Posted on 05/23/2006 12:30:46 PM PDT by Borges
Durham Police are investigating a sex slavery sect operating in a north-eastern suburban town, whose members model their sado-masochistic relationships on a series of 1960s science fiction novels.
The suburban home where Kaotians gather
The bizarre cult came to light when police raided an address in Darlington after complaints that a woman was being held against her will.
But it transpired that the Canadian concerned was a willing participant and police had no grounds to act against the so-called Kaotians sect.
It is understood the 29-year-old had voluntarily attended the sect after an internet chat, but later contacted a friend in America, who then contacted police, saying she wanted to leave but couldn't as she had burned her passport.
Police helped to arrange her return home, but a spokesman said there was no criminal activity discovered and that people involved were all "consenting adults".
Officers also investigated claims by a man in Essex that his 18-year-old son had joined the quasi-medieval sect, but police spoke to the teenager and he confirmed he was at the property voluntarily and police said they again had no grounds to get involved.
The Kaotians are a splinter group of the Goreans, which according to estimates number 25,000 followers nationwide.
Both groups base their slavery and dominance beliefs on a series of novels written by John Norman, an American philosophy academic. The Chronicles of Gor depict a society, called the land of Gor, which is divided into castes, and where women are kept as slaves.
Fascination in the international sect has grown since the advent of the internet.
Lee Thompson, 31, lives at the address that was investigated, and describes himself as a master who trains slaves, and that while they must cook and clean as part of their duties, there is an element of sexual domination.
In an interview with the Northern Echo, Mr Thompson, said: "I have been called sick but I don't think what I do is bad.
"There's no reason for people to be afraid of me. I'd die before I see anyone get hurt."
Mr Thompson, who was once banned from one shop for turning up with a girl on a leash, said that as many as 350 followers regularly meet in pubs and clubs around the North East, in an area from Berwick to York.
Mr Thompson, who has been a follower for 15 years, and says he has enjoyed slave relationships with about eight girls, added: "It works on the system that some women have a desire to serve.
"Most people think it is a very sexual thing, but it is about every action that they make, they do it for their master."
Elijah Wood
Someone please kill me now.
Duuude.
Well, as you wish...
I will be merciful... and quick!
One day at GDW, all of us working at the office had to pretty much drop everything paperwork-wise and run to the warehouse to help assemble and package up game sets (possibly Twilight: 2000, if memory serves correctly) that were behind in production. My job that day was to count out the dice out of the giant bins and place them in the box set before they were shrinkwrapped :-).
Your wife ought to be placed in the same LOTR padded cell with my LOTR-movie-addicted husband. They can have a great old time absorbing themselves with the movies, while you and I go have a beer somewhere ;-).
While there is a harmless side, the "ick" side has been taking over -- people who dress up in fur costumes to have sex. They have become the freaks of all freaks in geeky fandom and are considered freakier than even the anime fans and LARPers. The kinky stuff has become enough of the "face" of Furry fandom that the show "ER" made fun of it in an episode --a Furry shows up in the ER and so does a famous hand puppet from a children's show (think "Lambchop"). The "punchline" has the Furry stealing the hand puppet and, well, pleasuring himself with it. If anime worries you (anime also has a very harmless side), I'd be just as worried about Furry fandom, expecially if it involves making contacts online or attending a fan get together. There are some very creepy people and some very creepy art out there.
LOL, good story.
Not exactly. From what I've heard, it's fall out from fans of stuff like Albedo and classic cartoons to things oke Omaha the Cat Dancer cross-polinating, via gatherings, with the S&M and kinky sex subcultures, leading to people in fur suits having sex with each other as a major activy. And if you think that's creepy, the descriptions of the art I've read (no, I'm not curious enough to actually look at it) is even creepier.
The Sheehan poses little actual threat. Its constant loud wailing will soon draw unwanted attention and result in its being eaten by a Grue.
Of the two Clintons, the female is the more dangerous. Cast "Expecto KarlRovus" spell.
Sounds like your wife already has that covered, sailor. ;-)
I always got the impression that GDW leaned politically right or at least libertarian. Was that your sense (you don't have to name specific names)? Steve Jackson Games tends to be somewhat libertarian, too. The left coast game companies, on the other hand, are pretty liberal. You might find this Salon article interesting. I presume your days at GDW were nothing like that!
Tax-chick, you migth want to see the chart Mr. Jeeves posted and note what's at the bottom...
Visual Intelligence: How We Create What We See "With wit, insight and charm, Hoffman, University of California, Irvine professor of computer science, cognitive science and philosophy, explains in this spectacular volume how we use vision to construct the world around us. Hoffman does a masterful job of demonstrating that vision encompasses so much more than merely what we see, and of illustrating that much of what we see may not, in fact, exist. Presenting the 35 rules of vision that scientists claim we use to piece together our environment ("Rule 1. Always interpret a straight line in an image as a straight line in 3D"), he analyzes many common optical illusions, explains how we perceive motion, color and depth, and philosophizes about the nature of reality and perception. Throughout, Hoffman makes wonderful use of myriad photographs to demonstrate the points he is making. The photos in the chapter on motion fail, necessarily, to catch the imagination the way the others do, but an ancillary Web site allows observation of the full motion of his examples. Not only is this book an outstanding example of creative popular science but, given the many optical illusions it presents, it's also the rare book that, in line with its subject, can be thoroughly enjoyed both right side up and upside down." -- Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc. |
The professor who wrote this great book is working on a new book that makes the extreme case that our consciousness creates not just our vision but our awareness of reality itself. This book focuses on vision, one step at a time, and by the end, his more extreme thoughts about awareness have specific examples that he builds upon. (If this stuff is true, then VR games are kind of a metaphor for our deeper search for a real understanding of the world "around" us.) |
Thanks for the additional information. We're careful about the websites she visits, but I'll have her dad check the computer, again. And get-togethers of any kind are definitely off-limits!
LOL! Thanks for the ping - that was hilarious! One of my best friends from college got married at the Star Trek set in some Las Vegas hotel. This was just a couple of years ago. Her parents were so glad she was (a) getting married at last, and (b) didn't want a $20,000 fairy-tale wedding, that they didn't make a peep about the Star Trek theme!
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