-This results in the current buffer being killed, and a new http buffer
-being generated. However, when the old http buffer is killed, emacs
-picks the top buffer from the list as the new current buffer, so by the
-time we get to the end of url-http-parse-headers, _that_ buffer is marked
-as dead even though it is not necessarily a url buffer, so next time the
-url libraries reap their dead buffers, an innocent bystander buffer is
+This results in the current buffer being killed, and a new http buffer
+being generated. However, when the old http buffer is killed, emacs
+picks the top buffer from the list as the new current buffer, so by the
+time we get to the end of url-http-parse-headers, _that_ buffer is marked
+as dead even though it is not necessarily a url buffer, so next time the
+url libraries reap their dead buffers, an innocent bystander buffer is