Limehouse,
You put your finger right on it when you said "he knew where their vulnerabilities lay." He was a psychopath, and those creatures use the vulnerabilities of others as their bread and butter. That's the main the thing they are good at. He couldn't have cared less about those people.
Put the way you put it, concerning the times, the were more apart of the chaotic world, in a sense, than the protesters and other groups pushing for change. He was what the world needed change from.
Good post, Limehouse, very good insights and well stated. Thank you. You have given me a new outlook on Manson and his groupies.
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Oh yes, I think you are right about the time in which these events was located. It is crucial. Despite the fact that it is perceived as being a time of 'peace and love' there was conflict kicking off all over the globe. There was a cold war, with east and west coming very close to a catastrophic, head-on collision; Vietnam - with germ warfare and full-on armed conflict, trouble in northern Ireland, unrest in South America and in the Middle East and of course, class war which, in Manson's terms, would be a black-on-white civil war.
It is no wonder these confused youngsters were captured by Manson's preaching. He certainly did have some power over them and, importantly, knew where their vulnerabilities lay so that he could pick and probe and work them into a frenzy.
Their actions were pure evil. I don't care how long they've been in jail and how much they've changed - they should be prepared to die in jail to atone for their terrible crimes. After all, their victims' families are deprived of their loved ones for life, aren't they?
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Originally posted by Limehouse View PostIt amazes me that Manson was able to hold sway over those young people and influence their actions to such an extent. He was, and is, virtually illiterate, and yet he possessed an intelligence and charisma that enraptured highly educated people. Even now, one or two of his followers believe that his ideas about society and the resulting actions were justifiable. Incredible.
It's like a religious zeal, or something of that nature. Only what he was preaching was not a healthy, life-enhancing spirituality. It has to do with need. A healthier, more well-grounded person might find it hard to understand what happened with these folks. These were very needy people, in more ways than one. In a time when there were peace movements, civil rights movements, and the like, this guy was preaching race war, among other things, through which the Manson group would attain power. I hate to admit that he possesses some kind of power, but it's chaos power. "Incredible" is right, Limehouse.
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It amazes me that Manson was able to hold sway over those young people and influence their actions to such an extent. He was, and is, virtually illiterate, and yet he possessed an intelligence and charisma that enraptured highly educated people. Even now, one or two of his followers believe that his ideas about society and the resulting actions were justifiable. Incredible.
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Bobby Beausoleil killed Gary Hinman. Manson may have cut his face with a sword, which the girls tried to sew up, but then Manson left. Going from memory here. It was Beausoleil's arrest for the Hinman murder (from which he was later convicted) that some use to speculate that the Tate killings were copycat of the Hinman murder in an attempt to free Beausoleil from jail.Originally posted by Magpie View PostActually, he killed Gary Hinman.
JM
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Steven Kay: "But you know, could he have killed someone else? Possibly."
Who did Manson actually kill in the first place?
JM
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This will probably turn out to be plots where they buried garbage, or something.
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Sky News have only just picked up on the story, to busy chatting with Heather Mills I expect!!
http://news.sky.com/skynews/article/...309816,00.html
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Hi JM,
I took a quick look and will go back and take a more methodical look. You've got some good documentation on this. I would also like to see how that thread developed.
Maybe you're right about the six degrees of separation part. Until yesterday, it never occurred to me to look for serial killings in Texas dating to the time of the event I described. I had more or less accepted the possibility set forth by an engineer I worked with, that the person who tried to break in could have been this beheading guy, and perhaps that he was the neighbor's "cousin." I was pretty oblivious to Watts at the time. I took note of his arrest and the hoopla in the news but so much was going on that I did little more than that.
The mug shots, in your newspaper articles, don't show a young man, do they?
Thank you for talking with me about this part of your family life. I'm just sorry it happened.
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This occurred in the 1931, when my grandmother was a child. (I'm 35...) So she was raised in an orphanage where she met my grandfather, whose parents also passed in other circumstances. They were both youngsters there. So, if it were not for this guy killing my great-grandparents, yada yada yada. Thanks for the thoughts.
You can read press reports about it on jtrforums.com
http://www.jtrforums.com/showthread.php?t=2469
I do wonder who on the boards have used the 6 degrees of separation theory and can connect themselves to famous murderers or victims. Might be a good thread idea. I have a couple of them myself and I'm sure others do as well.
JM
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This is an extraordinary story. This would have happened when your mother was a child, or before she was born? One hears about these things happening, but rarely encounters someone whose family endured it. It's difficult to think of what to say. It must be a very tough thing to take in when you are a young member of the family. Hopefully you have enough of a sense of the family history to pass on to those who come after you. For your grandmother to lose both of her parents and nearly lose an aunt...
Have you written a family history of the event?
We also had the religious groups at my college as well. They would congregate in rather busy areas and wrap their arms around each other and chant "Oh, Lord Jesus!" over and over again. A friend of mine, a guy I thought was the epitome of cool at the time became one of them, which at the time was a letdown to me. But then, it was none of my business either. He got arrested when he was out in California for having a joint, I think, and it terrified him so much that he began to pray hysterically (his word) to Jesus. He told me Jesus appeared to him in the cell. He was already a fine person. He dedicated his life to the Christian belief system. So this group was not really a cult, I guess. I saw my friend some years later and he was still the same fine man that I had known, but I really missed his long hair!
I am sorry for the loss of your family. From the little I have seen of you here, you seen to have emerged as a strongly grounded person.
My best to you.
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