-Caveat Lector-

UNCONVENTIONAL MEANS I

'We were somewhere over Manchester on the edge of England when the
drugs began to take hold... and suddenly there was a terrible roar all
around us and the sky was full of what looked like huge bats, all
swooping and screeching and diving around the plane, which was going
about a thousand miles an hour on the way to the UnConvention in
London. And a voice screaming: "Holy Jesus! What are these goddamn
animals?"

'I thought about telling the pilot, dragging myself up the aisle,
fighting off the lizard-like stewardesses with my sword-stick, but
no...

...no point in mentioning those bats I thought. The poor bastards will
see them soon enough.'


By 1100 hours, Blather's leading gonzo journalist staggered from
his plane at London City Airport and lurched into the steaming
fleshpots of the City. By 1900 hours he was seated by the Thames -
outside a certain alehouse near Blackfriars bridge - those adept in
conspiracy lore may note that Roberto Calvi - The Italian financier -
was found dangling from this bridge in 1982, his pockets laden with
bricks. Calvi was known as 'God's Banker', due to his ties to the
Vatican, as well a member of Propaganda Due (P2), a right-wing, once
Masonic group with connections to the CIA and the Italian Mafia.

But we digress. Various folk of the forteana mailing list clique
sucked down ales in the bearable damp of Friday's twilight UnDrinking,
before some of us - members of the American and Irish contingents -
slunk off for a Chinese meal, during which the waiter insisted on
ripping apart a duck for our entertainment. Fortunately, it was dead
and well-cooked beforehand.

After hours of sampling the late night drinking dens of Soho and
slugging back garlic-chili-vodka shots, we made for home, grabbing
some fitful shut-eye in for preparation the UnConvention weekend
ahead.

Long-time Blather sufferers may recall last year's UnConvention
reports - a two-day conference on the weird, wonderful and paranormal,
staged by Fortean Times, the *Journal of Strange Phenomena*. Last
year's event covered such topics as Goat-Suckers, giant elephants,
thunderbirds, grim-reapers, Elvis cults, hollow earth, Men in Black
amongst other oddities. This year's UnCon - which took place in the
Commonwealth Institute on Kensington's High St., had a different
thread - 'Monsters, Madness & the Millennium'. We shall try to furnish
the readership with a brief rundown of the events...

When Damian Thompson, author of the excellent *The End of Time: Faith
and Fear in the shadow of the Millennium*, kicked off his talk, the
atmosphere was comparable to the first day of school term. So
intriguing was the Thompson spiel, we're giving it an exorbitant chunk
of column space.

A week before speaking to the UnCon, Thompson had been in Peru,
visiting the 'The Israelites of the New Universal Covenant', a new
religious movement in the Andes, now with allegedly 200,000 members.
The talk was accompanied by interesting photographs of the the group.
He described the sacrifice of a heifer by men in 'old testament
clothing', surrounded by hundreds of people in a scene seemingly
influenced by Hollywood renditions of Biblical themes, inside a
half-built copy of Solomon's Temple, with a Mexican Mariachi band
playing along... He talked of 100ft (30.48m) high letters on a
mountainside reading:

'Israel in Peru'

'Peru is Privileged'

The Israelites believe that Peru is new Holy Land, that Israel is out
of favour with God, that they *are* the Incas, and that their leader -
Ezekiel - an 81-year old shoemaker with Seventh Day Adventist
influences is the Son of God, The Holy Spirit and the Last (of the
old) Inca rolled into one (this somehow reminds of Jan Bockelson, the
16th century Münster (Germany) tailor who became a local Messiah
figure after 'running naked through the town in a state of ecstasy'.
See *The End of Time*, page 85.

The Israelites seem to be a mixture of Andes peasants, Peruvian
Indians, repentant criminals, reformed alcoholics, ex-drug addicts and
narcotics pedlars - these people are searching for a better way of
life. As Thompson states, they 'get new meaning from life when they
join Israelites'.

While Ezekiel's followers dress in a Cecil B. De Mille gone
Technicolor chic - the men in long beards, white robes, vivid blue
sashes, the women with their heads wrapped in red scarves, the Son of
Man himself (who, according to Thompson, seems somewhat senile) wears
normal black clothes, and seems almost indifferent to his thousands of
worshippers. On his birthday, they sing to him... there's a full moon,
and a mariachi band playing outside. Worshippers appear in plastic
Inca apparel, a woman is in tears - she has met the Living God.
Ezekiel seems more interested in his food. Perhaps he's bored...

Most Israelites were illiterate before getting hold of Bibles.
Thompson states that there seems to be no fixed doctrine - any Bible
will do, and any question - never mind how mundane - is referred to
the Bible. His own visit was shown to have been a prophecy fulfilled.
In fact, Doctrine seems to be a fast evolving concept there, with
Ezekiel constantly surprising his followers with his unpredictable
whimsy - he gives Thompson answers about forthcoming apocalyptic
events that seem to be plucked from the air.

Despite their taste for the death penalty - it's in the Bible after
all - and their sense of impending doom, Thompson seems have a lot of
time for these people. Although, like many, most, or perhaps all
religious movements, followers are being strung along with 'false'
hope, this hope may be far better than any other existence that these
people may have had to look forward to.

Damian Thompson
*The End of Time: Faith and Fear in the shadow of the Millennium*,
1996
ISBN 0-7493-8609-6

Tony Healy was next up, with 'The Poltergeist Down Under',
referring to last last year's alleged poltergeist activity in
Humpty-Doo, in Australia's Northern Territory. We won't dwell too much
on the matter here, as while Healy's talk was riveting, highly
enjoyable and informative, much of the information has been dealt with
in both Blather and *Fortean Times* (FT116:34). Tony Healy, and his
associate, Paul Cropper spent much time investigating one the arguably
most interesting 'polt' cases ever, a case further complicated by a
tabloid TV show's manhandling of the facts.
Despite Healy explaining - and even showing - how he and Cropper had
checked all sorts of possibilities - such as checking that objects
were not being hurled from ceiling fans - a rather obstinate member
of the audience piped up to say that it 'had to be' the ceiling fans,
and that fakery 'was' the 'only' explanation (presumably meaning that
this 'explanation' also covered the outdoor incidences of
materialising lightbulbs, flying knives and the like - all in the
presence of a toddler).

We hope that this irate (and apparently deaf) sceptic attended Ian
Simmons' talk on the 'Proof of Everything' on the Sunday of UnCon,
where he would have had his claims torn asunder - Ian had been
practising with the ceiling fan in his hotel room, showing that
objects will drop from a ceiling fan while it is accelerating after
start-up, not at unpredictable times while it is running (unless they
are temporarily fixed to the fan, which still wouldn't explain how
they can fly horizontally at face level, from a ceiling fan...)

Blather coverage of the Humpty-Doo case, by Cheyne D. Conrad, Peter
Darben, and Paul Cropper, with varying opinions...

http://www.blather.net/archives/issue1no50.html
http://www.blather.net/archives2/issue2no1.html
http://www.blather.net/archives2/issue2no4.html

At 1400 hrs, The Duke of Mendoza, in an exquisitely tailored suit,
followed the Count O'Blather's furtive forage for back-seats for
Daniel Wojcik's 'Modern Millennial Beliefs'.

Wojcik, Associate Professor of English and Folklore at the University
of Oregon, author of *The End of the World as We Know It: Faith,
Fatalism and Apocalypse in America* and the forthcoming *Doomsday
Passions*, gave a rousing speech on modern American end-time beliefs,
showing some of the frankly hilarious popular Christian comic-strips
depicting the rapture. This talk was a boon to those still rather
addled by the whole millennial thing, giving a good overview on the
sheer ludicrousness of it all. Wojcik's talk ended with the conclusion
that millennialism isn't about to disappear due to a mere change of
millennium - he reckons that we should expect a kind of reformist
millenarianism for the 21st century.
An excellent quote (which I don't think he knew he made until later)
was:

'No Catastrophe Necessary'

Check out the Millennial Information Exchange at
http://www.endnear.com

'Theatrical Maverick' Ken Campbell came to entertain and confound us
with his proposition of a 'Wol Wontok' - a One Word Language, i.e.
pidgin English. This talk took the form of entertainment with a
message - Campbell was dressed in a strange (hemp?) suit scribbled
with pidgin - a language apparently created about 150 years ago when
south-seas tribesmen slaves, captured and segregated from others of
their own tongue by the British. They developed a language with no
tense or grammar, by listening to their apparently Irish guards...and
lo, we have pidgin, variations of which are known as Creole. Campbell
claims that he can teach the entire language in 24 hours (Blather may
send an envoy to learn), and has re-written Shakespeare's Macbeth in
Pidgin.

Various helpers come on stage to help him with excerpts, including
Lady Macbeth 'Take my milk for gall' becomes something (saemting) like
'Put grilli in my titti' or somesuch. Roddy McDevitt came on stage
armed with a bodhrán - the Irish traditional goatskin drum - and
performed Paul McCartney's *Blackbird*...in pidgin. This was followed
by his reading of *The Second Coming* by W.B. Yeats - which his
brother, Niall, performed in pidgin...

It's certainly fascinating to listen to and use:

ting=think
ting=deep thought (thought about thought)
blong=belong

ting ting blong ting ting
(deep thought belonging to deep thought)
=philosophy


It's a language that seems to mean very little when seen written - but
makes much more sense when heard.

As the first site below mentions, if you're at the airport, and
someone asks you:

Plen bambae i foldaon long wanem taem?
(Plane by and by it falls down at what time?)

'Don't run for cover. The enquirer is simply trying to establish what
time the plane is due.'


"Evri samting yu wantem save long Vanuatu be yu fraet tumas bling
askem"
(Everthing you wanted to know about Vanuatu but were afraid to ask)
http://www.hideawayholidays.com.au/vli1.htm

Pidgin/English Dictionary
http://www.hardlink.com/~chambers/HLP/lang/pidgin.html

Lingo
http://hanaleihaven.com/lingo.htm

Pidgin and Creole Languages
http://aldus.stanford.edu/depts/ssrg/pidgins/pidgin.html

At this point in time, we ran out of steam and so retired to the
bench, loading ourselves with coffee and chocolate...and spent time
nattering to various fiendish folk who were found wandering the
grounds of the Institute. Other notable attractions were the
bookstalls, where the inimitable Jon Downes was holding forth, various
authors were inscribing manuscripts for their fans, and people were
laying out money to have their auras photographed - if any readers had
a go at that, we would be delighted to hear their comments.

As we didn't get a chance to pay much heed to the other UnCon
periphery pursuits - such as the *The Mind Machine*, The Seances, and
The Association for the Scientific Study of Anomalous Phenomena
(ASSAP) experiments, Blather appeals to those who did to come forward
and be heard... and, as there were always two speakers on at the same
time, we only managed to make to less than half the speakers. As a
result, we missed Richard Wiseman, David Barrett, Jenny Randles,
Gordon Rutter & Scott Russell, Andy Roberts, Neil Nixon, Emmet Sweeny,
and rather deplorably Tony Healy's Yowie talk.

Any readers wishing to contribute their comments on these talks - feel
free to pass their Blatherings to us...

- and so Day I ended, and the troops headed off to various Kensington
Hostelries for revelries...

Dave (daev) Walsh
4th May 1999

Next week: Day II of the UnConvention

Notes:

*Fortean Times*
http://www.forteantimes.com

The Association for the Scientific Study of Anomalous Phenomena
http://www.assap.org/assap

Wild paraphrasing from
*Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas*
Hunter S. Thompson

Photographs:
http://www.forteantimes.com/uncon/uncon99.html


This issue (with photographs) is archived at:
http://www.blather.net/archives2/issue2no42.html

DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion and informational exchange list. Proselyzting propagandic
screeds are not allowed. Substance—not soapboxing!  These are sordid matters
and 'conspiracy theory', with its many half-truths, misdirections and outright
frauds is used politically  by different groups with major and minor effects
spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought. That being said, CTRL
gives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and always suggests to readers;
be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no credeence to Holocaust denial and
nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:
http://home.ease.lsoft.com/archives/CTRL.html

http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

Reply via email to