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integer at www.god-emil.dk integer at www.god-emil.dk
Sat Jul 26 21:28:56 CEST 2003




"Auriea." <a at e8z.org>


>Re: [syndicate] Re:  Jagen op naakte vrouwen -in this sick society everyone is sick



tracking 2 0 point                            but none so sick as the ones we have seen hier 





>JAGEN OP NAAKTE VROUWEN

on 19 aug



nn - sllllllllooooooouuuuu food





>naakte vrouwen

                kan b v z!k auss!


http://www.god-emil.dk/=cw4t7abs/punkt-||_protokol/212121.hTmL




>http://www.msnbc.com/news/939777.asp?0cv=CB20
>
>'Hunts' of nude women draw fire
>By Mike Brunker
>MSNBC
>
>July 16 -  A paintball manufacturer and advocates for women are expressing
>outrage that a Las Vegas company claims to be charging men up to $10,000 to
>use the non-lethal but dangerous weapons to shoot naked women racing through
>the sagebrush. But a creator of the "Hunting for Bambi" game on Wednesday
>defended the enterprise as good, clean fun for "guys who thought they had
>done everything."
>
>WORD OF THE company's activities first surfaced last week, when a Las
>Vegas television station aired a report featuring footage from what it
>identified as one of the hunts and interviewed both a hunter and his prey,
>who admitted that she cried after being hit in the posterior by one of the
>paint-loaded pellets.
>The KLAS-TV report attracted little attention until Tuesday, when
>paintball equipment manufacturer Brass Eagle Inc. issued a press release
>denouncing the concept and calling on local officials to investigate whether
>the hunts endanger the women's health and welfare.
>"We condemn this irresponsible activity and do not endorse or condone
>the use of paintball products for such activities," said Lynn Scott,
>president of the Bentonville, Ark., firm.
>Questions were being raised about the veracity of the company's
>claims. Snopes.com, which researches so-called urban legends, noted that the
>huntingforbambi.com Web site lacks proper contact information and stated
>that some readers who sent e-mail expressing interest in booking a hunt
>received no reply to their inquiries.
>But David Krekelberg, who responded to an e-mail inquiry from
>MSNBC.com early Wednesday and said he was a spokesman for the company,
>insisted the enterprise is real.
>He also said that he and the company's "master hunter," Michael
>Burdick, have taken steps to address safety concerns.
>
>"At first we just told our hunters 'Don't shoot them in the head,'" he said.
>"Now the hunters are prohibited from raising the gun barrel above the waist
>level and if he does, it's game over and there are no refunds."
>Krekelberg also said that the guns were modified to reduce the
>velocity of the paint-pellet guns, which can have a muzzle velocity of up to
>200 mph, and that the women are now given the option of wearing goggles and
>helmets in addition to shoes.
>Krekelberg said the year-old company, which originally was formed to
>market a hunting spoof videotape, has so far conducted about 20 of the
>"hunts," most of them in the desert outside Las Vegas.
>"It's basically like a game show," he said. "There's a whistle, and
>maybe 20 minutes to an hour later, we have a girl with a big red welt on her
>butt, or maybe none."
>In addition to the thrill of the chase and the "kill," the hunter
>gets a videotape of the hunt captured by a three-camera team, he said.
>Krekelberg said the women - most of whom are showgirls - are paid
>inversely to the pain they experience - $1,000 if they get shot and $2,500
>if they don't - to give them added incentive to elude their armed pursuers.
>But the deck is clearly stacked in favor of the hunter - only two of
>the 20 or so have gone home without hitting a target, Krekelberg said. "They
>weren't unhappy," he said. "They still had a great time and met some
>beautiful women."
>The KLAS piece on the hunts that aired last week included criticism
>from clinical psychologist Marv Glovinsky, who told the station that the
>game could be dangerous for men who can not distinguish fantasy from reality
>and could lead them to act out violence against women.
>"If you're blurring reality and fantasy and you can't make the
>distinction, and your emotions overpower your intellect or your higher
>mental function, you're going to get into trouble," he told the station.
>"And if you have control problems to boot, that's really going to cause
>problems."
>
>Krekelberg said the company goes to great lengths to ensure that
>participants don't have psychological problems by subjecting them to lengthy
>interviews.
>"These are just fun guys who thought they had done everything, ridden
>everything and hunted everything," he said of the company's customers. "They
>come to Vegas to play golf and hang out in the nightclubs and suddenly they
>find out there is this other option out there."
>Krekelberg said that the TV piece also unleashed a torrent of
>criticism that he and his colleagues are degrading women, a charge he
>vigorously denied despite the inclusion on the company's Web site of photos
>of nude women "mounted" on walls much as a deer would be after being killed.
>"The women who think this is abusive and degrading need to put their
>attention where it should be, and I think that's Afghanistan," said
>Krekelberg. "We love our girls. Why do you think we pay them so much? There
>are desperate people in this town who could be taken advantage of. We choose
>not to do that."












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