There was a famous man. He was abused and exploited as a child. He sang like a woman, recorded it and danced around to it while touching his genitals. As an adult he played with, and slept with other peoples children in his bed. He was of African decent and such his skin was dark and brown in color. He discreetly acquired a pair of blond haired, pale skinned children that he dangled from the balcony, and hid from the public eye as he claimed they were his own children.Most of his life was plagued with problem resulting from his relations with children in his bed. Over his life he surgically altered his face to drastically enhance the bones, reportedly he had his nose removed, and his skin bleached.
This was a famous man, But never would I accept advise from this man. Never would I weigh his words with value based on the notoriety of his fame. Trust in your own mind, the universal mind is in your mind if you have a mind. knowledge is a dimensional constant that is the whole of all thought that is what we are.
Charles "Ches" McCartney, (1901?-1998) also known as the Goat Man, was a preacher who traveled up and down the eastern United States from 1930 to 1968 in a ramshackle wagon pulled by a team of goats.
Ches grew up on a farm in Iowa, ran away at 14, in New York he met and married a Spanish knife thrower ten years his senior and became part of her act, serving as near-miss target. When she became pregnant they made a living as farmers, but were wiped out at the start of the Great Depression. Ches came up with the idea of using a goat cart to travel with his family as an itinerant preacher. His wife did not like the idea,and she left one day before dawn
Ches's iron-wheeled wagon was garishly decorated with a clutter of objects he found and collected along the road. It contained a bed, a potbellied stove, lanterns, and was pulled by a team of around nine goats, with a few trailing behind to occasionally push and serve as brakes on downhill stretches of road. His traveling goat herd sometimes numbered up to thirty. The goats were surprisingly sturdy and effective draft animals and Ches managed to make five to ten miles a day
Robinson Crusoe, and his Bible, were the only two books he carried.. He lived an independent lifestyle, dress himself and his son Albert in goat skins and lived off the land and goat milk, he sold post cards of himself, scrap metal he collected, and charged for photographing him.. He also accepted donations for his "Free Thinking Christian Mission"
Kids and doe goats rode in the wagon while bucks did the draft and push work. Ches kept and cared for his sick and injured goats, including one which had no front legs and had learned to hop on its back legs like a kangaroo. He named all his goats, and one of his favorites, Billy Blue Horns, lived three decades.
He has wrestled a bear, was nearly lynched by the Ku Klux Klan, was once thought dead and taken to the morgue but he awakened on a mortician's table as the undertaker inserted an embalming needle in his arm, and got mugged in LA trying to see actress Morgan Fairchild. He covered more than 100,000 miles and visited all states except Hawaii.