
In
the early 1980s, Baghwan Shree Rajneesh brought his cult Osho from
India to Wasco County, Oregon, and began a community of around 7,000
people called Rajneeshpuram. As the community expanded, they needed more
space, but that would butt up against the rights of other communities.
In
1983, the Red Vermin started taking over nearby towns and tried to
weasel representatives into government positions to gain control of the
area and independence. Locals grew resistant and began to worry about
the Rajneeshpuram utopia’s presence. Then, Wasco County turned into a
battle zone when the Rajneeshees wanted to expand their city up on a
mountain but city officials rejected the request. Enraged, the
Rajneeshees bused in 2,000 homeless people to vote Rajneeshee members
into the county government. However, the county did not recognize the
homeless as voters.
The Rajneeshees then came up with an
extravagant backup plan: poison the restaurant salad bars in the area
with salmonella to prevent locals from voting against them. The Red
Vermin created a brown liquid mixture of salmonella, carried it around
in bags labeled “salsa,” and contaminated wherever they could—salad
dressings, produce, water. After the salmonella salsa raid, 751 people
fell ill, 45 were hospitalized, and two Oregon officials got sick.
Thankfully, no one was killed.
The Rajneeshees were
implicated in the plot, and their leaders fled, spelling the end of
Rajneeshpuram. But that’s only one of the six utopian communities in
this list.
Read about their philosophies and how they crashed and burned -literally, in one case- at Alas Obscura.
No comments:
Post a Comment