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Medical Forum / General / Alternative / November 2005

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Kook-watchers and Kooks: Join us!

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Modemac - 27 Nov 2005 17:02 GMT
If you remember the classic who's-who of kookdom, "High Weirdness by
Mail," then you are invited to join our ongoing project to expose and
catalog the modern kooks of today:

    The High Weirdness Project
     http://www.modemac.com

We're a wiki site (similar to Wikipedia) that currently provides
information about hundreds of odd, bizarre, fringe, noteworthy, and
Slackful kooks of all sort.  And we want to include YOU!

If you know of an oddball group, organization, cult, lone nut,
information source, or other bunch of wackos that you want to expose,
feel free to sign up and let us know about them.

Likewise: if you yourself are seeking to enlighten the world about
your forbidden science, suppressed technology, insidious conspiracy,
One True Path, or other Secret That Must Be Told, then by all means
let us help you to help us see the light!

We are currently receiving just under 1,000 hits per day, and of
course we are looking to increase our traffic.  More importantly, we
are looking to increase YOUR traffic by portraying your site.  The
High Weirdness Project is FREE and ad-free (except for our own
promotion of the most important End Of The World conspiracy of all:
X-DAY.)

We're definitely influenced by Wikipedia, especially because you can
add information to any of the articles here.  However, we are *not*
building another "encyclopedia" here.  In particular, we do not follow
Wikipedia's neutral point of view: we are biased and we are proud to
be biased, and we want YOU to be biased in your portrayals of the
groups we focus on.

Sarcasm and derision are welcome (and encouraged); however, all
contributions to the High Weirdness Project must be truthful and
accurate.  Lies, slander, and libel (and copyright violations) will
not be tolerated.

Other than that, feel free to take part and have fun!

Signature

                       The High Weirdness Project
                         http://www.modemac.com

Joe S. - 27 Nov 2005 19:57 GMT
> If you remember the classic who's-who of kookdom, "High Weirdness by
> Mail," then you are invited to join our ongoing project to expose and
[quoted text clipped - 10 lines]
> information source, or other bunch of wackos that you want to expose,
> feel free to sign up and let us know about them.

Have you included the following on your site?  These certainly do fit the
definition of  "oddball group, organization, cult, lone nut, information
source, or other bunch of wackos . . . "

-- Republican Party
-- Rush Limbaugh
-- Ann Coulter
-- Sean Hannity
-- Bill Al-Reilly
-- Fox "News"
-- Joe Scarborough
-- Michael Weiner (AKA Michael Savage)
-- Washington Times
-- Dick Cheney
-- PNAC
-- Pat Robertson
-- Jerry Falwell
-- Ralph Dobson
-- Gary Bauer
-- Tim LaHaye and the whole "Left Behind" crowd

> Likewise: if you yourself are seeking to enlighten the world about
> your forbidden science, suppressed technology, insidious conspiracy,
[quoted text clipped - 21 lines]
>
> Other than that, feel free to take part and have fun!
Modemac - 27 Nov 2005 23:54 GMT
>Have you included the following on your site?  These certainly do fit the
>definition of  "oddball group, organization, cult, lone nut, information
>source, or other bunch of wackos . . . "

We do have an entry (albeit brief) on the Unification Church amd
Christian Coalition, and a longer entry on James Dobson and Focus on
the Family.  I personally would *love* to see a decent review of the
"Left Behind" books on there, but I haven't been willing to slog
through all 12 books of the series (and their prequels, and their
spinoffs) myself.  Which is what's so great about a wiki: If you want
commentary on these subjects, then please feel free to add them!

>-- Republican Party
>-- Rush Limbaugh
[quoted text clipped - 12 lines]
>-- Gary Bauer
>-- Tim LaHaye and the whole "Left Behind" crowd

On the plus side, you may enjoy reading our entries on creationism
(and the Flying Spaghetti Monster), Li'l Markie (wacked-out
anti-abortion folk songs), TBN (the televangelist TV network), magnet
therapy, psychic surgeons, the Landmark Forum, Transcendental
Medication, and other entries.

Again, drop by and let us know if you like what you see!

Signature

                       The High Weirdness Project
                         http://www.modemac.com

Joe S. - 28 Nov 2005 01:31 GMT
>>Have you included the following on your site?  These certainly do fit the
>>definition of  "oddball group, organization, cult, lone nut, information
[quoted text clipped - 28 lines]
> (and the Flying Spaghetti Monster), Li'l Markie (wacked-out
> anti-abortion folk songs), TBN (the televangelist TV network),

TBN?  Damn, I forgot about the woman with the purple hair!!!!

> magnet
> therapy, psychic surgeons, the Landmark Forum, Transcendental
> Medication, and other entries.
>
> Again, drop by and let us know if you like what you see!
Enkidu the Atheist - 28 Nov 2005 01:55 GMT
>>>Have you included the following on your site?  These certainly do fit
>>>the definition of  "oddball group, organization, cult, lone nut,
[quoted text clipped - 30 lines]
>
> TBN?  Damn, I forgot about the woman with the purple hair!!!!

How about Unarius?  These nuts are truly wierd.  They used to have a show
on local cable access where the re-enacted a cosmic space battle by
running around the East County Performing Arts Complex with toy guns from
Toys-R-Us.

http://www.unarius.org/start.html

Signature

Enkidu AA#2165  
http://www.musings.leaddogs.org/
EAC Chaplain and ordained minister,
ULC, Modesto, CA

PGP ID: 0xC4CE8CF0

"The world is full of Laurel and Hardys. I saw them all the time as a boy
at my mother's hotel. There's always the dumb, dumb guy, who never has
anything bad happen to him, and the smart guy who's even dumber than the
dumb guy, only he doesn't know it."

   * Oliver Hardy

Robibnikoff - 28 Nov 2005 17:11 GMT
snip

> How about Unarius?  These nuts are truly wierd.  They used to have a show
> on local cable access where the re-enacted a cosmic space battle by
> running around the East County Performing Arts Complex with toy guns from
> Toys-R-Us.

Holy crap, you have GOT to be kidding! ;)
Signature

Robyn
Resident Witchypoo
#1557

Douglas Berry - 28 Nov 2005 01:29 GMT
What's so funny about peace, love and Modemac <modemac@modemac.com>
posting the following on Sun, 27 Nov 2005 17:02:26 GMT iin
alt.atheism?

>If you remember the classic who's-who of kookdom, "High Weirdness by
>Mail," then you are invited to join our ongoing project to expose and
>catalog the modern kooks of today:
>
>    The High Weirdness Project
>     http://www.modemac.com

I still have that book!
Signature


Douglas E. Berry  Do the OBVIOUS thing to send e-mail
Atheist #2147, Atheist Vet #5

"Men never do evil so completely and cheerfully as
when they do it from religious conviction."
       Blaise Pascal (1623-1662), Pense'es, #894.

Joe S. - 28 Nov 2005 03:01 GMT
> If you remember the classic who's-who of kookdom, "High Weirdness by
> Mail," then you are invited to join our ongoing project to expose and
[quoted text clipped - 36 lines]
>
> Other than that, feel free to take part and have fun!

Here's one for you  -- the Church of Scientology -- they definitely fit the
description.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/11/26/AR2005112601065.html

QUOTE

A Place in the Desert for New Mexico's Most Exclusive Circles

By Richard Leiby
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, November 27, 2005; Page D01

Secret Flying Saucer Base Found in New Mexico?

Maybe. From the state that gave us Roswell, the epicenter of UFO lore since
1947, comes a report from an Albuquerque TV station about its discovery of
strange landscape markings in the remote desert. They're etched in New
Mexico's barren northern reaches, resemble crop circles and are recognizable
only from a high altitude.

Also, they are directly connected to the Church of Scientology.

(Cue theremin music.)

The church tried to persuade station KRQE not to air its report last week
about the aerial signposts marking a Scientology compound that includes a
huge vault "built into a mountainside," the station said on its Web site.
The tunnel was constructed to protect the works of L. Ron Hubbard, the late
science-fiction writer who founded the church in the 1950s.

The archiving project, which the church has acknowledged, includes engraving
Hubbard's writings on stainless steel tablets and encasing them in titanium
capsules. It is overseen by a Scientology corporation called the Church of
Spiritual Technology. Based in Los Angeles, the corporation dispatched an
official named Jane McNairn and an attorney to visit the TV station in an
effort to squelch the story, KRQE news director Michelle Donaldson said.

The church offered a tour of the underground facility if KRQE would kill the
piece, the station said in its newscast. Scientology also called KRQE's
owner, Emmis Communications, and "sought the help of a powerful New Mexican
lawmaker" to lobby against airing the piece, the station reported on its Web
site.

McNairn did not respond to messages requesting comment; an employee said
that McNairn was traveling last week, and that no one else from the church
would be able to comment.

What do the markings mean? For starters, the interlocking circles and
diamonds match the logo of the Church of Spiritual Technology, which had the
vault constructed in a mesa in the late 1980s. The $2.5 million construction
job was done by Denman and Associates of Santa Fe, but company Vice
President Sally Butler said of the circles, "If there is anything like that
out there, it had nothing to do with us."

Perhaps the signs are just a proud expression of the Scientology brand. But
there are other, more intriguing theories.

Former Scientologists familiar with Hubbard's teachings on reincarnation say
the symbol marks a "return point" so loyal staff members know where they can
find the founder's works when they travel here in the future from other
places in the universe.

"As a lifetime staff member, you sign a billion-year contract. It's not just
symbolic," said Bruce Hines of Denver, who spent 30 years in Scientology but
is now critical of it. "You know you are coming back and you will defend the
movement no matter what. . . . The fact that they would etch this into the
desert to be seen from space, it fits into the whole ideology."

Recall if you will that Scientology traces most of mankind's woes to an evil
alien lord named Xenu, a galactic holocaust perpetrated 75 million years
ago, and, uh, the field of psychiatry. (The latter is a particular concern,
as all of America now knows, of movie star Tom Cruise.)

The church maintains two other vaults in California to preserve Hubbard's
materials and words, according to Hines and another longtime staff member
who also quit a couple of years ago, Chuck Beatty of Pittsburgh.

"The whole purpose of putting these teachings in the underground vaults was
expressly so that in the event that everything gets wiped out somehow,
someone would be willing to locate them and they would still be there," said
Beatty, who spent 28 years in Scientology. Some loyalists are tasked
specifically with the "super-duper confidential" job of coming back to Earth
in the far-off future, he added.

The billion-year contracts are signed by members of what Hubbard, a Navy
lieutenant in World War II, called the church's Sea Organization. The motto
of that cadre, according to Beatty and Hines, who said they were both
members, is "We come back."

The New Mexico site is about a 2 1/2 -hour drive east of Santa Fe, near the
small town of Trementina. The contents of the vault itself are not secret --  
they were shown in 1998 on ABC News's "20/20."

"Buried deep in these New Mexico hills in steel-lined tunnels, said to be
able to survive a nuclear blast, is what Scientology considers the future of
mankind," ABC's Tom Jarriel said in his report. "Seen here for the first
time, thousands of metal records, stored in heat-resistant titanium boxes
and playable on a solar-powered turntable, all containing the beliefs of
Scientology's founder, L. Ron Hubbard."

Other religions preserve their sacred texts. Nothing strange there.
Scientology leaders apparently just don't want to misplace theirs, and maybe
this is why somebody put the giant circles on the scrubland. Because there's
nothing worse than arriving from deep space, and not knowing where to park.

END QUOTE
Modemac - 28 Nov 2005 12:15 GMT
> Here's one for you  -- the Church of Scientology -- they definitely fit the
> description.

Actually, our Web site has been on the top 10 of Google searches for
the word "Scientology" for a while.  Take a look yourself:
http://www.modemac.com/wiki/Scientology
 
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