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The author of "The Case Against the West Memphis 3 Killers" follows new developments in the case, as well as other cases covered in various podcasts, televisions shows and documentaries, such as "Making a Murderer," "Truth and Justice," "The Staircase," and related news coverage, with a heavy emphasis on detailing misinformation and propaganda designed to subvert the judicial process.
Episodes
Saturday Feb 26, 2022
More moonwater for thirsty fans of child killers
Saturday Feb 26, 2022
Saturday Feb 26, 2022
I can only guess how the courts might rule on DNA retesting as sought by Damien Echols. But as long as the dupes continue sending him money, he'll be happy to keep up this charade.
Version: 20241125
Comments (2)
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Gerald Gardner was heavily influenced by Aleister Crowley, being in close communication with him at the time of formulating the Wiccan rituals. That said, I’ve never said Satanism, Wicca and Crowleyan “magick” are synonymous. The records on the case do not tend to distinguish between these various strains of belief and practice. Echols claimed to be a witch at the time of the murders, while actually performing black magic. Misskelley described him leading Satanic rituals. Etc.
Saturday Mar 19, 2022
I have no argument with a lot of your points, but I will ask that you please PLEASE stop speaking about Wicca as if it is synonymous with “the occult,” “Satanism,” and especially the horrific mutilation and murder of the three children in West Memphis in 1993. Wicca, Satanism, and the occult (in the Alastair Crowley sense) are as comparably synonymous as Roman Catholicism, Hinduism, and the ancient Egyptian polytheistic worship of Rah the Sun God — they couldn’t be more unrelated.
Saturday Mar 19, 2022
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