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![]() "Bertie the Bunyip" wrote in message .. . JL Grasso wrote in : On Sat, 26 Jul 2003 05:28:59 +0000 (UTC), Bertie the Bunyip wrote in alt.disasters.aviation: JL Grasso wrote in m: On Sat, 26 Jul 2003 05:40:13 GMT, Bertie the Bunyip wrote in alt.sailing.asa: JL Grasso wrote in m: On Sat, 26 Jul 2003 05:09:04 +0000 (UTC), Bertie the Bunyip wrote in alt.sailing.asa: JL Grasso wrote in news:qs24ivs328rbfqk9tok8dcjam2n2oo6dks@4ax. com: On Sat, 26 Jul 2003 02:17:27 +0000 (UTC), Bertie the Bunyip wrote in alt.disasters.aviation: JL Grasso wrote in news:j0p3ivstk69v33eujahafoi27evrep9ouc@4a x.com: On Fri, 25 Jul 2003 20:32:53 -0400, "Scott Vernon" wrote in alt.disasters.aviation: "JL Grasso" wrote in message news:lci3ivc75rqhjsd6nluok6ed2drtj0vavi@ 4ax.com... On Fri, 25 Jul 2003 20:21:10 -0400, "Scott Vernon" wrote in alt.disasters.aviation: "JL Grasso" wrote in message .. . On Sat, 26 Jul 2003 09:35:21 +0930, Flying Tadpole wrote in alt.disasters.aviation: JL Grasso wrote: On Sat, 26 Jul 2003 08:36:14 +0930, Flying Tadpole wrote in alt.disasters.aviation: Ralph Nesbitt slashed and inverted comma'd: "Peter Wiley" wrote in message ... On Fri, 25 Jul 2003 05:31:36 GMT, "Ralph Nesbitt" wrote: "Peter Wiley" wrote in message ... On Fri, 25 Jul 2003 02:00:35 GMT, "Ralph Nesbitt" wrote: "Donal" wrote in message ... "Bertie the Bunyip" wrote in message .com ... "Capt. Mooron" wrote in a: I didn't realize there was a limit on Bunyips... they seem to bite at anything. anything that looks tasty, sure. "anything that looks tasty, sure" must surely rank as one of the weakest, most limp wristed, effeminate responses that I have ever seen! That wouldn't even raise an eyebrow in alt.vicars.teaparty. If you consident the ADA group to be so beneath your "Capabili ties, why don't you join Capt Mooron & return/stay in a group you deem worthy of your skills. Honestly, Bertie. Can't you do better? We heard so much about your skills, and yet you appear to be completely useless. Are you, perhaps, a little bit out of your depth? Are you not slightly confused as to where you are. Capt Mooron is more likely to be familar with the subject of "Depth". Altitude/or lack of is the general/major issue of concern to those who frequent ADA. Prehaps it would behove you to return to your "Tea Party" before you drown or become aflicted/disoriented due altitude sickness/Oxygen Depravation. Sorry, ASA regulars are experts in depravity. Next time at least get the spelling right. Peter Wiley Please put your peanut brain in gear, before opening your "Whale Shark Mouth". If you had done so, then considered the context of the comment above you would realize in the context above, "Depravation" is the correct word, spelled correctly. If you had stayed with spelling/grammar/punctuation Lames it would not have been worth while to respond. But such a "Blatant Context Gaff", as you made above cannot be ignored. Umm, Ralphie, a gaff is a spar on a ship. That's almost on topic for ASA, but given your atrocious spelling, I'm sure it was only accidental. Taddy is our resident expert on gaffs. BTW: http://machaut.uchicago.edu/cgi-bin/...?WORD=depravat ion Depravation (Page: 394) Dep`ra*va"tion (?), n. [L. depravitio, from deprava cf. F. dépravation. See Deprave.] 1. Detraction; depreciation. [Obs.] To stubborn critics, apt, without a theme, For depravation. Shak. 2. The act of depraving, or making anything bad; the act of corrupting. 3. The state of being depraved or degenerated; degeneracy; depravity. The depravation of his moral character destroyed his judgment. Sir G. C. Lewis. 4. (Med.) Change for the worse; deterioration; morbid perversion. Syn. -- Depravity; corruption. See Depravity. -------------------------------------------------- ---- --- Your mentally deficient psyche may be able to relate this to oxygen in some wierd way, but most people who can understand context would have assumed oxygen *deprivation*. I'll leave it as an exercise for you to improve your sadly lacking education as to the difference in meaning between depravation and deprivation. Great foot shot, though. Peter Wiley Common indicators of the slow onset of "Hypoxia/Altitude Sickness" include but are not limited to "Tunnel Vision" followed by an increasing sense of "Euphoria" accompanied by diminished though processing capacity/diminished cogitative abilities. Taken in context of the above indicators Oxygen Depravation is the more "context descriptive term" for the condition leading to "Hypoxia/Altitude Sickness". It is also more common in everyday usage in flight training activities or among medical personnel dealing with treating those who are borderline Hypoxic due respiratory afflictions. There are also some known to practice intentionally limiting their oxygen intake by being choked to near or passing out as a sexual stimuli/enhancer. Considering your response above, perhaps you were borderline "Hypoxic", from cause/reason as you responded to my post. Ralph Nesbitt Professional FD/CFR/ARFF Type I shudder at the thought of the OH&S procedures you would have written. You do that often? Jerry What's a nice girl like you doing in a place like this? Wow. Good one. Jerry JL Grasso is an ASSHOLE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Thank you! Jerry see? Where? Why? How? More to the point, who? Moreover, what for? Well, that's the nub of it, really, but one has to ask, why in the first instance? In what time frame are we speaking? Well, it might have been anytime between then and some point in the future, whether that be the immediate future or sometime even further down the road. Then the answer can only be who knows what? Well, that would be the only answer in a perfect world, but of course we live in a world of duality.. bertie Someone is alleged to have once said "It is a strange, strange world that we live in, Master Jack." Ralph Nesbitt Professional FD/CFR/ARFF Type |
#2
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"Ralph Nesbitt" wrote in
m: "Bertie the Bunyip" wrote in message .. . JL Grasso wrote in : On Sat, 26 Jul 2003 05:28:59 +0000 (UTC), Bertie the Bunyip wrote in alt.disasters.aviation: JL Grasso wrote in m: On Sat, 26 Jul 2003 05:40:13 GMT, Bertie the Bunyip wrote in alt.sailing.asa: JL Grasso wrote in m: On Sat, 26 Jul 2003 05:09:04 +0000 (UTC), Bertie the Bunyip wrote in alt.sailing.asa: JL Grasso wrote in news:qs24ivs328rbfqk9tok8dcjam2n2oo6dks@4ax. com: On Sat, 26 Jul 2003 02:17:27 +0000 (UTC), Bertie the Bunyip wrote in alt.disasters.aviation: JL Grasso wrote in news:j0p3ivstk69v33eujahafoi27evrep9ouc@4a x.com: On Fri, 25 Jul 2003 20:32:53 -0400, "Scott Vernon" wrote in alt.disasters.aviation: "JL Grasso" wrote in message news:lci3ivc75rqhjsd6nluok6ed2drtj0vavi@ 4ax.com... On Fri, 25 Jul 2003 20:21:10 -0400, "Scott Vernon" wrote in alt.disasters.aviation: "JL Grasso" wrote in message .. . On Sat, 26 Jul 2003 09:35:21 +0930, Flying Tadpole wrote in alt.disasters.aviation: JL Grasso wrote: On Sat, 26 Jul 2003 08:36:14 +0930, Flying Tadpole wrote in alt.disasters.aviation: Ralph Nesbitt slashed and inverted comma'd: "Peter Wiley" wrote in message ... On Fri, 25 Jul 2003 05:31:36 GMT, "Ralph Nesbitt" wrote: "Peter Wiley" wrote in message ... On Fri, 25 Jul 2003 02:00:35 GMT, "Ralph Nesbitt" wrote: "Donal" wrote in message ... "Bertie the Bunyip" wrote in message six .com ... "Capt. Mooron" wrote in t.c a: I didn't realize there was a limit on Bunyips... they seem to bite at anything. anything that looks tasty, sure. "anything that looks tasty, sure" must surely rank as one of the weakest, most limp wristed, effeminate responses that I have ever seen! That wouldn't even raise an eyebrow in alt.vicars.teaparty. If you consident the ADA group to be so beneath your "Capabili ties, why don't you join Capt Mooron & return/stay in a group you deem worthy of your skills. Honestly, Bertie. Can't you do better? We heard so much about your skills, and yet you appear to be completely useless. Are you, perhaps, a little bit out of your depth? Are you not slightly confused as to where you are. Capt Mooron is more likely to be familar with the subject of "Depth". Altitude/or lack of is the general/major issue of concern to those who frequent ADA. Prehaps it would behove you to return to your "Tea Party" before you drown or become aflicted/disoriented due altitude sickness/Oxygen Depravation. Sorry, ASA regulars are experts in depravity. Next time at least get the spelling right. Peter Wiley Please put your peanut brain in gear, before opening your "Whale Shark Mouth". If you had done so, then considered the context of the comment above you would realize in the context above, "Depravation" is the correct word, spelled correctly. If you had stayed with spelling/grammar/punctuation Lames it would not have been worth while to respond. But such a "Blatant Context Gaff", as you made above cannot be ignored. Umm, Ralphie, a gaff is a spar on a ship. That's almost on topic for ASA, but given your atrocious spelling, I'm sure it was only accidental. Taddy is our resident expert on gaffs. BTW: http://machaut.uchicago.edu/cgi-bin/....sh?WORD=depra vat ion Depravation (Page: 394) Dep`ra*va"tion (?), n. [L. depravitio, from deprava cf. F. dépravation. See Deprave.] 1. Detraction; depreciation. [Obs.] To stubborn critics, apt, without a theme, For depravation. Shak. 2. The act of depraving, or making anything bad; the act of corrupting. 3. The state of being depraved or degenerated; degeneracy; depravity. The depravation of his moral character destroyed his judgment. Sir G. C. Lewis. 4. (Med.) Change for the worse; deterioration; morbid perversion. Syn. -- Depravity; corruption. See Depravity. ----------------------------------------------- --- ---- --- Your mentally deficient psyche may be able to relate this to oxygen in some wierd way, but most people who can understand context would have assumed oxygen *deprivation*. I'll leave it as an exercise for you to improve your sadly lacking education as to the difference in meaning between depravation and deprivation. Great foot shot, though. Peter Wiley Common indicators of the slow onset of "Hypoxia/Altitude Sickness" include but are not limited to "Tunnel Vision" followed by an increasing sense of "Euphoria" accompanied by diminished though processing capacity/diminished cogitative abilities. Taken in context of the above indicators Oxygen Depravation is the more "context descriptive term" for the condition leading to "Hypoxia/Altitude Sickness". It is also more common in everyday usage in flight training activities or among medical personnel dealing with treating those who are borderline Hypoxic due respiratory afflictions. There are also some known to practice intentionally limiting their oxygen intake by being choked to near or passing out as a sexual stimuli/enhancer. Considering your response above, perhaps you were borderline "Hypoxic", from cause/reason as you responded to my post. Ralph Nesbitt Professional FD/CFR/ARFF Type I shudder at the thought of the OH&S procedures you would have written. You do that often? Jerry What's a nice girl like you doing in a place like this? Wow. Good one. Jerry JL Grasso is an ASSHOLE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Thank you! Jerry see? Where? Why? How? More to the point, who? Moreover, what for? Well, that's the nub of it, really, but one has to ask, why in the first instance? In what time frame are we speaking? Well, it might have been anytime between then and some point in the future, whether that be the immediate future or sometime even further down the road. Then the answer can only be who knows what? Well, that would be the only answer in a perfect world, but of course we live in a world of duality.. bertie Someone is alleged to have once said "It is a strange, strange world that we live in, Master Jack." The who? bertie |
#3
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![]() "Bertie the Bunyip" wrote in message ... "Ralph Nesbitt" wrote in m: "Bertie the Bunyip" wrote in message .. . JL Grasso wrote in : On Sat, 26 Jul 2003 05:28:59 +0000 (UTC), Bertie the Bunyip wrote in alt.disasters.aviation: JL Grasso wrote in m: On Sat, 26 Jul 2003 05:40:13 GMT, Bertie the Bunyip wrote in alt.sailing.asa: JL Grasso wrote in m: On Sat, 26 Jul 2003 05:09:04 +0000 (UTC), Bertie the Bunyip wrote in alt.sailing.asa: JL Grasso wrote in news:qs24ivs328rbfqk9tok8dcjam2n2oo6dks@4ax. com: On Sat, 26 Jul 2003 02:17:27 +0000 (UTC), Bertie the Bunyip wrote in alt.disasters.aviation: JL Grasso wrote in news:j0p3ivstk69v33eujahafoi27evrep9ouc@4a x.com: On Fri, 25 Jul 2003 20:32:53 -0400, "Scott Vernon" wrote in alt.disasters.aviation: "JL Grasso" wrote in message news:lci3ivc75rqhjsd6nluok6ed2drtj0vavi@ 4ax.com... On Fri, 25 Jul 2003 20:21:10 -0400, "Scott Vernon" wrote in alt.disasters.aviation: "JL Grasso" wrote in message .. . On Sat, 26 Jul 2003 09:35:21 +0930, Flying Tadpole wrote in alt.disasters.aviation: JL Grasso wrote: On Sat, 26 Jul 2003 08:36:14 +0930, Flying Tadpole wrote in alt.disasters.aviation: Ralph Nesbitt slashed and inverted comma'd: "Peter Wiley" wrote in message ... On Fri, 25 Jul 2003 05:31:36 GMT, "Ralph Nesbitt" wrote: "Peter Wiley" wrote in message ... On Fri, 25 Jul 2003 02:00:35 GMT, "Ralph Nesbitt" wrote: "Donal" wrote in message ... "Bertie the Bunyip" wrote in message six .com ... "Capt. Mooron" wrote in t.c a: I didn't realize there was a limit on Bunyips... they seem to bite at anything. anything that looks tasty, sure. "anything that looks tasty, sure" must surely rank as one of the weakest, most limp wristed, effeminate responses that I have ever seen! That wouldn't even raise an eyebrow in alt.vicars.teaparty. If you consident the ADA group to be so beneath your "Capabili ties, why don't you join Capt Mooron & return/stay in a group you deem worthy of your skills. Honestly, Bertie. Can't you do better? We heard so much about your skills, and yet you appear to be completely useless. Are you, perhaps, a little bit out of your depth? Are you not slightly confused as to where you are. Capt Mooron is more likely to be familar with the subject of "Depth". Altitude/or lack of is the general/major issue of concern to those who frequent ADA. Prehaps it would behove you to return to your "Tea Party" before you drown or become aflicted/disoriented due altitude sickness/Oxygen Depravation. Sorry, ASA regulars are experts in depravity. Next time at least get the spelling right. Peter Wiley Please put your peanut brain in gear, before opening your "Whale Shark Mouth". If you had done so, then considered the context of the comment above you would realize in the context above, "Depravation" is the correct word, spelled correctly. If you had stayed with spelling/grammar/punctuation Lames it would not have been worth while to respond. But such a "Blatant Context Gaff", as you made above cannot be ignored. Umm, Ralphie, a gaff is a spar on a ship. That's almost on topic for ASA, but given your atrocious spelling, I'm sure it was only accidental. Taddy is our resident expert on gaffs. BTW: http://machaut.uchicago.edu/cgi-bin/....sh?WORD=depra vat ion Depravation (Page: 394) Dep`ra*va"tion (?), n. [L. depravitio, from deprava cf. F. dépravation. See Deprave.] 1. Detraction; depreciation. [Obs.] To stubborn critics, apt, without a theme, For depravation. Shak. 2. The act of depraving, or making anything bad; the act of corrupting. 3. The state of being depraved or degenerated; degeneracy; depravity. The depravation of his moral character destroyed his judgment. Sir G. C. Lewis. 4. (Med.) Change for the worse; deterioration; morbid perversion. Syn. -- Depravity; corruption. See Depravity. ----------------------------------------------- --- ---- --- Your mentally deficient psyche may be able to relate this to oxygen in some wierd way, but most people who can understand context would have assumed oxygen *deprivation*. I'll leave it as an exercise for you to improve your sadly lacking education as to the difference in meaning between depravation and deprivation. Great foot shot, though. Peter Wiley Common indicators of the slow onset of "Hypoxia/Altitude Sickness" include but are not limited to "Tunnel Vision" followed by an increasing sense of "Euphoria" accompanied by diminished though processing capacity/diminished cogitative abilities. Taken in context of the above indicators Oxygen Depravation is the more "context descriptive term" for the condition leading to "Hypoxia/Altitude Sickness". It is also more common in everyday usage in flight training activities or among medical personnel dealing with treating those who are borderline Hypoxic due respiratory afflictions. There are also some known to practice intentionally limiting their oxygen intake by being choked to near or passing out as a sexual stimuli/enhancer. Considering your response above, perhaps you were borderline "Hypoxic", from cause/reason as you responded to my post. Ralph Nesbitt Professional FD/CFR/ARFF Type I shudder at the thought of the OH&S procedures you would have written. You do that often? Jerry What's a nice girl like you doing in a place like this? Wow. Good one. Jerry JL Grasso is an ASSHOLE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Thank you! Jerry see? Where? Why? How? More to the point, who? Moreover, what for? Well, that's the nub of it, really, but one has to ask, why in the first instance? In what time frame are we speaking? Well, it might have been anytime between then and some point in the future, whether that be the immediate future or sometime even further down the road. Then the answer can only be who knows what? Well, that would be the only answer in a perfect world, but of course we live in a world of duality.. bertie Someone is alleged to have once said "It is a strange, strange world that we live in, Master Jack." The who? bertie No doubt made "The Quote" famous, but who originated it? Ralph Nesbitt Professional FD/CFR/ARFF Type |