enthalpy

Thursday, February 18, 2010


Turns out an Austin Toyota dealer started selling airplanes
A software engineer furious with the Internal Revenue Service launched a suicide attack on the agency Thursday by crashing his small plane into an office building containing nearly 200 IRS employees, setting off a raging fire that sent workers running for their lives.

Emergency crews recovered two bodies from the wreckage. The pilot was presumed dead and one worker in the building had been missing. Austin Fire Department Battalion Chief Palmer Buck declined to discuss the identities of those found, but said Thursday night that authorities had "accounted for everybody."
Of course, what's an insane act without a long, rambling suicide note that now days passes as a manifesto. This is no manifesto, this is just a sore headed old crank that tried to cheat the IRS and lost. More than once. No one enjoys paying taxes, except for some disingenuous liberals that lie a lot. But flying a small plane into a building in an office building that isn't even the state's IRS headquarters? That's just stupid. There's got to be a better way to make sure your suicide note gets posted on CNN.



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