an eye for an eye

Simon Bryquer sbryquer at worldnet.att.net
Wed Dec 12 22:33:14 CST 2001


Barbara is Doug and Doug is Barbara.

Look at the word patterns of this post.  Doug's  word strings mixed with an
artificial female voice assuming deep feelings of quasi sympathy. There is
no Barbara and if there is there should not be - only an act of bad fiction
remains.

Why you all responding to a bad example of intarsia.

SCB

----- Original Message -----
From: <barbara100 at jps.net>
To: <pynchon-l at waste.org>
Sent: Wednesday, December 12, 2001 11:03 PM
Subject: Re: an eye for an eye


> The 'upshot'? How about the 'end result'? That's what gets me.  Give it
all
> the high-minded analyses you want, in the end it's the same broken and
> battered bodies.  They're not just 3,700 or 6,000 or 6,000,000, they're
real
> people like you and me. Something Doug posted about Noor Muhammad (today I
> think)--did you read it?  There's a boy, an Afghan boy who got his eyes
and
> arms blown off. A fate worse than death. Reading it made my stomach ache.
> Writing it now does too. "What if that was me?," I ask myself.
"God!...What
> if it was my kid!" That's when I start screaming inside, "Are we fucking
> crazy doing that to people?!" Don't lecture me about REASON, Quail.  I
have
> all the reason I need in my gut.  And you do too, no matter how hard you
try
> to think above it.  It's not enough to say the world is messy and
> unforgiving.  It's not enough. It's only messy and unforgiving so much as
we
> allow it.  You and me and the whole lot of us. But it always has to start
> with you.
>
> About my dinner guests, though, Richard Romeo--rest assured, they don't
get
> to see my best side like you all do here.  I gave it a little try today,
> though, at a division holiday luncheon. We played a game where we wrote
our
> favorite book and other pertinent information on a card, pinned it to our
> lapel, then set out to meet five people we didn't "know very well."  Fun,
> huh?  What do you suppose I wrote as my favorite book? Gravity's Rainbow,
> you guessed it! None of my five people ever heard of it, though. It was
> rather disappointing. You ever felt alone in a crowded room? Yeah,
> well...And silly me, I came here to the P-List thinking it would be a
haven
> of like-minded individuals.  Ha! Look how that's turned out!  But, no,
> Richard, to answer your question, people in my everyday real life don't
hate
> me.  You make me wonder though--maybe they just don't know me well enough.
> Hmmm...
>
> Barbara
>
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: Richard Romeo <richardromeo at hotmail.com>
> To: <pynchon-l at waste.org>
> Sent: Wednesday, December 12, 2001 5:25 PM
> Subject: an eye for an eye
>
>
> > A case can be made as well, and has been, that Israel's so-called
> > assassinations of Palestinian terrorists differ from the suicide bomber
s
> in
> > that civilians are not the targets, though civilians are killed by
Israeli
> > forces in the process of those assassinations. The upshot is pretty much
> the
> > same, but the intentions I suspect are important too.
> > It's not an easy policy to feel whole-heartidly for, I admit.
> > But the world is a messy, unforgiving place.
> >
> > Rich
> >
> >
> > >From: "barbara100 at jps.net" <barbara100 at jps.net>
> > >Reply-To: barbara100 at jps.net
> > >To: "pynchon-l at waste.org" <pynchon-l at waste.org>
> > >Subject: RE: RE: Selective Memory
> > >Date: Tue, 11 Dec 2001 17:02:37 -0500
> > >
> > >Dude, the end of Toby Levy's post quoted Ghandi's, "An eye for an eye
> makes
> > >the whole world blind." It was his post and Ghandi's remark that
> motivated
> > >me to go fetch the Report from Democracy Now! for you all to see. If
the
> > >comment fits, use it!
> > >Don't take your guilt out on me...
> > >
> > >
> >
> > _________________________________________________________________
> > MSN Photos is the easiest way to share and print your photos:
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> >
>




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