Guest Friday OT -- "I Am God's Socialist"

Sigmapolis

Minister of Economy
Aug 10, 2011
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Waukee
Hi everybody. @Angie is enjoying the festivities in London right now, so she invited me to post a guest Friday OT.

Once upon a time, a boy was born in small-town Indiana in 1931. Once he grew up to be a man, he moved to Indianapolis and became a noted civil rights leader in the region during the late 1950s and 1960s when this was not easy or popular in a southern-influenced state like Indiana.

He was the director of the city's human rights commission. He and his wife adopted numerous nonwhite children, including being the first white couple in Indiana history to adopt a black child in 1961. The charity work of his organization was extensive. They fed anyone needing a meal. They provided housing to the homeless and refugees, a home to hundreds of children orphaned or stuck in the foster system, and provided a path to keep people out of jail or the nasty, inhuman psychiatric facilities of the 1960s and 1970s.

His organization was multiracial, including every demographic group in significant numbers, during an era when the country was still struggling with the upshot of Brown v. Board and the Civil Rights Act. Many of his followers were older black people who grew up under Jim Crow in the South.

Then they met him -- he called himself God's Socialist. And he gave them love, comfort, and community for the first time in their lives after decades of society beating them down.

That man's name was Jim Jones. This guy...

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I think many of you know how this story ends. Don't drink the Flavor Aid.

Now back to the OT --

What are some of the cults and cult leaders you find morbidly fascinating for their strangeness, the unknown nuances of their story, or for other reasons you'd like to discuss?
 
Anyone remember that God-Socks guy that would come to campus? Was he in a cult?
 
R Ron Hubbard is a good one.

This is slightly off topic because it's far from a cult, but I recently read a book on Kurt Cobain that in part addressed people's infatuation with him all these years after his death.
 
I had a pretty good idea who that was before the spoiler.

I remember being in 6th grade and researching the Jonestown massacre for a current events paper. Even Time and Newsweek had pretty graphic detail of the events. Everyone else did a fluff piece and mine was about the murder/suicide of over 900 people. I think my teacher was concerned...
 
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Also, that Hitler guy seemed like a bad dude.
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Jim Jones and that whole debacle was interesting. The Mormon church, Scientology, Heaven's Gate (and their matching cheap Nike's), David Koresh and his disgusting ilk, Charles Manson's family.
 
I'm not sure if this qualifies, but here's my curiosity.

There was girl that sat next to me in my Trans Log class back in '94 that was a big Dead Head. She'd seen the Grateful Dead around 75-80 times. She was extremely intelligent and completely unassuming when you talked with her about any topic, but whenever I would talk to her about the Dead, she would undergo a complete 180 in her persona. It went beyond mere infatuation.

She tried to get me to go with her and a group of friends to see them in Chicago over the summer, but I was doing an internship at the time. I kinda regret not experiencing a Dead show while Jerry was alive (he died the next year).
 

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