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Personnal Use

The following is placed here for personnal use.

From the Talk:Jesus archive N°21:

Jesus's Secret Message link Regarding the link Jesus's Secret Message which has been added by User:JoeMystical and removed by others several times today; does anyone else find this link a bit too tangential? There must be thousands of essays floating around about philosphical approaches to Jesus; it seems to be that this one is more about promoting Neo-tech than anything else. Jasmol 05:40, 17 December 2005 (UTC)

I agree; I suggest that JoeMystical makes his case here for inclusion and we can get some kind of community consensus. KHM03 19:53, 17 December 2005 (UTC)

The page begins with testimonials. Scrolling wayyyyy down, I still cannot find any clear statement about what I will find there - other than "something historical" about Jesus--JimWae 19:58, 17 December 2005 (UTC) Looking again, I "think" I have some idea about what the site is presenting - but it is not clearly stated - and the prose is hard to read because of syntax & visual presentation/format. I did not think it was worth spending any more time trying to figure out --JimWae 20:04, 17 December 2005 (UTC) I've asked JoeMystical to make his case here for the inclusion of the link. KHM03 20:07, 17 December 2005 (UTC) If you don't like it, just delete it. No problem. I'll just put it back later when I get around to it. That's how Wikipedia works. If there's no consensus, things don't stay. JoeMystical 02:36, 22 December 2005 (UTC)


This was a Neo Tech link. Thanks for enlightening us as to how Wiki functions.


Here are some third-party sources for this article"Most of the explanations of Neo Tech and the NovaTech Society (and attacks on them) could best be described as gibberish" says the Miami Herald on August 23, 2004. "An eight-page letter from the Nuova Tech Society received by Linda Muller promises membership will allow her to command respect and admiration and make her the centre of attention. ... [Mrs Muller] is convinced it is a 'manipulative scam'" reports the August 16, 2005 Aberdeen Press and Journal. The October 9, 2005 South Bend Tribune reports that "The Noveau Tech Society solicits consumers by mail to buy books published by the Neo Tech Publishing Co., which is based in Henderson, Nev., according to the Better Business Bureau. ... There are lots and lots of letters posted on www.Scam.com and www.BadBusinessBureau.com from people who bought books and found them worthless." From the Australian Associated Press on May 3, 2005, "Queensland consumers are being warned of a 'mystical' letter scam which promises them prosperity, love, happiness and peace of mind ... She said the scammers were sending the letters under various aliases including Novatech, Nouva Tech, Novus Tek Society and Neo-Tech Las Vegas." -- Dragonfiend 06:29, 6 September 2006 (UTC)