A Sick Society Validates Dysfunction
April 30, 2015
Left. Heather Arlene Carr, 1974-2015
The new normal? Wiccan priestess in polyamorous relations?
This obituary appears in the current issue of "Canada's National Magazine" Maclean's. We mean no disrespect for the dead but the obituary pretends that this woman was a normal, healthy member of society. Thereby, it commends her as an example to others.
As I have said, Western society is controlled by a satanic cult. The goal of a satanic cult is to invert sickness and health, unnatural and natural, evil and good, false and true, ugly and beauty. The cult perverts, degrades and sickens its members in order to control and exploit them.
The US "health care" industry has annual revenues of $1.6 trillion, edging out war at $1.5 trillion.
Discrimination is about distinguishing good and evil, healthy and sick. That's why they're outlawing it. That's why they treat Heather Carr as normal.
Be sure to read the last paragraph which describes Carr's accidental death. It symbolizes our collective fate if we continue in this direction.
A 'defender of the weak', she had a strong, nurturing way about her. She helped others as a social worker and a Wiccan priestess.
by Anthony A. Davis
Maclean's May 4, 2015
(abridged by henrymakow.com)
Heather Arlene Carr was born on Sept.6, 1974, in Kamloops, B.C. ...
Heather was a pudgy girl, with coke-bottle glasses, and different. Though fearless, she was still sometimes picked on. She buried her pain, says her mom, but she always noticed it in others: "She was a defender of the weak her whole life," says Judy. She brought home anybody who was having a problem. Their house, says sister Sheri, was a revolving door "of the wounded and hurt."
At 17, Heather ran away to Dawson Creek, B.C., where she met a man named Errol and had a son, Braydon, on Oct. 20, 1993. He was followed by Cody, born a year later on Nov. 2 when Heather and Errol moved to Tumbler Ridge. Their relationship didn't last and, in 1997, Heather moved with her children to Kamloops and, in 1998, she started studies at Thompson Rivers University (TRU).
Life as a single mother was difficult. Braydon has Asperger's syndrome, and Cody developed a brain tumour causing epilepsy. But Heather "loved being a mom," says Judy. "The boys really were the light of her life," and she was a fierce defender and advocate for their medical needs.
Heather earned an arts degree, then a bachelor's in social work in 2007. "If she could have been a lifelong student, she would have been," says Leesa Warner, who met Heather at TRU in 1998. Playing online games together, an Internet friend mentioned Wicca, a modern pagan religion, to Leesa and Heather. Intrigued, the two, who became a couple, bought books and researched Wicca deeply. They began to wear the pendants associated with Wicca, but kept them hidden under their clothes when they were around Kamloops.
In 2000, Heather met Stephen Carr, a Kamloops taxi driver. "I picked her and the boys up at a grocery store," says Stephen, who, at six foot three and some 250 lb., was dubbed "Bear" by friends. On that short ride, they got along and Stephen gave her his business card. He began dating Heather, who, with her big blond mop, was barely five feet tall. In 2003, Leesa officiated over a pagan wedding for them, then, in July, the couple married in a Kamloops church, "and we didn't burst into flames," jokes Stephen.
Heather, Leesa and Stephen had a polyamorous relationship, what Leesa calls "our triangle of awesomeness," though she maintained a separate residence. The running joke, says Stephen, "was I was the male version of Leesa who could reach the top shelf." In 2006, Leesa, Heather and Stephen attended PanFest, a large pagan event near Edmonton, for a long weekend of workshops on pagan subjects including shamanic healing.
Afterward, says Leesa, she and Heather were more determined to be open about their religious beliefs. Heather began wearing her black velvet ceremonial cloak everywhere she went. A night owl, she often practised rites alone late at night in a Kamloops park. She decided, says Leesa, "If someone doesn't like it [her beliefs], it wasn't a 'me' problem, it's a 'you' problem."
In 2007, Heather began work as a social worker in Merritt, B.C. It was difficult work. During her practicum shortly before graduation, Heather and a mentor had been held at gunpoint for six hours by an enraged father in Chase, B.C. In 2008, she was handling the case file of a family, when the father murdered his three children in the home of his estranged wife. Heather was diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder and took leave from her job.
As a Wiccan priestess, she continued to try to help others. On March 31, Heather went to Riverside Park around 2 a.m. to perform a healing rite for her uncle Barry, who had had a stroke. Removing a smaller stone, she crawled into the centre of a boulder formation--a place with spiritual meaning for Heather. Setting out candles, she somehow accidentally set herself ablaze while trapped inside. A passerby, then firemen, tried to extricate her and douse the flames, but she died of her injuries. She was 40.
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First Comment from Richard:
I noticed the McClean's obit said, "In 2003, Leesa officiated over a pagan wedding for them, then, in July, the couple married in a Kamloops church, "and we didn't burst into flames," jokes Stephen."
I'm surprised the editor didn't catch the irony - the woman "set herself ablaze while trapped inside" a 'sacred space'.
Stephen didn't catch it either.
Magazines and TV have moved fully into the new "do as thou wilt" cultural milieu. The "Wiccan Rede" "an it harm none, do as thou wilt" was actually cooked up in 1975. Wicca came about to give young women a bridge from their moral upbringing and Crowley's harsh and Satanic "Do what thou wilt". Crowley well understood that "do what thou wilt" is invariably at other's expense. I spent a lot of years around a lot of "neopagans" and witches. Behind the hippie "peace and love" facade, they all had skeletons in their closets and stone cold hearts. Every aborted fetus was either a man's fault - even though they didn't tell the men - or if they were advanced in Witchcraft, an abortion was a sacrifice to Diana or Hecate.
The NWO got rid of Christian ethics simply because the masses can be better enslaved through their passions.
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AK said (May 5, 2015):
Thank you Henry for this article. While one should not gloat the dead, I think Heather's demise was good riddance (no disrespect intended).
According to Katherine (a commentator), "Life is not a carnival". How eternally true!
It's quite unfortunate that morality is standing on it's head in present times. I can't but sometimes wonder how long it will take for normal persons to be extinct in this globe.