You think a Mormon Candidate Has Troubles?

Posted by Tom Bertonneau on December 26, 2007

Ladies and Gentlemen of the press; my fellow Americans.  Thank you for giving me the opportunity today to speak to you about matters of personal belief.

Recently my religious convictions—those associated with Cthulhu Worship and the Esoteric Order of Dagon—have constituted themselves a campaign issue.  Although no other current candidate for a presidential party nomination has been asked to justify his religious beliefs, and although I do not believe that my beliefs require justification, I have decided, in order that I might allay misgivings and settle misunderstandings, to devote a few remarks to the place of Cthulhu Worship in the American tradition.

First let me say that, if I were elected President of the United States, I would regard myself as the leader and chief representative of all Americans, not just of those who happen to be, like me, members in good standing of the Esoteric Order of Dagon.  Let me add that the basic tenets of the Order are identical with those of many other faiths that have also played a role in shaping the values of our nation—such as the Iroquois war-god cult, the Aztec Huitztliputztli cult as practiced by the ancestors of many Mexican-descended American citizens, Voodoo, and Santeria.  According to the Necronomicon of the “Mad Arab” Abdul Alhazred, the first Cthulhu Worshippers came to these shores in the company of the Mayflower Pilgrims.  Anyone who has read H. P. Lovecraft knows that the Minions of Cthulhu have played a central role in organizing the religious life of many remote regions of the American Northeast, especially in the hill country of Vermont, and of inaccessible parts of the Mississippi Delta.  Indeed, Cthulhu Worship and the Esoteric Order of Dagon have been subject to organized persecution directed from the Federal Government.  In 1926, in Innsmouth, Massachusetts, United States Marshals and soldiery of the United States Army and Marine Corps raided Innsmouth, arresting and jailing many citizens.  A Navy submarine fired torpedoes into the offshore, underwater crypts maintained by the Order and dedicated to the Holy Mysteries of Great Cthulhu.  Charges of cannibalism, virgin sacrifice, and interspecies breeding although whipped up by the yellow press were never proven.

What are the main tenets of Cthulhu Worship?  You’ve all heard, I’m sure, how exotic and creepy they are.  But nothing could be farther from the truth.  Simply put, Great Cthulhu is the mightiest of the Great Old Ones who ruled earth tens of millions of years ago before the so-called Elder Gods ousted them, sending some into eternal exile.  The Great Old Ones were, in fact, the creators of the human race, drawing forth the first humans from the primordial slime to serve and placate them in the cavernous underground temples of those days.  The Elder Gods confined Cthulhu in a trans-dimensional tomb, based on non-Euclidian geometry, in the stone city of ancient R’lyeh, which they then caused to sink below the waves of what would later become the South Pacific.  These events gave rise to the profoundest words of the Order’s liturgy:  Ph’nglui mglw’nafh Cthulhu R’lyeh wgah-nagl ftaghn! Or: “In his house at stone R’lyeh, Great Cthulhu lies sleeping.” Another important phrase in our liturgy—“That is not dead which can eternal lie, and with strange aeons even death may die”—is practically a mainstream Christian motif.

John Adams wrote, in a secret note penned at the time of the American founding, that, “Freedom requires Cthulhu Worship, just as Cthulhu Worship requires freedom.  Iä!  Iä!  Cthulhu ftaghn!” And so I say to you, the voters, in the same spirit: From the wells of night to the gulfs of space, and from the gulfs of space to the wells of night, ever be the praises of Great Cthulhu of Tsathoggua and of him who may not be named!

Thank you and may God bless you.

Comments

Wonder what Christopher Hitchens has to say about this.

I’m more worried about the anti-Paul forces.  They will see an obvious connection:  1) TakiMag publishes an article on Cthulhu; 2) TakiMag supports Ron Paul.  Ergo, Ron Paul is a member of the Esoteric Order of Dagon and worships the Great Cthulhu of Tsathoggua.

According to the wiki-link Father Dagon was a Semitic God.

The word semite however comes from the word Shem. Shem was a son of Noah.

Posted by Jet on Dec 27, 2007.
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Man, this post made me dig up my HP Lovecraft and curl up for a good read.

In short, you made my day.

Posted by Yehya on Dec 27, 2007.
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I’m pretty sure I read a blog post on the New York Times citing the Southern Poverty Law Center as confirming that the Robert A Taft Club and the Esoteric Order of Dagon, are both right wing extremist hate groups and that their leader, the Great Cthulhu of Tsathoggua, a known white supremacist and anti-semite who has associated with the likes of Marcus Epstein and Paul Gottfried, has contributed $500 to the campaign of Ron Paul. Thus far the Paul campaign has refused to return the Great Ctuhlu’s contribution. How sad.

Posted by Q on Dec 27, 2007.
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Funny, I thought that Dick Cheney was a member of a
Cthulhu congregation..

By the way, I was waiting to hear about strange
happenings at the site of the fire in the Vicepresident’s
office a few days ago. At least a mention of brimstone…

As a descendant (on my mother’s side) of the Waite family of Innsmouth, Mass., I am happy to see our particular ethnic/religious group finally receiving acceptance, and Miskatonic beint seen as the fine institution of learning that it is (apprecaite the link). In these days of confusion and horror at home abroad, it is woindeul that we have something to cling to (or, at least, that will cling to us) in such times --- as they say over at Campus Crusade for Cthulhu, “IT found ME!” Let me wish all a hearty “Ia! Yog-Sothoth!” for this holiday season.

Anyone who has read H. P. Lovecraft knows that the Minions of Cthulhu have played a central role in organizing the religious life of many remote regions of the American Northeast, especially in the hill country of Vermont,

Any Vermont crank, such as my own self, can attest to the historical truth of this claim.

And is it just coincidence one anagram of
Cthulhu is Cult huh (an esoteric inside joke)?

Don’t vote for the lesser evil!

Posted by tz on Dec 28, 2007.
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Is it just me, or is this really a big movement and Ron Paul is “he who must not be named”

Of course they would attempt to destroy your base.  After Planned Parenthood, where would you find a virgin to sacrifice?

Also, isn’t the “non euclidian geometry” merely a bit of hyperbole?

Some esoteric writings suggest they wished to preserve the human race, but in the form of tin-can-ibalism.

Posted by tz on Dec 28, 2007.
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It has spread down the Connecticut Valley like a black mist, and arched over from the Miskatonic into the headwaters of lesser streams. Only last month, chanting was heard in a stadium in New Haven:

Cthulu Cthulu,
Cthulu Cthulu
Eee-Yog Eee-Yog
Yale!

@I am not Spartacus.

Someone returning from Canada reports hearing this
whipsered in corners.

Cult ,eh?

I can’t find anything funny about this article, and yet I have the sneaking suspicion that the author and some of the commentators think that it is funny.

Posted by Rick on Jan 07, 2008.
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Ron Paul being a member of the Order of Dagon would make a lot of sense.

I was lost and now I am found.

Posted by lokis on Feb 20, 2008.
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For speaking the truth, you are doomed just as the Mad Arab was....to bad!

Posted by abdul on Feb 20, 2008.
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It is as it was written in the prophesy.  The old ones
shall rise up and shall rule once again.

Posted by Davol on Feb 20, 2008.
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Now if we could only hear from the Scientologists..

Posted by hp on Feb 20, 2008.
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Nothing but noisome, eldritch ichor. Eh?

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