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13. THE
CLEARING IN THE FOREST
THE FOG ROLLED in
over the giant redwoods of northern California and settled for the night
outside my motel room in the logging town of Occidental, giving the place
a menacing air that became less menacing when the fog lifted the next
morning and I saw that the motel's restaurant specialized in
low-cholesterol egg alternatives and breakfast smoothies.
I spent the day
sitting in my car and watching limousines pick elderly men up from Lear
jets at the nearby Santa Rosa airport. I followed them along Bohemian
Highway to a lane that read NO THROUGH ROAD. There, the limousines
disappeared up the hill.
This was the lane
that led to Bohemian Grove, the clearing in the forest where, it had long
been said, the rulers of the world -- President Bush, for instance, and
Bilderbergers Kissinger and Rockefeller -- dress in robes and hoods and
burn effigies at the foot of a giant owl. As far as Randy Weaver and Alex
Jones and David Icke and Thom Robb and all the others were concerned, the
very heart of Luciferian globalist evil lay at the top of this hill.
I wanted to attempt
the impossible. I wanted to somehow get in, mingle, and witness the owl
burning myself. After all, I had heard about the global elite these past
five years -- the claims and the counterclaims -- and I believed this to
be the only tangible way I could finally learn the truth. What were they
doing in there?
I had no clear idea
how to accomplish this. My original plan had been to enter the forest
alone, perhaps climb up some hills, and basically just scout around until
I found it. Recognizing that this was an ill-conceived strategy, I
telephoned some of the anti-New World Order radicals I had met during my
travels to ask their advice.
David Icke warned me
against it. He said the reptilian bloodlines transform themselves back
into giant lizards at Bohemian Grove. Furthermore, he said, Henry
Kissinger, Jimmy Carter, Walter Cronkite, and the male members of the
British royal family routinely sexually abuse their harem of kidnapped sex
slaves -- brainwashed through the MKULTRA trauma-based mind-control
program -- at the Grove. I asked David how he knew this, and he explained
that one of the sex slaves, a woman called Cathy O'Brien, escaped and
wrote a chilling memoir about her experiences called The
TranceFormation of America.
"If you read Cathy
O'Brien's book," said David, "you'd know not to go anywhere near the
place. People disappear in those forests."
I called Alex Jones,
the radio and TV talk-show host I had met while visiting Texas with Randy
Weaver. He instantly invited himself along.
"That place is
sick!" he yelled. "You've got presidents and governors and prime ministers
and corporate chieftains running around naked. They have orgies. They
worship their devil owl. I'll smuggle a camera in and get right up in
their faces."
"I think stealth
might be a better approach if we want to witness the owl-burning
ceremony," I said.
"You're right," said
Alex, thinking aloud. "Let's liken it to Indiana Jones. Getting in their
faces will be like going for the little emeralds along the way to the big
ruby in the head of the idol, which would be to actually witness the owl
burning itself."
"Exactly," I said.
I was glad Alex was
joining me. He struck me as someone who would behave fearlessly in the
face of danger. He also had five million listeners. He was a high-profile
person. He had personally organized the rebuilding of David Koresh's
Branch Davidian church at Mount Carmel near Waco. He had a can-do
attitude. I could not imagine that, with Alex around, they would dare to
do anything should we be caught.
I had arranged to
rendezvous with Alex, his girlfriend, Violet, and his producer, Mike, at
the Occidental Motel on Wednesday evening, but they didn't show up.
Instead they telephoned me from somewhere along the road at 10 P.M.
"It's all fogged
out," yelled Alex, "so thick you can't see. Weaving roads. Deer jumping in
front of us. I'll tell you, the hairs on the back of my neck are standing
up."
Alex called again at
11 P.M. to report on their progress.
"There's fog
everywhere," he yelled, "and there's all these strange people, old men and
old women just standing on the side of the road watching us. I know the
Bohemian Grovers have their snitches all over this forest. We're going to
take a more circuitous route down side roads. I'll call you back."
At midnight, I
received a final call from Alex's increasingly crackly cell phone.
"A jeep has come off
the side road and has started following us. We're going to turn around. Oh
my God, it's turning around too! It's following us back down the road.
Write this down. A red jeep. Newer model. Write down the license plate.
Hang on a minute."
Alex handed the
phone to his producer, Mike.
"If something
happens to us make a big stink about it!" yelled Mike. "Promise me that."
"I promise!" I
yelled.
I did not hear from
them again that night. The motel receptionist informed me at breakfast
that their beds had not been slept in.
I SPENT THE morning
leaving concerned messages on Alex's cell phone. Then I shrugged and
thought, well, life goes on, and I paid a visit to Mary Moore, a local
anti-Bohemian Grove activist who lived a mile from my motel. Mary was once
a beauty queen, the winner of the 1953 San Luis Obispo County Fiesta, but
she became radical in the 1960s and moved to Occidental. Mary protested
the Grove every summer for three decades, holding up placards, yelling at
the warmongers cruising past in their limousines, but now she is
sixty-five and retired. Her cabin was decorated as a monument to her
participation in left-wing causes. There were posters and bumper stickers
pinned everywhere reading NUCLEAR WAR? NO THANKS and WHO KILLED KAREN
SILKWOOD? and SPLIT WOOD NOT ATOMS and VOTE JESSE JACKSON.
"Is it dangerous to
try and get into Bohemian Grove?" I asked her.
"Yes, if you get
caught," she said. "They do not want publicity. But I will tell you this.
Getting in is easier than most people think."
She paused, and
added, with a cryptic smile, "Easy when you know how to do it, that is."
I asked her if she'd
help me, but she said she had been burned in the past. In 1991 she had
gone to great lengths to help a journalist from People magazine
smuggle himself in -- she had co-opted her deep throats and her people who
knew people -- but he was spotted inside by two executives from Time
Warner, People's publishers. They called security and had him
removed. His article never appeared.
"I don't know who
your On High is," said Mary. "I don't want to get burned again."
We talked for an
hour. She gave me a detailed map of the Grove that had been published by
the Bohemians themselves. The Grove's 2,700 acres do not appear on any
normal map of the region. She warned me of the nearby Russian River's
treacherous currents and the surrounding sheer rocky canyons. She said
that penetration via the surrounding terrain was not a good idea.
She showed me the
lists of Bohemian attendees she had managed to surreptitiously acquire
over the years. They read much like a Bilderberg roll call, with Kissinger
and Rockefeller alongside Presidents Bush and Reagan and Ford and Nixon.
There were movies stars like Clint Eastwood and Danny Glover, the ex Tory
cabinet minister Chris Fatten, Alan Greenspan of the Federal Reserve, and
Caspar Weinberger and George Shultz.
"What do you know
about the owl-burning ceremony?" I asked her.
"They call it the
'Cremation of Care,'" she said. "Is it deeply occult as many people think?
Some say they're killing children up there and sacrificing them on the
altar. Maybe they are. But I doubt it. I think we'd have heard about it by
now, at least locally."
Mary rifled through
her filing cabinet and she found a copy of an old "Cremation of Care"
program from the 1980s. One of Mary's deep throats had smuggled it out to
her. The front cover depicted a cartoon of a giant red owl with a snarling
grin clutching a small man in its claws, about to throw him into a giant
fire.
"Goodness," I said.
"Make of that what
you will," said Mary.
Mary said there was
much evidence of prostitutes from San Francisco being flown in en masse to
the nearby village of Monte Rio to service the all-male encampment for the
two-week duration, reports of a great deal of alfresco urination against
the redwood trees -- even though the campsite was equipped with a great
many toilets -- and world leaders wandering around in drag, with giant
fake breasts.
I tried to remain
objective, but it all seemed uncommonly strange and unexpected and hard to
rationalize.
"The truth is," said
Mary, "I couldn't care less about what they do in their private lives. I
don't care what their sexual habits are. Men are men. That's not news to
me. I care about the networking. This is where the ruling-class
bonding happens. This is the ultimate back room."
Mary told me about
the "lakeside talks," the unofficial power meetings that occur in an
open-air amphitheater on the grounds of the Grove. One of these lakeside
talks, said Mary, had conceived the Manhattan Project, which gave birth to
the first U.S. atomic bomb. In 1978, she added, the chief of the U.S. Air
Force gave a lakeside talk in which he directly pled for, and later
received, congressional approval for the B2 stealth bomber. Mary said that
the future of the world is discussed at the Grove by men like Henry
Kissinger who have the power to change the course of history, men who
actively thrive on secrecy, hence the mystique that has grown up around
any secret society Kissinger belongs to, especially if that very same
secret society undertakes berobed ceremonies involving owl effigies.
"It's strange to see
the left and the right coming together on this issue," I said.
"Well," she
shrugged, "we all hate Henry Kissinger."
"My colleague Alex
Jones hopes to smuggle in a hidden camera and film the owl-burning
ceremony," I said.
Mary brightened.
"Well, if you guys
can do that," she said, "that I'd like to see. That has never been done.
Hang on a minute."
Mary went into the
other room to make some calls. She returned some minutes later to tell me
the good news. A friend of hers called Rick -- a local lawyer who had
twice successfully infiltrated the Grove -- was prepared to meet with Alex
and me.
"He says he'll even
come in with you," said Mary. "He looks the part. He could be one of them.
You'll be OK with Rick."
ALEX AND VIOLET and
Mike finally showed up at the motel mid-afternoon. They explained that
their circuitous route down mountainous side roads had proved
unsuccessful, so they had retraced the road back to town and checked into
a hotel.
I laid out Mary's
map of the Grove on Alex's bed. They gathered around to study it.
"OK," said Alex.
"Here's the lake. Here's the shrine of their devil owl."
"Where does it say
that?" I asked.
"Right there," said
Alex, pointing to a spot marked Shrine. "Here's Bohemian Highway. I guess
our hotel must be right over there. Hey. Where did you get this secret
map?"
"Deep throat," I
said.
"Now wait a minute,"
said Alex. "This map is unheard of. This map isn't widely available." He
narrowed his eyes and scrutinized me. "Where did you get it?"
I could tell that
dark thoughts had entered Alex's mind.
"I am not one
of them," I tutted. "I am not luring you into a trap. Can we have some
trust here, please?"
"Yeah, yeah," said
Alex. "I'm sorry."
The treacherous
currents and the sheer rocky canyons did not seem intimidating to Alex and
Mike. They had made their plans. They intended to rent a boat, sail it
down the Russian River, moor it, climb a mountain, shimmy down the other
side, and get in that way.
"Hiking in two
thousand seven hundred acres is not hard," said Alex. "We need to catch
these people at their Luciferian worship."
The cleaning lady
wandered past the open bedroom door holding a vacuum cleaner. Alex slammed
the door shut. He pulled the curtains together.
"I saw her before,"
whispered Alex, "just standing there staring at me. Really. Standing there
and just staring. She had her hand to her ear like this."
Alex cupped his ear.
"All the literature
I've read on the Net says the Bohemians have got their snitches all over
this town," he explained.
"The actual clearing
seems to be only about five hundred acres," said Mike, still studying the
map. "The rest is undergrowth."
"God only knows
what's really going on in the other two thousand two hundred acres," said
Alex. "I would guess that's where they perform their more nasty or beastly
activities. But that is only speculation. We've got two hidden cameras.
We've got a tie camera and one that looks like a pager."
"Do you think that
Alex's temperament is such that he'll be able to maintain the stealth
needed to undertake the operation?" I asked Violet.
"Alex is not only a
great activist and a great broadcaster but also a great actor," she said.
"Thank you, honey,"
said Alex. They kissed each other on the lips.
"Do you worry for
Alex?" I asked.
"I do," said Violet.
" Alex gets so impassioned. I'm afraid sometimes he might be a little too
fearless. And it's creepy at night up here in the woods."
There was a silence.
"I just wish we were
armed," said Violet, wistfully.
"Well," muttered
Mike, "guns would be no good out here without silver bullets."
"I've arranged for
us to meet a local lawyer called Rick," I said, "who has twice infiltrated
the Grove."
"I'll meet your
guy," said Alex.
"I think his advice
might be valuable," I said. "I think you should just listen and not say
anything."
"Why not say
anything?" asked Alex.
"He comes from a
different political persuasion to you," I said. "I don't want your words
to disturb him."
"A socialist, huh?"
said Alex. "Well, if he wants to consolidate power and enslave the world's
population and kill eighty percent of us like the UN are publicly stating
then he ought to be all for Bohemian Grove."
"I don't think Rick
wants to sacrifice eighty percent of the world's population," I said.
"Well, you said he
was from a different political persuasion to me," said Alex.
"Still," I said,
"the important thing is for you to not say anything."
AT 6 P.M. Rick and
Alex and myself sat by the pool at the Occidental Motel. Rick was sixty
but he looked ten years younger. He wore a plaid shirt and khaki trousers.
Alex laid out Mary's map, which he and Mike had annotated with little red
arrows, plotting their proposed route along the torrents of Russian River,
up a mountain, and down the other side. Alex's arrows ended at the spot on
the map marked Shrine.
"Going in that way,"
said Rick, "will get you killed. We are talking about a sheer rocky
canyon."
Alex produced a
notepad and wrote down, "Sheer rocky canyon -- Killed."
"So what's the
secret?" I asked. "How do we get in?"
"The secret?" said
Rick. "Just walk right in up the drive. That's what I did. There'll be one
or two security guys sitting on the side of the road looking bored. You're
just going to nod to them as you walk in. Just nod and say hi. And that's
it."
"That's it?" said
Alex.
"What you don't do,"
said Rick, "is stand out. You don't dress young. Even the young ones in
there don't dress young. Dress casual. Khakis. Cotton pants."
"Preppy?" I asked.
"Preppy, yes," said
Rick. "It's a preppy crowd. Wear a baseball cap."
"Flip-flops?" asked
Alex. "Sandals?"
"Sandals would be
fine," said Rick. "Flip-flops might not be such a good idea."
Alex wrote down
"sandals."
"What time do they
have the owl-burning ceremony?" asked Alex.
"The 'Cremation of
Care,'" corrected Rick, "is at dusk tomorrow night."
"Have you witnessed
the ceremony?" asked Alex.
"Yes," said Rick.
"It's pretty elaborate. They do it down at the lagoon. The crowd is on one
side of the lagoon on a grassy slope and the ceremony is on the other
side. So the crowd are quite a way away from it. Some people bring
cushions or little lawn chairs. There's a chorus. There's a symphony
orchestra. A good symphony orchestra, right there by the lagoon."
"Wow," said Alex.
"What type of music?"
"Boston Pops-type
music," said Rick.
"Sounds pretty
eclectic," said Alex.
I smiled at Alex. He
smiled back. He was saying the right things.
"What is the owl
made out of?" asked Alex.
"I have no idea,"
said Rick. "I know there's a druid type of ceremonial altar in front of
it."
"A druid type of
ceremonial altar?" repeated Alex, writing down "druid type of ceremonial
altar."
"It has that look,"
said Rick. "Very old. Very pagan. I'm sure it's meant to be harmless
pranky type fun. "
Alex raised his
eyes.
"This is not
harmless pranky type fun," he snapped. "You have all these superpowerful
men in druid outfits, as you witnessed, Rick, burning an effigy in front
of an owl. It just so happens that other primitive cultures have had that
same owl, they just throw children inside the burning innards. That's
historically based."
Rick looked
perplexed.
"And if you ask them
what it's all about," Alex continued, "they'll just say, Oh! I don't
know what you're talking about. Get away from me, little man, or I'll set
my dogs on you. You sniveling twit. I'll have you removed immediately. How
dare you! Wretched fool!'
I shot Alex an
annoyed look.
"You're probably
right," Alex shrugged, calming down. "It could be just big-kid grown-up
fraternity behavior."
"The important
thing," said Rick, "is to look like you know where you're going. Smile.
Just walk right in. Hell, I'll walk in with you. And dress preppy."
Alex wrote down
"preppy dress."
THE NEXT MORNING we
drove into town to buy preppy clothes at Eddie Bauer. I nearly gasped when
Alex and Mike stepped out of their dressing rooms. The visual
transformation was astonishing. They no longer looked like highly strung
Texan right-wingers. Now they were the very picture of Ivy League
graduates, the East Coast elite, in sports shirts and khaki trousers,
cashmere sweaters draped with carefree abandon over their shoulders.
"You look very
handsome," said Violet.
"Thank you, baby,"
said Alex. They embraced and passionately kissed right there in Eddie
Bauer, and Mike and I and the shop assistants shuffled uncomfortably.
Back at the motel,
Alex and Mike practiced being preppy by wandering up and down the corridor
in a preppy fashion, their hands in their pockets, a slightly effeminate
lilt to their gait.
"The point is," said
Alex, "we belong here. We're just normal."
I didn't join in
with the rehearsals. I felt I already knew how to behave preppily.
Rick had advised
that Alex should assume a profession familiar to him -- a talk-show host
from Austin, for instance -- but after much deliberation he and Mike
decided to pretend to be high flyers from Silicon Valley. Alex was to be
the CEO of a microprocessing firm, and Mike the technical brains with a
doctorate in molecular science.
"What are our
names?" asked Mike.
"I'm David Hancock
and you're Professor Mike Richards," said Alex. "We're just going to talk.
We're just going to walk normally as we would. Calmly. La la la. We're fat
cats."
Alex and Mike began
rehearsing preppy conversations.
"But seriously,"
said Alex, adopting a recondite tone of voice, the two men rambling
delicately along the corridor, ''as fast as microprocessors are beginning
to move ... it's getting down to a molecular level ... the question is, at
what level will the actual basics of science stop us from making these
systems smaller? It's the entire nanotechnology revolution that I find
most dynamic ..."
I could see that
Mike's hands were shaking, making his polo shirt quiver.
"I agree," he
murmured, unsurely.
They looked over to
me for approval.
"I'm not sure about
'I agree,'" I said.
"I don't think we
should practice talking," snapped Mike. "What comes up comes up. It's got
to be natural when we do it."
"No," said
Alex. "We're going to go over it and over it until we get it right."
"OK," said Mike.
They resumed
wandering along the corridor.
"But I really want
to know your opinion of nanotechnology," said Alex. "You've been studying
it so closely. You've already got these transistors down to the size of
molecules. What I want to know is when will the science, just the basic
laws, stop our progress in the miniaturization process. Doctor?"
Mike smiled wisely
but he said nothing.
"What do you think?"
said Alex to me.
"Are you sure you
don't look too preppy?" I said.
"I need a prop to
stop my hands from shaking," said Mike.
"Mineral water,"
said Alex. "They drink mineral water."
WE ABANDONED
REHEARSALS to purchase mineral water from the local general store. In the
few moments it took us to cross the road, two limousines and an open-top
BMW cruised past us towards the Grove.
Rick's logic was
that no security guard would risk his livelihood by insulting potential
VIPs with impertinent questions about their right to be there, but Alex
was still unsure.
"You think we can
trust Rick?" he asked. "People have recommended him to you? I'm not going
to end up tied to a pentagram with Henry Kissinger's fat belly hanging
over me while he's necking with a big dagger, am I?"
I could see Alex's
point. Rick's tips seemed so contrary to everything we had heard about
Bohemian Grove. How could we just walk in? That seemed incorrect.
"Have you worked out
something to say as a last resort in case you get caught?" I asked.
"Yes I have," said
Alex.
"What is it?" I
asked.
"I'll say, 'DON'T
COME ANY CLOSER!"' screamed Alex.
"I'm sorry?" I said.
"I'll say, 'BACK
OFF! JUST BACK THE HELL OFF! DON'T TAKE ANOTHER STEP!"'
"Oh my God," I said.
"That's a threat."
"It won't come to
that," said Alex.
"'Don't come any
closer is not preppy talk," I said.
"Definitely not,"
said Alex. He smiled slightly and looked me squarely in the eye.
There was a silence.
"Are you dangerous?"
I asked Alex.
"Are these people
dangerous?" he replied. "They certainly are. I'm completely nonviolent.
Dangerous? I'm definitely dangerous to corrupt bureaucrats and their
financial bosses that like to control the people on the planet."
"But not in a
violent way," I said.
"Not in a violent
way," he said.
"Alex is one of the
best guys you'll ever meet," said Mike.
"This world
government is dangerous," said Alex. "Henry Kissinger and George Bush are
the dangerous ones. This degenerate inbred New World Order crowd are the
dangerous ones. I have no criminal record."
"He's not
dangerous," said Mike. He turned to Alex. "You need to clear that up," he
said.
"This is really a
gross analogy," said Alex, "but I'll use it. I see most of these elitist
individuals as a whole bunch of dog turds being laid all over this
society. I don't run around stomping on them because I don't want to get
it on my feet."
Alex paused. His
voice became somber.
"I just say to the
general public, 'Let's clean these dog turds up. Let's tell these people
they can't do this anymore."
Mike nodded in
earnest agreement.
"They can't shit on
us," said Alex. "That's really what I'm saying. You can't shit on us
anymore."
There was a silence.
"I just want them to
stop shitting on us," said Alex.
"OK," I said.
"Sorry."
ON SATURDAY
AFTERNOON at 4 P.M. -- three hours before our allotted rendezvous with
Rick -- Alex had a private meeting with Mike and Violet in Mike's bedroom.
Then he took me to one side to formally inform me of their change of plan.
Yes, Alex was grateful for Rick's clothing advice and, yes, they were
willing to walk up the driveway, just as Rick recommended. But, no
offense, Alex said, they were not prepared to actually walk into the Grove
with either Rick or myself. They had decided to go it alone.
Alex didn't admit it
outright, but his reason was clear. He simply could not know for certain
that Rick or I were not them: undercover Feds, or worse, part of some
complex trap to capture an outsider and perhaps even offer him up as a
sacrifice to the owl god. I considered launching a defense, but the truth
was I had no tangible evidence to prove that I was not one of them.
Furthermore, as crazy as it sounds, those suspicions had also crossed my
mind about Rick, and I too was finding It difficult to shake them.
"When are you going
to attempt your penetration?" I asked him.
"Right now," said
Alex.
"Well, at least let
me come along to see you off," I said.
THE JOURNEY TO the
gates of Bohemian Grove was undertaken in an anxious silence. Violet
pulled up in a turnout near the entrance.
"If we're not here
at eleven P.M., come back at eleven-thirty," said Alex.
"And every half hour
after that," said Mike.
"What time do I get
in touch with the police?" asked Violet.
"Six A.M.," said
Alex.
"If something does
happen to us, make a big stink about it," said Mike. "Promise us that."
"I promise," said
Violet.
"Here we go," said
Alex.
Alex and Mike
climbed out of the car. They strode away from us in a conspicuously preppy
manner. They were looking good. I could tell by their hand gestures that
they had already begun debating the miniaturization process of
microprocessors, even though they were still a hundred yards from the
driveway.
"It seems to be
going well so far," I said.
And it did seem to
be going well, right up until the moment, some ten seconds later, that
Alex and Mike, for no apparent reason, suddenly dived frantically into the
undergrowth at the side of the road.
"Bloody hell," I
said.
For a second the two
men became visible as they stood up in the bushes, brushed themselves
down, turned around, gave Violet and me a surreptitious thumbs up, took a
step forward, cascaded headfirst down into a gully, and were gone.
Violet gasped.
"Hmm," I said.
"WHERE ARE THE
Texans?" asked Rick.
It was two hours
later. Violet had gone back to the Occidental Motel. Rick and I were
steeling ourselves for our impending penetration with cocktails at the
Village Inn, a lovely riverside bar on the edge of the Grove.
"I last saw them
diving into the bushes," I said.
"Boy Scouts," tutted
Rick. "So predictable. You know there's poison oak all over these
forests."
"Will they die?" I
asked Rick.
"I don't know," he
said. "Depends how many times they get stung. Anyway. Are you ready?"
"As I'll ever be," I
said.
I took a last big
swig, we paid up, walked the hundred yards to the entrance, up past the
sign that read NO THROUGH ROAD, and were immediately approached by a
security guard.
"Hey there," said
Rick.
"You guys should
have driven up here," smiled the guard.
"Oh, we wanted to
walk," said Rick. "You know. Enjoy the air."
"Hey!" said the
guard. "No problem. Have a good time at Care."
He gave us a little
salute. We walked on.
"That was easy," I
whispered.
"Told you,"
whispered Rick.
We walked the length
of the parking lot -- there were perhaps five hundred cars, Mercedes and
BMWs and Range Rovers and Jeeps -- and up to a second wooden guardhouse,
manned by a bored-looking security officer and some young valet parkers.
Nobody seemed to notice us as we walked past.
And then we were in
Bohemian Grove.
THE BANK OF sixteen
public telephones offered the first indication that this was no ordinary
campground. The piano music drifting down from a nearby hill was another.
There were clusters of canvas tents everywhere, some just off the road,
others perched in the hills, as if built out of the trees. Each encampment
was equipped with a bar, a grand piano, a huge stone fireplace, a stone
barbecue, and a wooden owl sculpture.
One had an open-air
Jacuzzi. A live band played rock and roll standards in another --
"Lucille" and "Shout" and "Go Johnny Go" -- to a group of men, most
elderly, some middle-aged, dancing and shouting and gulping down
cocktails. I did not recognize any of them. But we kept our distance.
From time to time an
open-top tram drove bumpily past us --decorated with a drawing of an owl
-- carrying khaki-wearing Bohemians from one end of the camp to the other.
Again, I recognized nobody, although they all had an unmistakable aura of
wealth and power. They all looked like they were someone.
Rick and I continued
to explore. The camps were each marked with wooden signs: CAVE MAN and
WOLF and DRAGONS and LOST ANGELS and STOWAWAY. Red lanterns hung in the
trees behind Dragons, like little devil eyes. The Grove's ambience seemed
deliberately spooky, as if a designer had been instructed to utilize the
shadows of the giant redwoods -- the whole place was in shadow -- to give
it some kind of chic druid-Satanic milieu.
Everywhere we walked
we discovered the remnants of a recently defunct party. Dozens of empty
bottles of Moet et Chandon were scattered around a secluded lawn. The ice
had not yet melted in the silver bowl that stood on a wooden table. Three
strawberries remained. I ate them.
"Look at this," said
Rick. He was standing by a bulletin board, full of snapshot photographs
presumably taken at the previous night's entertainment. In these
photographs, elderly preppy- looking gentlemen stood around, drinking and
laughing. Some were dressed in full drag, with fishnet stockings and
hideously applied makeup, humorously oversized fake breasts protruding
from their nylon blouses. They struck burlesque erotic poses, their legs
wide apart, fingering their buttocks, tongues out, etc. Others were
dressed as Elvis impersonators, with fake chest wigs. Next to the
photographs was a notice advertising the following Tuesday's concert --
MC: George Bush Sr.
There was a further
notice, locked in a glass case. It was the guest list. I quickly scanned
the names. Bohemians were wandering past me and I didn't want to appear
too nosy. Under C was the name Cheney, Richard. It would be reported on
CNN a week later that George Bush learned of his son's decision to appoint
Dick Cheney as his vice-presidential running mate while he was camping on
vacation in northern California.
And there was the
list of guest speakers for the following week's lakeside talks: Henry
Kissinger and John Major.
Black linen drapes
hung from a bank of trees near the lagoon. We walked between them. I
turned around to find myself face to face with a giant stone owl, nestling
between two huge redwoods. It must have been fifty feet high and covered
in moss.
"The shrine,"
whispered Rick.
Bohemian Grove was,
all in all, an unusual place. Besides the photographic remnants of the
drag/Elvis costume party, which I had found decidedly unpleasant in a
palpably woman-hating way, and the pseudo-spooky Rocky Horror Show
touches, this was a very beautiful spot. The ancient redwoods were vast
and breathtaking. The tents looked luxurious and opulent, and I imagined
myself sipping cocktails at twilight, discussing preppy issues with
like-minded world leaders.
We wandered along
the winding path. We found a private beach at the edge of a tranquil part
of the Russian River, the sand perfectly manicured. There was a landing
stage and a diving board. A handful of Bohemians were swimming naked in
the waters below.
Rick and I gazed out
at the trees and we discussed world events. How did we feel about the
breakup of Microsoft? Rick was on balance in favor. I hadn't made up my
mind. How about GB? Rick was on balance against. I hadn't made up my mind.
I realized that my preppy demeanor was not a camouflage. I was genuinely
interested in these matters. I didn't have a care in the world. I had made
it to the inner enclave. Dusk was falling and the owl burning was soon to
begin, and with Rick as my cover I knew I would not be caught.
"Hey, look," said
Rick. "There's your friend Alex."
Sure enough, Alex
and Mike were heading down the path towards us.
"Hi, you two!" I
said.
"Don't go that
way," hissed Alex. "There are cameras in the trees!"
"There are owls
everywhere!" hissed Mike, his eyes wide in terror.
"Just keep
walking!" said Alex. "Just keep walking!"
And before I could
say another word to them, they had gone.
"Hmm," I said.
"They seem to be
trapped in some sort of paranoid state," said Rick, breezily.
"They certainly do,"
I said.
"Ah," said Rick.
"Can you see the osprey?"
"Oh yes," I said. "A
lovely seabird."
NINE P.M. There was
no formal announcement. No bell was rung. But the Bohemians instinctively
knew that the time had come for them down at the lagoon. The ceremony was
about to begin. Rick and I found a prime spot, directly opposite the giant
stone owl. We sat on the grass and we rested our backs against a tree.
Soon the grassy bank was packed. A thousand men had drifted down, in
groups of twenty or thirty, and were crowded together, sitting
cross-legged on the grass. Many lit cigars. A few scrutinized me. I was
probably the youngest person there.
I glanced behind me
and spotted Alex and Mike. They spotted me. We looked away.
"First-timer?" asked
a big man wearing glasses.
"Yes," I said.
"You're going to
love the ceremony," he said. "Fools! Fools! Ha ha!"
"Sorry?" I said.
"You'll see," he
laughed. "Here. Have this."
He handed me a color
program. The cover read "Cremation of Care. July 15th, 2000. 121st
Performance. Bohemian Grove." I thanked him and flicked through it. It was
a cast list.
High Priest -- Jay
Jacobus.
Voice of the Owl --
John MacAllister.
Funeral Cortege --
The Gentlemen of Lost Angels Camp.
And so on.
From across the
lagoon, a single violin began to play. A hush descended. A figure appeared
before the owl. He wore lederhosen. His lederhosen were covered in leaves.
He resembled some kind of elfin Germanic Tarzan. He was, I learned from my
program, Eden's Garden Soloist.
He stretched out his
arms and began to sing, with operatic grandeur: "Glorious! Glorious! Oh
twigs! Oh boughs! Oh trees ...!"
For the next ten
minutes or so, Eden's Garden Soloist eulogized nature's splendor, his
voice ringing through loudspeakers concealed in the trees. Spotlights
picked out individual redwoods. They glowed green.
Then we were plunged
suddenly into darkness. The drums thundered. Boom! Boom! At each boom a
robed man carrying a flaming torch appeared amid the trees. There were
perhaps thirty of them. It was, without question, a berobed torchlight
procession. Their hoods were red, their robes black. They resembled posh
Klansmen, or the cast of a Broadway musical, should Broadway ever decide
to do the Moloch Pagan Cult of Sacrifice story.
They lit a pyre at
the foot of the owl.
"Hail,
Bohemians!" said the High Priest, and it was clear he was the highest
of all the priests because his robes were silver and gold and made of
silk. The High Priest reprised Eden's Garden Soloist's eulogy of the great
outdoors. "The ripple of waters, the song of birds, such music as
inspires the soul ..."
To summarize, he
informed the crowd, these men of wealth and power, that Dull Care,
archenemy of Beauty, must be slain, right here and right now!
"Bring fire!"
he roared.
I wondered what Alex
and Mike were making of this. I, personally, took Dull Care to mean the
burdens and responsibilities of business, but I imagined that Alex was
interpreting the scene differently. A naysayer could easily presume that
Dull Care meant the world beyond the Grove, the average Joes, and that the
High Priest was suggesting the world leaders in the crowd should not give
a damn about ordinary people.
As I pondered this,
a startling thundercrack rang out through the trees, followed by a scary,
cackly voice. It was the voice of Dull Care.
"Fools!" he
roared. "Fools.! Ha ha ha! When will ye learn that me ye cannot
slay?"
Dull Care suggested
to the High Priest that he was invincible.
"When ye turn your
feet to the marketplace," he mocked cacklingly, "am I not waiting for you
as of old? Fools! To dream ye conquer Care."
At this, and in a
breathtaking display of pyrotechnic wizardry, the spirit of Dull Care spat
fire onto the High Priest. From the treetops, a gob of fire rained down
upon the High Priest's hat. This infuriated the High Priest.
"Nay, thou mocking
spirit," he spluttered. "We know thou waitest for us when this our sylvan
holiday shall end. But this too we know: Year after year, within this
happy Grove, our fellowship has banned thee for a space. So shall we burn
thee once again and in the flames that eat thine effigy, we'll read the
sign. Midsummer set us free!"
And the crowd roared
and cheered and yelled the last line back at the priest.
"Midsummer set us
free!"
At this moment,
Death appeared on a gondola on the lagoon, carrying a papier-mache effigy
towards the giant owl. Dry ice floated upon the lagoon's surface. It was a
beautiful sight. The effigy was retrieved from the boat by (my program
informed me) the Brazier Bearers, held out to the owl's midriff, and then
thrown -- by the Mourning Revelry Dancers -- into the fire.
"Aaaargh," said Dull
Care, his grotesque death rattle filling the forest.
"Hooray!" said the
crowd.
Then fireworks
erupted. Then everybody sang "When the Saints Go Marching In." Then it was
over. We clapped. The Grove descended once again into silence, broken only
by the sound of many elderly men murmuring to their neighbors, "Could you
possibly help me up? Thank you so much."
"Well, well, well,"
I said.
"Pretty
spectacular," said Rick.
"I guess we should
go," I said.
We wandered back
towards the exit. A ragtime band was playing near a bonfire. All along the
path, men unzipped their khakis and urinated up against the trees and
straight onto the road. This did not strike me as mere convenience. There
were public toilets everywhere. It was a statement. I needed the toilet
myself, so I urinated too, my urine joining theirs, forming a little
golden stream down the path and into the mud.
AT 1 A.M., back at
the Occidental Motel, Alex and Mike and Violet knocked on my bedroom door.
We nodded to each other. Alex locked the door behind him. He pulled the
curtains closed. Violet hooked the hidden camera up to the TV set. She
fiddled around with the wires. We sat on the bed.
"OK," said Violet.
"I think we've got it."
She switched on the
TV to reveal an indistinct blob of green to the right of the screen. We
squinted our eyes.
"I don't understand
what I'm seeing," said Violet. "The picture is very blurry and crooked,
honey."
"Nobody has ever
lived to get this footage out before," snapped Mike.
"I think it might be
Eden's Garden Soloist," I suggested.
"Who?" said Mike.
"The elf in the
leaf-covered lederhosen," I said.
"Glorious!
Glorious! Oh twigs! Oh boughs! Oh trees ...!" sang Eden's Garden
Soloist.
"Look!" said Alex.
"Torches! Two torches! Now there's three torches! See them? More torches!
It was some kind of sick torchlight procession."
Sure enough, specks
of light had appeared at a perplexing ninety-degree angle in the corner of
the TV screen.
"Damn," said Alex.
"The camera must have toppled over."
"That's so scary,"
said Violet. "I would have been terrified. How terrifying is that?"
"That's nothing,"
said Alex. "They start worshipping the owl any minute."
"Hail,
Bohemians!" began the High Priest. "The ripple of waters, the song
of birds, such music as inspires the soul ..."
"Were you scared?"
Violet asked Mike.
"I'm not going to
lie," he replied. "I was scared to death in there. The whole place was
full of owl statues and gods. Just owls everywhere."
"But surely that's
like going to a Hilton and getting freaked out because they had H's
everywhere," I reasoned. "The owls were a motif."
Mike stared at me as
if I was mad.
IT WAS CLEAR that
the Texans' interpretation of the ceremony differed from my own. My
lasting impression was of an all-pervading sense of immaturity: the Elvis
impersonators, the pseudo-pagan spooky rituals, the heavy drinking. These
people might have reached the apex of their professions but emotionally
they seemed to be trapped in their college years. I wondered whether the
Bohemians shrouded themselves in secrecy for reasons no more sinister than
that they thought it was cool.
I remembered
something that my Bilderberg Deep Throat had said to me on the telephone
one Sunday evening shortly before I set off for the Grove. He said that
far from being fed up with hearing wild conspiracy theories about
themselves, many of the Bilderbergers actually thoroughly enjoy it.
He also said that,
in all honesty, neither Bilderberg nor Bohemian Grove attract the caliber
that they used to. The current members are getting older and older, and
the prospective newcomers -- the world leaders of tomorrow -- don't seem
all that interested in getting involved.
"Let's face it," my
Deep Throat had said to me, "nobody rules the world anymore. The markets
rule the world. Maybe that's why your conspiracy theorists make up all
those crazy things. Because the truth is so much more frightening. Nobody
rules the world. Nobody controls anything."
"Maybe," I said,
"that's why you Bilderbergers love to hear the conspiracy theories. So you
can pretend to yourselves that you do still rule the world."
"Maybe so," he said.
"Fools!"
roared Dull Care on the video in my bedroom.
"Oh my God!"
shrieked Violet, clutching Alex's arm. "How is that normal? That is
so Satanic!"
Mike washed his face
at my sink. He said he wanted to get the hell out of northern California.
He said that as long as only one copy of the videotape existed all our
lives were in danger.
"We should make
copies," said Mike, "give one to Jon, mail another back home, and keep the
third with us at all times."
Alex and Mike and
Violet plotted the future of their video. Once home, they would stream it
on their Web site. Then they would release the complete version as a
mail-order VHS.
"Look," said Alex,
"I'm not into the occult. I deal with concrete things. Waco. Ruby Ridge. I
deal with hardcore things. But this was much worse than I expected. The
catcalls and the insane cackling. After it was over I was walking through
the crowd and I was hearing little bits of conversation. Old men were
going, 'Yes! That's the key! We must burn him again! I do
want to burn him again.' These people were in a fever."
"Even so," I said,
"it isn't as if you overheard any of them secretly discussing global
control or anything like that."
There was a short
silence.
"Yes I did," said
Alex.
"Did you?" I asked.
"Yes," said Alex. "I
heard old men going around bragging about how they manipulate the world. I
heard two guys going, 'Yes, we're going to get him elected.'"
"Did you hear
someone say, 'Yes, we're going to get him elected'?" I asked.
"I swear to God,"
said Alex. "Mike was right there with me."
"Is that word for
word?" I said.
Mike nodded.
"Another guy said,
'Our new missile system is really on top form. They're delivering the
reactor next week,'" said Alex.
"You're making this
up," I said.
"No I'm not," said
Alex.
"These people are
sick," said Mike. "This was sick for America."
"You do seem freaked
out," I said.
"I am very much
freaked out," he said. "I'm so tired of these people telling us that David
Koresh ran a cult. That was a cult. I have never seen the Branch
Davidians worship an idol."
This was a good
point. I wrote the line down in my notepad.
"Write this
down," said Alex. "The government is so good at calling people weirdos and
... and .... cult members ..." Alex paused, stumbling on his words. "I'm
so tired," he said.
"The government,"
prompted Violet, "are saying the Branch Davidians are a cult but here's a
bunch of old guys that run America in their black robes ..."
"I'm exhausted,"
said Alex.
"I'd be exhausted
too if I'd been through what you've been through," said Violet. She leant
over to hug Alex. But he flinched away.
"The point I'm
trying to make is this," said Alex. "These people point their fingers
every day. If you're against the government you're an extremist. You're
crazy. But this was a pagan ceremony worshiping the earth and engaging
in human sacrifice."
"Oh, come on," I
said. "Mock human sacrifice. At worst."
"I know the Branch
Davidians," continued Alex. "They have their little five-hour Bible-study
meetings every Saturday. They are really boring, to be frank ..."
"That wasn't
boring," I admitted.
"That was occultic,"
said Alex. "You've got former and current presidents, all these old men in
the crowd chuckling their mirthful death rattles. 'Burn him! Burn him!"
"They're cheering
for this guy to be killed!" yelled Mike. "It's disgusting!"
"That's not normal,"
said Violet.
"It just got weirder
and weirder and weirder," said Alex. "You've got eighty-year-old men
peeing on trees and going, 'Here! Let's pee!' You've got the Fortune 500
crowd, politicians, peeing on trees, out in public. I mean on concrete
paved roads. Even though they've got toilets, like, five feet away.
Whipping it out and peeing and peeing and peeing. It's running down the
street. Now they're worshiping owls and burning humans in effigy. You've
got death on a black boat bringing a papier-mache person so they can burn
him for some idol, some owl god, some demon."
"Oh, come on," I
said. "They were only saying that for two weeks they should forget their
worldly cares. Be reasonable:
"Look," snapped
Alex, "we understand that they're not literally killing a person,
OK? We understand that. But, Jon, let's get this straight. They
were burning a human in effigy in deference to their great owl god.
This was a simulated human sacrifice complete with the person
begging and pleading for his life. This was bizarre Luciferian garbage."
Mike stood up. He
paced the room. He rapped the walls with his knuckles.
"They did not
kill an effigy of a person," I said. "They burnt a symbol of their
troubles so they can enjoy their bloody summer holiday."
"THEY WERE
KILLING AN EFFIGY OF A PERSON!" roared Alex.
"THEY BLOODY WERE
NOT!" I yelled. "YOU'RE DOING TO THEM" -- I pointed furiously at the TV
screen -- " EXACTLY WHAT THEY DID TO RANDY WEAVER AND DAVID KORESH! SURE!
THEY'RE BEROBED! SURE! THEY RULE THE WORLD! SURE! THEY'VE GOT A GIANT
STONE OWL AND THEY'RE BURNING A -- UM -- HUMAN-ISH EFFIGY IN FRONT OF IT!
BUT YOU'RE PUTTING TWO AND TWO TOGETHER AND MAKING FIVE IN EXACTLY THE
SAME WAY THAT THEY SAW THAT RANDY WEAVER WAS HIGHLY ARMED AND HE
FREQUENTED ARYAN NATIONS AND THEY CONSEQUENTLY DECIDED THAT HE MUST BE A
HIGHLY ARMED -- UM -- WHITE SUPREMACIST!"'
I paused for breath
and saw that Alex and Mike and Violet were staring at me with incredulity.
"Look, I'm sorry," I
said. "It's just been an exhilarating night."
"This will not fly
with the American people," said Mike. "How do you think the American
people will react when we tell them?"
"What are you
going to tell them?" I asked.
"That it's all
true!" yelled Mike. "I looked the New World Order in the face
out there! I saw a bunch of old rich white men, our leaders, out there
sacrificing something to an owl god. I think they're sacrificing people in
the real world too. Ruby Ridge. Waco. Oklahoma City."
Mike splashed cold
water onto his face.
"There will
be an outcry about this," he said. "These are the doctors who make
the vaccines that get pumped into our children. These are the people who
make the movies our children watch. They're at the top, bringing
all that stuff down on us. These are the people that bomb innocent
countries and justify it by making them demons. It wasn't fun and games to
me. I had a tear in my eye."
Mike had a tear in
his eye now. I gave up. I be1ieved I was right, but who knows? Perhaps
Alex and Mike's interpretation was equally correct. Alex patted Mike on
the shoulder.
"Good job, Mike," he
said.
THE NEXT MORNING, as
Mike had recommended, Alex copied all of his undercover Bohemian Grove
footage for me. I watched the tape being transferred. I watched the
ceremony again in my hotel room in Los Angeles on my way back home to
London. I placed the tape underneath my clothes in my suitcase. I checked
my suitcase in at the airport. I retrieved it at Gatwick. When I arrived
home, I put the tape into my VCR and pressed Play. There was Alex and Mike
diving into the undergrowth. There they were wandering through the
grounds. There they were heading down to the lagoon at dusk. And then --
and I offer no explanation for this, no theories -- the tape blanked out.
The ceremony had somehow been erased.
Bombshell: elitist Bohemian Grove
cult blown wide open!
In the weeks that
followed, Alex did, indeed, stream his video on his Web site. It
immediately became an underground blockbuster. Everywhere I looked, the
Internet was aflame with news of the daring raid.
First ever video from inside the
Northern Californian globalist retreat obtained! Leaders from politics,
big business, academia, and the arts captured on tape worshiping a 50~foot
horned owl and engaging in mock human sacrifice.
Radio Talk-Show Host
and Documentary Filmmaker Alex Jones infiltrated the cult on one of their
highest holy days to witness the infamous "Cremation of Care." On July 15,
2000, Jones, carefully disguised as a "Grover," spent four hours inside
the elite cult compound. Armed with two hidden digital video cameras, he
observed and documented bizarre public urination and the worship of a
giant stone horned owl deity.
Other news:
The Bush Gang: wanted for
international murder, child abuse, drug running, and genocide. You know
the father now meet the son.
NATO leaders controlled by
Bilderberg. Bilderberg summit closes in Portugal under massive security.
... Reporter Jon
Ronson was understandably disturbed by the experience of being trailed by
security men in a green Lancia K throughout Wednesday. According to
Ronson, the British Embassy had told him not to provoke any incidents and
that his fate was in his own hands ...
Why was The Spotlight's Jim
Tucker and reporter Jon Ronson chased by Bilderberg security in Portugal?
Perhaps the whole
reason was just so Tucker could write an outlandish article about it that
nobody would believe because of The Spotlight's racist tendencies.
Perhaps they were chased just so nobody would believe them.
I got tired. I
turned off my computer.
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