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Author: IlusionIlusion Date: Apr 26, 2008 10:58
On Apr 25, 4:28 pm, ChattyDaisy hotmail.com> wrote:
> On Apr 25, 12:07 am, BasketCase strawbox.com> wrote:
>
>
>
>> Tommy Joe wrote:
>
>>> BasketCase wrote:
>>>> Tommy Joe wrote:
>>>>>> So was it only one incident that lead you towards being a Basket-Case
>>>>>> or was it several incidents over a long period of time. Give me the
>>>>>> Reader's Digest version.
>
>>>>>> Thanks in advance,
>>>>>> Daisy
>
>>>>> You really are a demanding sort, wanting to know his life story,
>>>>> but he must tell it in a condensed manner.
>
>>>>> Tommy Joe (In 3 words or less, tell me why I shouldn't kill you right ...
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Author: IlusionIlusion Date: Apr 26, 2008 11:04
On Apr 25, 9:11 pm, Tommy Joe bellsouth.net> wrote:
> UncleDave at wrote:
>
>> And one of the most famous persons believed to have been suffering from teh
>> Stockholm Syndrome was none other than Patty Hearst when she was held
>> hostage by the SLA.
>
> In other words it's a syndrome available only to those with money
> to afford top lawyers. I don't care what Daisy says, I'm sure at some
> point she's pulled the typical female stunt of breaking down in a
> neurotic heap and screaming, "I need some time for MYSELF!" They all
> do it, even those, like Daisy, who claim otherwise. And besides, I'm
> not talking about Daisy directly, just females in general. They all
> want to believe they're making a huge sacrifice bringing children into
> the world, not to mention carrying them around in their guts for 9
> months. And it's always THEIR child, I've noticed. Watch it in their
> conversations, few use the word "we" when talking about their babies.
> It's always MY baby. Until divorce procedings, of course, and it's
> time to go after child support, etc. Then, conveniently, it becomes
> OUR baby. Women are so full of fake they don't even have to practice. ...
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Author: IlusionIlusion Date: Apr 26, 2008 11:06
On Apr 26, 1:55 pm, BasketCase strawbox.com> wrote:
> Tommy Joe wrote:
>
>> UncleDave at wrote:
>>> And one of the most famous persons believed to have been suffering from teh
>>> Stockholm Syndrome was none other than Patty Hearst when she was held
>>> hostage by the SLA.
>
>> In other words it's a syndrome available only to those with money
>> to afford top lawyers. I don't care what Daisy says, I'm sure at some
>> point she's pulled the typical female stunt of breaking down in a
>> neurotic heap and screaming, "I need some time for MYSELF!" They all
>> do it, even those, like Daisy, who claim otherwise. And besides, I'm
>> not talking about Daisy directly, just females in general. They all
>> want to believe they're making a huge sacrifice bringing children into
>> the world, not to mention carrying them around in their guts for 9
>> months. And it's always THEIR child, I've noticed. Watch it in their
>> conversations, few use the word "we" when talking about their babies.
>> It's always MY baby. Until divorce procedings, of course, and it's
>> time to go after child support, etc. Then, conveniently, it becomes ...
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Author: IlusionIlusion Date: Apr 26, 2008 11:10
On Apr 24, 11:03 am, "UncleDave" sasktel.net> wrote:
> "BasketCase" strawbox.com> wrote in message
>
> news:BqGdncWvfc8ppI3VnZ2dnUVZ8uCdnZ2d@bt.com...
>
>
>
>> ChattyDaisy wrote:
>>> On Apr 23, 1:39 am, BasketCase strawbox.com> wrote:
>>>> ChattyDaisy wrote:
>>>>> Who has a shovel in here?
>>>>> Regards,
>>>>> Daisy
>>>> Now that was a politically correct question.
>
>>>> If you'd asked ;
>
>>>> "Who has a spade in here?"
>
>>>> ...you could be charged with racism. ...
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Author: IlusionIlusion Date: Apr 26, 2008 11:13
On Apr 25, 4:22 pm, ChattyDaisy hotmail.com> wrote:
> On Apr 25, 12:03 am, BasketCase strawbox.com> wrote:
>
>> ChattyDaisy wrote:
>>> What lead the lass to storm out of the flat and call you a Basket
>>> Case? I call my father's brother who sits in the basement all day,
>>> rocking back and forth humming to himself the Happy Birthday song, all
>>> day and night, a Basekt Case. Sometimes he leaves the basement and
>>> rides on the trains all day long. Sometimes he spends weeks in the
>>> basement gluing tiny model cars together. Regardless of what he does,
>>> he's a Basket Case.
>
>> That sounds like a perfect life.
>
> You must not be claustrophobic. I could not live in a place that
> didn't have at least one window.
>
> Regards,
> Daisy
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Author: swsw Date: Apr 26, 2008 13:08
> sw wrote:
>>> ChattyDaisy wrote:
>>>> On Apr 25, 12:07 am, BasketCase strawbox.com> wrote:
>>>>> Tommy Joe wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>> BasketCase wrote:
>>>>>>> Tommy Joe wrote:
>>>>>>>>> So was it only one incident that lead you towards being a Basket-Case
>>>>>>>>> or was it several incidents over a long period of time. Give me the
>>>>>>>>> Reader's Digest version.
>>>>>>>>> Thanks in advance,
>>>>>>>>> Daisy
>>>>>>>> You really are a demanding sort, wanting to know his life story,
>>>>>>>> but he must tell it in a condensed manner.
>>>>>>>> Tommy Joe (In 3 words or less, tell me why I shouldn't kill you right
>>>>>>>> now!) ...
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Author: swsw Date: Apr 26, 2008 13:15
>
>
> sw wrote:
>>
>>
>>> In other words it's a syndrome available only to those with money
>>> to afford top lawyers.
>
>> You don't know what the fuck you're talking about. There
>> isn't anything legal about it, from a medical or neuropsychiatric
>> standpoint. Now would you like me to educate you or hit
>> on the head with a frying pan? dig?
>
>
>
> Come on now, let's be honest. I'm not saying the syndrome was
> invented for legal reasons, only that it has been used that way, as in
> the case of Patty Hearst. Even suspects without cash can get a legal ...
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Author: Tommy JoeTommy Joe Date: Apr 26, 2008 18:03
Illusion wrote:
>
> And women do a big personal sacrifice while having a child, of
> course. It's a risky thing that could even cost their lives. You
> don't see it? Sorry... But it's this way. And they do need personal
> time. Who doesn't??? How is the wish of having a child related to
> the need of having some personal time? Since when the first one does
> imply that the person doesn't need personal time too? Whether you
> believe it or not, women are persons too, not only men.
Sorry, you and no one else will ever convince me that it's a
sacrifice for women to have children. It's a biological need. It's
also a social thing. The vast majority of women want children, badly.
I know this, as do many men. But most men won't admit it. People who
have to live around a bunch of unmannered children and their loud
obnoxious parents are the ones making the sacrifice. I don't care if
women have 20 children apiece. But to try to pass it off as some kind
of self sacrifice, that's not going over with me. Take the bullshit
somewhere else, please.
Tommy Joe
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Author: IlusionIlusion Date: Apr 26, 2008 18:15
On Apr 26, 10:03 pm, Tommy Joe bellsouth.net> wrote:
> Illusion wrote:
>
>> And women do a big personal sacrifice while having a child, of
>> course. It's a risky thing that could even cost their lives. You
>> don't see it? Sorry... But it's this way. And they do need personal
>> time. Who doesn't??? How is the wish of having a child related to
>> the need of having some personal time? Since when the first one does
>> imply that the person doesn't need personal time too? Whether you
>> believe it or not, women are persons too, not only men.
>
> Sorry, you and no one else will ever convince me that it's a
> sacrifice for women to have children. It's a biological need.
So what? It's a biological need for men too. Otherwise the human
race would disapear from the Earth surface. Do men do a sacrifice to
have children?
> It's also a social thing. The vast majority of women want children, badly.
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Author: Tommy JoeTommy Joe Date: Apr 26, 2008 18:15
sw wrote:
>
>
> Lawyers will throw anything at the jury when things
> got to trial. That's what they get paid for. Now
> do you want my "opinion" on Patty Hurst? Ok. She
> hooked up with a criminal organization which portrayed
> themselves as "revolutionaries" to suck in members (hehe
> that sounds funny). She was a rich spoiled bitch and fell
> into the scam. When she realized what she'd done, she
> feigned mental illness at the advice of her doctor and
> lawyer. CASE CLOSED!
We have no argument there. I was saying the same thing from the
start. But no one really knows except Hurst herself.
As for the stockholm syndrome routine, I'm not saying there can't
be such a thing, but once it exists on paper it's there to be twisted
and used as seen fit by lawyers and the so-called experts they...
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