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Re: Sprint peering policy

  • From: Richard Irving
  • Date: Tue Jul 02 17:16:45 2002

This crossed my desk, thought someone might find it
relevant...... (I am not sure who wrote it... ;)
router> conf t
#
<REMAINING U.S. CEOs MAKE A BREAK FOR IT
 Date: Tue, 2 Jul 2002 08:28:04 -0600
 
REMAINING U.S. CEOs MAKE A BREAK FOR IT
 
 Band of Roving Chief Executives Spotted Miles from
 Mexican Border
 
 San Antonio, Texas(Reuters) - Unwilling to wait for
 their eventual  indictments, the 10,000 remaining CEOs of public
 U.S. companies made a break for it yesterday, heading for the Mexican border,
 plundering towns and villages along the way, and writing the entire
 rampage off as a marketing expense.
 
 "They came into my home, made me pay for my own TV,
 then double-booked the revenues," said Rachel Sanchez of Las Cruces, just
 north of El Paso.
 
 "Right in front of my daughters." Calling themselves
 the CEOnistas, the chief executives were first spotted last night along
 the Rio Grande River near Quemado, where they bought each of the town's
 320 residents by borrowing against pension fund gains. By late this
 morning, the CEOnistas had arbitrarily inflated Quemado's population to
 960, and declared a 200 percent profit for the fiscal second quarter.
 
 This morning, the outlaws bought the city of Waco,
 transferred its underperforming areas to a private partnership, and
 sent a bill to California for $4.5 billion.
 
 Law enforcement officials and disgruntled
 shareholders riding posse were noticeably frustrated.
 
 "First of all, they're very hard to find because
 they always stand behind their numbers, and the numbers keep shifting," said
 posse spokesman Dean  Lewitt. "And every time we yell 'Stop in the name of
 the shareholders!', they refer us to investor relations. I've been on
 the phone all damn morning."
 
 "YOU'LL NEVER AUDIT ME ALIVE!" they scream. The
 pursuers said they have had some success, however, by preying on a common
 executive weakness. "Last night we caught about 24 of them by
 disguising one of our female officers as a CNBC
 anchor," said U.S. Border Patrol spokesperson Janet Lewis. 
 "It was like moths to a flame."
 
 Also, teams of agents have been using high-powered
 listening devices to scan the plains for telltale sounds of the CEOnistas.
 "Most of the time we just hear leaves rustling or cattle flicking their
 tails," said Lewis, "but occasionally we'll pick up someone saying, 'I was
 totally out of the loop on that."
 
 Among former and current CEOs apprehended with this
 method were Computer Associates' Sanjay Kumar, Adelphia's John Rigas,
 Enron's Ken Lay, Joseph Nacchio of Qwest, Joseph Berardino of Arthur
 Andersen, and -=every=- Global Crossing CEO since 1997. 
 ImClone Systems' Sam Waksal and Dennis Kozlowski of Tyco 
 were not allowed to join the CEOnistas as they have already been indicted.
 
 So far, about 50 chief executives have been
 captured, including Martha Stewart, who was detained south of El Paso where she
 had cut through a barbed-wire fence at the Zaragosa border crossing
 off Highway 375. "She would have gotten away, but she was stopping
 motorists to ask for marzipan and food coloring so she could make edible
 snowman place settings, using the cut pieces of wire for the arms," said
 Border Patrol officer Jenette Cushing. "We put her in cell No. 7, because
 the morning sun really adds texture to the stucco walls."

 While some stragglers are believed to have successfully crossed into Mexico,
 Cushing said the bulk of the CEOnistas have holed themselves up at the
 Alamo. "No, not the fort, the car rental place at the airport," she said.
 "They're rotating all the tires on the minivans and accounting
 for each change as a sale."

 :D