"Today's world seems to be crazy": Unabomber's Manifest On May 25, 1978 Terry Marker was traveling around the campus of the University of Illinois. This special package was sent to engineering professor of Rensselaer, a professor of material science at Northwestern University, found in the parking lot. It seems that a very slight misguided package is about to start the longest search in Terror and American history. The police picked up the parcel and opened it, and the mechanism of the oil trigger exploded the equipment.
Unabomber's manifesto was welcomed as a genius work, or at least profound and wise, by many thoughtful people in 1995. The University of Colorado hosted a group called "The Unabomber has points".
On 19th September 1995, "New York Times" and "Washington Post" requested the declaration of "Unabomber" Theodore Kaczynski called "Unabomber Declaration". Kaczynski sentenced his sentence for his letter explosion movement between 1979 and 1995, but the extreme environmentalism rhetoric contained in his declaration was not the first time, but a wider range of present And made available to future environmental militants. Given the online availability at the time of publication, Unabomber Manifesto became one of the most famous rhetorical artifacts supporting environmental extremism. Using Herbert Simmons' 'rhetorical request' approach, this research shows that the 'anarchist declaration' represents Kachyski's rhetorical efforts to bring environmental radicalists with similar ambition .
On September 19, 1995, both papers submitted Kaczynski's request and got 3000 words excerpts from the paper now known as the "Unabomber Declaration". The announcement of the declaration got the national heading of Unabomber, which was also the destruction of Kaczynski. After reading the declaration, social workers in Schenectady, New York noticed that the usage and writing of Unabomber's language is quite similar to that of his brother Theodore Kaczynski and the authorities. On 3 April 1996, the FBI official arrested Kaczynski in the cabin of Montana State and effectively ended Unabomber's ecoterror campaign. As part of the litigation negotiations, Kaczynski was sentenced to life imprisonment without parole. However, the imprisonment of Kaczynski did not hinder his anti-technical, environmental protection information.