Thursday, March 4, 2010

Somebody call Little Jimmy Vann.


I believe ATF is nothing if not diligent, and the day ATF finally catches up with Ramsis A. Bear (ATF looked hard at Knob Creek, and recently in Alaska) will be a red letter day. The reason is that when the final report on Ramsis A. Bear is written, it will stand mutely as a symbol of ATF's implacable diligence, and the results of that diligence. Whether it makes any difference in the case to which ATF is connecting things, remains to be seen. -- Avatar, posting on CleanUpATF.org.


Another clue to the identity of R.A. Bear?

-----Original Message-----
From: (REDACTED)
To: GeorgeMason1776@aol.com
Sent: Wed, Mar 3, 2010 3:40 pm
Subject: Captain Bear

The Captain gets around -

Canadian Medical Association Journal, Vol 130, Issue 1 17-23.

A clinical approach to common electrolyte problems: 3. Hypophosphatemia by C. Berkelhammer and R. A. Bear

Hypophosphatemia is a common disorder caused by decreased intake, increased loss or transcellular shift of phosphorus.


LATER: COL Robert "Mad Bob" REDACTED of the Dogtown Rangers has just now bruskly informed me that this is NOT our CPT R.A. Bear, subject of a quiet ATF nationwide manhunt, but rather a Dr. Robert A. Bear. "You think he's some sort of Canuck sawbones?!?" he fairly shouted. "Now," he continued, "my man R.A. is quick and deadly with a knife, but I don't reckon you could say it was exactly in the service of medicine." So my thanks to Julian for the email tip, but I think this has been but the latest fish in a whole package case of red herrings. Keep looking, Deputy Dawg, er, ah, I mean, Little Jimmy. Keep looking.

2 comments:

jon said...

a "red letter" day? aha! a clue! there you are, you sneaky bear!

Cybrludite said...

Is this the same R.A. Bear? Being a bit of a latecomer to the site, I'm amongst those puzzled by the references. If so, the hostility becomes clear...