I think that the COG cult is still alive as a non profit (pet sacrifice?) cult in a valley surrounded by BLM land is creepy enough to warrant suspicion. Endowment $19,383,509. Let that sink in for a moment. The Process Church of The Final Judgment - Wikipedia
The Hivites were a tribe that originated in the area of Canaan in the middle east. It is north of the old site of Sodom and Gomorra at Mt. Baal Hermon near Damascus. If you type in "mt baal hermon" in google earth it will take you there. Kabbalistic, Talmudic, satanic, Moloch, Baal, etc....
Amorites. They appear as an uncivilized and nomadic people in early Mesopotamian writings from Sumer, Akkad, and Assyria, especially connected with the mountainous region now called Jebel Bishri in northern Syria called the "mountain of the Amorites". The ethnic terms Mar.tu (Westerners), Amurru (likely derived from 'aburru', pasture) and Amar were used for them in Sumerian, Akkadian,[2] and Ancient Egyptian respectively. Kurd's hill. National Geographic has portrayed them as lost Caucasians. The locals remember exactly when they showed up, and the Turks, ect.
TY. What's your opinion on this? Do you think it's really a cult that has been going on for such a long time, unchanging its rituals? Seems almost unbelievable, imo. Usually this cult stuff changes over time, no matter where you look. Every now and then, new guys throw in there own two cents, rituals change, beliefs shift etc. Also, I'm a bit sceptical of the bloodline stuff (not saying that
some
of it doesn't ring true).
Sarah Ruth Ashcroft, on the other hand, is totally believable imo when it comes to her experiences in the cult.
Do you think it's really a cult that has been going on for such a long time, unchanging its rituals?
Fundamentally for the most part yes.
Usually this cult stuff changes over time, no matter where you look. Every now and then, new guys throw in there own two cents, rituals change, beliefs shift etc.
I would guess that it has been modified to some degree as time has passed but at it's core the fundamental philosophy and basic tenets seems to have remained intact from what I can see.
I'm a bit sceptical of the bloodline stuff
I'm not sure how much of that I buy either. I think a lot of the bloodline claims are made up to substantiate their "inherited right to rule" claims. However I do believe it is at least possible that some of these people might be able to target their family lines somewhere close due to how closely they intermarry within their own families and with closely associated families. I think it is a mixture of bullshit and perhaps a few claims that might have a little bit of merit but I don't know for sure.
i sometimes wonder if there's a chicken& egg thing going on here - do cults lead to paedophilia - or have paedophiles used religion / spiritual beliefs to justify / mollify a searing conscience
Just ribbin'. I really think I stumbled on something with the Mt. Kisco/ Eden Village/ Sandy hook/Shel Silverstien connection. I could use some extra eyes. I have been working alot, and have little time, as usual.
At the core is Pathological Narcissism. The two things running a cult (creating a Narcissistic Pathological Space) and abuse in all its forms are intertwined.
I think both is true. The cult system is about power and hierachy, which always facilitates power games and violence, and some pedophiles hide behind religion or spiritual beliefs.
Dannielle Blumenthal on Twitter: "1) Starting a new thread to talk about a theory I have on child sex trafficking in the U.S. and internationally. This thoughtstream may be true, known & obvious to others, or totally wrong. #humantrafficking #crime #lawenforcement #criminaljustice #organizedcrime #sociology"
▼ IShallNotFear
Archive of thread: http://archive.is/iOA3F
▼ kazza64
what the actual fuck :( this bitch has got me blocked i dont even know her
▼ think-
I'm still puzzled by this Hivite cult theory, since I haven't had time to look into yet.
Otherwise, it's good to focus on the Children of God, and Sarah Ruth Ashcroft and her friend are totally believable imo.
▼ YogSoggoth
I think that the COG cult is still alive as a non profit (pet sacrifice?) cult in a valley surrounded by BLM land is creepy enough to warrant suspicion. Endowment $19,383,509. Let that sink in for a moment. The Process Church of The Final Judgment - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Process_Church_of_The_Final_Judgment
▼ ESOTERICshade
The Hivites were a tribe that originated in the area of Canaan in the middle east. It is north of the old site of Sodom and Gomorra at Mt. Baal Hermon near Damascus. If you type in "mt baal hermon" in google earth it will take you there. Kabbalistic, Talmudic, satanic, Moloch, Baal, etc....
▼ YogSoggoth
Amorites. They appear as an uncivilized and nomadic people in early Mesopotamian writings from Sumer, Akkad, and Assyria, especially connected with the mountainous region now called Jebel Bishri in northern Syria called the "mountain of the Amorites". The ethnic terms Mar.tu (Westerners), Amurru (likely derived from 'aburru', pasture) and Amar were used for them in Sumerian, Akkadian,[2] and Ancient Egyptian respectively. Kurd's hill. National Geographic has portrayed them as lost Caucasians. The locals remember exactly when they showed up, and the Turks, ect.
▼ think-
TY. What's your opinion on this? Do you think it's really a cult that has been going on for such a long time, unchanging its rituals? Seems almost unbelievable, imo. Usually this cult stuff changes over time, no matter where you look. Every now and then, new guys throw in there own two cents, rituals change, beliefs shift etc. Also, I'm a bit sceptical of the bloodline stuff (not saying that some of it doesn't ring true).
Sarah Ruth Ashcroft, on the other hand, is totally believable imo when it comes to her experiences in the cult.
▼ ESOTERICshade
Fundamentally for the most part yes.
I would guess that it has been modified to some degree as time has passed but at it's core the fundamental philosophy and basic tenets seems to have remained intact from what I can see.
I'm not sure how much of that I buy either. I think a lot of the bloodline claims are made up to substantiate their "inherited right to rule" claims. However I do believe it is at least possible that some of these people might be able to target their family lines somewhere close due to how closely they intermarry within their own families and with closely associated families. I think it is a mixture of bullshit and perhaps a few claims that might have a little bit of merit but I don't know for sure.
▼ think-
Yes, that's what I think, too.
▼ MolochHunter
i sometimes wonder if there's a chicken& egg thing going on here - do cults lead to paedophilia - or have paedophiles used religion / spiritual beliefs to justify / mollify a searing conscience
▼ YogSoggoth
I hate to say this because you are usually on track. You know what your problem is? You think too much.
▼ MolochHunter
there's worse sins
▼ YogSoggoth
Just ribbin'. I really think I stumbled on something with the Mt. Kisco/ Eden Village/ Sandy hook/Shel Silverstien connection. I could use some extra eyes. I have been working alot, and have little time, as usual.
▼ think-
LOL! I agree! :-)
think-
▼ Narcissism
At the core is Pathological Narcissism. The two things running a cult (creating a Narcissistic Pathological Space) and abuse in all its forms are intertwined.
▼ think-
'Creating a Narcissistic Pathological Space' - interesting.
▼ think-
I think both is true. The cult system is about power and hierachy, which always facilitates power games and violence, and some pedophiles hide behind religion or spiritual beliefs.
▼ DoJustice
Thanks for sharing. I found it helpful. It's a good summary
▼ derram
https://tweetsave.com/drdannielle/status/961938960770523136 :
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