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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: asenna1 who wrote (170783)8/13/2001 1:06:46 AM
From: Thomas A Watson  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 769667
 
asenna1, I see you find the suffering of other who have lost life and limbs humor for your life. How many dead in Israel.

The origination of your use of this association of bombs and tic, tic etc with my name occurred after my discussion with another person about what I consider sick humor.
You continue to post to with references that refer back to bombs and words used to imply aspects of bombs and sending bombs.

I can only conclude, from your constant childish need to make references that are clearly come from prior posts having todo with the suggestions of manufacturing and distributing of bombs, you believe that anyone should be free to suggest that others build bombs and send them to innocent folks. I find your use of such sick humor shows a person in need of pity.

tom watson tosiwmee



To: asenna1 who wrote (170783)8/13/2001 2:04:27 AM
From: Gordon A. Langston  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 769667
 
Message 16189615

It turns out, however, that publicly owned utilities charged the state an average of $344 for a megawatt of electricity during the first three
months of the year. Private companies were meanwhile charging less than an average of $250 per megawatt. And those Houston-based
"snakes" -- Reliant, Dynergy, and Enron -- were charging less than the publicly owned utilities, less than the sainted and celebrated L.A.
Department of Water & Power ($292 per megawatt), less than the Sacramento Municipal Utility District ($330 per megawatt), less than other
investor-owned California-based power marketers, and less than the overall market average. Other more ambitious sellers include those
municipal "good neighbors" at Seattle's City Light Department ($634 per megawatt), BC Hydro ($498), and virtually every other socialist
power entity that bellied up to the California wholesale power market.