mirror of
https://github.com/nhammer514/textfiles-politics.git
synced 2024-12-25 15:29:25 -05:00
297 lines
16 KiB
Plaintext
297 lines
16 KiB
Plaintext
<conspiracyFile><div> EXPLORING <div>
|
||
HHH HHH HHH HHH HHHHHHH HHHHHHHHHH HHHHHHH.
|
||
HHH HHH HHH HHH HHHHHHHHH. HHHHHHHHHH HHHHHHHHH
|
||
HHHHHHHHHH HHH HHH HHH HHH HHH<div> HHH HHH
|
||
HHHHHHHHHH 'HHH' HHHHHHHHH HHHHHHHHH HHHHHHHHH
|
||
HHH HHH HHH HHHHHHH' HHH HHHHHHH'
|
||
HHH HHH HHH HHH HHHHHHHHHH HHH HHH
|
||
HHH HHH HHH HHH HHHHHHHHHH HHH HHH.
|
||
.HHHHHHHH HHHHHHH. HHH .HHHHHHH HHHHHHHHH
|
||
HHHHHHHHHH HHHHHHHHH. HHHHH HHHHHHHHH HHHHHHHHH
|
||
HHH<div> HHH HHH HHH HHH HHH' HHH<div>
|
||
HHHHHHHH HHHHHHHHH HHH<div>HHH (HH( HHHHHHHH
|
||
HHH HHHHHHH' HHHHHHHHHHH HHH. HHH
|
||
HHHHHHHHH HHH HHH HHH HHHHHHHHH HHHHHHHHH
|
||
HHHHHHHH' HHH .HHH HHH. 'HHHHHHH HHHHHHHHH
|
||
in
|
||
<div> EVERYDAY LIFE <div>
|
||
by
|
||
T.B. PAWLICKI
|
||
<div>
|
||
I I
|
||
I (C) COPYRIGHT 1988 I
|
||
I by I
|
||
I T.B. Pawlicki I
|
||
I 843 FORT STREET I
|
||
I VICTORIA, BRITISH COLUMBIA I
|
||
I V8W 1H6 I
|
||
I CANADA I
|
||
I<div>I
|
||
<div> FORWARD <div>
|
||
Thank you for participating in a pioneering publishing
|
||
venture.
|
||
Mass communication has progressed through four major
|
||
transformations. The first revolution separated the author from
|
||
his audience by means of writing; the LITERATI became a secret
|
||
society of COGNOSCENTI that used its exclusive knowledge to
|
||
dominate the ignorant masses. Modern democracy began when movable
|
||
type made it possible for a message to be received by everyone
|
||
who could read. Recently, radio broadcasting countered the first
|
||
and second revolutions by delivering messages to everyone who
|
||
can't read; television is likely to be the MATADOR of democracy.
|
||
The capital cost of printing plants and broadcasting studios
|
||
limits the messengers to parties of power and wealth, whose
|
||
messages are determined to maintain the STATUS QUO --- natcherly
|
||
--- especially their own status plus all the more quid they can
|
||
quo. The tragic consequence of mass communications has been the
|
||
dissemination of tendencious knowledge to enslave the minds of
|
||
mankind, rather than free us to experience our own ignorance
|
||
until we learn better. A truly free press for truly free minds
|
||
could not exist until the personal home photocopier brought
|
||
publishing within the economic capacity of every person with a
|
||
message and postage. As well as reducing the cost of copying to a
|
||
few pennies per kilowatt hour, the computer completes the
|
||
revolution of mass communications by restoring audience feedback.
|
||
As camels and soups show, quality goes down as participation
|
||
increases, but participation is better for the participators;
|
||
eventually, participators support higher standards.
|
||
Since authors began to write, instead of speaking directly
|
||
to their audience, ideas have flowed in one direction, only. It
|
||
is, however, as impossible to teach without learning as it is to
|
||
learn without teaching, which is why so little is learned from
|
||
reading books. For the first time since the advent of writing,
|
||
the computer makes it possible for readers to contribute to the
|
||
discourse and transform a lecture into a dialogue, a
|
||
conversation, a seminar, a workshop, a global town meeting.
|
||
Finding a publisher for my first book, How To Build A
|
||
<div>
|
||
Flying Saucer, took nearly ten years; nearly ten more years
|
||
<div>
|
||
passed while my market grew to critical mass by word of mouth.
|
||
Now people are reading my first book as if the ideas were as hot
|
||
as tomorrow's news, but a whole generation has grown up to
|
||
drinking age --- and another generation has died of cirrhotic
|
||
livers --- since I was working out those early insights. My
|
||
ideas develop so rapidly that I had to rewrite the manuscript
|
||
every year until it was published. Once printed, however, the
|
||
printing plates are as immutable as graven stone. As soon as I
|
||
began to write my personal correspondence on computer, I
|
||
realized that this electronic medium keeps discoveries alive and
|
||
growing through pooling contributions in ways not feasible by
|
||
any other means of communication. The entire industry is built
|
||
by fielding half-baked ideas and then improving them with
|
||
consumer feedback, as it goes along; no other industry advances
|
||
so fast, and in no other industry do the suppliers lag behind
|
||
the advances made by their own demanders. And thus it came to
|
||
pass as I was speaking to the Global Sciences Congress, held at
|
||
Denver in August, l987, that the idea came to me to offer my
|
||
audience my current manuscripts explaining HYPERSPACE to
|
||
<div>
|
||
everyone who would participate by also sharing their ideas on
|
||
computer discs.
|
||
Ideally, a book of this nature should be transmitted over
|
||
wires to be downloaded by Special Interest Groups on
|
||
international networks. In the present state of the art,
|
||
however, computers still cannot replace paper. This
|
||
unrealistically jealous industry has not yet made files
|
||
universally readable, like sound and film tapes, and it is still
|
||
impractical to transmit text formats and illustrations through
|
||
wires. Even after the computer industry gets its parameters
|
||
together, all of us early worms will remain stuck with our
|
||
capital investments. Therefore, I have decided to print my
|
||
manuscripts onto discs for postal distribution to the computers
|
||
being used now.
|
||
---
|
||
This enterprise will succeed only if each reader will make
|
||
at least two copies and pass them on. Some readers may not know
|
||
three other people with compatible computers, so it is hoped
|
||
that readers with the most popular computer models will pass on
|
||
to their computing friends as many copies as they feel this
|
||
publication is worth. If anyone can make conversions to
|
||
unpopular computers, a copy returned to me will be passed on to
|
||
other readers out in left field.
|
||
This brings us to the matter of copyrights. Most people
|
||
<div>
|
||
believe that anyone may freely copy published material in any
|
||
numbers for any purpose as long as the copies are not sold for a
|
||
profit (*1). If legal process were not so expensive, a lot of
|
||
copycats would learn how very mistaken they are. Copyright
|
||
entitles the author to assign legal permission to make copies and
|
||
set the conditions of contract. Although I am assigning all my
|
||
readers the right to make copies and distribute this literature
|
||
freely, the formal copyright remains mine. Any party enterprising
|
||
enough to reproduce these discs by the hundred for sale at a
|
||
profit will very likely interest my attorney to offer a royalty
|
||
contract as a more attractive alternative to a court ordered
|
||
remedy. Any party that fails to include my byline and copyright
|
||
notice will be taken to task for the more serious offense of
|
||
plagiarism.
|
||
<div>
|
||
Heckling is a part of all public speaking, and most of the
|
||
fun. If hecklers had a fair chance to give their opinions, many
|
||
of them would have more to say than the speakers, and some may
|
||
have better ideas. The only way a reader can add his two bits
|
||
worth to a discourse is by scribbling in the margins of public
|
||
library books. Anything that can be done will be done, so
|
||
hecklers will always be with us, and so will graffiti, along
|
||
with carefully considered letters to editors. Since it is so
|
||
easy to add and subtract opinions to a magnetic publication, a
|
||
lot of opinionated readers are going to do it. The main purpose
|
||
of this venture is to turn audience feedback into an advantage
|
||
--- for everyone --- by encouraging constructive criticism
|
||
guided by rules for fair comment within the laws governing
|
||
copyright and public utterance.
|
||
By the nature of this medium, this publication is going to
|
||
be shared by an unknown number of readers. Those who want to
|
||
give us the benefit of their superior information are asked to
|
||
follow these rules. On those matters that readers can wait for,
|
||
please append your comments to the end of the file. If you feel
|
||
that your information needs to be interjected, then mark the
|
||
beginning and end of your contribution with lines or stars.
|
||
Please include your name and the date so that we know whom to
|
||
credit. If you find mistakes of fact, your immediate correction
|
||
is eagerly asked for. Critics looking for an argument improve
|
||
their chances by including their addresses. If you are so
|
||
offended by some statements that you are compelled to make
|
||
deletions, please mark your censorship with a notice of the
|
||
amount of text you deleted, in numbers of lines or bytes, and
|
||
include your name and date to prove the courage of your
|
||
convictions. Anyone who wants to retain his copyright on
|
||
contributions is advised to include notice of their legal claim
|
||
so that no one will assume that all commentaries and
|
||
contributions are in the public domain. Expect disputes;
|
||
democracy is not for weak stomachs and faint hearts.
|
||
Depending on the number of readers who distribute more
|
||
copies, and the number of contributions added --- not to mention
|
||
subtracted --- my original text will be unrecognizable by the
|
||
time this print passes through a dozen recopies. There is no way
|
||
to know whether all contributors have marked the changes they
|
||
make. Neither is there any way to know whether they have their
|
||
facts correct, unless they cite their sources for reference.
|
||
Furthermore, these discs are communicated person-to-person
|
||
through private, first-class mail, making the message into a
|
||
conversation between acquaintances rather than a publication to
|
||
strangers; it is permissible to say things in private and
|
||
personal mail that is regarded as unethical, if not illegal, in
|
||
public utterance. Therefore, all readers must always remember
|
||
and bear in mind that the copy they are reading is a
|
||
BOUILLABAISSE stirred by many cooks, not a FILET MIGNON SAUTEED
|
||
by a chef. Unless you receive a copy that you can certify as
|
||
unaltered from the original, do not believe anything that
|
||
offends your common sense and don't hold the original author or
|
||
signed contributors responsible for statements and/or context
|
||
that may have been altered by hecklers who prefer to remain
|
||
anonymous (*2). My own editors have altered my manuscripts until
|
||
I could hardly recognize my publications as my own compositions
|
||
--- usually for the better. If some party suffers personal
|
||
injury from this special interest group disc, everyone who
|
||
receives it becomes suspect. This is an utterly novel kind of
|
||
case for the courts to rule on, not quite so much privileged
|
||
privacy as a closed computer conference but still a one-on-one
|
||
private correspondence. I dare say that honest mistakes will be
|
||
excused with a pointed finger, but deliberate malice producing
|
||
suffering to an identifiable person, when proven unjustified in
|
||
these litiginous times, will be liable to legal penalties. We may
|
||
protect ourselves from slanderous or obscene remarks by scanning
|
||
each disc immediately before mailing, to check that no one else
|
||
has run the copy and added comments disgraceful to polite
|
||
company.
|
||
I have enough discoveries in my head to keep me writing
|
||
full time for ten years --- I should live so long. In the
|
||
likelihood that my insurance is vastly underrated, I am
|
||
curtailing my research and graphic design in order to put as
|
||
much of my time as I can into getting my ideas written.
|
||
Unfortunately, the charter members of this publishing revolution
|
||
will receive bare bones of text, a dearth shared by everyone who
|
||
buys Version 1.0 of any program. The economy of electronic
|
||
publication, however, enables me to update my text whenever I
|
||
get a break, add animated illustrations in colour, and enliven
|
||
the text with creative layouts in future editions. Most
|
||
important of all, as copies eventually find their way back to me
|
||
with accumulated reader input, new editions can be issued with
|
||
the latest and most extensive information --- better than
|
||
anything I can do. This publication can be considered as a book
|
||
written by its best qualified readers. In order to receive
|
||
updates and new books, all readers will have to send me their
|
||
names and addresses, regardless whence they received their
|
||
copies. Please bear in mind that my resources are exceedingly
|
||
limited, and expect to wait like a Christian for me to follow up
|
||
in my spare time. I expect this enterprise to be taken over by
|
||
more resourceful enthusiasts.
|
||
The definitive version of this disc book will be written on
|
||
an APPLE IIc, in ASCII files; the animated illustrations will be
|
||
rendered with DAZZLE DRAW and FANTAVISION --- if I can't find
|
||
more practical graphics programs. I invested in the APPLE system
|
||
because I believed all the press reports that the computer field
|
||
has more APPLE trees planted than anything else. I am deceived;
|
||
MS-DOS is the most widely used operating system on this scene.
|
||
This original version, however, is written on a KAYPRO II
|
||
operated by CP/M 2.2 in WORDSTAR 3.3. files. It will take me
|
||
time to convert WORDSTAR files to ASCII, and then convert both
|
||
to MS-DOS. The few graphics included on this disc are drawn with
|
||
keyboard characters. Since the ASCII code is standardized only
|
||
for alphanumeric characters, computers using different keyboard
|
||
codes will produce surprising characters --- the trouble is not
|
||
in the disk or your computer.
|
||
As long as computers remain inconvenient to read in bed or
|
||
on public transportation, I shall concurrently try to find
|
||
publishers for paper versions of my disc books. These discs hold
|
||
the beginning of a 75000 word paper book, heavily illustrated
|
||
with animated illustrations included on disc, under the title
|
||
TIME TRAVEL --- The Secret Science of The UFOs. Availing myself
|
||
<div> <div>
|
||
of the impermanent and quasiconversational nature of magnetic
|
||
correspondence, I have included many speculations and tangents
|
||
on these disks to stimulate response; these unessential essays
|
||
will be deleted from the paper version. The heaviest reading is
|
||
the Second Chapter; once you establish the theoretical
|
||
foundation laid in my repetitive manner of logic, the rest of
|
||
the book is freeway, much like the First Chapter. For the first
|
||
time, the theory and engineering of time travel are explained in
|
||
sufficient practical detail for young physicists to begin
|
||
constructing their own Philadelphia Experiments in their home
|
||
workshops; at least one researcher I know is doing it already,
|
||
in California. Let me know whether you are willing to buy
|
||
TIME TRAVEL --- The Secret Science of The UFOs at a prepublication
|
||
<div> <div>
|
||
price of $10 or a postpublication price of $16. Send no money. I
|
||
only want to know whether there is a market for a paper book
|
||
before I invest more than I can afford to print it. I apologize
|
||
for my inability to acknowlege subscribers to this paper book by
|
||
individual letters, as they are received; at a dollar a letter,
|
||
the cost of mailing is prohibitive. Subscribers will be notified
|
||
individually to write their cheques when the response is
|
||
sufficient to underwrite publication. In the meantime, enquiries
|
||
from royalty publishers are welcome. Zees is a bootstrap
|
||
production, Dollink --- my apologies to Zsa Zsa.
|
||
END OF FORWARD
|
||
*1 This is the belief taken by the Government of the United
|
||
States, especially its Public Broadcasting System. Assuredly,
|
||
what the lord hath given us starving authors with one hand, he
|
||
taketh away by truckloads driven by the other. With legal
|
||
protection like we got, we are better off with our pirates.
|
||
Unless you are a government authorized freebooter, however, the
|
||
first hand lays down the law.
|
||
Readers who copy programs published in magazines are
|
||
subject to the same legal strictures. The magazine publishers do
|
||
not assign its readers the right to make copies of their text to
|
||
give to their friends, much less sell.
|
||
<div>
|
||
*2 The most heavily edited and censored book in the world is
|
||
the Holy Bible, yet its readers are convinced every copy is the
|
||
original and every last Word of God. Evidently, God has
|
||
afterthoughts --- The New Testament. The Holy Koran is an even
|
||
later Word of the very same God compiled from the very same
|
||
orginal Scriptures. And don't forget the equally Holy Book of
|
||
Mormon. I can relate to Him; I am also compelled to rewrite my
|
||
original words innumerable times as I get my act together.
|
||
I believe the Bible; it is the publishers I question. I
|
||
have no doubt that God inspires all His chosen publishers, but I
|
||
wonder whether He chose every publisher; after all, the Bible is
|
||
in public domain. If God inspired the American Constitution, in
|
||
which I believe more than the Bible, He is the Source of the
|
||
First Amendment --- entitling Larry Flint to turn a dollar in
|
||
the pre-eminently profitable religious market. It isn't belief
|
||
in the Bible that fomented the most vicious wars, but belief in
|
||
the infallible veracity of the publishers.
|
||
</conspiracyFile> |