To: Mortimer Snavely
This needs to be protested in the strongest terms legally feasible. Someone could publish the names and addresses of all employees of the newspapers, and legislators who voted to make the info public.
2 posted on
01/05/2003 6:40:49 PM PST by
Mulder
To: Mulder
this is too much.......unflippin believable
I'd sue the paper for INTENTIONALLY PREMEDIATEDLY
targeting my life, my families life when all I
did was follow the law book chapter and verse
Then I'd scream to every venue possible how
a newspaper used it's ink to attack the constitution
and her citizens. There can be no doubt this paper
believes criminals have more rights than law abiders
To: Mulder
"Someone could publish the names and addresses of all employees of the newspapers, and legislators who voted to make the info public."
You fogot to ad, and distribute this ,along with what they drive, to all of the street urchins and assorted riff-raff.
To: Mulder
They did the same thing in Nashville, Tennessee in the early 80's, before Tennessee even had a CCW system. Back then the Sheriff issued permits to the usual suspects (donors, politicians, bussinessmen) so the Nashville Tennessean published their names and addresses. It caused quite an uproar.
91 posted on
01/06/2003 9:25:40 AM PST by
dljordan
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson