Cranks and Con-artists

19th February 2024

Our ongoing plagiarism project is going well - thanks to the people who reached out and offered to help with running the text we have through TurnItIn. We’re now receiving reports from two different academics who are putting the documents through two different plagiarism detectors. Our evidence, and the website we’re building to showcase it, is coming together well. It’s been a lot of work so far, but there’s a lot still to do, so we’ll keep working until we’ve built the most thorough case we’re able to put together - we really want to make sure we do this well, as it involves serious accusations.

While working on the project, I’ve been watching documentaries about cults (Twin Flames and Shiny Happy People - both of which Bronwyn wrote about last year). I’m currently half way through watching a documentary series about a small, weird cult that I’d never heard of until yesterday. The series is called Stolen Youth and is about a charismatic, controlling and possibly narcissistic man who preyed on students at Sarah Lawrence college in the US, What’s really interested me is that the leader of this group, Larry, looks so familiar to me by now - yet another middle-aged man who starts off thinking he’s uncovered a revolutionary kind of therapy that can treat all kinds of psychological issues, and ends up controlling the lives of, and ruthlessly abusing, a group of people who have been conditioned to mindlessly accept anything he says. And, as there often is, this case involves a lot of story-telling, a made-up history of the cult leader that looks much more impressive than the dreariness of reality.

However, instead of looking into this compelling, fascinating story of abuse and control, in this week’s newsletter I’ve reviewed a very mediocre movie, The Mandela Effect. Katrina has reported on the demise of the Therapeutic Products Act, and I’ve responded to an ex-member who was unhappy with our submission back when the Act was still a Bill, and was going through the Select Committee process. Craig has written about his misunderstanding of crank magnetism (a term I’m not sure I’ve even heard of before), and Bronwyn has continued her series on channelers, focusing this week on Yasmeen Clark, who regularly channels “Pascha”.

Mark Honeychurch

Membership Renewals

Bronwyn Rideout - 19 February 2024

Over the last couple of weeks we've received a few emails from members about our membership system, specifically the renewals process. We're happy to report that, if you see a charge on your card from the NZ Skeptics, it's not a scam - it's simply that your account is set to auto-renew each year.

Movie Review: The Mandela Effect

Mark Honeychurch - 19 February 2024

Movie Review: The Mandela Effect

Those who know me well know that I have a thing for painful, uncomfortable experiences - I'm finally planning to redeem my colonic irrigation voucher in the next few weeks, I've enjoyed stabbing myself with acupuncture needles and joining interminably boring cult meetings. So for some it's no surprise that I'm a big fan of bad movies - some of my favourites are Twisted Pair (or anything really) by Neil Breen, Champagne and Bullets, Jurassic Shark, Dangerous Men, Dolemite, Tammy and the T-Rex, and Birdemic. Yep, these movies are so bad that The Room doesn't even make the list.

Crank Magnetism

Craig Shearer - 19 February 2024

Crank Magnetism

You may or may not have heard the term “crank magnetism”. I had heard of the term, but I'd completely misunderstood its meaning. Yes, this item is going to be a bit of a laugh at myself as much as anything!

Crossed Lines: Ascended Masters and the Kiwis who channel them

Bronwyn Rideout - 19 February 2024

Crossed Lines: Ascended Masters and the Kiwis who channel them

For an island nation with a population of 5.3 million, I would hazard that we have more than our fair share of pākehā with a hotline to millenia-long dead Asians. And by more I sadly mean a non-zero number. While they won't use the word, they are modern day mediums, a paranormal practice/belief that has failed to provide any empirical evidence for its efficacy.