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This website has been taken offline due to the sensitive nature of the events that transpired in Texas this morning and in compliance with a request from the FBI. If you want to see the original letter, please see the archived version at thesmokinggun.com: http://www.thesmokinggun.com/archive/ye ... tack1.html
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T35 Hosting
nathan28 wrote:Barracuda, are we reading the same thing? I can barely follow the guy save to say that I gather he's been a tax agitator with a middle-of-the-road populist bend for about three decades now and having gotten hit with back taxes for the final time, decided to killed himself. He'd fit the standard "profile" for most suicides, too: middle-aged educated male with some degree of success at some point in life.
nathan28 wrote:A suicide attack is a show of force, and by the Faux Brownshirt manual, "liberals" can't do that. So they're going to have to recoup him as either a repressed homosexual or a madman, though i imagine they've got an intern digging through internet records to find links to Al Qaeda or at least having been friends or neighbors with a Muslim.
All this as a way of saying that there is very little you could do in the way of tax protesting that I would find unreasonable.
The Austin Texas Bombing Is A HUGE Image Blow To The "Tea Party" Right
Joe Weisenthal | Feb. 18, 2010, 1:47 PM | 2,484 | 51
PrintTags: Planes, Transportation, Terrorism
Source: Wikipedia
It's not clear who the Austin, TX plane crash pilot Joe Stack hung out with, but let's just put it out there and stop playing pretend: this is not good publicity for the "Tea Party" right, and no, we're not saying Stack was a tea partier.
But in his insane manifesto he rails against the IRS, bailouts, and, well, all of the right wing's typical enemies.
Is this fair to the right? No. Will some of the media use this as a chance to smear the "tea partiers"? Sure.
But we're not talking about what's fair, we're just talking about what happens.
The bottom line is that this event is to Obama what Oklahoma City was to Bill Clinton, and Oklahoma City helped Clinton a lot in the dark days after the 1994 election.
http://www.businessinsider.com/the-aust ... ght-2010-2
norton ash wrote:C'mon, this angry guy's lil' 9/11 show is a reasonable protest?
barracuda wrote:
I gave the IRS my last payment this year to cover $65,000 in taxes that they insisted upon collecting for the years 1994 - 1996, during which time I had made $18,000 per year as a contractor. Granted, I had skipped my filings at the time, mostly due to my lifestyle as a fairly hardcore drug addict and part-time correctional facility resident, but really - did they need to essentially ruin me financially for the next ten or fifteen years? Twice they swooped on my bank accounts, emptying them entirely without notice (the first time causing my eviction), and once they garnished 100% of my wages for three months, so that I lost a perfectly good job and couldn't pay them a thing while the interest and penalties continued to accrue mercilessly. Had I filed originally, I would have owed them nothing.
elfismiles wrote:
The Austin Texas Bombing Is A HUGE Image Blow To The "Tea Party" Right
Joe Weisenthal | Feb. 18, 2010, 1:47 PM | 2,484 | 51
PrintTags: Planes, Transportation, Terrorism
Source: Wikipedia
It's not clear who the Austin, TX plane crash pilot Joe Stack hung out with, but let's just put it out there and stop playing pretend: this is not good publicity for the "Tea Party" right, and no, we're not saying Stack was a tea partier.
But in his insane manifesto he rails against the IRS, bailouts, and, well, all of the right wing's typical enemies.
barracuda wrote:nathan28 wrote:Barracuda, are we reading the same thing? I can barely follow the guy save to say that I gather he's been a tax agitator with a middle-of-the-road populist bend for about three decades now and having gotten hit with back taxes for the final time, decided to killed himself. He'd fit the standard "profile" for most suicides, too: middle-aged educated male with some degree of success at some point in life.
I gave the IRS my last payment this year to cover $65,000 in taxes that they insisted upon collecting for the years 1994 - 1996, during which time I had made $18,000 per year as a contractor. Granted, I had skipped my filings at the time, mostly due to my lifestyle as a fairly hardcore drug addict and part-time correctional facility resident, but really - did they need to essentially ruin me financially for the next ten or fifteen years? Twice they swooped on my bank accounts, emptying them entirely without notice (the first time causing my eviction), and once they garnished 100% of my wages for three months, so that I lost a perfectly good job and couldn't pay them a thing while the interest and penalties continued to accrue mercilessly. Had I filed originally, I would have owed them nothing.
All this as a way of saying that there is very little you could do in the way of tax protesting that I would find unreasonable.
Joseph Andrew Stack Did Software Work For Hughes Aircraft, Warner Bros Studios Stores, More
Gillian Reagan | Feb. 18, 2010, 2:37 PM | 1,494 | 3
PrintTags: News, Planes, Transportation, Terrorism, Media, Airline Industry
Source: http://twitpic.com/13yxsb
Software engineer Joseph Andrew Stack, the pilot who intentionally crashed a plane in Texas this morning, did contract work for several companies including Hughes Aircraft, Equinox Industries/Warner Brothers Studio Stores, Sorrento Electronics, according to his business website.
He ran a firmware/software development service company called Embedded Art. Here's a description of his business, from his homepage:
Embedded Art is a small independent software house, specializing in process control and automation. In its current form it represents the culmination of 20 years of experience in the software development consulting business. Founded by Joe Stack in 1983 (under the name of Prowess Engineering) in Southern California, the company thrived for 15 years until shifting focus to the Sacramento area to take advantage of growth in the Silicon Valley.
Now, 5 years later, the expertise of Embedded Art has landed in the Austin Area expecting to lend a hand to the growing high technology industry in South-Central Texas.
The concept behind the success of Embedded Art is that we provide the experience and muscle for addressing complex software engineering development tasks. Much of today's programming is a step-wise refinement of previous development projects. With 20 years of experience, we provide the expertise that can effectively navigate around many of the pitfalls that snare the unseasoned engineer (indeed, we've seen many of the same mistakes made again and again by the inexperienced).
Here's his list of clients and the description of his projects, according to the site:
Cylink Corporation
Project: The Cylink CY8300 IPSec high-performance security processor
DMC Stratex Networks
Project: The Spectrum and Altium product lines, high-capacity wireless communication platforms (i.e., microwave radios)
Western Digital Corporation
Project: A high-performance multi-function ESDI/SCSI/Floppy controller for the Apollo networked workstations and high-end PCs.
Equinox Industries/Warner Brothers Studio Stores
Project: Distribution Center Processing Automation
Interstate Electronics Corporation
Project: IEC 9002 GPS-based Flight Management System
Project: The IEC 9002 Navigation Database Update Processor, a Windows-based, off-line data reduction tool
Project: IEC 9002 MCDU, an ARINC-739 compatible Multi-purpose Control and Display Unit
Project: GPS Satellite Simulator (Military & Commercial unit)
Project: IEC Military Plasma Display, an 80186/82720-based "intelligent" terminal boasting multi-mode text graphics display, ANSI Standard compatibility, multiple virtual screens, and downloadable display generation capabilityEverett Charles Technologies
Project: ECT 9090(tm) Bare Board Tester
MOST, Inc.
Project: 2.6GB SCSI II read/write CD-ROM (Magneto/Optical) drive
Emulex Corporation
Project: SCSI/ATA(IDE) chipset firmware base (early C++)
Design and implement hardware interface library components
Cable & Computer Technology, Inc.
Project: An AMD-2900 based bit-slice magnetic tape controller
Taradactyl Technovation, Inc.
Project: The Mileage Elephant (vehicle usage tracker)
Teledyne Systems Corporation
Project: An AMD-2900 based bit-slice emulation/simulation of IBM's 32-bit AP101-F floating-point processor
Hughes Aircraft, Fullerton
Project: A multi-processor control system composed of six 68000 processors, twenty-two 8085
Sorrento Electronics, Inc.
Project: Process Control System
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