Capital of Nasty Electronic Magazine Volume IV, Issue 3, AD MCMXCIX Monday, February 8, 1999 ISSN 1482-0471 ------------------------------------------- George Carlin said that if four people are doing something, there's a magazine for it. Now, if there's one person doing it, there's an Internet site. ------------------------------------------- Hey, the second heads makes us all do stupid things. Brain: She will get us killed. Do you understand? KILLED. DEAD. Penis: Yeah, but look at that body! Let's try her out! Brain: Okay! ------------------------------------------- 1. Editorial 2. The Meaning of Life 3. Jason's Republic: Nearly Ten Minutes of Philosophical Training 4. On the Eve of Tomorrow 5. Duckism ------------------------------------------- This week's Golden Testicle award: http://www.patents.ibm.com/details?patent_number=5501650 ------------------------------------------- 1. Editorial By CoN Staff Welcome to Issue 3 of CoN. If you are wondering why the long delay, you have no one else but me to blame. While this issue was ready to go last Monday, I was incredibly tired from the College/Work combination. The only priority I had in mind once I got home was to put my face on the pillow. College has proved to be quite the opposite of the challenge I was expecting. In one class we had a three hour lecture on printers. We learned that printers are devices that when hooked to a computer, print. Or that hard drives store data magnetically and should not be kicked. That scanners scan. That telnet is like DOS but different. In our software class, the highlight of the first week was how to make folders and rename them on our Macs. English is always a surprise. One day is a 3 hour long video on everything you never cared to know about our province. The next may be some story about Freud. A three hour lecture on Freud done with a German accent. And of course, assignments. You can't go wrong here (unless you are in the graphic design class, where if you are a dot too much to the left, you'll get a lecture on how to respect positive-negative space), in fact if you miss to talk completely on the subject assigned, you are bound to get a B+. I digress. In the mean time, college coffee has become my best friend. NativeOfSF writes: > Hot puppies & also yippie!!! > > Ah gottz mah furst one!!! Hot damn...eye's a-rare'in 2 down-load > dat file & guezz whatz??? No file attached. Nope. Zero. Nada. No > contentz!!! X-cept'z itz got notin 2 download. Ken U-all fix it???? > > I really, really need that download...please. > > Keep up dis coolness!!! > > I'm about 6'6^', over 100 kilos++ & eye know how 2 run with > scissors & other stuff...please. Okay. For any other AOL user out there that is having problems receiving the issues of CoN, be advised of the following: AOL's mailer has a whole set of weird and absurd filters, some of which do not allow attachments of a certain size to be received. If you receive the headers but not the content and you are an AOL user, you'll have to change the settings so that you can receive large attachments. It's not our fault, please do not write to complain to us. THE RESTROOM ETIQUETTE article got quite a few responses. The first is from Gregoire Seither: > On top of an overall excellent issue, this is the cherry ! So > true ! It made me laugh out loud as I was reading it, making my > co-designers think I am some kind of weirdo (since I am supposed > to be doing this plumbing catalogue with lots of tables in > QXpress - and who would laugh while doing that...) Crystal proves to us that if you are a woman who likes to pee standing up, the test might not be so hard: > just a quick comment for ya, i was a bit surprised that, > being female, i actually answered all the urinal questions > CORRECTLY... hmmm... I'll leave you with a site suggested by one of our readers, Quonie: > www.lateboomer.com---this site has music and lyrics of a > political nature that are both humorous and scathing. Next issue of CoN will be about horses water skiing -- no hands -- on lakes of 100% pure margarine. They use their trunks to hold onto the line. Or something. Have a great issue. ------------------------------------------- 2. The Meaning of Life By Lilith DemHareIs "There is more in Heaven and Earth, Horatio, than is dreamt of in your philosophy..." -- Wm Shakespeare I feel I know the meaning of life. In fact, I'm pretty convinced I've figured it out. I've also had sufficient proof to convince me that I'm on the right track. As a result, I experience extreme joy. No doubt there are countless others who can claim the same thing. And each one probably has a different viewpoint to me. But the question is: Has their philosophy already proven itself? Or are they just hanging on, hoping that they're right, not so much that what they believe is right, but only because they know that what is wrong is wrong. It's like those Christians who believe in Christianity not because it'll get them to Heaven, but because they're afraid if they *don't* believe, they'll go to Hell. Do not believe in something because you fear something. Believe in something because you *don't* fear. Knowing the meaning of life involves some knowledge (or at least faith) about where you once were, where you are now, where you are going, how you are getting there, and -- most importantly -- WHY you are going there. Don't forget to ask yourself WHY you are going there, and what do you expect to do once you get there. I could never understand the Buddhist viewpoint, especially that becoming One with whatever it is the One is. WHY would someone want to become One with the One? And after they do, then what? Surely that One beingness has a purpose. I can understand wanting to reach Nirvana (as some of certain religious persuasion are wont to do). But the process it takes to get there seems a little long, slow, arduous, and I don't see how the journey justifies the destination. Perhaps it is my own philosophy that gets in the way. In my views on the Meaning of Life, it takes only one cycle to get to where I'm going. If I do the right things, not only will I make it to where I'm going, but the journey's gonna be downright pleasant. And then, once I get there, it's not just harps and hallelujas. I've actually got things planned to do. The Rest of Forever is not going to be boring. And WHY it's not going to be boring is my philosophy on the Meaning of Life. What completely baffles me is why would anyone settle for anything less? ------------------------------------------- 3. Jason's Republic: Nearly Ten Minutes of Philosophical Training By Jason MacIsaac The very first philosophy course I ever took was on modern ethics and issues. I don't remember the exact course name or code (hardly surprising for reasons that shall be clear in a moment), but the course description was very promising. It covered very hot issues like abortion, capital punishment, euthanasia, and so on. Doesn't that sound interesting? I thought if nothing else, I should go for the screaming fights. I remember some rip-roaring good-ones in high school on such issues. In University, a person's cultural or political leanings get extra support from meeting like-minded people on campus. If you were a hardcore socialist in high school, than University clubs made you so hardcore your centre mass was so dense you actually gave off a gravitational pull, sucking in less powerful socialists. With people like that around, I was prepared for some verbal exchanges like gunfights. The reality was extremely disheartening. Our teacher could have made anything boring. Send her into regions of the world with bitter religious and ethnic conflicts to lecture both sides, and they'd lose interest in killing each other. She sure killed all potential conflict in our class. She probably could have said, "Gay people are evil" to the Gay and Lesbian campus group, and instead of outrage, they probably just would have yawned and turned over. The woman could weaken the impact and fallout damage from a nuclear warhead by boring it into submission. Her first sin was her tendency to stretch out material much longer than necessary. One day one we learned about "The Slippery Slope Theorem." This is basically the idea that once you permit one morally questionable act, it becomes easier to take a step closer to the next morally questionable act, and so on, until you're doing things that are just plain wrong, or something you wanted to avoid doing in the first place. For example, (WARNING: SIMPLISTIC EXAMPLE AHEAD BUT WITH SENSITIVE ISSUE AHEAD. DOES NOT REFLECT THE OPINIONS OF THIS AUTHOR OR CAPNASTY. IF YOU WRITE AN ANGRY LETTER, IT MEANS YOU MISINTERPRETED THIS AND WE GET TO MAKE FUN OF YOU), you could argue that if you legalize abortion within the first trimester, it becomes easier to legalize it for the second. And the third. And early childhood. And finally the adolescent years, when quite frankly, abortion becomes extremely tempting for parents putting up with surly and smelly teens. Ok, do we understand the slippery slope thingy? Good. Now imagine my teacher spreading this out for another 20 minutes. But that's not all! You've got to add her speech pattern, which did nothing to reduce the running time: "And so, and so.if we consider.if we.consider, the slippery.and so, the slippery slope, if we consider.the slope.and." Her lectures were two hours long. During the hour-long "classroom" portions, she took attendance too. This is sacrilege. Skipping classes isn't a privilege; it's a right. I paid tuition, and if I chose not to be in the spot I paid for, my loss. And in fact, her gain. One less pratt to worry about. Of course, keeping attendance is an easy and cheap way of giving marks to people (it accounted for a percentage of our grade). I skipped those classes anyway. Then, one day, I got to thinking about the midterm. I reflected that I'd better start catching up on the work I was missing, and find out when then midterm was. So I opened up my student planner, and determined that the philosophy midterm was six hours ago. Oops. I dropped the course before she could flunk me. *** The only other course in philosophy I took (and I completed this one), was an Existentialist class. The teacher of that one I gathered felt rather above his assignment. It was in his mannerisms. During his first class, he sat there jotting notes in a book before saying a damn word. We sat there, not knowing what to do. I suspect he was running some kind of "test" on us, as humanities teachers are wont to do. The worst offenders are Psychology teachers, who feel that the world is theirs to experiment on, but are unprepared for the consequences of doing so (i.e., the people experimented on get pissed and kick the shit out of the teacher). As he jotted, my room-mate from Saskatoon, Zaphod (she was and is a strange girl, but damn I miss her), passed me a note that said "This guy has 30 second to say something useful or I'm out of here." Mysteriously, our teacher consulted his watch, said "Five minutes," and then began his lecture. No one ever asked what he was doing. No one, I suspect, really cared all that much. The thing I carried away most from this class was a stark trembling fear. Around essay time we got out the usual shovel and hoisted our fair share of bullshit, but then I learned that he had given a 0 on two essays from the previous class. Why? "Because they weren't about philosophy." Uh, okay, but ZERO? Come on, you'd think just writing your name on a sheet of paper would be worth a percent. It was then that we realized our teacher was certifiable insane and should not be provoked so long as he could give us a mark. Because of this, the class was hard to enjoy. In particular, we seemed to go over the same sort of ground again and again because some students couldn't get with it. I think this is because there were a lot of Journalism students, who are notoriously bad at absorbing information. No, I'm serious. I remember one girl, a promising future columnist for the Toronto Sun I'm sure, who couldn't hack the fact that a certain region of the world was once controlled by Greece, but is now currently in Turkish possession. I remember wasting twenty minutes on these simple Before and After conundrums. Still, it was worth it. The information I absorbed from that class allowed me to write a short story several years later. I even copied the personality of our teacher, and also a part where someone corrects the tech about the real circumstances surrounding Lord Byron's death. In real life, that was me. He claimed that he knew Lord Byron had not been killed in battle, but had been bled to death by leeching. I wonder why he passed the inaccurate information on to our class though. So, while my education doesn't allow me to understand the nature or absurdity of the cosmos, I did get to write a good story, with an excellent title, too. Too bad all my classes weren't as helpful. ------------------------------------------- 4. ON THE EVE OF THE FUTURE By Joe Tomorrow This is our history. I still remember the day it happened -- March 3, 2013. At 11:15 in morning it was announced simultaneously around the world the Bill Gates' personal net worth had exceeded the national debt of the United States and in a hostile, but unchallenged takeover, achieved through absorption and complex stock splits, the United States became an incorporated, wholly owned subsidiary of Microsoft. The country was now known as United States of Microsoft, inc. The Whitehouse moved to Bill's palatial home, the Senate and Congress moved to "The Campus". The flying windows Microsoft logo replaced the stars in the upper corner of old glory and the entire work force of what was America was laid off and hired back as perma-temps at lower wages, no benefits and no unions. Unions were outlawed. These were President/CEO/Chairman Bill's changes in the first week. Surprisingly, there was not too much protest. Mainly Free Mason's and some militia groups in the Michigan area but they were quickly rounded up by the USMS commandos and shipped into Microsoft Users Re-education Development EnviRonments -- or MURDER as they came to be known. Most people figured they would all have life time jobs with Microsoft after the take over but like most corporations, Microsoft did a lot of downsizing after the change. It only took 3 days for the labour laws to be repealed and everyone in the country was hit with pink slips. It seems that contract labour on demand is the only way to work in the US of M now. The hourly wage is frozen at $8.00 per hour regardless of the work you do. It's almost enough to survive on but not enough to allow for any strongholds of resistance to be funded. And overtime pay is non-existent. Perma-temps simply work the hours required by the employers or face permanent unemployment. With absolutely no social safety net, the fear of unemployment effectively silences all protesters. Everyone was also issued with Microsoft SmartBuyer cards. Which were basically combination credit cards and personal info cards. It was law that everyone had to show their card when asked by an MSMP officer. Penalty for not having a card was internment in one of the MURDER centers. The credit accumulated on these cards followed not only the users but the users descendants. Indentured servitude guarantees a work force for the future. Washington, Oregon, and California became a single walled state. Accessed only by those of the upper echelons of Microsoft and the former US government. CEO of competitors of Microsoft were rounded up and either interned or expelled from the country all together -- minus their personal wealth, belongings and companies. Every industry in the former US of A was absorbed into a branch of Microsoft. It took less than a month for Bill Gates' wealth to return to the pre-takeover level. The only aspect Bill didn't beat down completely (not for lack of trying) were the hacker's and the paranoid types (which most serious hackers are). We saw it coming and prepared. We have our own counterfeit SmartBuyer cards. Our own non-Microsoft proprietary computer networks. And we're growing. Not in physical size, but in infiltration of trojans, worms, viruses, password capturing software, email monitoring, etc. Through our understanding and use of technologies such as Tempest, Microsoft has not detected our presence. But they will one day. But then it may well be too late. Because as our last line of defence we have a smashing offence -- but it can only be used once. The damage will be done and there will no recovering. At least not in our lifetime. You see there are still a lot of untapped resources -- knowledge bases -- to use an MS friendly term that are available to Joe Average. And we've tapped those sources and learned all we could. And we found out how (relatively) simple it was to manufacture our own electro magnetic pulse bombs. If need be, we will effectively cut off our nose to spite our face and use the EMP weapons. History will judge us accordingly. ------------------------------------------- 5. Duckism By Neux Well, when you said that the subject this time around would be philosophy, I decided I had to contribute my somewhat unique take on things. You see, since October or so I have been conducting a philosophical experiment. Specifically, I have decided that everyone and everything, including yourself, myself, and even Crazy Uncle Joe, is a duck. As in, yellow bill, webbed feet, says "quack". It is not uncommon to see me go up to a random person and say, "You... are a... duck!" So by now you're looking at me pretty funny, so I should probably explain. Duckism dates back to an english class back in October or so when we were discussing the poetry of Wordsworth. We were getting pretty deeply into various romantic themes, one of which happens to be reality of perception; do things have some sort of underlying realism to what they are, or is it all in the eye of the beholder? So, in the midst of this quagmire of quasi-romantic Wordsworthian philosophy, I asked the teacher, "So, um, if I see that table over there as a duck, then at some level is it a duck?" And she said yes. "So then that table is a duck?" And she said that if I really wanted to believe that, then yes. "Then how about Scott? Is he a duck too?" Well, you can imagine where it went from there. Suffice to say, there is not a single man, woman, child, or inanimate object that is somehow a duck. And I am sticking to that. "So why a duck?" you might ask. "Why not a wolf, or a piano, or silly putty?" Well, I will tell you why a duck. I believe that ducks really stand for something, a childlike innocense and silliness that ins't represented by much of anything else. Probably comes from hours of watching Bert and Ernie sing "Rubber Duckie" on Sesame Street... y'know, "Rubber Duckie, joy of joys, when I squeeze you, you make noise..." Anyway, I think that ducks symbolize the need to have fun, and be silly, and to not take everything too seriously. In other words, to lighten up and enjoy life. So I've embraced duckism, and so have most of my friends. And, however strange and misguided it may be, I've become accustomed to carrying a stuffed duck doll with me during my day, just as a little reminder to myself about duckism. And to throw at people when they act stupid. I mean, really, I find it somehow fitting that the price for stupidity should be having a duck thrown at you. So that's a little look into my wacky world. Geeze, stop staring at me like that. You're such a duck. ------------------------------------------- CoN would not be possible without the great help of Scriba Org. Yapper can KIFF my ass. Capital of Nasty Electronic Magazine "media you can abuse" In memory of Father Ross "Padre" Legere Published every second Monday (or when we get around it) Disclaimer: unintentionally offensive Comments, queries and submissions are welcome http://www.capnasty.org ISSN 1482-0471 A bi-weekly electronic journal. Subscriptions available at no cost electronically. Available on Usenet newsgroups alt.zines and alt.ezines. This mailing is sent exclusively to those poor souls who chose to subscribe to the Capital of Nasty mailing list. Spread the word! If you have friends who would like to receive CoN, ask them to send email to join@capnasty.org. If you'd like to unsubscribe because such email aggravates your philosophical intolerance, simply send an empty message to leave@capnasty.org. Pretty feckin' clear, I'd think. Brought to you by C.C.C.P. (Collective Communist Computing Proletariat) Leandro Asnaghi-Nicastro Colin Barrett ZimID 708EC8D1 1994/09/14 EC B0 97 59 1D FE 7C 32 7E 04 2C 66 47 41 FB 7D