On 7 Nov 2003 08:19:27 -0800, Brett Robson <jet_boy@deja.com> belched
the alphabet and kept on going with:

>On Fri, 07 Nov 2003 20:39:24 +0900, Michael Cash  ...
>>
>>On Wed, 5 Nov 2003 11:48:16 -0800, "Bryce"
>><fukuzzz@takethisout.hotmail.com> belched the alphabet and kept on
>>going with:
>>
>>>
>>>"Eric Takabayashi" <etakajp@yahoo.co.jp> wrote in message
>>>news:3FA9512F.FFFC266E@yahoo.co.jp...
>>>> Bryce wrote:
>>>>
>>>> > > >EMT?
>>>> > >
>>>> > > Emergency Medical Technician. A paramedic, in other words. You know,
>>>> > > one of the people who crewed the ambulance which came and tried to
>>>> > > rescue her retarded ass.
>>>> >
>>>> > O yeah, all those "Insta-Heros" from 9-11. You know, the firemen and
>>>EMT's.
>>>>
>>>> No, I did not have that in mind.
>>>>
>>>> They're heroes anyway.
>>>>
>>>
>>>What about the garbageman that picks up our garbage everyday permitting our
>>>neighborhoods from succumbing to disease and hundreds of people dying,
>>>putting his life on the line because at any time he could get pricked by a
>>>needle or bit by a diseased rat? Is he too, then, not a hero? And if he is,
>>>then isn't anyone in any job or industry a hero? If this is so, we need to
>>>come up with a different idea of what a hero is, because it is way, way
>>>overused.
>>
>>If I may take this opportunity to go off on a tangent...
>>
>>Can someone explain to me why Jessica Lynch got the Bronze Star?
>>
>
>
>Apparently she was raped up the arse. Do they issue sailors their's when they
>sign up, or do they have to finish their first tour?

I, apparently, have been robbed.