In mid-July, I made a trip to Rhinelander, Wisconsin, to join with a small group of men and women who had been in close fellowship with Doug Evers and his family over many years. Doug passed away in February this year, but due to Covid restrictions, none of us were able to be present at his funeral.
In late spring, Pauline Oja had the idea of asking a small group to come to Rhinelander this summer to remember, honor and celebrate the life of our friend and brother. Doug’s widow, Kathy, and her family were thrilled with the idea, and thus we spent the weekend of July 16-18 with them all.
Doug with a trophy Northern Pike on Canadian fishing trip ca. 2001
It was a marvelous time with lots of hugs, some tears, and many stories of remembering wonderful times with Doug at our Bible conferences, on fishing trips, and more. Attendees came from Nebraska, Pennsylvania, Minnesota, Wisconsin and Michigan.
For me, it was about a three-day drive. My first day ended with my arrival in the Indianapolis area where I was delighted to visit with Pat Thomas. Those of you who have attended our conferences will know Pat, who frequently headed up the volunteers manning the registration tables.
Pat lost her husband, Jim, nearly two years ago. Jim was a wonderful friend also, whom we all miss very much. As we reminisced, Pat smiled with joy as she recalled the day when they were at one of the Bible Conferences hosted by Steve Jones at the Doubletree in the Twin Cities.
That is when Jim asked me if I would baptize him. Pat said she had no idea he was going to request baptism, but that it was one of the happiest days of her life—and Jim’s, too, of course.
While in Pat’s kitchen, she noticed that I had noticed a copy of The Kid by the Side of the Road lying on the table.
She said, “You are familiar with that, aren’t you?” I replied that I was quite familiar with many of the long “teachings” of the author, Juan O. Savin, as found on many video channels, but that I had not taken the time to order the book yet.
She said she had an extra one and insisted that I take that one. It is a large, coffee table-style book, which is designed to attract attention in your living room, to help “newbies” get acquainted with red-pill material (see Glossary).
I am very appreciative of the gift and later learned that when purchased individually, they are quite pricey; but that when one buys a bundle of ten, the price comes down to an affordable 20 bucks per copy.
Needless to say, I was diving into it while in hotel rooms on the way up and back from Rhinelander, and showing it off to those friends who were interested. They all were. Some already had obtained a copy. One thing I noticed which no one else had, was the tiny, simulated postage imprint in the upper right corner of the back cover. Here’s a photo of it.
I, myself would not have given it a second thought except that Kathy from our Stone Kingdom Fellowship in the Atlanta area had sent to me a year or so previously a link to an article in a local, Boston area, tourist-type magazine.
The article is called: “History Lesson: Why is Savin Hill called Savin Hill?” It dates back to 1630 and is the original nucleus of the area which later became known as Boston, Massachusetts.
Hmmm… Now, let’s think about this for a minute. Why would a man called Juan O. Savin, aka Juan O’Savin (with an “O” apostrophe, as though it were an Irish surname), put that little fake postage imprint on the back cover of The Kid by the Side of the Road?
And what famous, political family has its roots in Boston? And then therefore, who is the original Kid by the Side of the Road when his assassinated father’s caisson at the state funeral in 1963 was passing by on the road in Washington, D. C.? How about JFK, Jr.?
(Update on August 30, 2021: I just discovered this. Wikipedia tells us that the JFK Presidential Library and Museum “is located on Columbia Point in the Dorchester neighborhood of Boston, Massachusetts.” That is true, but what it omits is that it could also be accurately described as being in the Savin Hill area.
The JFK Presidential Library & Museum, located in the Savin Hill area of Boston.
Using online satellite maps, I verified it. It looks like a five-minute walk to Savin Hill Cove and a two-minute drive around the cove to Savin Hill Park, Savin Hill Ave., Savin Hill Yacht Club, Savin Hill beach, etc. End of update.)
See all my previous posts about Juan (use this website’s blog search tool). Juan uses the phrase “Kid by the Side of the Road” as a metaphor for all Americans in 2020/2021. We won’t pursue that in this post. Again, looking at the back cover, we have commented in previous posts how Melania Trump used her wardrobe to send signals to those who could discern.
This is the dress she wore as she and POTUS exited Air Force One in Palm Beach County on faux Joe’s fake inauguration day this past January 20th. Her dress is full of esoteric symbolism! Again, we will not pursue that here.
But here is one hint: it is connected with page 19 in the book which Juan caused to be deliberately misprinted as page “19.5,” a reference to hyperdimensional physics. We discussed that topic in great detail throughout my lecture series, From Inner Space to Outer Space, but especially in lecture #19 & 20, the concluding lectures, entitled Stargates and the Hyperdimensionality of God.
That is all I have time to share of the trip report today. (To be continued.)