Get Paid To Search Google!
#1
edited
#2
Goodbye.

Spam is met with open hostility here.

You are not welcome. Your pyramid scheme is not welcome. Your banination is likely. All your base are belong to Bolty. You have no chance to survive make your time HAHAHA.
All alone, or in twos,
The ones who really love you
Walk up and down outside the wall.
Some hand in hand
And some gathered together in bands.
The bleeding hearts and artists
Make their stand.

And when they've given you their all
Some stagger and fall, after all it's not easy
Banging your heart against some mad buggers wall.

"Isn't this where...."
#3
Adios @$$|-|0|_3
The mass of men lead lives of quiet desperation - Henry David Thoreau

Whatever doesn't kill you makes you stronger, and at the rate I'm going, I'm going to be invincible.

Chicago wargaming club
#4
[Image: diagram.jpg]

Buh-Bye :wub:
#5
LOL
Eat <moderated> <moderated>.
#6
In a sick way, this is kinda fun.

oooh edit.

Anybody notice he included Blizzhacking to try and gain our interest? In advertising, it pays to know your audience... WE FARKING HATE HACKS HERE AT THE LOUNGE YOU IGNORANT LITTLE TIT MONKEY! That alone can and will get you banned.
All alone, or in twos,
The ones who really love you
Walk up and down outside the wall.
Some hand in hand
And some gathered together in bands.
The bleeding hearts and artists
Make their stand.

And when they've given you their all
Some stagger and fall, after all it's not easy
Banging your heart against some mad buggers wall.

"Isn't this where...."
#7
Doc,Apr 21 2005, 10:04 PM Wrote:In a sick way, this is kinda fun.
[right][snapback]74755[/snapback][/right]
... like throwing meat to the lions! :lol:
Lochnar[ITB]
Freshman Diablo

[Image: jsoho8.png][Image: 10gmtrs.png]

"I reject your reality and substitute my own."
"You don't know how strong you can be until strong is the only option."
"Think deeply, speak gently, love much, laugh loudly, give freely, be kind."
"Talk, Laugh, Love."
#8
The pathogenicity of avian H5N1 influenza viruses to mammals has been evolving since the mid-1980s. Here, we demonstrate that H5N1 influenza viruses, isolated from apparently healthy domestic ducks in mainland China from 1999 through 2002, were becoming progressively more pathogenic for mammals, and we present a hypothesis explaining the mechanism of this evolutionary direction. Twenty-one viruses isolated from apparently healthy ducks in southern China from 1999 through 2002 were confirmed to be H5N1 subtype influenza A viruses. These isolates are antigenically similar to A/Goose/Guangdong/1/96 (H5N1) virus, which was the source of the 1997 Hong Kong “bird flu” hemagglutinin gene, and all are highly pathogenic in chickens. The viruses form four pathotypes on the basis of their replication and lethality in mice. There is a clear temporal pattern in the progressively increasing pathogenicity of these isolates in the mammalian model. Five of six H5N1 isolates tested replicated in inoculated ducks and were shed from trachea or cloaca, but none caused disease signs or death. Phylogenetic analysis of the full genome indicated that most of the viruses are reassortants containing the A/Goose/Guangdong/1/96-like hemagglutinin gene and the other genes from unknown Eurasian avian influenza viruses. This study is a characterization of the H5N1 avian influenza viruses recently circulating in ducks in mainland China. Our findings suggest that immediate action is needed to prevent the transmission of highly pathogenic avian influenza viruses from the apparently healthy ducks into chickens or mammalian hosts.
#9
DeeBye,Apr 21 2005, 10:12 PM Wrote:The pathogenicity of avian H5N1 influenza viruses to mammals has been evolving since the mid-1980s. Here, we demonstrate that H5N1 influenza viruses, isolated from apparently healthy domestic ducks in mainland China from 1999 through 2002, were becoming progressively more pathogenic for mammals, and we present a hypothesis explaining the mechanism of this evolutionary direction. Twenty-one viruses isolated from apparently healthy ducks in southern China from 1999 through 2002 were confirmed to be H5N1 subtype influenza A viruses. These isolates are antigenically similar to A/Goose/Guangdong/1/96 (H5N1) virus, which was the source of the 1997 Hong Kong “bird flu” hemagglutinin gene, and all are highly pathogenic in chickens. The viruses form four pathotypes on the basis of their replication and lethality in mice. There is a clear temporal pattern in the progressively increasing pathogenicity of these isolates in the mammalian model. Five of six H5N1 isolates tested replicated in inoculated ducks and were shed from trachea or cloaca, but none caused disease signs or death. Phylogenetic analysis of the full genome indicated that most of the viruses are reassortants containing the A/Goose/Guangdong/1/96-like hemagglutinin gene and the other genes from unknown Eurasian avian influenza viruses. This study is a characterization of the H5N1 avian influenza viruses recently circulating in ducks in mainland China. Our findings suggest that immediate action is needed to prevent the transmission of highly pathogenic avian influenza viruses from the apparently healthy ducks into chickens or mammalian hosts.
[right][snapback]74758[/snapback][/right]


Duck? Duck? Goose!

MONKS: [chanting] Pie Iesu domine, dona eis requiem.

[bonk]

Pie Iesu domine,...

[bonk]

...dona eis requiem.

[bonk]

Pie Iesu domine,...

[bonk]

...dona eis requiem.

CROWD: A witch! A witch!

[bonk]

A witch! A witch!

MONKS: [chanting] Pie Iesu domine...

CROWD: A witch! A witch! A witch! A witch! We’ve found a witch! A witch! A witch! A witch! A witch! We’ve got a witch! A witch! A witch! Burn her! Burn her! Burn her! We’ve found a witch! We’ve found a witch! A witch! A witch! A witch!

VILLAGER #1: We have found a witch. May we burn her?

CROWD: Burn her! Burn! Burn her! Burn her!

BEDEVERE: How do you know she is a witch?

VILLAGER #2: She looks like one.

CROWD: Right! Yeah! Yeah!

BEDEVERE: Bring her forward.

WITCH: I’m not a witch. I’m not a witch.

BEDEVERE: Uh, but you are dressed as one.

WITCH: They dressed me up like this.

CROWD: Augh, we didn’t! We didn’t...

WITCH: And this isn’t my nose. It’s a false one.

BEDEVERE: Well?

VILLAGER #1: Well, we did do the nose.

BEDEVERE: The nose?

VILLAGER #1: And the hat, but she is a witch!

VILLAGER #2: Yeah!

CROWD: We burn her! Right! Yeaaah! Yeaah!

BEDEVERE: Did you dress her up like this?

VILLAGER #1: No!

VILLAGER #2 and 3: No. No.

VILLAGER #2: No.

VILLAGER #1: No.

VILLAGERS #2 and #3: No.

VILLAGER #1: Yes.

VILLAGER #2: Yes.

VILLAGER #1: Yes. Yeah, a bit.

VILLAGER #3: A bit.

VILLAGERS #1 and #2: A bit.

VILLAGER #3: A bit.

VILLAGER #1: She has got a wart.

RANDOM: [cough]

BEDEVERE: What makes you think she is a witch?

VILLAGER #3: Well, she turned me into a newt.

BEDEVERE: A newt?

VILLAGER #3: I got better.

VILLAGER #2: Burn her anyway!

VILLAGER #1: Burn!

CROWD: Burn her! Burn! Burn her!...

BEDEVERE: Quiet! Quiet! Quiet! Quiet! There are ways of telling whether she is a witch.

VILLAGER #1: Are there?

VILLAGER #2: Ah?

VILLAGER #1: What are they?

CROWD: Tell us! Tell us!...

BEDEVERE: Tell me. What do you do with witches?

VILLAGER #2: Burn!

VILLAGER #1: Burn!

CROWD: Burn! Burn them up! Burn!...

BEDEVERE: And what do you burn apart from witches?

VILLAGER #1: More witches!

VILLAGER #3: Shh!

VILLAGER #2: Wood!

BEDEVERE: So, why do witches burn?

[pause]

VILLAGER #3: B--... ‘cause they’re made of... wood?

BEDEVERE: Good! Heh heh.

CROWD: Oh, yeah. Oh.

BEDEVERE: So, how do we tell whether she is made of wood?

VILLAGER #1: Build a bridge out of her.

BEDEVERE: Ah, but can you not also make bridges out of stone?

VILLAGER #1: Oh, yeah.

RANDOM: Oh, yeah. True. Uhh...

BEDEVERE: Does wood sink in water?

VILLAGER #1: No. No.

VILLAGER #2: No, it floats! It floats!

VILLAGER #1: Throw her into the pond!

CROWD: The pond! Throw her into the pond!

BEDEVERE: What also floats in water?

VILLAGER #1: Bread!

VILLAGER #2: Apples!

VILLAGER #3: Uh, very small rocks!

VILLAGER #1: Cider!

VILLAGER #2: Uh, gra—gravy!

VILLAGER #1: Cherries!

VILLAGER #2: Mud!

VILLAGER #3: Uh, churches! Churches!

VILLAGER #2: Lead! Lead!

ARTHUR: A duck!

CROWD: Oooh.

BEDEVERE: Exactly. So, logically...

VILLAGER #1: If... she... weighs... the same as a duck,... she’s made of wood.

BEDEVERE: And therefore?

VILLAGER #2: A witch!

VILLAGER #1: A witch!

CROWD: A witch! A witch!...

VILLAGER #4: Here is a duck. Use this duck.

[quack quack quack]

BEDEVERE: Very good. We shall use my largest scales.

CROWD: Ohh! Ohh! Burn the witch! Burn the witch! Burn her! Burn her! Burn her! Burn her! Burn her! Burn her! Burn her! Ahh! Ahh...

BEDEVERE: Right. Remove the supports!

[whop]

[clunk]

[creak]

CROWD: A witch! A witch! A witch!

WITCH: It’s a fair cop.

VILLAGER #3: Burn her!

CROWD: Burn her! Burn her! Burn her! Burn! Burn!




All alone, or in twos,
The ones who really love you
Walk up and down outside the wall.
Some hand in hand
And some gathered together in bands.
The bleeding hearts and artists
Make their stand.

And when they've given you their all
Some stagger and fall, after all it's not easy
Banging your heart against some mad buggers wall.

"Isn't this where...."
#10
Doc,Apr 21 2005, 11:20 PM Wrote:Duck? Duck? Goose!
[right][snapback]74759[/snapback][/right]

Cardboard Catalogue essay

I’ve seen cardboard homes around the world. They look much the same in Yorkshire, Tokyo, Manila, London, Paris, New York, Perth, except that, in Tokyo, the old domestic rules apply, shoes outside the threshold, futons hung out to air. Almost everywhere the destitute and marginalised dwell in brightly labelled containers from somewhere else, intended for goods they can never afford. Universal cardboard came with consumerism. It is the absolute index of the triumph of capital and globalism and the misery they can bring. Kids build castles from cardboard boxes. It is the most despised, the most humble of materials. It can also be home for the dead, symbolic and practical. George Harrison was cremated in a cardboard coffin.



Strange stuff cardboard, at once endless promise and doomladen denial, glamourous one minute, garbage the next. Tough brown cardboard carries white goods, fruit and veg, glossy, laminated, colour printed pasteboards contain everything else, from shoes and underwear to toothpaste and scent. They can perfume the cardboard package, so you think you smell its contents. They can wax it to hold milk and fruit juice. Then there’s the all too familiar chateau cardboard. Maybe they pack nuclear warheads in cardboard boxes. If you walk down a city street your gaze will always fall on cardboard.



It’s only a paper moon sailing over a cardboard sea,

But, it wouldn’t be make-believe, if you believed in me.

Old popular song

The mutability of cardboard, its universality, its intimate affinity with all desirable things, its primary status as a container/substitute for everything else, prompts the suggestion that it is the most virtual product possible. This material is never itself, always a veil, a token for some desired object, a revelation in waiting. Even so cardboard is irrevocably enmeshed with modernism and modernity. Playing cards, visiting cards, christmas cards and jigsaws came first in the mid nineteenth century. Early inventors dreamed of cardboard clothes, cardboard furniture, cardboard cars, a cardboard bowler hat. Then came the hard heads of technology. Advertising and the printing industry took hold. Capitalist modernity, that glamourous century long vanishing trick of our richly resistant material world, ran smoothly to a conclusion. Postmodernity has been defined, by Jameson and many others, as the cultural state reached when no nature, no authentic material condition beyond culture and ideology remains to be desired or exploited. If there is a landscape at the end of the third millenium the chances are that it will be cardboard, a pulp and glue packaging memorial to forests woodchipped to ease the world wide progress of consumer capital. In 2001, cardboard is already the most natural thing in the world.



Just Fold Along The Dotted Lines

Back of a cornflakes box

Cardboard, far more than plastic, is, par excellence, the omnipresent substance of modernity. This makes it difficult stuff for art making. It repels attempts to treat it as a medium in the manner of paint, canvas, wood, bronze, stone and so on. Technology long ago reconfigured all traditional artistic media beyond recognition - consider the paint tube or the chemistry of acrylics,- but, for whatever reason, they retain an aura that cardboard never had. Few viewers notice that a painting by David Hockney is hi-tech, nothing to do with Rembrandt or Titian. Cardboard is, always and forever, industrial, inescapably the packaging never the contents. Cardboard is cheap, the most common found material, the most realistic. Artists who use cardboard are freed from pretence, able to disrespect their craft so as to rediscover the material substance of experience.

Cardboard can be stamped, moulded, cut and folded - all industrial processes. Picasso and Braque used it to make 3D versions of their cubist images. There is a famous photo of, I think, Picasso with a cubist cardboard guitar on the wall behind him. The abstract, even arbitrary planes of the instrument, are given by the material qualities of cardboard, the very same qualities produced to the requirements of industry. There has been much pretentious prattle about the theory of relativity in the context of cubism. Forget about Einstein. Think of synthetic cubism as a visionary method of repackaging the world, a fold it yourself tableau on the back of a cornflakes box.

Aesthetics, the pretence that autonomous beauty exists, that it has laws apart from the material, has always been the last refuge of the scoundrel. The very mutability of cardboard, its absence of consistent material characteristics, its association with every banal form and substance in our corrupt cornucopia of consumer goods and tainted desires, endowed it with a remarkable power to scandalise the pretences of high art and its wanker academic acolytes. It was a Dada favourite, a Surrealist sine qua non. A simple figure drawing on cardboard is repackaged by its support, a handcrafted bone flung in the teeth of wolfish modernity. Cardboard collages instantly plug the viewer into a swelling universe of production and products. Cardboard found objects form its doppelganger archaeology. Cardboard locks art into the pains and pleasures of a material existence. It is a valuable political resource. We can do with it what we will.



This way up. Use no Hooks, Please Recycle.

Various cardboard boxes.

George Harrison, a washing machine, a book or a bunch of bananas its all the same to the cardboard box. In the prevalent banal excess the container is the key to all desire - you buy the lifestyle, the pre planned holiday, the degree in Fine Arts, from the package, the pictures in the colour brochure, long before the experience itself. I wish disappointment and depression were likely to follow. The evidence is against me. People prefer to be empty boxes, they compete to be containers for all the crap is around. Big Brother is the biggest cardboard box in the universe and oh boy! have the contestants got the goods! Well, actually, they are the goods. The pathetic attempts of the excluded losers to relocate themselves as quality products strike me as up market versions of the confessions at Stalin’s show trials. This is humanity as a cardboard box, life as an never to be opened package. At the same time, cardboard is the greatest spiritual force we have, the universal reminder that all things must pass, we must all pass through the great waste incinerator. Becoming a cardboard box is no guarantee of immortality nor will it ease the pain of dying.

This exhibition engages the history of cardboard from cards and jigsaws to the ultimate package a Sydney gallery and a real time Paris studio, complete with artist sound and light, packed in cardboard . There are mobile boxes cut into the shape of a human bodies, sleeping like spoons for comfort. There is woven cardboard. There are spaces empty and filled with junk and desire. There are boxes hanging on the walls, packages of packages, life size figures, a pregnant woman, a consumer standing at attention. Will it ever end? Shall we be boxed in forever?.
#11
Getting something in here befor Gris locks it. :)
#12
DeeBye,Apr 21 2005, 07:27 PM Wrote:Cardboard Catalogue essay

I’ve seen cardboard homes around the world. They look much the same in Yorkshire, Tokyo, Manila, London, Paris, New York, Perth, except that, in Tokyo, the old domestic rules apply, shoes outside the threshold, futons hung out to air. Almost everywhere the destitute and marginalised dwell in brightly labelled containers from somewhere else, intended for goods they can never afford. Universal cardboard came with consumerism. It is the absolute index of the triumph of capital and globalism and the misery they can bring. Kids build castles from cardboard boxes. It is the most despised, the most humble of materials. It can also be home for the dead, symbolic and practical. George Harrison was cremated in a cardboard coffin.



Strange stuff cardboard, at once endless promise and doomladen denial, glamourous one minute, garbage the next. Tough brown cardboard carries white goods, fruit and veg, glossy, laminated, colour printed pasteboards contain everything else, from shoes and underwear to toothpaste and scent. They can perfume the cardboard package, so you think you smell its contents. They can wax it to hold milk and fruit juice. Then there’s the all too familiar chateau cardboard. Maybe they pack nuclear warheads in cardboard boxes. If you walk down a city street your gaze will always fall on cardboard.



It’s only a paper moon sailing over a cardboard sea,

But, it wouldn’t be make-believe, if you believed in me.

Old popular song

The mutability of cardboard, its universality, its intimate affinity with all desirable things, its primary status as a container/substitute for everything else, prompts the suggestion that it is the most virtual product possible. This material is never itself, always a veil, a token for some desired object, a revelation in waiting. Even so cardboard is irrevocably enmeshed with modernism and modernity. Playing cards, visiting cards, christmas cards and jigsaws came first in the mid nineteenth century. Early inventors dreamed of cardboard clothes, cardboard furniture, cardboard cars, a cardboard bowler hat. Then came the hard heads of technology. Advertising and the printing industry took hold. Capitalist modernity, that glamourous century long vanishing trick of our richly resistant material world, ran smoothly to a conclusion. Postmodernity has been defined, by Jameson and many others, as the cultural state reached when no nature, no authentic material condition beyond culture and ideology remains to be desired or exploited. If there is a landscape at the end of the third millenium the chances are that it will be cardboard, a pulp and glue packaging memorial to forests woodchipped to ease the world wide progress of consumer capital. In 2001, cardboard is already the most natural thing in the world.



Just Fold Along The Dotted Lines

Back of a cornflakes box

Cardboard, far more than plastic, is, par excellence, the omnipresent substance of modernity. This makes it difficult stuff for art making. It repels attempts to treat it as a medium in the manner of paint, canvas, wood, bronze, stone and so on. Technology long ago reconfigured all traditional artistic media beyond recognition - consider the paint tube or the chemistry of acrylics,- but, for whatever reason, they retain an aura that cardboard never had. Few viewers notice that a painting by David Hockney is hi-tech, nothing to do with Rembrandt or Titian. Cardboard is, always and forever, industrial, inescapably the packaging never the contents. Cardboard is cheap, the most common found material, the most realistic. Artists who use cardboard are freed from pretence, able to disrespect their craft so as to rediscover the material substance of experience.

Cardboard can be stamped, moulded, cut and folded - all industrial processes. Picasso and Braque used it to make 3D versions of their cubist images. There is a famous photo of, I think, Picasso with a cubist cardboard guitar on the wall behind him. The abstract, even arbitrary planes of the instrument, are given by the material qualities of cardboard, the very same qualities produced to the requirements of industry. There has been much pretentious prattle about the theory of relativity in the context of cubism. Forget about Einstein. Think of synthetic cubism as a visionary method of repackaging the world, a fold it yourself tableau on the back of a cornflakes box.

Aesthetics, the pretence that autonomous beauty exists, that it has laws apart from the material, has always been the last refuge of the scoundrel. The very mutability of cardboard, its absence of consistent material characteristics, its association with every banal form and substance in our corrupt cornucopia of consumer goods and tainted desires, endowed it with a remarkable power to scandalise the pretences of high art and its wanker academic acolytes. It was a Dada favourite, a Surrealist sine qua non. A simple figure drawing on cardboard is repackaged by its support, a handcrafted bone flung in the teeth of wolfish modernity. Cardboard collages instantly plug the viewer into a swelling universe of production and products. Cardboard found objects form its doppelganger archaeology. Cardboard locks art into the pains and pleasures of a material existence. It is a valuable political resource. We can do with it what we will.



This way up. Use no Hooks, Please Recycle.

Various cardboard boxes.

George Harrison, a washing machine, a book or a bunch of bananas its all the same to the cardboard box. In the prevalent banal excess the container is the key to all desire - you buy the lifestyle, the pre planned holiday, the degree in Fine Arts, from the package, the pictures in the colour brochure, long before the experience itself. I wish disappointment and depression were likely to follow. The evidence is against me. People prefer to be empty boxes, they compete to be containers for all the crap is around. Big Brother is the biggest cardboard box in the universe and oh boy! have the contestants got the goods! Well, actually, they are the goods. The pathetic attempts of the excluded losers to relocate themselves as quality products strike me as up market versions of the confessions at Stalin’s show trials. This is humanity as a cardboard box, life as an never to be opened package. At the same time, cardboard is the greatest spiritual force we have, the universal reminder that all things must pass, we must all pass through the great waste incinerator. Becoming a cardboard box is no guarantee of immortality nor will it ease the pain of dying.

This exhibition engages the history of cardboard from cards and jigsaws to the ultimate package a Sydney gallery and a real time Paris studio, complete with artist sound and light, packed in cardboard . There are mobile boxes cut into the shape of a human bodies, sleeping like spoons for comfort. There is woven cardboard. There are spaces empty and filled with junk and desire. There are boxes hanging on the walls, packages of packages, life size figures, a pregnant woman, a consumer standing at attention. Will it ever end? Shall we be boxed in forever?.
[right][snapback]74760[/snapback][/right]

Me = Scared^infinity
I have my own signature. Yay.
#13
Closing the thread. Griselda did the dirty work already. She always beats me to it!

-Bolty
Quote:Considering the mods here are generally liberals who seem to have a soft spot for fascism and white supremacy (despite them saying otherwise), me being perma-banned at some point is probably not out of the question.


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