Thread: New guy
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Old 22-06-2004, 01:03 AM
David Moffitt
 
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Default New guy


"Strabo" wrote in message
...
On Mon, 21 Jun 2004 06:35:23 -0700, The Independent
wrote:



Santa Cruz Mike wrote:

On Sun, 20 Jun 2004 21:26:57 GMT, Alan Connor wrote:

On Sun, 20 Jun 2004 00:44:29 -0700, The Independent

wrote:
snipped


AC


--
"The greatest fine art of the future will be the making of a
comfortable living from a small piece of land." -Abraham Lincoln

Intereting observations Alan.. in Santa Cruz county... old pictures
from early 1900s show a county and city in particular.. with almost no
trees... now trees everywhere...

MIke


Mike there is only about 7% of all old growth forests left in the United
States. Most of the North west was logged off in between 1910 and
1930.

Even in old growth timber, you cannot hide indefinitely. There was an
Ultra Light aircraft that was supposed to be flying over the south of
Union Mills Oregon that didn't come back. Nobody had a clue were it
went down. With in two years it was found on the slopes of Mt. Hood in
Old Growth Timber, by hunters.

My point is ANAL (anagram for Alan) Connor is not hiding in the forest.
It just cannot be done in 21st century America.


Tell it to Eric Rudolph (in the mountains of North Carolina)
and hundreds of others that have skillfully eluded the
vengeful.


%%%% Eric Rudolph had his camp 200 yards behind a strip mall in Murphy N.C.
He was fed by the dumpsters and people sympthetic to his plight.
When captured his camp was well stocked with groceries. He had been seen
many times in the town of Murphy N.C. but because of his beard he was not
recognised. Doesn't sound like living in the wildwood flowers to me!!

"I might've seen him a hundred times. I wouldn't know him from Adam," says
Charles Franklin, a life-long valley resident mowing a park near Rudolph's
camp on Fires Creek.



The Independent of Clackamas County, Oregon

"The great questions of the day will not be settled by means of
speeches and majority decisions ... but by iron and blood."

(Otto Von Bismarck, Speech, Sept. 30, 1862.)