his firmware.



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Message 8/17             31-May-03  @  11:41 AM   -   RE: Ron Hubbard, come in come in

cheddar

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X don!t tell me your looking for sense here,

guidance costs. "...HE said" loverly little circles of longing to... and be. Same one for speaker and listener, only the speaker earns more.

We are not special, sorry. Only animals with poor reflection. Nothing will save us because "we" don't exist, just lots of the same thing.

Wake up you say, wake up I say, excuses excuses in speaking to yourself. Intelligence is not survival trait, thought i had said that before. Idiots rule. How big is your world.

"HE said I could see the aura, now I can" hahahaha

childrens innocence like photographic paper left out, try to get a personality on it at least to make it pleasant becoming black. abuse yourself, at least its active

say it first and live forever

be there for people so you can feel better

i have led a charmed life but still i am nasty trying to find a reason. Opposites I console myself with, while the party goes on all around. What do you want?

I sometimes get nasty at some stage in an evening / but last week i was boozing with strangers and I started down the path (prolly something about how shit radio music is and why people take it) and one guy says (...2 well timed phenomes with cautious tone) and I just stop and gulp and get on with enjoying it. Now if I can just remeber next time I will have learned something and then my whole logic has gone out the window



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Message 9/17             31-May-03  @  12:06 PM   -   RE: Ron Hubbard, come in come in

cheddar

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answers even hahahahahahah

alone

born, live and die alone. so much so our presence is only marginal during waking and preference is away

the only consolation is the comlimentary nature of dna. But thats only theory, in practice only one works



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Message 10/17             31-May-03  @  04:16 PM   -   RE: Ron Hubbard, come in come in

xoxos

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Yuma plant could deplete ecology of Sonoran wetland
StarNet online extra

See the Star's 2001 special report on the Colorado River delta, "Barely a
River," which includes a photo slide show. Go »»
By Mitch Tobin
ARIZONA DAILY STAR

The Yuma Desalting Plant, a $250 million facility stuck in mothballs since
it was completed a decade ago, may soon awaken and send its poisonous dregs
into the Sonoran Desert's largest wetland.

The 12,000-acre marsh - the Cienega de Santa Clara - is in Mexico's Colorado
River Delta. It offers a glimpse of the millions of acres of "milk-and-honey
wilderness" that famed ecologist Aldo Leopold visited in 1922, before
upstream dam-building reduced the Southwest's mightiest river to a trickle
and turned its delta into a wasteland.

Now, with a record drought depleting reservoirs along the Colorado, top
Interior Department officials have expressed interest in starting up the
Yuma plant so the United States can keep more water for its customers. Those
customers include Tucson, which is drawing an increasing amount from the
Colorado via the Central Arizona Project.

The 60-acre Yuma plant was built between 1975 and 1992 so the United States
could meet its treaty obligation to deliver river water to Mexico that's not
too salty. The plant was designed to use reverse osmosis to treat brackish
water flowing off cropland in Arizona's Wellton-Mohawk farming district,
returning the "desalted" water to the Colorado and sending the "reject
stream" of toxic brine through a parallel canal to Mexico.



But wet years in the 1990s meant the United States didn't need to use the
Yuma desalter. Instead, the United States sent the brackish water from
Wellton-Mohawk to Mexico in the canal that would have carried the brine. The
result was the continued blossoming of the Cienega de Santa Clara in a
sun-baked floodplain now dominated by sterile salt flats.

Biologists say the cienega - declared a biosphere reserve by Mexico in
1993 - has become a vital stopover for birds traveling the "Pacific Flyway."
It provides habitat for 280 avian species, including the largest known
population of endangered Yuma clapper rails. The endangered desert pupfish
also lives in its olive waters.

The cienega has been receiving about 35 billion gallons each year from the
Wellton-Mohawk fields, about how much Tucson Water delivers to its
customers.

But if the Yuma plant were restarted, the cienega would get a third as much
water and it would be three times as saline, according to an Interior
Department draft proposal.

Should the plant come on line, the cienega's vegetation would disappear,
said Ed Glenn, a scientist with the University of Arizona's Environmental
Research Lab who has studied the area since 1991.

"It would become a repository for selenium-laden, poisonous water," he said.
Selenium is a naturally occurring metal that can hurt fish and birds by
accumulating in the food chain.



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