http://www.fortunecity.com/tinpan/humperdinck/634/Anarchy.htm Im allmost positive this is a re-post but i think it should be posted again. This thing basically teaches you everything and anything illigal.... so cool. Im bound to try one of them.
They are fun until some teenage d00shbag leaves one at a dog park, leading to the detonation of some happy dog's head. True story, and pretty f*cked up. I own a dog, and I swear I will kill every teenager in the country if a tennis ball bomb comesnear her mouth.
:shrug: I threw the ones I made up against a boulder (and a certain rusted out car) out in a caked dirt field and brought along a fire extinguisher just in case. I also advise against such blatant stereotyping.
I think this is sick... Do you think this is where guys like the Una-bomber get their inspiration from? /Peter
my friend years ago had a copy sitting around it was like 450 pages, i borrowed it and the first time my in laws came to town I put it in the guest bathroom as reading material. they had only met me once, never been to my house. thats what its good for freaking out inlaws. It was great. john
Uh, not quite. People like the Una bomber get all the inspiration they need from the government hate and daily events. Books like these every once in a while might give them assistance in pursuit.
I didn't click the link as I'm still at work, but if its the same Anarchist's Cookbook that I remember from my high school days, its terribly out of date. Blowing whistles into phone recievers won't sieze phone trunks anymore. Though, explosives technology probably hasn't changed much.
If I remember correctly, the 1970's Captain Crunch toy whistles had the exact pitch to enable a dial tone at the pay phone to make calls for free.
Yeah, it was 2600 Hz. Which is why the big hacker magazine is called 2600, and the hacker newsgroup is alt.2600. Useless info tidbit for the day. Although the bigger trick at the payphones was to unscrew the bottom cap, and then touch one of the connectors to the metal on the coin box via a pull tab. A la Wargames (with Matthew Broderick and Alley Sheedy). The 2600 trick was much more powerful. If you got it to work, you owned that particular phone trunk. Mainly from home, you could make free long distance calls, conference calls, and other sorts of crazy mayhem. Oh, how I wish I was born 15 years earlier. Stupid digital phone networks.
i was at work yesterday (food runner) and was waiting in the kitchen and listening to what the cooks and the FLOOR MANAGER would do when they were kids...it was terrible. I don't consider myself a goody-too-shoes (or two-shoes or whatever it is) but the worst i;ve done is thrown waterbaloons at cars (only once, never again since the guy stopped and tried to chase us). Thats the worst. The floor manager was the worst, he talked about smashing car windows, stealing stuff and the worst was how he would hide stuff on the road under snow during snow storms and then cars would run over them and get messed up. It was shocking really. Not really good to talk about that in front of your employees/co-workers
Required reading that's much more interesting than the Anarchist's Cookbook is "Secrets of the Little Blue Box", an Esquire article from the 70s... http://www.webcrunchers.com/crunch/esq-art.html I had the pleasure of listening to a panel headed by Capt. Crunch and the Cheshire Catalyst this past summer at 2600's HOPE convention in NYC. Fun, fun stuff...