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cheranne

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  1. I church hopped for a long time.like channel surfing..it is hard you feel like an outsider at first. The first church I went to and became a member of I didn't agree with everything but enjoyed the preachers teachings. The hands raised and "pentecostal" type ways made me feel a little uncomfortable at first but, I just kinda sat on the back row taking notes.(in my much scribled bible I had as a way believer) I had to eventually get rid of it and start FRESH with a new bible(it was just to confusing to look at all those pfal class notes and words had differant meanings to me than to other people) The reason I stayed as long as I did in a non denominational church was because of my children whom I learned more about life than any church or class I could ever take. But,I wanted them to have a knowledge of the bible and not ever have to go thru what I had to in The Way(so far they haven't joined any cults!) After I moved again I never found a church home again, I am not much into organized religon but it doessn't bother me if people are at all or if they are not.
  2. Being involved in The Way changed my life, it made me more sensitive to "people" like in a humanitairian type of way at first. Then when I decided to leave I was torn in a spiritual world ,the earthly world was NOW better than what I thought I had found and followed in The Way. I felt broken and damaged like I had been in a war and been sent home. Still glad to be out and away from the danger I knew my friends were still in there fighting for something I didn't think they were even sure IF they believed in anymore. But...because it was such a fixed situation of living for some friends that had been in there since the early 70's and were ordained to there calling it made it very difficult to just walk away,eventually most of them did. Some I don't know if or where they are but we all started on the same note,everyone that went to that first twig fellowship, we were all on that same level at first..looking for answers to life,the bible salvation....a change, and for me The Way was a saftey net so I thought. Spiritually it became a disaster for me a obsesive compulsive dissorder of knowing scripture and selling the class,nothing else mattered to me. Little did I know it was twisted scripiture for I knew very little of the bible in the get go,but I did have a love for God like a innocent child which was sweet. That sweetness became SOUR the longer I stayed involved with The Way til it became a sickness inside of my soul attempting to kill my spirit. As I look back I wondered how that happened and the only answer I have is the greed of man to make a buck off the bible and adorn themselves with things or man of god status,and a big spiritual warfare on whom we were on the dark side of. Never to win only intending to fight and stand and walk the walk until we ultimatly collapse from sick ness.
  3. hmmm....other people NO! myself yes.(back then)
  4. My father was there and told me this. He wrote the book on C5A fire extinction safety. We were in Dover for 3 yrs then went to Tinker AFB where I became involved with The Way. He was sent back there when I was sitting at Emporia Kansas listening to vpw speak on the "psychological hoax",but I'll never forget him talking to me about it and trying to warn me about TWI.
  5. My Father was stationed at Dover AFB Dover DE. when we brought back the 913 bodies from Jonestown. Day after day we were taking caskets out of C-5A Jets (we Called them pigs, because of the size, and the black painted nose on the front of the jet. Couple that with the way the front of the jet opens, and it looks like a pig opening it’s mouth) We processed the bodies in a hanger called the black hanger, which we could drop the temperature down to help slow down the decomposition process while we tried to ID the people by different means.
  6. (Just to save some people time in looking this up) page 2 Law-enforcement agencies pressed on with their investigations. The FBI is trying to determine if there was a plan to kill Congressman Leo Ryan even before he went to Jonestown. In addition, the bureau was investigating the possibility that there are assassination squads made up of surviving cultists and a hit list left behind by Jones, as some defectors from the temple feared. The Secret Service, assuming that the President or Vice President might be on such a list, if one exists, joined the probe. Since some members of the temple in San Francisco refused to cooperate with FBI interviewers, a federal grand jury will likely be convened to question them under oath. The apprehensions about hit squads were fueled partly by statements from master self-publicist Mark Lane, who has made a career out of pushing assassination conspiracy theories and was one of the cult's lawyers. After being hired by Jones, Lane protested in a press release: "It makes me almost weep to see such an incredible experiment, with such vast potential for the human spirit and the soul of this country, to be cruelly assaulted by the intelligence operations." After the cultists gunned down Ryan and his four American companions, and then engaged in their act of self-destruction, Lane claimed he had known all along that Jones was unstable and that the temple members had rehearsed mass suicide. But he never warned Ryan and the others about the cult's potential for violence. Last week Lane grabbed more headlines by claiming that he knew there was an $11 million Peoples Temple fund set aside to assassinate defecting cultists, public officials and reporters who had somehow offended Jones. Lane said he even knew the numbers of the foreign bank accounts in which most of the funds were kept. He claimed that he had given this information to the FBI. That agency was checking out a variety of such reports but had not confirmed them. Yet to be determined by investigators in the U.S. and Guyana was just how much cash, property and other assets still belonged to the cult and whether any of them could be seized as repayment for the costs the ritual of death had incurred. The temple's longtime lawyer, Charles Garry, said assets in Guyana might be used for this purpose but not those in the U.S. Said he: "I don't intend to let them get away with that. It's an ongoing church. Temple money is not subject to government interference." Just what will happen to those who survived Jonestown, some only because they were luckily away from the commune at the fatal moments, is not at all clear. Eight of the more elderly survivors returned to the U.S. last week, after being released by police in Georgetown because they had committed no crimes and witnessed nothing that would help Guyanese authorities in their investigations. Grover Davis, 79, said he had jumped into a ditch when the suicides were ordered by Jones and pretended to be dead until everyone had left. Why? "Because I didn't want to die," he said. Hyacinth Thrash, 76, recalled that she had felt ill and had slept through the entire poison-taking ritual. When she awoke and saw no movement, she said, "I thought everybody had run off. I started crying and wailing, 'Why did they leave me? Why did they leave me?' " And then she found out why.
  7. Go to Timemagazine.com under nov 78 and dec 78 for more info. A search for answers to the questions of Jonestown The grisly remains of Jonestown's dead had been brought to the U.S. and stacked tidily in coffin-like aluminum transfer cases in a huge gray hangar at Delaware's Dover Air Force Base. The shacks and other buildings at the Jonestown commune in Guyana were shuttered and silent. Most of the 80 Jonestown survivors waited restlessly at the Victorian Park Hotel in Georgetown, pending a decision by Guyanese authorities on whether they would be allowed to leave or be held as witnesses, and in some cases defendants, in future murder trials. The tragic saga of Jonestown was far from over. At Dover, teams of military pathologists, FBI technicians and civilian embalmers worked to identify the 911 corpses (the count now seemed official and final) and prepare them for burial or cremation. Yet the condition of the remains and the lack of fingerprint records for many victims meant the process was slow—and in many cases would prove futile. Autopsies were to be conducted on seven bodies: Cult Leader Jim Jones, Cult Physician Larry Schacht and five others selected at random. Officials decided that trying to pin down the precise cause of death for all victims would be impractical and pointless. The Government had not yet decided what to do with the remains. Residents of Dover feared that unidentified or unclaimed bodies might be buried near their small town (pop. 28,500) in massive numbers and become a macabre shrine of sorts. Predicted Dover Mayor Charles A. Legates: "You could expect martyrdom, hordes of people making an annual pilgrimage on the anniversary of Jonestown. We just couldn't handle that." Many of the victims' relatives hoped that the bodies that can be identified would be flown home for burial. But representatives of the relatives complained that many of them cannot afford the $275 that Government officials estimate as the cost of moving each coffin from Delaware to burial sites on the West Coast. The task of removing the bodies from Guyana and embalming them was expensive, but the Government would not yet predict the total costs. The fact that U.S. taxpayers were bearing the cost upset at least two Congressmen, Illinois Republican Philip Crane and Rhode Island Democrat Edward Beard. They publicly protested the use of federal funds (unofficial estimates of the cost have run as high as $8 million) to transport and process the decayed remains. Said Crane: "Although the entire situation is deplorable, the responsibility to bring the loved ones back to the United States rests with the families, not the Federal Government." Crane demanded to know who in the State Department had authorized the operation (it was the decision of Secretary of State Cyrus Vance). 1 | 2 Next
  8. They were brought back on a C5-A.
  9. Ready for the Mosh Pit? This kid is!
  10. I found this in other threads it may intrest some people. Does any one remember this tape? I still have it, it was so wild. VP blamed the Jim Jones Kool-aid cult-suicide on the CIA predominently because they had planes "ready" in Florida. This was probably my first red-flag...don't ask me why I stayed...maybe because I was only 20 then? and VERY impressionable still! Wierwille, Jonestown, & totalitarian "cults", exploitative manipulation, TWI-style The Thirteenth Tribe 1978 - The Current Psychological Hoax 1976 Corps Meetings VPW - A Patton Wannab
  11. Just want to share this with some greasespoters one of my favorite thinkers. April 3, 2007 - Tuesday Empowering Soul Through The Feminine - An Interview with Marion Woodman by Michael Bertrand Category: Dreams and the Supernatural MB: Your whole work seems to be in a way about soul making. MW: I would say that's true - or soul mirroring. More and more I tend to see the soul expressing itself in body symptoms - in the way the body moves, in the dreams. I see it almost as a prisoner with the complexes squeezing in to take the life out of it. So, I try to do the mirroring that the parents were not able to do. The soul just became more and more encased. It wasn't heard in a child's body. It wasn't seen. And that's because the parents often have their own agenda as to what the child is, so they want it to act and speak in a certain way. The result is that the soul goes underground. I see therapy as an attempt to reconnect what that child has lost, the soul child. MB: There are a lot of books out on the concept of the soul. Do you have a definition? MW: Well, for me, the soul is the divine part of us that is embodied in this physical form for a few years. Eventually it is released, but I see soul as the embodied part. I see spirit as the energy, the disembodied energy that can come in to union with the soul in the body. For example, a great dancer like Nureyev can prepare his instrument. His muscles can be in perfect shape through his attention and his concentration. So, his consciousness, his light in his body--which for me would be soul--can be a perfect instrument. But, he's a great dancer when spirit is in union with that instrument. The leap is in the union of soul and spirit. MB: So, a lot of your work is freeing up the soul so that it can be able to get in that union? MW: Yes, so the soul is strong enough to be able to accept that union. If it is weak, or if the body is not conscious, the spirit could come flashing in and cause a psychotic episode. It's like a Rolls Royce engine in a Volkswagen car. The energy could blast the container to pieces and that does happen to people. It's in that surrender to the transcendent...that art is created. I think of the soul as feminine, because it's the receiver--in both men and women. The artist, for example, has to have a receiver and just hopes to God that the spirit will come and touch into soul so that there will a poem come out of that union or a piece of music or art. It's in that surrender to the transcendent, or however you want to call the spirit energy, that art is created. That manifests in dreams. A lot of people dream that there's going to be a wedding and the bride is all ready but there is no groom or there's something wrong with the groom. He's too young or he's got no legs or no heart or he's dying. Sometimes there's something wrong with the bridesmaid--the shadow side of the bride. So the union can't take place until they come together as equals and some people are at that stage now. MB: It seems that's the place at the end of a long quest. Does that have to be done through processes like psychoanalysis? Not everyone is going to be able to find the therapist to get them there. MW: I don't think it has to come through psychoanalysis. I mean not many people will get there if it did. I think it can come through life, with an experience, through loss--if people care enough about consciousness. You know, what does this loss - of relationship, of my partner in love, the job - mean? Suffering does seem to give us a chance to really come to consciousness. I think the world we're in so many people would rather go into an addiction or into unconsciousness. The journey I'm talking about is a conscious journey and certainly many people in the past, through their religious faith, have gone on this journey. But, I do see psychotherapy as a speeding up of the psychic process. In the Middle Ages people were terrified of miners and blacksmiths. Miners went into the earth and raped it before the jewels or minerals were ready to come out. They thought this was going against God's timing and that they would be punished. There is a point...where people are addicted to being victims. It's very important to want to walk on your own. A lot of people have similar feelings about therapists and analysts, that they are raping the unconscious by putting this kind of heat on the psyche. What this process does is speed up the maturation process and one has to be strong to take that kind of fire. Not everybody that goes into therapy goes into the fire. MB: No. They step back or... MW: They fool themselves. They're just not committed and are more interested in being supported than they are in doing the work. That sounds rough, and I certainly support so long as I see a need. Some people come in very, very broken and then one does support, but there is a point I think in our culture where people are addicted to being victims. It's very important to want to walk on your own legs instead of on crutches. MB: You said something like staying with the process is what matters, through imagery... MW: Yes, and body symptoms and experiences that just seem to come in from nowhere. It's amazing how synchronistic things become when you're going through the process. You can get to the point where you can hardly tell the difference between inner and outer. When you realize that inner and outer are the same the kind of person that you love in your dreams will be the kind that you are seeking in your outer life or indeed are married to. As the inner relationship changes the outer relationship changes or you find a different person outside. MB: Dreams seem to be of primary importance in getting in touch with what's stopping the process or encasing the soul. MW: I put dreams and body symptoms on a par. Dreams bring to consciousness what's happening in the body. The dream imagery will tell you what the blocked energy in the body is about. For example, if you've got a frozen shoulder, often if you work on that the dream will tell you the conflicts that are holding that shoulder frozen. So, I keep working with dreams and body images together. MB: You have people do all different types of bodywork? MW: I don't think it matters what kind you do. I think it's the practitioner that matters. That means for me that they will not be trying to exert their own power, that they will allow the soul to express itself through the body just as it expresses itself through the psyche. In my experience the soul has been so raped that it just can't deal with power. It just turns off completely from anybody that tries to use power over it. MB: So the process is fairly subtle and empathic. MW: Yes, it's very subtle, because we're so used to power we don't even recognize it. Often the body recognizes it before the ego does. In other words, the ego may like a certain practitioner, but the body doesn't want to work with that person and will pull the energy back. You have to really look at that when it happens. I've worked with people that I've really, really liked and yet when they touched my hand it said, "Thank you and good-bye". The energy just went out. The practitioner knew it had gone out and I knew and we knew we couldn't work together. Afterwards she found out from her own teacher that she was moving into another level of giving up power and my body had picked that up. MB: When you talk about giving up power so many women feel they're only just coming into their power, so the word power has a lot of connotations. MW: I'm using the word in the sense of controlling somebody else or trying to control yourself or your own body. An anorexic, for example, will drive her body as if - well, in their dreams they dream about concentration camps and Nazis, just so so cruel to the body. What I strive for is empowerment, where you sense your own strength right through your whole being. When I'm talking about power I'm talking about the kind of attitude that does not value other people, certainly isn't interested in soul and couldn't care less about holy spirit. They just leave no room at all for things to happen. What I strive for is empowerment, where you sense your own strength right through your whole being, that you are in touch with your feelings, anxieties and needs in your body. You are grounded in that and are embodied and through that embodiment you are empowered. You can act out of who you are, stand in your own truth and express your own truth. At the same time - and here's the paradox - you're strong enough to step aside and let the much greater energy through. That's a real strength, the real power too, because you're in the tao if you're able to do that and not trying to push your own stupid little ego desires and trying to force them on yourself and other people. To me that's power. MB: You have said that you try to write your books in a way that's not of the will of the patriarchy. You're trying to write from your own voice, in a different way, trying to write from the feminine. MW: Yes. I don't always succeed and the more I work with it the more I'm coming into that feminine voice, but I used to be able to work according to the laws of unity and emphasis and coherence and I used to lecture from that point of view. But, there was nothing spontaneous and it didn't leave for anything to come flashing through. I found it very boring. MB: I read a paragraph in your books and all of a sudden there'll be a line in there coming right out of left field that will be totally pertinent and it will stop me. I can't read the book for a couple of weeks. MW: I don't experience it as coming out of left field, but I know people do. I think it's because I'm so used to working with the unconscious. I work with dreams six, seven hours a day so I'm used to the logic of the unconscious and it is very logical in its own way. It will just fire in an image that just hits you right in the belly, but sort of brings it all together and says, "Okay, you want to bring together emotions, intellect, imagination - there's the image." And it does make your gooseflesh zip up on your arms. People have told me they don't understand the books at all, but their stomach is going round and their heart's beating fast and they can't understand why. It's because the unconscious is ringing in at the body level. I assume that's what's going on. MB: You're hitting something that some part of one knows is true. MW: Yes. I don't try to do that. MB: No, you wouldn't succeed. MW: No, I wouldn't. I just let it flash through and I hope I never do understand it. I think if I ever did I'd lose it. You know, it's like after Gretzky saw himself playing hockey on TV he couldn't hit the goal for a few weeks. He suddenly got his consciousness between him and the goal. I think he's a real Zen hockey player and in that sense I'm a Zen writer. I really don't try to do that, but I'm delighted when it happens. MB: Your writing in some way is an antidote to what's been called patriarchal thinking, some way of moving out of the bind that we seem to be in. MW: I try to stay more with feeling and imagery is, of course, tied into that feeling. I want to make clear that I don't associate patriarchy with men any more. To me men are the victims of patriarchy just as much as women are, in fact moreso. I know many women are now coming into their femininity and they're looking for a masculine to balance that in themselves and they dream of poor broken men with no hearts and no legs. They're often little boys who've been smashed over the mouth so that they're very damaged. I think the full horror of what's happened to the masculine is just beginning to come into consciousness and to me patriarchy is a power principle of which Nazism was the epitome. I think all of us have to really look so carefully at how we collude with patriarchy. We're so used to it that we don't even know how we're being struck by it. MB: In these buildings and architecture and technology and air conditioning, whatever, it all seems to be a product. We live McLuhan's curse, that the medium is indeed the message. MW: I always think in terms of microcosm and macrocosm and I think the body is the microcosm and time is the macrocosm. Every addict that I've every worked had to have their knees against the wall before they did anything really. They have to come to a place where they're on their knees asking for help and it's choosing between life and death. I have faith that...the feminine will come into consciousness - the manifestation of light in matter, that matter is sacred. That may sound apocalyptic, but I suspect we may have to suffer on this planet a lot more before we're going to change. But, I also have huge faith. I do believe in the evolution of consciousness and the evolution of God and I think that the feminine side of God is now going to come into consciousness and we don't want her. She sure is going to make one chaos of patriarchy and yet if she isn't brought to consciousness the planet is going to die. We know that, and we'll die in our own garbage. So, I have faith that, maybe not in my lifetime but the feminine will come into consciousness. By that I mean the manifestation of light in matter, that matter is sacred, and that God can be manifested through light in matter. That's what the French Impressionists were trying to paint and what the Romantics were trying to write music about. MB: So, the Gaia principle and all these ideas that are coming to the fore are ways of bringing this symbology at least here and the reality... MW: I think the reality will come. We are living in the atomic age and Einstein is about matter releasing into energy and that's what I'm talking about. Unconscious matter is actually, at a cellular level, capable of becoming energy and radiating light. So long as we just go along defiling it and thinking that we've got the right to do as we please we're raping the feminine side of God and we will not get away with it. We do it to our bodies. We treat them like junk shops. MB: A question about Leaving My Father's House. It's quite different from your other ones in that you've had three other participants. MW: I like other people to have a chance to express their creativity and felt that each of those women was totally able to express their own experience and what was the point of me getting between her and the reader. I had my input in the book. It's an example of stepping aside. That book wanted to be. The three of them all started writing at the same time. They were all totally on their own, miles apart, beginning a process of articulation and that's how it turned out. MB: Is the process for doing this sort of work different for men and women? MW: I think the rituals involved are different. Women's rituals tend to be around body, menstruation, women's biological worlds. Men's rituals, I'm sure, are around men's biological worlds. They'll likely be on a very spiritual level. Every process is different. No two women's process is the same either. So I think while the imagery is different in men's and women's dreams and certainly while the energy in the body is different - you know, when I worked with men only in body groups I used to get blown against the wall. But, there is an archetypal part that is very similar. MB: The journey, the quest. MW: Yes, the fundamental images of the quest seem to me very much the same. In the man's dreams he has to separate out from the mother, then reconnect and find the virgin within himself. I think many men think that once they've found mothering they've found the feminine and they aren't anywhere near the virgin in themselves, with that kind of femininity. But, it's all beginning to flower. I do have men in my practice. I like to hold that balance. But, I like to take 30 women away into nature alone and let the process take over. Most women can't endure being with men at this point. They're too vulnerable. They don't know what their own femininity is and they can't deal with the confusion of being with men, at least until they get stronger. MB: I've experienced that with men's groups, too. They feel they've finally made some leap to actually get together in some meaningful way and that they need to do the work by themselves for a while. MW: Yes. That's what Robert Bly and I try to do at our conferences. He works with the men, I work with the women and then we bring them together. It's always immensely moving when the two come together. The moment is unforgettable. MB: You once said that once you rely on dreams it's like a rudder in the unconscious and will help convert the conscious ever so subtly. It's important to stay with those images. MW: Yes, I see the whole cycle of life as a ship and a sailboat specifically, because it's not got a motor that's going to propel it. It's going to take its energy from the wind and the sails and the wind, of course, is an image of the holy spirit. Often [the dream] will echo back through the years to the places where you betrayed soul in the same way as you betrayed it in the last 24 hours. At the same time the hand is on the rudder, taking the energy from the sea itself and you have to direct your boat with the imagery that's coming from the unconscious, so that the dream will tell you if you have been true to soul during the last 24 hours. Often it will echo back through the years to the places where you betrayed soul in the same way as you betrayed it in the last 24 hours. It may give you a dream of living in your house when you were 20 years old and what happened yesterday is the same kind of thing you did when you were 20. MB: So the soul wants 24 hour awareness. MW: Yes. Some people, of course, it takes 36 or 48 hours. People have to figure out how long it takes a dream to respond. Some people it's not the same day, it's maybe even the third day. The body will come back to equilibrium through sleep and the psyche also comes back to equilibrium through sleep. It's the dreams that bring equilibrium. They've found that it's not the sleep deprivation so much as the dream deprivation that makes people wild if they don't sleep. MB: I know some people can't get their dreams if they're wakened by an alarm clock or if they don't have enough sleep or they'll get them later if they sleep in. MW: Yes. Certainly the process we've been talking about is dependent on bringing the dream into consciousness, but I think the dream can do a great deal even if you don't get it. It's doing something to re-establish a balance. Even if you only get the feeling of the dream and don't try to interpret at all the feeling can give you a very different kind of balance for your day.
  12. I have only heard of it as mstar1 explained,and it can be very good therapy.
  13. However, most of the first ladies color there hair! Except Barbara Bush.
  14. Thank You Veterans!!! http://www.slide.com/r/6C-J259vsz-k6XDYIHE...lt_embedded_url
  15. Yummy http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z6S7dYxwh8s
  16. Here is a clip if you get a chance watch 1-10 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VSYbhtbsJTc
  17. She's a deep thinker, I have her spiral staircase audio,it is good .I can't believe she was a nun! I also love Caroline Myss,she will just straight talk punch you in the face(in a good way!) and get you attentiom on spiritual matters.
  18. Visit the Jonestown Memorial website (Link takes you outside the Rick A. Ross Institute web site) Letters from Jonestown New Career on the Hill For Survivor of Killings Basketball saved family Who Died at Jonestown? Jonestown survivor set to replace US Democratic Rep Lantos An overdue memorial in Oakland Jim Jones' grandson tries to rebuild family name Wall to remember 276 children who died in Jonestown, week of November 15-21 Rob Jones, grandson of People's Temple founder Jim Jones, writing fresh chapter to family history as prized USD recruit The son who survived Jonestown BBC interview with Jim Jones Jr, son of cult leader Jim Jones (mp3) Cult classic Portrait of infamous cult's rise and fall Lessons of Jonestown Jonestown: Low point in American journalism Two new documentaries revisit Jonestown Doomsday dream believer 28 years later No charges filed against son in 1980 murders Ex-Berkeley man held in family slayings 'Temple' doesn't reveal tragedy's hows and whys Letter from Tim Stoen After 30 years, Jim Jones aide seeks forgiveness Guyana's Foreign Trade Minister Calls On Opposition To Tell All On Jonestown Keeping her brother's memory alive New revelations on Jonestown tragedy He lived to tell Brief sojourn to hell still vivid 25 years later Hell's 25-Year Echo: The Jonestown Mass Suicide Jones disciple recovers from, recalls painful past Erin Ryan wants father to be appreciated Jonestown Massacre Memory Fades in Guyana Jonestown Tragedy Mourned, 25 Years Later Jonestown survivor: 'Wrong from every point of view Jonestown survivors recall fateful day 'Timeline: Road to tragedy in Jonestown Jonestown massacre - 25 years later The day they 'stepped across' Remembering Jonestown Massacre Former local newspaperman recalls interviews, events Journalist shot at airstrip says Jones wielded great power Former People's Temple building is open to possibilities The Devil and John Walker What was the lure? Villagers Recall Jonestown Massacre Veteran recalls recovery after Jonestown suicides Jonestown Survivors Remember Jonestown only the beginning of episodic cult nightmare Jonestown massacre + 20: Questions linger Madman in Our Midst: Jim Jones and the California Cover Up 'A cult is like abusive relationships... You are trapped, like a caged animal' Jonestown's Horror Fades but Mystery Remains I REMEMBER..November 18, 1978: Of cults and death Cult's headquarters becomes a church House of Representitives Report on Jonestown--Findings The Assassination of Representative Leo J. Ryan and the Jonestown, Guyana Tragedy Affidavit of Deborah Layton Blakey Jonestown Suicides Shocked World The Rise and Fall of Jim Jones The End To Innocent Acceptance Of Sects Most Peoples Temple Documents Still Sealed The power of persuasion Jonestown Audiotape Dead followers of Jim Jones lay before his "throne" Jerry Brown and Jim Jones The Rick A. Ross Institute email: info@rickross.com URL: http://www.rickross.com
  19. It was said the bodies were so bad by the people that had to clean up Jonestown,that they had to order snow shovels,because when they'd pick them up they would just fall apart. So the body bags ,the clean up,all that was yet another trauma for those who had to clean it up.
  20. You can review the FBI's summaries of the tapes at http://www-rohan.sdsu.edu/~remoore/jonestown/tapes/fbi.html.
  21. The bodies of the dead were flown to Dover AFB,there is no question about the count.
  22. Glad your here! It took me ten years after I was out of TWI to come to terms with it. Wish I would have had the support from a place like this. Where else can you find people with what you've been through? Therapy helped me too(expensive!)but worth it,if you have the right therapist,my biggest problem was all the scripture in my head and the feeling of having "betrayed" God and my calling(with I found was just dumb to even think that)because if God had a calling for us to follow it would not be under the direction of a liar. Begin life and enjoy
  23. Unbelievable! I had never seen this news but very briefly in 78(at that time I had put away all news ,magazines etc like vpw said too and focused only on the word! I had just finished taking "the class" I remember my parents freaking out and looking more closley what I was into,trying to warn me of deception in cult groups and i thougth they were nuts! It only made me more determined to get completely "sold out" to twi and quit college.go wow and join the way corp. In watching this tonight,it is very clear that Jim Jones didn't start out to be in what the end he was and neither did vpw or okie boy . However, spiritually bad seed was in the mix,making it worse and worse every year (red dawn big red flag!) Psychological Hoax(why so much defense )I think the Jonestown incident hit vpw a little tooooo close to home as he gathered his chickens live at Emporia to remind them to STAND and having done all Anyone still have that tape? It would be intresting to see it on paper here as vpee s spoken word.
  24. Just moving this up for tonight. Hear from Jim Jones' son In 1978, more than 900 Americans in a group called Peoples Temple, led by Rev. Jim Jones, were poisoned by cyanide-laced punch in Jonestown, Guyana. Share your memories of JonestownPreview the premiere Web-exclusive: Click here to watch a sneak preview of the two-hour documentaryMore web-only content Survivors speak Three Peoples Temple members talk to NBC News not long after they escaped from Jonestown on the day of the massacre. Producer's diary: Doing justice to Jonestown Where did 'Drink the Kool-Aid' come from?ExplorePinned VideoMore Video highlights Profiles of the NBC newsmen killed at Jonestown Video 1978 report on the suspected shooters Documentaries Video NBC producer’s account of attacks Documentaries Video An eyewitness account of massacre Documentaries Video A mother’s excitement turns to horror Documentaries Video Father searches for missing daughter Documentaries Video Congressman Leo Ryan remembered Documentaries Video Three Peoples Temple members who escaped massacre Documentaries Family members lost Father searches for daughter missing at Jonestown A grieving father searches for his daughter after the massacre at Jonestown. Killed congressman Congressman Leo Ryan remembered Andrea Mitchell, NBC News, reports on the life of Congressman Leo Ryan, a California mayor. More information Jonestown Institute Web site Get more information about the November 18, 1978 tragedy.
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