Homegrown IED Targets Manhattan Military Recruiting Station
The NY Times City Room blog has the latest details:
They also have a useful slideshow of images from the scene, which gives us just enough information to start making some inferences about the bomb and the bomber. Looking at images 1-3 in the slideshow, you'll note that the damage from the blast seems relatively minor. Image 1 give you a pretty good idea of precisely where the bomb was placed, as you can see how the shrapnel radiated out from a central point, which appears to have been (as we face the building) almost dead-center in front of the plate-glass window.
The police have attributed the blast to an improvised explosive device, and police Commissioner Raymond W. Kelly said the device had been placed in an ammunition box like the kind that can be bought at a military supply store. Mr. Kelly spoke with Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg at a news conference at 9:30 a.m. in Times Square. The authorities are looking into a possible connection to two earlier bombings at foreign consulates in Manhattan, in 2005 and 2007. Official said that in today’s attack, a man in a gray hooded sweatshirt was seen leaving the scene on a bicycle. Subways and traffic are running normally through Times Square.


Yes, the Bill Ayer's above is the same man that has had Barack Obama as a dinner guest, and who served with Obama on the board of directors of the left-leaning Woods Fund from 1999 until 2002. Diana Oughton, one of the deceased, was Ayer's girlfriend until some of the 100 pounds of dynamite they intended to use to bomb a non-commissioned officers' dance at Fort Dix detonated.
Thirty-Eight Years Ago Today March 6, 1970 at 11:55 a.m. Three members of the radical activist group known as the Weather Underground, Diana Oughton, Ted Gold and Terry Robbins, blew themselves straight to hell when the bomb they were building, which was intended to blow up a dance at Fort Dix, exploded in an otherwise quiet New York neighborhood. Had they been better bomb-makers, instead of killing themselves, they would have killed an untold number of American soldiers. In the name of peace. Luckily, the Weathermen's expertise at bomb-making left much to be desired. The Weathermen's hatred of the United States manifested itself in the bombings of the U.S. Capitol building, New York City Police Headquarters, the Pentagon, and the National Guard offices in Washington, D.C. The Weathermen's leader, Bill Ayers summed up the Weathermen's ideology as follows: "Kill all the rich people. Break up their cars and apartments. Bring the revolution home, Kill your parents."
Update: Hot Air has surveillance video of the bike-riding bomber approaching the recruiting center, and the NYPD thinks they have his bike. Was the suspect smart enough to wipe his prints from the bike? Update: The bomber sent an anti-war manifesto to eight NY Democratic Congressmen. Update: Coincidence? Authorities are now saying the anti-war activist that mailed the "We did it!" letters to Congress had nothing to do with the recruiting center blast.
Posted by: Confederate Yankee at 10:48 AM
Comments
Posted by: Bookworm at March 06, 2008 11:05 AM (ueKxq)
Posted by: Sara at March 06, 2008 11:34 AM (Wi/N0)
I'm not arguing against your thesis, which seems sound. I'm just saying, if someone had been unlucky enough to be walking past, this could have been nasty.
Posted by: S. Weasel at March 06, 2008 11:43 AM (rasT+)
How many recruits are angry at their recruiters? I would bet this is at least as likely as an anti-war protester. And since an ammo can was used, this is probably not a bad bet. An anti-war protester would be more likely to use a pipe or a jar/molotv style.
Posted by: Skyler at March 06, 2008 12:10 PM (xakVm)
Everyone else has figured out who it is already, and wants to cut their heads off for treason.
Thank you for this small island of calm in an ocean of screaming vigilantes.
Posted by: eric taylor at March 06, 2008 12:13 PM (HaPIL)
Posted by: Glen Harness at March 06, 2008 12:20 PM (qrVOZ)
At least he's a carbon-neutral domestic terrorist.
Posted by: zorn at March 06, 2008 12:25 PM (TSa/6)
Actually, not many. While you are being recruited, it's all sunshine and candy. It isn't till you get to boot that you realize that the recruiter may have colored the facts a bit.
When I went in the Marines, the only people mad at the recruiter were the ones he had to tell that they were not eligible, for whatever reason.
Posted by: DanB at March 06, 2008 12:28 PM (lUqUe)
Just look at the police sketch of the Unibomber that was originally distributed:
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/9/9e/Unabomber-sketch.png/180px-Unabomber-sketch.png
Coincidence? I think NOT.
Posted by: MarkJ at March 06, 2008 12:30 PM (IKzfP)
Skyler, you do know there is no draft, right?
Everyone who visits a recruitment office does so voluntarily, to obtain information so that they can make their own decision about whether to volunteer or not. How, exactly, would this lead to recruits being angry at their recruiters? Angry about what?
Please explain.
Posted by: Pat at March 06, 2008 12:30 PM (0suEp)
This seems like it was clearly a political act aimed at the military. The purpose was to send a message to the war effort.
Posted by: Tibor at March 06, 2008 12:39 PM (STAFE)
Posted by: Samir at March 06, 2008 12:40 PM (9xpb9)
Few, if any. This is high brow comedy.
But, lets take this "logic" to it's extension. Assuming for the minute there is someone pissed off enough at their recruiter to do this.
What is the likely hood they were recruited in Manhattan? I'd say 0.02
Likely hood they are still so mad, while not on active duty, but out of the military riding around on a bicycle in Manhattan in a hooded sweatshirt: 0.000000001
I would bet this is at least as likely as an anti-war protester.
And you'd lose that bet.
Posted by: The Ace at March 06, 2008 12:42 PM (BNlV7)
in-f-ing-credible. talk about thought control.
Posted by: rapid at March 06, 2008 12:54 PM (c7CKN)
I have, however, deleted someone else's comment for profanity. It isn't allowed here, folks, and if you can't make your point without it, you are invited to leave.
Posted by: Confederate Yankee at March 06, 2008 12:59 PM (xNV2a)
Posted by: Rob Crawford at March 06, 2008 01:19 PM (IuKAf)
Posted by: Rob Crawford at March 06, 2008 01:21 PM (IuKAf)
I've seen IED damage before, working in movies, and this was no IED. It was a controlled demolition from _INSIDE_ the recruiting office.
Obvious suspects: New York City moneymen, Bush, the Israelis, the RNC, the KKk, Bush, freepers, Michelle Malkin, Bush, St. John McBush, the Clintons, the ghost of Vince Foster, Bush or the one Dixie chick who is a dwarf or a midget.
Or, going to the left, Cindy McKinney. Anyone check that facade for slap marks?
Posted by: docweasel at March 06, 2008 01:21 PM (WzPzd)
Posted by: nick at March 06, 2008 01:23 PM (iO6Ju)
Posted by: Mike at March 06, 2008 01:26 PM (6xL4n)
Posted by: j at March 06, 2008 01:28 PM (hB0jP)
Posted by: jfp at March 06, 2008 01:46 PM (cqQrZ)
This indicates the blast was very close to the leading edge of the door, which took the brunt of the explosion. No doubt the doorjam near the leading edge of the door is probably heavily damaged and bent almost directly back, tho the pictures I've seen are taken at the wrong angle to show this.
Posted by: mcgurk at March 06, 2008 01:52 PM (Ri74D)
There's still glass at the top of the window! It defies all the laws of gravity! Can anyone confirm Rove's whereabouts at the time of the attack?
Posted by: TBinSTL at March 06, 2008 02:00 PM (2vLkB)
Um, right. Sure. Because anti-war protesters are all clear-thinking, logical people who would never do anything stupid, pointless, or counter-productive.
No, the military recruiters must have set off the bomb themselves, in order to . . . um . . . wait a minute, I'm sure I can think of some way that bombing their own office would benefit them. Wait, I've got it! To discredit the anti-war protesters and make them look bad! Because the anti-war folks are definitely not doing that to themselves already.
Posted by: Pat at March 06, 2008 02:06 PM (c6S8U)
Posted by: chicagodudewhotrades at March 06, 2008 02:07 PM (Efj0b)
Posted by: Snooper at March 06, 2008 02:11 PM (U01dQ)
Since when has this nonsense been true? One of these "non-violent" types concluded an argument with me by taking a swing at me. He had to be held back by his friends. During that same event i saw a half-dozen of these "non-violent" types menace a fifteen year-old girl, knock her to the ground and tear up her sign.
a year ago, a fossil from the original SDS started a new version. It's kinda silly i know, but what purpose is served by creating a new "SDS" when the current "anti-war" movement has all bases well-covered, especially the campuses? The only thing this "anti-war" movement misses that those nostalgic for the SDS of olde might note, is the sort of vile domestic terrorism of the SDS offshoot, the Weather Underground.
Has anyone seen the Weather Underground documentary? You know, the one nominated for an Oscar and winner of the Palm D'Or? It's a celebration of "anti-war" violence and a lamentation that the current anti-war movement isn't earnest enough to start killing "pigs" again.
Not only are they not "generally non-violent", they are slaveringly eager for the opportunity to become violent.
Even if we dismiss that this was in any way cordinated amonst several people, individual progressives have been quite active in committing violent acts for "Social Justice".
Andrew Mickel shot a cop in the back of the head after leaving his manifesto on IndyMedia.
Matthew Marren sought out and shot an Air Force member before shooting himself and leaving behind a letter explaining that it was an act against the government.
Two years ago, "peace" protesters conducted a drive-by shooting on a Denver recruiting facility.
Honestly, that was nonsense what you wrote there.
You should check the NYC Indymedia, They're not hedging their bets on this at all:
"Bringing the war home, a hooded bicyclist bombed the Times Square Armed Forces recruiting station this morning. There has been no statement regarding this thus far, and perhaps there will not be, although in this case, perhaps the medium is the message."
They even have a theory on the linkage of this and the other two past explosions:
"The New York Times is reporting that police suspect a connection between this attack and similar blasts outside the British Consulate (May 5, 2005) and the Mexican Consulate in New York (Oct. 26, 2007). Unmentioned in the NY Times coverage: the British Consulate bombing occurred on the day of the UK's general elections, during which pro-war PM Tony Blair won a third term; the Mexican Consulate blast was on the one-year anniversary of the murder of Indymedia journalist Brad Will, a killing widely attributed to PRI-backed paramilitaries."
Posted by: albnorgrimex at March 06, 2008 02:12 PM (jCNT0)
Their claim is that an anti-military hate crime is actually the military commiting a crime against themselves, in order to frame liberals and discredit their views. They believe this attack to be anti-liberal.
Weird.
Posted by: brando at March 06, 2008 02:15 PM (qzOby)
Obviously not.
It looks like safety glass to me. Safety glass is a laminated glass made by sandwiching a thin, flexible plastic sheet between two layers of glass. When safety glass is broken, the plastic layer tends to hold the fragments together instead of letting them fly everywhere. Safety glass also shatters into smaller pieces with fewer sharp points than ordinary plate glass. The results are consistent with what is shown in the photos of the recruiting office. This picture shows another example.
Posted by: Pat at March 06, 2008 02:20 PM (c6S8U)
Generally, no. Ammo boxes aren't designed to turn into bombs if enough ammo 'cooks off' : traditional metal ones have weaknesses at the seams to allow gases to vent without really making a messy detonation, while plastic ones will just rip the rings and hinges off and rocket a plastic piece into the air. They could do some damage, but not much compared to a traditional pipebomb or even a well-designed suitcase.
That's not to say the bomber meant for it to be less-lethal. You don't need much technical knowledge to make a very basic bomb, and I expect he or she thought it would do well enough damage for their purposes and didn't care past that point.
My bet is that the case, and for that matter the target and likely the explosive and trigger device (gunpowder rather than homemade stuff), were all chosen for the symbolism.
Posted by: gattsuru at March 06, 2008 02:22 PM (X3kcN)
Posted by: Hymietown Boy at March 06, 2008 04:45 PM (9PuVT)
Posted by: Pat at March 06, 2008 05:05 PM (0suEp)
False flag attack to divert people's attention away from the collapsing economy until the rich have managed to sell all their stocks and bonds.
Posted by: Bubba at March 06, 2008 05:18 PM (nhFyu)
You know the old saying, tell it to the Marines, they've seen everything.
In the end, it doesn't much matter why they did it. It only matters that they get caught. And punished.
Posted by: Skyler at March 06, 2008 05:39 PM (xakVm)
Whatever you say, Bubba.
I do have a few questions about this theory.
1. Who, exactly, is supposed to have carried out this "false flag attack" on behalf of "the rich"?
2. Who, exactly, is "the rich"? Everyone who owns any stock or bonds?
3. Just how long does it take to sell stocks and bonds, anyway? I was under the impression that such transactions could be done in a matter of minutes. Why haven't "the rich" already sold their stocks and bonds, if that's what they want to do?
4. When was it determined that the economy is "collapsing"? I missed it.
5. How will this event "divert people's attention" from the economic collapse if the news media are reporting said collapse? Or are they in on the conspiracy too? If the news media have already promised to keep quiet about the collapse, then why is a false-flag bombing necessary?
6. If people's attention isn't distracted, exactly what will happen?
7. What have you been smoking, and where can I get some?
Posted by: Pat at March 06, 2008 06:19 PM (0suEp)
Posted by: Pat at March 06, 2008 06:21 PM (0suEp)
You seem to think someone who would plant a bomb is rational and not prone to overreaction to events real or imagined.
I suggest you revisit your premise.
And Bob: "This was an act of domestic terrorism."
I suggest you look up the definition of the term (USA PATRIOT Section 802). Without knowing the intention, you can't make that determination. It could just as easily be simple mindless vandalism for all we know now. Keep you bugbears in check.
Posted by: Overreaction Central at March 06, 2008 06:22 PM (V+jPs)
Posted by: Lifeofthemind at March 06, 2008 06:30 PM (qhNk+)
Nope. I'm sure the person who planted the bomb was irrational. And we already know about lots of irrational people who hate the military and are in the habit of using recruiting offices as the target of their hostility. I see no need to invent, out of whole cloth, a theory that this attack was carried out by a disgruntled member of the military. There is no evidence whatsoever to support such a notion.
Posted by: Pat at March 06, 2008 06:42 PM (0suEp)
Posted by: Skyler at March 06, 2008 06:45 PM (xakVm)
The comment that rapid thinks got deleted was actually posted over here. It wasn't deleted, he was simply looking for it in the wrong comment thread.
Glad to be of service. :-)
Posted by: Robin Munn at March 06, 2008 07:14 PM (vcwY0)
Posted by: Sam at March 06, 2008 10:58 PM (qetyY)
Ammo cans are widely available at sporting goods stores and surplus stores and hardware stores and...
"False flag" ?? Occam's Razor is more likely.
Posted by: Barry at March 06, 2008 11:40 PM (aJtCl)
I believe that several helpings of crow are in order for some of the commenters here.
Posted by: C-C-G at March 06, 2008 11:42 PM (43PDP)
Posted by: iraq vet at March 07, 2008 12:29 AM (hocia)
I call bull. You are not a Marine, much less an officer. Who is your S-3?
Posted by: Fen at March 07, 2008 12:56 AM (huzqX)
"Happy New Year, We Did It," declared a sign held by a man who was photographed with the placard outside the recruiting center sometime before the early-morning blast. Cops were investigating whether he was the elusive bomber.
Copies of the photo and a 32-page missive that railed against the Iraq war and was signed "David Karne" were sent to nine congressional offices, a source briefed on the probe said.
Posted by: Zach Foreman at March 07, 2008 03:53 AM (lHN8H)
The danger of jumping to conclusions is that if you jump in the wrong direction, then in the future the guilty party will be able to claim that everyone is maligning them again. We should be a bit more patient and wait for a little more evidence before condemning people and organizations for specific acts.
There's plenty of stuff to legitimately hate these violent and disruptive anti-war organizations. We don't need to look too hard for that. I'd rather that we know they've done something before piling on top or else they will be able to wave a bloody flag in our faces the next time they do something bad.
Someone has been emailing me about this and I'll copy what I told her:
I have personally seen a Marine who, through an unfortunate admin error, was not given his enlistment bonus but didn't even tell anyone. He destroyed three jet engines, wrote enough fraudulent checks to cover the amount of his bonus, and went back home to mommy and daddy until I called them and told them he was about to be declared a deserter. I had a master sergeant in my squadron get thrown in prison for having sex with his elementary school-age children because his wife was sick and he "had to do something to relieve his urges." While I've been in, I've seen a Lance Corporal on my base steal an attack aircraft and fly it around southern California for a few hours (his name was LCpl Foot, you can look that up, and I was the duty officer that day). I've had drug dealers and gang members in my section. I've had a Marine threaten to kill himself and the commanding officer so he wouldn't have to go to Iraq (sadly, he succeeded). The commanding officer of another logistics squadron was murdered by a disgruntled Marine in Camp Pendleton back in 87 or so. Around the same time, a Marine went crazy and started shooting people on the shooting range.
In the news, an army soldier has just in this recent war rolled a grenade into the tent of his officers. Do I need to continue? Shall we also go into Arthur and Michael Walker, Lonetree and other traitors and spies? I think it's fascinating that so many people here think that it's virtually impossible that someone in the military could be involved. It's not inconceivable that one of those kooks went through the "busiest" recruiting station in the country.
There are plenty of kooks in the military. Yes, there are likely more who are not in the military, but my point is that before jumping to conclusions it's best to be patient and learn a bit more about who the guilty bastards are.
Posted by: Skyler at March 07, 2008 05:55 AM (xakVm)
Posted by: Al in St. Lou at March 07, 2008 08:22 AM (l5yFx)
No, because you are trying to prove a point that was never in question. Of course there are some bad and crazy people in the military. No one in this thread has claimed otherwise.
But when you hear hoofbeats, you should assume it's horses, not zebras. This was an attack on a military recruiting office, something we've seen many times in the past. Such attacks are invariably carried out by anti-war activists. I'm not aware of a single instance in which a member of the military was responsible. That doesn't mean that it will never happen -- but your insistence that the two scenarios are equally likely is simply not supported by history.
An initial assumption that anti-war activists were responsible was not "jumping to a conclusion". It was a perfectly reasonable working hypothesis, and one that has apparently been borne out by the evidence.
Posted by: Pat at March 07, 2008 08:22 AM (0suEp)
Posted by: chris lee at March 07, 2008 10:53 AM (6x0Nb)
Posted by: Techie at March 07, 2008 11:10 AM (AV8Z6)
Posted by: chris lee at March 07, 2008 12:45 PM (6x0Nb)
Posted by: Nathan White at March 07, 2008 01:24 PM (EG0er)
revolution.
all you "wackos" keep driving your suv's, keep sheltering your children from the rest of the world, and most importantly shop shop shop.
Posted by: Nathan White at March 07, 2008 01:26 PM (EG0er)
Posted by: chris lee at March 07, 2008 01:33 PM (6x0Nb)
Posted by: chris lee at March 07, 2008 01:46 PM (6x0Nb)
Posted by: Techie at March 07, 2008 04:37 PM (AV8Z6)
Posted by: chris lee at March 07, 2008 04:53 PM (6x0Nb)
My 2 cents on this bombing is that it's emblematic and also a crime.
Posted by: brando at March 07, 2008 05:03 PM (rDQC9)
Posted by: chris lee at March 07, 2008 05:13 PM (6x0Nb)
My only question is this. Why would you assume that it is/was a service member that did this, when there are many more likely candidates? Calling the service into question is not something I know a lot of service members to do.
Chris, you are an idiot. But I will die making sure you can continue to be an idiot.
Posted by: Matt at March 07, 2008 06:10 PM (9V6Vj)
Posted by: C-C-G at March 07, 2008 06:30 PM (lUnc9)
Posted by: Matt at March 07, 2008 06:39 PM (9V6Vj)
Posted by: chris lee at March 07, 2008 09:35 PM (qTV/d)
Posted by: chris lee at March 07, 2008 09:53 PM (qTV/d)
Posted by: Matt at March 07, 2008 10:09 PM (9V6Vj)
SEE" they see what they BELIEVE...
Posted by: chris lee at March 07, 2008 11:20 PM (qTV/d)
Posted by: chris lee at March 07, 2008 11:24 PM (qTV/d)
You just curl up in your little fantasy world if you want. The yellow submarine will be by to pick you up pretty soon.
The rest of us will do just fine without you.
Posted by: C-C-G at March 07, 2008 11:32 PM (43PDP)
Ok, how about you man up and say what you mean instead of tippy toeing around it.
If you mean phony about who I am, then you sir are dead wrong. Feel free to join me on SOFNET. Or if you do not want to get hammered by the members there, feel free to email me at bear23991@yahoo.com where I will send you a copy of my SRB edited for OPSEC and you can go ahead and finish chewing on that foot you stuck in your mouth.
Posted by: Matt at March 07, 2008 11:33 PM (9V6Vj)
Posted by: chris lee at March 08, 2008 05:07 AM (qTV/d)
Posted by: Matt at March 08, 2008 06:46 PM (9V6Vj)
Posted by: LindaSoG at March 09, 2008 08:51 AM (GBBmd)
Really, chris? I ask because you were constructively engaged here, and your reaction was to try a couple of dodges and, upon them failing, to disappear. And yet now you claim that you ALWAYS have found bitchy name calling and no give and take. Perhaps that's because give and take requires that both parties have something to give and you don't. Remember this: the common denominator of all your dysfunctional relationships is you.
Posted by: Pablo at March 09, 2008 09:07 AM (yTndK)
Posted by: chris lee at March 09, 2008 11:01 AM (qTV/d)
Posted by: Pablo at March 09, 2008 11:15 AM (yTndK)
Is that the derisive tone of contemporary liberal opinion I see there, chris? I think it's missing a "RACIST!!1!one!!" and maybe a "HOMOPHOBE!!eleven!!"
Oh, and Halliburton.
Posted by: Pablo at March 09, 2008 11:19 AM (yTndK)
In simpler terms. If one person calls you an idiot, they may be an idiot, if twenty people call you an idiot, then it is time to take a long hard look at yourself.
Matt, kicking the darkness till it bleeds light.
Posted by: Matt at March 09, 2008 12:25 PM (9V6Vj)
Therefore, because we haven't been screaming those things, Chris thinks we haven't been engaging him substantively.
Posted by: C-C-G at March 09, 2008 12:41 PM (XoKp7)
That's one more concept to add to the list.
I really liked a few threads back when Chris claimed that his insane arguments were not based on flawed concepts, but because he writes his ideas in a hurry, and on his friend's faulty computer.
Faulty Computer, huh? Well then, by all means, go bananas.
Posted by: brando at March 09, 2008 01:04 PM (rDQC9)
I have seen a few (be it very few) level headed leftists, but I tend to think of them as Conservatives in denial.
But the left has never been good at faulting themselves for their shortcomings. It is human to want to blame others for your faults. But one of the key resources in the learning process is knowing when to say, "Oh I am sorry, I was wrong."
Then saying. "But now I know I was wrong, and I will do my best to correct that failing."
Posted by: Matt at March 09, 2008 02:44 PM (9V6Vj)
Posted by: chris lee at March 09, 2008 07:45 PM (qTV/d)
Would you be willing to send the US Armed Forces to that "state" to stamp out terrorists?
Oh, and which side in the Revolutionary War beheaded innocent journalists after capture? How about the Civil War?
Posted by: C-C-G at March 09, 2008 08:30 PM (XoKp7)
Posted by: Matt at March 09, 2008 09:07 PM (9V6Vj)
Posted by: chris lee at March 09, 2008 09:07 PM (qTV/d)
Which is what I'd call a dodge. And chris wonders why people get derisive with him. There you have it.
Posted by: Pablo at March 09, 2008 09:34 PM (yTndK)
You're digging yourself ever deeper, and forgetting the first rule of debate: when you find yourself in a hole, stop digging.
Posted by: C-C-G at March 09, 2008 09:35 PM (XoKp7)
No bright box. The point is, in one type of violence, innocent death is avoided, and not reason it is done, the other type it is the desired effect.
Yes civilians die during war, it is a bad thing, but sometimes it can not be avoided, but we do try to avoid it. Terrorists attempt to cause as many civilian deaths as they can. Big difference buddy.
Posted by: Matt at March 09, 2008 09:43 PM (9V6Vj)
Which side in the Revolutionary War beheaded innocent journalists, Chris? Which side in the Civil War did?
Posted by: C-C-G at March 09, 2008 09:49 PM (XoKp7)
Posted by: chris lee at March 10, 2008 04:50 AM (qTV/d)
Posted by: C-C-G at March 10, 2008 08:01 AM (XoKp7)
Posted by: chris lee at March 10, 2008 08:37 AM (6x0Nb)
Posted by: chris lee at March 10, 2008 09:01 AM (6x0Nb)
I presume you graduated from high school, so give me an article reference as you would if you were putting it in the bibliography of a paper.
Posted by: C-C-G at March 10, 2008 08:06 PM (XoKp7)
Yossarian: That's some catch that Cath-22.
Doc Daneeka: It's the best there is.
Sweet dreams everyone
Posted by: Chris lee at March 10, 2008 08:19 PM (qTV/d)
We have some lovely parting gifts for you. Unfortunately, a good reputation is not among them.
Oh, and have a nice day.
Posted by: C-C-G at March 10, 2008 09:19 PM (XoKp7)
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