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The killer of rbp.....
This guy Ingram says he killed rbp, to
save children. Parts of Ingrams rants: -------- You can find my above reply to Jim in rec.boats.paddle, a newsgroup that has fallen on hard times recently. You can see that if confronted, most citizens do not want to post any more deadly and degrading canoe and kayak propaganda. This experiment, conducted by me over several years, shows how responsive the most rabid "experts" are, when confronted with the simple facts. Daily posts on rec.boats.paddle went from about 50 daily to about zero! The Nuremberg trials certainly stopped similar crimes aginst humanity, conducted on the world stage. Legal action now, in Canada and the United States will quickly put an end to these horrible crimes by the canoe and kayak industry. And save about twenty (20) agonizing deaths of children every year, in the United States and Canada alone, out of about 120 dead in canoes and kayaks total, in both countries every year! See the US Coast Guard website numbers and Canadian numbers annually. Would you like to see the pictures of the 2 dead boys in the Rome Tribune, February 2005? You see, they were wearing PFDs too, in Florida waters on a school trip; but they were denied any means to get out of the water, so they died like the Girl Guides, when the back-up powerboat suffered an entangled propellor: Dr. Milgram set up the Yale experiments after studying NAZI "monsters", who baffled prosecutors at the Nuremberg Trials; by showing love and compassion for others who were outside of their targeted "identifiable hate group." Of course the chapters in this book show not the Diligent Pursuit of Rescue Safety, to save innocent victims, even eleven-year-old Girl Guides. Instead, as Dr. Milgram's experiments predict, any number of "reasons" are given for "why" these deaths must continue. "Words are inadequate for expressing my sympathy for the loss of your son. The dangers of canoeing and kayaking are real. A simple solution for eliminating the dangers would be appreciated by many people. Tim holds out his sponsons as that simple solution. This organization sells its' instruction despite years of information, warnings, and hundreds of deaths. They operate like any criminal organization, without regard for dead victims. Since many paddlers will paddle while not wearing a PFD, against advice, these people are condemned to death, just as those who do wear a PFD. Whereas otherwise they all would have a "life raft". This must be stopped. Thank you. Tim Ingram Contact information: http://www.sponsonguy.com/ |
The killer of rbp.....
Brian Nystrom wrote:
Crescentius Vespasianus wrote: This guy Ingram says he killed rbp, to save children. Parts of Ingrams rants: lunatic ranting snipped Tim obviously has delusions of grandeur and apparently believes that he actually has influence in this world. Sad and laughable. Anyone who's been here for any length of time filtered his rants out years ago. I didn't even realize that he still posted here. If RBP goes away, it's simply a symptom of what's happening to Usenet in general. It's basically a relic of the early days of the Internet. There are so many other outlets for discussions, most of which are graphical, more interesting (at least visually), and easier for most people to find and access, that this text-only format is probably going to go the way of the dinosaurs. Additionally, it seems that the "kayak craze" that raged for a decade or so is over. I've seen it in the reduced participation in local clubs and heard it from dealers. There is still a decent market, but there aren't as many people getting into paddling as there were in years past. ----------------- I'm a baby boomer, big time cyclist, and a paddler. I paddle a sit-on-top prowler 13 in the Sea of Cortez, and have never seen many paddlers there, so I'm in no position to see any trend there. But in cycling I've seen the trend you are talking about in paddling in cycling. Also I live in Arizona, where people are moving here in droves, but yet in the local century rides, I have seen a huge drop in participation. I have many theories, like triathlons seem to be the rage, and running, but endurance cycling is way down. It seem that spending 5-7 hours on a bike just doesn't appeal anymore. The running events, and cycling take about half the time. So it could be a time squeeze on peoples time. And as we all know, you really have to like kayaking to do it, as it takes preparation, and there is a big time commitment. |
The killer of rbp.....
Crescentius Vespasianus wrote:
This guy Ingram says he killed rbp, to save children. Parts of Ingrams rants: lunatic ranting snipped Tim obviously has delusions of grandeur and apparently believes that he actually has influence in this world. Sad and laughable. Anyone who's been here for any length of time filtered his rants out years ago. I didn't even realize that he still posted here. If RBP goes away, it's simply a symptom of what's happening to Usenet in general. It's basically a relic of the early days of the Internet. There are so many other outlets for discussions, most of which are graphical, more interesting (at least visually), and easier for most people to find and access, that this text-only format is probably going to go the way of the dinosaurs. Additionally, it seems that the "kayak craze" that raged for a decade or so is over. I've seen it in the reduced participation in local clubs and heard it from dealers. There is still a decent market, but there aren't as many people getting into paddling as there were in years past. |
The killer of rbp.....
Brian Nystrom wrote:
snip : Additionally, it seems that the "kayak craze" that raged for a decade or : so is over. I've seen it in the reduced participation in local clubs and : heard it from dealers. There is still a decent market, but there aren't : as many people getting into paddling as there were in years past. Do you think that's related to a craze or a desire not to belong to a club? -- John Nelson ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- Chicago Area Paddling/Fishing Page http://www.chicagopaddling.org http://www.chicagofishing.org (A Non-Commercial Web Site: No Sponsors, No Paid Ads and Nothing to Sell) |
The killer of rbp.....
Chicago Paddling-Fishing wrote:
Brian Nystrom wrote: snip : Additionally, it seems that the "kayak craze" that raged for a decade or : so is over. I've seen it in the reduced participation in local clubs and : heard it from dealers. There is still a decent market, but there aren't : as many people getting into paddling as there were in years past. Do you think that's related to a craze or a desire not to belong to a club? No, but it appears that people tend to "outgrow" clubs after a while, often once they reach a certain proficiency level. Most of the paddlers I started out paddling with have left the club that we belonged to. |
The killer of rbp.....
"Brian Nystrom" wrote in message news:yZYYi.13017$%n.1553@trndny07... Chicago Paddling-Fishing wrote: Brian Nystrom wrote: snip : Additionally, it seems that the "kayak craze" that raged for a decade or : so is over. I've seen it in the reduced participation in local clubs and : heard it from dealers. There is still a decent market, but there aren't : as many people getting into paddling as there were in years past. Do you think that's related to a craze or a desire not to belong to a club? No, but it appears that people tend to "outgrow" clubs after a while, often once they reach a certain proficiency level. Most of the paddlers I started out paddling with have left the club that we belonged to. I've personally infected eight or ten people with the kayak bug, and neither I nor any of them ever belonged to a club. We mostly just doodle down lazy rivers, but technically we're kayaking... ;D In our case, there really aren't any convientient clubs, plus our time constraints would make it impossible - we grab a couple of hours in the evening, when we can, mostly. We still get on the water quite a lot, but it's pretty much impromptu, last minute stuff. Cricket |
The killer of rbp.....
Brian Nystrom wrote:
: Chicago Paddling-Fishing wrote: : Brian Nystrom wrote: : snip : : Additionally, it seems that the "kayak craze" that raged for a decade or : : so is over. I've seen it in the reduced participation in local clubs and : : heard it from dealers. There is still a decent market, but there aren't : : as many people getting into paddling as there were in years past. : : Do you think that's related to a craze or a desire not to belong to a club? : No, but it appears that people tend to "outgrow" clubs after a while, : often once they reach a certain proficiency level. Most of the paddlers : I started out paddling with have left the club that we belonged to. There are some good folks in a club, but often its better to paddle in smaller groups, depending on what you want to see on the shoreline... -- John Nelson ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- Chicago Area Paddling/Fishing Page http://www.chicagopaddling.org http://www.chicagofishing.org (A Non-Commercial Web Site: No Sponsors, No Paid Ads and Nothing to Sell) |
The killer of rbp.....
I'm sure it's regional.....White water speaking, the sport is growing if
anything, local club participation in my area witch suppoerts half a dozen at least within 100 mile radius is growing. That said, flat water trips have all but diasppeared from our club schedule in last couple of years, although more than half our membership are of the calm water persuasion. Rivers can be crowded....please recruit some to the flat side? "Brian Nystrom" wrote in message news:r2EWi.229$Sd.6@trndny02... Crescentius Vespasianus wrote: This guy Ingram says he killed rbp, to save children. Parts of Ingrams rants: lunatic ranting snipped Tim obviously has delusions of grandeur and apparently believes that he actually has influence in this world. Sad and laughable. Anyone who's been here for any length of time filtered his rants out years ago. I didn't even realize that he still posted here. If RBP goes away, it's simply a symptom of what's happening to Usenet in general. It's basically a relic of the early days of the Internet. There are so many other outlets for discussions, most of which are graphical, more interesting (at least visually), and easier for most people to find and access, that this text-only format is probably going to go the way of the dinosaurs. Additionally, it seems that the "kayak craze" that raged for a decade or so is over. I've seen it in the reduced participation in local clubs and heard it from dealers. There is still a decent market, but there aren't as many people getting into paddling as there were in years past. |
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