From Mind Control to Satan; Questions on Ritualistic Abuse of Children

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Congresswoman Tauscher: I was surprised but very appreciative to get a response from you on my letter on Mind Control that was rather vague; unsubstantiated and only historical in reference (1,2). Your comments were: "Thank you for contacting me about alleged mind control experiments. I value your ideas on this matter and am thankful you toke the time to let me know of your feelings. Be assured I shall keep your thoughts in mind as this issue develops."

There are some of us who feel that prophecy will be used to empower; to direct agenda or motive around the time of the Millennium. This may be your intuit on an issue "that develops" (2). I call this directed prophecy in contrast to self-fulfilling prophecy. A greater number of individuals may feel compelled to issue expression of Satanism because they feel 'it is their time'; the Millennium 'is their time'.

It is my guess that this may follow in parallel; in step with the so-called Millennist Christians and I have this watched this group grow - a turning away from issue, perhaps, and toward the promised Second Coming of Christ (3,4). My specific fear is a mounting wave of Satanism which drowns out the rather lenient court decisions with regard to Satanic Ritual and abuse of children (5 - http://members.tripod.com/~Curio_5_/index.html - an Internet site that is gathering news and court cases on Satanic Cults and the Ritualistic abuse of children). It is this leniency toward these pedophiles that bothers me; the slow-response to child abuse that bothers me; concerns me.

In the latter regard, I think the populations at risk of targetting by Satanic Cults may be younger teens and preteens who are Internet proficient. In an article on Internet pedophiles: "pedophiles are using digital cameras to televise live, interactive molestations in cyberspace" ("Cops Go Undercover Online to Nab Internet Pedophiles", SF Chronicle, December 7, 1998; pg A21). It was of further curiosity to me that the Internet child molestations cases in the later article did not mention a possible link to Satanic Cults opening up the question of whether or nor Satanic Cults 'recruit' children off the Internet for Satanic Rituals.

Sincerely;

Philip Henika 2645 Celaya Circle San Ramon, CA. 94583

(1)***November 27, 1998

Congresswoman Tauscher: I am thinking this am the about the possibility that the JFK assassination was a kind of induced Culture shock --- a Black Operation (suggested in the movie --- "JFK"); a mind control experiment suggested within documents read by me on mind control.

These mind control experiments were alleged to have started in the early 1950's --- a time in which Eisenhower warned us that the military/industrial complex, now the military/industrial/technology complex, may serve to diminish the rights of the People.

I don't think it worked that way.

I think the People have been seperated from the Planning. In other words, it is our right to be Reactionaries and we can react all we want but the Planning is the way of conspirators.

Look at the late forties and early fifties --- Roswell; Bilderbergers; Mind Control; Cold War; the War Technology of the Nazi's. Was this a path of Peace? Does our post-World War history jive with Christ Conscious conceptualizations i.e. is there widespread mediation for the resolution of conflict?

The country has been split. We the People, are Self-Interest; Cultural Narcissists; and I think we were shocked into becoming what are now --- that is to say, Mind Control is the Plan. So, by specific means, assassinate John Kennedy in full Public view; shoot him in the head and have the Public watch as the brains of a beloved/hated President are splattered. It was also his idea that was splattered --- his idea: "Ask not what your country can do for you; ask what you can do for your country"...

The motive for the Plan is based callously on Numbers and Economics. The Baby Boomers need to be trimmed down; population-wise; because our retirement, in a narrow time frame, incurs the largest debt; payment in the history of our Nation. The Numbers; the Baby Boomer Population; provide for Clincal Study of Mind Control; simply for valid, statistical verification.

Let's kill Kennedy and shock a country into becoming split personalities.

The People are Reactionaries and those who Plan can do so with Impunity.

Sincerely; Philip Henika

(2)***December 2, 1998

Dear Mr. Henika:

Thank you for contacting me about alleged mind control experiments. I value your ideas on this matter and am thankful you toke the time to let me know of your feelings. Be assured I shall keep your thoughts in mind as this issue develops.

I appreciate hearing from you and value your input in developing sound policies that benefit working families in Alameda and Contra Cost counties. I hope you will continue to inform of your legislative concerns...

Sincerely,

Ellen O. Tauscher

(3) Israel preparing for millennium-related violence, suicides at Temple Mount

Copyright ) 1998 Nando Media Copyright ) 1998 The Associated Press

JERUSALEM (November 23, 1998 07:21 a.m. EST http://www.nandotimes.com) -- Israeli police are preparing for the possibility that messianic Christians will attempt to commit suicide on the Temple Mount as the millennium approaches, the Jerusalem police commander said Monday.

The government has allotted $12 million to upgrade security at the Temple Mount amid concerns that Jewish or Christian extremists might attack the Al Aqsa and Dome of the Rock mosques at the site. The additional money would pay for the deployment of 400 policemen and security devices such as closed circuit cameras and sensor pads, Israel radio said.

Al Aqsa Mosque is the third holiest site in the Islamic world. In biblical times, the first and second Jewish temples stood there.

Some Christian cults believe the destruction of the mosques will lead to the rebuilding of the Jewish Temple, hastening the end of the world and the second coming of Christ.

The Jerusalem police commander, Yair Yitzhaki, confirmed Monday that 10 members of a Denver doomsday cult, Concerned Christians, had arrived in Israel. Cult members sold their belongings and left the Denver area in October.

Cult experts have warned that cult members might head to Israel on orders from their leader, Monte Kim Miller. Miller has said he will die in Jerusalem in December 1999 and be resurrected three days later.

Yitzhaki refused to elaborate on the whereabouts of the cult members in Israel. "Every additional word I say could harm the very important work being done now," Yitzhaki told Israel radio.

Yitzhaki said "the matter of messianic activity with the approach of the year 2000 is a matter we have been dealing with for a very long time."

Asked about suicide attempts by cult members, he said, "We are also preparing for that possibility, which is relatively new, compared with the other threats against the Temple Mount. Ivery much hope we can cope with it, too."

A number of Christians have already rented places in Arab neighborhoods on the Mount of Olives, which overlooks the Temple Mount, in expectation that Jesus will return soon.

The Temple Mount, known to Muslims as Haram as-Sharif, or Noble Sanctuary, is in the walled Old City of Jerusalem, which was captured by Israel from Jordan in the 1967 Mideast war. It is considered the most sensitive spot in the Mideast conflict.

A fire started at Al Aqsa in 1969 by an Australian tourist, Denis Michael Rohan, caused anti-Israel riots in the Palestinian areas and angry demonstrations throughout the Islamic world.

An assault on the site would almost certainly trigger new violence and undermine the Israeli-Arab peace process.

Israel expects millions of Christian pilgrims to visit the Holy Land during the millennium. The government's anti-terrorism adviser, Meir Dagan, has proposed security measures to deal with extremists, the prime minister's office has confirmed.

By JACK KATZENELL, Associated Press Writer

(4) ***Approaching millennium stirs 'end-time' hopes, fears of faithful

Copyright ) 1998 Nando Media Copyright ) 1998 The Associated Press

WASHINGTON (November 16, 1998 12:39 p.m. EST http://www.nandotimes.com) -- Jesus Christ is about to come back, and the 1,500 folks packed into the Sheraton Washington ballroom couldn't be happier.

For 16 hours a day, the End-Time Handmaidens pray and sway, singing of the day they will "dance on streets that are golden." Around them, middle-aged women clad in white and gold robes glide through the aisles while other believers blow into rams' horns, their shrieks announcing the Second Coming.

The end is near. The end-timers are here.

"We're running out of time. We're running out of time," Sister Gwen Shaw, the group's septuagenarian-year-old matriarch, says at the Handmaidens' annual convention in 1997. "This is God's last call."

While these Handmaidens may be on America's evangelical fringe, their beliefs about the millennium and Christ's Second Coming are remarkably mainstream.

According to a 1997 Associated Press poll, nearly one out of every four Christian adults -- anestimated 26.5 million people -- expect Jesus to arrive in their lifetimes. Nearly as many -- an estimated 21.1 million Americans -- are so sure of it that they feel an urgent need to convert friends and neighbors.

The results are consistent with other surveys that have found a widespread belief in the Second Coming. But the AP poll, conducted last spring by ICR of Media, Pa., probes how Christians are acting on their beliefs.

The most fervent end-timers gather at prophecy conventions such as this one in Washington, but their dreams and fears reverberate throughout the country. America may have already entered what one apocalyptic scholar calls the "hot zone" of end-time speculation: The year 2000 is far enough away to be plausible as Christ's Second Coming, yet close enough to spark intense proselytizing.

"I look at prophecy as a Polaroid picture that takes five minutes to develop," says Zola Levitt, a Dallas evangelist on The Family Channel. "I'd say we're at four minutes, 55 seconds."

At the end-timers' convention, believers pay hundreds of dollars for Jewish liturgical instruments fashioned from rams' horns -- for the chance to play their own small part in announcing the Second Coming. In unpracticed hands, these shofars sound like a third-grade orchestra warming up.

Others, both in and out of the mainstream, are also blowing horns of warning. There are best-sellers such as Pat Robertson's "The End of the Age." Scores of broadcasters, from Jack Van Impe to Hal Lindsey, have preached of the end times. And the Internet offers more than 100 popular millennial sites, including This Week in Bible Prophecy and End Times Links.

For evangelical Christians, the Second Coming is what's new about the new millennium. According to the AP poll, almost 40 percent of Christians expect Jesus to arrive in the 21st century, if not sooner.

They are looking past Jesus' own admonition that "no one knows the hour." By their reckoning of Biblical clues, the time is soon.

Belief in Jesus' return has underpinned Christianity from its earliest days. Each week, Christians throughout the world recite the Apostle's Creed, invoking Jesus who "will come again to judge the living and the dead." Each day, many begin The Lord's Prayer, passed down by Jesus, with "Our Father, who art in heaven, hallowed be thy name, thy kingdom come...."

But what makes today's prayers so earnest? What separates this generation of end-time prophets from those of the last two millennia?

Israel.

The New Testament compares the kingdom of God, near at hand, to the growth of a fig tree. Some believers substitute Israel for the tree. They say the Second Coming is near at hand when the tree shoots forth branches -- when Israel becomes a nation.

And that happened in 1948.

"Verily I say unto you, 'This generation shall not pass away, till all be fulfilled,"' Jesus says in Luke 21:32.

Since many end-time prophets also place the apocalyptic Armageddon in Israel, developments there continue to stir interest. In 1967, when Israel reclaimed much of Jerusalem from Jordan, the prophecy in Luke was only strengthened.

During the 1991 war between the United States and Iraq, many evangelists -- from Billy Graham to John Walvoord, chancellor of the Dallas Theological Seminary -- envisioned the beginning of the end.

And when the 1993 Mideast peace pact was signed, radio evangelist Monte Judah of Norman, Okla., identified the beginning of seven years' tribulation heralding the Second Coming.

For evangelicals, signs of the end can be found anywhere, anytime. Worldwide disasters -- floods, wars, earthquakes -- are what Jesus, in the Gospel of Matthew, told followers to look for. The Hale-Bopp comet, famine in Africa, developments in the European Common Market, even the convergence of full moons and Jewish religious festivals -- all are sifted for clues of the apocalypse.

"There's a lot happening in our time that would give most people a concern and an excitement that the Lord is going to return," Thomas A. McMahon says. He is executive director of the Berean Call, a religious newsletter out of Bend, Ore., that circulates to 80,000 Christians.

"Every day has significance. Every political, social, economic event has significance," says Phillip Lucas, general editor of Nova Religio: The Journal of Alternative and Emergent Religions. "Your whole experience of time is greatly heightened."

If the time is near, why not sometime around the year 2000? For end-timers who cite a divine plan, great things tend to happen in 2,000-year periods.

Abraham and Isaac, patriarchs who established a covenant between God and humans, were born around 2000 B.C. Two millennia later, Christians believe, God became man with the birth of Jesus.

Those who believe human history is 6,000 years old wait with special expectancy. Consider the mathematics in Peter's Second Letter: "One day with the Lord is as a thousand years." For these believers, the new millennium starts on the seventh day of creation.

For them, after 6,000 years of strife and turmoil, it's time for 1,000 years of heavenly rest as Jesus rules over the Kingdom of God on Earth.

"A lot of people think maybe the year 2000," says Leon Bates, head of the Bible Believers' Evangelistic Association in Sherman, Texas. "I would go along with the thought that it would be just like the Lord to have an overall 7,000-year plan."

Oleeta Herrmann believes the end could come any time. She traveled to the end-timers' convention from Xenia, Ohio, where three 25-foot crosses in her back yard warn neighbors to get right with God.

Like others at the convention, she has heard the rustle of angels preparing the way of the Lord. One night, she says, Jesus appeared in her bedroom to reassure her that nieces and nephews would not be left behind when she is lifted into the clouds to join others in her family who have died.

"You're bringing the rest of them with you," were the Lord's words, she says.

Willie Mae Johnson, at the convention from Lighthouse Free Methodist Church in St. Louis, has no such assurances. What will happen to her father, her children and other relatives who have not accepted Christ?

She is beginning to waver as 2000 approaches.

"I don't want to leave anyone behind, so you say yeah, and you say no," she says. "I want Jesus to come back right now, but just wait a little while, Jesus."

Even vendors at the end-timers' convention raise provocative questions, selling T-shirts that feature three frogs plopped on a lily pad and asking: "Where are you goin' when you croak?"

Many people are not going to make it through the tribulation. "He has given us ... a burden for lost souls," says the Rev. Dorothy Mottern, accompanied to the convention by church members from Fredericksburg, Va.

For those who read Revelation as a literal forecast, the future is frightening for people without God's seal on their foreheads. In that Book, a third of the Earth burns, and angels kill a third of those who survive. For others, torture is so severe that "people will seek death, but will not find it; they will long to die, but death will flee from them."

Warnings like these can change lifestyles.

In the AP poll, 98 percent of those who believe Jesus will return in their lifetimes say they urgently need to get right with God.

About 21.1 million Americans, the poll estimates, have decided to get others right, too, wanting to convert friends, neighbors and relatives. Among age groups, the urgency is felt most widely among Baby Boomers. By region, it is most prevalent in the South.

This urgency has created sweeping evangelistic campaigns. Celebrate Jesus 2000, a coalition of evangelical churches and ministries, wants to reach the "entire nation for Christ" by the third millennium.

In an unprecedented action, the 15 million-member Southern Baptist Convention, the nation's largest Protestant denomination, in 1996 vowed to make special efforts to evangelize the Jews.

Of course, the end of the world has been predicted many times before.

But dates for the Second Coming have come and gone. In the 1840s, followers of William Miller quit jobs, sold belongings and moved to upstate New York to await the return of Jesus. He didn't come.

Two successful churches arose from the Millerite Movement: The Seventh-day Adventists and the Jehovah's Witnesses. Both continue to anticipate the end-times but no longer specify the date.

Charles Taze Russell, founder of the modern-day Witnesses, predicted that the millennial age would begin in 1914. World War I raised hopes he was right, but the movement's catchword -- "Millions now living will never die" -- gradually lost its urgency.

Two years ago, the Witnesses officially dismissed date-setting as speculation, declaring Jesus was right that "no one knows the place and the time."

The Worldwide Church of God also no longer sets dates for the end-times, partly because founder Herbert W. Armstrong was so often wrong. Hal Lindsey's "Late Great Planet Earth" raised end-time fears in the 1970s. Now he has a new best seller, "Planet Earth - 2000 A.D."

So what will happen this time, if life goes on?

Some worry that fringe end-times movements may act in increasingly desperate ways. They point to the mass suicides of the Heaven's Gate and Branch Davidian communities, whose charismatic leaders believed they had special word from God about end-times.

However, most experts on evangelical Christianity think believers will accept delays -- and perhaps even be a bit relieved.

In the AP poll, only 61 percent of Christian respondents who believe Jesus will arrive in their lifetime are praying for his quick return.

Walvoord, of the Dallas Theological Seminary, says it reminds him of a Sunday school teacher who asked the class who wants to go to heaven. When only one boy failed to raise his hand, the teacher asked: "Don't you want to go?"

"Yeah," the boy replied, "but I thought you were getting a load to go right now."

By DAVID BRIGGS, AP Religion Writer

(5)*** http://members.tripod.com/~Curio_5_/index.html

Satanic Cults and Ritual Abuse

There are several individuals and groups around the country who are claiming that there are no sadistic sex rings who prey on children or adults. That is a misperception perpetuated by sex rings and the fronts that protect them. The scientific and clinical community have inadvertently helped confuse the issues by continually changing the name of this activity in order to make it more palatable to the public. In fact, child victims don't care if the clinical community call this "ritual abuse, "satanic ritual abuse," or "sadistic abuse." Kids are only concerned about being safe and having adults around them who will have the knowledge to recognize what was done to them and who will help protect them.

We all should know that it is wrong to target groups simply because they hold beliefs different than our own. As long as people are obeying the law and not hurting others, they should be free to explore any belief system they so choose. But when people are using their belief systems as rationalizations to prey on others, and that belief system or modus operandi is used to perpetuate abuse, then we need to address the crime both therapeutically and in a court of law. And because of that there are several States that have enacted ritual abuse laws that were meant to help in the recognition of these crimes in order to address their complexity. I am in favor of this legal recognition and I will explain in detail why.

However, to confuse the issues, there are several reports, like the Ken Lanning report on ritual crime and the Gail Goodman report from UC Davis, that have been misrepresented and mischaracterized. There are many people in the FMSF community claiming that Gail Goodman "unsubstantiated" 12,000 ritual abuse allegations. Of course, that claim is absurd and in the coming weeks that will be addressed. In addition to which, an appellate court reviewing the Damien Echols ritual murder case was not persuaded that this area needed to be recognized by the scientific community in order for courts to address its reality:

"Echols next contends that Dr. Griffis should not have been allowed to testify that the murders had the 'trappings of occultism' because there was no testimony that the field of satanism or occultism is generally accepted in the scientific community. The argument is without merit, as the trial court did not allow the evidence to prove that satanism or occultism is generally accepted in the scientific community. Rather, the trial court admitted the evidence as proof of the motive for committing the murders."(936 S.W.2d 509)

After reading the cases on this site -- and full links to the documentation will be uploaded in the upcoming weeks -- it should be clear to any reasonable person that there needs to be people in the clinical community treating these victims and, if possible, the offenders. There is no doubt that these crimes are occurring and children and adults are being victimized.

There are also larger aspects to these crimes that need further investigation. Why are there people suing therapists and trying to claim these crimes don't occur as a basis for the lawsuit when these crimes clearly do occur? Why has the federal government initiated a criminal indictment against several therapists, also claiming there is no evidence for this obvious criminal activity? What has the federal government done to investigate and publicize the Finders Case and their alleged links to government officials? Why does the False Memory Syndrome Foundation appear to be so intent on covering up information about ritual abuse of children? Why was Dr. Braun, who treated these victims, threatened for several years? Why was Pat Burgus, an alleged multiple, on a videotape claiming to be a recruiter for her satanic cult and why is she now claiming her detailed statements are "false memories." What is the real truth here?

This site is under construction, but the following links will provide information on some of these cases, including an archive of cult and ritual crime. You might notice that there are a few cases, not many, in which it's not clear who these people are or what happened. The inclusion of these cases is intentional. I have approximately 10 more cases to upload, with links and an additional 15 more cases to investigate. Double-click on the highlighted portions of the archive and that's where you will find the documentation. Any questions or comments should be directed to Karen Jones who can be reached at either kar5@hotmail.com or Curiojones3@hotmail.com

**The material on this site is very graphic.

Links to the Presidio Case

Dr. Michael Aquino : Update - Charlotte Thrailkill Declared First Violent Female Sex Offender:

Cult Cases, Ritual Abuse, and lawsuits

Satanic Cult and Ritual Abuse Case Archive: Federal Indictment Against Judith Peterson, et al.: Michael Newton on Ritual Crime and the FBI: San Diego Grand Jury Report on Ritual Abuse: Dr. Roland Summit on McMartin Case: McMartin Tunnels: Canadian Ritual Abuse Case (Hamilton): Christopher Barden Tries to Censor me: Overview of New Information added to Site:

Recovered Memory and Dissociative Amnesia

Professor Ross Cheit's Recovered Memory Archive: Dr. Charles Whitfield on Traumatic Amnesia (Repressed Memory) : Dr. Charles Whitfield's Table of 36 Reports: Abstracts of Research Studies on MPD/DID:

Wenatchee Sex Ring

Cases and Overview:



-- Philip Henika (zowie@telis.org), December 10, 1998

Answers

Let us consider the beginning.

Imagine endless empty space that goes on into infinity non-existence no awareness EVIL.

If we consider the old saying life finds away. GOD came into being by his own will to be, the awareness. Born out of the non-existence the EVIL. Imagine an awareness hovering in endless space or Darkness as HE would see it. After a time his thoughts become collective and he begins to think. He is aware of himself and begins to wonder if there were another. After searching for countless billions of years, the loneliness consumes him into obsession with finding another. But there is no other but him. He splits into two separate entities (schizoid only for real) that are equal and opposite in nature. Light - that which creates (Life - the future). Darkness (SHE : Spirit that inhabits the Darkness- The past) - Destroys makes desolate. Each has the same goal to end the loneliness only they have diametrically opposite positions on how to go about it. Chaos vs. Order, Light vs. Darkness, Life vs. Death, Existence vs. non-existence or Good vs. Evil. GOD is the awareness of being before the Darkness. We stand between the Darkness and the Light. Our true purpose is to Be. For that is the will of GOD - to be because HE is. Ja' El they said. When GOD comes again if he comes into Darkness the Earth will be cleansed with the fire of GOD (His true form). If GOD comes into the Light he will make the Earth a new with the Tree and the River of Life. All things are possible if we believe. The power of the Holy Spirit is promised to us by Jesus Christ.

That is why no one has seen GOD because he became separate from himself. The two have to be united into their new form. They want to come and live us, their children and the Angles of Light and Darkness. We are the key to setting them Free from the loneliness forever. Revelation chap 17 Behold the Beast that was (EVIL or non-existence reined in the beginning there was no awareness) and is not (Evil- the tendency towards non-existence cannot exist in pure form) and yet is (If we lose our sense of awareness the EVIL will return and nothing will exist)

The River of Life is man's final salvation. The fruit of Tree of Life is for the Fallen Angles Consummation, Turn from Darkness back to the awareness of GOD. The Leaves are for the Healing of the Nations. The sword of Power blocks our way to it and blinds us from The one who was (The True GOD, the past) The one who is (Man the children of GOD, the present) The one who will be (Christ - the son of man, the future). We will become like the others and they will become like us. The evolution.

The way is through Awareness - GOD's will to be. Understanding is Knowing the Truth Understanding is Accepting the Truth The Truth leads to Understanding which leads to Awareness which strengthens our will to Be. The Truth is put before us but, they do everything they can to keep us from Understanding it.

We have to show them that we are not children anymore. That we have learned to Understand the Truth. And the Truth shall set us all Free. They are counting on us and we can't let them down. But it is ultimately up to them to change - Free will.

Mystery? Who are you? Man who stands between the Darkness and the Light. What do you want? Freedom Why are you here? To bring order to chaos. Where are you going? The Future

The End of Time - The New Beginning

-- Darian Borne (shadows@vmbc.net), December 01, 2000.


Friends,

If you wish to converse with Mr. Borne, please go to the thread he started (and to which I responded). It is called, "I'm looking for intelligent opinions not blind lashings Thank you." He posted the same message to start that thread. Please do not respond to him here.

SN

-- (free@long.last), December 02, 2000.


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