View Full Version : George M. Middius, Docteur es "Kroopologism"
Lionel
May 1st 04, 11:52 PM
Never give an occasion to "George M. Middius" to discuss about wine, he
will avoid the question and will return to the only thing he perfectly
knows, his creation, his life accomplishment : THE "*Kroopologism*" (LOL).
Totally invested in his paranoid crusade he ignores the ridicule and
gratifies us with the most grotesque imitation of Hercules Poirot that I
have never read.
Thank you "George" you are inimitable... Except by McKelvy who just
pretends in an other thread that I haven't any children.
Don't worry "George" here in France we use to say :
"le ridicule ne tue pas"
LOL.
----------------------------------------------------------------
La Salope blithered:
> > > Perhaps we would discuss about this interesting "Corbieres" red
wine I am
> > > tasting now ! ;-)
> > That's a prole's choice. Always has been, always will be.
> Ok Bernard, the above Middius intervention[sic] is really interesting
because
> concerning this particular[sic] Corbières he his[sic] *right*.
There is no "particular" (assuming you intended the meaning of
"specific") Corbieres. They're all of a piece.
> He don't[sic] know why but he his[sic] right ;-).
Speaking of not knowing why, perhaps it's time for you to delve into
your devotion to The Great ****. My guess would be that in your real
life, you feel superior to no one, and in Arnii Kroofeces you have
finally found someone you can look down on, and hence you support him at
every turn.
I'd hate to think the real explanation is even more pathetic than that.
> Coming back to this Corbières, George is right because in the past
this area
> have[sic] produced one of the worst wine[sic] of France.
It's bizarre to see you pretend to fracture french that way, Salope,
inasmuch as both French and English abide by the same rules of
subject-verb agreement: plural verb forms for plural nouns. In real
French, one would say "cette région produisaient" (or possibly "...
avaient produit") Also, your butchery "one of the worst wine" is equally
bizarre, since the expression in French is verbatim: "un des plus
mauvais vins". This kind of false posturing lends credence to the
hypothesis advanced by several RAOers that you are an old Kroopologist
in new clothing; i.e., a fraud.
Robert Morein
May 2nd 04, 12:28 AM
Lionel,
Kroopology, the study of the Kroopologism and all it's ramifications, is
one of the fundamental structures of nature. As one of the noble sciences,
it holds equal rank with Scatology, No Apologies, and E****ology. It
deservedly holds 4th rank in the Seven Fudamental Quagmires. And yet anyone
who has a fundament can appreciate it in all its scintillating glory.
We know that Plato anticipated Kroopology in the recently discovered
lost chapter of Plato's Apology, titled "Meletus lies again, as the
parchment will show." He attributes it to a corruption of the passion of
Socrates, who coincidentally was a member of the Hellenic Chapter of NAMBLA.
As we know, when Socrates was judged by the assembly of Athens, he said
(translation from Greek is approximate) "I would do to you as I would to
sheep."
We now know that what Socrates meant was that he would lead them to a
better place. However, it was too late for poor 'ole Socrates, who drank a
cup of what Mrs. Krueger is probably brewing on the stove right now.
"Lionel" > wrote in message
...
> Never give an occasion to "George M. Middius" to discuss about wine, he
> will avoid the question and will return to the only thing he perfectly
> knows, his creation, his life accomplishment : THE "*Kroopologism*" (LOL).
>
> Totally invested in his paranoid crusade he ignores the ridicule and
> gratifies us with the most grotesque imitation of Hercules Poirot that I
> have never read.
> Thank you "George" you are inimitable... Except by McKelvy who just
> pretends in an other thread that I haven't any children.
>
> Don't worry "George" here in France we use to say :
> "le ridicule ne tue pas"
> LOL.
>
>
> ----------------------------------------------------------------
>
> La Salope blithered:
>
> > > > Perhaps we would discuss about this interesting "Corbieres" red
> wine I am
> > > > tasting now ! ;-)
> > > That's a prole's choice. Always has been, always will be.
> > Ok Bernard, the above Middius intervention[sic] is really interesting
> because
> > concerning this particular[sic] Corbières he his[sic] *right*.
>
> There is no "particular" (assuming you intended the meaning of
> "specific") Corbieres. They're all of a piece.
>
> > He don't[sic] know why but he his[sic] right ;-).
>
> Speaking of not knowing why, perhaps it's time for you to delve into
> your devotion to The Great ****. My guess would be that in your real
> life, you feel superior to no one, and in Arnii Kroofeces you have
> finally found someone you can look down on, and hence you support him at
> every turn.
>
> I'd hate to think the real explanation is even more pathetic than that.
>
> > Coming back to this Corbières, George is right because in the past
> this area
> > have[sic] produced one of the worst wine[sic] of France.
>
> It's bizarre to see you pretend to fracture french that way, Salope,
> inasmuch as both French and English abide by the same rules of
> subject-verb agreement: plural verb forms for plural nouns. In real
> French, one would say "cette région produisaient" (or possibly "...
> avaient produit") Also, your butchery "one of the worst wine" is equally
> bizarre, since the expression in French is verbatim: "un des plus
> mauvais vins". This kind of false posturing lends credence to the
> hypothesis advanced by several RAOers that you are an old Kroopologist
> in new clothing; i.e., a fraud.
Robert Morein
May 2nd 04, 12:32 AM
"Robert Morein" > wrote in message
...
> Lionel,
> Kroopology, the study of the Kroopologism and all it's ramifications,
is
> one of the fundamental structures of nature. As one of the noble sciences,
> it holds equal rank with Scatology, No Apologies, and E****ology. It
> deservedly holds 4th rank in the Seven Fudamental Quagmires. And yet
anyone
> who has a fundament can appreciate it in all its scintillating glory.
>
Could this be one of Krueger's ancestors: ???
From
http://www.law.umkc.edu/faculty/projects/ftrials/socrates/socratesaccount.html,
"Critias, without question, was the more frightening of the two former
pupils of Socrates. I.F. Stone, in his The Trial of Socrates, describes
Critias (a cousin of Plato's) as "the first Robespierre," a cruel and
inhumane man "determined to remake the city to his own antidemocratic mold
whatever the human cost." The oligarchy confiscated the estates of Athenian
aristocrats, banished 5,000 women, children, and slaves, and summarily
executed about 1,500 of Athen's most prominent democrats."
In this analogy, Noussaine corresponds to Socrates, while Critias
corresponds to Krueger.
Robert Morein
May 2nd 04, 01:48 AM
"Lionel" > wrote in message
...
> Robert Morein - > - dimanche 2 Mai
2004
> 01:32 wrote:
>
>
http://www.law.umkc.edu/faculty/projects/ftrials/socrates/socratesaccount.html,
> > "Critias, without question, was the more frightening of the two former
> > pupils of Socrates. I.F. Stone, in his The Trial of Socrates, describes
> > Critias (a cousin of Plato's) as "the first Robespierre," a cruel and
> > inhumane man "determined to remake the city to his own antidemocratic
mold
> > whatever the human cost." The oligarchy confiscated the estates of
> > Athenian aristocrats, banished 5,000 women, children, and slaves, and
> > summarily executed about 1,500 of Athen's most prominent democrats."
> >
> > In this analogy, Noussaine corresponds to Socrates, while Critias
> > corresponds to Krueger.
>
> Nousaine ? The DBT guy of RAHE ? I don't understand more of 1% of what he
> uses to write on RAHE but I like him because he's systematically
> contradicting S888Wheel... ;-)
>
> I appreciate your philosophico-historic analogy Bob and I better
understand
> now the particular importance of Kroopology.
> As I am also an initiate now I can say that Middius is to Kroopology what
> Staline was to communisn... :o)
That may be, but if Krueger is an audio fascist, ie., a Hitler, then the
world needs a Stalin to crush him against a wave of Russian steel.
I feel like singing the "Internationale" right now :).
Arny Krueger
May 2nd 04, 12:14 PM
Robert Morein wrote:
> That may be, but if Krueger is an audio fascist, ie., a Hitler, then
> the world needs a Stalin to crush him against a wave of Russian steel.
> I feel like singing the "Internationale" right now :).
To bad that the strongest opposition visible is on the scale of Lithuania. I
guess they sang the "Internationale", too.
Robert Morein
May 2nd 04, 08:02 PM
"Arny Krueger" > wrote in message
...
> Robert Morein wrote:
>
> > That may be, but if Krueger is an audio fascist, ie., a Hitler, then
> > the world needs a Stalin to crush him against a wave of Russian steel.
> > I feel like singing the "Internationale" right now :).
>
> To bad that the strongest opposition visible is on the scale of Lithuania.
I
> guess they sang the "Internationale", too.
>
vs. Estonia
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