aiera
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SteamID32 STEAM_0:0:44010239
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Signed Up April 8, 2013
Last Posted March 12, 2025 at 11:44 AM
Posts 3935 (0.9 per day)
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#4 Mid Silver Roamer LF Mentor in Mentoring

Pretty rad videogamer.

posted about 11 years ago
#8 Absurd books? in Off Topic

http://www.amazon.com/Soldiers-Of-God-Supremacists-America/dp/1575666596/ref=cm_cr_pr_product_top

Show Content
Post-Christian Society's Malcontents February 19, 2002
By southpaw68
The authors of the book take a neutral stance on these white supremacists. They present their ideas without actually condoning them. They have a reserved sympathy for these people since the authors live in the rural conservative culture of Texas that breeds this sort of extremism. They also mention that they had repugnance towards some of the ideas presented, but avoided editorial comments as part of their deal with the extremists.
Many racial extremists have the religious theology of an antisemitic variety of Christian Identity. They interpret the scriptures to mean that whites are actually the chosen people and the Jews are the seed of Satan. They believe that the stone of destiny that the monarchs in England swear themselves upon when being enthroned is Jacob's pillar in the Bible because English tradition says so. Not all Identity Christians are anti-semitic though.

The extremists are firm believers in conspiracy theories involving the Jews and their Gentile freemason cohorts. They believe everything is controlled by ZOG (Zionist Occupied Government) and that the Jews and freemasons involved shape society to their own benefit and to the detriment of the white population.

The authors do not sanitize their accounts of what the extremists truly believe. They believe in the elimination of homosexuals, Jews, race mixers, and the unproductive. Some of their beliefs on these matters are influenced by their interpretation of the Scriptures. (The more violent, younger and secular Neo-Nazi gangs believe in elimination of the unproductive.) The religious racists see themselves as soldiers of God in a righteous fight against what they see as evil.
They have problems with the theory of racial equality since they think affirmative action is used to promote people who do not merit the position and that blacks often make formerly all-white neighborhoods crime zones.

The authors do not try to confirm or deny any of the many conspiracy theories that they believe in and I think that this is weakness to the book.

The racial extremists have a battle strategy of leaderless resistance in which they form a small group of no more than seven people who know each other well. This strategy guards against infiltrators because the group remains very quiet about what they plan to do. They plan to have hundreds of these groups who will reek havoc upon what they see as ZOG controlled society as they attempt to implement a revolution.

I view the group as ultra conservatives with unorthodox Christian beliefs that do not want to live in a multi-culti society with race mixing and little adherence to some of the more thorny traditional Christian beliefs. They are unable to get what they want at the voting booth and are willing to use violence to get what they want. They also see through the weaknesses in the theory of racial equality and racial sameness when they observe reality. They are scary, but at the same time, fascinating to read about. Although milder conservatives may have the same complaints as the extremists do, they do not have the same nuances in their beliefs that will lead them to violence. Nuances in belief systems are important.

More people will probably be radicalized enough to join extremist groups in the future if the economy keeps sputtering and more foreigners come to live here making the nation less of a predominately white culture. Resentment will be stirred if non-whites are still considered a protected class as opposed to whites according to the law.
posted about 11 years ago
#32 Friction and Arm Aim in Hardware
cage-i have 11in/360 and use my wrist???

How often do you pick up your mouse?

posted about 11 years ago
#10 Friction and Arm Aim in Hardware

Winter is coming, so...
A long sleeve shirt?

posted about 11 years ago
#31 #justtf2things in TF2 General Discussion
ToastyTHTEricYToastyTHTKiritoToastyTHTEricYToastyTHTEricYToastyTHTGOLDEN_NINJA_WARRIORi got detention once for walking to school on my own when i was 6I was a bystander to a drive-by surfing, and got detention for a WEEK
woah thats not hollister bro
That's so hollister but you prob wouldn't know cuz you ware white hanez and jeans if ur lucky

http://fc05.deviantart.net/fs71/f/2013/214/e/0/profile_picture_by_fuccboi-d6ge6tk.png

fite me
http://elpresidente13.files.wordpress.com/2013/05/article-2328356-19e825a1000005dc-817_634x416.jpg
ur on nerd
can't hold us down
http://i.imgur.com/bBHpEMy.gif
http://cdn.memegenerator.net/instances/250x250/37679819.jpg

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/3/39/Dakimakura.png/400px-Dakimakura.png

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g34dZLAIOLA
Cloudmaker2Join the group chat - http://steamcommunity.com/groups/LotusTourney
posted about 11 years ago
#28 #justtf2things in TF2 General Discussion
EricYToastyTHTKiritoToastyTHTEricYToastyTHTEricYToastyTHTGOLDEN_NINJA_WARRIORi got detention once for walking to school on my own when i was 6I was a bystander to a drive-by surfing, and got detention for a WEEK
woah thats not hollister bro
That's so hollister but you prob wouldn't know cuz you ware white hanez and jeans if ur lucky

http://fc05.deviantart.net/fs71/f/2013/214/e/0/profile_picture_by_fuccboi-d6ge6tk.png

fite me
http://elpresidente13.files.wordpress.com/2013/05/article-2328356-19e825a1000005dc-817_634x416.jpg
ur on nerd
can't hold us down
http://i.imgur.com/bBHpEMy.gif
http://cdn.memegenerator.net/instances/250x250/37679819.jpg

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/3/39/Dakimakura.png/400px-Dakimakura.png

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g34dZLAIOLA

posted about 11 years ago
#25 #justtf2things in TF2 General Discussion
KiritoToastyTHTEricYToastyTHTEricYToastyTHTGOLDEN_NINJA_WARRIORi got detention once for walking to school on my own when i was 6I was a bystander to a drive-by surfing, and got detention for a WEEK
woah thats not hollister bro
That's so hollister but you prob wouldn't know cuz you ware white hanez and jeans if ur lucky

http://fc05.deviantart.net/fs71/f/2013/214/e/0/profile_picture_by_fuccboi-d6ge6tk.png

fite me
http://elpresidente13.files.wordpress.com/2013/05/article-2328356-19e825a1000005dc-817_634x416.jpg
ur on nerd
can't hold us down
http://i.imgur.com/bBHpEMy.gif

http://cdn.memegenerator.net/instances/250x250/37679819.jpg

posted about 11 years ago
#23 #justtf2things in TF2 General Discussion
EricYToastyTHTEricYToastyTHTGOLDEN_NINJA_WARRIORi got detention once for walking to school on my own when i was 6I was a bystander to a drive-by surfing, and got detention for a WEEK
woah thats not hollister bro
That's so hollister but you prob wouldn't know cuz you ware white hanez and jeans if ur lucky

http://fc05.deviantart.net/fs71/f/2013/214/e/0/profile_picture_by_fuccboi-d6ge6tk.png

fite me

http://elpresidente13.files.wordpress.com/2013/05/article-2328356-19e825a1000005dc-817_634x416.jpg

ur on nerd

posted about 11 years ago
#21 #justtf2things in TF2 General Discussion
EricYToastyTHTGOLDEN_NINJA_WARRIORi got detention once for walking to school on my own when i was 6I was a bystander to a drive-by surfing, and got detention for a WEEK
woah thats not hollister bro

That's so hollister but you prob wouldn't know cuz you ware white hanez and jeans if ur lucky

posted about 11 years ago
#17 #justtf2things in TF2 General Discussion
GOLDEN_NINJA_WARRIORi got detention once for walking to school on my own when i was 6

I was a bystander to a drive-by surfing, and got detention for a WEEK

posted about 11 years ago
#12 #justtf2things in TF2 General Discussion
EricYToastyTHThttps://lh5.googleusercontent.com/-6mwGRNRzJYo/Uj8OgncEyHI/AAAAAAAAE3E/euB53zBMhtU/w28-h646-no/skitched-20130922-021641.jpg
https://plus.google.com/105705880489879891091/posts/fEJYEGmiJJz

Anime is a diverse art form with distinctive production methods and techniques that have been adapted over time in response to emergent technologies. The production of anime differs from Disney animation by focusing less on the animation of movement and more on the realism of settings as well as the use of camera effects, including panning, zooming and angle shots. No single art style exists and character proportions and features can be quite varied, including characteristically

Email
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search
This article is about the communications medium. For the former manufacturing conglomerate, see Email Limited.
The at sign, a part of every SMTP email address[1]

Electronic mail, most commonly referred to as email or e-mail since c. 1993,[2] is a method of exchanging digital messages from an author to one or more recipients. Modern email operates across the Internet or other computer networks. Some early email systems required that the author and the recipient both be online at the same time, in common with instant messaging. Today's email systems are based on a store-and-forward model. Email servers accept, forward, deliver, and store messages. Neither the users nor their computers are required to be online simultaneously; they need connect only briefly, typically to a mail server, for as long as it takes to send or receive messages.

Historically, the term electronic mail was used generically for any electronic document transmission. For example, several writers in the early 1970s used the term to describe fax document transmission.[3][4] As a result, it is difficult to find the first citation for the use of the term with the more specific meaning it has today.

An Internet email message[NB 1] consists of three components, the message envelope, the message header, and the message body. The message header contains control information, including, minimally, an originator's email address and one or more recipient addresses. Usually descriptive information is also added, such as a subject header field and a message submission date/time stamp.

Originally a text-only (ASCII) communications medium, Internet email was extended to carry, e.g. text in other character sets, multi-media content attachments, a process standardized in RFC 2045 through 2049. Collectively, these RFCs have come to be called Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions (MIME). Subsequent RFC's have proposed standards for internationalized email addresses using UTF-8.

Electronic mail predates the inception of the Internet and was in fact a crucial tool in creating it,[5] but the history of modern, global Internet email services reaches back to the early ARPANET. Standards for encoding email messages were proposed as early as 1973 (RFC 561). Conversion from ARPANET to the Internet in the early 1980s produced the core of the current services. An email sent in the early 1970s looks quite similar to a basic text message sent on the Internet today.

Network-based email was initially exchanged on the ARPANET in extensions to the File Transfer Protocol (FTP), but is now carried by the Simple Mail Transfer Protocol (SMTP), first published as Internet standard 10 (RFC 821) in 1982. In the process of transporting email messages between systems, SMTP communicates delivery parameters using a message envelope separate from the message (header and body) itself.

Contents

1 Spelling
2 Origin
2.1 Host-based mail systems
2.2 LAN email systems
2.3 Email networks
2.4 Attempts at interoperability
2.5 From SNDMSG to MSG
2.6 Rise of ARPANET mail
3 Operation overview
4 Message format
4.1 Message header
4.1.1 Header fields
4.2 Message body
4.2.1 Content encoding
4.2.2 Plain text and HTML
5 Servers and client applications
5.1 Filename extensions
5.2 URI scheme mailto
6 Types
6.1 Web-based email (webmail)
6.2 POP3 email services
6.3 IMAP email servers
6.4 MAPI email servers
7 Use
7.1 Flaming
7.2 Email bankruptcy
7.3 In business
7.3.1 Pros
7.3.2 Cons
7.3.3 Research on email marketing
8 Problems
8.1 Speed of correspondence
8.2 Attachment size limitation
8.3 Information overload
8.4 Spamming and computer viruses
8.5 Email spoofing
8.6 Email bombing
8.7 Privacy concerns
8.8 Tracking of sent mail
9 U.S. government
10 See also
10.1 Email terminologies
10.2 Email social issues
10.3 Clients and servers
10.4 Mailing list
10.5 History
10.6 Protocols
11 Notes
12 References
13 Further reading
14 External links

Spelling

Electronic mail has several English spelling options that occasionally prove cause for vehement disagreement.[6][7]

e-mail is the most common form in print, and is recommended by some prominent journalistic and technical style guides[citation needed]. According to Corpus of Contemporary American English data, this is the form that appears most frequently in edited, published American English and British English writing.[8]
email is the most common form used online, and is required by IETF Requests for Comment and working groups[9] and increasingly by style guides.[10][11][12] This spelling also appears in most dictionaries.[13][14][15][16][17][18]
mail was the form used in the original RFC. The service is referred to as mail and a single piece of electronic mail is called a message.[19][20][21]
eMail, capitalizing only the letter M, was common among ARPANET users and the early developers of Unix, CMS, AppleLink, eWorld, AOL, GEnie, and Hotmail.[citation needed]
EMail is a traditional form that has been used in RFCs for the "Author's Address",[20][21] and is expressly required "for historical reasons".[22]
E-mail is sometimes used, capitalizing the initial letter E as in similar abbreviations like E-piano, E-guitar, A-bomb, H-bomb, and C-section.[23]

There is also some variety in the plural form of the term. In US English email is used as a mass noun (like the term mail for items sent through the postal system), but in British English it is more commonly used as a count noun with the plural emails.[citation needed]
Origin

The AUTODIN network provided message service between 1,350 terminals, handling 30 million messages per month, with an average message length of approximately 3,000 characters. Autodin was supported by 18 large computerized switches, and was connected to the United States General Services Administration Advanced Record System, which provided similar services to roughly 2,500 terminals.[24]
Host-based mail systems

With the introduction of MIT's Compatible Time-Sharing System (CTSS) in 1961[25] multiple users were able to log into a central system[26] from remote dial-up terminals, and to store and share files on the central disk.[27] Informal methods of using this to pass messages developed and were expanded to create the first system worthy of the name "email":

1965 – MIT's CTSS MAIL.[28]

Other early systems soon had their own email applications:

1962 – 1440/1460 Administrative Terminal System[29]
1968 – ATS/360[30][31]
1972 – Unix mail program[32][33]
1972 – APL Mailbox by Larry Breed[34][35]

posted about 11 years ago
#10 #justtf2things in TF2 General Discussion

https://lh5.googleusercontent.com/-6mwGRNRzJYo/Uj8OgncEyHI/AAAAAAAAE3E/euB53zBMhtU/w28-h646-no/skitched-20130922-021641.jpg

https://plus.google.com/105705880489879891091/posts/fEJYEGmiJJz

posted about 11 years ago
#6 #justtf2things in TF2 General Discussion

good meme

posted about 11 years ago
#51 Lotus Clan Tournament in TF2 General Discussion

@10am EST
@10am EST
@10am EST

posted about 11 years ago
#18 6s tips with huhy! in TF2 General Discussion

I really enjoyed the video. I agree the script was a bit robotic though, however I really like the idea.

posted about 11 years ago
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