Watch your potty mouth around Victorian Cops - (plus they are more likely to shoot you than an officer from another Australian state)
http://www.theage.com.au/victoria/big-f ... 1fctb.html

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SirSebstar wrote:Truly a fine place to be....
In the Netherlands a person got set to jail for having a T-shirt with 1312 on it. It was viewed by the judge to be a clear sign of dissing the poliece. After all (??) everybody!! knows 1312 stands for ACAB that stands for All Cops Are Bastards, and its illigal to badmouth police officers...
thoughtpolice is next, mark nightstrike's words..
SirSebstar wrote:Truly a fine place to be....
In the Netherlands a person got set to jail for having a T-shirt with 1312 on it. It was viewed by the judge to be a clear sign of dissing the poliece. After all (??) everybody!! knows 1312 stands for ACAB that stands for All Cops Are Bastards, and its illigal to badmouth police officers...
thoughtpolice is next, mark nightstrike's words..
Please explainradiojake wrote:SirSebstar wrote:Truly a fine place to be....
In the Netherlands a person got set to jail for having a T-shirt with 1312 on it. It was viewed by the judge to be a clear sign of dissing the poliece. After all (??) everybody!! knows 1312 stands for ACAB that stands for All Cops Are Bastards, and its illigal to badmouth police officers...
thoughtpolice is next, mark nightstrike's words..
Whoever has a facebook profile has already voluntered themselves to the thought police
InkL0sed wrote:Please explainradiojake wrote:SirSebstar wrote:Truly a fine place to be....
In the Netherlands a person got set to jail for having a T-shirt with 1312 on it. It was viewed by the judge to be a clear sign of dissing the poliece. After all (??) everybody!! knows 1312 stands for ACAB that stands for All Cops Are Bastards, and its illigal to badmouth police officers...
thoughtpolice is next, mark nightstrike's words..
Whoever has a facebook profile has already voluntered themselves to the thought police

Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
https://www.conquerclub.com/forum/viewt ... 0#p5349880
I hadn't even heard of it before, and I live here.kabuki.mono wrote:Even though in Holland and Germany A.C.A.B is widely used. More so that the rest of mainland Europe (at least to my knowledge)SirSebstar wrote:Truly a fine place to be....
In the Netherlands a person got set to jail for having a T-shirt with 1312 on it. It was viewed by the judge to be a clear sign of dissing the poliece. After all (??) everybody!! knows 1312 stands for ACAB that stands for All Cops Are Bastards, and its illigal to badmouth police officers...
thoughtpolice is next, mark nightstrike's words..
With this I agree.It is rather over the top getting sent to prison for it (!?)
Are people with 88's on their t-shirt going to be trailed under Nuremberg? Where does it end![]()
Love the T-shirt though
saxitoxin wrote:Your position is more complex than the federal tax code. As soon as I think I understand it, I find another index of cross-references, exceptions and amendments I have to apply.
Timminz wrote:Yo mama is so classless, she could be a Marxist utopia.
I don't see it. But that's OK! You can still do it.saxitoxin wrote:InkL0sed wrote:Please explainradiojake wrote:SirSebstar wrote:Truly a fine place to be....
In the Netherlands a person got set to jail for having a T-shirt with 1312 on it. It was viewed by the judge to be a clear sign of dissing the poliece. After all (??) everybody!! knows 1312 stands for ACAB that stands for All Cops Are Bastards, and its illigal to badmouth police officers...
thoughtpolice is next, mark nightstrike's words..
Whoever has a facebook profile has already voluntered themselves to the thought police
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
https://www.conquerclub.com/forum/viewt ... 0#p5349880
saxitoxin wrote:InkL0sed wrote:Please explainradiojake wrote:SirSebstar wrote: thoughtpolice is next, mark nightstrike's words..
Whoever has a facebook profile has already voluntered themselves to the thought police
I don't see how this amounts to "thought police". Your first point is really just a complaint about how it makes it harder for stupid people to commit crimes; your second is a complaint about how its easier for companies to market. I can sort of see how, as a communist (correct me if I'm wrong, but you are, right?), you'd find that distasteful, but in the end, I think you're just the one being silly.radiojake wrote:saxitoxin wrote:InkL0sed wrote:Please explainradiojake wrote:SirSebstar wrote: thoughtpolice is next, mark nightstrike's words..
Whoever has a facebook profile has already voluntered themselves to the thought police
Facebook is a legal (and completely voluntary) means of collaborating data on any given individual who has a profile. Obviously, the more information one puts up, the worse. Firstly, if you ever happen to become a suspect for any given crime, the first place the police will go is to look for your online profile. Secondly, there are even apps (from what I am aware) that ask people to 'check in' and 'out' of various events, restaurants and places. When you arrive you 'check in' on your stupid ipad app, so people can instantaneously know where you are. This is silly for a number of reasons.
Plus, there is the whole aspect of 'liking' which invariably results in company research data to try to find the latest trends in consumer habits - Some people may not have a problem with this, but I certainly don't want to be a part of it.
Facebook is still very new, and in all aspects, still in its infancy - In a decade I am sure even you will notice its 'thought police' shape.InkL0sed wrote:
I don't see how this amounts to "thought police". Your first point is really just a complaint about how it makes it harder for stupid people to commit crimes; your second is a complaint about how its easier for companies to market. I can sort of see how, as a communist (correct me if I'm wrong, but you are, right?), you'd find that distasteful, but in the end, I think you're just the one being silly.
When Saxi says "teach him a lesson" I mean "sodomize him with a broomstick" not launch into some big explanation, Poindexter.radiojake wrote:saxitoxin wrote:InkL0sed wrote:Please explainradiojake wrote:SirSebstar wrote: thoughtpolice is next, mark nightstrike's words..
Whoever has a facebook profile has already voluntered themselves to the thought police
Facebook is a legal (and completely voluntary) means of collaborating data on any given individual who has a profile. Obviously, the more information one puts up, the worse. Firstly, if you ever happen to become a suspect for any given crime, the first place the police will go is to look for your online profile. Secondly, there are even apps (from what I am aware) that ask people to 'check in' and 'out' of various events, restaurants and places. When you arrive you 'check in' on your stupid ipad app, so people can instantaneously know where you are. This is silly for a number of reasons.
Plus, there is the whole aspect of 'liking' which invariably results in company research data to try to find the latest trends in consumer habits - Some people may not have a problem with this, but I certainly don't want to be a part of it.
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
https://www.conquerclub.com/forum/viewt ... 0#p5349880
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
https://www.conquerclub.com/forum/viewt ... 0#p5349880
Would you like to be Facebook friends, saxitoxin?saxitoxin wrote:Facebook is a favourite tool of secret police forces around the world. The fact that it is not (though I'd question whether this is actually a fact) yet being abused in the U.S. today does not mean it won't tomorrow.
At any other point in history a request to provide a list of associates, political affiliation, religious preferences and detailed whereabouts, all of which would be meticulously cataloged in a permanent fashion, would be met by horror. That the U.S. capitalist marketing machine has been able to get people to voluntarily do what citizens throughout history have tried to resist is a testament to the totality of the consolidated corporation-state.
In the early '90's a U.S. private company, Inslaw, marketed a database software to governments around the world including Canada, Israel, etc. We now know that this software had a backdoor built-in that the U.S. has used to seamlessly access the most secret files of sovereign nations around the world - including its supposed allies. The only publicly revealed Canadian intelligence operation against the U.S. in the last two decades was over Inslaw.
They did that, are doing that, there is nothing that doesn't have a secondary (primary) purpose. Everything traces its genesis to the U.S. miltiary and secret police forces, from the Internet to Facebook to even benign tools of supposed subversion like onion routing.
I must be missing a point, however there are tv shows that run over 50 years, so why not the device itself. I hope my house stands for longer then 50 years too...BigBallinStalin wrote:@radiojake
Would you really want a TV that lasts 50 years?
You would have to be satisfied with technology that is 50 years old... How can one have relatively high quality over such a long period of time?
Then, you might say something along the lines of "50 years = hyperbole"
So, what should that length of time be? Should markets determine that, or should central planning? Or what extend in between those two should be used to determine what is the best length of time (i.e. mostly central planning).
What's so great about paying the much higher price to purchase a TV that would last 50 years?SirSebstar wrote:I must be missing a point, however there are tv shows that run over 50 years, so why not the device itself. I hope my house stands for longer then 50 years too...BigBallinStalin wrote:@radiojake
Would you really want a TV that lasts 50 years?
You would have to be satisfied with technology that is 50 years old... How can one have relatively high quality over such a long period of time?
Then, you might say something along the lines of "50 years = hyperbole"
So, what should that length of time be? Should markets determine that, or should central planning? Or what extend in between those two should be used to determine what is the best length of time (i.e. mostly central planning).
perspective..
radiojake wrote:As for being a communist, well - I have many problems with capitalism, as I'm sure you all know. If you were working from a binary opposite logic, I can see why you would call me a communist. I don't think I am a communist; I think a lot of what Marx wrote is completely relevant for today, but I don't think that inherently makes me a communist.
I don't have a label for myself - I think the most imperative change we need for our economy is to find a way so it is not based on perpetual growth - A steady based economy - That values quality and longevity over profits. We shouldn't be able to buy shit consumer goods that break in 6 months or have inbuilt obsoletism. If I buy a TV, it should be able to last 50 years, not 5.
Our economy is based on waste - I don't think the communist economies faired all that better in terms of wastage, so I would also have a problem with those models -
Maybe it's a more used within a punk/anti authority group. At least I picked up the word while in Germany. They where German punks and they had A.C.A.B tattooed on their knucklesMeDeFe wrote:I hadn't even heard of it before, and I live here.kabuki.mono wrote:Even though in Holland and Germany A.C.A.B is widely used. More so that the rest of mainland Europe (at least to my knowledge)SirSebstar wrote:Truly a fine place to be....
In the Netherlands a person got set to jail for having a T-shirt with 1312 on it. It was viewed by the judge to be a clear sign of dissing the poliece. After all (??) everybody!! knows 1312 stands for ACAB that stands for All Cops Are Bastards, and its illigal to badmouth police officers...
thoughtpolice is next, mark nightstrike's words..
I think inbuilt obsoletism and the wastage produced from this is the biggest environmental problem that we face (more so than climate change)BigBallinStalin wrote:@radiojake
Would you really want a TV that lasts 50 years?
You would have to be satisfied with technology that is 50 years old... How can one have relatively high quality over such a long period of time?
Then, you might say something along the lines of "50 years = hyperbole"
So, what should that length of time be? Should markets determine that, or should central planning? Or what extend in between those two should be used to determine what is the best length of time (i.e. mostly central planning).
Well, I'm not entirely sure what kinds of technological advancements are involved with TV's, but I'm pretty sure it's usually hardware-oriented, so I don't think that's very possible. It is probably possible to simply replace parts (if the TV's are modular), but that would require more expertise from the consumer.radiojake wrote:
I am sure it would be possible to produce a TV (or other electronic good) that has the capabilities to be upgraded as technology advances, instead of having to purchase an entirely new TV and throw the old one out into landfill -
InkL0sed wrote:Well, I'm not entirely sure what kinds of technological advancements are involved with TV's, but I'm pretty sure it's usually hardware-oriented, so I don't think that's very possible. It is probably possible to simply replace parts (if the TV's are modular), but that would require more expertise from the consumer.radiojake wrote:
I am sure it would be possible to produce a TV (or other electronic good) that has the capabilities to be upgraded as technology advances, instead of having to purchase an entirely new TV and throw the old one out into landfill -
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
https://www.conquerclub.com/forum/viewt ... 0#p5349880
Well, that's one way of looking at it.saxitoxin wrote:To be sure Jake is correct, however, it's not just about making technology expandable, it's about the technology itself.
For the current materialist economy (materialist intentionally as capitalism and socialism are both vectors on the materialist continuum) to operate, there must be ongoing production; but for production to continue there needs to be a steady rate of consumption. This requires transforming wants into needs. The technological differences between a 2001 mobile phone and a 2005 mobile phone were minor, but these differences are hyper-inflated to grandiose proportions by the media-state's marketing machine. Both the government and the corporation complex need people to believe these wants are needs. This transformation of perspective has a devolutionary impact on human psychology.
Human needs can be met by 3 hours of work per day. Humans work 8 hours per day to achieve the wants that the marketing machine has convinced them are needs. The time the humans would otherwise use to become aware and combat the police state ruling over them is, instead, spent in labor to purchase new mobile phones, televisions and fleshlights. Politicians have a vested, personal interest in keeping unemployment rates low.