24 February 2026

Sandra Good | Life at the Ranch

 


"We didn't consider ourselves hippies. 

We lived on a ranch that was used for filming cowboy movies. We loved discovering the wildlife, the land. We didn't have newspapers, watches, television. We didn't go to the movies. We were interesting enough and didn't need outside entertainment. We wanted to be as far away from the madness of the city as possible..."

"The reality is that the people who belonged to what they call the

"Manson Family" were brilliant young people who wanted a future. The Earth is dying and people can't think beyond money and television. My friends gave their lives by taking those other lives. We were ahead of our time. In 1969 we were already warning of the chaos and violence that would come if people did not respect the Earth and listen to the young people. We had a vision of the world and we still have it."

-Blue

08 February 2026

Immortality



Do not stand

By my grave, and weep. 

I am not there,

I do not sleep— I am the thousand winds that blow I am the diamond glints in snow I am the sunlight on ripened grain,

I am the gentle, autumn rain. As you awake with morning's hush, I am the swift, up-flinging rush 

Of quiet birds in circling flight,

I am the day transcending night.

Do not stand By my grave, and cry- I am not there

I did not die.

— Clare Harner, 1934

07 February 2026

Charles Manson | Secret and Sacred

 


Salaam

Secret, and the SS secrets and sacred, is a synonymous viewpoint when you look at it from the dead. Everything that was never told and held to the death, and was killed... martyred hearts to hold and held forth to the death that becomes a viewpoint, secret holy ghost.

We the mind think, and are thought- there we are men of truth, righteous brothers' honor and had no way of knowing things and the ways kept from us. We all looked to death row where we thought brothers were being kept. We looked up to the strongest images, to the father. Gods mind in the flesh. Old cowboys, heroes, past wars and even bandits, crooks and revolutionists.

We look for the patriarch soldier as we were told and shown on tv and movies. They died for our rights and all we thought was ‘love and real'. Then the end of acts and stars changed our minds. We saw the covers were not real. The cover is real but like rubber apples- they look good but you can't eat them.

What was kept secret or concealed as we lived our lives in 2 world wars, cover ups-past.

On from the money heads, all the good real and love was murdered right before our eyes. We saw it but we were told and taught and we had no way to find out but to go through it. Our Souls the soul kept calling the eyes of the soul- seen one thing, our souls were going one way and your words and ways were going the other- so we ended up on death row in a war that started before our granddads were born.

The egg broke in 1969. The courtroom I was in, in the 1940's when the USA was calling war a crime and crime became a war my court room became. When the Manson cult went to death row to redeem the brother, we thought was there it was there but in the graves. The secrets and keeping word true Manson was raised up in prison not knowing that the people that kept their word were hung and put to death and that there was only a movie left, and money slaves. I hold the worlds in English and the secrets of the bottom line underworld. SS, death head cult, death, will of revolution and pirate USN George Washington, USA, USSR, China, Japan and Germany and all the good Indians.

Charles Manson





Craig Carlisle Hammond 1950 - 2026



Craig lived for a short time at Spahn’s Ranch in 1970, he was arrested for “loitering” during the vigil on the corner of Broadway and Temple in front of the Hall of Justice during Manson‘s trial with a group of others, all having an X carved in their foreheads.

Craig, a true southerner and a former carnival worker, eventually ended up back in North Carolina, where he was from, raising a family, and running a moving company. Decades later he moved back to California, I had been corresponding with Craig for many years after Red gave me his contact information, we worked on many projects together: cleaning up beaches and parks, releasing Manson’s music, helping Manson with his personal affairs and maintaining websites for ATWA.

Craig was a music lover with a good voice who played the guitar well. He also wrote his own songs, playing music every day, he even recorded a CD called “Learn to Fly” for his family and friends.  Charlie wrote us some songs and we recorded them, Craig on guitar and vocals, Afton (Star) on violin and vocals and myself playing tambourine and vocals, the best one was “Riverboat Gamblers and Rodeo Clowns”.


Most of you know of Craig as Gray Wolf, the name that Manson gave him, Charlie originally called him Copperhead, and later Coyote, 

If you would like to hear some conversations between Manson and Craig when he was called Copperhead, you can look for the spoken word CD called a ‘Taste of Freedom’.

Before he moved to California, when he was still living in North Carolina, we put out the Manson CD ‘One Mind’ together, you can listen to this music on YouTube.

I have lots of good memories of Craig and can’t include them all here,  there were also plenty of times when I felt he betrayed me, I can see now that he got in over his head like many people in our circle have done in their lives.  

After Manson‘s passing, Craig moved to Arizona, he leaves behind his sons and family and friends.

Photos are from Craig‘s first return visit to California days after visiting Manson for the first time, he and Afton came to visit when I was living with Country Sue.

- Hawk

01 December 2025

Jill Purce | The Mystic Spiral




 BBC Two England, 29 December 1974

A BBC documentary about the early pioneering work of Jill Purce on the spiral, showing her interdisciplinary explorations into nature, consciousness,  science, art and religion. German composer Karlheniz Stockhausen, physicist Fritjof Capra and biologist Maurice Wilkins, who with Watson and Crick, received the Nobel Prize for the discovery of DNA, were all influenced by her work, and appear in the film to discuss her ideas.

Pioneer of voice, family and ancestral healing, a musician and artist, Jill is a former fellow of Kings College, London, Biophysics Department, General Editor of the Thames and Hudson "Art and Imagination" series, and author of "The Mystic Spiral, Journey of the Soul".  For more information on Jill and her "Healing Voice" and "Healing the Family and Ancestors" workshops, visit www.healingvoice.com




25 November 2025

New ATWA Instagram Page

 


New ATWA Instagram page is live, click here to view:

www.instagram.com/air.trees.water.animals


we are always interested in collaborating with authors, artists, photographers, and filmmakers who are passionate about ecology, wildlife, survival, the life and thought of Charles Manson or any topic that you think fits here, please contact us if you are interested in collaborating.

orderofatwa @ gmail.com


23 November 2025

Charles Manson | My Father

 



Well my father is Scotch Whiskey. My father is General Mac Arthur, My father is Richard Milhouse Nixon, My father is Irish and Scot. My father is my graveyard. I live in my father for eternity. I have no hates or fears toward any other people. But you can't play games on me and get my pussy by using fear and playing prejudiced. I understand the games of prejudice and fear. I love everything as much as I can. But I'm not out of perspective. I understand the order of all life and I understand that if this planet does not come to one world government with a one world economy with a base reality of ecology for earth, if we don't put earth first, we're not going to have any planet left. Now, any Christian that don't want to live on this earth they should get to heaven's gate as quick as they can. They should find any way off this planet that they can find in their own time because this is the last roundup. The kids are coming back again and they want harmony and they want peace on earth. I want my peace on earth. But not only do I want my peace on earth, I want my trees on earth and I want my animals on earth.

-Charles Manson

08 November 2025

A Thunder of Bison | Return of the Buffalo

 



60 million American bison, commonly known as buffalo, once thundered across the prairies of North America — until 1889, when they were almost driven to extinction.

These mighty giants terraformed the land, diversified prairie ecosystems, and sustained many native tribes across the continent. Now, tribes and conservationists join forces to bring the species back from the brink, finally returning the American bison to their native grasslands.  





The Osage Nation in Oklahoma, with help from allies at the Nature Conservancy and the Bronx Zoo, are reviving their cultural and spiritual connection to buffalo by rebuilding a herd that once shared their land. By reigniting traditional land management practices like prescribed fire, the Osage support the herd as it continues to grow, which in turn, restores natural balance that helps the entire prairie ecosystem thrive.





05 November 2025

Charles Manson | Forever

 



Forever is forever and anyone who wants to see into and put their mind and thoughts into forever can. You see a rock and understand the rock is not forever. You can see into the sky and all its stars and say that is forever. Cars, money, things are moving. The pillars or God's word symbols that thought travels on and with thoughts in the will of God is forever the mind. Something true is true forever even if we don't know what it is. We go through life and come to thoughts in sky's mind that are and have always been. Soul is forever. Life and death are games. Forever is no game. If you give your words into forever and sell them out by dropping them for reasons you justify then your mind and heart is not in forever. Your life keeps on but when it ends and you must face your own knowing you know, and that won't let your soul into itself. The wheels of thought are held in forever. Your mind's brains can become aware of them and you can come in and out of the temple of forever. It's not a judge. Our own thoughts do that. We alone effect our self. There is no one, no us, no we, unless we make it, redeem it, and come back in grace with truth. As I say, I don't judge it, it just is in nothing as nothing is forever as nothing is soul. The beyond, the Ansome. But one lie is like a wall. Like a space movie one lie and a force field goes up and forever and truth goes on and on without you. A real witch knows no one can catch her lying. No one but herself. Everything is perfection. Monks who are in forever say no women can hold points of view in forever because they have no soul, that their fear turns them to lie and hide from the real. I've just drove up on forever and feel it started with me so I'm just here. (Swastika)

-Charles Manson

04 November 2025

Luther Martin Ingraham

 

Charles Manson's Great Grandfather,
Luther Martin Ingraham.
Father of Nancy Ingraham Maddox.

01 November 2025

Charles Manson | The Moon




Looking at the Moon

Thinking about how many times 

That I have died for love 

Looking at the Moon

Think about the times I’ve cried for love

Thinking about the Moon

Where did it go and why did it pass me by?

Why was the shadow not right within the sky above
?
There must have been an eye 

Together with saints angels in the sky

Imaginations 

Disneyland

I seen Donald Duck 

When he cried

Mickey Mouse was 

Standing in the corner 

In a shadow

Watching a parade 

Go by

Go by 

Walking on by me now

In a dream dream land 

Dream land yeah

Dreaming in God's hands now 

Dream of

Dreaming dreaming dreaming dreaming dreaming

Dreaming

Of a dead man on the ground 

He didn’t know it was worth dying for

Or how it was just giving his life to God

A sacred moment in a frogs life

Where he gives his life 

To a bigger frog

That needed something to eat

And he ate

His shadow...

'The Moon'
- Charles Manson



31 October 2025

19 October 2025

A Real Witch

 

A Real Witch

Can be self centered, and survive anywhere, drop her in the desert where there’s nothing. 

She knows where there’s water, and can forage for food in the meanest desert… Feed me, make me shoes, and clothes. 

Knows roots, herbs. She’s a part of wildlife itself. 

I’ve seen her deliver her own baby, put it on her back, climb a mountain with the baby hanging on her back, keep it warm, make fire where there was no matches, where there was no store… Feed me, make me shoes and rub my feet at the same time. 

At the same time three counties had their cops looking for us with air spotters, jeep patrols and never bitch, cry.. 

she can run with the coyotes, fly with the owls, forage with the wolves and lay with the snakes. 

She’s a part of the Earth and the trees. She is a tree. And feed me and do everything. 

I only do what she can’t do. 

Everything else she has in hand and she knows what will happen if she don’t. 

She has no doubts at all. 

She knows god, and is 33 x’s on the moon. 

Red, Gold, Blue. 

I seen them do it. 


-Charles Manson

18 October 2025

Kindred of the Kibbo Kift



The Kindred of the Kibbo Kift was a camping, hiking and handicraft group with ambitions to bring world peace. It was the first of three movements in England associated with the charismatic artist and writer John Hargrave (1894–1982). The Kindred was founded in 1920. Some members continued into Hargrave's Green Shirt Movement for Social Credit, which was established in 1931–32, and which became in 1935 the Social Credit Party of Great Britain and Northern Ireland. 

 Hargrave claimed all three organisations to be part of one mission, telling his followers after the last title-change: 'We are the Green Shirts – indeed we are the Kindred – calling ourselves the Social Credit Party of Great Britain officially, but knowing full well who and what we are. "Whelm on me ye Resurrected Men!" – I give you that outcry of the Kin in 1927.'


The mission was the belief that Kibbo Kift training would produce a core of healthy and creative individuals through whom the human race would evolve into a society without war, poverty and wasted lives. The Kibbo Kift held that individual character strengthened by mental discipline was the key to the future, not mass movements based on groups defined by class, race or nation states.




Origins

The Kindred was formed at a meeting held on 18 August 1920 at the offices of the Charity Organisation Society. Besides Hargrave, the movers were Mrs Emmeline Pethick-Lawrence, a former suffragette and Theosophist-inclined pacifist; and Dr C. K. Cullen, socialist-inclined medical officer in East London and a youth leader at the Camelot Youth Club in Poplar. All three shared a broad vision of creating a new model for character–building youth groups, a progressive, co-educational and non-militaristic alternative to The Boy Scouts Association. However, there were differences. In the early years of the Kibbo Kift, there were ideological and personal wranglings over the new organisation, from which Hargrave emerged in 1924 as the 'Head Man'.




Hargrave (aka 'White Fox'), artist, author and The Boy Scouts Association's Commissioner for Woodcraft and Camping, had become disenchanted with the increasingly militaristic tendency in The Boy Scouts Association after World War I. Soon after the formation of the Kindred, Hargrave was expelled from The Boy Scouts Association by its chief, Robert Baden-Powell. According to Hargrave, Baden-Powell acted with extreme reluctance and only after some wealthy backers had threatened to withdraw funding from The Boy Scouts Association unless he was expelled.


The Kibbo Kift did indeed offer an alternative to The Boy Scouts Association: it was open to both sexes and all ages. The ideas of world peace and the regeneration of urban man through the open-air life replaced the nationalism and militarism Hargrave had detested in the post-Boy Scouts Association. In its mixture of woodcraft, ritual and handicraft, it had much in common with the Order of Woodcraft Chivalry and the British Camp Fire Girls , which Hargrave knew through his wife, Ruth Clark, who led a Camp Fire Girls group at the Garden School run by the Theosophical Educational Trust in St John's Wood. The school moved in 1920 to Ballinger Grange in Buckinghamshire where it became something of a Kibbo Kift centre.




 The words Kibbo Kift come from a Cheshire dialect term used to indicate 'proof of great strength', specifically lifting a heavy bag of grain (about 142 kg, or 325 lb) onto one's shoulders.) The group's initials have led some to assume a relationship to the Ku Klux Klan  but this has no basis in fact (and Hargrave took great pains to correct this misapprehension in the popular press during the group's lifetime). Kibbo Kift had interests in regional geography and world culture that coexisted with passionate ideas about national identity. The group has been claimed to be 'the only genuine English national movement of modern times'.




In 1920 Hargrave explained what the distinctive words meant:

Kibbo Kift is an old English expression meaning literally proof of great strength – or The Strong. So today, in the woodcraft camp we speak of:

KIBBO KIFT – meaning the Idea and Ideal of the Great Outdoor Trail and Open Air Education

THE KIBBO KIFT – meaning the Woodcraft Kindred, or the people who follow the great Woodcraft Trail

TO BE KIBBO KIFT – meaning to be a good camper and woodcrafter, to be a clean, strong, upright man (woman or child).

The movement drew heavily on the woodcraft ideas of naturalist Ernest Thompson Seton  (also a key part of the early Scout Movement). Hargrave also imported into the movement his fondness for 'symbology', art and ritual – drawing his ideas on art from Jane Ellen Harrison, and on education from G.Stanley Hall's then fashionable theory of 'recapitulation'. Kibbo Kift was also strongly influenced by ideas about myth and religion from James Frazer's popular anthropological study, The Golden Bough. 

In the second half of the 1920s the Kindred's educational ideas tended to be swamped by Hargrave's enthusiasm for the economic theory of Social Credit, but the faith in ritual and ceremony remained strong. According to Hargrave in 1924: 'The Ceremonial System of the Kibbo Kift with all its Colour and Symbolism, has been, is, and must always remain vital to the expression of our ideals and to our method of propaganda. Other movements can go on with their everlasting, excessively dull and too often fruitless meetings, manifestos, reports and resolutions. They are not for us.Inspiration for the more concealed of Kibbo Kift rituals came from a range of hermetic sources including the writings of Aleister Crowley.



Activities 

Those who joined the Kibbo Kift had to sign up to a lengthy covenant, which set out some great Utopian ideals. In many aspects it resembled American President Woodrow Wilson's Fourteen Points, a blueprint for world peace at the close of the Great War. The establishment of a League of Nations Union as well as H. G. Wells more far-reaching call for a World State were key touchstones for Kibbo Kift policies. A shorter, more personal, 'Declaration' abbreviated the covenant and was used especially for younger members:

I wish to be Kibbo Kift and to

1 Camp out and keep fit

2 Help others

3 Learn how to make things

4 Work for world peace and brotherhood


Kinsmen and women were organised into 'Things' (districts), Clans (groups), Tribes (groups with children, such as scout patrols or classes from a school) and Lodges (groups of adults). There was also room for 'Lone Kinsmen', who kept up with the movement through newsletters: The Mark (1922–23), The Nomad (1923–25), and Broadsheet (1925–38). Each individual took a 'woodcraft name': thus Emmeline Pethick-Lawrence was 'Lotosa' (Look to the Stars'). The correct costume had to be hand-made by each individual or 'rooftree' (family group), according to designs laid down by Hargrave. The everyday 'habit' of Saxon hood, jerkin, shorts and long cloak must have seemed outlandish in the English countryside of the early 1920s. The popular press also drew attention to the group's skimpy exercise costumes; these included brassiere-type tops for women and gee-strings or breech-clouts for men. By the late 1920s the movement's ceremonial occasions required brilliantly coloured surcoats or silk-embroidered robes, worn by the various office-holders such as the Tallykeeper, Campswarden, Ritesmaster and Gleeman. Hargrave himself was 'Head Man'.




Groups devised their own local activities, such as mumming plays, weekend camps, weekly meetings and excursions to museums. All groups came together for the annual Althings (assemblies), Spring hikes and Autumn Gleemotes (festivals). The Kibbo Kift's central activities, hiking and camping, were elevated to the level of a spiritual exercise: all marked by colourful and impressive ritual, couched in language reminiscent of Norse Sagas and rich in Saxon archaisms. Hikes could be turned into 'pilgrimages', as for example in 1924 when the Kibbo Kift made a pilgrimage to Piltdown in Sussex, in homage to 'Dawn Man', a supposed early humanoid whose skull had recently been unearthed (later found to be a hoax). At the site the Kindred performed a ceremony, complete with fire rituals, psalm singing, ritual chanting and a plaster cast replica of the skull. Kinsmen were not only required to make their own lightweight, one-man hiking tents (the first seen in England) but to decorate them with vivid, symbolic designs of their own devising. The movement included several talented art and craft teachers, including Kathleen Milnes ('Blue Falcon'), Winifred Tuckfield ('Iarmailteach'), a co-founder of the Knox Guild of Design and Crafts, and C.W. Paul Jones ('Old Mole'). Consequently, the robes, regalia, tents, totems and artefacts can display an extremely high standard of craftsmanship. Hargrave designed most of the movement's official visual symbols, including the striking banners and the 'sigils' (symbols) which were made into embroidered badges by Ruth Clark for the coloured surcoats of mandated officials. His designs for Kibbo Kift banners from the late 1920s are stronger and more graphic, probably a consequence of his work as a freelance advertising artist and copywriter, principally for Lever Brothers and Carlton Studios. The direct influence of commercial designers such as Edward McKnight Kauffer and Ashley Havinden is evident in Hargrave's style.




Members

The Kibbo Kift were never more than a few hundred strong at any one time but over a thousand members signed a covenant in total. Kinsmen and Kinswomen included former suffragettes Emmeline Pethick-Lawrence, Mary Neal and May Billinghurst, Evelyn Sharp  (her husband, the journalist Henry Nevinson, was a passive supporter), the photographer Angus McBean, Ruth Clark, the mountaineer Mabel Barker (Patrick Geddes' god-daughter, through whom the Kindred became involved in Regional Survey work), the explorer Millican Dalton, Roland Berrill – later a founder of Mensa, and Rolf Gardiner  – a folk-dance revivalist. Many teachers and art teachers were attracted by the movement's educational aspirations. Kibbo-Kift friendly schools included Matlock Modern School in Derbyshire and the King Alfred School in North London. A major Kibbo Kift Educational Exhibition was held at Whitechapel Gallery in 1929.

The 'Advisory Committee' named on the Kindred's stationery did little more than lend their names to the organisation: they included Havelock Ellis, Maurice Maeterlinck, the Bengali poet Rabindranath Tagore, H. G. Wells and Professor Julian Huxley. Patrick Geddes was the exception in taking a more active interest in the group. D. H. Lawrence followed the progress of the Kindred via the letters of Rolf Gardiner, and it has been suggested that Mellors in Lady Chatterley's Lover is based on an archetypal Kinsman.

 T. E. Lawrence is also said to have allowed Kinsmen to camp on his land. Emmeline Pethick-Lawrence and Rolf Gardiner tried to link the Kindred with European youth groups (arranging for Hargrave's woodcraft books to be translated and published in Germany in the early 1920s). Although international Kibbo Kift groups appeared sporadically (the White Fang Tribe in Russia, for example) the only lasting European group was in Belgium, the Lawerce Lodge in Antwerp.



Changes

The growth of the Kibbo Kift had setbacks. In 1924, the South London co-operative lodges seceded from the movement. This was the culmination of a growing dissatisfaction with Hargrave's top-down decision-making structure and his tendency to make outlandish public claims for the organisation that deviated from the covenant and risked ridicule. in June 1924, a group of 32 signatories produced a circular leaflet stating 'That the administration of Kibbo Kift during recent months has been profoundly unsatisfactory'. At the 1924 Althing, Dr. Cullen, Gordon Ellis, and Joseph Reeves from the Royal Arsenal Cooperative Society, which had supported the Kindred financially, led the formal walk out. One of the departing members, Leslie Paul, formed The Woodcraft Folk, which outlived its parent organisation and still exists as of 2024.

In 1924, Hargrave was introduced to the theory of social credit. The theory was first put forward by C. H. Douglas, as early as the First World War. It was taken up by The New Age magazine which, under the radical leadership of A. R. Orage, enjoyed an influence out of proportion to its circulation. In the second half of the 1920s, Hargrave became progressively more preoccupied with social credit, seeing the Kindred as the megaphone, through which these esoteric ideas could reach the general public. By 1931, the Kibbo Kift was well on the way towards becoming a political movement with a single-minded mission: focussing on the state of the British nation and spreading social credit ideas among the unemployed ('surplus labour' in Hargrave's terms) in Britain's industrial cities. Again, the movement was split from top to bottom, but by 1932, the transformation was complete, and Kibbo Kift was no more. The Anglo-Saxon costume, camping, hiking and woodcraft were replaced by military uniform, marching and propagandising. The name was changed to the Green Shirt Movement for Social Credit and later to the Social Credit Party of Great Britain and Northern Ireland. As the Green Shirts, the Social Credit Party played a role in the political street culture of the 1930s: marching, meeting and often clashing with the Black Shirts and the Red Shirts. The Public Order Act 1936, which banned the wearing of uniforms by political groups, was a great setback for a movement that relied on agit-prop, but it was World War II that provided the deathblow. The organization was wound up in 1951.



Legacy

In 1976 The Kibbo Kift a rock musical, was put on at the Traverse Theatre for the Edinburgh Festival ( The musical, created by Judge Smith and Maxwell Hutchinson, transferred to Sheffield's Crucible Theatre, where, produced by Mel Smith,  it played to great acclaim. This flurry of interest led to the formation of the Kibbo Kift Foundation, dedicated to preserving the documentary and material archive of the movement. The surviving artefacts, costume and regalia were lent to the National Trust Museum of Childhood at Sudbury Hall  in Derbyshire, but in 1982 they were deposited with the Museum of London. The documentary archive went first to the University of Cardiff and then the British Library of Political and Economic Science. In 2015 over 300 items from the Museum of London's collection were made accessible online through the museum's website. The collection features strongly in Designing Utopia: John Hargrave and the Kibbo Kift by Cathy Ross and Oliver Bennett, published by the museum in 2015.

An exhibition, "Intellectual Barbarians: The Kibbo Kift Kindred", exploring the group's artistic output, ran at Whitechapel Gallery, London from October 2015 to March 2016, co-curated by Annebella Pollen and Nayia Yiakoumaki. The exhibition showcased original garments, sculptures, furniture, paintings, photographs and ephemera from public and private collections, and was accompanied by a series of public events. The exhibition coincided with the first full-length book to examine the organisation's visual style and occult beliefs. Featuring over a hundred images, 

The Kindred of the Kibbo Kift: Intellectual Barbarians, written by Annebella Pollen, designed by Roland Brauchli, and published by Donlon Books, won a Most Beautiful Swiss Books award in 2015.

A new generation of creative practitioners have found inspiration in Kibbo Kift. Artists and designers including Olivia Plender, Steven Claydon and Liam Hodges, as well as novelists Matthew De Abaitua, Kate Atkinson and musicians (Ganser), have used Kibbo Kift ideas and imagery in their work.




12 October 2025

The Fields They Are All Golden


 "...The fields they are all golden

Now the cycle will repeat

In order to harvest the grain

You've got to cut the wheat"

"Get on Home"

The Family Jams

Lyrics by Charles Manson


07 October 2025

Charles Manson | Peace on Earth

 


"Peace on Earth, what's it worth? This Peace on Earth?"

- Charles Manson

One Mind

 

Navajo Weaving

"You're dealing with one mind. But the people that are running the mind that you're dealing with, they don't even know what the mind is. They think they got a mind. Nobody's got a mind. The mind has everybody. But everybody wants to think that they've really got something going. So they play all these different little political games. I'm interested in my life, the order that runs in my atmosphere and my world, the one I know. I can't know what anybody else knows, All I can know is what I know..." 
- Manson

05 October 2025

Queen of Blue, Queen of Red

 


"I see no way you can touch the women of the Family. She's as vast as the universe & the world & all his colors. I took her & showed her the Earth Balance & she picked it up beyond words. There is no doubt in her mind. I seen her deliver her own babies and put babies on her back & walk acrost the desert in heat without water & 2/3 dead, smile with an endless love for her own. I could spend years explaining her but only she understands my words, motions and my ways."

- Charles's Manson

1977