Dressing Up Tech With Math

clothe your banal pronouncements in the proper mathematical

> raiments.

You think math is to "dress up" tech?

Did you get swindled by someone telling you that nonsense?

What was his name?

You can recover your "tuition" money. It's an easy small claims case.

Bret Cahill

Reply to
Bret Cahill
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All of your claims are small, just like your mind.

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aioe.org, Goggle Groups, and Web TV users must request to be white listed, or I will not see your messages.

If you have broadband, your ISP may have a NNTP news server included in your account:

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There are two kinds of people on this earth: The crazy, and the insane. The first sign of insanity is denying that you're crazy.

Reply to
Michael A. Terrell

Just as the criminal returns to the scene of a crime the dunces return to their own foolish posts to expose themselves:

Anyone can look me up in U. S. Reports - Supreme Court Reporter.

In sharp contrast vaporware types such as yourself have no paper trail. No paper trail = not doing anything. In the immortal words of cowboy poet and large animal vet Baxter Black, "you aren't self employed, you're self _un_employed."

BTW, when did that nonsense get started where every dunce on sci.electronics.basics goes around defending his lack of knowledge / lack of interest in electronics with the claim that he "has a lot of happy customers?"

Has that ever fooled anyone other than other dunces?

Anyway, back to the issue:

I don't do small claims but I know it's an easy small claims case.

Obviously the swindle was less than the jurisdictional limit on two bit frauds.

Actually you aren't even functional enough to be a two bit fraud. You only indulge in self deception.

Bret Cahill

Reply to
Bret Cahill

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I think that if you think that\'s what I think you have very poor reading
comprehension skills.
Reply to
John Fields

Here's your opportunity to clarify yourself.

You got suckered into paying for a "electronics training" course didn't you?

You're all using the same "happy customer" nonsense.

Remember the "training course" scam is an organized fraud scheme, a first or 2nd degree felony.

case.

Indulging in fantasy is legal so you might be safe, even if you did get swindled.

Bret Cahill

Reply to
Bret_E_Cahill

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