|
THE |
|
a cache of usenet and other text files pertaining
to occult, mystical, and spiritual subjects. |
To: alt.magick.tyagi,alt.satanism,alt.politics.satanism
From: boboroshi@satanservice.org (SOD of the CoE)
Subject: JDeboo's Most Recent Whereabouts
Date: Mon, 24 Jun 2002 03:37:09 GMT
50020609 VII Hail Satan!
while constructing this letter, I noticed that Jeffrey Deboo's
work was one of the first bits of posting I did in zazas elist.
for this reason I am also posting this to zazas and anonymizing
my correspondent. enjoy. :>
> Hi, thanks so much for the check-in, I really appreciate it.
sure, your familiarity with and interest in Satanic writings
is not easily come by. in part my service to Satan is a service
to you and to people like you.
re: Jeffrey Deboo's contact information:
> Do you have a current address for him now?
tell ya what, I've got a free morning and will do something I've
not tried yet: search the internet for Jeffrey Deboo and post the
results to zazas elist (and you). :>
at Google (searched www on "Jeffrey Deboo address") I found his
Berkeley address at Factsheet Five
http://www.factsheet5.com/Science_Fiction.html
(FF is a valuable information source) listed a source for
Sci-Fi magazines:
Abunai: Fantasy & Science Fiction Zine Issue 2 December, 1995
Some decent SF stories from Mr. Deboo and Marie Buckner (as
with the previous issue). They've branched out into more
genres and much improved writing.
$4.00 Each , Subs: $16.00 for 4 issues to Jeffrey Deboo,
1442-A Walnut Street #64, Berkeley, CA 94709 (38 Pages/S/JP)
No trades/reviews zines/submissions OK/no ads/Age Statement.
I didn't remember that he had Sci-Fi writing interests. of course
I found him listed as editor of "Dark Reflections" without an address:
Nazism, Racism & Satanism
An Answer
Extracted from The Burning Ground,
Volume 1, Issue 4, 1994
by Walter Grimwald
I first read Jeffrey Deboo's "Nazism, Racism and Satanism"
in The Black Flame (Vol.3/Num.1 & 2), forum of the CHURCH
OF SATAN. Since then, it has been reprinted in other Satanic
forums more often than any other article which I can recall.
Deboo is editing his own magazine - Dark Reflections - which
he advertises as "Satanism without Fascist/racist/authoritarian
nonsense."
which the Shub ( http://www.io.com/~shub/amc/ref.txt ) lists as his
same Berkeley address:
Dark Reflections 1442A Walnut st #64 Berkeley CA 94704.
"Intellectual Satanism" From: Eclectic Mage n6 $16 x 4,
$4 x 1. IndeX: Satanism, Church of Satan, Jeffrey Deboo.
and Factsheet Five also has him http://www.factsheet5.com/Spirituality.htm
indicates that he may be contacted through a "Paul Brown":
The Sacred Oak Vol 1 Issue 3 October '95
An angry Satanist zine that doesn't hide how it feels.
The writing is intense and extensive, exploring the
subject in depth.
In this new, lower-priced issue, Jeffrey Deboo discussed
the difference between instinct and willfull self-awareness,
and then explained the relationship that Satan plays in
rebellion. In another essay he explained why anti-Semitism
has no rational basis in the Satanic philosophy.
$3 Each to Paul Brown, P.O. Box 1048, Waterford, CT 06385
(43 Pages/D/RSF) No trades/reviews zines/submissions OK/no ads/
someone reviewed a 'zine Deboo is/was editing called JD Medley Zine and
gave the last OR address I remember:
[at http://www.negcap.com/everything_else/zine_reviews5.html I include
the entirety because it is so interesting concerning the man and his
consistency about lack of technology.]
rlott@aol.com
http://www.hitchmagazine.com
Rod Lott
P.O. Box 23621
Oklahoma City, OK 73123-2621
JD Medley Zine
#2. First off, let me tell you that normally when I review a
zine, I jump to a quick conclusion, and spend my time reading
the rest of the zine trying to prove that conclusion wrong. So,
I want to start by saying that it's been a while since I've seen
a zine with a title this lame. I mean, the author's initials,
followed by a category description is about the worst thing I
could imagine calling a zine. It was a bad omen, as was the $3
price tag for a bunch of typed (not desktop published) pages
that were photocopied. So I started out saying, "Oh, no. Not
again." But once I got through the boring letters, the
unnecessary introduction and generic zine plugs, I got to the
first piece. In it, Jeffrey Deboo (the editor) discusses a
recent court decision that ruled against people who put up web
sites encouraging people to murder abortion doctors. He takes
an interesting approach to it, and while I disagree with him
very strongly, he makes his point clearly and articulately.
There's no flash, no hyperbole, no great graphics, hell,
there's no art in this whole zine except for the cover and
some ads. But what it does have is ideas presented in an
intelligent, serious way. I love that. After that comes a
daring, fascinating and well-researched piece on global
warming which is both the centerpiece of this issue and
clearly the best thing in it. In fact, this one piece alone
is worth the price (inflated though it may be) of admission.
Other pieces include commentary about pop culture stuff like
movies and TV and a story that was said to be SciFi, but I
could not get through it. While Jeff's taste in movies and
TV is a little too nerdy and mainstream for me, he does offer
some insight and valid criticism, so that's cool. Overall, a
good effort though a few different fonts and perhaps a graphic
or two might do something about the monotonous aesthetic of
page after page of typed stuff, but Jeff rightly focuses on
the words and does a damn fine job. [$3 / M / 28 pages]
Jeffrey Deboo
4326 SW Woodstock Blvd. #524
Portland, OR 97206
which is the last address I had, and is a DIFFERENT address
than one provided for his Medley Zine at Xerox Debt #7:
JDMZ apparently stands for ³Jeffrey Deboo¹s Medley Zine,²
unless he¹s got some kind of secret coded message also
bearing those four letters. Issue #10 screams on the cover,
³It¹s RANT Time!² And so the highlight is a ten-page
diatribe that begins, ³I¹m getting very tired of writing
about politics.² But write he does -- politics lately is
fodder for ranting, so why not? Plus, film commentary, a
dash of fiction, and a global warming watch. I like it when
someone knows what they want to say, then goes right out
and says it. So go ahead and send that $3.00 (plus age
statement, which I can¹t quite understand being necessary)
to Jeff at P.O. Box 930, Gresham, OR 97030-0214.
from http://www.leekinginc.com/xeroxdebt/xd7.htm
so perhaps now we have something more to go on.
in fact, with a new search ('"Jeffrey Deboo" OR') turns up
additional references to Gresham:
JDMZ #10
Issue ten of JDMZ begins with an ³Introit² including the apt
observance that, ³The political situation in this country has
reached a point at which total cynicism and disgust are the
only possible legitimate responses.² This statement is echoed,
with examples, by the first lengthy article simply entitled
³Rant² which also goes off on the insidious nature of
genetically modified foods and their sponsors (bringing up
several points of which I was unaware), the Internet and the
MPAA rating system. Deboo looks at AI, the latest work of
child exploitation by Steven Spielberg, and comes to the
conclusion that it is a ³failure more impressive than most
successes²; as usual a ³Global Warming Watch² and several
publication reviews are included; and the first half of the
multi-dimensional sci-fi story ³The World of Lust and Horror²
is debuted. For some reason I found the contents of this
issue to be more direct and capable of holding my attention
than past issues, perhaps due to the fact that the emphasis
here is consolidated on three main topics (politics/world
affairs, film, fiction) rather than a greater number of
smaller less-connected pieces.
$3.00 from Jeffrey Deboo P.O. Box 930, Gresham, OR, 97030-0214
from
Paniscus Review
http://www.paniscusrevue.com/reviews/print/3star/jdmz6910.htm
Ken Gage had a peculiar essay involving Deboo at:
http://www.angelfire.com/music/kengage/sworks/kg0016.html
called "The Deboo Report";
the Paniscus Review appears to do regular reviews of his JDMZ(ine).
here's another one from
http://www.paniscusrevue.com/reviews/print/3star/jdmz1112.htm
JDMZ #12
This last issue of JDMZ (hereafter to be called Galatea Lives)
begins with an exasperated "Introit" about the general state
of things before moving forward to the ever-fatalistic
"Global Warming Watch" and the review of recent publications
of interest. As the JDMZ #11 concentrated on last year's
terrorist attacks this issue features several favorable reader
responses as well as some wide-ranging "Thoughts on the War"
that have coalesced in the aftermath. "Why Do They Hate Us?"
looks at Islam from an historical and cultural perspective in
an attempt to make sense of the Muslim mindset (albeit with a
bit of a pat on the back for the author's own "specialized
knowledge"); "American Taliban" examines our own home-grown
religious fanatics, the Christian Right; there's a fond
"Film Comment" on Amelie; and a 2-page prose piece, "Anna,"
the point of which eluded me. As always, strong opinions
backed by research and intelligent insight.
$3.00 from Jeffrey Deboo P.O. Box 930, Gresham, OR, 97030-0214
and you can find reviews of JDMZ #s 6, 9, and 10 reviewed at:
http://www.paniscusrevue.com/reviews/print/3star/jdmz6910.htm
#'s 11 and 12 at:
http://www.paniscusrevue.com/reviews/print/3star/jdmz1112.htm
wherein (#6) I found the following address:
Jeffrey Deboo P.O. Box 230877, Tigard, OR, 97281-0877
and #s 8-12 seem to have the Gresham, OR P.O. Box.
I found a peculiar listing in German at
http://www.harrassowitz.de/verlag/worter.htm
which included what appears to be his name:
Jemenitisches Wörterbuch10. Arabisch-Deutsch-Englisch.
Von Jeffrey Deboo 1989. XV, 292 Seiten (ISBN 3-447-02933-1),
br, EUR 64,- [D] / sFr 109,- Berücksichtigt - unter Einschluß
einiger südjemenitischer Worte - nur die Dialekte des
Nordjemen. Gemeinjemenitische Wörter sind gekennzeichnet.
In English this translates at dictionary.com as:
Yemeni Woerterbuch10. Arab German/English. Of Jeffrey Deboo
1989. XV, 292 pages (ISBN 3-447-02933-1), br, EUR 64, -
[ D ] / sFr 109, - - under inclusion of some southYemeni
words - only the dialects north Yemen considers.
Common-Yemeni words are characterized.
which is listed at Amazon.com but with no additional information
about the book other than that it was authored by Jeffrey Deboo
and pertains to the following topics:
from Amazon:
Look for similar books by subject:
Search for books by subject:
Arabic language
Dialects
Yemen
Dictionaries
German
English
is our Jeffrey Deboo an editor of translation dictionaries?
hopefully this will assist you in contacting Mr. Deboo. :>
blessed beast!
boboroshi@satanservice.org: Satanic Outreach Director
Church of Euthanasia: http://www.churchofeuthanasia.org/
TOKUS WEBLINKS: http://dmoz.org/Bookmarks/B/boboroshi
Ninth Scholar's Library (Satanism Archive): http://www.satanservice.org/
Hail Satan! Zazas Zazas Nasatanada Zazas!
|
|
The Arcane Archive is copyright by the authors cited.
Send comments to the Arcane Archivist: tyaginator@arcane-archive.org. |
|
Did you like what you read here? Find it useful?
Then please click on the Paypal Secure Server logo and make a small donation to the site maintainer for the creation and upkeep of this site. |
|
The ARCANE ARCHIVE is a large domain,
organized into a number of sub-directories, each dealing with a different branch of religion, mysticism, occultism, or esoteric knowledge. Here are the major ARCANE ARCHIVE directories you can visit: |
|
interdisciplinary:
geometry, natural proportion, ratio, archaeoastronomy
mysticism: enlightenment, self-realization, trance, meditation, consciousness occultism: divination, hermeticism, amulets, sigils, magick, witchcraft, spells religion: buddhism, christianity, hinduism, islam, judaism, taoism, wicca, voodoo societies and fraternal orders: freemasonry, golden dawn, rosicrucians, etc. |
SEARCH THE ARCANE ARCHIVE
There are thousands of web pages at the ARCANE ARCHIVE. You can use ATOMZ.COM
to search for a single word (like witchcraft, hoodoo, pagan, or magic) or an
exact phrase (like Kwan Yin, golden ratio, or book of shadows):
|
OTHER ESOTERIC AND OCCULT SITES OF INTEREST
Southern
Spirits: 19th and 20th century accounts of hoodoo,
including slave narratives & interviews
|