### ### ### ### ### #### ### ### ### #### ### ### ##### ### ### ### ### ### ### ### ### ### ##### ### ### ########## ### ### ########## ### ### ### ### Underground eXperts United Presents... ####### ## ## ####### # # ####### ####### ####### ## ## ## ## ##### # ## ## ## #### ## ## #### # # #### ## ## ## ## ## ## ##### # ## ## ## ## ## ####### ####### # # ####### ## ## [ Marauder ] [ By The GNN ] ____________________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________ MARAUDER by THE GNN/DualCrew-Shining/uXu In a way, this is a true story. Alone in his cramped little apartment, Mr. Crax worked on his first (and, as it would turn out later, last) book. According to himself, it was a magnificent piece of story telling, a complete hermeneutic reading of the only truth, obviously a Nobel-prize winning artwork on the subject of revolutionary warfare'. Or for short, as Mr. Crax himself would prefer to put it: 'the best book ever written'. Sweat poured down from the forehead of Mr. Crax, his fingers typed faster and faster, the white pages were filled with letters. Soon, he thought to himself, soon the book will be ready. It will hit the streets like a bomb. Everyone will read this book. Everyone will understand the truth! Smoke began to rise from the typewriter. Then flames. Mr. Crax did not care; he had just a few words left to nail down. The typewriter exploded. Pieces of metal and plastic were spread across the room. But Mr. Crax did not mind. He was on his knees, kissing the last page of the book. He cried in joy, licked the paper, before he carefully placed it under the stack of papers that were his wonderful and completed book. Then he made love to the stack. This could be regarded as quite a weird behavior, but after considering the fact that Mr. Crax was insane, the pumping and the grunting could perhaps be excused. After Mr. Crax had zipped his fly, he decided it was time to proofread the book. Mutilating Officers of The Law, Molesting Innocent Little Children and Killing Oppressed Black Women, In Theory and Practice. by Lord Henry Crax Mr. Crax admired the title for several hours. Then he decided that he did not need read the rest of the book. In fact, he had already wasted too much time. It was time to do what any writer, and especially such a good writer as him, sooner or later must do: sell the book; tell the world the truth; give the masses their well-deserved bread, food for thought. Society would never be the same after the release of this book was the plan. With the stack of papers under his right arm and a little pistol in his back pocket, Mr. Crax quickly made his way through the crowded streets. His goal was the nearest publisher. And he found one just a few blocks away, namely House of Drain. John Lester Drain studied the stack of papers very closely. He held it far away from his face, as if it had been a load of excrements. Mr. Crax stood in front of the huge mahogany desk, holding his hat close to his heart, trying to find a sign of appreciation in the face of Mr. Drain. But the skilled publisher's face was as stiff as a stone. "Well," began Mr. Drain, "This is surely... special." "Special? As in... 'good'?" "No." "Wonderful?" "Certainly not." "Innovative?" "Well..." "Oh, you really think so?" said Mr. Crax. "That's great. You see, I've got a lot of new ideas, after this book I'll write a new one that'll be much much better and..." Mr. Drain removed his reading glasses. "Shut up, Crax," he said. "The concept 'special' means, in this context, something else. It could be translated into 'the worst piece of garbage I've ever had the misfortune to read'. Do I make myself clear?" A painful silence engulfed the room. Mr. Drain looked at Mr. Crax with a couple of eyes that revealed nothing but indifference. "I see," began Mr. Crax, "I see, well, uh... could you tell me exactly which part of the book you didn't fancy?" Mr. Drain's face suddenly erupted. It opened up, turned red and began to yell: "Which part? Which part?! Are you trying to be funny? Every page, every single letter, is worthless! Let me give you a brief example of your own writing! (Misspelling and grammatical errors excluded, we don't want to make this fiasco any worse, do we, Mr. Crax?)" Mr. Drain put his glasses on the nose, cleared his throat, pulled out a random page from the stack and began to read: "This is a question about GOOD and evil, RIGHT or wrong. For the sake of humanity, we need to join forces and KILL ALL COPS! Yes, indeed. We need to open up their bodies to that extent that their INNER ORGANS leave their respective places. ALL cops are guilty of crimes far worse than Hitler/Mussolini/Stalin could ever produce. Cops are state paid gangsters, licensed to maim people on public streets. BUT THIS IS NOT 'NUF! All around us, we also find little children, screaming and demanding PROFIT. Toys, toys, toys! All day long! HORRIBLE, MAN! They do constitute the biggest threat to mankind. They cannot even speak our language. They must be removed, with knives and guns. When children DIE, it is like TURNING OFF A RADIO. Whine, whine, whine, BOOM, end of story. Cutting up a child is like making a salad: completely free of any inherent or intrinsic values. And while we are still at it, let us make the world AN EVEN BETTER PLACE, by killing all those damn oppressed black women that rage through the streets at night like MAD DOGS, searching for white innocent males to kill for pleasure. All must die, since the rest of us must be given our deserved Lebensraum. This is the HOLY TRUTH of today, presented without mercy, endorsed by GOD!" "Need I read any further, or do you get the picture?" "Needless to say, I get the picture! I wrote the goddamn book!" Before Mr. Crax really had figured out what had happened, he found himself lying on the street outside House of Drain. The stack of papers that were his book came flying a couple of seconds later, and almost struck him unconscious as it crashed onto his head. "... in theory," mumbled Mr. Crax, "And now it's time to show the world how it's to be done in practice..." He got to his feet, feeling a little dizzy after the flight. "In practice, yes, oh yes," he mumbled while trying to find the gun he had packed, "Everyone will understand, even, yes, even that shit-box lowlife son-of-a-bitch John Lester Drain! Ha! Watch me dance. The revolution will not be televised, so stand up and fight like a man!" He eventually found the pistol in his back pocket. As he staggered further down the street, he cocked the gun and looked for a good target. Naturally, a good target had to be either a police man, a little innocent child, or some black oppressed woman. It was, however, rather hard to find anyone; his vision of the world was quite blurred, due to the rendezvous between the book and his head. After a while of searching, he finally found what he had looked for: two officers of the law. He aimed carefully and fired. Unfortunately, it was just one cop. The other one (which he had aimed for) was just a simple split-vision mirage, constructed by his own dizzy head. Before he had really got a grip of his failure, Mr. Crax had already been gunned down by the real cop. A few months later, Mr. Crax went to trial. The judge, a bit drunk but happy, informed him that his little deed was nothing to worry about. "I find no reason to sentence Henry Crax to more than five years in jail. After all, he was a bit confused during the shooting. It could happen to anyone. We all need to blow our steam, now and then." The crowd in the courtroom applauded. "Thankyou, Mr. Judge," said Mr. Crax. "I will spend those five years behind bars as a hardworking man..." "How nice..." said the judge and smiled with dreamy (glossy) eyes. "... dedicated to the construction of my new book." Everything turned silent. Very silent. "On your what?" the judge asked, his face was dead serious. Mr. Crax brought up the familiar stack of papers and held it up so everyone could see it. "Part two of this masterpiece!" The judge jumped over the desk and rushed down to Mr. Crax. He snatched the stack and began to flip through the pages. His eyes widened as he read the book of Mr. Crax. "My God..." the judge whispered to himself. Mr. Crax did, in his usual manner, manage to misunderstand the whole situation: "Yes. Divine, isn't it?" The judge did not answer. He kept on reading, and after a couple of minutes, he put down the stack and slowly returned to the desk. "Mr. Crax," he began after sitting down in his chair, "I now understand that you are a menace to society. Trying to kill officers of the law is one thing. Molesting little brats is one thing. Slaughtering black oppressed bitches is one thing. All that can be excused and forgiven, with the help of our fair legal system. But! Writing a book that includes all those ideas! Now, that's insane! I will not sentence you to five years. I will give you fifty! And your goddamn book will be burned!" "Burned? But it's not even published yet." "No, but it could have been. We, the state, are not merely punishers, we are into crime prevention too! Remember that, Mr. Crax, when you sit and rot in jail!" And that was it. Well, here the story about Lord Henry Crax ends, the marauder of writing. The rest is history. Even worse: contemporary history. ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// Danish mercenary seeks work. HI RISK, HI PAID jobs only. 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