1995-10-01 - Re: WHERE did this come from?

Header Data

From: jmrubin@ix.netcom.com (Joel Rubin)
To: N/A
Message Hash: 63e2eb05a508db1f6959fa63ec6b2ba5754885180e4e14ad84a77dea5740c1f9
Message ID: <44lh9u$qoh@ixnews7.ix.netcom.com>
Reply To: <44kgtb$88i@news.rain.org>
UTC Datetime: 1995-10-01 17:23:06 UTC
Raw Date: Sun, 1 Oct 95 10:23:06 PDT

Raw message

From: jmrubin@ix.netcom.com (Joel Rubin)
Date: Sun, 1 Oct 95 10:23:06 PDT
Subject: Re: WHERE did this come from?
In-Reply-To: <44kgtb$88i@news.rain.org>
Message-ID: <44lh9u$qoh@ixnews7.ix.netcom.com>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain


In article <44leli$s38@ixnews6.ix.netcom.com>, VMARX@ix.netcom.com 
says...
>
>In <44kgtb$88i@news.rain.org> rivaud@rain.org writes: 
>>
>>This is a multi-part message in MIME format.
>>
>>---------------------------------17921121372935
>>Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
>>Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
>>
>>Attatched to this is, (I hope), the header text from a unsolicited
>e-mail 
>>message I received.  The return address does not work.  WHY? How can I
>
>>inform the sender that I hope to never receive there material again?
>>
>>I tried "reply-all" through Eudora, but my reply got bounced back to
>me 
>>as undeliverable.
>>
>>I have removed the content of the original message. I don't know why
>it 
>>was sent to me, but it contained material that I found offensive.
>>
>>Any help, or words of wisdom and enlightenment would be appreciated. 
>>Information would be nice too.  
>>
>
>I got the SAME dammed letter.  I don't know who the facist bastard is
>that sent it to me, but I sent him a reply ALSO telling him to stop
>sending it to me (he sent me 3 copies) and I couldn't connect to his
>server.
>
There was a posting allegedly from a Harvey S. Cohen at AT&T on 
soc.culture.jewish to the effect that the "Long March" email is, in 
fact, a fraud intended to get the National Alliance in trouble. (a noble 
cause if not necessarily appropriate means)

I don't know if this is connected but I notice that a "let's use these 
big lie tactics on Usenet" posting allegedly from the National 
Alliance's Compuserve address seems to have somehow gone through the 
University of Pennsylvania.

     "Things are seldom what they seem.
      Skim milk masquerades as cream."

                                William S. Gilbert (H.M.S. Pinafore)






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