Foundation day
The history of the Church of the Creator and its World Center really begins with the day we started moving dirt and laying the foundations at Its present location in North Carolina. We regard this as an historic event in our movement, and choose to call it Foundation Day. It occurred on a beautiful spring day, March 10, to be exact, and I will never forget it. The contractor, Billy Sanders, and his crew and surveyors appeared on the scene at 8 AM that fine morning, and Henrie and I were there with our cameras to take both colored and black and white pictures, to record the event for posterity. By 10 AM Dean Conners and his crew arrived with their bulldozers and other heaving equipment to start moving dirt. Although I have already set forth most of the details of the architectural planning and the actual construction of the building itself in my previous book, Against the Evil Tide, I nevertheless want to briefly review some of the major events of that first epic year, beginning with Foundation Day, in order to properly tie the story into the period about which this chronicle is concerned. That particular period is the decade between Foundation Day, March 10, 1982, and the time I retired and legally turned the leadership of the Church over to the succeeding Pontifex Maximus. That ten year span has been the most crucial, the most frustrating, yet undoubtedly the most productive and rewarding ten years of my life. March 10 was a busy day. Besides dealing with the surveyors, the contractor, and the dirt movers, I also met with the well driller, Charles Davidson, and reached an agreement with him about the cost of drilling a well for the church, the cost of the pump, the pressure tank and all the rest of the supplementary equipment that went with it, as well as the exact location of the well site itself. For some reason, any attempt to found a new religion, anywhere, at any time in history, has always been encountered with the most virulent opposition and the utmost hostility. It took Christianity at least three hundred years to come out into the open, and then more than fifteen hundred years of warfare and strife to establish itself. In fact, the battle is still raging in numerous parts of the world unto this very day. Mohammed and his cohorts had to fight endless battles in order to spread their beliefs, and, as we all know, the warfare is still far from over. Joseph Smith and his brother were killed at an early age by an angry mob in their attempt to establish their Mormon religion. The Jews, as we all know, have been under siege for the last four thousand years or so In order to maintain their parasitic religion in every region they have intruded. In fact, their continuing existence in Palestine, where it all began, is most precarious, to say the least, and chances are excellent that they will not be there for long. But no one can argue that the most conspicuous characteristic about all these religions, that despite all the opposition, hostility and warfare, is that they have endured. They have survived, they have grown and spread and they have persevered. Furthermore, they have had a more pervasive influence on the culture and the course of history than any other human endeavor throughout the ages.
When I first entertained the idea of structuring a racial religion for the White Race in the face of the two dominant and well entrenched Jew-spawned religions, namely Judaism and its bastard offspring, Christianity, I had no illusions about the hostility and opposition I would undoubtedly encounter. Besides the religious hostility which I expected we would encounter, there was also the added racial aspect as well. The niggers would be hostile, the Jews even more so, and then there were (especially in Southern Florida) the Cubans, the Haitians, the Mexicans, the South American mixbreeds and a dozen shades of other mud races, all hostile to the White Race and any movement that might unite us. In fact, during the first ten years after the inception of Creativity a major portion of my concern was where I could possibly locate our main headquarters without having the place burned to the ground in short order by our enemies. As I stated in my previous book, I finally decided on the wide open spaces of North Carolina, where I already owned some suitable acreage. Although I realized that there was no such a place as a safe haven anywhere in the world, I reasoned that in a nearly all-White area such as the one in which I was already established in Macon County, NC, our chances of maintaining reasonable security would be much better than in a Jew and nigger infested area such as Broward County, Florida, where I then lived. In this line of reasoning I was probably correct. Who knows how long we might have lasted in that increasingly polyglot area of crime, drugs and turmoil in South Florida. As our anti-Christian racial religion invaded Macon County in 1982 in the center of that highly bigoted mass of religious Insanity known as the Bible Belt, I believe it is constructive to review some of the highlights and antagonisms of that first hectic year. We were prepared for unrelenting warfare against the Jews, the niggers, and the other mud races, since this was what our religion was primarily geared to warn our White Racial comrades about. However, we were also keenly aware of the hatred engendered against us by the fanaticism of the Christian zealots. Nevertheless, we were not quite prepared for the viciousness of the onslaught by the local paper, highly aided and abetted by the local peddlers of the spook-craft hoax, the Christian preachers themselves. They not only were highly alarmed that we could and would expose their nefarious network of lies and lunacy, but by the very nature of our realistic creed and program we would eventually by our exposure of their hoax be undermining their very source of livelihood as well. Let me say that their fear was well founded, and as the years go by, Jewish Christianity will wither on the vine by its own sheer mass of mendacity and deceptions, as has already befallen its other twin hoax, Jewish communism. The atmosphere for the reception of our controversial new religion by the bible thumping natives was set and determined by a nasty and vicious article that appeared in the Franklin Press on May 13, 1982, when our headquarters building was barely in mid-construction. In blaring headlines on page one, it proclaimed “Pro-Hitler, anti-Christ Leader Headquarters Here.” In a sea of fanatic, spook-worshipping zealots, could anyone possibly dream up a more hateful, inflammatory target than a Hitler-loving and Christ-hating beast? Hardly! It set the whole county on its ear, and was the subject of much buzzing and a host of rumors for weeks. It also set the tone for other news items
in the state and regions elsewhere that usually follow such an upheaval. For years my wife and I had been commuting back and forth between Florida and North Carolina, as circumstances demanded, trying to take care of our affairs in both areas. This was no easy task, since the distance between the two areas was a mean 750 miles, a trip that consumed the better part of two days one way. At the time the rumors started flying about our impending headquarters, I happened to be at our home in Lighthouse Point. I received a long-distance call from a Franklin Press reporter by the name of Kim Kimmins, a fanatic who I later learned belonged to one of the many Pentecostal Churches in Macon County. (By the way, this small county at that time was, and still is, infested by more than 100 churches of all stripes.) We talked for about an hour, and most of the information of what she already possessed had been fed to her by the Jewish anti-Defamation League; who had also gratuitously sent her a copy of the two-page article that same outfit had planted in the Miami Herald in 1981. Well, soon all hell broke loose, and we were the main topic of conversation and rumor for the next several weeks, in fact, the rumors and lies never have stopped unto this very day nearly ten years later. All kinds of stories were invented and bandied about: that we were devil worshipers, that we practiced animalistic rituals (whatever that was), that we were neo-Nazis, Christ haters, and about every other odious idea these spook chasing idiots could dream up.