From mw34@cornell.edu Fri Jul 18 07:57:18 1997 Received: from anise.ee.cornell.edu (ANISE.EE.CORNELL.EDU [128.84.210.14]) by neanderthal.ee.cornell.edu (8.8.5/8.7.3) with SMTP id HAA23069 for ; Fri, 18 Jul 1997 07:57:16 -0400 Received: from postoffice2.mail.cornell.edu by anise.ee.cornell.edu (4.1/1.6.10+n-y-Cornell-Electrical-Engineering) id AA27526; Fri, 18 Jul 97 07:56:50 EDT Received: (from daemon@localhost) by postoffice2.mail.cornell.edu (8.8.5/8.8.5) id HAA07401; Fri, 18 Jul 1997 07:56:49 -0400 (EDT) Received: from [132.236.236.57] (CU-DIALUP-2206.CIT.CORNELL.EDU [128.253.44.44]) by postoffice2.mail.cornell.edu (8.8.5/8.8.5) with ESMTP id HAA07390; Fri, 18 Jul 1997 07:56:47 -0400 (EDT) X-Sender: mw34@postoffice2.mail.cornell.edu Message-Id: Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" Date: Thu, 17 Jul 1997 23:56:28 -0400 X-Ph: V4.1@postoffice2.mail.cornell.edu (Cornell Modified) To: pgh1@cornell.edu (Peter George Hartwell), jjs15@cornell.edu (John Jacob Stimson), Daniel_Goldwater@brown.edu From: Michael Wolfson Subject: Godless devil-worshiping evil computers Status: RO Newsgroups: rec.humor.funny.reruns Subject: Godless devil-worshiping evil computers >From: karl@ima.ima.isc.com (Karl Heuer) Resent-From: ksr!warren@harvard.harvard.edu (If you don't understand the T-shirt image, look at your copy of "The Design and Implementation of the 4.3BSD UNIX Operating System" by Leffler, et. al.) Resent-From: Charles Forsythe This was sent to me by Linda Branagan -- Convex doc. writer and Connie Dobbs look-alike. I think its an excellent illustration of why "Bob" began his mission in Dallas. ==================================================== The following is a true story. Last week I walked into a local "home style cookin' restaurant/watering hole" to pick up a take out order. I spoke briefly to the waitress behind the counter, who told me my order would be done in a few minutes. So, while I was busy gazing at the farm implements hanging on the walls, I was approached by two, uh, um... well, let's call them "natives". These guys might just be the *original* Texas rednecks -- complete with ten-gallon hats, snakeskin boots and the pervasive odor of cheap beer and whiskey. "Pardon us, ma'am. Mind of we ask you a question?" Well, people keep telling me that Texans are real friendly, so I nodded. "Are you a Satanist?" Well, at least they didn't ask me if I liked to party. "Uh, no, I can't say that I am." "Gee ma'am. Are you *sure* about that?" they asked. I put on my biggest, brightest Dallas Cowboys cheerleader smile and said, "No, I'm positive. The closest I've ever come to Satanism is watching Geraldo." "Hmm. Interesting. See, we was just wondering why it is you have the lord of darkness on your chest there." I was this close to slapping one of them and causing a scene -- then I stopped and noticed the T-shirt I happened to be wearing that day. Sure enough, it had a picture of a small, devilish looking creature that has for quite some time now been associated with a certain operating system. In this particular representation, the creature was wearing sneakers. They continued: "See, ma'am, we don't exactly *appreciate* it when people show off pictures of the devil. Especially when he's lookin' so friendly." These idiots sounded terrifyingly serious. Me: "Oh, well, see, this isn't really the devil, it's just, well, it's sort of a mascot." Native: "And what kind of football team has the devil as a mascot?" Me: "Oh, it's not a team. It's an operating-- uh, a kind of computer." I figured that an ATM machine was about as much technology as these guys could handle, and I knew that if I so much as uttered the word "unix" I would only make things worse. Native: "Where does this satanical computer come from?" Me: "California. And there's nothing satanical about it really." Somewhere along the line here, the waitress has noticed my predicament -- but these guys probably outweighed her by 600 pounds, so all she did was look at me sympathetically and run off into the kitchen. Native: "Ma'am, I think you're lying. And we'd appreciate it if you'd leave the premises now." Fortunately, the waitress returned that very instant with my order, and they agreed that it would be okay for me to actually pay for my food before I left. While I was at the cash register, they amused themselves by talking to each other. Native #1: "Do you think the police know about these devil computers?" Native #2: "If they come from California, then the FBI oughta know about 'em." They escorted me to the door. I tried one last time: "You're really blowing this all out of proportion. A lot of people use this `kind of computers.' Universities, researchers, businesses. They're actually very useful." Big, big, BIG mistake. I should have guessed at what came next. Native: "Does the government use these devil computers?" Me: "Yes." Another BIG boo-boo. Native: "And does the government *pay* for 'em? With *our* tax dollars?" I decided that it was time to jump ship. Me: "No. Nope. Not at all. You're tax dollars never entered the picture at all. I promise. No sir, not a penny. Our good Christian congressmen would never let something like that happen. Nope. Never. Bye." Texas. What a country. -- >From the RHF archives as selected by Brad Templeton, Maddi Hausmann and Jim Griffith. 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