Английская Википедия:Amy Carlson (religious leader)

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Amy Carlson (November 30, 1975 – Шаблон:Circa April 16, 2021), also known by her followers as Mother God, was an American religious leader and the co-founder of the new religious movement Love Has Won.[1] Carlson and her followers believed that she was God, a 19-billion-year-old being, and a reincarnation of Jesus Christ, and that she could heal people of cancer "with the power of love."[2] News media have described the group as a cult.

Carlson's body was found mummified in Love Has Won's compound in Crestone, Colorado in April 2021.

Early life

Carlson was born in McPherson, Kansas. Her parents divorced when she was a child, and after they both remarried, Carlson was raised between their homes in Kansas and Oklahoma City.[3][4] Carlson and her sister Tara left to live with her mother and stepfather after claims of abuse by their stepmother.[4] The family later lived a middle-class life in Dallas, Texas, where Carlson received good grades and sang in the school choir. They later relocated to Houston.[5][6]

Carlson had three children by three different fathers.[7] She worked as a manager at McDonald's.[8]

During the mid-2000s, Carlson developed an interest in New Age philosophy, and became a regular poster on the forums of the website Lightworkers.org. On the forum, she met Amerith WhiteEagle, who convinced Carlson that she was divine, and Carlson began to claim to experience paranormal phenomena; specifically, she heard a voice telling her she would one day become President of the United States.[9]

In late 2007, Carlson left her third husband, her children, and her job,[10][8] and ceased contact with most members of her family.[10] She then joined up with WhiteEagle in Colorado.[9] The group was originally known under the name "Galactic Federation of Light".[11] The group posted their first videos to YouTube in 2009.[9] Carlson and WhiteEagle led the group as Mother and Father God.

Love Has Won

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WhiteEagle left Carlson around 2014. Carlson gained her first follower, Miguel Lamboy, the same year. Miguel managed the group's logistics and finances. The movement began to grow from 2014 onwards, mainly by the internet.[9] The group travelled between Colorado, Oregon, California and Florida prior to 2018, before moving to Moffat, Colorado.[11] There were a succession of "Father Gods", with Jason Castillo becoming the final "Father God" in 2018.[9]

The group briefly moved to the island of Kauai in Hawaii in August 2020, where they were met with hostility from locals after Carlson publicly proclaimed that she was the Hawaiian goddess Pele.[12] A multi-day protest ensued, with protestors lighting driftwood fires and chanting Hawaiian prayers around the rented property the group were staying in.[12] Video footage provided to The Denver Post by Love Has Won member Lauryn Suarez showed eggs and rocks being thrown at the house, as well as the broken windows of the house and the SUV parked in the driveway.[13] The mayor of Kauai, Derek Kawakami, intervened to negotiate the departure of the group from the island.[13] They subsequently flew to Kahului Airport on Maui, but were convinced to fly back to Colorado in September 2020.[14][15]

Just before Carlson's death in April 2021, Lamboy paid the Colorado Secretary of State's office $50 to register a new nonprofit, Gaia's Crystal Schools Inc., listing the associated address as 4 Alcedo Court, where authorities recovered Carlson's body.[16][17]

Her followers claimed that, rather than dying, Carlson had "ascended" to the fifth dimension after assuming all of mankind's pain. The website Lovehaswon.org was taken offline.[18][19] The core members of Love Has Won still believe Amy Carlson is God and reject the 3D world.[20]

The group renamed their Facebook page and YouTube channel to "5D Full Disclosure",[11] and launched a new website, 5dfulldisclosure.org. In the aftermath of Carlson's death, the group splintered, with Castillo forming the separate group Joy Rains with a small number of followers.[21]

Mother God and beliefs

Шаблон:Multiple image Carlson's teachings revolved around the idea that she was the 534th incarnation of Mother God, a deity who was destined to lead exactly 144,000 believers out of the superficial reality of our "3-D world" and into a fifth dimensional plane of higher existence.[17] She said she was Mother Earth, Gaia,[22] Cleopatra, Jesus, Joan of Arc,[2] Harriet Tubman,[23] and Marilyn Monroe; she claimed to have full memory of her lives, including being hanged on the cross as Jesus.[2] She said she could "produce miracles, kind of like Jesus."[22] She also claimed to be the reincarnated "Madam Blavtski," likely Helena Blavatsky, the founder of the occult religion Theosophy.[24] Carlson also said Elvis Presley was her son.[24]

To accomplish her goals, she needed to regularly commune with "The Galactics," an "etheric team" of spiritual ambassadors that she said was largely made up of deceased celebrities[17][24] Robin Williams was her right-hand man and Patrick Swayze was in charge of pets.[25] John Lennon was on the team, commanding a spaceship; Love Has Won identified him as Ashtar.[24] Other members of "The Galactics" were Whitney Houston, Prince, Steve Irwin, Carrie Fisher, Rodney Dangerfield, Tupac Shakur, Chris Farley, David Bowie, Gene Wilder, and Michael Jackson – as well as the living Donald Trump and Carol Burnett. She also claimed to receive help from the metaphysical Count of St. Germain.[24]

She claimed that she lived in the mythical, ancient land of Lemuria and Trump was her father. A special, obscure technology was stolen, causing an explosion that sank Atlantis. "Mother God" was able to save the technology, but wasn't able to fully ascend to the fifth dimension because humanity wasn't ready, so she continued returning to Earth in human form.[16]

The group's former website said Carlson was a spiritual surgeon who would work "multidimensionally" to operate on people's bodies and cure various physical ailments. She said she had cured cancer, Lyme disease, addiction, and suicidal thoughts, as well as removed brain tumors, and helped cases of autism.[7][16]

Death

In September 2020, it had been stated that Carlson was in poor health and was paralyzed from the waist down; Carlson herself stated that she had cancer.[26][13] In the weeks leading up to her death, the police were called multiple times to perform wellness checks on her. On each visit, LHW members claimed she was not home.[7]

In early April 2021, the group was located in an RV park in Mount Shasta in northern California but were asked to leave due to overcrowding.[27] Carlson was last seen alive by someone outside the group on April 10, 2021.[21]

In the HBO documentary Love Has Won, the group said that they traveled to Ashland, Oregon, upon Carlson's request, and stayed in Callahan's Mountain Lodge, Ashland, Oregon. While there, Carlson lost all motor control and had to be carried around. According to two members, Carlson had asked to be taken to the hospital, but was refused.[7] She died in the room at Callahan's Mountain Lodge on an unknown date very soon after the move. The group moved Carlson's body a few days after her death to the Mount Hood National Forest when the hotel staff became suspicious. The group waited for the "Galactic" beings to pick up her body, but Castillo claimed that he heard a calling to move Carlson's body. Her body was driven back to Miguel Lamboy’s Crestone, Colorado, mission home.[28]

Lamboy discovered the body on April 27, 2021, and reported to the Saguache County police department on April 28.[29] The mummified corpse of Carlson was discovered in the home. Its state of decay suggested that she had been dead for several weeks. The body was found in a sleeping bag wrapped in Christmas lights—the face covered in glitter and the eyes missing—in what authorities stated was a makeshift shrine. Seven members of the group were charged with abuse of a corpse as well as child abuse due to the presence of two children in the property.[30][31] A photo from a few weeks before she is thought to have died shows her appearance to be emaciated; she had thinning hair and discoloured skin with a purplish hue.[30] She was just 75 pounds when she died.[20]

According to Saguache County Coroner Tom Perrin, Carlson had been ingesting large amounts of colloidal silver, which the group had been promoting as a COVID-19 cure, and had received a warning from the FDA for promoting it.[32][33] Consuming colloidal silver over a long period of time can lead to blue-grey discolouration of the skin, as well as seizures and organ failure.[30] An autopsy report released in December 2021 stated that Carlson had died from "global decline in the setting of alcohol abuse, anorexia, and chronic colloidal silver ingestion."[34] The autopsy found no evidence that Carlson had cancer.[34]

On May 5, Deputy District Attorney Alex Raines announced plans to upgrade the abuse of corpse charges to the more serious charge of tampering with a deceased human body, and the group members were reported to be facing a mix of charges of child abuse, abuse of a corpse, tampering with deceased human remains, and false imprisonment.[18][35] The charges were later dropped.[36]

Media appearances

Carlson appeared on Dr. Phil in 2020, where she spread her claims of being God and confronted her family.[2]

Dateline NBC aired a two-hour documentary about the group on October 15, 2021.[37]

An HBO documentary series Love Has Won: The Cult of Mother God directed by Hannah Olson premiered on November 13, 2023.[38][39] The documentary interviews current and former followers of Love Has Won.

References

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