Date: Sun, November 17, 2013 12:16 pm (answered 19 November 2013)
Peter Ferentzy, PhD
Hi again, Peter,
Oh yes. Thanks for the tip. If it's by Stanton Peele, we know it will be good.
Have a good day now.
== Orange
Date: Sun, November 17, 2013 7:26 pm (answered 19 November 2013) Agent Orange looks like Jesus needing a styled haircut and some better fitting clothes, if he has any intentions of women in AA groups wanting to 13th step him. I am fairly handsome, and clean cut and dress well. I allowed myself to be taken advantage of by the 40-somethings tank top cougar women in the meetings. These ladies had some serious sobriety time too. Most of my big book learning took place naked in bed with these female sponsors who wanted to help me remain sober. I went from a hopeless, helpless, desperate, alcoholic to a womanizing slut for a guy with no morals whatsoever. Today, I am heading toward my 14th year of sobriety and I feel good. As I say, "Keep coming back..... It works if you work it and there are a lot of cougar tank-top oldies available that need some loving.
Hello Tom,
Thanks for the laugh. Really, if I have to totally change my appearance to get a woman
interested in me, then she must be a rather shallow person who might not be worth the bother.
Have a good day now.
== Orange
Sent To Gmail: It is easy for humans to condemn, criticize, analyze, and tear apart. Awareness is often suggested to be the first step in creating change. But the ultimate trick is to move beyond awareness and find the alternatives, test them, subject them to the same critical analysis and promote what makes this a better world for all life. Doesn't sustaining life require balance and harmony? Where is the other side of your sword of commentary about AA.
janet f. mcc. m.ed.
Hello Janet,
Thanks for the letter. The reason that I didn't answer it sooner is because you sent
it to my Gmail address. I don't use that address for anything but a spam-catcher, because
Google reads all email that comes or goes through Gmail, in order to target ads.
Any letter to Gmail may go unread for months.
Now, about your subject line:
Isn't it funny how anonymity is supposedly a holy virtue when A.A.
members do it, but it's somehow a fault or a wrong when I do it?
Is that hypocrisy, or what?
The fact is, I abandoned anonymity many years ago.
My birth name was, and still is, Terrance Hodgins, and I live in rural Oregon.
You can find the rest of the autobiographical information here:
Now, about your other complaints: You read the file
What's Not Good About A.A.?,
and totally ignored everything in the file.
Doesn't it bother you that Alcoholics Anonymous is a lying fraud that foists an old
pro-Nazi cult religion on sick people as a quack cure for alcohol addiction and alcohol abuse?
You complained that it is easy to criticize. Well, it's also easy to sell quackery and
fraud as a cure for a phony "spiritual disease", too.
And it's even easier for me to criticize when my opponent is such a criminal, doing
such harm to sick people.
This is spectacularly wrong pseudo-spiritual nonsense:
Move beyond awareness? Into blindness, unconsciousness, and stupidity?
Moving beyond awareness is what we used to do when we drank alcohol until we passed out.
The real answer is, "Learn the truth, and the truth shall make you free."
Now to give you the benefit of the doubt, it sounds like what you are trying to say
is that we should test the various suggested cures for alcohol abuse
and alcohol addiction, and see what works. That has been done.
Here is the list of methods of recovery where Prof. William Miller and his crew
at the Center for Alcohol, Substance Abuse and Addictions at the University of New Mexico
rated 48 various methods of recovery:
http://www.behaviortherapy.com/ResearchDiv/whatworks.aspx
Note that A.A. and "twelve-step facilitation" are so far down the list
that you have to look for them, at numbers 37 and 38 in effectiveness. Also, they
have a very negative rating.
(You can read more discussion of that list here:
When A.A. was tested, it was a total failure. Every time:
Then, you finished with an
appeal to relativism:
"Harmony and balance" don't mean that we should just smile and allow the
criminals to rob, rape, and kill, in the interests of fairly representing "the
other side of the sword". There is such a thing as right and wrong.
And allowing criminals to hurt sick people with quack medicine is wrong.
Allowing criminals to
sexually exploit sick women is wrong.
Allowing criminals to deceive sick people with an old pro-Nazi cult religion is wrong.
Have a good day now.
== Orange
Sent To Gmail: People die from alcoholism AA gives them a chance and the book says that we are not the only solution .why would bash an institution that's only goal is to help people.they don't gain monetarily so that's not their motive unlike so called treatment centers. AA doesn't and never has used courts or doctors to push their message they do that of their own free will. Is the success rate low yes it is but not any lower than anything else and higher than not trying it at all. The government claimed AA a church not AA. I'd love to meet you in person instead of you hiding on the Internet. it is a spiritually program for those who want it.I agree courts shouldn't force people there because they can't prove you even went . They can't call and find out if you understand the word anonymous . Was bill Wilson perfect no he wasn't was he a Saint no and he didn't claim to be. If you'd ever seen the hope return to people's life you sick bastard unless your a psychopath ? You wouldn't bash AA you'd praise it you sick fuck Sent from my iPhone
Hello Eric,
Thanks for the letter. The reason that I didn't answer it sooner is because you sent
it to my Gmail address. I don't use that address for anything but a spam-catcher, because
Google reads all email that comes or goes through Gmail, in order to target ads.
Any letter to Gmail may go unread for months.
Your letter is a mess of denial. Yes, you are in denial.
Denial isn't just a river in Egypt.
When A.A. was
tested by Dr. George E. Vaillant, who loves A.A. and went on to be a Trustee of A.A. for many years,
he found that A.A. was the worst way to treat alcohol abuse. Nothing produced a higher death toll.
Here is the list of methods of recovery where Prof. William Miller and his crew
at the Center for Alcohol, Substance Abuse and Addictions at the University of New Mexico
rated 48 various methods of recovery:
http://www.behaviortherapy.com/ResearchDiv/whatworks.aspx
Note that A.A. and "twelve-step facilitation" are so far down the list
that you have to look for them, at numbers 37 and 38 in effectiveness. Also, they
have a very negative rating.
(You can read more discussion of that list here:
Wrong. The U.S. courts have declared that A.A. is a religion, and engages in religious activities.
Actually, it's a very superstitious program for those who want superstitions, like that
you can worship anything as your "god" or "higher power",
and nevertheless, old "H.P." will
perform a miracle for you — make you quit drinking alcohol —
and even talk to you in séances.
Actually, the reason that courts should not force people to go to A.A.
is because it is unConstitutional and against the law of the land.
A.A. is a religion, and it is against the laws of the United States of America to
force anyone to participate in any religion.
Bill Wilson jabbered "We are not saints" to explain away his crimes, but he also put on airs of
being a holy man:
And there we see the truth about A.A. "spirituality".
That's how cult members react to criticism of their favorite sacred cow.
And yes, I have seen the hope return to people's eyes. Most often, after they escaped from the
madness of A.A.
Have a good day now.
== Orange
Sent To Gmail: Greetings: I'm just curious as to why you're so anti-AA. I've been going to more than 4 meetings a week for over 8 years and I've never experienced any of the negatives you seem to think typify the program. AA didn't foster "learned helplessness" in me. However, it did help me to stop destroying my life after years of self-help efforts had failed miserably and left me literally a shell of a person. I have heard that some people find the program restrictive and controlling. However, it's never been so for me. Quite the opposite, it's been liberating and has expanded the horizons of my life in every direction. My hope for Recovery was that it would simply remove all the negatives that addiction had brought to my life. It certainly did that, but it did so much more too. In Recovery I found, and now have, a better, fuller, more abundant life than I ever knew was possible. Brad
Hello Brad,
Thanks for the letter. The reason that I didn't answer it sooner is because you sent
it to my Gmail address. I don't use that address for anything but a spam-catcher, because
Google reads all email that comes or goes through Gmail, in order to target ads.
They have no respect for our privacy, so I don't use it.
Any letter to Gmail may go unread for months.
Now, about the body of your letter: Apparently, you are going to some other meetings than
A.A. meetings.
Every A.A. meeting that I ever went to began by reading the plastic laminated dogma that says:
So, apparently, you found a wonderful organization that is not at all like Alcoholics Anonymous.
Lucky you.
Oh, by the way, since you've been going to your meetings for 8 years now, you should know the answers
to these questions: Could you please tell us what the cure
rate of your organization is? Out of each 100 newcomers, how many get a year of sobriety?
And what are the A.A. divorce rate, suicide rate, and death rate?
Thank you.
(HINT: the answers are here
and
here
and
here.
And
here, and
here, and
here.)
Have a good day now.
== Orange
[ Link here = http://www.orange-papers.info/orange-letters376.html#Bradley2 ]
Date: Wed, November 20, 2013 12:01 pm (answered 23 November 2013) Thanks for your response, Orange. Interesting that the same program can be seen as so bad from one vantage point and so good from another. I think I understand what you find objectionable about AA. If you don't mind me asking, what is it about those objections that compels you to devote the time and attention to your efforts? If you do mind me asking, please know that no offense was intended. Brad
Hello again, Brad,
Thanks for the response.
Seeing something from "one vantage point or another" is the propaganda trick called
Escape via Relativism.
It implies that all viewpoints are equal in value or merit.
For example, as if the Nazi opinion of Jews should be considered just
as accurate as a Hassidic Rabbi's view of Jews.
Or, the KKK opinion of Black people is just as valid as Dr. Martin Luther King's
view of Black people.
The idea that we should represent all viewpoints equally is another expression of that propaganda trick.
Well, all viewpoints are not created equal. Some viewpoints are based on nothing but misinformation,
prejudice, ignorance, and the desire to believe. Sometimes even hatred and anger.
Other viewpoints are based on true information and careful
judgement. And it is our job to figure out which are which.
It is our job to find out what is true.
My big objection to A.A. is that it is a fraud that does not help people. They lie and say that
it does. They being every meeting by repeating the lie about
"RARELY have we seen a person fail, who has thoroughly followed our path."
But that is a lie.
I have seen the people die.
I've seen
the struggling people
misled by A.A. misinformation and quackery.
I have seen people hurt, not helped, by A.A.
That is why I am so opposed to it.
I am reminded of what an anonymous correspondent wrote in years ago:
Have a good day now.
== Orange
[ Link here = http://www.orange-papers.info/orange-letters376.html#Bradley3 ]
Date: Sat, November 23, 2013 6:35 pm (answered 27 November 2013) Well, AA saved my life and I have seen it save others. I have seen people who seemed doomed and absolutely hopeless completely restored. I read your "The Lizard Brain Addiction Monster." Good stuff. I have long believed pretty much everything you said there. At a meeting on Friday with Drug Court "kids" I was talking about how it had been a great help to me in early recovery to think of my addiction as a nasty, mean monster that I had locked in a cage — it would try anything to trick me into letting it out, or feeding it a bit, but my job was to keep it locked up. The rule was "don't feed it, don't pet it, don't talk to it, and don't ever let it out — not even for a minute." I still follow those rules, but the monster has long been well contained and certain to stay that way as long as I don't open the cage and feed it. The last rehab I went to (Bridging the Gaps in Winchester, VA) was driven by a concern/belief that the majority of addicts/alcoholics don't get saved by AA alone. They were really big on diet and amino acid therapy a la Dr. Charles Gant. Take care, Orange. I'm glad you found what works for you. Brad PS I quite smoking on 3/7/10. Having quit using almost 5 years before that, I knew in my heart that no matter what I couldn't smoke even a little. A free on-line PDF book that really helped me was "Never Take Another Puff."
Hello Brad,
Thanks for the response.
When you say that A.A. saved your life, you are
assuming a cause-and-effect relationship
where none exists. That is a common logical failing. "My mother gave me chicken soup when I had a
cold, and then I got over the cold, so chicken soup cures the common cold."
Similarly, "I went to some A.A. meetings and quit drinking, so A.A. made me quit drinking."
What about, "My desire to quit drinking and have a better life made me quit drinking and also
caused me to go to some A.A. meetings."?
In order to reliably establish cause-and-effect relationships, it is necessary to do
Randomized Longitudinal Controlled Studies.
Still, I'm glad to hear that you are doing well and are getting healthy. The quitting smoking too
is great. That makes a huge difference in your health. Congratulations.
And I'll have to check out "Never Take Another Puff".
I'm glad to hear that you liked
"The Lizard Brain Addiction Monster",
and could relate to it. The knowledge in that page was a huge help to me
in my first couple of years off of alcohol — and also off of cigarettes.
It was a revelation to me to realize that the addictive mechanism that urged me to have a drink
was also the same monster that was urging me to smoke a cigarette.
He would even use the same lines, like,
"It's okay to have just one... We've got it under control
now. Just one won't hurt."
(No matter what "just one" was.)
I don't know anything about Dr. Charles Gant. That is another area to investigate.
Have a good day now.
== Orange
Date: Oct 15, 2013 (answered 19 November 2013) If you don't like AA then don't go. I like AA because my life is better for it. My health, marriage, relationships, occupation, self worth. etc. Do I agree with everything in AA ? No. I say it at meetings too. I don't believe in Bill's spiritual axiom. I don't blindly take my sponsor's advice. I'm in a group that is loose and open. We just don't drink and try to help each other. I also love that no matter where I go in the country there is a really nice group of friends there to welcome me. Something you don't have.
Hello Dave,
Thanks for the letter. The reason that I didn't answer it sooner is because you sent
it to my Gmail address. I don't use that address for anything but a spam-catcher, because
Google reads all email that comes or goes through Gmail, in order to target ads.
They have no respect for our privacy, so I don't use it.
Any letter to Gmail may go unread for months.
Now, about your letter: It's all fine and well that you are happy with your favorite meeting group.
It's a free country and you can join any religion that you wish. And you can believe almost anything
that you wish.
Congratulations for getting your act together and quitting drinking.
Really. You did it, not them.
The problem is that
A.A. does not actually work
as a cure for alcohol addiction or alcohol abuse,
and 75% of the treatment centers in the USA sell 12-Step "treatment" as a quack cure.
And courts sentence people to the phony A.A. religion that is really Buchmanism,
which is
an old pro-Nazi cult religion from the nineteen-thirties.
That is why I criticize it.
Alcoholics Anonymous treatment of alcohol addiction and alcohol abuse
actually raises the death
rate in alcoholics. It does not lower it or save their lives.
That is why I criticize it.
So, can you answer these questions?
Can you please tell us what the cure rate of A.A. is?
Out of each 100 newcomers, how many get a year of sobriety?
And what are the A.A. divorce rate, suicide rate, and death rate?
Thank you.
(HINT: the answers are here
and
here
and
here.
And
here, and
here, and
here.)
Have a good day now.
== Orange
Date: Wed, November 20, 2013 5:39 pm (answered 23 November 2013) Dear Orange, I heard your interview with Monica and loved it. This is Anti-Denial and I wanted to bring something to your attention and get your thoughts. It seems like an overzealous forum member Cause and Effect has put a disclaimer on everyone of her posts that says.
"Disclaimer: The beliefs and actions of Jim Battle and AntiDenial do not Who is Cause and Effect to say this and basically attempt to blackball me and anyone else who might not agree with her gay and religious views? Also threatening to add people to the list is intimidating others to show support as well. Bully behavior. I know they tried to get me and Jim banned. I know you have stated you do not believe in personal attacks against other members. I feel having this on every single comment Cause and Effect makes is abusive. This was all because of my support of Jim speaking with churches that have AA meetings. Thank you in advance for you taking my thoughts on the matter into consideration. AntiDenial
Hello AntiDenial,
Thanks for the letter. I agree with you. The one thing that that is forbidden on the forum is
personal attacks on others. So I'll have to discourage it.
I posted the following message in response to
If we are to make any headway against A.A., we need people to clearly understand that this is not a battle of religious belief versus atheism. That's how A.A. promoters like to frame the argument: "Oh, you are just against A.A. because you are against God." It is important for the religious community to understand that A.A. is a heretical cult religion that is no friend of theirs.
Unfortunately, some people are easily fooled by a few choice words, like "God" or "Jesus". Just sprinkle those words in your rap, and a lot of people will immediately think that you must be a very moral and ethical person. Alas, it ain't necessarily so. Every election year, plenty of politicians prove that to be untrue.
One thing we are all agreed upon is the idea that it is bad to sell your soul to the Devil. Now you can take that as either literal or figurative, depending on your beliefs.
In the literal sense, someone agrees to be a servant of the Evil One in trade for getting a list of wishes granted, which is usually wealth, power, sex, and maybe longevity. Signing the contract in blood might be optional today.
In the figurative sense, someone sells his soul to the Devil by turning his back on what is good and right, in trade for wealth or power or something. The evil bankers and Wall Street billionaires who stole Grandma's house in order to get more billions of dollars come to mind. The recent Wall Street meltdown with packaged bad mortgages, and Credit Default Swaps and Collateralized Debt Obligations and tranches and worthless securitites supporting more worthless securities was all just a pyramid of evil and wrongs piled up on more evil and wrongs until the mountain of fraud reached to the sky, taller than the skyscrapers of Manhattan. It isn't hard to find a lot of men who sold their souls to the Devil in that mess. (And it's a national disgrace that they got bailed out rather than sent to prison.)
In A.A., the "spiritual deal" for recovery is basically just selling your soul to the Devil. You surrender control of your mind, your will, and your life to a vague "higher power" who can be anything from a rock or doorknob or Golden Calf or nameless spirit to a Group Of Drunks. Then you let "Higher Power" talk to you in a séance in Step 11 and tell you what to do. And then you go do whatever they tell you to do. Among other things, you promise to not tell the truth to newcomers, to only reveal the truth slowly, in order to lure them in, and you promise to go recruiting and get more souls for "our little fellowship". And you promise to always praise A.A. and the Founders, and never tell the truth about A.A.
Umm, let's see, "lure the reader in." "Dole out the truth by teaspoons, not buckets." "Don't reveal too much truth too soon." Isn't that what Jesus taught?
Oh well, have a good day now.
Oh, as a parting note:
Jesus Christ has been declared persona non grata and banned from the local Anonymous Alcoholism clubhouse, informed sources say. "Well, that joker was always zapping people's water or coffee, and turning it into wine, and getting them drunk. We just couldn't have that. We know that traditionally the only requirement for membership in A.A. is a desire to quit drinking, but Jesus's behavior was simply not acceptable here."
When asked if he thought they would get into trouble for banning Jesus, an anonymous spokesperson said, "No, I don't think we will have any problems with it. Besides, most of us here pray to a bedpan or a doorknob as our Higher Power anyway, so Jesus won't really be missed."
Have a good day now. == Orange
Wow! That was fast. Last month, the Orange Papers set a new record of 4 million
hits in a single month. Now, this month, just last night, it broke 5 million, and if the numbers
continue the way that they are going now, the total will go over 6 million hits
before the end of this month. The record will go from 4 million hits up to 6 million in a single month.
I don't know what is going on. I'm not doing anything differently. The traffic just keeps going up and up.
Way back in
on 2013.07.26, Btnben asked, "Is the Orange Papers doing a Bob Beamon?"
He explained,
The OP monthly hits count has been close to the 3 million mark for some months now
— it was just a matter of time before it happened. This month has gone
crazy. It looks like the OP hits count is going to hit a new record over 4 million,
never having had 3 million as the best monthly count.
Well, it didn't happen. We just barely missed reaching 4 million hits in July.
Only missed it by 70,787, which equals a fraction of one day. So close.
But the month of July contained a fluke:
We got a huge spike of almost 1½ million hits in just a single day.
I still don't know what happened there. I can only guess that someone
must have given the web site a plug on nationwide TV or something.
It took two more months before the regular usage finally reached 4 million
hits per month. But now, 25 days later, it hits 5 million and it's climbing hard
towards 6 million in the same month.
If the numbers don't fall sharply, it will happen. Wow.
So it looks like, this month the Bob Beamon thing is going to happen.
You can see the numbers at:
http://www.orange-papers.info/webstats
Date: Mon, November 25, 2013 11:17 am (answered 27 November 2013) I read the cautionary heads-up re: Google reading my email... I'm not sure that I have anything contained herein that I need to keep hidden from them, but thanks for apprising me of the possibility. I don't think that I've written you since around 2006 or 2007, and it was from different email addresses (mostly yahoo ones if my memory is serving me accurately). Omg, I am a paranoid person! But departing further and further from a superstitious person... Your online book has served as an anchor to reality for me over the years, and even just knowing that the forum is there is a source of comfort, confidence, learning and rationality. I wanted to reach back out. My name is Mikey, I've drank alcoholically, but I maintain that the "obsession" is a matter of choices and decision-making, not a matter of powerlessness. I've allowed myself to be repeatedly harmed by the process of stepwork and sponsorship... yet I struggle (sometimes despairingly) with loneliness and alienation from my peers (other gay men) and I lead myself back into the WeHo rooms of AA looking for fellowship, companionship, and (admittedly) the possibility of a sexual liaison... which even at 34 and a handsome gay guy, I have major difficulty in securing. :-( This is mostly my own hang-up, really. Idk HOW, but I somehow found myself in that stuck-ness from Program. I'm becoming a rational freethinking atheist, like some of my brothers in my family of origin. I never thought that I would be that, and at first, the prospect was so depressing and saddening to me. But there's so much more freedom and hope in seeing things as they really are vs. some made-up fairytale that doesn't reflect the truth of anything about ANYTHING... including a spiritual disease. That's no more true than exorcisms/demonic possession. Anyway, I may be foolish to be spilling all of this to you... but you, whomever you are represent a beacon of sanity in a truly insane, torrential sea of ridiculous fascism and superstition regarding a disease they made up to label themselves and absolve themselves of any real responsibility. The AA snake oil is like some yogi guru recommending pranic breath to a flock of famished people if food can't be secured or is unavailable. There HAS to be something better than that. I wish that I had more people to surround myself with. If you feel so inclined to respond, I'd be most grateful. Anyway, thank you for your work & steadfastness in the orange papers. It can't be easy and sometimes must be pretty thankless. I'm not in a position to donate any money right now... but also please let me know if there's any way that I can be of help or service! :-)
Warmest regards,
Hello Mikey,
Thank you for the letter and all of the compliments. I wish that I felt as much like a pillar
of sanity as you feel that I am.
I feel more like an ordinary human with all of the emotions and conflicts that everybody else has.
Oh well, so it goes.
Speaking of which, the loneliness and wanting companionship is perfectly normal and usual.
That's what it means to be human. Humans are flocking birds.
May I suggest that you just look in other places? (It reminds me of the song Looking for Love in
All of the Wrong Places.)
I don't know if they have any SMART or SOS meetings in your town, but here's the list, and you
can check:
http://www.orange-papers.info/orange-alt_list.html
Also, consider other groups that have nothing to do with alcohol or recovery. Book clubs, folk dance,
coffee houses, theater clubs, political or social organizations come to mind.
Perhaps there is something that you can do to help the cause.
Every so often, there is research to do. You know,
just searching and investigating and gathering information. I spend lot of time doing that,
and there is always more to do.
Also, there is publicity, like letters to the editor and comments to news articles on
newspapers' web sites. Steppers keep up a non-stop campaign of
publicity to promote their racket, and we have to counteract that.
And there are letters to your Congresspersons and Senators, both State and Federal, to be written.
They often really don't know what is going on. All that they ever heard was Stepper propaganda
telling them that A.A. and N.A. are the best way to recover. So somebody has to tell them the truth.
Have a good day now.
== Orange
Date: Mon, November 25, 2013 11:05 am (answered 27 November 2013) Hi Orange, Just wanted to let you know that I will be using your "What's Not Good About AA" article as an outline on my TV program titled "Alcoholics Anonymous Is Dangerous" It will air in Tucson AZ and on the internet for 30 minutes, 2 days a week, and for 4 months. The title stay up on the screen at all times for the purpose of catching the attention of channel surfers. I'm sure you appreciate how I expose what AA, Drug Courts, and Churches are doing. Just thought I'd let you know because your info is playing a big part in this. Thank you.
Jim B.,
Okay, Jim,
Thanks for the information. That sounds interesting. I'm glad to hear that you are spreading the word.
Do you have a link or channel or time? Thanks.
And have a good day now.
== Orange
Last updated 27 December 2013. |