X-Message-Number: 32647 Date: Mon, 21 Jun 2010 15:05:35 -0500 Subject: Who pays LJ & MM to air cryonics' dirty laundry?? From: Finance Department <> --001636e0b9b5f0fd7004898fd3e5 Who paid Larry Johnson to wear wires into Alcor, and who now pays Melody Maxim to work for LJ? (Well, must be LJ himself, whom she reports to). Reports to, as evidenced by a post in the CryoNet queue yesterday which got deleted by its maker as it was obviously a colossal blunder on her part. It was originally posted as #3 in the queue after she had posted it without the forwarding as #2 in the queue, which actually made it into CryoNet as Message #32645. She had obviously intended to email it to LJ, but it went to instead. "I think my Cryonet post, below, will support the portion of your book, where you described Alcor's "Organ Procurement Team" name tags." she says to her idol. Wow. And all along we thought she objected to things like misrepresenting oneself as a perfusionist, for the right reasons and the good of cryonics. Instead it is clear she is doing all of this to support LJ's sensationalist and defamatory book. She was distraught enough, apparently, not to bother to correct the word "medial" to something more meaningful, in any of this. Here is the blundering post: ************************************************************* X-Message-Number: 3 Date: Sun, 20 Jun 2010 16:48:17 +0000 (UTC) From: Melody Maxim <> Subject: Fwd: Misrepresenting Staff Members as Medial Professionals ------=_Part_401606_1764844494.1277052497360 I'm still making a stink about Kelly claiming to be a perfusionist. I think my Cryonet post, below, will support the portion of your book, where you described Alcor's "Organ Procurement Team" name tags. ----- Forwarded Message ----- From: "Melody Maxim" <> To: Sent: Sunday, June 20, 2010 12:46:21 PM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern Subject: Misrepresenting Staff Members as Medial Professionals I think it damages the credibility of cryonics organizations, to represent staff members as medical professionals when they are not. In fact, I am often tempted to argue it is a form of consumer fraud. It doesn't take much common sense to know that people interested in cryonics, who view photos of people appearing to be performing surgical procedures, while dressed up in medical garb .... (bla bla. rest is the same as in Message #32645) ********************************************************* Cheers, FD --001636e0b9b5f0fd7004898fd3e5 Content-Type: text/html; charset=ISO-8859-1 [ AUTOMATICALLY SKIPPING HTML ENCODING! ] Rate This Message: http://www.cryonet.org/cgi-bin/rate.cgi?msg=32647