Gee, you can cut and paste. But none of these references discuss
anything about the programs on ARPANET which led these programs.
That is because USENET preceded ARPANET, you babbling fool.
And the Berkley link to ARPANET occurred very early and is what made
Usenet viable. Many of those using earlier versions started their own
NNTP servers (before NNTP there was no real standardization - mainly
email and telnet).
No, it did not as very few systems were or could be connected to ARPANET
at that time. The vast majority of sites passing USENET were modem
connected until the late 80's by which time there was no ARPANET.
Usenet didn't just appear out of nowhere, although the articles seem to
indicate it did. It was the result of several years of experimentation
by people all over the country (and to a limited extent, around the world).
True, but irrelevant to how traffic was carried.
Traffic was UUCP over modem connections because that was all that was
available and affordable to most sites until the Internet boom.
But then trolls will claim anything, even without proof.
Self declared experts at everything hate it when it is pointed out to
them they are wrong.
Yea, you really do hate being shown you are wrong.
What a laugh you are struggling to maintain your superiority to othere.