My experience with the free posting section of CL

My GF had this Pentium II computer sitting around our house for almost a year. We never could get a charity over to pick up the thing because either it was considered too old or they would only make trips for donations of multiple computers… so it sat, collecting dust under our dining table. I tried to sell it for 40 bucks for about two weeks and only got a few offers for the Harmon Kardon speakers or to have the monitor taken off my hands… for free…. cheap bastards on CL I tell you… parted out this thing was worth at least 50!!!

So I made the dive, posted my first free listing to CL at 9PM Tuesday night and went back to Battle Carrot … Iron Chef.

Next morning, I have about 50 emails for this thing and in a rush to get things done I didn’t have time to reply. By 4 PM, I had about 130 and decided to take my address off. I looked through most of them then, and realized how many of these people need an education first before they get a computer. A few were sappy, and a few were straight up – when can I get it!. I ended up giving the computer to two ladies that started a non-profit organization in Harlem called Two Grandmas, Inc. – they support the NYC community and provide donated art and educational supplies to disenfranchised families in the area. My good deed for the day. But here are a few ad replies that caught my attention – spelling left intact.

“Hey yo, when can i get it?” by a guy with an email address: yanksruleu2@…

“MY LITLE BRITHER COULD USE THE COMPUTOR” – looks like he may need EDU first

“I will pick it up now. What your address and number so I can come get you.” – uh ok.

“hi i need it bad can u call me chris” – uh Chris, NSAs are in a different forum

“Hi , Am email you regarding a free computer you was offering in and ad posted on craigslist in the free section, I will like to pick up item at your convenience, at the earliest possible time, if is still available and free.” – I liked the “Still Available?” responses better – GET TO THE POINT!

“do you still have your computer available? i don’t know much about computers, except that mine is broken and i desperately need a new one. I use a windows computer is a DELL anything like that? hope to hear from you!”

“I’d like it, can I pick it up Saturday?” when I explicitly stated must be picked up by Thursday.

“Hi I’m a poor family and could really use the computer to help give my 2 children a better education. Please let me know if I can pick it up from you” from a guy that works at Computer Wrecker Inc. (a computer dismantler and reseller)

“Where you live, I’ll come by to get it.” from a guy with an email address in2crock@ if crock is anything like Crack ROCK, this guy isn’t even getting near my address.

“God has sent you to me to help our church. We appreciate your patronage and I look forward to meeting you my son. ….” from theprophet@… whoa.. no I’m not contributing to cults.

“Our office could use addition computer resources, which boro are you located and I’ll have someone come by to pick it up.” from NYPDblu5@… didn’t know the police were so strapped they had to look for free resources on CL

“can it be shipped?” – sure for 1000$ jack ass…

“C Bass here from Queens…” – sorry, started laughing to read the rest, just picturing good old Sea-Bass from the movie Dumb and Dumber gesturing “over here!”

“Hi big boi, I would love to get a hold of that thing, and pick up the computer too of course. Please let me know when we can meet.” signed freakycamgurl392@… we have a winner!!!

Bush Maintains Opposition to Doubling Aid for Africa

WASHINGTON, June 1 – President Bush refused on Wednesday to budge on his administration’s opposition to doubling aid for Africa, a major proposal on the agenda for a summit meeting of industrial nations next month in Scotland.

The long-simmering dispute could culminate next week when Prime Minister Tony Blair of Britain, who has advocated the plan, visits Washington in advance of the July session, a meeting of the Group of 8. As host of the meeting, Mr. Blair set the agenda, and he argued during his successful campaign for a third term in office that the world’s richest nations had to make a $25 billion increase in support for Africa. But Mr. Bush has been cool to the idea from the start and has resisted making new aid commitments.

Asked Wednesday about the issue, Mr. Bush said, “It doesn’t fit our budgetary process.”

Meeting the South African president, Thabo Mbeki, in the Oval Office on Wednesday morning, Mr. Bush also renewed his administration’s declaration, first made by Colin L. Powell when he was secretary of state, that genocide was taking place in the Darfur region of Sudan.

Crisis in DarfurMr. Bush has said almost nothing about Darfur this year, and several human rights groups have criticized him for paying too little attention to the issue. But on Wednesday he noted that the deputy secretary of state, Robert B. Zoellick, was on his way to the region for his second trip.

Congress recently approved $50 million in additional aid for refugees in Sudan, and the United States has committed to providing transportation for Rwandan troops who are going into the area as part of an African Union force that is expected to number about 7,700 troops.

If the word “genocide” was on Mr. Bush’s mind, it may be because he had dinner on Tuesday at Mr. Powell’s home in Virginia. But Mr. Mbeki sat in silence when Mr. Bush used the term, refusing to declare that the Sudanese government was responsible for the killings in the region.

“It might be fine for some in the United States to make all kinds of statements,” he said later. “If you denounce Sudan as genocidal, what next? Don’t you have to arrest the president? The solution doesn’t lie in making radical solutions – not for us in Africa.”

While the Darfur crisis, along with the problem of AIDS, has dominated the administration’s debate about assistance for Africa, Mr. Blair’s call for a vast increase in the amount spent to fight poverty has created considerable tension between Washington and Britain.

In March, Mr. Blair called on rich nations to double aid to Africa while challenging African nations to end the corrupt practices that have undercut so much aid in the past. Pointing to the poverty in Africa and the deaths of millions of children there each year, Mr. Blair called improving the continent “the fundamental moral challenge of our time.”

But he has run into opposition in Germany and Italy, which are both Group of 8 members. Mr. Bush’s opposition, if it holds, could doom the effort at the meeting in Scotland. Mr. Bush has his own agenda for the session, including nuclear proliferation and the situation in Iraq.

In an interview, Mr. Mbeki said his meeting with Mr. Bush had been part of a two-week campaign to speak with the leaders of the eight industrial countries about Mr. Blair’s initiative, and to forge a consensus on how to help Africa. South Africa is the only African nation that will attend the annual summit meeting.

“President Bush responded extremely positively to all of the suggestions for the meeting,” he said, though he stopped short of saying that Mr. Bush had made any new commitments.

Mr. Mbeki is seeking more development help for Africa, a reduction in agriculture subsidies that compete with African exports and relief of the debt of the poorest countries. He urged the wealthier nations to choose their own ways to help and noted that the European Union was considering imposing a new tax to finance the program. “I am absolutely certain President Bush is willing to commit whatever is required,” he said.

But in the United States, such a tax would be antithetical to Mr. Bush’s philosophy, and a tax aimed at foreign assistance is most likely to run into considerable resistance within Mr. Bush’s own party.

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“We’re spending money on clean coal technology. Do you realize we’ve got 250 million years of coal?”
President George W. Bush – Washington, D.C., June 8, 2005