The quest for information about Andy Austin continues ...
I've copied and pasted the following statement that was posted by Andy in his Facebook profile under the section entitled "Basic Information." There's also a picture of Andy with a group of African children in the upper left corner of his profile webpage. The only way you can access a Facebook member's profile is by joining Facebook, which is what I did. (Well, actually, I renewed my membership, which I had cancelled at the time of the 4chan troll raid.)
http://www.facebook.com/home.php?react= ... [quote]Eyo Amigos! The name is Andy Austin, I'm currently a Sophomore at Montana State University Bozeman where I am working on a nursing degree and playing football! I'm a down to earth person, I don't drink but that doesn't mean I don't enjoy a good time. I am currently working with my father with an organization called Bicycles for Humanity. We work to give Africans a method of transportation. If you would like to learn more just contact me![/quote]
I realize that anyone who posts in a website's forum is in a good position to lie through his teeth. For that reason I have provided evidence, not hearsay or conjecture. The hometown of Andy and his father Dan is Billings, Montana. I've copied and pasted an article from a billingsgazette.com webpage as proof of Andy's participation in the Bicycles for Humanity charity.
http://billingsgazette.com/news/local/a ... html[quote]
LOCAL DRIVE TO BENEFIT BICYCLES FOR HUMANITY EFFORT
Celebrate Community: Two wheels for 3rd world
By DONNA HEALY Of The Gazette Staff The Billings Gazette | Posted: Sunday, February 28, 2010 11:55 pm |
This spring, old bicycles taking up space in garages across Billings can help improve the lives of impoverished Africans.
In Africa, a bicycle can enhance access to health care, education and jobs, said Dan Austin, a Billings bike enthusiast.
â??The difference between walking 14 miles a day to biking it is huge,â? said Austin, who started a Billings chapter of Bicycles for Humanity, or B4H, in February.
A nonprofit organization founded in British Columbia, B4H raises funds and collects unwanted bicycles to send to developing African countries.
The organization, which has 22 local chapters spread across three continents, has sent 10,000 bicycles overseas since it was founded in 2005. The Billings B4H chapter is the first in Montana.
Public drive kicks off
This month, the Billings chapter kicks off a public drive to collect 500 used bikes along with repair tools and spare parts â?? enough cast-off bikes to fill a shipping container to send to Namibia in April.
Austin is the co-founder of Austin-Lehman Adventures, a global adventure travel business headquartered in Billings. He kick-started the used bike drive by donating 120 Gary Fisher bicycles from the companyâ??s fleet of tour bikes.
Austin, a daily bicycle commuter, is active in the Billings Chamber of Commerceâ??s bike trails committee. When Austin-Lehman Adventures bought a new fleet of bikes for the 2010 tour season, he contacted Bicycles for Humanity about making a donation.
He was impressed with the way the organization trains Africans to repair and maintain the bicycles.
Once the bikes arrive in a community, windows and doors are cut into the shipping container to turn it into a makeshift repair shop to refurbish the bicycles and provide on-going maintenance service.
Refurbished bicycles are given free of charge to health-care outreach volunteers and school children and others. Other bikes are sold for a low price, with income from the sale and servicing of those bicycles reinvested in other community projects.
Health-care workers can visit five times as many homes by bicycle as they can on foot, said Austin, who met with the organizationâ??s founder, Pat Montani, of Whistler, British Columbia, in mid-February.
â??I stumbled on to B4H and was so impressed with their success,â? Austin said. â??Itâ??s pretty exciting how a bike can make such a dramatic difference.â?
So far, almost all of the bicycles have gone to Namibia, an arid country in sub-Saharan Africa.
Namibia gained independence from South Africa in 1990, making it one of Africaâ??s youngest countries.
More than half the population of 2.1 million lives on $2 a day or less. About 15 percent of all the nationâ??s adults suffer from HIV/AIDS.
The Billings bicycles will go to Ngoma, in Namibiaâ??s far northeastern corner.
The 20 health-care outreach workers in Ngoma will be among the first to get bicycles.
Austin and his son, Andy, a freshman at Montana State University who is interested in doing relief work overseas, will pay their own way to escort the first shipment of bikes to Namibia this spring.
Fledgling chapter
The fledgling B4H chapter has already garnered sponsorship support from Montana Cycling, a bike shop planning to open at the end of April in the Shiloh Crossing development at King Avenue West and Shiloh Road.
Montana Cycling will offer a $25 store gift certificate to anyone who donates a bike to B4H during the March donation drive.
â??Combining our love of biking and working with the Billings community, while making a global difference, was just too good to pass up,â? said Mark Soueidi, the storeâ??s owner and manager.
To promote awareness of B4H and bicycling in Billings, several organizations and bike clubs will ride together in the St. Patrickâ??s Day Parade.
Austin expects at least 100 bicyclists to turn out for the parade, which will kick off the public donation drive. From 2 to 5 p.m., starting on March 13 and continuing through the remaining Saturdays in March, people can donate their used bikes at the soon-to-open Montana Cycling store.
Although mountain bikes and similar-style bikes are best suited to Africaâ??s terrain, any bicycles, including childrenâ??s bikes, bike parts and equipment will be accepted.
â??The collecting of bikes is pretty much the easy part,â? Austin said.
â??They have to go to the right village. The people have to be trained to maintain the bikes. You donâ??t want them to show up in Africa and be sold on the black market.â?
One reason Austin became involved with B4H is that the organization partners with African communities to sustain the project.
Along with encouraging Billings groups, including schools, churches and bike clubs, to become involved, Austin intends to challenge other Montana communities to create their own B4H chapters.
Contact Donna Healy at
dhealy@billingsgazette.com or 657-1292.
Copyright 2011 The Billings Gazette. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.[/quote]
My point in copying and pasting these two items is simply to
provide facts. Make of them what you will.
ChrisOH wrote:He did show the usual signs of trolling behavior, and I can see from the archival posts that he created quite an uproar among regulars at this site. (Heck, he's still being talked about a year later, so for someone who made a grand total of 10 posts to the forums, he sure stirred up enough trouble -- which is, IMO, exactly what his intentions were.)
Hi, ChrisOH. What caused the uproar was not Andy, but our own disagreements among ourselves.
ChrisOH wrote:What's most disconcerting to me is the division among site member here that he caused. I've seen other sites torn apart by such things (usually instigated by trolls) and it can damage much of the camaraderie and support that the site was intended to provide. I'd hate to see that happen here, as a result of Andy or anyone else.
I'm confident that that will never happen here. I strongly support this website. That's why I, as a moderator, am determined to preserve this forum's integrity and further its reputation.
Edit: More information, folks!

Andy's hometown is in the state of Montana, as is the university he attends. Therefore, there is a seven-hour difference between his time (which is MST, or Mountain Standard Time) and the UTC times that are displayed in this forum for dating posts. The UTC for Andy's OP of his topic entitled "Here for a civilized debate" is 1:43 a.m., dated 1-5-10. According to reckoning by U.S. time zone, this
does mean that Andy posted in our forum
and on the Tech N9ne webpage on the same day. This also means that Andy's OP was submitted at 6:43 p.m. (MST). The time for Andy's Tech N9ne post is given simply as 8:14 p.m. The time zone is not given. I assume Tech N9ne is based in the United States. If someone could find out which time zone is used by Tech N9ne, then we would be able to figure out just how much time elapsed between the submitting of Andy's Tech N9ne post and the submitting of his OP in our own forum. Right now we can't even tell which came first. Ain't detective work fun?