Anonymous ID: 9a8caa Aug. 7, 2022, 4:21 a.m. No.17124620   🗄️.is 🔗kun

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U.S. Congressman Leo Ryan visited Jonestown in November of 1978, investigating allegations of human rights abuses within the Jonestown community. Ryan was accompanied by NBC News correspondent Don Harris, various other members of the media, and concerned family members of Jonestown residents. While visiting Jonestown, Congressman Ryan met a little over a dozen Temple members who wanted to leave

(including a couple who passed a note reading in part, "Please help us get out of Jonestown" to news anchor Harris, mistaking him for Congressman Ryan).

That number of defectors was actually quite low, considering the population of Jonestown, which was then over 900.

 

While processing paperwork to help Temple members return to the U.S., Ryan was attacked by knife-wielding Temple member Don Sly, but the would-be assassin was restrained before he could injure Ryan. Eventually, the entire Ryan party plus the group of Jonestown defectors drove to a nearby airstrip and boarded planes, hoping to leave. But Jim Jones had sent armed Temple members (his creepily-named "Red Brigade") with the group, and the Red Brigade opened fire, killing Ryan, one Temple defector, and three members of the media

– and injuring eleven others. Those who survived fled into the jungle.

 

When the murderers returned to Jonestown and reported their actions, Jones promptly started up what he called a "White Night" meeting, inviting all Temple members. But this wasn't the first White Night. On various occasions prior to the murders, Jones had hosted White Night meetings in which he suggested that U.S. intelligence agencies would soon attack Jonestown; he had even staged fake attackers around Jonestown to add an air of pseudo-realism to the proceedings

(though it's hard to imagine that such a small community wouldn't recognize their own people pretending to threaten the Temple). Faced with this hypothetical invasion scenario, Jones offered Temple members these choices: stay and fight the imaginary invaders, head for the USSR, head for the Guyana jungle, or commit "revolutionary suicide"

(in other words, mass suicide as an act of political protest). On previous occasions when Temple members mock-voted for suicide, Jones tested them: Temple members were given small cups of liquid purportedly containing poison and were asked to drink it. They did. After a while, Jones revealed that the liquid didn't contain poison

– but that one day it would. And, by the way, he had been stockpiling cyanide for years (not to mention piles of other drugs).

 

On the final White Night, Jones was not testing his Temple followers. He was killing them all.

 

After the airstrip murders outside Jonestown, Jim Jones ordered Temple members to create a fruity mix containing a cocktail of chemicals including cyanide, diazepam

(aka Valium – an anti-anxiety medication), promethazine

(aka Phenergan – a sedative), chloral hydrate

(a sedative/hypnotic sometimes called "knockout drops"), and most interestingly… Flavor Aid – a grape-flavored beverage similar to Kool-Aid. We'll get back to that last one in a moment.

 

Jones urged Temple members to commit suicide in order to make a political point. Some discussion ensued

– an alternate plan put forth by Temple member Christine Miller involved flying Temple members to the USSR

– but Jones prevailed, after repeatedly telling his followers that Congressman Ryan was dead, and that would bring the authorities soon (an audiotape of this meeting exists, and is just as creepy as you'd think). Jones first insisted that mothers squirt poison into the mouths of their children using syringes. As their children died, the mothers were dosed as well, though they were allowed to drink from cups. Temple members wandered out onto the ground, where eventually just over 900 lay dead, including more than 300 children. Only a handful of survivors escaped Jonestown

– primarily residents who happened to be away on errands or playing basketball when the mass suicide/massacre took place.

 

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