Re: (M)-adman--speed freak, bot, or team?



On Sat, 25 Oct 2008 13:58:21 -0500, "\(M\)-adman" <grat@xxxxxxxxxx>
wrote:

Joe Cummings wrote:
On Fri, 24 Oct 2008 14:11:09 -0700, Rusty Sites
<SpameYouToo@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

(M)-adman's full time profession seems to be posting to this group.
He is on the job from around 4-7 am to 9-12 pm each day with hardly
a break of more than 10 minutes between posts. Is this really one
person or even a person at all? If so, is he simply deranged or is
he actually up to something? Even without considering that most of
his original posts are simply copy-paste jobs without attribution,
this seems like it would qualify as some sort of abuse. Spamming
perhaps? Reply if you want, Madman, but I have killfiled you. Just
as a matter of practicality, you are littering up my view of this
group and increasing my newsreaders sort time. We need to start
ignoring this guy.


Every newsgroup needs a clown, and I always regret that Ed
Conrad disappeared. His poetry was great, almost McGonaglesque. His
science, too, was awesome ("Skeleton found in coal seam.")

Madman seems an amiable kind of nut, but he's not in the same
league as Ed.

I'd characterise him as a Conradian epigone, with a fixation
about pyramids.

You should read for comprehension. I discuss much more the pyramids. One
example is corrupt science in relation to origins. Another would be the
invalidity of evolution. And yet another would be the true 'origins' of man.
This is a Talk --->ORIGINS NG correct?

I put forth the hypothesis based on this thread that the ones pointing
fingers and crying "troll" and the very ones that do NOT discuss things that
are on topic for this NG.




Have fun,

Thanks.



Joe Cummings.


Does our resident pyramidologist actually "discuss" anything?

The impression I get from his voluminous postings - and I
could be mistaken - is that he typically cuts and pastes items and
then abuses the people who correct the content of his cut-and-pastes.

But he did a wonderful botch-up of pyramid lore.

Have fun with solid geometry,

Joe Cummings

.


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