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Paul Zimmerman
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Message 131267 - Posted: 1 Jul 2005, 19:11:28 UTC - in response to Message 131261.  
Last modified: 1 Jul 2005, 19:26:33 UTC

These are international fora of the SETI-BOINC, not your political playground.
Respectfully (still)
Vladimir


respectfully also, vladimir....

As I have come to find, ....this forum is, as is stated on the home page, hosted by Seti@Home.

Whether you crunch with Boinc software or Classic, the bottom line is, you still crunch for Seti@Home.

(As to who may have 'started' the circus? We may disagree or we may hold opinions which may be at odds with one another....)

respectfully, (still)

paul

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Message 131261 - Posted: 1 Jul 2005, 19:00:49 UTC - in response to Message 131238.  

Paul, this has become ridiculous long ago. There is no logical reason to persist in your scornful arrogance, imposing your presence in fora where you have not earned the right to be. What is your quest here - to instruct, to enlighten, to open the eyes of the blind? Thanks but no thanks. You are nothing more than a typical troll. It does not matter at all that I am more often closer to your opinions than to Tom's for example. The only thing you achieve is to irritate many of us, and drive nuts some. May be this is your real goal in life? How sad... I admit that the behavior of others here got ugly too, but you started the whole circus. Please go away. These are international fora of the SETI-BOINC, not your political playground.
Respectfully (still)
Vladimir

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Message 131238 - Posted: 1 Jul 2005, 18:09:37 UTC - in response to Message 131234.  
Last modified: 1 Jul 2005, 18:12:44 UTC

Respect? You don't know the meaning of it.



I quickly saw reason to show you little respect..... your own behaviour dictates that, tom.

You can try to lay it off on others, but you know that's not it too....

...sputter and fume, make false accusations and mischaracterizations, .... you won't be alone in that, eh?

'see ya'

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Message 131234 - Posted: 1 Jul 2005, 17:57:58 UTC - in response to Message 131229.  

Common respect would expect you to take your crass undertakings elsewhere....


Common respect? You are the last person to talk to me about respect. In one of your first posts you had a picture of an infant sticking his middle finger at George Bush. There was no substance to your obscene post, no explaination of why you opposed the President on that particular issue, just your disrespect of someone you don't like. In your 1,400+ posts, you have never treated me or anyone else whose opinions you dislike with respect. Respect? You don't know the meaning of it.

And while I'm at it: as a troll, you have no right to complain about my behavior. At least I crunch for the project that sponsors these boards; at least I have computers doing work for SETI/BOINC; at least I got my cobblestones legitimately. I don't care if you think it is disrespectful of me to post in this thread--your disrespect for everyone on these boards who is legitimately here makes your accusation hollow.

Now, if you had ever made an effort to participate here legitimately, you would have found that most everyone would welcome you (even if they disagree with your politics). But you are so oppositional, it seems you will never do what you know you should have done months ago.
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Message 131229 - Posted: 1 Jul 2005, 17:24:52 UTC - in response to Message 131221.  
Last modified: 1 Jul 2005, 17:26:09 UTC

... troll behavior? .


I've got all the time and the patience to deal with your 'troll behaviour', tom.

It's readily apparent who trolls in this thread.

(...or is that blissful ignorance crowding out your reason and logic again?)

I'll post Mr Keelings story again...

.....desecrate the post if you will........ your actions deny your thinking.

Common respect would expect you to take your crass undertakings elsewhere....
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Message 131221 - Posted: 1 Jul 2005, 17:18:29 UTC - in response to Message 131215.  

Why would a troll think he was honoring Mr. Keeling by engaging in troll behavior? If the troll's purpose is to honor someone, it seems that an attempt would be made to do it in a place and in a way that shows respect, not in a place and in a way that simply shoves the troll's bahavior into the faces of the very people who want him to stop being a troll.
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Message 131215 - Posted: 1 Jul 2005, 17:10:42 UTC - in response to Message 131209.  

Just in case some may have missed it..... this thread is offered in a memorium to a man who died recently....

show your disrespect if you are of that nature...

I have fixed the links.... for those with an interest and a better sense of decorum. (seems the UK Independant links are no longer available.... but I found reprints elsewhere.)

************************************************

Charles David Keeling, chemist, oceanographer and atmospheric scientist: born Scranton, Pennsylvania 20 April 1928;

Research Fellow, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena 1953-56; Assistant Research Chemist, Scripps Institute of Oceanography, University of California, San Diego 1956-60, Assistant Professor of Oceanography 1964-68, Professor of Oceanography 1968-2003 (Emeritus);

.....died Hamilton, Montana 20 June 2005.

The American climate scientist Charles David Keeling measured and showed the world what will probably turn out to be the most deadly impact of all, the one which does indeed put a question mark over the future of the planet itself: the accumulation of carbon dioxide gas in the atmosphere from the burning of fossil fuels, now widely accepted to be causing global warming, with potentially catastrophic effect.



....the grand old man of CO2 explained, in disturbing detail, the pressure that the Bush administration was now putting on US climate scientists to keep quiet about any inconvenient facts or research that might support the idea that global warming was happening. The usual threat, he said, was a simple but dire one - your funding would be cut.

Keeling did not want that to happen to him: even though he was then 76, he was still in active charge of the Carbon Dioxide Research Group at Scripps.

At the end of our talk he said: "Give me 24 hours to think about it."

The following day he had made his choice: he would speak on the record. The increase in the rate of CO2 accumulation was a real and worrying phenomenon, he said - and the story went round the world.

Keeling knew that what he had been recording so tellingly for nearly half a century was far too important for all our futures to keep quiet about; history will surely bear him out.

Scripps global climate change pioneer to receive Tyler Prize


"I can think of no individual who has made a more significant contribution to the modern science of global change research or to our understanding of the global carbon cycle, and therefore, no one more deserving of the world's most distinguished prize for environmental science."

In 2002, President George W. Bush presented Keeling with the National Medal of Science, the nation's highest award for lifetime achievement in scientific research.




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Message 131212 - Posted: 1 Jul 2005, 17:06:31 UTC - in response to Message 131209.  

I'm sure Mr. Keeling was a great man.

You know what great men are capable of, Pauly-poo? They are capable of listening to others. They are capable of assessing their situation and reacting accordingly. They are capable of getting along with people.

I'm sure Mr. Keeling was a great man. You dishonor him by your association with his name.
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Message 131209 - Posted: 1 Jul 2005, 17:01:30 UTC - in response to Message 131202.  

Just in case some may have missed it..... this thread is offered in a memorium to a man who died recently....

show your disrespect if you are of that nature...

I have fixed the links.... for those with an interest and a better sense of decorum. (seems the UK Independant links are no longer available.... but I found reprints elsewhere.)

************************************************

Charles David Keeling, chemist, oceanographer and atmospheric scientist: born Scranton, Pennsylvania 20 April 1928;

Research Fellow, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena 1953-56; Assistant Research Chemist, Scripps Institute of Oceanography, University of California, San Diego 1956-60, Assistant Professor of Oceanography 1964-68, Professor of Oceanography 1968-2003 (Emeritus);

.....died Hamilton, Montana 20 June 2005.

The American climate scientist Charles David Keeling measured and showed the world what will probably turn out to be the most deadly impact of all, the one which does indeed put a question mark over the future of the planet itself: the accumulation of carbon dioxide gas in the atmosphere from the burning of fossil fuels, now widely accepted to be causing global warming, with potentially catastrophic effect.



....the grand old man of CO2 explained, in disturbing detail, the pressure that the Bush administration was now putting on US climate scientists to keep quiet about any inconvenient facts or research that might support the idea that global warming was happening. The usual threat, he said, was a simple but dire one - your funding would be cut.

Keeling did not want that to happen to him: even though he was then 76, he was still in active charge of the Carbon Dioxide Research Group at Scripps.

At the end of our talk he said: "Give me 24 hours to think about it."

The following day he had made his choice: he would speak on the record. The increase in the rate of CO2 accumulation was a real and worrying phenomenon, he said - and the story went round the world.

Keeling knew that what he had been recording so tellingly for nearly half a century was far too important for all our futures to keep quiet about; history will surely bear him out.

Scripps global climate change pioneer to receive Tyler Prize


"I can think of no individual who has made a more significant contribution to the modern science of global change research or to our understanding of the global carbon cycle, and therefore, no one more deserving of the world's most distinguished prize for environmental science."

In 2002, President George W. Bush presented Keeling with the National Medal of Science, the nation's highest award for lifetime achievement in scientific research.






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Message 131205 - Posted: 1 Jul 2005, 16:57:19 UTC - in response to Message 131202.  

Just in case some may have missed it..... this thread is offered in a memorium [sic] to a man (actually, it's just Pauly-poo) whose ability to treat others with respect died recently, or perhaps it never developed at all.

His disrespect of others on these boards is shown daily, repeatedly and without any justification. He expects of others what he has never given. He has repeatedly lied, reused to follow accepted practices, insulted and cursed anyone who disagrees with him, and he has generally messed whatever thread he touched. Then, he gets indignant when people react to his childish, vindictive, hateful behavior.

If this is his obituary, he will not be missed.


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Message 131202 - Posted: 1 Jul 2005, 16:54:05 UTC - in response to Message 131197.  

Just in case some may have missed it..... this thread is offered in a memorium to a man who died recently....

show your disrespect if you are of that nature...

I have fixed the links.... for those with an interest and a better sense of decorum. (seems the UK Independant links are no longer available.... but I found reprints elsewhere.)

************************************************

Charles David Keeling, chemist, oceanographer and atmospheric scientist: born Scranton, Pennsylvania 20 April 1928;

Research Fellow, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena 1953-56; Assistant Research Chemist, Scripps Institute of Oceanography, University of California, San Diego 1956-60, Assistant Professor of Oceanography 1964-68, Professor of Oceanography 1968-2003 (Emeritus);

.....died Hamilton, Montana 20 June 2005.

The American climate scientist Charles David Keeling measured and showed the world what will probably turn out to be the most deadly impact of all, the one which does indeed put a question mark over the future of the planet itself: the accumulation of carbon dioxide gas in the atmosphere from the burning of fossil fuels, now widely accepted to be causing global warming, with potentially catastrophic effect.



....the grand old man of CO2 explained, in disturbing detail, the pressure that the Bush administration was now putting on US climate scientists to keep quiet about any inconvenient facts or research that might support the idea that global warming was happening. The usual threat, he said, was a simple but dire one - your funding would be cut.

Keeling did not want that to happen to him: even though he was then 76, he was still in active charge of the Carbon Dioxide Research Group at Scripps.

At the end of our talk he said: "Give me 24 hours to think about it."

The following day he had made his choice: he would speak on the record. The increase in the rate of CO2 accumulation was a real and worrying phenomenon, he said - and the story went round the world.

Keeling knew that what he had been recording so tellingly for nearly half a century was far too important for all our futures to keep quiet about; history will surely bear him out.

Scripps global climate change pioneer to receive Tyler Prize


"I can think of no individual who has made a more significant contribution to the modern science of global change research or to our understanding of the global carbon cycle, and therefore, no one more deserving of the world's most distinguished prize for environmental science."

In 2002, President George W. Bush presented Keeling with the National Medal of Science, the nation's highest award for lifetime achievement in scientific research.





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Message 131199 - Posted: 1 Jul 2005, 16:52:02 UTC - in response to Message 131183.  

Just in case some may have missed it..... this thread is offered in a memorium [sic] to a man (actually, it's just Pauly-poo) whose ability to treat others with respect died recently, or perhaps it never developed at all.

His disrespect of others on these boards is shown daily, repeatedly and without any justification. He expects of others what he has never given. He has repeatedly lied, reused to follow accepted practices, insulted and cursed anyone who disagrees with him, and he has generally messed whatever thread he touched. Then, he gets indignant when people react to his childish, vindictive, hateful behavior.

If this is his obituary, he will not be missed.
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Message 131197 - Posted: 1 Jul 2005, 16:51:15 UTC - in response to Message 131183.  

Just in case some may have missed it..... this thread is offered in a memorium to a man who died recently....

show your disrespect if you are of that nature...

I have fixed the links.... for those with an interest and a better sense of decorum. (seems the UK Independant links are no longer available.... but I found reprints elsewhere.)

************************************************

Charles David Keeling, chemist, oceanographer and atmospheric scientist: born Scranton, Pennsylvania 20 April 1928;

Research Fellow, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena 1953-56; Assistant Research Chemist, Scripps Institute of Oceanography, University of California, San Diego 1956-60, Assistant Professor of Oceanography 1964-68, Professor of Oceanography 1968-2003 (Emeritus);

.....died Hamilton, Montana 20 June 2005.

The American climate scientist Charles David Keeling measured and showed the world what will probably turn out to be the most deadly impact of all, the one which does indeed put a question mark over the future of the planet itself: the accumulation of carbon dioxide gas in the atmosphere from the burning of fossil fuels, now widely accepted to be causing global warming, with potentially catastrophic effect.



....the grand old man of CO2 explained, in disturbing detail, the pressure that the Bush administration was now putting on US climate scientists to keep quiet about any inconvenient facts or research that might support the idea that global warming was happening. The usual threat, he said, was a simple but dire one - your funding would be cut.

Keeling did not want that to happen to him: even though he was then 76, he was still in active charge of the Carbon Dioxide Research Group at Scripps.

At the end of our talk he said: "Give me 24 hours to think about it."

The following day he had made his choice: he would speak on the record. The increase in the rate of CO2 accumulation was a real and worrying phenomenon, he said - and the story went round the world.

Keeling knew that what he had been recording so tellingly for nearly half a century was far too important for all our futures to keep quiet about; history will surely bear him out.

Scripps global climate change pioneer to receive Tyler Prize


"I can think of no individual who has made a more significant contribution to the modern science of global change research or to our understanding of the global carbon cycle, and therefore, no one more deserving of the world's most distinguished prize for environmental science."

In 2002, President George W. Bush presented Keeling with the National Medal of Science, the nation's highest award for lifetime achievement in scientific research.




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Message 131189 - Posted: 1 Jul 2005, 16:41:33 UTC - in response to Message 131183.  
Last modified: 1 Jul 2005, 16:44:18 UTC

Nice new avatar, Thanks!!!
Hi, I'm Paul and I'm a tard :-)
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Message 131183 - Posted: 1 Jul 2005, 16:35:04 UTC - in response to Message 131164.  
Last modified: 1 Jul 2005, 16:50:28 UTC

Just in case some may have missed it..... this thread is offered in a memorium to a man who died recently....

show your disrespect if you are of that nature...

I have fixed the links.... for those with an interest and a better sense of decorum. (seems the UK Independant links are no longer available.... but I found reprints elsewhere.)

************************************************

Charles David Keeling, chemist, oceanographer and atmospheric scientist: born Scranton, Pennsylvania 20 April 1928;

Research Fellow, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena 1953-56; Assistant Research Chemist, Scripps Institute of Oceanography, University of California, San Diego 1956-60, Assistant Professor of Oceanography 1964-68, Professor of Oceanography 1968-2003 (Emeritus);

.....died Hamilton, Montana 20 June 2005.

The American climate scientist Charles David Keeling measured and showed the world what will probably turn out to be the most deadly impact of all, the one which does indeed put a question mark over the future of the planet itself: the accumulation of carbon dioxide gas in the atmosphere from the burning of fossil fuels, now widely accepted to be causing global warming, with potentially catastrophic effect.



....the grand old man of CO2 explained, in disturbing detail, the pressure that the Bush administration was now putting on US climate scientists to keep quiet about any inconvenient facts or research that might support the idea that global warming was happening. The usual threat, he said, was a simple but dire one - your funding would be cut.

Keeling did not want that to happen to him: even though he was then 76, he was still in active charge of the Carbon Dioxide Research Group at Scripps.

At the end of our talk he said: "Give me 24 hours to think about it."

The following day he had made his choice: he would speak on the record. The increase in the rate of CO2 accumulation was a real and worrying phenomenon, he said - and the story went round the world.

Keeling knew that what he had been recording so tellingly for nearly half a century was far too important for all our futures to keep quiet about; history will surely bear him out.

Scripps global climate change pioneer to receive Tyler Prize


"I can think of no individual who has made a more significant contribution to the modern science of global change research or to our understanding of the global carbon cycle, and therefore, no one more deserving of the world's most distinguished prize for environmental science."

In 2002, President George W. Bush presented Keeling with the National Medal of Science, the nation's highest award for lifetime achievement in scientific research.



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Message 131178 - Posted: 1 Jul 2005, 16:23:58 UTC - in response to Message 131028.  

Just in case some may have missed it..... this thread was a memorium to a man who died recently....

(....some think their 'playground' knows no bounds.) ....pitiful, no?



Exactly, some people, who do not contribute to this project, who are not wanted, who post simply to bother others, who have refused (yes, refused) to make their presence here legitimate, think "their playground" knows no bounds. It's more than pitiful, it's immoral.
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Message 131164 - Posted: 1 Jul 2005, 15:37:24 UTC - in response to Message 131150.  

Just in case some may have missed it..... this thread is offered in a memorium to a man who died recently....

(....some think their 'playground' knows no bounds.) ....pitiful, no?



Charles David Keeling, chemist, oceanographer and atmospheric scientist: born Scranton, Pennsylvania 20 April 1928;

Research Fellow, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena 1953-56; Assistant Research Chemist, Scripps Institute of Oceanography, University of California, San Diego 1956-60, Assistant Professor of Oceanography 1964-68, Professor of Oceanography 1968-2003 (Emeritus);

.....died Hamilton, Montana 20 June 2005.

The American climate scientist Charles David Keeling measured and showed the world what will probably turn out to be the most deadly impact of all, the one which does indeed put a question mark over the future of the planet itself: the accumulation of carbon dioxide gas in the atmosphere from the burning of fossil fuels, now widely accepted to be causing global warming, with potentially catastrophic effect.



....the grand old man of CO2 explained, in disturbing detail, the pressure that the Bush administration was now putting on US climate scientists to keep quiet about any inconvenient facts or research that might support the idea that global warming was happening. The usual threat, he said, was a simple but dire one - your funding would be cut.

Keeling did not want that to happen to him: even though he was then 76, he was still in active charge of the Carbon Dioxide Research Group at Scripps.

At the end of our talk he said: "Give me 24 hours to think about it."

The following day he had made his choice: he would speak on the record. The increase in the rate of CO2 accumulation was a real and worrying phenomenon, he said - and the story went round the world.

Keeling knew that what he had been recording so tellingly for nearly half a century was far too important for all our futures to keep quiet about; history will surely bear him out.

Scripps global climate change pioneer to receive Tyler Prize


"I can think of no individual who has made a more significant contribution to the modern science of global change research or to our understanding of the global carbon cycle, and therefore, no one more deserving of the world's most distinguished prize for environmental science."

In 2002, President George W. Bush presented Keeling with the National Medal of Science, the nation's highest award for lifetime achievement in scientific research.



......



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Message 131159 - Posted: 1 Jul 2005, 15:29:25 UTC

No matter how many times the post is repeated,
Mr. Keeling.....is still dead

Sign his Online Condolence Log...and move along.
www.boincsynergy.com


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Message 131150 - Posted: 1 Jul 2005, 15:16:01 UTC - in response to Message 131035.  
Last modified: 1 Jul 2005, 15:17:30 UTC

Just in case some may have missed it..... this thread is offered in a memorium to a man who died recently....

(....some think their 'playground' knows no bounds.) ....pitiful, no?



Charles David Keeling, chemist, oceanographer and atmospheric scientist: born Scranton, Pennsylvania 20 April 1928;

Research Fellow, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena 1953-56; Assistant Research Chemist, Scripps Institute of Oceanography, University of California, San Diego 1956-60, Assistant Professor of Oceanography 1964-68, Professor of Oceanography 1968-2003 (Emeritus);

.....died Hamilton, Montana 20 June 2005.

The American climate scientist Charles David Keeling measured and showed the world what will probably turn out to be the most deadly impact of all, the one which does indeed put a question mark over the future of the planet itself: the accumulation of carbon dioxide gas in the atmosphere from the burning of fossil fuels, now widely accepted to be causing global warming, with potentially catastrophic effect.



....the grand old man of CO2 explained, in disturbing detail, the pressure that the Bush administration was now putting on US climate scientists to keep quiet about any inconvenient facts or research that might support the idea that global warming was happening. The usual threat, he said, was a simple but dire one - your funding would be cut.

Keeling did not want that to happen to him: even though he was then 76, he was still in active charge of the Carbon Dioxide Research Group at Scripps.

At the end of our talk he said: "Give me 24 hours to think about it."

The following day he had made his choice: he would speak on the record. The increase in the rate of CO2 accumulation was a real and worrying phenomenon, he said - and the story went round the world.

Keeling knew that what he had been recording so tellingly for nearly half a century was far too important for all our futures to keep quiet about; history will surely bear him out.

Scripps global climate change pioneer to receive Tyler Prize


"I can think of no individual who has made a more significant contribution to the modern science of global change research or to our understanding of the global carbon cycle, and therefore, no one more deserving of the world's most distinguished prize for environmental science."

In 2002, President George W. Bush presented Keeling with the National Medal of Science, the nation's highest award for lifetime achievement in scientific research.



......


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Message 131101 - Posted: 1 Jul 2005, 13:19:18 UTC - in response to Message 131028.  

Irrelevance deleted....

Since the thread was dead, anything goes asshole....

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