UFO
Cult Predicts End Of The World In July 2008
CLEVELAND,
Ohio, January 4, 2008: The Church of the SubGenius has announced that the end
of the world will take place on Saturday, July 5, 2008. In preparation for the
fulfillment of this doomsday prophecy, the Church is requesting that all of its
members participate in a bizarre religious ceremony taking place in upstate New
York, during the final weekend before the arrival of the apocalypse.
Since
its inception in 1953, Church founder J.R. "Bob" Dobbs has predicted
that a fleet of flying saucers will arrive at the beginning of July to destroy
the worldwide Conspiracy against the Church of the SubGenius, while all ordained
SubGenius ministers will be rescued by escape vessels piloted by the Alien Sex
Goddesses, also known as the Xists.
The
Church is inviting all of its members worldwide to gather together for the final
hours in Sherman, New York from Wednesday, July 2 to Sunday, July 6, at a clothing-optional
outdoor campground called Brushwood Folklore Center. The first gathering at this
compound took place in 1996, and the event has increased in size and participants
each following year. 1998 was designated the first true "X-Day," and
each successive year has added one to the total.
This year's celebration in
2008 is X-Day 11, or X-Day XI.
The
Church has been engaged in a massive recruitment campaign to increase the numbers
of its membership before the arrival of the Xists. According to Church records,
the organization currently has approximately 100,000 members worldwide. SubGenius
recruitment has been especially dedicated among the ranks of people who refuse
to conform to the norms of society, including disbelievers, blasphemers, pranksters,
rebels, hackers, pornographers, geeks, and outcasts.
The
Church is seeking underground bands, indie rockers, performance artists, and performers
and producers from the adult entertainment industry, because sexual freedom has
been an important part of Church doctrine from the start.
X-Day will be a
celebration of free expression, performance art, rock and roll, pornography, and
adult entertainment; and certain parts of the event will be restricted to adults
only. Only ordained ministers of the Church of the SubGenius are allowed at the
event, but the Church is accepting memberships at its standard rate of $30 up
until the final hours of July 4.
The
Church of the SubGenius has been no stranger to controversy since its foundation,
and the upcoming X-Day celebration promises to be no different. In the late 1980s,
members of the Church were accused of spreading a virus in Macintosh computers
known as the "Peace Virus." Numerous articles have been written on the
Church in such noteworthy publications as the New York Times, Washington Post,
Wired Online, Boston Globe, U.S. News and World Report; and broadcast reports
have been produced by CNN and NPR. In April 1999, officials of the city of Cambridge,
Massachusetts shut down an official SubGenius Devival gathering in the belief
that the Church was affiliated with the Trenchcoat Mafia (the organization blamed
for the Columbine high school shootings), though authorities later realized the
association was mistaken. In its January 1, 2000 issue, a Time magazine poll declared
J.R. "Bob" Dobbs the biggest fraud of the 20th century.
The
Church received additional media attention in 2006 when one of its high-ranking
members, known in SubGenius circles as Reverend Mary Magdalen, became involved
in a legal battle for custody of her son due to her membership in the Church.
This case has been covered in such popular online sites as Boing Boing, Fark,
and Wikinews (Wikipedia's news reporting service). Reverend Magdalen is being
represented by the law firm of Lipsitz Green Fahringer Roll Salisbury & Cambria,
LLP.