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Old Jul 28th 2001, 4:46 am
  #46  
Paul
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"Jefferson N. Glapski" <[email protected]>

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Miliken committed white-collar crimes. Nothing he did that I know of deserved him to
be sent to Death Row or something like that. His

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John Gotti,the Teflon Don,didn't get what he deserved. He was only prosecuted because
New York Mayor,Rudolph Giuliani, was tough on crime. Giuliani wanted to clean up New
York,and he did. Gotti got off easy. He was responsible for many murders, including
the hit on Paul Castellano at Spark's Steak House in 1985. Castellano was the head of
the New York Mafia prior to Gotti rising to the top job. If he wasn't a crime boss,he
would have likely been on Death Row or executed by now.
 
Old Jul 28th 2001, 4:50 am
  #47  
Paul
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tdrake <[email protected]>

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I hear Mach 10s are nice.
 
Old Jul 28th 2001, 6:15 am
  #48  
Jefferson N. Glapski
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"Paul" <[email protected]>
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[usenetquote2]> > Hey to Michael Milken, who should not have been persecuted.[/usenetquote2]
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You never mentioned anything about death row. You only mentioned the rich and
powerful not being subject to laws. Milken was subject to persecution.

[usenetquote2]> >Hey to John Gotti.[/usenetquote2]
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Still, he was rich and powerful and he got convicted.

--
Your pla, Jefferson N. Glapski

"I can't believe that pieces of shit like you are able to exist in a nation as
wonderful as the United States of America, I can accept murderers, crackheads, and
even your wifebeating father, but You?"

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Old Jul 29th 2001, 3:34 am
  #49  
Paul
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"Jefferson N. Glapski" <[email protected]>

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I said something about the chances of being prosecuted are negligble. Put it this
way,if you're a poor and a minority,your chances of getting prosecuted for the same
crime as a person who is rich and part of the ethnic majority aren't the same.
Everyone is subject to the law, but not everyone is going to get treated the same
under the law.

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Yes,only because NYC had a mayor who wanted to take a tough stance on crime. I'm not
a fan of Giuliani,but he has to be commended on this. How many crime bosses get
executed or put on Death Row? I'm not talking about gangland style executions like
Paul Castellano from within,but condemned prisoners who get the death penalty,when
I'm referring to executions. For what Gotti did when he was in charge,he got off
easy. He should be executed for his crimes in my opinion.
 
Old Jul 29th 2001, 7:45 am
  #50  
Jefferson N. Glapski
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"Paul" <[email protected]>
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[usenetquote2]> >You never mentioned anything about death row. You only mentioned the rich and[/usenetquote2]
[usenetquote2]> >powerful not being subject to laws. Milken was subject to persecution.[/usenetquote2]
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law,
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Correct. A RICO indictment does not threaten the poor.

--
Your pla, Jefferson N. Glapski

"I can't believe that pieces of shit like you are able to exist in a nation as
wonderful as the United States of America, I can accept murderers, crackheads, and
even your wifebeating father, but You?"

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Old Jul 29th 2001, 9:34 am
  #51  
Jefferson N. Glapski
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Posts: n/a
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[usenetquote2]> > >[/usenetquote2]
[usenetquote2]> > > : >Still, he was rich and powerful and he got convicted.[/usenetquote2]
[usenetquote2]> > >[/usenetquote2]
[usenetquote2]> > > : Yes,only because NYC had a mayor who wanted to take a tough[/usenetquote2]
stance
[usenetquote2]> > on[/usenetquote2]
[usenetquote2]> > > : crime. I'm not a fan of Giuliani,but he has to be commended on[/usenetquote2]
this.
[usenetquote2]> > >[/usenetquote2]
[usenetquote2]> > > Rudi Giuliani was a federal prosecutor working under the senior President Bush.[/usenetquote2]
[usenetquote2]> > > David Dinkens was Mayor of New York City when Milken, Boskey (sp?) etc. were[/usenetquote2]
[usenetquote2]> > > prosecuted and the Drexel Burham Lambert firm collapsed.[/usenetquote2]
[usenetquote2]> >[/usenetquote2]
[usenetquote2]> > Giuliani was a whore who used his US Attorney office to generate publicity for[/usenetquote2]
[usenetquote2]> > his run at mayor.[/usenetquote2]
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whore,
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would
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think
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senate
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[usenetquote2]> > Thankfully, Dinkins kicked his ass the first time.[/usenetquote2]
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great
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around
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Dinkins is an asshole too. I'm glad Giuliani lost, but not that Dinkins won.

Giuliani sold out decency in order to become the mayor. He got his just desserts by
not getting elected.

--
Your pla, Jefferson N. Glapski

"I can't believe that pieces of shit like you are able to exist in a nation as
wonderful as the United States of America, I can accept murderers, crackheads, and
even your wifebeating father, but You?"

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Old Jul 29th 2001, 4:31 pm
  #52  
Paul
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"Jefferson N. Glapski" <[email protected]>

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Nor should it,but if I was a boxing promoter or ran a boxing federation,I would be
worried. Ditto for organized crime. Some of these people should be brought up on
federal or state RICO statutes. The corrupt and the racketeers should feel threatened
though,since it was designed to go after them.
 
Old Jul 29th 2001, 6:23 pm
  #53  
Gary L. Dare
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SnOrKy <[email protected]> wrote
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In previous recessions, Americans weren't driven to find jobs picking lettuce,
gardening, housekeeping, etc.

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Actually, that happened last year according to Census 2000 ...
35.4 Million "hispanics" versus 35.3 Million African-Americans. However, the
definition of "hispanic" is questionable since one can be blonde, blue-eyed and
barely speak Spanish like Christina Aguilera (born Staten Island, NY; raised
Pittsburgh, PA) or many others who fell under this category ... my neighbour
"Isabella" who, everybody in the condo association, figured for Italian. Yes, she
has a legacy citizenship from her grandparents and lived in Italy since age 10 ...
but she was born in Argentina and that's the basis of her L transferee visa from
Citibank. This sort of demographic slotting/categorization defies reason but the
bureaucrats need it ... better evidence is found on the street, where even in
Chicago there is a practical need to know rudimentary Spanish (apparently 1 M of
the 8.34 M metro populace is Mexican), more not fewer radio (adios, "Big 80's"
103.1 WXXY) and television stations are switching to Latin American format.

http://www.msnbc.com/news/census2000_front.asp

While the US is becoming more of a Latin American country by demographics (something
you won't read in Canada's National Post nor Globe & Mail, where more people like
Trent Lott are emerging every day in America), it has always had some sort of linkage
to the Hispanic New World. While there's an issue of legalizing illegal Mexicans,
there is a precedent for that but not in the US ... but the UK, which passed the
Irish Act in 1949 and had an open border for the Irish long before the EU. The
Gallagher brothers of band Oasis are children of two Irish who moved to Manchester
under the Irish Act.

http://cnn.com/ALLPOLITICS/time/2001/07/30/fox.html

--
Gary L. Dare [email protected]

"Je me souviens"
 
Old Jul 29th 2001, 10:55 pm
  #54  
Jefferson N. Glapski
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"Paul" <[email protected]>
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[usenetquote2]> >Correct. A RICO indictment does not threaten the poor.[/usenetquote2]
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It is the stupidest law on the books today. It has already brought down an investment
bank, which helped lead to an S&L crisis.

Racketeering is a term invented by people who must resort to violence against those
who are adept at business.

Perhaps you should reevaluate what is meant by corrupt and you will see that the
people utilizing this law are the ones that are corrupt.

--
Your pla, Jefferson N. Glapski

"I can't believe that pieces of shit like you are able to exist in a nation as
wonderful as the United States of America, I can accept murderers, crackheads, and
even your wifebeating father, but You?"

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Old Aug 1st 2001, 2:57 pm
  #55  
Paul
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[email protected] (Gary L. Dare)

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Well that's because even in recession there are still going to be white collar and
blue collar jobs,but there will be layoffs during that hard time.

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Actually shouldn't the French and Italians fall under the Latin classification as
well? Actually various dialects of Latin developed into
Italian,French,Spanish,Portuguese,and Rumanian. Latin is just more than Spanish and
Portuguese speaking people.
 
Old Aug 1st 2001, 2:59 pm
  #56  
Paul
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"Jefferson N. Glapski" <[email protected]>

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I'm not disagreeing,since politicians who make the law are sometimes more corrupt
than those the laws they draft are designed to prosecute.
 
Old Aug 1st 2001, 3:11 pm
  #57  
Jefferson N. Glapski
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"Paul" <[email protected]>
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[usenetquote2]> >It is the stupidest law on the books today. It has already brought[/usenetquote2]
down
[usenetquote2]> >an investment bank, which helped lead to an S&L crisis.[/usenetquote2]
[usenetquote2]> >[/usenetquote2]
[usenetquote2]> >Racketeering is a term invented by people who must resort to violence against[/usenetquote2]
[usenetquote2]> >those who are adept at business.[/usenetquote2]
[usenetquote2]> >[/usenetquote2]
[usenetquote2]> >Perhaps you should reevaluate what is meant by corrupt and you will[/usenetquote2]
see
[usenetquote2]> >that the people utilizing this law are the ones that are corrupt.[/usenetquote2]
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more
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Sometimes?

--
Your pla, Jefferson N. Glapski

"I can't believe that pieces of shit like you are able to exist in a nation as
wonderful as the United States of America, I can accept murderers, crackheads, and
even your wifebeating father, but You?"

######### ######### #### ####
#### #### #### #### #### ####
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#### #### #### #### #### ####
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Old Aug 3rd 2001, 3:52 am
  #58  
Paul
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"Jefferson N. Glapski" <[email protected]>

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Ok,most of the time,but I have some faint hope there may be a politician out there
who is actually honest.
 

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