Date: Tue, June 26, 2007 7:33 pm (answered 28 June 2007)
From: washboy
Subject: 12 step bashing
AO,
It's obvious what your addiction is. I pray you will find the help you need to
overcome it.
God Bless,
Washboy
Hello Washboy,
"AA-bashing" is not an addiction. Neither is habitually telling the truth.
And I certainly don't want to be "saved from it".
If you ask this goose, who knows me much better than you do, she will tell you that
if I'm addicted to anything, it's to playing in the sunshine — going down to the river and
feeding the geese and ducks, and working on my suntan and guitar playing, and
drinking lemonade and soda pop. I hardly have the
spare time to waste on answering letters from AA members, or in writing about Alcoholics
Anonymous, especially when the summer is so beautiful.
The white stuff on the edge of her beak is bread crumbs. She's been munching bread, and
now she wants some more.
So as soon as I finish a few letters here, I'm heading for the river.
And you have a good day too.
== Orange
* orange@orange-papers.info *
* AA and Recovery Cult Debunking *
* http://www.Orange-Papers.org/ *
** "I have sworn, before the altar of God, eternal hostility
** against any form of tyranny over the mind of man."
** == Thomas Jefferson
Date: July 3, 2007 (answered 3 July 2007)
From: Jay V.
Subject: Link to interesting AA commentary
That's outrageous. The anonymity of A.A. meetings is such a perfect
cover for a predator. A woman gets killed, and all that the group
members can do is complain about someone telling the truth about
a killer meeting his victim in an A.A. meeting...
And then there was this paragraph,
"It's really unfair to AA as an anonymous place for safety, for
people to come and get sober, to be accused of such a thing as being a
place where murderers lurk," said one caller, who identified herself
as a recovering alcoholic. "That's what the title is insinuating."
Telling the truth isn't unfair.
And the speaker is assuming things that
are obviously untrue — A.A. is obviously not a place for safety.
That's what the whole article is about.
And notice the word twists,
"to be accused of such a thing as being a place where murderers lurk...".
No, not accused. The reporter just told the truth — that A.A. really is a place where
murderers lurk.
(Well of course, we knew that. That is one of A.A.'s claims to fame — that all kinds of down-and-out
disreputable people find a happy home in A.A., where no one looks down on them and they get lots of
"love" and "unconditional acceptance".)
Oh well, have a good day anyway.
== Orange
* orange@orange-papers.info *
* AA and Recovery Cult Debunking *
* http://www.Orange-Papers.org/ *
** "Now I know what it's like to be high on life.
** It isn't as good, but my driving has improved."
** == Nina, on "Just Shoot Me", 13 Jan 2006.
P.S. I also heard about a sequential predator in California and Nevada who went to A.A. meetings to
find lonely old women. He used a false name, of course, to hide his real identity.
He would pretend to be their friend and lover until he had emptied their bank accounts and retirement
funds and then he was gone, to another city where he would show up in another A.A. meeting with
a new name...
Date: Sun, July 1, 2007 12:54 am (answered 5 July 2007)
From: "cvmweb"
Subject: what the..
I know all about the TIME magazine "100 Most Influential People of
the 20th Century" list.
I also know that Adolf Hitler made the same list too. And I agree that
both Adolf Hitler and
Bill Wilson greatly influenced the course of history during the 20th
century — for the worse.
And guess who wrote the flattering TIME magazine article about Bill Wilson?
None other than Susan Cheever,
the sycophant who is "just in love with Bill Wilson", and who wrote
a whole book of brown-nosing
praise of Bill Wilson
that even included the rationalization that it really was
okay for Bill Wilson to practice necromancy —
"maybe the dead are not gone"
— and that it was normal for people like
Bill Wilson to conduct séances with a Ouija board and spirit rapping
and channeling,
and talk to the spirits of the dead.
And then Susan Cheever even rationalized that it was
okay for Bill Wilson to be a sexual predator
who exploited the pretty women who came to A.A. meetings seeking help
for a drinking problem.
(And then, her reward for such parrotting of the A.A. party line was that
Susan Cheever was then elected to the
Board of Directors of the National Council on Alcoholism and Drug Dependency
— the NCADD — the A.A. front group that was founded by
"Mrs." Marty Mann to promote Alcoholics Anonymous.)
Nowhere in the writings of Aldous Huxley have I been able to find one
word of praise of Bill Wilson
or Alcoholics Anonymous, and I've looked for it. And so have other people.
If Huxley really said that Bill Wilson and his organization were so great,
then you would think that he would have said it somewhere, in one of his
books. Maybe just a tiny little
mention — a paragraph or two — in a utopian novel like Island.
Island was one of Huxley's masterpieces,
and in it he talked about how to solve all kinds of social problems.
Huxley even had high-school graduates mountain-climbing together,
to build bonds of trust between them, and then taking psychelic drugs
together to get their spiritual experiences. (That was the graduation ceremony.)
But there was no mention of "support groups" or 12 Steps or
anybody like Bill Wilson in that utopia.
In fact, when the crown prince of the island showed signs of a neurotic
sexual disorder, the island elders prescribed sex lessons from an
older woman. No 12-Step support group.
By the way, remember that Aldous Huxley and Bill Wilson met because they were both
getting LSD from Doctors Humphry Osmond and Abram Hoffer.
Bill Wilson's first trip was August 29, 1956, in Los Angeles. (See PASS IT ON, pages 368 to 377.)
That was where Huxley got the idea of using psychedelic drugs to reform and improve society.
So Huxley had already met Bill Wilson before he wrote Island.
In fact, Island was
inspired by Huxley's psychedelic experiences with LSD and mescaline.
Still, Huxley didn't consider Bill Wilson or 12-Step
support groups worth including in his vision of an ideal enlightened society.
I challenge you to show me anything in Huxley's writings or letters or
speeches where he praised
Bill Wilson or Alcoholics Anonymous. Really. Let's see the evidence.
Bill Wilson's grandiose bragging about
himself isn't good enough evidence.
It isn't really evidence of anything except
Bill's narcissistic personality disorder.
Have a good day.
== Orange
* orange@orange-papers.info *
* AA and Recovery Cult Debunking *
* http://www.Orange-Papers.org/ *
** "You can fool all the people some of the time, and
** some of the people all the time, but you cannot fool
** all the people all the time." == Abraham Lincoln
P.S.: And this is what I've been enjoying lately. It's the Portland Waterfront Park Blues Festival, and
it goes on for 5 days this year, from July 4 through the following Sunday (today).
It's great.
And lest some bozo suggest that I should avoid "people, places, and things" where alcohol is consumed
and people party,
let me say that I've been doing this every summer since I quit drinking and smoking. It's my way of enjoying
sobriety. And I'm always reminded of the fact that when I was drinking and smoking, I was too sick to get out and
enjoy things like this.
I never had this much fun when I was drinking and smoking.
That alone is a good reason to continue to stay sober.
[another letter from William:]
Date: Tue, July 10, 2007 11:05 pm
From: William
Subject: Huxley quote
Dear Agent Orange:
Hi again!
Below is a PDF file
of the letter where Aldous Huxley mentions BW
in The Letters of Aldous Huxley. Out of nearly a thousand pages this is the
only reference to BW in the index. I hope you can open the file. Huxley says
nothing good or bad about aa or Bill W. He just uses what Bill was talking about
over lunch as a spring board for a larger topic. Oh well, so much for "The
greatest social architect of the 20th century." I think it can be safely said that
Aldous never said any such thing. And I am so glad Huxley never said it!
I
found this quote by Huxley on Wikipedia: On _social organizations_
(
http://www.cybernation.com/quotationcenter/quoteshow.php?type=author&id=4470) :
"One of
the many reasons for the bewildering and tragic character of human existence
is the fact that social organization is at once necessary and fatal. Men are
forever creating such organizations for their own convenience and forever
finding themselves the victims of their home-made monsters."
[No citation given.]
Enough said?? (Come on Susan Cheever prove it!)
You got me very interested in rereading Island again after so many years.
(I'm 51 and read Huxley back in my early 20's. I've read some essays and
biographical stuff since then, but not one of his novels). So I picked Island up this
evening and started reading it. I flipped to near the end of the book and
Huxley was parodying Onward Christian Solders. That would shock an Oxford Grouper,
let alone an aa True Believer! (I'm sure Aldous heard of the Oxford group
just because they were so big during part of his life.) I'm certain Aldous would
have never bought into Frank Buckman's ideas, therefore aa by extension (oh,
by the way, he wrote an essay where he rips apart the Lord's Preyer).
I'd like to tell you that yesterday I celebrated 2 years of sobriety!!
Congrats to you for more then 6 years!! Glad all aa people who wished you would go
drink lost! Your pages really helped me though some rough spots. Now I don't
want any alcohol at all (and it took about 11 months for the cravings to go
away). Now that my mind has really cleared up, also about 11 months, I just can't
see sitting around consuming like 9 beers a night. People need to start
believing that it is a human problem that does have a human answer — not ONLY by
divine intervention. [well actually most people do believe it has a human
answer. The aa people don't]. No one's alcoholism is just removed magically by God
and then proclaim that it just isn't a problem any more, just like that. It's
such an affront to all of us who are working on recovering from this dreadful
problem.
Someday I'd like to tell you about my experiences with the 12 step treatment
mill. Hey, I didn't know this for the longest time, and I'm sure you know. To
become a "Chemical Dependency Counselor" only requires you to be 18, posses a
high school diploma, and take about 12 seminar classes that can be completed
in about 9 months at most. I know that it's true in Michigan (I live north of
Detroit), I know it's true in New York, and in California you need an
associates degree. A friend of mine works at a treatment center in New York City and
they train them and have the requirements on their web site. The sick train the
sick to help the sick get well. One good reason treatment is such a colossal
failure! This really burns me. Any other psychological problem can't be touch
by someone without at least a Masters up to MD. And alcoholism is surely a
psychological problem (with some biological components). Well, after all it is
listed in the DSM-4 as alcohol abuse/depndency. I'm not saying that people with
masters or above would all make splendid alcohol councilors, but the bar is way
too low. It was designed that way I think so the aa true believer can become a
counselor, otherwise most of them never could hack the education to make it
into the field. It's interesting to note that people with higher academic
training who get a job in a treatment center, who were not alcoholic and had never
been to a meeting, just fall into the belief systems exposed by the treatment
centers. They think this all has sound psychological validity. That the way we
treat alcoholics in the therapeutic setting is actually based on a lot of real
research. WRONG.
Well, I could go on forever this way. But it's late and I want to read more
of Island before falling asleep. Isn't sobriety wonderful!
Great day to ya Orange!
William
Hello again William,
Thank you very much for the PDF file. Now that is interesting.
What is particularly revealing is that Bill Wilson was also messing around
with other strange experimental chemicals in addition to LSD. And Bill was either giving the chemicals
to his fellow "ex-alcoholics", or some doctor that Bill knew was. (Don't you love that wording —
"ex-alcoholics"?)
I know that Bill Wilson was going around handing out LSD. He dosed everybody he could talk into it,
from his wife and secretary to his minister Sam Shoemaker, to other alcoholics.
So he was probably handing out other stuff too.
That makes the
current A.A. attitude that you don't have "perfect sobriety"
if you are taking psychiatric medications ridiculous.
Bill Wilson himself didn't believe in such "purity".
And yes, Aldous Huxley spoke no praise of Bill Wilson there.
Certainly not a declaration that Bill Wilson was
the greatest social architect of the 20th century.
Not even a statement that he had done anything good.
Just a statement that Bill Wilson was taking experimental drugs, and
giving them to his neurotic ex-alcoholics,
and that those drugs might also help Huxley's wife.
Wow. That is so far away from the current "Back To The Basics"
12-Step fundamentalist religion that I'm sure the fundies don't want to
hear the truth about Bill Wilson.
(And they don't. That's why they send hostile letters.
And why they keep the historical archives locked
and sealed.)
It is impressive how Aldous Huxley clearly foresaw that Freudian psychoanalysts would be upset and
angered by chemicals that cured mental problems like neurosis.
The new medicines would put the Freudians out of business — and they did.
Rather than paying $300 per hour to lay on a couch and talk about sexual fantasies about your mother,
mental patients now just pop a pill and get fixed.
Freudian psychoanalysis is as dead as the dinosaurs.
Curiously, we have history repeating itself with Alcoholics Anonymous being opposed to any medications
to cure alcoholism. New medicines could put A.A. out of business, too.
Congratulations on your 2 years of sobriety. Now it gets easier.
(Just watch out for the mind games where
old lizard brain
tells you that
"You have it under control now —
two or three years of perfect sobriety, with no cheating whatsoever, so you can have just one now..."
That's what got me, once.)
And the training of "drug and alcohol counselors" really is a disgrace, isn't it?
And what you didn't mention is that in many states, most of the training and education is really
just indoctrination in 12-Step slogans and Alcoholics Anonymous dogma.
The classes are just training in how to push people into Alcoholics Anonymous.
Just memorize all of the A.A. sayings and misinformation and you get your certificate.
And I never heard of would-be counselors having to pass some kind of mental evaluation
to make sure that they are sane and qualified to counsel anybody.
Most of those drug and alcohol counselors are really better
equipped to teach you how to take drugs and alcohol than in how to avoid them.
(Ten or twenty years of training with drugs, smoking and drinking;
less than one year of education about abstinence, sobriety, and sanity.)
My so-called "counselor" certainly was more qualified to teach
drug consumption than to teach clean and sober living.
After a day at the treatment center, telling people
not to take drugs or drink, he would go home,
snort cocaine, and molest his step-children.
And the Oregon Health Plan actually paid a lot of money for people to get "treatment"
from that guy. Unreal.
And what is really funny is that while I was going to that so-called
"treatment center" — PAAC, the Portland Alternative Addictions Center
— they claimed that it was one of the best programs in the nation.
They had people coming in from all over the country to study the program
and learn how to do it. Meanwhile, my cocaine-snorting counselor screwed
his step-children. It was all a hoax and quackery.
It really is a case of having the lunatics running the insane asylum.
Oh well, have a good day anyway.
== Orange
* orange@orange-papers.info *
* AA and Recovery Cult Debunking *
* http://www.Orange-Papers.org/ *
** Every thinker puts some portion of an apparently
** stable world at peril.
Date: Tue, July 10, 2007 4:04 pm
From: "Chase T."
Subject: So hows the white knuckling going for you?
Ok so you have a problem with AA we all get it.
Have fun white knuckling it pal. And if you are really truly happy —
then what's with the freakin 100+ page rant about AA?
Regards,
"Recovered"
Hello "Recovered",
It's very revealing that A.A. members have to claim that anybody who quits drinking without joining Alcoholics
Anonymous must be very unhappy — "white-knuckling it."
I am not white-knuckling it. I am quite comfortable with my sobriety.
And I am very much enjoying life now.
But I am not happy with how A.A. is lying about its success rate and foisting cult religion
and quackery on sick people, though.
That's why I write about it — so that people will have some true facts available to them.
You, on the other hand, seem to be very unhappy with somebody telling the truth.
Why is that?
Have a good day.
== Orange
* orange@orange-papers.info *
* AA and Recovery Cult Debunking *
* http://www.Orange-Papers.org/ *
** A fanatic is a man who consciously over-compensates a secret doubt.
** == Aldous Huxley
Date: Mon, July 9, 2007 11:20 pm (answered 14 July 2007)
From: "Steve M."
Subject: AA
Hey man or what ever your name is I will call you Mr. orange. Why are
you so hard on AA's Mr. Orange? How many people have you help or
rescure, from death? We of AA have the largest sucess rate of any
organization. And that includes churches and Jails.
Hello Steven,
Right there, you just answered the question of why I am so hard on Alcoholics Anonymous.
A.A. constantly lies about its success rate. Everything you just said is A.A. misinformation.
A.A. does not have a success rate; it has a failure rate. Alcoholics who quit drinking on their own
do as well or better than with Alcoholics Anonymous. But A.A. lies about that and claims to be the best
thing that there is for alcoholics.
Has it ever occurded
to you why the courts, send thier poeple to us? In 1977 a judge came to
us ( intergroup, i was the chairperson at the time) and ask , if he
could send some people to us, ( they were men and women that had
problems with drinking) these people had been arested many times, this
judge was asking for help! " he said nothing was working to make a
change in there lives, he read where AA had some success with people. He
ask if he could send some people to us for help. Now we did not ask
him,he came to us. This what we said to that judge, " that we could not
get involved in outside controvery, but the AA program will not turn
away anyone, court ordered or other wise." Next week people started
comming,that were from the courts.
That was in publeo Coloardo 1977.
Again, you are proving my points for me. The judge
"read where AA had some success with people."
The judge read some A.A. propaganda. The judge was lied to. He was fooled
into thinking that A.A. works. That's why he sends people to Alcoholics Anonymous.
I would like to know, are you the anti-christ? Mr. Orange don't fight
with God! You aren't going to win.
I am not fighting against God. I am fighting against a lying cult religion.
By the way, you just demonstrated that A.A. really is a religion. It's
very typical for A.A. members to complain that someone is "against
God" when they criticize Alcoholics Anonymous.
Good luck, and thanks for the good
advertisemennt
Your friend
Steve M.
God bless you.
You have a good day too.
== Orange
Date: Tue, July 10, 2007 12:32 am (answered 14 July 2007)
From: "Steven M."
Subject: AA
Its me again, steve m. I have been sober for 33 yrs. doing ok. Matter of
fact Would like to say everything you have written has some good and bad
points, what the hell, AA help me save my like where was (smart) 33
years ago, now I'am stuck with this God thing.
You are assuming a cause and effect connection where none exists. You quit drinking because you
wanted to. There is no evidence that A.A. "made you" quit drinking, or even helped you to quit
drinking.
If A.A. really helped alcoholics to quit drinking, then alcoholics who go to A.A. should quit drinking
in greater numbers than the alcoholics who go it alone. They don't. A.A. does not improve the
situation at all.
When A.A. was put to the test, Alcoholics Anonymous was actually shown to cause:
All of those facts were revealed by carefully controlled medical tests.
The last test was even done by a leader of Alcoholics Anonymous.
He tried for many years to prove that A.A. works, and he accidentally proved that A.A. does not work; it
just raises the death rate of alcoholics.
Oh yes in 1979 I help
start the crossroads detox and rehab. in pueblo colorado, over those yrs
we have carried AA message and help 60,000, men wemen childern, to start
a new life.
So you go recruiting and proselytizing for your cult religion
— "carrying the message" as you call it.
So what? So do Scientology and the Moonies.
Hey why don't you rename your group smart the
anti-christ, or smart pride, or or the smart atheist hey here is one, I
hate God and that makes me smart.
SMART is not against religions or God. It is neutral on the subject. SMART simply teaches
some sane, rational, sensible techniques for straightening out your mind and breaking addictions.
Once again, you are showing that A.A. is a religion, and a rather jealous and angry one at that.
By the way, my web site is not about SMART. I am not promoting SMART per se — I recommend
any and all of the sensible sane recovery methods and organizations, including
SMART,
Rational Recovery,
WFS (Women For Sobriety),
SOS (Secular Organizations for Sobriety),
and
LifeRing Secular Recovery (LSR)
I haven't actually been to a SMART meeting in years.
I haven't in all your writing ( course
I haven't read every word) you don't talk about love, careing for your
bothers and sisters. You sound mean and you have hate in your heart, you
sound troubled. I know I know that is some more of that cult religion
you were talking about.
I love the alcoholics so much that I think they deserve to be told the truth, so I'm doing it.
Mr Orange P what is your problem, you can't slow
down AA no more than you can stop God. Why don't you spend some time
feeding the poor, and the hungry. what you are doing is helping us more
than you are hurting AA, you are hurting yourself, I can tell by the way
you talk.
I'm not going to brag about the other stuff that I do, so I won't.
You wrote something about the civil war and General Grant, he
was far from fighting a thinking war, come on they kill over 600,000
people and wounded another 3 million. How stupid can one be! to
line-up thounsands of men and have them to fire point blank at each
other, hell If I pull such an act I'd be drunk too. Don't make sence to
me but I'am one of those religious cult and dam proud of it. Hey if I
join you smart guys, would I have to give up my religion?
It's funny how many A.A. members go non-linear over that story.
You would think that they would be happy to hear something good about an alcoholic, but no,
they aren't happy. And that is in fact the point of that file,
"The Us Stupid Drunks Conspiracy".
Get all your programs, keep real good track of your people, see what
kind of success they will have, better hurry,we have little head start
of 4 million sober Alcoholics. That have recoved.
No, A.A. does not have 4 million sober alcoholics.
Again, you are just repeating the usual grossly exaggerated propaganda of Alcoholics Anonymous.
That isn't true at all. A.A. MIGHT have 2 million members world-wide
(probably much less than that due to duplication),
and the vast majority of them will drop out and return to drinking.
And those few who do get sober and stay sober don't owe their sobriety to Alcoholics Anonymous,
because A.A. doesn't work.
Those people should thank themselves.
All that A.A. does is steal the credit for some people who were going to quit drinking anyway.
If you really believe that A.A. works, then please answer these simple questions:
What is the real A.A. success rate?
Out of each 1000 newcomers to A.A., how many of them will pick up a ten-year coin
for sobriety?
How about the 11-year coin? What percentage of the newcomers go on to get an 11-year coin?
How many success stories are there really, out of each 1000 newcomers to A.A.?
How many 20-year success stories do you get out of each 1000 newcomers?
How many 30-year success stories do you get out of each 1000 newcomers?
Not very many, right?
And
the answers are:
11 or 12 ten-year winners per 1000 newcomers.
7 1/2 (seven and a half) eleven-year winners per 1000 newcomers.
1 1/2 (one and a half) twenty-year winners per 1000 newcomers.
1/6 (yes, one-sixth) of a 30-year winner per 1000 newcomers.
If you would like to some serious writting, why don't you come to South
America with me (that is where I have lived off and on the last 9
years), Cali Colombia, they need smart people like yourself, to feed the
poor, you could help me in the soup kitchens,. I bet you would be
calling up some kinda God before you got back home. I go there not
because, I'am brave, but because the AA book say He will keep me safe as
long as I'am doing his will. I know more cult.
I see that you use the A.A. Big Book as your Bible.
And you imagine that
"If it's written in the Big Book, then you can believe that it's true."
Yes, that is more cult stuff.
And again, you assume that I must be an atheist because I criticize the quackery and cult garbage
of Alcoholics Anonymous. Not so.
Now it is good that you are going to South America and doing charitable work.
But that is not the way of Alcoholics Anonymous.
In fact, Bill Wilson instructed A.A. members NOT to help alcoholics,
and NOT to do service work, remember?
The minute we put our work on a service plane, the alcoholic
commences to rely upon our assistance rather than upon God.
The Big Book, 3rd and 4th Editions, page 98.
well I will be leaving for Cali Colombia, in about month let me know if
you would like to tag along.
Please keep slamming AA you'll get your rewards. God bless you
Okay Steve,
I will continue to tell the truth. And you have a good day anyway.
== Orange
* orange@orange-papers.info *
* AA and Recovery Cult Debunking *
* http://www.Orange-Papers.org/ *
** "Not only had we failed to alter the natural history of alcoholism,
** but our death rate of three percent a year was appalling."
** == Dr. George E. Vaillant, currently a member of the A.A. Board of
** Trustees, describing the treatment of alcoholism with Alcoholics
** Anonymous, in The Natural History of Alcoholism: Causes, Patterns,
** and Paths to Recovery, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA,
** 1983, pages 283-286.