Wednesday, December 29, 2010

Is R Tabera a terrorist or just a telephone scammer?

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Visit this link:
http://800notes.com/Phone.aspx/1-954-537-5248/2

The fact is that a scammer named Tabera is calling Americans and hoping to get them to give him $500 for a phony cruise. They call every day and they claim that you can call a number to get them to stop, but there is never a live voice on the line. It is computer driven.

Why isn't the U.S. Justice Department investigating this foreign based terrorist solicitor?

Why should I have to call them to get off the list? And what right do they have to call my home number and harass me every day?

I think they are terrorists and I have tried to ask every time I answer the phone but no one answers when you pick it up. They insist you call them to register (and pay) for the cruise line they claim you won by registering on the Internet, which is an outright lie.

Stop the terrorists.

The Justice Department should act. I am reaching out to them to file a formal complaint.

Monday, December 27, 2010

XMasTrade.com is a spam scam web site ... beware

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The message claims to be from one of your friends. It asks you to go to www.XMasTrade.com to purchase a new iPad. It's a phishing site that the U.S. Attorney should shut down.

Here is the spam message that the web site sent out using my email address:


hey 
Just  received my ipad from this website    www.Xmastrade.com   Total price $660US all charges included .I've now spent the better part of a day playing with the new iPad, and while it excels in many things there are still some things anyone considering buying one should probably keep in mind.
This thing is very fast, opening and closing applications is quick, the screen is incredibly responsive, there is no lag while typing, and the built in Safari browser does a great job of quickly loading even graphic intense pages.
If you want to get one. you can check it out.Take care. 

I shall take this opportunity to wish you a Blessed Christmas and a healthy and happy New Year.
Regards,
Ray Hanania


BEWARE folks. 


If you get the email, complain to your email provider and to the Justice Department.


-- Ray Hanania

Friday, December 10, 2010

Max My Speed dot Com (www.MaxMySpeed.com) doesn't work. Watch the billings, too

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(UPDATED: DEC. 11, 2011. Click here to read lastest news on this software scam.)

Whenever you see a commercial on TV claiming unbelievable things, it is unbelievable. Yet, in the interests of helping people, I decided to go online and try out MaxMySpeed.com, the CyberDefender software that sells for $19 and change.

The commercial says you can get a free scan, and it is free, of course. But like all sleazy sales people, there is always a catch. I like companies that are honest and direct and don't have those false loss leaders and misleading promises that are incomplete. The MaxMySpeed.com CyberDefender promise is misleading.

When you go to their web site, right away they throw the sleazy sales pitch at you. An audio program automatically runs with a video of a salesman on the bottom right side of the screen.

That should have been a sign right away. You put audio that starts automatically on the site, that means there is trouble a brewing. You have to put your mouse over the video image to display the controls to "pause" it. You can't turn it off.

When you run their "free" scan of your system, it takes a long time. And it will come back and report hundreds of registry errors that they claim are slowing your system down. Registry errors do not necessarily slow your system down. Most major ones can be fixed using your virus software. I use Norton and run a registry fix often. But Norton identified 42 major problems. MaxMySpeed.com identified 942, alleged registry errors. And that sounded like a lot.

Once they identify the errors, you can click "Fix" and the software then takes you to a credit card page where you have to purchase the software upfront.

A good software company would let you runt he scan for free and not pay to prove that they do what they promise. Not MaxMySpeed.com CyberDefender. You have to trust them and buy their software.

So I decided to try it. After all, that's what I do. Buy and sample software and give you a review based on my experience to help you decide if it is worth doing yourself. In this case, you have to pay the $19 to buy the license and then download and then install the software.

When I ordered the software, I discovered that they automatically pad their billing charge. So, when I ordered the $19 software license, it automatically added three more programs to the bill bringing it to nearly $80. I was shocked. I had to delete the choices they made for me. They want to sell you their own virus scan and they want to sell something else.

That something else wouldn't delete from my order and I ended up paying more than $44, including $9 for the CD -- downloading software without buying the CD is a mistake. When your computer crashes, you can't reinstall the software on a new computer and they make you purchase a new license.

I called the company and they promised to credit me something like $19 more. But why did I have to go through that?

In the end, my laptop ran just as fast and slow as it always does. The registry scan didn't do anything. All those testimonials from the happy girl and happy guy voices on the commercials are paid, and don't represent real consumers.

My advice, don't buy it.  My advice to the company, stopping scamming people. Be honest. If you promise a free scan give people the free service. Don't play games with people. That's not a good way to do business and be successful. It is a way to make more money. But not a way to build confidence and trust.

-- Ray Hanania
www.RadioChicagoland.com

Thursday, October 14, 2010

The Chicago Newsroom Weekly TV Program: The old and new media

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The Chicago Newsroom Weekly TV Program: The old and new media
Hosted by Ken Davis
In this week's program, Ken Davis is joined by Sun-Times columnist, Esther J. Cepeda, Thom Clark, President, Community Media Workshop, Ray Hanania, independent columnist, and Neil Tesser, Chicago jazz writer. The panel discusses "The New News", a report on the state of Chicago's online media.This program was produced by Chicago Access Network TV.



# # #

Saturday, October 9, 2010

iPad -- what a rip-off

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Being a technology addict, I purchased the iPad. I've ignored the iBooks and all those readers they sell because I just can't get used to reading a book on a computer screen. I prefer the real pages. And when I'm on a beach, it's one thing to get sand in the pages of the book but another to get sand inside your computer. And a book doesn't need a battery that has to be recharged -- or if the light is too bright, you can actually read the pages better than the glare you get on a computer screen.

Yet despite all that and knowing that computer developers are geeks with no lives who know nothing about regular people and design programs and apps that look great in concept but have no practical usage because the developer has no practical usage for themselves, I bought an iPad.

Here's what it does that great. It has a touch pad screen that allows you to shift from one group of menus to another.

Here's what it does that sucks. You have to download most of the aps, and most cost money and they all come from iTunes. The ones that are free generally require you to download an upgrade that costs more money in order to get it to work properly.

You're familiar with Aps.

But here's the other problem. The iPad doesn't replace your computer. There are some Aps that allow you to connect to your computer, like watching the movies you have downloaded on your computer, laptop or PC from the iPad using wireless -- but, they only let you watch movies purchased -- yes purchased -- from iTunes.

You know what iPad really is? It's an Apply sales person who you now have invited in to your home who constantly pushes you to spend money at Apple's iTunes store.

So greedy and selfish of Apply. But isn't that what Apple and Macs are all about. Money. So little really applicability. It's a financial umbilical chord from your checkbook or credit card to Apple and without it, the iPad is worthless.

Sure, you look cool carrying it around and using it at a restaurant. Wow! No, you don't look cool. You look like a sucker.

There's more. The computer technology developers really are morons. They have all the answers and none of the answers. Their programs are designed from their perspective on need, which has nothing to do with the needs of the users or the masses of people.

For example, you want to search for an App. There are something like 1,565 total aps that appear on the screen about 12 at a time. You touch the next button ... next .... next ... you get to about 300 and finally find one that looks interesting. You click it. Read it. Discover it's crap. Then hit the return button. And badda bing (easier to spell that voile)  ... it takes you back to the beginning. And you have to sit there and tap the next key over and over again to get to where you were so you can continue the search. I haven't been past App 320 yet and not sure I will ever make it.

Oh. I can search. Another genius idea from the stupid technology developers. But, what do I search for when I don't know what they have? Maybe I connect what I want with what they have, but it ain't easy.

It doesn't have a camera or recorder. It's difficult to connect to a printer. There's an App that let's you connect to Canon printers. I have a brand new one, but it won't work because my printer is not on the list.

Once you download the App how do you get rid of it? Right. Like some genius technology writer who never thought that all of their great Apps that they write might be worthless to us average pee-on like me. So it's almost impossible to get rid of something you have placed on your screen and pretty soon it gets crowded.

They give you some basic software. I use Outlook on my laptop, but of course, Microsoft Word and Outlook hate Apple -- they used to be BFFs, Apple and Microsoft, but no longer. A modernday competition between Sony BetaMax and VHS garbage that has long been replaced by CD and DVD pay-through-the-nose technology.

So I synced my laptop Outlook files to the iPad and then, of course, you run in to the problems that geek technology writers always miss when creating their genius. My iPad loads all my emails. But to delete them, I have to do it one at a time in several key strokes. Or, finger strokes. Swipe the email to the left and a button pops up asking me Delete? Yes, moron. I have to tap the red Delete button. For every email. And I get a lot of emails. Of course, geek technology writers who have no friends do not get much email so why would they care that it takes one hour to delete 350 email messages on an iPad.

Wow. Technology.

Now, it costs $100 a year to protect the iPad from internal problems. Not if you sit on it and crack it, for example. But if the technology fails, as it will.

And, it costs $25 a month to connect to the AT&T WiFi 4G. Which is not reliable, by the way. But who cares at Apple? The point is they offer it so why are you complaining that it doesn't work? Working is not the goal of the Apple iPad.

The goal is money. To soak every possible penny out of your pocket. And you pay, what? $1,100 for the iPad and the service and protection in the first hit? And they got you for the rest foy our life. A monthly subscription of $25 that you pay so you can look cool while you simmer in your now deteriorating mind as the software does what it wants, not what you want.

But what choice do we have in human society? The laptops will be outdated soon. Everything will be on a cell phone and iPad or iPod or iPhone. And it will cost you through your iAss.

I had two laptops die on me over the past six months, laptops that were only 2 years old, just beyond the warranty periods, of course. Sitting in a pile reminding me of the thousands Apple and Microsoft already yanked out of my pocket like new teeth that only needed a cleaning but were extracted without anesthesia.

Such is our lives? Maybe that should be the new soap opera, one that laments that computer plagued world of today. Computer Daze of our Lives.

-- Ray Hanania
www.RadioChicagoland.com

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Too many social networks to "twitter" to? Try this new service, Ping.fm

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I post blurbs about my writings, columns and morning radio show to about 20 social networks. Each social network has a different constituency. Some overlap but I have to reach them all in order to push readership of my syndicated columns and audience interest in my morning radio show. It's the new journalism, folks.

The social media isn't merely about reconnecting with classmates, former girlfriends or wives, but also people who want to follow your activities and efforts. And, if you are a writer and media host, like I am, it's a mandatory necessity.

Until now, I was able to link my Twitter account to post my Tweets to both Twitter and Facebook. But then, I would have to go to the many other social networks where I have presence and repost to each, one at a time in order to reach the breadth and depth of my media audience.

That's changed, thanks to Ping.fm.

Ping.fm is a free online social networking time saver. I now post to Ping.fm what I might normally have posted laboriously one at a time to Twitter and then the 20 or so other social networking sites. Ping.fm allows me to link all of the sites and the one post now broadcasts out to all of them.

And, even more beneficial is the fact that Ping.fm will automatically take long links and compress them into shorter links with fewer characters allowing for more informational newsie text to go along with the link.

Now, one post to Ping.fm and all of the followers and friends and business pals get the message at the same time. I didn't have to change my Twitter feed to Facebook, though I could have. It might have been a little complicated to do. So instead of adding Facebook to the feed, I just post to Twitter, MySpace, LinkedIn, GoogleBuzz, Yahoo Profile and a bunch of them.

The response was almost immediate with higher traffic to the downloading of my podcasts from the radio show and higher hits on column postings.

Try it. It is definitely a great service.

-- Ray Hanania
www.RadioChicagoland.com

Sunday, September 12, 2010

Ning Network is Nang. The owners move from social networking to greed

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Ning is no longer a free network that they once promised to be. Now that they have gotten a lot of support, they have decided to impose monthly fees (really ridiculous amounts, actually) in order to keep your network going. So all the 18 months of work I am my network of 36 journalism associates is not out the window.

No pay, no play.

Ning sucked. It was limiting. It boasted that if offered all these great options but they mostly don't work or never did what was promised. You can bring people together and create chat rooms and put your profile on the Ning Network. Wow. Big deal. You can even blog there, although the blog is not automatically indexed on any search engines like Google.

I can do all of that for Free on Facebook where I have 2200 friends who share my interests and read my many columns on Middle East peace, social networking media (like this blog) and on US politics, including in CHicago where politics and the retirement of Mayor Richard M. Daley has sent the Chicagoland region rocking.

So why would I pay to get far less from Ning?

Because they are not social networkers at all. They are geeks. And Geeks like to write fascinating programs that do fascinating things that THEY think normal people like to do but the fact is that because they are geeks, they are not normal people so they have no idea what a normal person needs in terms of a software program.

That's the failing of companies created by Geeks. They think they know and write all these press releases about what they know, but the truth is they know squat, which actually is probably more than what they know.

The best software programs and online systems are those written by Geeks who are directed by people's needs, not their bean-counting vision of what they think would be cool. Geek crap is not cool.

Ning is even less cool today.

Send the Ning Nang back to internet Sing Sing.

They suck

-- Ray Hanania
www.RadioChicagoland.com

(distributed by the Hanania Media Network)

Sunday, April 25, 2010

Anapod's Explorer for the iPod is a worthless software program that doesn't do what it promises

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I purchased Red Chair Software's Anapod Explorer for $29 online. I hate to download software that doesn't send a backup, but the iTunes software that controls your iPod's life is so oppressive and terrible, you just have to keep trying to find an alternative.

Microsoft and Apple have one thing in common. They are about greed, money and control. They don't want you to control your computer. They want to control it like they own it so they can decide for you what software can run and what software can't run, so they can protect their money. It's all about money for most computer software tech designers and programmers. They are all dictators and tyrants, but one day we will find a Gandhi who can fight for the rights of the oppressed computer users.

So, I tried Reds Chair Software's Anapod Explorer for the iPod. And it sucks. The concept is good but it doesn't work. Worse, they have poor tech-support -- virtually nil. And like all bad software designers, they simply do not know what consumers really want and need, but they do a great job of writing programs that work for them -- I doubt any of them even use an iPod.

The software supposedly creates a Window's Explorer. It has to be loaded with the computer and on your System Tray so you don't have any choice to run it like a program when you need it. Instead, it sits in wasted memory for the few times you might use it.

I want to copy songs and movies that I have legitimately purchased but that iTunes doesn't want me to copy for backup and expanded viewing. I downloaded Avatar for $14.99 from iTunes (it took six hours and I have high speed internet -- volume was the problem, which is typical of iTunes challenges that you want to escape.). I want to make a copy so I can watch it on my DVD and HD TV.

I could have purchased the DVD and then ripped it to my iPod, but I thought why not try buying off the internet and then copying it so I have a hard copy when my computer fails -- all computers are made to fail specifically so the computer technology industry can sell you more computers. When they are not thinking of ways to limit the future expansion of your laptop and computer, they are thinking of ways to make lousy computers good for only a few years, if that much even.

I installed Anapod's Explorer the way instructed. But they fail to tell you to reboot your computer so the software installs on your system tray. After the usual trial and error, I figured that out on my own.

I ran the software and it shows my iPod directory and my computer directory. And I right clicked the movie, Avatar and tried to move it to a new window on my computer -- and it doesn't work.

So, the claim that Anapod's Explorer turns your iPod into justa nother hard drive that can be managed is baloney.

I'll keep looking for a new software program. But in the meantime, save your money, Don't buy Red Chair Software's Anapod Explorer. It doesn't work.

-- Ray Hanania
www.RadioChicagoland.com

Saturday, March 13, 2010

Corel DVD Copy 6 -- does a poor job of copying and does not copy your legally purchased videos

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Corel DVD Copy 6 brags that it can copy anything. But it can't. Worse, the quality of what it does copy is poor at best. It costs only $49 but that's $49 you should not spend and keep in your savings. But there is a great alternative that you should purchase and that I have tried.

Corel DVD Copy 6 also does not copy legally purchased DVD's that you may have bought and wish to transfer to your iPod.

Many people believe the software will allow you to convert DVD's to your iPod format but the quality is so poor, it's sad.

Don't buy the software. I'll waste my money. You save yours.

But, you can and should purchase Magic DVD Ripper (and also a Copier). This software allows you to make backup copies in the event that your original DVD is damaged or fails to work as they OFTEN do. The movie industry is intentionally making cheap copies of BlueRay and DVD because they want you to purchase new ones.

Click HERE to get information on Magic DVD Ripper & Copier. It costs $39 for the ripper and an additional $10 for the Copier and for $9 plus shipping they'll actually send you a CD that actually works, unlike the Corel DVD Copy 6 which does not work properly.

Magic DVD Ripper will seamlessly copy your legally owned DVDs and you can convert them to formats for viewing on your cell phone and your iPod. Just "rip" the DVD and "save" it to the iTunes "Library" directory under Movies. Then sync your iPod.

The quality of the copies is amazingly clear and formatted for viewing on the smaller screens.

-- Ray Hanania
www.RadioChicagoland.com

Tuesday, February 2, 2010

iPad: Another dumb idea by a bunch of tekkies who don't know crap about what real people want or need

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Computer technicians are the real war criminals in this world. They are real robber barons. But most of all, they are the Kings with no clothing. And its the public that acts like drugged up lemmings. Every time some stupid Geek throws out another stupid do nothing technology "advancement," the public goes Lazy Ga Ga and jumps with joy to unload another chunk of massive change to purchase the equipment.

Why?

Why are we as Americans so stupid and wasteful? Why do we allow the computer geeks to run our lives so they can line their pockets with billions?

Sure the Apple iPad sounds like a great idea. But so does the iPhone and so did the laptop and so did the PC and so did the lightbulb that Thomas Edison invented.

But the drive to create new technologies is missing a lot: Human compassion. Human need. Human respect. Morality. Principle.

Over the last quarter century, I have been on the cutting edge of spending on high tech crap. I would buy a computer and literally within months it would be outdated. I'd have to buy another. It's been like that since I purchased my first computer, the Coleco Adam and then the IBM PC Junior, and then the IBM XT and on and on until today's sequence of modernday rip-offs has been invented.

None of these brilliant technologies are created with the needs of humanity in mind. It's all about the billions that robber baron thieves like Steve Jobs and Bill Gates who came up with their criminal enterprises in their stupid garages like Geek Gang members.

They are making billions for a reason. They produce worthless junk that only lives up to 30 percent of the promised services. Part of the reason is that they produce new junk so fast because they know how stupid people are. They know the secret of Western civilization is that we like to spend money. Spend money on what? Who cares? Just spend the money. It's not about who has the best car or the best home any more in today's race for the elusive American Dream that is more dream than reality. It is about who can spend more money faster. And the place to spend is on worthless, shortlived computer junk. Junk that not only fails to deliver a full load but also fails to last.

Computers are behind the new industry promise to consumers: We make and sell this junk and you buy it at your own risk. We no longer warranty our work because we know it is worthless. So we will sell you a warranty for $250 in order to insure that the high priced crap you just bought from us will work.

The iPad is the icon of idiocy. Here is a mobile Laptop that doesn't open with a touch screen TV. Can you use it to make a phone call, no, but they are telling you it will be better than the iPhone they sold you last year to watch TV on a tiny screen -- maybe they have a deal with the eye industry which last year jacked up their prices of glasses and contact lenses because so many people are going blind from looking at these tiny screens to watch worthless crap on YouTube that would look better on a big screen TV if the worthless crap had any social redeeming value. But very little on YouTube has any social redeeming value. Except that it helps to ruin your eyesight and drive up the eye doctor industry.

The iPad is supposed to help you read a book. Why? I like the way we read books now. Instead of improving the publishing industry we've turned to smoke, mirrors and magician tricks to convince the brain dead public consumer that it's better to spend $1,000 on an iPad rather than $35 to buy a book. You can download the book. Who cares?

Has anyone not noticed how unreliable the Internet has become these days.

I am waiting for a computer genius -- an oxymoron -- to invent a computer that someone buys that can be upgraded to the latest standards and technology for a few pennies, rather than throwing it out and having to buy a new computer every year. Literally every year folks if you haven't noticed in your blindness caused by the new advertising PR spin doctors who are riding on the hips of the computer geeks out there like Gates and Jobs.

I'm waiting for the computer genius who builds a computer that REALLY WORKS and that can be expanded at little cost to keep up with the new gadgets.

But that would mean a computer genius who has set aside the fast buck industry to provide a real service to humanity. A Gandhi for Geeks, maybe. Someone willing to fight for the rights of us poor schmucks who have been convinced by hi-tech television graphics to believe in something that is just a fantasy to make money for someone else.

Will some one please hit the Control-Alt-Delete buttons on this system? It's a Twilight Zone of nightmarish computer failures, internet disconnects and busy signals without the signal any more.

-- Ray Hanania
www.RadioChicagoland.com

Sunday, January 17, 2010

The real software piracy is by the software manufacturers and retailers

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ANyone who uses computers on a regular basis -- all of us -- knows this sad pathetic fact: computer programmers and software developers are Geeks who do not know anything about being a normal human being. They are locked in a black box of self-awareness with no real experience in the real world. So, they program software based not on what real human beings need, but rather based on what they think we would need. And, of course, they wouldn't know because software programmers are not human at all.

That goes for the people who build Dell Computers -- the worst investment you can make in buying a computer, and those who run the few software stores left that that you can physically enter.

Some software retailers absolutely know nothing about computers. I mean absolutely nothing. The problem is they are only a few retail stores left in the world where you can speak to a human being -- okay a computer programmer is a sub-human, but still a sub-human at least allows you to focus your rage when you purchase software that doesn't work and then you can't return it because, well, the software industry is deivwn by so much greed they assume that you, the consumer will be a thieving crook like them. They assume that any return is a theft.

The computer industry lacks ethics, too. They sell garbage and then force you to purchase service packs, updates and warranties. They dodn't even warranty the products they make, which on its face shows you that they know the crap they sell doesn't workm otherwise they would stand by their product. They don't stand y their produts because the PC people use MACs and the MAC people use PC's, mainly so they can steal from each other. The software industry is a den of thieves. Theft is the hallmark of their culture.

Again despite my better judgement, I went to one, CompUSA, in Orland Park and purchased what I thought was a copy of Office Basic with Word, Outlook and Excel. It was only $186. Only! They said it was a "license"and that all I had to do, they insisted over my better judgment, was to go to the Office web site and download the software and then enter the license. No, that's not the case, of course. But I didn't learn that until AFTER I purchased the software -- which means no return. No exchange. No support. No accepting blame. The software license only works for software that is pre-installed on new computers, not downloads. Fortunately, they have a very smart -- and consumer compassionate manager -- who did allow me to pay another $216 to purchase the actual software, which they did have. (Imagine Word and Outlook costs over $400 to purchase from rip-off Microsoft. Pathetic.)

I went to Amazon.com to purchase what I finally learned was a full working copy of Office 2007 for $316, cheaper than the $399 that Microsoft sells it for online. They will send me the software the old fashioned way, on a CD Disk mailed.

That's the other problem with the industry today. They are cheap bastards. They don't give you CD's any more under the phony claim that you don't need it. you DO need it on a CD because we all know laptops are unreliable. They crash and you lose your software and you have to reinstall it and they play by the 20 percent rule to underwrite their greed. That rule is simple. If you fuck with people enough, 20 percent of them will just give up and their misfortune is the software industry's profits.

That's how Bill Gates is really the anti-Christ. His billions didn't come from hard work. It came from a system that he set up that is filled with loopholes to allow his company to shove it up your ass. All day and everyday that you are stuck with their inefficient software. He thrives on that 20 percent of profit that is literally tilen from the public. The public buys software and for most, it doesn't work right. Then, 20 percent just give up and go someother route, never recovering their money because the new system is based on the no return policy. That 20 percent is the profit that makes them billionaires.

Oh, and this all explains this new phenomena, you know, the one where the computer manufacturers are telling us they have cut down the cost of laptops. Well, they haven't cut down the cost of laptops. Instead, what they have done is eliminate the software that was bundled with the computers. That software costs a fortune, of course. So they eliminate the software and now you have to buy it when you buy their worthless laptop computers.

They only way we are going to change this is to take matters into our own hands. We need to fight back and make them pay for their theiving ways.

-- Ray Hanania
http://www.radiochicagoland.com/