Capri

December 19, 2007

Sick of Internet Trolls Whining about ‘Censorship’

Filed under: 2946 — Miss Capri @ 6:38 pm
On the news today, there was a story about hate speech made against Muslims on the Western Standard web site http://www.westernstandard.ca but the Human Rights commission here isn’t doing anything about it because they claim the internet is federally regulated, and this was a site in a western Canadian city. Bull! If they won’t do anything over such a piddly technicality and someone feels threatened because some stupid hater wants them to die – and this hater living in the same city as them – what good is this human rights organization at all? The net isn’t federally regulated, it isn’t regulated at all, really. Go federal, and you’ll surely get told that this is a municipal problem, take it up with the site owner. Or worse, you might be told to go fly a kite and get over it, because as the owner sees fit to leave the hate speech up on their site, it’s their site, and they have a right to put whatever they want on it regardless of who feels threatened or gets offended, no matter how egregious the hate blither is.
 
Every time somebody behaves badly and shoots off their disgusting mouth, saying things that are incredibly stupid and hateful, scores of people rally to defend these blockheads to the hilt, but when haters say anything against a religious group or race, we are told they must be allowed to exercise their “right to free speech” bull shart! It’s not free speech any more, it’s ABUSE of the freedom of speech! And it’s way past high time people yanked these sorry, hateful trolls off the internet altogether or at the very least, make them take the burning heat for their foul mouthed, disgusting attitudes. Only idiot trolls whine so much about “censorship” and “You’re taking away my right to free speech! Waaaaaahhh!” because it’s a way they know they can bully people into knuckling under and letting them get away with wishing Muslims would die or wishing Jews, Christians, etc. would die, and calling people “scum” just because they are of a different religion or ethnicity from them.
 
It’s time those with any clout on the net got some guts, to do something about these haters and tell them in no uncertain terms to shut the flying hecx up!

December 13, 2007

Old Virus Hoax Learns New Trick – the Merry Christmas Virus Warning Hoax 2007 Version

Filed under: 2946 — Miss Capri @ 2:23 pm

HOAX!
http://www.snopes.com/computer/virus/invitation.asp

Just because a chain letter claims Snopes says it's real and provides a link,
doesn't make it so…

The 2007 "Don't Open Merry Christmas" virus chain email is a hoax that gives the
usual bogus "This is the worst virus ever, it will burn your hard drive!" and
other such hysterical claims. But in order to try looking credible so people
will pass it along without actually bothering to look it up, the chain also
provides a link to a three-year-old Snopes page about a virus from 2004. The
deal is that most people will just pass on the chain without actually checking
out the Snopes info. And no, it is not better getting any chain email 25 times
than opening a Merry Christmas message.

Outdated 2004 virus info:
http://www.snopes.com/computer/virus/zafi.asp

Snopes page on the current Merry Christmas virus warning hoax and variations of:
http://www.snopes.com/computer/virus/invitation.asp

December 6, 2007

Facebook News

Filed under: 2946 — Miss Capri @ 8:37 am

Keeping up with news about Facebook and Myspace can be a pretty interesting
read.

Facebook

The Facebook Blog:
http://blog.facebook.com

Facebook blog post apologizing for the big woops they made with the beacon
program:
http://blog.facebook.com/blog.php?post=7584397130

Inside Facebook
http://www.insidefacebook.com

Site that contains a link to the privacy preference allowing users to opt out of
beacons:

Facebook adds universal opt-out to Beacon; this time, the PR comes …
By Justin Smith
This morning, in response to the complaints from privacy advocates that
have been well-documented in recent weeks, Facebook added a Beacon
preference to allow users to universally opt-out of Beacon. Now, if
users globally opt-out, …
http://www.insidefacebook.com/2007/12/05/facebook-adds-universal-opt-out-to-beacon-this-time-the-pr-comes-from-zuckerberg/

All Facebook
http://www.allfacebook.com

Post on allfacebook:
Facebook Listens to the Blogosphere
By Nick O'Neill
Last night I briefly ranted about Facebook not responding to the noise.
Initially, they may have perceived it as only being chatter among
bloggers. As soon as I heard that brands were beginning to become
hesitant about advertising on …
http://www.allfacebook.com/2007/12/facebook-listens-to-the-blogosphere/

Facebook and Relationships:

If it's Facebook, it's love
Reuters – USA
By Joanne Kenen With profiles on the Facebook social networking site almost
de rigueur on college campuses, students can define their relationship
status …
http://features.us.reuters.com/techlife/news/A582F772-A2BF-11DC-BE5C-A0488271.html

More over the Facebook Beacon Frackus

Facebook's foolish foes [Media]
By Owen Thomas
I remember, distinctly, when former Business 2.0 editor Josh Quittner's
love affair with Facebook began this spring. He couldn't stop talking
about it, and I could hardly avoid hearing about it,… [[ This is a
content summary only. …
http://valleywag.com/tech/media/facebooks-foolish-foes-330424.php

November 16, 2007

Spammers Are Football Fans Now?

Filed under: 2946 — Miss Capri @ 1:30 am

Well, it looks as if spammers are trying to get football fans to click on their
cruddy malware sites.

Via Mailwasher I was able to look and laugh at the message w/o any harm to my
system, and then blacklist the spammer.

Return-path: YourJersey@marriagesocialist.com

-MarriageSocialist? – I'm not looking to get married, and am not a socialist or
interested in marrying one.

From: FootballJersey FootballJersey@tfqxs.marriagesocialist.com
Subject: Who is your favourite Football team

-None – as well as none of your business…

Visit-us here, if you cannot view the image below.

-Nope, chude, not interested in your malware… Site deleted.

Blacklisted.

November 4, 2007

ROTFLMHO!

Filed under: 2946 — Miss Capri @ 2:25 am

I took a quiz on Facebook, "What epoch hero are you?"

And if you know me and are familiar with my online handles and rp/creative
writing characters, this might give you a chuckle as well. My result:

Indiana Jones (Raiders of the Lost Ark)
Clever and highly intelligent, you are the paradox of the typical classroom
sort. You represent Harrison Ford as Dr. Jones, the most famous adventurer in
American cinematic history. Your quick wit, disarming charm, and unexpected
bravery are easily hidden in your daily rabble and revealed in the quest for the
incredible.

"Indy" of all people! Lol! Absolute coolness, but lololol!

November 2, 2007

Spam School, So To Speak – ROFLOL!!

Filed under: 2946 — Miss Capri @ 2:22 am

Here's an article sassing back at spammers. It isn't written by me, so it's
hilarious IMO. It's also worth sharing because like anything else I don't write
but do share, it is not a chain letter forward. :)

Originally found at:
http://www.columbusdispatch.com/live/content/life/stories/2007/11/01/1A_BLUN01.ART_ART_11-01-07_D1_M08AL6T.html?sid=101

SO TO SPEAK
Listen up, spammers: Your e-mail is stale
Thursday, November 1, 2007 4:06 AM
By JOE BLUNDO

Welcome to the School for Spammers.

Through the years, I've noticed that e-mail spam, while impressive in volume,
keeps getting worse in quality. Even the Nigerian fraud letters no longer ring
with the false sincerity they once did.

So I've decided to offer a remedial course for spammers who might be wondering
why no one orders their fake Rolexes or falls for their bogus European Lottery
messages.

Here are answers to your elementary questions, spammers:

• Is e-mail in Russian an effective way to communicate with an English-speaking
audience?

No — or, because you seem stubbornly wedded to the language, nyet.

Judging from my e-mail in-box, which resembles the Moscow phone book on any
given morning, you have not quite caught on to the fact that Americans don't use
the Cyrillic alphabet. You might as well be writing in Chinese. Oh, wait, you're
already doing that, too.

So here's tip No. 1: If you want to improve your communication skills, start by
writing in a language that your audience understands. Details matter, people.

• I get poor response to my hoax e-mail informing people they've won $75 million
in an obscure foreign lottery. Should I increase the phony prize money to $100
million?

No, because the next crook will falsely award $150 million and then you'll have
to up your phony jackpot to $200 million. Things could get out of control.

You might have better luck telling people that, for the low price of 49 cents,
you will never e-mail them about a fake lottery prize again.

• If I write "You will love this, Shaun" in the subject line, will you love it?

No. Especially if my name isn't Shaun.

• How effective is bad grammar in making my e-mail more believable?

It definitely beats those spam messages that consist of random numbers and
symbols. Other than that, I don't see it as a winning strategy.

If I'm literate enough to read e-mail, I'm probably literate enough to know that
great stock-market tips rarely come from people who write, "You're next
oppurtunity are now!"

Also, remember that it's difficult to simultaneously defraud people and amuse
them.

That's why this kind of message might not prove convincing: "Notice of Closing
Your Account: To protect your private, we have locked Account # 76245. Please to
reply us urgent."

• When trying to evade spam filters, is it better to write "p*nis" or "p#nis"?

You could spell it "p*#@$" and most guys would get your drift — because it is
the official body part of the spam world. In other words, they're onto you.

If you decide to forge ahead anyway, watch your syntax. You might imagine that a
subject line reading "We're here for your p*nis" conveys caring and concern
about a man's well-being. But it could also be interpreted as a threat of
confiscation.

Guys are generally put off by that idea.

• Would you like to buy some herbal V1agr@ for only 99 cents a bottle?

Nyet.

Joe Blundo is a Dispatch columnist.

jblundo@dispatch.com

October 25, 2007

ConsumerFreedom Memo To Congress: The Physicians Committee Isn’t One

Filed under: 2946 — Miss Capri @ 11:57 am

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Sent: Thursday, October 25, 2007 9:49 AM
Subject: ConsumerFreedom Memo To Congress: The Physicians Committee Isn’t One
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Animal Rights October 25, 2007
 
 
Memo To Congress: The Physicians Committee Isn’t One

The Physicians Committee Isn't One

Cartoons


Copyright © 2007 Center for Consumer Freedom. All Rights Reserved.
P.O. Box 34557 | Washington, DC 20043 | Tel: 202-463-7112 | info@consumerfreedom.com
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October 11, 2007

Missing Kid Hoaxes Started by the Kids Themselves

Filed under: 2946 — Miss Capri @ 12:09 pm

Missing Nanaimo Teen Email is a Big Hoax

http://www.canada.com/vancouverisland/nanaimo/story.html?id=4f7749de-8e18-487b-948e-8b30bf42b78a

Furthermore, it's also a rip-off of the Evan Trembley hoax.

http://www.breakthechain.org/exclusives/evantrembley.html which was started as a
sick joke on Myspace by the real and not missing Evan Trembley himself.

It borrows content from the Ashley Flores hoax
http://www.breakthechain.org/exclusives/ashleyflores.html
which was started by one of the real and not missing Ashley's friends on Myspace
as a sick joke, and borrows heavily from the Penny Brown hoax
http://www.breakthechain.org/exclusives/pennybrown.html
which is a mutation of the Kelsey Brook Jones chain, which was true for the two
hours that kelsey was thought missing. Kelsey was found playing, and unharmed
two hours after her mother's initial panic.
http://www.breakthechain.org/exclusives/kelsey.html

http://www.breakthechain.org/missing.html

People who start hoaxes like that should be penalized, because they are getting
very sick kicks at others' expense!
It's manipulative, attention-seeking behavior on a level that is so low and
disgusting because people are getting jerked around just so a few childish teens
can get their haw-haws.

Ignorance or lack of forethought as no excuse.

Playing pranks on your friends in a social network like Myspace is bad enough,
but when it's in the form of a chain letter, it's not going to stay just among
the friends of the hoaxter. This is because your circle of friends also has
their own circles of friends, which in turn, have their own circle of friends,
so, you start a hoax about yourself as missing or dying or whatever, and your
friends might think it's funny, but somebody else who is listed as one of their
friends but not listed as your friend, looks at this friend's profile and
bulletins, and this stranger looking at your friend's profile, sees your
missing/dying hoax and assumes it's for real, and compulsively passes it along
to their friends, who pass it on to theirs.

So, yet more reasons chain letters really stink, and why starting a hoax might
get you the controll over the masses and the attention you desire, but it could
also land you and those associated with you in a pile of inconvenience if not
trouble.

I'm very sorry for anyone these hoaxes have hurt, from those who were taken in
by them, (hopefully they'll know better than pass on chain email from now on) to
those who are friends of or related to the hoaxter and suffering fallout because
of the hoax.

But as for the hoaxters themselves, I wish they would get a lot more than just a
slap on the wrist for their self-serving, inconsiderate and just plain sick
actions.

Evan Trembley was exceedingly stupid to start a hoax about himself, as was the
friend of Ashley Flores. The guy who mooched off the Trembley hoax and made it
about himself as a missing kid in Nanaimo is just as guilty. Shame on them!

Full article about the Nanaimo prank:

http://www.canada.com/vancouverisland/nanaimo/story.html?id=4f7749de-8e18-487b-948e-8b30bf42b78a

Missing Nanaimo Teen Email is a Big Hoax

Nanaimo Daily News Missing teen e-mail is a big hoax
Plea urging people to look out for Nanaimo boy is a prank that first began in
Texas
Derek Spalding , Daily News
Published: Thursday, October 11, 2007
Nanaimo RCMP say its unfortunate that someone is circulating a fake missing
person notice through e-mail accounts.

Thousands of Harbour City residents have recently received a message in their
inbox about a missing teenager from Nanaimo, but the chain mail is nothing but a
hoax. The message asks recipients to please "pass this to everyone in your
address book" in hopes that someone will have seen 15-year-old Evan Trembley.
After a simple Internet search, however, the real story behind the prank is
revealed.

Evan Trembley of Wichita, Falls, Tex, created a fake Amber Alert with himself as
the missing person. He then sent it out to his friends on MySpace.com. Then a
few people who didn't know it was a joke, sent the e-mail out to everyone on
their list. Police exposed Trembley who said he thought his "friends would
recognize it, get a laugh out of it" and delete it, he told reporters in
Wichita.

****But then people who weren't his friends took it seriously and continued to
e-mail all their friends. Trembley and his mother Tammy said they do not expect
any criminal charges.

It appears someone in Nanaimo decided to localize Trembley's prank and
distributed it throughout the city. Using the same photo and similar
information, Trembley now appears to be a missing Nanaimo boy. This week, the
e-mail reached Robin Dutton, owner of Arrowsmith Bikes, who then forwarded it to
more than 300 people on his mailing list.

"I just thought, if somebody's missing, it doesn't take a whole lot for me to
send it out to everyone in my address book," he said before expressing his
disappointment in the hoax. "I just think it's really unfortunate. I'd like to
think that people have a bit more to do rather than waste people's time."

DSpalding@nanaimodailynews.com

250-729-4231

October 10, 2007

ConsumerFreedom Obesity Bandwagon Careening Toward Economic Crisis?

Filed under: 2946 — Miss Capri @ 1:56 pm

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From: Center for Consumer Freedom
Sent: Wednesday, October 10, 2007 9:06 AM
Subject: ConsumerFreedom Obesity Bandwagon Careening Toward Economic Crisis?
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Big Fat Lies October 10, 2007
 
 
Obesity Bandwagon Careening Toward Economic Crisis?

Obesity Bandwagon Careening Toward Economic Crisis?

America is caught in the middle of an “informational cascade” where subsequent scientists build new premises on the claims of previous researchers. If the first scientists in the line of research got it right, then … well, there’s nothing really to discuss. But if the initial findings were flawed, every theory built on that conclusion is also kaput. Welcome to obesity research.

Yesterday, New York Times science reporter John Tierney outlined this “cascade” phenomenon as it relates to “expert” diet recommendations: 

The notion that fatty foods shorten your life began as a hypothesis based on dubious assumptions and data; when scientists tried to confirm it they failed repeatedly. The evidence against Häagen-Dazs was nothing like the evidence against Marlboros.

Tierney sought out “the most rigorous meta-analysis of the clinical trials of low-fat diets” and discovered that it found no significant impact on mortality. More recent research has also broken away from the group-think. A study in the prestigious Lancet medical journal found that people with low BMIs, not the overweight or obese, had the highest risk of heart disease and early death. But the media didn’t widely cover these findings that contradicted the party line.

Instead, the report covered by multiple news outlets found that Cuba’s economic downturn had led to a substantial drop in average calories eaten (aka “famine”) and a decrease in obesity rates (aka “starvation”). The researchers recommend that the U.S. look to Cuba’s “successful” experience as a dietary standard. (Never mind that premature death rates among the elderly actually inched upward and there was an epidemic of degenerative nerve damage as a result of widespread malnutrition.) 

These reduced-fat, low-salt, no-food recommendations — besides being unjustified — may well have unintended consequences as severe as those observed in the Cuba study. If Americans hope to avoid the lemmings’ fate, they should tune out the latest nutrition survey and fad diets. Rather, heed the advice of Dr. Edward H. Ahrens Jr., a distinguished researcher who spoke out against the erroneous 1970s Congressional report that advised Americans to eat less fat:

This is a matter … of such enormous social, economic and medical importance that it must be evaluated with our eyes completely open. Thus I would hate to see this issue settled by anything that smacks of a Gallup poll.

Breaking News

Here’s a sampling of other stories that have caught our interest today. To see a one-week archive of these items, click here.

Past Headlines

  ObesityMyths.com


Copyright © 2007 Center for Consumer Freedom. All Rights Reserved.
P.O. Box 34557 | Washington, DC 20043 | Tel: 202-463-7112 | info@consumerfreedom.com
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October 9, 2007

Stupid Fanatical Food Cops: Not Worth Their Weight In Salt

Filed under: 2946 — Miss Capri @ 12:28 pm
From: Center for Consumer Freedom
Sent: Tuesday, October 09, 2007 11:34 AM
Subject: ConsumerFreedom Food Cops: Not Worth Their Weight In Salt
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Food Police October 9, 2007
 
 
Food Cops: Not Worth Their Weight In Salt

Not Worth Their Weight In Salt

Food-police activists have compared trans fats to arsenic, cupcakes to contraband, and—most recently—salt to the plague. Over the weekend, the Chicago Tribune quoted one nutrition “expert” who likened the effects of salt to “AIDS, malaria, terrorism, obesity, high cholesterol and tobacco.” This epidemic of hyperbole is nothing new. Over the past decade, nutrition zealots at the Center for Science in the Public Interest have repeatedly petitioned the FDA to revoke salt’s “generally recognized as safe” status and treat it as a food additive for the purposes of regulation, which would allow strict limits on the salt content of processed foods.

For many activists spreading these food fears, the facts seem largely irrelevant. There’s no scientific consensus on the issue, let alone concrete evidence of a universal relationship between salt intake and hypertension. In fact, only a small minority of people—tagged as “salt-sensitive”—respond to changes in dietary sodium. For the rest of us, studies have shown that the consequences of too little salt can be deadly. 

Common sense dictates that we can’t simply cut salt out of our diets. For thousands of years people have used it for currency, medicine, and preservation of food. Unlike the self-important food cops, salt is truly essential for life itself.

Breaking News

Here’s a sampling of other stories that have caught our interest today. To see a one-week archive of these items, click here.

Past Headlines

  ObesityMyths.com


Copyright © 2007 Center for Consumer Freedom. All Rights Reserved.
P.O. Box 34557 | Washington, DC 20043 | Tel: 202-463-7112 | info@consumerfreedom.com
You’re receiving this Email because you are subscribed to the Center for Consumer Freedom’s daily news list. If you want to change your email preferences, click here. If you want to be removed from our news list, click here. Or you can send a brief response to: info@consumerfreedom.com.


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October 7, 2007

Urban Legends Reference Pages Update #331

Filed under: 2946 — Miss Capri @ 10:29 am
From: update@snopes.com
Sent: Saturday, October 06, 2007 8:21 PM
Subject: CU24: Urban Legends Reference Pages Update #331
 
snopes.com  
 
 
Urban Legends Reference Pages:
Update #331

Hello again from snopes.com, where we shed light on the wild tales you’ve heard! This e-mail gives information about new articles recently added to the Urban Legends Reference Pages and provides pointers to older pieces about rumors and hoaxes still wandering into everyone’s inboxes. Our last update mailing was September 29, 2007.

If after this update you are left wondering about something newly arrived in your inbox, our search engine stands ready to assist you. Bookmark that URL — it’s a keeper!

An RSS feed for our What’s New page is available at the following URL:
http://www.snopes.com/info/whatsnew.xml

And now to the legends, the mayhem, and the misinformation!


New Articles

  • Jamba Juice freebie!

  • E-mail purports to describe an attempted abduction rape in Vacaville, California.

  • Open letter to the Atlanta NAACP protests the chapter president’s support of Michael Vick.

  • Update: Another Internet-circulated appeal about abandoned puppies needing adoption, these ones Labrador mix.

  • More monetary mayhem: E-mail warns that a proposed redesign of the Lincoln Cent will omit the motto “In God We Trust.”

  • Photographs show a bear rescued from the ledge of a bridge.

  • Yohana Ravelo: missing child or Internet hoax?

  • E-mail decries the Red Cross for providing supplies to marchers in Jena, Louisiana.

Worth a Second Look

  • A lawyer demonstrating the safety of windows in a skyscraper crashed through a pane and plunged to his death.

Still Haunting the Inbox

  • 15-year-old Evan Trembley of Wichita Falls, Texas, isn’t missing – it’s a hoax.

  • Dialing #77 or *677 is not a surefire way of reaching the local highway patrol — the service is in place in some regions, but not in others. If in need of assistance, dial 911 instead for the sure thing.

  • We look at two eraser sponge rumors, that they contain formaldehyde or have caused chemical burns when rubbed on skin.

  • While it’s true a consortium of wireless providers is planning to create a 411 (directory assistance) service for cell phone numbers, you need not register your cell phone with the national “Do Not Call” directory to prevent your number from being provided to telemarketers.

  • The missing child alert about 13-year-old Ashley Flores of Philadelphia is a hoax.

  • Petition advocates buying/not buying gasoline from Citgo. And no, Citgo did not change its name to Petro Express.

  • No, the new dollar coin doesn’t omit “In God We Trust” – that phrase has been stamped into its edge.

  • The entreaty to aid 7-year-old Amy Bruce who is dying of lung cancer and a brain tumor by forwarding an email and a sappy poem titled “Slow Dance” is a hoax.

  • E-mail compares George W. Bush’s eco-friendly ranch with Al Gore’s energy-expending mansion.

  • E-mailed petition advocates denying social services to immigrants.

  • Will pressing #-9-0 on your telephone allow scammers to make long-distance calls and charge them to your phone bill?

  • No, Johns Hopkins Hospital has not issued a “cancer update” detailing how cancer spreads and recommending methods for treating the disease.

  • Is Illinois Senator Barack Obama “ideologically Muslim”?

  • 809 area code scam: Unsuspecting phone customers have been gulled by con artists into placing calls to area codes in the Caribbean that result in hefty charges.

  • While the FDA health advisory regarding drugs containing PPA (phenylpropanolamine) is the real thing, it’s outdated.

  • While actor Lee Marvin did fight in the Pacific theater during World War II, earned a Purple Heart, and is buried in Arlington National Cemetery, he and Bob Keeshan (TV’s “Captain Kangaroo,”) did not fight together in the battle for Iwo Jima.

  • There was no letter to Starbucks from coffee-seeking G.I.s serving in Iraq, so no response from the coffee retailer saying it didn’t support the war and anyone in it. As for Oscar Mayer refusing troops free hot dogs, the 2004 Starbucks e-mail was altered in 2007 to aim it at the blameless hot dog maker.

  • No, Jay Leno did not write the “Hits the Nail on the Head” essay — it was Craig R. Smith.

  • There’s no abductor prowling the Target parking lot in Wheaton, Illinois, who is using an old lady who appears to be in distress to lure victims.

  • E-mail claims Jane Fonda betrayed U.S. POWs during the Vietnam War.

  • During the 1987 Iran-Contra hearings, Oliver North did decry that a certain terrorist was “the most evil person alive” and that “an assassin team [should] be formed to eliminate him and his men from the face of the earth,” but he wasn’t talking about Osama bin Laden.

  • Images do show the USS New York, which is being built with steel from the Twin Towers.

  • No, robbers are not luring female victims into sniffing ether-laced perfume in parking lots.

  • While it is true that in 2004 a man in India was electrocuted when trying to use his cell phone as it recharged, it is safe to use your cell phone while it is charging.

  • Hillary Clinton is the subject of many e-mailed items, and our “Clintons” section contains write-ups about a number of them.

  • No, Bill Gates is not sharing his fortune with everyone who forwards a specific e-mail on his behalf. This tired leg-pull continues to romp through everyone’s inbox, the most widespread incarnation swearing “This took two pages of the Tuesday USA Today!”

  • Virus announcement and virus hoax e-mails are afoot! We try to keep current on them and do our best to point readers to authoritative links confirming or debunking them.

Fraud Afoot

  • Seems like everyone has become the recipient of mysterious e-mails promising untold wealth if only one helps a wealthy foreigner quietly move millions of dollars out of his country. The venerable Nigerian Scam has discovered the goldmine that is the Internet. Beware — there’s still no such thing as “something for nothing,” and the contents of your bank account will end up with these wily foreigners if you fall in with this.

  • Likewise, look out for mailings announcing you’ve won a foreign lottery you don’t recall entering.

  • Or that because you share the surname of a wealthy person who died without leaving a will you’re in line for a windfall inheritance.

  • And be especially wary if, while trying to sell or rent anything online (car, boat, horse, motorcycle, painting, apartment, you name it) you’re approached by a prospective buyer/renter who wants to pay with a cashier check made out for an amount in excess of the agreed-upon price and who asks the balance be sent to a third party.

  • Aspiring work-at-homers promised big bucks for acting as intermediaries for international transactions wherein they cash checks for other parties or reship goods to them have been defrauded by con artists. Don’t you be next.

  • If someone telephones to announce you can have a $200 Wal-Mart shopping spree or $200 in gasoline coupons in return for a $3.49 processing charge to be debited directly from your bank account, hang up. You’re being set up via the promise of “something for almost nothing” into authorizing a swindler to help himself to the contents of your bank account.

  • If someone calls to announce you’ve failed to appear for jury duty and will be arrested, do not give the caller your personal and financial information in an effort to prove he’s sending the gendarmes after the wrong guy. You’re being tricked into giving up this information to an identity thief.

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    October 6, 2007

    Shoddy Writing

    Filed under: 2946 — Miss Capri @ 12:31 pm

    Every so often a story write-up comes along that has such a glaring error in
    judgement and phrasing; an error so bad that it begs for a re-write.

    Such was the case of an article whose summary showed up in my Google alert
    emails for two days in a row.


    Beauty Queen Takes on Predators, Spammers

    It'sa sign of the times: The current Miss America **doesn't want to
    save the world from hunger or work for world peace.** No, she wants to
    help keep the kids safe on the Internet. Lauren Nelson, 20, will help
    launch the new Miss America …

    http://www.darkreading.com/document.asp?doc_id=135495 appears to be the original
    offending site and http://www.first.org/newsroom/globalsecurity/157241.html has
    a link to that site, -plus the quote above.

    Just because Miss America may not have actually listed world hunger and world
    peace in her speech, or maybe didn't donate to these causes does NOT mean she
    "does not want to" end world hunger or help achieve world peace!

    One can put their efforts into fighting spam and keeping the net more
    kid-friendly while still wanting to end world hunger and work to achieve world
    peace!

    This article could've been far better written if it simply stated that Lauren
    Nelson added a unique cause to those of all the collective Miss Americas, and
    then went on with the rest of the article, explaining her current project and
    why.

    But stating that Lauren Nelson "doesn't want to save the world from hunger or
    work for world peace" judges her as just that – "not wanting" to end world
    hunger or work for world peace. It gives the impression that she must be somehow
    less caring because she is working on a different project than the usual!

    How would that make her feel?

    Probably not too good!

    Intended or not, this is a shoddy, offensive judgement call that does not belong
    in what is supposed to be a professionally written story!

    October 4, 2007

    Scientific Establishment Smacks Down Mercury-In-Fish Fear Mongers

    Filed under: 2946 — Miss Capri @ 2:23 pm
    From: Center for Consumer Freedom
    Sent: Thursday, October 04, 2007 11:58 AM
    Subject: ConsumerFreedom Scientific Establishment Smacks Down Mercury-In-Fish Fear Mongers
    This email was sent to you by the Center for Consumer Freedom. To ensure delivery to your inbox, please add info@consumerfreedom.com to your address book.


    Daily Headlines www.consumerfreedom.com


    Search Search


     
    Seafood October 4, 2007
     
     
    Scientific Establishment Smacks Down Mercury-In-Fish Fear Mongers

    Scientific Establishment Smacks Down Mercury-In-Fish Fear Mongers

    We hate to say we told you so, but…well, we told you so. Today, a coalition of some of the nation’s most prominent women’s health experts publicized its recommendations for maternal seafood consumption. Their verdict: Pregnant and breast-feeding women need to eat at least 12 ounces of fish a week to ensure healthy brain development in their kids. And what about the trace levels of mercury found in exceedingly low levels in some fish? Spokeswoman Dr. Ashley Roman put it best in an interview with MSNBC:

    A lot of the concern about mercury or consuming mercury in fish products is unfounded. To date, there’s not a single case of fetal toxicity linked directly to fish intake.

    Finally, some common sense in the mercury-in-fish debate. As we’re telling the press today:

    Green groups including Oceana, the Sierra Club, the Environmental Working Group, the Natural Resources Defense Council, and the Mercury Policy Project owe millions of American moms and their babies a sincere apology. And the Environmental Protection Agency should join in that chorus …

    Sadly, a public health tragedy still awaits us, but not from the fish on our plates. The real danger will come from unintended consequences of alarm bells, as moms deny their children the vital health benefits of seafood because of unfounded mercury fears.

    For three years, we’ve been saying that the proven health benefits of eating fish far outweigh the hypothetical risks. Serious science clearly doesn’t support the prevailing panic, and we’re glad to see mainstream nutrition experts telling moms that the Great Mercury Scare belongs in the dustbin of history.

    Breaking News

    Here’s a sampling of other stories that have caught our interest today. To see a one-week archive of these items, click here.

    Past Headlines

      ObesityMyths.com


    Copyright (c) 2007 Center for Consumer Freedom. All Rights Reserved.
    P.O. Box 34557 | Washington, DC 20043 | Tel: 202-463-7112 | info@consumerfreedom.com
    You’re receiving this Email because you are subscribed to the Center for Consumer Freedom’s daily news list. If you want to change your email preferences, click here. If you want to be removed from our news list, click here. Or you can send a brief response to: info@consumerfreedom.com.


    –~–~———~–~—-~————~——-~–~—-~
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    -~———-~—-~—-~—-~——~—-~——~–~—

    Re: the "6 black lab (mix) puppies" Chain email

    Filed under: 2946 — Miss Capri @ 5:04 am
    The chain letter is out of date, the dogs have homes…
     
    I received this chain letter email from one of my friends but deleted everybody’s email and work info that appeared in this particular branch of the chain to hopefully keep this thing and everybody’s email and info from being spread any further via this forward. As chain emails spread, they become more out of date and more distorted and inaccurate, also, they are a way people unwittingly give out their work info and email addresses, phone numbers etc. to complete strangers. Work place emails often or usually have full signatures with phone numbers, cell numbers, email addresses and position descriptions attached. There were quite a few of these in this particular branch of the chain email by the time it got to me.
     
    For help preventing the spread of email chain letters and the unnecessary emotional distress or rush they often cause, and for further info that proves, disproves, and gives history on all kinds of chain letters and why it is not a good idea to send them on, there are:
    http://www.BreakTheChain.org
    http://www.TruthOrFiction.com
    http.www.snopes.com
     
    A couple of excellent articles are at
    “C’mon, What Can it Hurt?” at
    http://www.breakthechain.org/reasons.html
     
    and the Psychology of Forwarding 101 at
    http://www.breakthechain.org/psych.html
     
    Snopes.com dealt with two similar “homeless puppies” chain emails on one page, so I’m just including what they said about the current one in this email. I inserted a couple of little things.
     
    snopes.com
     
          Update:   In September 2007 the following “adoption” appeal for black
          labrador puppies began circulating:
     
                Forwarded from a friend – please forward to anyone you know that may
                be able to help or is interested in adopting.
     
                Scott (sometimes replaced with the first person of “I” everybody wants to be an animal hero) rescued 6 black lab (mix) puppies out of the middle of the
     
    *Cut rest of chain email*
     
          This appears to have been a genuine appeal that began as a Craigslist
          posting, but although the person whose name and phone number were listed
          on the earliest e-mailed versions has stated that all puppies have since
          been “adopted”, the same message and picture continue to be forwarded with a
          number of different names, e-mail addresses, phone numbers, and locations
          now attached to them.
     
          Last updated:   2 October 2007

            
             Sources:
                Powell, Larry.   “E-mail Plea Spreads.”
                The Dallas Morning News.   24 May 2003   (p. 40).

    October 3, 2007

    PETA Gets Schooled

    Filed under: 2946 — Miss Capri @ 12:38 pm
    High 5 to the CCF for trying to teach PEta anything, and all the best of luck and success educating the public about PEta and the animal rights/welfare movements in general with this article!
     
    —– Original Message —–
    Sent: Wednesday, October 03, 2007 12:01 PM
    Subject: ConsumerFreedom PETA Gets Schooled
    This email was sent to you by the Center for Consumer Freedom. To ensure delivery to your inbox, please add info@consumerfreedom.com to your address book.


    Daily Headlines www.consumerfreedom.com


    Search Search


     
    Animal Rights October 3, 2007
     
     
    PETA Gets Schooled

    PETA Gets Schooled

    The animal rights zealots at People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) are engaging in some very public back-patting after wrapping up a day-long “cruelty to animals” seminar with disgraced NFL quarterback Michael Vick. PETA loves to play the part of enlightened humanitarian for the press, and the Vick scandal has proved to be the perfect opportunity for these save-the-chickens extremists to generate sympathetic media coverage. Which got us thinking: Given PETA’s well-documented history of cruelty to humans, its staff would certainly benefit from a similar seminar (at our headquarters).

    Suggested schedule:

    9:00 am: “Human Beings Have Feelings” — Recent scientific breakthroughs show definitely that members of the homo sapiens species consciously experience the world, and have negative emotional reactions to adverse external stimuli. Activities proven to cause stress in humans include harassment at work, physical assaults, death threats, and verbal abuse.

    10:30 am: “Don’t Exploit Human Misery” — For reasons still not completely understood, most people find the insensitive exploitation of human tragedy to be offensive. Examples include viciously criticizing a recently deceased and widely beloved naturalist, mocking the cancer diagnosis of a big-city mayor, and comparing farm animals to victims of the Nazi Holocaust.

    12:00 pm: Lunch break (hot dog cart provided)

    1:30 pm: “Science is Good” — Scientific investigation into the causes and cures of human illness has reaped untold benefits to society. Obstruction of medical research through criminal activities or misinformation campaigns is inhumane and wrong.

    3:00 pm: “Preying on Children is Bad” — Children are psychologically vulnerable and should not be used as pawns in activist campaigns. Examples of reprehensible treatment of children include distributing disturbing comic books at schools and lying about the health effects of kids’ favorite foods.

    4:30 pm: “Things Cost Money” — Most stuff isn’t free. If you destroy something, it costs money to rebuild or replace it. Instances of costly behavior include burning down medical laboratories and vandalizing restaurants.

    6:00 pm: “Many People Take Their Religion Seriously” — Most Americans subscribe to one organized religion or another, and they can become offended by insensitivity toward their chosen deities and holy books. Examples of callous disregard for religion include deliberately misquoting scripture, ascribing vegetarianism to a clearly omnivorous religious figure, and mocking church leaders by portraying them as livestock.

    Breaking News

    Here’s a sampling of other stories that have caught our interest today. To see a one-week archive of these items, click here.

    Past Headlines

      ObesityMyths.com


    Copyright (c) 2007 Center for Consumer Freedom. All Rights Reserved.
    P.O. Box 34557 | Washington, DC 20043 | Tel: 202-463-7112 | info@consumerfreedom.com
    You’re receiving this Email because you are subscribed to the Center for Consumer Freedom’s daily news list. If you want to change your email preferences, click here. If you want to be removed from our news list, click here. Or you can send a brief response to: info@consumerfreedom.com.


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    Well Said!

    Filed under: 2946 — Miss Capri @ 2:26 am

    From a Snopes message board, here's a great response to that awful canned
    friendship chain email I received yesterday.

    http://msgboard.snopes.com/cgi-bin/ultimatebb.cgi?ubb=get_topic;f=15;t=002384;p=1

    Friendship glurge
    jw
    posted 26 November, 2006 07:19 AM
    ——————————————————————————–
    An acquaintance of mine has started forwarding this type of glurge rubbish to me
    recently. The excessive capitalisation rounds it off.

    Hello There Nice Person
    Did Anyone Ever Tell You,
    Just How Special You Are
    The Light that You Emit
    Might even Light a Star

    *rest of awful sappy phony friendship chain email snipped out*

    How do I politely get them to stop?
    I'm sure many of you have dealt with this before, so I would appreciate your
    input.
    ——————————————————————————–

    Ariadne

    posted 26 November, 2006 07:50 AM
    ——————————————————————————–
    Hello There Person I Barely Know,
    Did Anyone Ever Tell You
    Just How Annoying it can be
    To Get this Crap you Send
    To Poor Old Busy Me?
    I Have Better Things to Do
    Than Read your Silly Junk.
    It Does Not Make Me Happy,
    It Puts me In a Funk.
    I already Know I'm Special;
    I Don't Need Your Awful Rhyme
    Or Your other Email Glurge
    To waste My Precious Time.
    For you See I am Too Busy
    Spending Time With Those I Know
    To Send this Tripe Back to You
    And Help Raise Your Ego.
    Because the Test of Friendship
    Is Not Based on what one Sends
    But Rather it is the Delete Key
    For Non-Forwarders are Friends.

    If you care, delete this message!
    Friends do not let friends clog up inboxes!
    YOU MUST DELETE THIS IMMEDIATELY!!
    OR RISK LOSING AT LEAST 4 FRIENDS!

    October 1, 2007

    McCann Case – Police and Media Bumbling Way Off the Map!

    Filed under: 2946 — Miss Capri @ 6:26 am

    The police and the media are making complete idiots of themselves over the
    Madeleine McCann case. I have a few comments on these site summaries.

    Site 1.
    McCann's hire car examined by experts
    Brisbane Times – Brisbane,Queensland,Australia
    A team of forensic scientists have reportedly made independent tests on a
    hire car rented by the parents of missing British girl Madeline McCann. …
    http://news.brisbanetimes.com.au/mccanns-hire-car-examined-by-experts/20074630-11s5.html

    -Okay, summary looks good, it's probably one of the more sensible writeups in a
    while.

    Site 2.
    Girl in photo not Madeleine McCann
    Melbourne Herald Sun – Australia
    PARENTS of missing British girl Madeleine McCann were being consoled by
    friends last night after being given the devastating news that a holiday
    snap …
    http://www.news.com.au/heraldsun/story/0,21985,22493955-663,00.html

    -The stupid media should not have splashed little Bushra's picture all over the
    world and assumed she was Madeline in the first place! Not only have they wasted
    a lot of people's time and attention on a claim that isn't real, they added to
    the torment of Maddeleine's family! Gads, but you police and news reporters are
    inconsiderate, bumbling idiots!

    Site 3.
    A sacked maid seeking revenge is latest suspect over missing …
    Times Online – UK
    A maid who is alleged to have abducted Madeleine McCann in revenge for
    being sacked from the holiday resort where the missing girl was staying is
    being …
    http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/europe/article2563493.ece

    -Whoever came up with this hair-brained theory? Oh, right, the brain-dead police
    again! Next thing you know, there will be reports that the Great Pumpkin took
    her, then Santa did it, then the Easter Bunny. Please, don't waste any more time
    and energy until something has been proven before spouting this unbelievable
    dreck!

    Site 4.
    How the Portugese police say Madeleine in fall on a staircase
    This is London – London,England,UK
    Madeleine McCann died in a fall down a flight of stairs at her parents'
    holiday apartment, Portuguese police claimed yesterday in the latest leak
    from …
    http://www.thisislondon.co.uk/news/article-23414439-details/How+the+Portugese+police+say+Madeleine+in+fall+on+a+staircase/article.do

    -Well, doesn't everybody know how reliable the Portuguese police are by now? You
    stupid cops are all over the map, you have no idea what you're doing, and the
    gullible media, desperate for a story, any story, truth be damned, will print
    anything, not caring how it hurts the McCann family and their friends!

    Site 5.
    Maddy McCann My Nightmares Part 4
    This Gross Nightmare About Maddy McCann with a Horrible Bloody Hand Still Keeps
    Periodically Reoccurring. It Really Freaks Me Out.
    http://digg.com/world_news/Maddy_McCann_My_Nightmares_Part_4

    -Oh, but it's digg.com… You have to click through digg to actually get to the
    article – nope, sorry, don't want to read it that badly. Anyway, for the one who
    wrote it: try to calm down, okay?

    Site 6.
    Maid Up Stories, Avoid the Questions
    By transfattyacid(transfattyacid)
    If this is yet another red herring, in a week of red herrings from the McCann
    camp, it does have an advantage over the Maddie in Morocco story. The matter is
    being investigated by the British police, and they are unlikely to hurry any …
    http://trannyfattyacid.blogspot.com/2007/09/maid-up-stories-avoid-questions.html

    -Erm, okay, so we agree about the media being bungling idiots. But I'm not sure
    what your take is on the McCanns themselves.

    Site 7.
    If Madeleine McCann was Black, Would the Media Care?
    By ExpatJane(MLH)
    If Madeleine McCann was Black, Would the Media Care?Madeleine McCann, who you've
    no doubt heard has been missing over in Europe, is a white British four-year-old
    whose disappearance has sparked a massive global media focus. …
    http://missingminorities.blogspot.com/2007/09/if-madeleine-mccann-was-black-would.html

    -What's black and white got to do with Madeleine McCann!? Oh, please, give me a
    pickin break!!

    The reason the world knows about Madeleine McCann at all is because of a chain
    email one of her relatives started – a chain email that, for once, isn't a hoax!

    -Yes, if she was black, and it was the same story and it was for real and if a
    relative had started a chain email and everybody heard about it, everybody would
    care just as much!

    -Sheesh! Why in the heck is it that some apparently bigoted attention-hogs with
    their own racist agendas always have to go throwing the race card and silly
    pity-parties into things!? So now, tell me, should we all of a sudden just stop
    praying that Madeleine will be found alive or at the very least, didn't suffer a
    horrible death because she's not black? Should we wish she's dead because she's
    not black? Should we just forget all about any other missing kids we are told
    about if they happen not to be black? Should we only be on the look out for
    missing kids if they are black and simply shrug off and refuse to even consider
    trying to help out if a picture shows a missing kid who isn't black? Are we
    supposed to only care about missing kids if they are "the right color" for you
    now? Sheesh! I'm not even going to read your crummy site! This isn't about wite
    and black! Stop trying to turn it into that and just please go away if you
    aren't interested in helping find missing kids regardless of skin color! ARGH!

    Comment on Open Thread: A photo of Madeleine McCann? by TobyRose
    By TobyRose
    It is odd that Kate McCann announced Madeleine had been abducted before a search
    was done for her in the complex. It seems she was trying to convince people of
    that. A mother's first reaction to a missing child is that the child has …
    http://crimeblog.us/?p=566#comment-64196

    -Uhm no, I'd think that would be one of the initial reactions of any parent
    whose kid went missing from a motel room!

    September 30, 2007

    Urban Legends Reference Pages Update #330

    Filed under: 2946 — Miss Capri @ 2:50 am
     
    —– Original Message —–
    Sent: Sunday, September 30, 2007 2:43 AM
    Subject: CU23: Urban Legends Reference Pages Update #330
     
    snopes.com  
     
     
    Urban Legends Reference Pages:
    Update #330

    Hello again from snopes.com, where we shed light on the wild tales you’ve heard! This e-mail gives information about new articles recently added to the Urban Legends Reference Pages and provides pointers to older pieces about rumors and hoaxes still wandering into everyone’s inboxes. Our last update mailing was September 22, 2007.

    If after this update you are left wondering about something newly arrived in your inbox, our search engine stands ready to assist you. Bookmark that URL — it’s a keeper!

    An RSS feed for our What’s New page is available at the following URL:
    http://www.snopes.com/info/whatsnew.xml

    And now to the legends, the mayhem, and the misinformation!


    New Articles

    • Old hoax back for another run: Exhortation to refuse an invitation from a named stranger to converse online warns of an attempt to implant a computer virus.

    • Flip-flops purchased at Wal-Mart caused skin rashes or chemical burns.

    • Letter to the editor urges atheists to get out of America.

    • Croc Squawk: Children suffer injuries on escalators because of their shoes.

    • Video clip you don’t want to miss: Dorito-snatching seagull bedevils small shop in Scotland.

    • Of Lee Greenwood and a concert cancellation over a pay dispute.

    Worth a Second Look

    • Legend asserts the White House gained its name from the color of paint chosen for the new structure that replaced the one burned down by the British in 1814.

    Still Haunting the Inbox

    • 15-year-old Evan Trembley of Wichita Falls, Texas, isn’t missing – it’s a hoax.

    • Dialing #77 or *677 is not a surefire way of reaching the local highway patrol — the service is in place in some regions, but not in others. If in need of assistance, dial 911 instead for the sure thing.

    • We look at two eraser sponge rumors, that they contain formaldehyde or have caused chemical burns when rubbed on skin.

    • While it’s true a consortium of wireless providers is planning to create a 411 (directory assistance) service for cell phone numbers, you need not register your cell phone with the national “Do Not Call” directory to prevent your number from being provided to telemarketers.

    • The missing child alert about 13-year-old Ashley Flores of Philadelphia is a hoax.

    • Petition advocates buying/not buying gasoline from Citgo. And no, Citgo did not change its name to Petro Express.

    • No, the new dollar coin doesn’t omit “In God We Trust” – that phrase has been stamped into its edge.

    • The entreaty to aid 7-year-old Amy Bruce who is dying of lung cancer and a brain tumor by forwarding an email and a sappy poem titled “Slow Dance” is a hoax.

    • E-mail compares George W. Bush’s eco-friendly ranch with Al Gore’s energy-expending mansion.

    • E-mailed petition advocates denying social services to immigrants.

    • Will pressing #-9-0 on your telephone allow scammers to make long-distance calls and charge them to your phone bill?

    • No, Johns Hopkins Hospital has not issued a “cancer update” detailing how cancer spreads and recommending methods for treating the disease.

    • Is Illinois Senator Barack Obama “ideologically Muslim”?

    • 809 area code scam: Unsuspecting phone customers have been gulled by con artists into placing calls to area codes in the Caribbean that result in hefty charges.

    • While the FDA health advisory regarding drugs containing PPA (phenylpropanolamine) is the real thing, it’s outdated.

    • While actor Lee Marvin did fight in the Pacific theater during World War II, earned a Purple Heart, and is buried in Arlington National Cemetery, he and Bob Keeshan (TV’s “Captain Kangaroo,”) did not fight together in the battle for Iwo Jima.

    • There was no letter to Starbucks from coffee-seeking G.I.s serving in Iraq, so no response from the coffee retailer saying it didn’t support the war and anyone in it. As for Oscar Mayer refusing troops free hot dogs, the 2004 Starbucks e-mail was altered in 2007 to aim it at the blameless hot dog maker.

    • No, Jay Leno did not write the “Hits the Nail on the Head” essay — it was Craig R. Smith.

    • There’s no abductor prowling the Target parking lot in Wheaton, Illinois, who is using an old lady who appears to be in distress to lure victims.

    • E-mail claims Jane Fonda betrayed U.S. POWs during the Vietnam War.

    • During the 1987 Iran-Contra hearings, Oliver North did decry that a certain terrorist was “the most evil person alive” and that “an assassin team [should] be formed to eliminate him and his men from the face of the earth,” but he wasn’t talking about Osama bin Laden.

    • Images do show the USS New York, which is being built with steel from the Twin Towers.

    • No, robbers are not luring female victims into sniffing ether-laced perfume in parking lots.

    • While it is true that in 2004 a man in India was electrocuted when trying to use his cell phone as it recharged, it is safe to use your cell phone while it is charging.

    • Hillary Clinton is the subject of many e-mailed items, and our “Clintons” section contains write-ups about a number of them.

    • No, Bill Gates is not sharing his fortune with everyone who forwards a specific e-mail on his behalf. This tired leg-pull continues to romp through everyone’s inbox, the most widespread incarnation swearing “This took two pages of the Tuesday USA Today!”

    • Virus announcement and virus hoax e-mails are afoot! We try to keep current on them and do our best to point readers to authoritative links confirming or debunking them.

    Fraud Afoot

    • Seems like everyone has become the recipient of mysterious e-mails promising untold wealth if only one helps a wealthy foreigner quietly move millions of dollars out of his country. The venerable Nigerian Scam has discovered the goldmine that is the Internet. Beware — there’s still no such thing as “something for nothing,” and the contents of your bank account will end up with these wily foreigners if you fall in with this.

    • Likewise, look out for mailings announcing you’ve won a foreign lottery you don’t recall entering.

    • Or that because you share the surname of a wealthy person who died without leaving a will you’re in line for a windfall inheritance.

    • And be especially wary if, while trying to sell or rent anything online (car, boat, horse, motorcycle, painting, apartment, you name it) you’re approached by a prospective buyer/renter who wants to pay with a cashier check made out for an amount in excess of the agreed-upon price and who asks the balance be sent to a third party.

    • Aspiring work-at-homers promised big bucks for acting as intermediaries for international transactions wherein they cash checks for other parties or reship goods to them have been defrauded by con artists. Don’t you be next.

    • If someone telephones to announce you can have a $200 Wal-Mart shopping spree or $200 in gasoline coupons in return for a $3.49 processing charge to be debited directly from your bank account, hang up. You’re being set up via the promise of “something for almost nothing” into authorizing a swindler to help himself to the contents of your bank account.

    • If someone calls to announce you’ve failed to appear for jury duty and will be arrested, do not give the caller your personal and financial information in an effort to prove he’s sending the gendarmes after the wrong guy. You’re being tricked into giving up this information to an identity thief.

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      September 29, 2007

      Environmental Activist Bomber Convicted

      Filed under: 2946 — Miss Capri @ 2:40 am
      What is scary is how close the jury came to aquitting the guy over some technicality, mainly if he was reluctant or not… Personally I think animal rights/environmental extremists are human-hating, sympathetic to terrorists even if they haven’t committed terrorism themselves, if they agree with their causes, that’s enough to make them seriously twisted – and there should be a lot stiffer penalties for any crimes done in the name of protecting animals or protecting the environment etc.
       
      From: karousel
      To: ACTION
      Cc: ORABS ; anti-peta ; pet-law@yahoogroups.com
      Sent: Friday, September 28, 2007 1:09 PM
      Subject: Bomb plotter found guilty
       
      What is interesting in these cases is that the AR’s are taking pleas and ratting on their fellow AR’s. They’ll cancel each other out.
       
      wjf
       
      http://www.sacbee.com/101/story/403623.html
       
      Bomb plotter found guilty
      He faces up to 20 years in prison for a scheme to damage targets that included Nimbus Dam.
      By Denny Walsh – Bee Staff Writer
      Published 12:00 am PDT Friday, September 28, 2007
      Story appeared in METRO section, Page B4
       
      Eric McDavid, a 29-year-old self-styled anarchist with an aimless lifestyle, was found guilty Thursday in federal court of plotting acts of eco-terrorism in the Sacramento region.
       
      The jury of seven men and five women deliberated 11 hours over two days and reached a verdict near the end of the trial’s eighth day.
       
      Following the verdict, U.S. Attorney McGregor Scott linked the Earth Liberation Front to the bombing campaign that was discussed by McDavid and three others.
       
      “ELF is a loosely knit organization of environmental extremists who believe in committing domestic acts of terrorism to advance their radical ideology,” Scott said.
       
      The evidence at trial was that McDavid and his cohorts discussed the pros and cons of crediting the ELF in the wake of their actions, but had not firmly decided on that course.
       
      Scott said prosecutors will ask that the maximum 20-year prison sentence be imposed on McDavid.
       
      Sentencing is set for Dec. 6. McDavid will remain in custody. He has been locked up since he and two co-conspirators were arrested Jan. 13, 2006.
       
      Lauren Weiner and Zachary Jenson were allowed to plead guilty to lesser charges and testified against McDavid. A status conference in connection with their sentences is scheduled Oct. 11.
       
      The charges to which the pair pleaded guilty carry a maximum five years in prison, although they testified that they hope prosecutors will recommend far less.
       
      But Scott said Thursday the prosecutors will seek maximum five-year sentences for Weiner, 21, and Jenson. 22.
       
      Referring to the ELF, one of the prosecutors, R. Steven Lapham, said, “In some ways it’s tragic that young people are going to pay the price when others encourage them. But you cannot take these guys lightly. We lost a $4 million veterinary school building just down the road.”
       
      Lapham’s latter reference was to a 1987 arson fire at the University of California, Davis, that caused $4.6 million in damage to an unfinished veterinary medicine building. Authorities attributed the blaze to the Animal Liberation Front, a movement similar to ELF. Those affiliated with both movements are classified as terrorists by the FBI.
       
      In post-verdict interviews, eight of the jurors, who refused to identify themselves by name, had comments generally favorable to the defense.
       
      “The nail in the coffin was his lack of reluctance,” one juror said of McDavid. “Not once did he try to back out of” the conspiracy charged in a grand jury indictment.
       
      “If he had,” said another juror, “we’d still be in there now” deliberating.
       
      From notes sent by the panel to U.S. District Judge Morrison C. England Jr., it was clear the jurors were confused about how to apply the evidence to the question of whether McDavid had a predisposition to violence.
       
      This was a critical element in the trial, with the prosecutors arguing he was predisposed to the intended violent acts, even without the active role played by an FBI informer who was embedded with McDavid, Weiner and Jenson, and who was the government’s key witness.
       
      Defense attorney Mark Reichel argued vehemently that the FBI-supplied resources the informer, known only to the jury as “Anna,” brought to the plot, plus McDavid’s infatuation with her kept the group’s plan for a bombing campaign alive and entrapped his client.
       
      In an additional instruction on the law given to the jury Thursday morning, England recited five criteria that should be considered in weighing predisposition. He then told the jurors the most important of the five is “reluctance.”
       
      Reichel said in a hallway interview after the verdict that an important part of an appeal of the conviction will focus on England’s instructions regarding entrapment.
       
      The judge told the jury that “contact” between a government informer and a defendant in the context of entrapment is the first time the two discuss the charged crime. In this case, that was in July 2005.
       
      Reichel contends case law says it means the first contact between an informer and a defendant. In this case, that was August 2004. At that time and before then McDavid was not disposed toward violence, the defense lawyer argues.
       
      The jurors agreed that if the judge’s instructions had allowed them to place the relevant time period from August 2004 forward, they would have acquitted McDavid.
       
      “This was a good jury,” Reichel said. “They followed the rules they were given. I think the rules they were given are wrong. It’s not the law of entrapment.”
       
      McDavid was charged with conspiring between June 2005 and January 2006 to damage or destroy by fire and an explosive the U.S. Forest Service’s Institute of Forest Genetics in Placerville, the Nimbus Dam and nearby fish hatchery in Rancho Cordova, and “cellular telephone towers and electric power stations” at unspecified locations.
       
      At a news conference, Scott and Drew Parenti, the special agent in charge of the FBI in Sacramento, had glowing words for “Anna’s” performance.
       
      “Her conduct while undercover, as well as her testimony on the stand during this trial, were nothing short of remarkable,” Scott said.
       
      The jurors were not as impressed.
       
      “Initially, I saw her as credible, but eventually her bias became apparent,” one juror said, expressing the feelings of most of his fellow jurors. “We did feel a lot of times she was pushing.”
       
      About the writer:
      a.. The Bee’s Denny Walsh can be reached at (916) 321-1189 or dwalsh@sacbee.com.

      September 28, 2007

      Fw: ConsumerFreedom Collateral Damage From The Great Mercury Scare

      Filed under: 2946 — Miss Capri @ 7:46 am
      From: Center for Consumer Freedom
      Sent: Thursday, September 27, 2007 9:04 AM
      Subject: ConsumerFreedom Collateral Damage From The Great Mercury Scare
      This email was sent to you by the Center for Consumer Freedom. To ensure delivery to your inbox, please add info@consumerfreedom.com to your address book.


      Daily Headlines www.consumerfreedom.com


      Search Search


       
      Seafood September 27, 2007
       
       
      Collateral Damage From The Great Mercury Scare

      Collateral Damage From The Great Mercury Scare

      Many Americans senselessly fear harmless traces of mercury in the fish they eat, but the flip side of the Great Mercury Scare has been the presence of thimerosal (a preservative that contains mercury) in some children’s vaccines. In landmark research appearing in today’s New England Journal of Medicine, researchers from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found that mercury in vaccines has no effect whatsoever on children’s brain functioning.

      This episode is one of the most interesting failures of the omnipresent “Precautionary Principle.” Countless parents actually stopped having their kids vaccinated, believing that health risks related to mercury (including autism, a claim trumpeted repeatedly by über environmentalist Robert F. Kennedy Jr.) were worth avoiding at all costs. Those costs, however, included the very real risk of being hospitalized (or dying) from the flu or some other avoidable infection.

      In a New England Journal of Medicine opinion piece today, Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia Infectious Diseases chief Dr. Paul Offit writes: 

      Although the precautionary principle assumes that there is no harm in exercising caution, the alarm caused by the removal of thimerosal from vaccines has been quite harmful … the thimerosal controversy should stand as a cautionary tale of how not to communicate theoretical risks to the public; otherwise, the lesson inherent in the collateral damage caused by its precipitous removal will remain unlearned.

      It’s worth remembering that there has been similar “collateral damage” in our irrational (mercury-related) fear of fish. Americans who go cold-turkey on tuna and other seafood risk losing the health benefits of Omega-3 fatty acids. And since evidence keeps pouring in that these very real health benefits far outweigh the theoretical risks from mercury (see here, here, here, here, and here), adding the Precautionary Principle to our dinner plates looks like a risk not worth taking.

      Breaking News

      Here’s a sampling of other stories that have caught our interest today. To see a one-week archive of these items, click here.

      Past Headlines

        ObesityMyths.com


      Copyright (c) 2007 Center for Consumer Freedom. All Rights Reserved.
      P.O. Box 34557 | Washington, DC 20043 | Tel: 202-463-7112 | info@consumerfreedom.com
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      Unsubscription: ConsumerFreedom-unsubscribe@googlegroups.com

      Disclaimer: Though we are against genuine cruelty, including cruelty to humans, the position of this list does not endorse any sponsored animal rights/welfare advertising which may appear on the group page.
      -~———-~—-~—-~—-~——~—-~——~–~—

      September 26, 2007

      Deceptive TV Ads From PETA’s "Physician" Buddies

      Filed under: 2946 — Miss Capri @ 6:02 pm
      From: Center for Consumer Freedom
      Sent: Wednesday, September 26, 2007 11:15 AM
      Subject: ConsumerFreedom Deceptive TV Ads From PETA’s “Physician” Buddies
      This email was sent to you by the Center for Consumer Freedom. To ensure delivery to your inbox, please add info@consumerfreedom.com to your address book.


      Daily Headlines www.consumerfreedom.com


      Search Search


       
      Animal Rights September 26, 2007
       
       
      Deceptive TV Ads From PETA’s “Physician” Buddies

      Deceptive TV Ads From PETA's

      Today, the animal rights loonies at the misnamed Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine (PCRM) unveiled a new television advertisement lampooning the Senator Larry Craig bathroom scandal. Unsurprisingly, this latest PR stunt looks a lot like something PCRMs close friends at People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) would produce. The Craig spot includes a re-enactment of the now infamous toe-tapping incident between two bathroom stalls, an exchange of money, and a rather disturbing pig costume.

      There’s a crushing irony in the fact that a group that purposefully hides its true colors from the public would run a media campaign playing off a scandal involving a politician accused of hiding his true colors from the public.

      How is PCRM getting away with calling itself a “physicians” committee when less than 4 percent of its members are actual doctors? Beats us. And we’re reminding the press today  (click here and here for examples) that:

      PCRM is nothing more than a bunch of save-the-chickens extremists. Like everything PCRM does, this latest ad is deceptive propaganda … PCRM has been pretending to be a mainstream medical charity for years. But it’s really just PETA in a lab coat.

      Tonight at its Washington, DC headquarters PCRM is hosting a “special reception” to strategize about how to influence the federal Farm Bill, which is the topic of the groups ad. Here’s the invitation to the event and here’s where you can sign up to attend. If you’re in the area, you might want to stop by and let these animal-liberation lackeys know how you feel about their latest trickery.

       

      Breaking News

      Here’s a sampling of other stories that have caught our interest today. To see a one-week archive of these items, click here.

      Past Headlines

        Cartoons


      Copyright (c) 2007 Center for Consumer Freedom. All Rights Reserved.
      P.O. Box 34557 | Washington, DC 20043 | Tel: 202-463-7112 | info@consumerfreedom.com
      You’re receiving this Email because you are subscribed to the Center for Consumer Freedom’s daily news list. If you want to change your email preferences, click here. If you want to be removed from our news list, click here. Or you can send a brief response to: info@consumerfreedom.com.


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      Disclaimer: Though we are against genuine cruelty, including cruelty to humans, the position of this list does not endorse any sponsored animal rights/welfare advertising which may appear on the group page.
      -~———-~—-~—-~—-~——~—-~——~–~—

      September 24, 2007

      H$U$

      Filed under: 2946 — Miss Capri @ 7:48 am

      This is a good expose on the animal welfare group known as the H$U$ (Humane
      Society of the US)

      It would be nice if this article used the words "buy" and "sell" instead of
      "adopt" since adoption is for children, and pets are not children. It was
      unnecessary to hail the pet owners who donated to animal welfare groups because
      of the hurricanes as "compassionate" when donating to help fellow human beings
      surely should take first priority and helping humans especially children and the
      disabled to survive a vicious natural disaster is certainly worth being called
      "compassionate". "animal shelters" are actually the pound. Shelters are for
      people – for example, a shelter for the homeless, a shelter for battered women
      etc. Other than that, a good article. And animal welfare people do call it
      "adoption" when animals are bought and sold.

      Well, I always thought it was terribly egocentric and shallow of the animal
      welfare people to go on and on about the animals when human lives including
      those of children and the disabled were in peril during and after that
      hurricane. It's like the animal activists go "Look at us, you people only care
      about the people, we're so much better and so much more caring than you, we care
      about the animals!"

      And then, the H$U$ turns around and loots animals from the storm they claim to
      "rescue" them from, and doesn't even take care of them to the same standards
      they expect the average pet owner to maintain. Instead of seeking out the
      rightful owners of these pets, the H$U$ turns around and sells these animals or
      impounds them, and as the article says, some of the larger dog breeds simply
      disappear. Hmmm, killed in the pound, perhaps? The animal welfare movement is
      trying to end ownership of some large breed dogs, so this is just one of the
      steps in that direction.

      The H$U$ are not humane. The H$U$ are thieves. The H$U$ are hypocrites.

      —– Original Message —–
      From: Alahni
      To: Anti-PETA@yahoogroups.com
      Sent: Sunday, September 23, 2007 6:12 PM
      Subject: [Anti-PETA] Fw:crosspost, HSUS

      —– Original Message —–

      Nothing new under the sun, same ole crooks they always were…

      Permission to crosspost

      For quite some time, there have been rumors that the Louisiana
      Attorney General had plans to investigate complaints filed against the
      HSUS for misuse of donated funds in connection with
      rescue of pets from the Hurricane Katrina and Hurricane Rita ravaged
      areas of the southern states.

      It's now official. Complaints and reports have indicated
      that supplies (beds, blankets, toys, crates, x-pens,
      etc.) and food were never allowed to be used to help the animals
      housed in the rescue centers. Although thousands of pounds of
      top-quality
      food were donated, many volunteers have complained that they
      were only allowed to feed the rescued animals the cheapest, poorest
      quality foods they received.

      Allegations have been made that purebred "rescue" groups
      were turned away by the HSUS and not allowed to pull their own
      breeds from the "rescue" centers, unless they were willing to take "X"
      number of "others" as well. Additional reports indicate that at
      least 700 "bully" breed dogs mysteriously disappeared from the
      HSUS "rescue" centers, never to be seen again. It has also been
      widely reported that some pets were sent to far-away locations,
      quickly "adopted" out, and that no real efforts were made to reunite
      these lost pets with their original owners.

      If you personally volunteered in the post-hurricane
      rescue effort (or if you know someone who did) and may have firsthand
      knowledge of the pet rescue situation in the aftermath of the
      hurricanes, please contact Attorney General Foti and provide him with
      all pertinent information to assist him in his effort to ensure that
      funds and/or supplies donated by the pet owners of
      the U.S. were and **will be** used for the purposes for which they
      were
      donated. Press release and contact information follow:

      PERMISSION TO CROSS POST

      http://www.ag.state.la.us/ViewPressRel.aspx?RelID=451

      Attorney General Charles Foti Opens Inquiry into
      Humane Society of the United States
      March 27, 2006: (Baton Rouge, LA)-Attorney General
      Charles C. Foti, Jr., announced today that his office has opened an
      inquiry into allegations involving funds raised for pet /owner
      reunions by the Humane Society of the United States (HSUS). The
      Attorney General's Office is asking the HSUS for an accounting of all
      funds HSUS raised for the purpose of pet rescue and reunion with pet
      owners in the aftermath of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita.

      The Attorney General's office has received numerous
      complaints from pet owners about problems many are having finding
      their pets following Hurricanes Katrina and Rita. Through its
      association with other animal welfare organizations nationwide, HSUS has
      documented and placed animals in "shelters" (pounds) around the country, often
      resulting in the displaced pets' "adoption." (sale). In some cases, pet owners
      claim that those who are currently caring for the displaced pets are
      refusing to reunite the pet with the proper owners.

      "Once again we will be on the lookout to make sure that those who seek to
      raise money for Hurricane victims in our state, do exactly what they claim
      to do when soliciting funds," stated General Foti, "While I commend the work
      of the many wonderful charitable organizations that have come forward to
      help
      us in our time of need, I also want people to know that they cannot take
      advantage of our situation in any way," added General Foti.

      The Attorney General is asking anyone with information
      about questionable fundraising activities by animal groups
      or any other groups to please contact the Attorney General's
      Consumer Protection Section at 1-800-351-4889 or visit our website at
      <http://www.ag.state.la.us

      September 23, 2007

      More on the McCann Case

      Filed under: 2946 — Miss Capri @ 10:42 pm

      The fatal flaw of David Cameron and Kate and Gerry McCann
      Times Online – UK
      Look what they've done to Kate and Gerry McCann. Here were two people
      deserving of the most intense public sympathy. On a superficial level they
      got it – by …
      http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/columnists/matthew_parris/article2507926.ece

      Madeleine McCann's parents challenge police
      Telegraph.co.uk – United Kingdom
      By Nick Britten and Caroline Gammell Madeleine McCann's parents have issued
      a stark ultimatum to the Portuguese authorities, telling them to "put up or
      shut …
      http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2007/09/22/nmaddy621.xml

      CITY OF LOCKPORT: McCann fleshes out housing plan
      Lockport Union-Sun &amp; Journal – Lockport,NY,USA
      By Joyce Miles/milesj@gnnewspaper.com Chief Building Inspector Jim McCann
      briefed the Common Council on a plan to revive a long-dormant housing
      inspection …
      http://www.lockportjournal.com/local/local_story_264132348.html

      Stoking the Madeleine McCann rumour mill
      Standing outside the pretty church in Praia da Luz, Portugal, with a dozens or
      so other journalists one morning a rumour ripples through the gathering: a 24
      hour TV channel is on to the disappearance of another child. …
      http://blogs.reuters.com/2007/09/21/stoking-the-madeleine-mccann-rumour-mill/

      Now A Convicted Terrorist Questioned in Madeleine McCann's …
      By Greta Van Susteren
      Fresh operations in the hunt for Madeleine McCann have been authorized by a
      Portuguese judge, with police appearing to accept the original belief that she
      may have been abducted by a stranger. A convicted terrorist was questioned by

      http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/blogs/Gretawire/~3/159474233/

      'Gerry Found Bedroom Door Ajar'
      By comment(comment)
      Gerry McCann believes he may have come within a few yards of his daughter's
      abductor when he left his meal to check on his children on the night of
      Madeleine's disappearance, May 3. Still a suspect in his daughter's abduction,

      http://madeleinemccann.blogspot.com/2007/09/gerry-found-bedroom-door-ajar.html

      Missing Madeleine: Gerry McCann's Intruder Theory
      The father of Madeleine McCann believes an intruder may have been hiding inside
      the family's holiday apartment on the night his daughter went missing, says a
      friend.
      http://news.sky.com/skynews/article/0,,91210-1285288,00.html?f=rss

      Comment on Open Thread With Starter Topic: Madeleine McCann by SuziQ
      By SuziQ
      How can anyone believe the McCann's are guilty when you can't even trust the
      integrity of the investigation? I believe it was Robert M who said, "Where does
      PLE think they are? Chicago in the 20's?". It's been fun debating with you. …
      http://crimeblog.us/?p=556#comment-61043

      ABC News: McCanns Relaunch Campaign for Madeleine
      The parents of missing British toddler Madeleine McCann announced a new
      campaign … During the press conference, John McCann stressed the need "to
      remind …
      http://abcnews.go.com/International/story?id=3607297&page=1

      British scientists say Portuguese police 'twisted' McCann evidence
      Daily Mail – UK
      British scientists have sent Portuguese police an email complaining that
      their laboratory findings have been "wildly misused". The Forensic Science
      Service …
      http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/news/news.html?in_article_id=483483&in_page_id=1770

      Madeleine McCann police tortured me, says mother behind bars
      Times Online – UK
      The senior detective leading the Madeleine McCann investigation is facing
      calls to step down after a woman jailed for the murder of her daughter
      claimed …
      http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/europe/article2511981.ece

      -Note from Capri – And that sorry excuse for a detective should have his lousy
      stinking butt canned and tossed in the slammer – permanently!

      Hysteria around moms suspected of murder can warp judgment and logic.
      Newsweek – USA
      By Jennie Yabroff Oct. 1, 2007 issue – Kate McCann rarely cries in public,
      even when talking about her missing daughter, Madeleine. …
      http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/20920379/site/newsweek/

      Professor's technology could be used in McCann case
      Fairborn Daily Herald – OH,USA
      And soon, he could be using the same technology and expertise to help out
      the McCann family, who lost their daughter Madeleine on May 3 in Portugal
      and are …
      http://fairborndailyherald.1upmonitor.com/main.asp?SectionID=2&SubSectionID=4&ArticleID=126580&TM=43927.64

      Madeleine McCann's Father: 'Intruder Was Hiding In Flat'
      By Ryan
      The father of the girl who was abducted whilst on holiday in Portugal has spoken
      out with what he believes is the most justifiable idea for his missing daughter,
      Madeleine McCann. Gerry McCann believes he may have been just a few feet …
      http://www.product-reviews.net/2007/09/22/madeleine-mccanns-father-intruder-was-hiding-in-flat/

      ABC News: McCanns Relaunch Campaign for Madeleine
      The parents of missing British toddler Madeleine McCann announced a new …
      Since then, her parents, Gerry and Kate McCann, have led an intense media
      effort …
      http://abcnews.go.com/International/story?id=3607297&amp;page=1

      Maddie's kidnapper was hiding in room – McCann
      Belfast Telegraph – United Kingdom
      Gerry McCann believes Madeleine's kidnapper was hiding in the room when he
      checked on his daughter the night she went missing in Portugal. …

      Madeleine McCann's parents hired detectives
      Telegraph.co.uk – United Kingdom
      By Caroline Gammell in Praia da Luz Kate and Gerry McCann have hired a firm
      of private investigators to help them track their missing daughter,
      Madeleine, …
      http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2007/09/24/nmaddy124.xml

      New Video, Old Suspect in McCann Case
      With Portuguese officials still tight-lipped on the case of British toddler
      Madeleine McCann's disappearance in May, word is emerging of a video that showed
      Maddie dining out just hours before she vanished, while a suspect is denying a

      http://www.daylife.com/story/0dQu5sI4RY70j

      McCann friends fill in 'missing six hours' – Independent Online
      ABC NewsMcCann friends fill in 'missing six hours'Independent Online – 4 hours
      agoThe first full account of Kate and Gerry McCann's final day with their
      daughter emerged on Saturday, reports the Daily Mail newspaper. …
      http://news.originalsignal.com/article/495766/mccann-friends-fill-in-and-39-missing-six-hoursand-39-independent-online.html

      More About Spammers

      Filed under: 2946 — Miss Capri @ 3:25 pm

      Google being used to bypass anti-spam defenses
      InfoWorld – San Francisco,CA,USA
      Spammers are using embedded google search strings in spam emails to
      generate search results that contain malicious web sites as the first
      result. …
      http://weblog.infoworld.com/securityadviser/archives/2007/09/google_being_us.html

      News – US net providers pursue spammers
      "Congress gave us the necessary tools to pursue spammers with stiff penalties,
      and we in the industry didn't waste a moment moving with speed and resolve to
      take advantage of the new law," said Mr Boe. Huge problem …
      http://blogaj.mctv.si/cochranediabetesdrug/2007/09/22/news-us-net-providers-pursue-spammers/

      Jag's datacenter is listed as a spamer
      By thisisit3
      Your Provider GNAXNET-AS – Global Net Access, LLC/AS3595 is UCEPROTECT-Level3
      listed because he is responsible for a total of 322 Spammers on the net. For
      details see: http://www.uceprotect.net
      http://www.jaguarpc.com/forums/showthread.php?t=18111

      Spammers feeling lucky with Google
      For quite some time spammers have been trying to hide links advertised in their
      e-mails. The main reason for this is probably increasing effectiveness of
      various realtime blocklists, such as SURBL. For those that aren't familiar with

      http://www.first.org/newsroom/globalsecurity/152974.html

      News – Spammers given boot by net host
      Along with C&W US's 3000 business customers, Savvis inherited 95 major spammers
      who make their money by sending out millions of unsolicited e-mails a day with
      the standard mix of Viagra and porn offers. …
      http://blog.e-norwich.co.uk/cochranediabetesdrug/2007/09/22/news-spammers-given-boot-by-net-host/

      How to Avoid Spam After Setting up Your Free Forum
      By LIFEGUARD(LIFEGUARD)
      But once you have a forum up and running, you have to deal with problems that
      may arise such as spammers. It is really unfortunate that so much time is wasted
      dealing with such things as spam. Unfortunately, a lot of forums have become …
      http://urownbusiness.blogspot.com/2007/09/how-to-avoid-spam-after-setting-up-your.html
      http://www.google.com/alerts/manage?hl=en

      September 22, 2007

      Urban Legends Reference Pages Update #329

      Filed under: 2946 — Miss Capri @ 10:43 pm
       
      —– Original Message —–
      Sent: Saturday, September 22, 2007 7:23 PM
      Subject: CU22: Urban Legends Reference Pages Update #329
       
      snopes.com  
       
       
      Urban Legends Reference Pages:
      Update #329

      Hello again from snopes.com, where we shed light on the wild tales you’ve heard! This e-mail gives information about new articles recently added to the Urban Legends Reference Pages and provides pointers to older pieces about rumors and hoaxes still wandering into everyone’s inboxes. Our last update mailing was September 15, 2007.

      If after this update you are left wondering about something newly arrived in your inbox, our search engine stands ready to assist you. Bookmark that URL — it’s a keeper!

      An RSS feed for our What’s New page is available at the following URL:
      http://www.snopes.com/info/whatsnew.xml

      And now to the legends, the mayhem, and the misinformation!


      New Articles

      • Hanky warning: Video clip shows an aired-once-only Budweiser commercial paying tribute to 9/11 victims.

      • This week the media was awash in stories about this being the emoticon’s 25th anniversary. We say the little critters are older.

      • Political humor: Recycled joke posits problem with new postage stamp.

      • E-mail warns that jerky treats manufactured in China have been making dogs sick.

      • While the “free chicken sandwich and Coke at Chick-fil-A” promotion was for real, the company has since announced its fulfillment level has been reached.

      • The movement to ban dihydrogen monoxide strikes again!

      Worth a Second Look

      • A physician once attempted to measure the weight of the human soul.

      Still Haunting the Inbox

      • 15-year-old Evan Trembley of Wichita Falls, Texas, isn’t missing – it’s a hoax.

      • Dialing #77 or *677 is not a surefire way of reaching the local highway patrol — the service is in place in some regions, but not in others. If in need of assistance, dial 911 instead for the sure thing.

      • We look at two eraser sponge rumors, that they contain formaldehyde or have caused chemical burns when rubbed on skin.

      • While it’s true a consortium of wireless providers is planning to create a 411 (directory assistance) service for cell phone numbers, you need not register your cell phone with the national “Do Not Call” directory to prevent your number from being provided to telemarketers.

      • The missing child alert about 13-year-old Ashley Flores of Philadelphia is a hoax.

      • Petition advocates buying/not buying gasoline from Citgo. And no, Citgo did not change its name to Petro Express.

      • No, the new dollar coin doesn’t omit “In God We Trust” – that phrase has been stamped into its edge.

      • The entreaty to aid 7-year-old Amy Bruce who is dying of lung cancer and a brain tumor by forwarding an email and a sappy poem titled “Slow Dance” is a hoax.

      • E-mail compares George W. Bush’s eco-friendly ranch with Al Gore’s energy-expending mansion.

      • E-mailed petition advocates denying social services to immigrants.

      • Will pressing #-9-0 on your telephone allow scammers to make long-distance calls and charge them to your phone bill?

      • No, Johns Hopkins Hospital has not issued a “cancer update” detailing how cancer spreads and recommending methods for treating the disease.

      • Is Illinois Senator Barack Obama “ideologically Muslim”?

      • 809 area code scam: Unsuspecting phone customers have been gulled by con artists into placing calls to area codes in the Caribbean that result in hefty charges.

      • While the FDA health advisory regarding drugs containing PPA (phenylpropanolamine) is the real thing, it’s outdated.

      • While actor Lee Marvin did fight in the Pacific theater during World War II, earned a Purple Heart, and is buried in Arlington National Cemetery, he and Bob Keeshan (TV’s “Captain Kangaroo,”) did not fight together in the battle for Iwo Jima.

      • There was no letter to Starbucks from coffee-seeking G.I.s serving in Iraq, so no response from the coffee retailer saying it didn’t support the war and anyone in it. As for Oscar Mayer refusing troops free hot dogs, the 2004 Starbucks e-mail was altered in 2007 to aim it at the blameless hot dog maker.

      • No, Jay Leno did not write the “Hits the Nail on the Head” essay — it was Craig R. Smith.

      • There’s no abductor prowling the Target parking lot in Wheaton, Illinois, who is using an old lady who appears to be in distress to lure victims.

      • E-mail claims Jane Fonda betrayed U.S. POWs during the Vietnam War.

      • During the 1987 Iran-Contra hearings, Oliver North did decry that a certain terrorist was “the most evil person alive” and that “an assassin team [should] be formed to eliminate him and his men from the face of the earth,” but he wasn’t talking about Osama bin Laden.

      • Images do show the USS New York, which is being built with steel from the Twin Towers.

      • No, robbers are not luring female victims into sniffing ether-laced perfume in parking lots.

      • While it is true that in 2004 a man in India was electrocuted when trying to use his cell phone as it recharged, it is safe to use your cell phone while it is charging.

      • Hillary Clinton is the subject of many e-mailed items, and our “Clintons” section contains write-ups about a number of them.

      • No, Bill Gates is not sharing his fortune with everyone who forwards a specific e-mail on his behalf. This tired leg-pull continues to romp through everyone’s inbox, the most widespread incarnation swearing “This took two pages of the Tuesday USA Today!”

      • Virus announcement and virus hoax e-mails are afoot! We try to keep current on them and do our best to point readers to authoritative links confirming or debunking them.

      Fraud Afoot

      • Seems like everyone has become the recipient of mysterious e-mails promising untold wealth if only one helps a wealthy foreigner quietly move millions of dollars out of his country. The venerable Nigerian Scam has discovered the goldmine that is the Internet. Beware — there’s still no such thing as “something for nothing,” and the contents of your bank account will end up with these wily foreigners if you fall in with this.

      • Likewise, look out for mailings announcing you’ve won a foreign lottery you don’t recall entering.

      • Or that because you share the surname of a wealthy person who died without leaving a will you’re in line for a windfall inheritance.

      • And be especially wary if, while trying to sell or rent anything online (car, boat, horse, motorcycle, painting, apartment, you name it) you’re approached by a prospective buyer/renter who wants to pay with a cashier check made out for an amount in excess of the agreed-upon price and who asks the balance be sent to a third party.

      • Aspiring work-at-homers promised big bucks for acting as intermediaries for international transactions wherein they cash checks for other parties or reship goods to them have been defrauded by con artists. Don’t you be next.

      • If someone telephones to announce you can have a $200 Wal-Mart shopping spree or $200 in gasoline coupons in return for a $3.49 processing charge to be debited directly from your bank account, hang up. You’re being set up via the promise of “something for almost nothing” into authorizing a swindler to help himself to the contents of your bank account.

      • If someone calls to announce you’ve failed to appear for jury duty and will be arrested, do not give the caller your personal and financial information in an effort to prove he’s sending the gendarmes after the wrong guy. You’re being tricked into giving up this information to an identity thief.

      Admin Stuff

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      • Our What’s New page and our 25 Hottest Urban Legends page are also handy places to check whenever you receive something questionable in your inbox.

      • Other inquiries and comments may be submitted through the “Contact Us” form at snopes.com.

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        This material may not be reproduced without permission

           
           

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        September 20, 2007

        Sheesh

        Filed under: 2946 — Miss Capri @ 2:05 pm

        —– Original Message —–
        From: Chrissy
        To: dog_anti-rescue_anti-peta_new@yahoogroups.com
        Sent: Thursday, September 20, 2007 6:11 AM
        Subject: Re: [dog_anti-rescue_anti-peta_new] "owner"

        This is really not a well thought out message from the AR… (I couldn't think
        of anything nice to say)

        What do people expect? Totally free vet care? I suppose the Ar would want the
        vet to provide free services. There are some vets that would work out payment
        arrangements on large bills, I know I have had to make payments for quite a few
        visits. Hey that have bills to pay too.
        As far as the Dentist comment, they wont keep your child but they will stop any
        further dental care, the child is a human.
        And YES I do OWN my dog. Until they work and can support themselves and provide
        there own dinner, be a contributing part of my family I will be the boss of
        them… and yes this goes for my child too… But there is a huge difference
        between my child and my dog… I will kick the dog out of bed if it has flees,
        and my daughter doesn't crap in the floor if I don't get back in time to tell
        her to go to the bathroom.

        Ok… that is my 2 cents on this… Animals are property.. we should be able to
        do with them as we want.. the only rights an animal has is food water and
        protection from the elements (and to be slaughtered in a quick and effective
        way)

        Chrissy

        Re: [dog_anti-rescue_anti-peta_new] "owner"
        By Indy(Indy)
        Disgusting! I'll put *s around anything else I see wrong with this garbage, and
        it's bound to be a heck of a lot. Subject: FW: [stopthekilling] Extension of
        *Rights* for *Companion Animals* Date: Wed, 19 Sep 2007 09:07:36 -0700 …
        http://dontgimmethat.blogspot.com/2007_09_01_archive.html#7351929862199627787

        September 19, 2007

        ConsumerFreedom Lone Star Vegan Vigilante Behind Bars

        Filed under: 2946 — Miss Capri @ 2:50 pm
        —– Original Message —–
        Sent: Wednesday, September 19, 2007 10:42 AM
        Subject: ConsumerFreedom Lone Star Vegan Vigilante Behind Bars
        This email was sent to you by the Center for Consumer Freedom. To ensure delivery to your inbox, please add info@consumerfreedom.com to your address book.


        Daily Headlines www.consumerfreedom.com


        Search Search


         
        Animal Rights September 19, 2007
         
         
        Lone Star Vegan Vigilante Behind Bars

        Lone Star Vegan Vigilante Behind Bars

        Strange things happen when a restaurant dares to serve foie gras in a hotbed of animal-liberation lunatics. And sometimes those strange things are felonies. Last weekend police in Austin, Texas arrested Josh Rosenberg, the self-styled “V-Gangstar” who allegedly vandalized a series of restaurants where the menus didn’t meet with his vegetarian approval. (A security camera outside one restaurant that offers foie gras caught Rosenberg in the act.) He remains behind bars on a $20,000 bond, but the story hardly ends there.

        A group calling itself Central Texas Animal Defense (CTAD) has been protesting outside Restaurant Jezebel for weeks, and the foie gras-friendly chef-owner tells The Austin Chronicle that sales of the delicacy are increasing because of the controversy. CTAD, it turns out, is led by Noah Cooper, a former campaign manager at People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) who has a lot of explaining to do.

        Predictably, Cooper is trying to distance himself from Rosenberg’s alleged vandalism, although the Austin American-Statesmen reports that Rosenberg participated in CTAD’s organized protests with Cooper and others. Jezebel’s chef-owner wrote a scathing description of Cooper’s involvement with Rosenberg yesterday, and added some personal notes about what he and his family have been through:

        Mr. Cooper is not as distant from the vandal as he claims; in fact he can be seen standing and “hanging out” with Joshua Rosenberg on the surveillance video at every single protest until Mr. Rosenberg’s arrest.  Mr. Cooper called and threatened my parents in South Carolina and scared them to a point where they filed a police report and they are in the process of having charges filed on Mr. Cooper et al. I had to close the restaurant (Jezebel) to fly to SC to reassure my mother because she called me crying on the phone.  Mr. Cooper stated in a blog involving his girlfriend “restaurateurs are far more likely to listen when their windows are broken or their storefronts are redecorated” …

        Mr. Cooper in fact has worked for PETA and has moved to Texas to start up problems.  The tactics he uses are not appropriate anywhere.

        We couldn’t agree more. Archives of Cooper’s pages on MySpace and Friendster (later replaced with milder language) show an activist whose interests include “militancy,” “anti-capitalism,” and “anarchism.” Cooper wrote on one page:

        “[A]nyone involved with the ALF or the ELF are, by default, amazing … Try as you might, you cannot argue with the effectiveness of Ted Kaczynski [and] Leon Czolgosz … [Y]ou’re fooling yourself if you think talk is going to bring social change. Quit TALKING about anarchy, and go f— s— up!”

        Kaczynski is the famed “Unabomber.” Czolgosz was the anarchist who assassinated President William McKinley. The ALF and ELF are domestic terrorism organizations. And yes, we “bleeped” Cooper’s last sentence.

         

        Breaking News

        Here’s a sampling of other stories that have caught our interest today. To see a one-week archive of these items, click here.

        Past Headlines

          Cartoons


        Copyright (c) 2007 Center for Consumer Freedom. All Rights Reserved.
        P.O. Box 27414 | Washington, DC 20038 | Tel: 202-463-7112 | info@consumerfreedom.com
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        September 18, 2007

        From My Alerts: More Sites About the Madeleine McCann Case

        Filed under: 2946 — Miss Capri @ 10:21 pm

        Sorry tale's just spinning out of control
        Belfast Telegraph – United Kingdom
        By Gail Walker Everywhere, people are talking about what might have really
        happened to Madeleine McCann that night in Praia da Luz. …
        http://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/columnists/gail-walker/article2974525.ece

        Madeleine McCann's Parents Want To Refocus On Finding Missing Girl
        The family of Madeleine McCann called for an end to the widespread speculation
        surrounding the case, saying the focus should return to finding the missing
        child.
        http://www.citynews.ca/news/news_14869.aspx

        Madeleine: McCanns consult American lawyers over 'cadaver dog …
        By comment(comment)
        Kate and Gerry McCann's legal team have consulted the lawyers of an American man
        accused of murdering his estranged wife in a case where cadaver dog evidence was
        key, a source said today. Two British sniffer dogs, one capable of …
        http://madeleinemccann.blogspot.com/2007/09/madeleine-mccanns-consult-american.html

        Interviews with Gerry and Kate McCann
        Here are a few video clips of interviews with Gerry and Kate McCann, parents of
        missing four-year-old Madeleine. From the beginning, I have felt that a horrible
        thing happened to the McCann family. Surely, few horrors can begin to …
        http://michellerichmond.com/sanserif/2007/09/18/interviews-with-gerry-and-kate-mccann/

        Overheard In McCann Erickson
        By superspy
        Woman #1: Oooh, I really like the smell of whatever you're eating or wearing.
        What is that? Woman #2: A cough drop. Woman #1: What kind? Woman #2: Hall's.
        Woman #1: Oooh, that's really nice. -Elevator, McCann Erickson office …
        http://agencyspy.wordpress.com/2007/09/18/overheard-in-ny/

        Corrupt Police

        Filed under: 2946 — Miss Capri @ 1:26 am

        I don't have much faith in the police to begin with, but those who have abused
        the parents of missing children should never work again, at least, not in any
        position of authority over anyone else.

        I don't know if this case will ever be solved, or if any outcomes whatever they
        may be, can be believed.

        Controversial past of policeman leading the McCann investigation
        Independent – London,England,UK
        Despite the recent furore surrounding Kate and Gerry McCann being made
        suspects in their daughter's disappearance, Goncalo Amaral – head of the
        Policia …
        http://news.independent.co.uk/europe/article2950302.ece

        Lindy Chamberlain-Creighton knows McCann's pain
        Melbourne Herald Sun – Australia
        LINDY Chamberlain-Creighton last night leapt to the defence of the
        embattled parents of missing girl Madeleine McCann. She even offered to
        speak to the …
        http://www.news.com.au/heraldsun/story/0,21985,22408831-662,00.html

        Moral superiority: the ugly new stick to beat Kate McCann
        Times Online – UK
        We have witnessed it almost from the start with the story of Madeleine
        McCann. It was there in the beginning, as in: they left their children
        alone in the …
        http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/columnists/sandra_parsons/article2439235.ece

        Madeleine: The vital witness who could help clear the McCann's name
        Daily Mail – UK
        TV producer Jeremy Wilkins, on holiday in Praia da Luz with his partner and
        baby son, spoke to Gerry McCann during the hour when Madeleine went
        missing. …
        http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/news/news.html?in_article_id=482157&in_page_id=1770
        See all stories on this topic:
        http://news.google.com/news?hl=en&ncl=http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/news/news.html%3Fin_article_id%3D482157%26in_page_id%3D1770

        Maddie McCann cops in torture claim
        Melbourne Herald Sun – Australia
        THE senior detective jointly in charge of the investigation into the
        Madeleine McCann disappearance is to face a criminal hearing into an
        alleged cover-up …
        http://www.news.com.au/heraldsun/story/0,21985,22430541-5005961,00.html

        The McCann case is no place for anonymity
        Guardian Unlimited – UK
        They've 'launched an astonishing smear campaign against Kate McCann'
        apparently. They say she's 'hysterical and visibly out of control'. …
        http://www.guardian.co.uk/Columnists/Column/0,,2170052,00.html

        UK media raise doubts about McCann police
        New Zealand Herald – New Zealand
        By Stacey Hunt The blanket media coverage of the Madeleine McCann case
        continues in the UK, with the public now taking some of the blame for the
        abuse laid …
        http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/2/story.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10464199

        September 17, 2007

        Re: [Anti-PETA] Fresno SPCA and Parvo

        Filed under: 2946 — Miss Capri @ 1:54 pm
        Yes, sheesh,well, I guess the short answer is, as always, this is the ar way of fazing out pet ownership. Make people get pound dogs they know are sick, to prevent people from getting healthy dogs from breeders or pet stores, decreasing the demand so that breeders eventually have to stop breeding and selling animals, and eventually the supply of pets runs out altogether – until the pounds import more sick animals from other countries and continue to make money off them and off people’s ar-created heartbreak.
         
        —– Original Message —–
        From: Deenerz
        Sent: Monday, September 17, 2007 1:27 PM
        Subject: [Anti-PETA] Fresno SPCA and Parvo

        Today while driving in to work I was listening to a talk show that features?a Lawyer, Len Tillem, that discusses legal issues with callers on the air.? Today he had a caller call in about three dogs he “adopted” from the Fresno SPCA.? This young U.S. Marine bought a dog a couple months ago and the dog ended up having Parvo.? The SPCA would not look at the dog so he had to go to an Emergency Vet as all other vets would not see the dog.? After extended treatment the dog died and he owes $3700. in Vet bills.

        He then?”adopts” a second dog from the Fresno SPCA and the dog ends up with Kennel?Cough.? They gave him medication to treat the dog but the condition worsens,?and the SPCA tells him it will get worse before it gets better.? At 11:00 AM today the dog was put down.? The dog had pneumonia.

        This young Marine complained to the Fresno SPCA about the two dogs and to make amends the SPCA gives him another dog.? This dog has PARVO!

        Now why was it I am supposed to avoid people that breed dogs and buy one from a shelter?

        I really want to know why our tax dollars are funding places that make animals diseased and we are emotionally black mailed into “Adopting” pets from them only to have our hearts broken.

        I feel sad for this young man that wanted to “Do the right thing” and “Adopt” a dog from a shelter.

        -Mike
        __________________________________________________________
        Email and AIM finally together. You’ve gotta check out free AOL Mail! – http://mail.aol.com

        [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

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