I never, EVER in my life, thought there would be any reason for me to be ashamed to admit I grew up in Nashua, NH.
For some reason this guy’s name is familiar to me. I’m sure I’ve seen his name on a couple letters to the editor of the Nashua Telegraph - it may have stuck in my head because he seemed like such a nutcase back then, too.
FWIW, the Washington Post printed that he’d tried at one point to run a Web dating service for Nashua High School students. Two of the sections?
“He wants it bad”
“She wants it bad”
shudder Not all of us from Nashua are like that, honest!
There’s one guy who hangs around in DC politics that I always keep my eye out for: John Capozzi.
I met him when I was at a job fair in college, and he helped get me an interview with some company. He mentioned that he was a “former DC councilman” and was a big-shot in the DC politics. I, being a naive college kid, thought he was really impressive. Then, I spied his name in the City Paper’s “Loose Lips” column and saw that he’s a person of great mockery in town.
Anyway, he’s the kind of person I expect to get elected someday, and then say something wacky like this.
In addition to Dornam’s already mentioned comment, there is G. Gordon Liddy’s famous advice to shoot “the feds” in the head, “…that way their flak jackets won’t protect them.”
And who can forget Jesse Helms, whom the Secret Service requested the US Attorney’s office prosecute for threatening the president.
I don’t know about you, but this seems rather indicative of his love of law enforcement…
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Subject: How BP agents deserve to be treated.
Date: 05/03/2000
Author: Tom Alciere <tomalciere@netway.com>
Here’s what happened: These people were
peacefully bringing their crop to market when a BP
goon confronted them in order to violate their
right to bring their crop to market and to violate
the right of the American people to enjoy the
crops of their choice. They fought back. The BP
goon and its government paid a price.
Yeah, seems like a very peaceful type, except the crop was drugs (which is another debate) and the price paid was a dead border patrol agent. So, in effect, the charming Mr. Alciere is saying that the treatment BP agents deserve is a bullet in the head. Sorry, I don’t think he’s been taken out of context.
…I personally like the way Mr. Alciere refers to the killing of a cop as “bringing the cop to justice” - such a humanitarian he is!
Subject: Join the fun at Winchester Online
Date: 06/15/2000
Author: Tom Alciere <tomalciere@netway.com>
It’s about the cop that the Jamaican drug dealer
brought to justice on 29 Oct 1999. My web site
contains links to the news articles relevant, at http://www.una-novia.com/timbrook.html but my
narrative may be a little misleading about the
degree of confrontation before the dealer began
running.
Anyway, I’ve been swamped by Winchester VA
residents who are wrongly believing that the
cop-killer was not justified in defending
himself. Maybe you could offer your thoughts at http://www.winchesteronline.com/cgi-bin/wwwboard/wwwboard.html
the people have a right “to be secure…against unreasonable searches and seizures”
so, if the cop was in the wrong, as it presumably was, then the driver was in the right to shoot it.
Let us hope the cop will be unable to serve its evil government in the future, whether it lives or not.
BTW I don’t like cops.