Keep this in mind: I want to burn the world. You made me what I am. You added to the rage.
Don't wanna be here? Send us removal request.
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I'd smile at [Candiotti] and other newswomen who came in who were hot... Jones wanted to make points with the media so they would help him with his investigation. He kept trying to coach me to meet with certain people. I didn't like the media but I did see one benefit, and I joked about it. I openly said, "Jones, you bring in some good looking chicks, I'll meet with them." For me it was something to jerk off to that night, for him it was a connection with the media, for him to become a powerful person. I was looking for a blowjob in some of these visits. One time this girl came in with one of the investigators. I think she left the seat wet she was so horny. I took a sip of her pop, passed it back to her; she said "I'm keeping this can." I felt like saying, "crawl under the table, take care of me honey."
Timothy Mcveigh
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eric didnt speak german, he spoke rammstein
Do you want to see the world in flames?, Eric Harris
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we need someone as disillusioned with auto insurance agencies as timothy mcveigh was with the federal government
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Mcveigh fucked Nichols’ wife lmfao
sad they executed mr mcveigh because i want to be his prison pen pal. i don’t want to write to terry nichols because he is bald and met his wife thru a mail order bride service….. i want my girlfriend-less meow meow who probably died a virgin
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“My only regret with Timothy McVeigh is he did not go to the New York Times building.”
— Ann Coulter
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“A man with nothing left to lose is a very dangerous man”
— Timothy Mcveigh
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“Why do you hate the world so much?”
Eric:
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Jeffrey Dahmer, letter dated 5-2-94 My Dearest Mary, Hello my Beautiful One, how are you? Thanks a lot for those lovely poems that you’ve been sending me; I like them all! I hope that you enjoy reading the magazine’s that I’ve sent; I found them to be interesting. Also, thanks for offering to send me $50,00 each month - that’s very kind of you. But, now that you are looking for work, I don’t want you to cut yourself short. I hope that you find something you like soon. I do have a small amount in my account, so don’t feel that you need to send anything - but thanks anyway! I did enclose an order form for a book that sounded interesting, it’s called “To Hell & Back.” Do you think that you could order it for me? Then, when I finished reading it, I could mail it out to you if you would like to read it - what do you think? About that article you read, I have one or two art books, but I’m not all that interested in the subject. I really liked that ”lesson” on the puffins. I think that they are pretty neat too! I enjoy listening classical music, but I don’t have any tapes of whales. Yes, I think that you and your son would enjoy a visit to the Chicago Aquarium, I’ve always liked fish. You are right, I am very depressed, so I don’t have many interests these days. I really am not able to open up new world’s for anyone because mine has completely collapsed in on itself - sorry. Well Mary, that sounds like a great way to wake up to me too! I hope that all your days are bright and filled with good things and such Joy! Take good care of yourself for me to! All My Love, Jeff PS. There is a fat little chipmunk that has hole right in front of my window. He comes out everyday, and eats the clover flowers, and he’s out there right now. It’s fun to watch him. There are a lot of dandellion’s too, but he never eats any of them; I wonder why? *To Hell & Back is a book about life after death by Dr. Maurice Rawlings.
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Dylan: I want to find love
Robyn: heey
Dylan: not you
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It’s January 6 2023 and I can’t help but think what Tim would’ve thought of January 6 2021
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Most people who insist on nonviolence as a matter of principle fall into one of three categories. First, there are the conformists, those who believe in nonviolence because the system has successfully brainwashed them. Second, there are the cowards. Third, there are the saints, those rather rare people whose belief in nonviolence is motivated by genuine compassion. […] When violence is carried out with the approval of the system, as in war, for instance, most people take it for granted. They are horrified by violence only when it is disapproved by the system. My lawyers brought a neuropsychologist, a Dr. Watson, to give me some tests to verify that I wasn’t crazy. After the testing was done, Dr. Watson asked me some questions about my bombings. Among other things, he asked me how I felt about the impact of my actions on the victims and their families, and he seemed rather troubled that an intelligent man like me could kill people without feeling much guilt and without worrying very much about the impact on the dead men’s families. But if I had been a soldier who had killed or maimed enemy soldiers in a war, it would not even have occurred to Dr. Watson to ask how I felt about the impact on the victims or their families. No one expects a soldier to hesitate in killing enemy soldiers or to worry about how the dead men’s families feel, and very few soldiers do worry about such things. This shows that most people’s attitude toward violence is governed not by compassion but by social convention.
Ted Kaczynski on violence
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