Last Podcast On The Left - Last Update on the Left - Episode 8 - Waco: David Koresh, the Branch Davidians, and a Legacy of Rage - An Interview with Jeff Guinn
Episode Date: November 14, 2025The boys sit down with Author Jeff Guinn to discuss getting doxxed by Charles Manson, the power of a demagogue, the 30th Anniversary of the Siege at Waco, and to take a look back at the brutal legacy ...of David Koresh and the Branch Davidians. For Live Shows, Merch, and More Visit: www.LastPodcastOnTheLeft.comKevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 Licensehttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Subscribe to SiriusXM Podcasts+ to listen to new episodes of Last Podcast on the Left ad-free, plus get Friday episodes a whole week early. Start a free trial now on Apple Podcasts or by visiting siriusxm.com/podcastsplus. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Transcript
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Live from your blade.
That's when the cannibalism started.
Last update on the left.
Oh, yes!
Hey, folks.
Hi.
How are you doing?
How you doing, sir?
Yeah, we can hear you great.
How are you doing today?
Doing fine.
Thanks for letting me be on your show.
Dude, can I say, before we're going to hear from me again normally?
All right, because I'm the funny one
I sit here to the side.
You are an extremely intelligent, good man.
We love your work here.
We are unabashed fans of your work.
I've read a lot of your books.
You're very smart.
I'm the stupid one.
So now I'm going to
fade into the background.
Why do I think that might be a cruel trick?
No, we're good here.
This isn't a gotcha place.
No, it's like we're real, like I'm such a huge fan.
to Jonestown, go down together.
Like, I'm a massive fan of your work.
I really am.
But it's just your...
It's nice of you to say.
I appreciate it, guys.
Always butter them up first.
That's what I've heard.
And this book as well.
This new Waco book, like, it's just...
Okay, so we're going to be talking about...
And I still, like, I'm saving your Manson book for a special...
Like, I don't know why I was, like, one of these days, I'm saving it for when I, like, need it.
Like, when I need it for my soul.
like, I'm saving your mouth, because I know it's going to be so incredible.
Well, Charlie hated it, so maybe that's a recommendation.
I don't know.
He actually posted my home address and contact information on the website.
His followers kept up for him.
He was so pissed.
Wow.
Was he offended?
Well, I found his sister and his cousin and was able to get a lot of information about his
childhood that didn't sort of match up with what Charlie tried to present as his poor blighted
kid.
And so he sent me a letter telling me, you know, that better not get published.
And when it did, he was unhappy.
But it was a good thing in a way because, you know, these books, sometimes people get mad
about them.
The Waco book is a good example.
And they will say something.
effect of, well, we know how to handle your kind. And I can say, truthfully, I've been threatened by
Charlie Manson. Do you think you scare me? That's a good intro. And that's where we're going to start
this interview. Today we have with this one of our favorite authors. You've heard us talk about
his books on this show again and again. We're so happy to have on the show. Jeff Gwynn, author of
the new book, Waco. Thank you so much for joining us today.
it's a real pleasure. Thanks for letting me be on.
Of course. Well, I mean, well, the, the books that you've written, you wrote, you wrote to
Jones Town, which, you know, I consider to be the definitive work on the Jonestown tragedy.
You wrote, you know, a book about Bonnie and Clyde go down together. You've written books about
Charles Manson. And of course, your new book is about Waco. Like, what is it that makes you seek out
these stories that are so big, so legendary and most of all, like, so confusing to
most people? Well, I'm not actually attracted just to tragedy. I don't look for something that's
got a lot of death, a lot of sadness involved. What I am interested in is things that happen,
iconic events that take on a life of their own afterward and change the way we as a country,
as a society, tend to look at things. To a certain extent,
The reaction to Jim Jones in Jonestown was based on what had happened with Manson some years ago.
People had already decided crazy cult, weird followers, kill, you know, kill people for no particular reason.
And the word cult began taking on a much more horrific sort of meaning to most people than it originally was intended to have.
And when you get to Waco in the events that happened there, and as I researched it, the people in the FBI, in ATF, even some of the surviving branched of Indians, talked about the things that happened in Waco in part were based on folks thinking, if we don't do something, it's going to be another Jonestown when it would never have been that.
But people equated all of them the same way.
So having written about Manson, having written about Jim Jones, in modern American history,
there's sort of a big three here, deservedly or not.
And I thought the 30th anniversary, let's take a look at David Koresh and Waco.
Let's try to see how much the past played into the things that happened there.
and the similarities with the Branch Divideans and their leader
and the differences between Jim Jones and People's Temple,
Charlie Manson and the Manson family, David Koresh,
and the Branch Dividians, because they are all very different.
Well, we know that David Koresh was much physically cuter than Jim Jones.
He was probably, I probably, if you were going to list him by hotness,
I would put him above Jim Jones,
but that's one of my sort of the side realizations.
Yeah, Jim Jones was a little too much Roy Orbison.
You may feel that way yourself, but Jim Jones would have thought he damn well knew better.
Can I ask you a dumb question before we get deeper into, is there a big difference?
Like, obviously, you get into these stories that are now, like, in your own research, you seem to be revising them for us.
Like, these are common, big, these are big important stories to, but you said these important parts of the American, our American history, especially,
modern American history and what is like the core difference between like the way this information
is portrayed and the the information that people carry versus what actually happened like I feel
like that's where you're seeing a butt up against where it's like they use Charles Manson's face
to scare people but you don't actually really know he was actually more so like a fully institutionalized
not very skilled cult leader that you know like but on one but he was this American boogeyman
that ended the hippie movement, like on this, a bigger, broader scope?
Well, the thing that's always important to remember is that a lot of what many people consider
to be history is just mythology, and that all of us, whatever something big happens,
we put our own sort of personal spin on it.
As communications expand, technology expands, with the Internet now, for just about any important activity or individual in modern history, any hour of the day or night, you can read something new from someone claiming, well, I know exactly what all this is about, and a lot of people think they're experts.
one of the things I always have going for me in my books, I say this and people think I'm joking and I'm
quite serious. I never want to write a book where I think I know everything that happened.
Because if I do that, when I'm doing my research, I'm only going to be looking for things that
reinforce what I already think. I'm lucky in that my ignorance is so wide. There's so many things
I know I don't know about, from Manson to Jim Jones to Waco, that I can go in sort of like a
blank slate, and whatever I find is what I'm going to write. I never go in thinking, I'm going to
prove this, that, or the other thing. I'm just going to go in, get all the facts I can,
and let the reader decide what he or she wants to think. My job is not to tell you what you have to
think, my job is just to give you the information that helps you make an informed opinion.
I mean, that's one of the reasons why I love you as a writer. And that's why you'd like been
such a huge influence on this podcast as well, because, you know, we approach things much
the same way. And, and that's the thing. Because a lot of these stories, like, so much of the,
so much of them are, is unknowable. Like, we can't really know what happened inside the branched
of any compound. We can't know what happened during a Charles Manson acid trip. You know, like,
and we can't really know, we can't know a lot about what actually occurred in those last
moments in Jonestown. We don't know what happened in the room before Jim Jones died. But when
you're writing these books, like, how, how do you discern what you want to put in that book?
Well, how do you discern what sort of information you deem to be like, this is worth knowing? This is
worth, you know, writing about?
One of the advantages of writing narrative nonfiction is that I think any writer who's presenting
something like this has the obligation not just to have the chapters themselves, but the chapter
notes.
What I want to make certain of is when anybody reads a book of mine and they think, wait a minute,
you know, where's this coming from?
I want to make sure they know it's not from the author's imagination.
That's why in the notes to every chapter, everything I present as a fact in any chapter,
will be in those notes so a reader could go to the same place and look for themselves.
What I always tell people who say, and for every book there will be people who say,
well, I think you made this up.
you know, I don't think it actually happened that way.
And what I always tell them is you don't have to believe me.
Look in the notes.
You can see where I got this, and you can look for yourself.
Readers deserve to know that people who claim to be historians
aren't just taking a few facts and making the rest up out of their imaginations.
And, of course, there's always some readers who are going to, won't believe it anyway.
I once had a guy on a call-in show identify himself as the gentleman from Tennessee.
And I said, well, do you have a question about my book?
And this is the Waco book.
And he said, I don't have a question.
I have a statement.
I thought, well, this is going to be fun.
Yeah, yeah.
I said, well, okay, what's your statement?
every page is full of lies
there's nothing but lies in that book
it's a disaster it's horrible
never should have been published
and I said you know I'm really pretty careful
in my books and in the chapter notes
to say exactly where I got everything so let's do this
tell me one thing you read in my book
that you're claiming I made up
and he said oh I didn't read your book I didn't have to
I read me
Thank you, sir
Thank you for buying my book
Now I mean it's like you know
Just like send him a free one
Hey
As long as he bought it
He can say what he wants
Exactly that's what I say
Live from North Lane
When you're interviewing people
With all these extreme situations
Or you're reading about stuff
Obviously
You know
People lie
You know to you
How do you realize
How do you just
know that they're lying or do you print it anyway and say that's just what this person said or
how do you go about that i never take anyone's word for anything and when i talk to college
writing courses about these books of mine i say if your mama says you were born on a
friday check just in case now a lot of times you can't be sure there are people in the same place at the
same time, who are claiming something completely opposite. Now, what does that mean? Well, human
nature is that if you're part of a group in a terrible chaotic situation, any two people there
are going to remember parts of it differently. And when that happens, what I try to do is say,
okay, here are the conflicting reports. And this is what each side says. And sometimes,
times there's a third group. Like in the Waco book, ATF agents, and believe me, I talked to
almost three dozen of them. Everyone's swearing. The Branch Devidians fired first.
They have no doubt. The Branch Devidians. And again, when I interview folks, I'm doing
this over a period of years. I get to know them a little bit. And just like you guys,
you've interviewed so many people, you can probably get a sense when somebody is BS in you.
after a while you just you feel like yeah maybe not but i'm talking to people on both sides who
i've convinced truly believe what they're saying is right so i put both sides of it in the book
who fired first whether the helicopters fired or not but i also talked to a half dozen members of
the local media reporters tv cameramen who were right there the whole way every one of them
Everyone. And I interviewed them separately and never interviewed two people together, so they
reinforce each other's stories. Every one of those folks said the firing began from inside Mount
Carmel. The Branch Davidians were firing first on ATF. Now, what I ended up doing in the book
was giving both sides ATF and Branch Davidian. And then I point out that the third group, the ones who
an affiliate either side or unanimous, the Branch Devidians fired first.
But readers, again, they can make up their minds.
How many Branch Devidians survived after the incident?
Nine got out alive, all adults.
There were some that had come out during the whole standoff.
And there were a few others, Paul Fadda in particular, who was a,
away at a gun show, selling some of those illegal weapons that morning. But you had,
ultimately, about, oh, 20 people who had been branched of Vidians were either in there during
the siege and barely escaped with their lives or were affiliated with the branched
divinians but didn't happen to be in there at the moment of the raid and didn't get trapped
in there. When you spoke to them, were they still like in the group or do they have a lot of them
moved away from their belief system? Here's something that's a little unique about people in this
book, okay? When I did the Manson book and I've tracked members of the Manson family, including
some of the convicted murderers who were still in prison, every one of them said, oh my God,
I was so stupid with Charlie Manson.
I was a dumb kid.
They were all out of drugs.
You know, I spend every day thinking what a fool I was.
I have spent so much time with former members of People's Temple.
A couple of whom escaped that day in Jonestown,
others who were in the Guyanese capital city and weren't in Jonestown that day.
Every one of them.
When I look back, how could I have been taken in by Jim Jones?
though they stress and it's it's a fact that they were part of people's temple not out of personal
greed or looking for power but that they were trying to help make the world a better place
because they really did have a beautiful beginning it just went back they did yeah but the
branch devidians who survived one of the big worries i had writing this book while i was writing
it, I found it out about Cyrus Teed. I devoted months to tracking him, and I finally found
documents in an archive and a little Florida college where he had written all the same prophecies
and got published things about them that David Koresh would later say were his. What worried
me when I talked to surviving Branch Davidians, and they all still felt connected to David
Koresh, every one of them. They might deplore one or two things he did, particularly involving
10 and 12-year-old girls. But in general, they felt that he had loved his followers. He believed
what he was saying, and they believed him. And so I made a deal with the archivists of Florida
Gulf Coast University, which is, by the way, where all those T documents are. And anybody watching this
program who wants to know more about Cyrus Teed, you can read for yourself how he was
Koresh before David Koresh with the exact same prophecies.
That's fascinating.
And even with the same name, Cyrus, you know, to Koresh.
Yeah, it's incredible.
The thing I was worried about when I'm talking to these folks, Paul Fadda, Kathy Schroeder,
you know, all of them, I knew at some point I would have to tell them about Cyrus Teed.
and if they believe what I'm telling them
then this takes away the belief system they've had
sustaining themselves all these years
they believe that everything they've gone through
and they've all gone through a lot
was something righteous
that David Koresh really is the lamb
he's coming back just like Revelation said
and this is how they've withstood all these years
afterward.
So what I tried to do was I first went to interview them, and I didn't mention Teague yet,
until we'd really establish sort of a relationship where that had a chance to give their
side of things, and I know felt confident that I would put what they said in the book,
the way they said it.
And then I got back in touch with everybody, because I wanted them to know in advance.
I didn't want them to read the book afterward.
And, hey, Jeff Gwyn never told us that he thinks.
thinks he proved David wasn't a real profit, and there was this teed guy. And so I would contact
them and say, look, I found this out. I would not put it in the book if, you know, it wasn't
something that could be verified. And I wanted you know in advance. I told them about Cyrus Teed,
and I had made a deal with the archivists at Florida Gulf Coast University, that if any former
Branch Davidian contacted them to see whether these tea materials were real, that I would pay
to have copies made of everything and sent to that Branch Davidian so they could see for
themselves. But I got the same response every time. Well, you may believe that, but we know better
because we knew David. We don't have to see anything. It wouldn't matter what you showed us.
we would know better.
They weren't impolite.
They weren't threatening.
Damn.
And in a way, can you blame them?
This is what they stake their lives on.
They lost spouses, friends, some of them lost children.
And all these years later, I couldn't expect they're going to say, well, thank you
for proving we were absolutely wrong.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, we've come across that with Scientology, too, where there's a lot of people after the fact
that believed that the core teachings of Scientology
were just sort of
manipulated by David Miscavage
after the fact that Elron Hubbard
was a pure being and there was
stuff to learn from him but you're like
you start to realize like no as soon as you look at
his storyline it all falls apart
so you're you have spent
hundreds of thousands of dollars you've given
up your family you're living in Clearwater
and you're you know like your
whole life's over and what do you do
then I guess that's what they I guess
that's the sunken cost fallacy
or the term?
Well, the thing is, as hard as it is, we've got to always remember people's motivation,
why they do the things they did.
And because the FBI and because ATF never bothered ahead of time to find out what Koresh taught
or what the Branch Davidians believed, that was a big part of the tragedy that follows.
I mean, if you read, and there's so many thousands of pages of the negotiation tapes, and I read every page, I mean, you have to.
And over and over, Karras or Steve Schneider or some of the other branch divinians would be trying to explain in a very long, complicated way to the FBI.
But this is what we believe.
This is why we're doing this.
and the FBI simply said it's all Bible Babel.
That's what they decided.
So they never knew why the Branch Divideans thought they would be honored to die at the hands of Babylon.
If they understood that, and talking to ATF people now, they agree with me.
If they'd known that, never would have done that kind of entry.
just would have surrounded the place and said, hey, you know, come on out and talk when
you feel like it. None of this had to happen. It wasn't entirely ATF's fault. It was
entirely FBI's fault. It wasn't even entirely the Branch Divideon's fault. But none of them
thought it was necessary to understand the other side. And whenever we get that situation,
tragedy is certain. And that's, I mean, that's one of the things about this entire story is that
to me, it does seem like a tragic comedy of errors, just over and over again, just
one thing, like, just things just keep popping up.
And that makes me so goddamn mad and frustrated.
Yeah.
And it's true, not just in this book, but pretty much all the ones that deal with tragedy.
People don't want to understand the other side.
And as communication and the means of communication continue to increase in our culture, it's not bringing anybody together.
It's dividing us further, for God's sake, look at America now.
And yet there's an article in the New York Times a couple years ago.
This is a fact.
And again, don't take my word for it, guys.
No, we won't.
It's true.
I will check.
Good.
I'm glad.
The New York Times published a story.
about certain evangelistic Christian leaders
who are beginning to think that Donald Trump
is the reincarnation of King Cyrus
of the Old Testament
and that he is the ordained one by God
to lead us.
No, it's Guy Fierry.
If it was anybody who was Guy Fierry,
that's where they were wrong.
Because Guy Fierry is joining everyone across the country
in a love of thick-stick and, like,
meals. But see, here's the, this is the thing. You guys can have your show and bring people on to
talk. People like me can write books and try to say, look, these are the facts, decide for
yourselves. But you're always going to have those people who have what I think we need to call
deliberate ignorance. Let's not let the facts get in the way of what I believe. And particularly the
group that says, God puts in my heart what is right. Yeah. You know, leave your facts out of it.
But that also goes for in Waco, ATF, and FBI saying, you know, all these people are, they're just
idiots, obviously. We don't need to understand what they think. So it cuts both ways. Yeah. And,
And concerning, you know, what the ATF's motivations were, do you believe that they, you know, because there was, of course, the 60-minute story that was about to come out right before that in which there was going to be, you know, allegations of like sexual abuse and sexual harassment within the ATF.
And there was also the rumor that Bill Clinton was about to fold the ATF into the FBI and the ATF kind of needed to make a big splash.
Like, do you think that that was the ATF's main motivation for doing what they did?
Don't forget Ruby Ridge.
And Ruby Ridge, of course.
In the fall of 1992, when ATF and FBI combined supposedly to get a dangerous white nationalist
and ended up killing his wife and one of his sons, and it was a horrible thing,
and gave the public the impression that these are two agencies of the government that will just go out there and start.
shooting people, ATF clearly saw Waco as an opportunity. We can do this so well, all by ourselves,
and they've got their budgetary hearings coming up in a couple months after that, when they
got to go before Congress and convince them, don't take our money away. You know, don't fold us
into the FBI. And that's part of it. And of course, it's not something that puts them in a very good
like. This is an opportunity, but it is also true that the Branch Divideans were breaking a very
serious gun law by converting semi-automatic weapons to set to automatic illegally, and that they
were, even among themselves, talking about using the weapons themselves in their battle against
Babylon, and people had to die in order for David's prophecies to come true. So ATF has always been
a great punching bag. Sure. I mean, the NRA has basically made its reputation and millions for
years, ragging on ATF. But it's also true that how were they ever going to be popular?
Any of you ever read a novel by a great writer named T. Jefferson Parker?
No.
No, sir.
If you haven't, remember his name.
He writes some great what people would call mystery books.
But he has a hero in one of them who's actually an ATF agent.
Oh, yes.
This guy, you know, Charlie Hood, member of the ATF, and Charlie realizes Americans hate,
ATF, because ATF enforces rules involving alcohol, tobacco, and firearms, and almost all
Americans like or love, even at least one among alcohol, tobacco, and firearm.
So, yeah, ATF screwed up, and I think that's in the book, and there's no denying it.
But the FBI screwed up, and by God, the Branch Davidian agenda, which was violent and
meant people were going to have to die for them to achieve what they wanted.
If the Branch Devidians hadn't done the things they did and left all the clues out there that
they did, ATF never would have gotten involved.
Well, the Branch Divideons, like, I remember reading in your book where you talk, you said that
David Koresh at one point said 1995 is going to be a big year.
Like, something's going to happen in 1995.
Do you think that David Koresh, like, either consciously or.
subconsciously set up the conditions for something like this to happen? Like, did he get,
in other words, did he get what he wanted? Okay, let's talk about the one thing demagogues slash
profits all have in common. Okay. When you're a prophet, when you're saying, I, you know,
have the powers beyond human ability, and this is going to happen at some point. Well, it better
happen because profits have to deliver. People are only going to follow them for a certain amount of
time. Charlie Manson decided he better get this helter-skelter deal going because he'd been
promising his followers. And if it didn't happen, they were going to start to walk away.
Jim Jones had to have his followers believing that the government was out to get them, just like Jones
had said would happen someday. You got to leave the comforts of America and come to the jungle in
Guyana. David Koresh is keeping people in an absolute hellhole. All the surviving
branched of idiots talk about how Mount Carmel was a cruddy, huge shack on top of a barren hill
that's infested with fire ants. They ate crappy food. They had to get up.
the crack of dawn, listen to David Koresh preach, all the women had to submit sexually
to Koresh. All the men had to give up their wives. And all the time Koresh is saying,
we're doing this because that's what God wants. And within a couple years, finally,
the apocalypse is going to come, the second coming, and we're going to be the ones who are
exalted. Now, how many years are they going to sit around and have David say any time?
now. Yeah, when's the exaltation coming? Yeah, yeah, looking for that. So in 1992, he starts
talking about, well, we can't exactly know the time, but I'm getting the sense that it might be around
1995. Three years is a while, right? Yeah, it's a good, it's a long time to maybe build up. You
could kick that can. Maybe you can figure out. I have to think, based on what I've learned about
profit slash demagogues.
And, you know, I've spent quite a few years of my life doing in-depth stuff on this.
Yes.
Yeah.
If the ATF doesn't come after David Kresh, and Child Protective Services already started
an investigation about children being mistreated, possibly, and so forth, the FBI has already
had complaints about people being held against their will.
if it hadn't been the ATF in their investigation, something would have popped.
And if it hadn't happened from an outside source, David Koresh, who I do think truly believed what he was spouting,
then Karrasch one morning would have waked up and decided God has put it in his heart,
that the lamb and his followers have to take it to the Babylonians.
and that would have happened.
Right from your grave.
That's fat.
I do want to ask because we've had this question.
Maybe I'll get it from your head.
How far, like we talk about Colts.
My favorite about a cult leader, like a leader, specifically,
maybe not even just a prophet, but like a cult leader,
they kind of have to keep one foot in the con game
and kind of maybe one foot half outside the con game
because you're kind of dealing with the logistic.
are running your cult, I think
is difficult. What
point do you think that Jim Jones
was a true believer
in his own work? And do you think that
he ever, like,
do you think that he had any cracks in that
that he thought that what he was doing
was not real? Or if that's
why where the drugs came in, like, do you think
that helps prop up somebody's...
I mean, it helps my confidence. Drugs are great
for that. So I don't know if Jim
was like, it was just like that for him.
Any demigots?
usually we'll use some fragment of truth and build it into something much greater.
Now, Jim Jones had this in common with Charlie Manson, with David Koresh, and with certain political
leader we might name, but won't.
They all have the same thing.
The first thing they do is declare there is this awful problem, and I am the only one who can
solve it. You have to follow me because nobody else can possibly do it. And Joan said that,
as Manson did, as Koresh did. The second thing they have to do is separate their followers from
people who are going to say something different, that the only voice the followers can hear is
their own. For Manson, it was the Spahn Ranch. For David Koresh, it's Mount Carmel. For Jim
Jones, it ends up being a compound in the Guy in these jungle.
And guys, I have cut my way in there with a machete.
And that is serious jungle, believe me.
No, no, that is, I don't know how these like, these literally just church people just went, made a town.
But then comes the next thing that they do.
And Jim Jones did these things, just like the other two.
You begin by declaring the media to be your enemy.
that you can't read newspapers.
You don't want to watch TV because it's all lies.
I'm the only one telling you the truth.
And then you separate the followers from their outside families who might be skeptical.
You know, you're either part of us or you're part of them.
So you isolate the people.
And then you have a deadline of some sort.
this terrible thing is going to happen soon and the request Jones's requests or Manson or
Koresh get weirder and weirder yeah that's bizarre and that's what we talk when we talk about
cult so much is like you can always tell when a cult leader is slipping is with that's when
they up the ante they the cult leader always they have to keep up in the ante and sometimes and
sometimes the cult will up the ante for them but they're always
is escalation, right?
Yeah.
Now, demagogues are part of everyday life,
in America and everywhere else.
Every politician is at least in part of demagogue.
Here are these horrible things that are happening,
and it's going to get worse unless you elect me,
unless you vote for me.
The opposition is ruining everything.
I'm going to save you, but I need your vote now.
In churches, religiously,
leaders to a certain extent have to be demagogues. I'm the one who's telling you exactly what God
wants and the things you've got to do unless you want to go to hell. I mean, your soul's in
jeopardy, but I'm here for you. But then the Joneses ratchet it up and more and more and more
and nothing is ever going to be enough. And yet, I heard one story about Jim Joneses,
had stopped me dead in my tracks
as I started thinking
by the time he gets to California
he's in UKIA
and the drugs are starting
and he's getting weirder
and weirder. Yeah.
Is this the moment when
Jim Jones really checked
out in terms of
I believe we're making this a better world
and trying to make
the world a more equitable place
because he did amazing things in Indianapolis
which people tend to forget.
If you've read Road to Jonestown, you'll notice that I have talked a lot to a guy named Tim Carter, a Vietnam veteran who came, joined the temple, and in Jonestown, saw his wife and toddler's son die in front of him from ingesting the flavor aid and would have died there himself, but Jones gave him a task of getting some money out and trying to get it to the capital city.
And I sat with Tim Carter in his apartment in the Northwest for a week while he told his story.
And he would break down sobbing or he would start raging at himself.
How did I believe this?
And Gloria, my wife died.
You know, my little boy, you know, why did I do it?
Why did I do it?
And I was, you know, it was intense.
Yeah, yeah.
And it was a week.
and I started, you know, you can stay objective in what you research and write, but you have some
personal feelings. Of course. And then he said, but all of a sudden he just stops. He said,
but there was this one weird thing. In San Francisco, people's temple, the big building, the church
that they built there. Yeah. Above the auditorium, there were some apartments where older members
would live
kind of, you know, protected
space for them. And these were really elderly
folks. Most of
them, poor black people
who, you know, had been living in complete
squalor and being part of the temple
meant they were respected.
They had a clean place to look.
And what Jones would do is his
sermons would last for hours,
hours and hours.
And he had a little bucket.
He'd relieve himself in behind his
pulpit now and then.
But, yeah, I know.
But every once in a while, he had let the choir take over and do a couple numbers,
and he would kind of slip backstage, you know, take a deep breath, whatever.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, of course.
Get his oxygen.
And Tim Carter, during one of these performances, was backstage doing something or other.
And Jim Jones ducks back behind the curtains for a minute.
And Carter's watching Jim Jones and just thinking, you know,
What's he going to do, you know? Is he going to sneak a cigarette, have a drink? And instead, behind the stage, it was this little staircase, you know, that led up to the apartments. And a much older lady, who was a member of People's Temple, apparently he'd been out shopping. And she's got a couple of heavy bags, and she's starting up this staircase. Carter sees it. He doesn't see anything. But Jim Jones sees her, and he rushes over and takes the bags from her.
and carries them upstairs and opens the apartment door and gets her settled before he comes
down. And he didn't have to do that. Nobody's watching somewhere at some level. And that's what
makes Jim Jones such a contradiction. Yeah. For all the horrible things he did, and they were horrible and
unforgivable. Every once in a while, there'd be this little glistening moment where there's
no benefit to himself and he thinks no one's watching, he does something for someone, one of
his followers. So fascinating. And you have to factor that in, too. I mean, do you think that's
there's something in all three of these men, all three of these like big cult leaders? Like,
there was a quote, there was a two out of three, not Manson, of course. Yeah, Manson, yeah, he was more
of, we called Boutique Colt. That's what he had, lower seat. But there was this, uh, this quote.
from the book, I think it was Kathy Schroeder, is it Schroeder or Kathy Schroeder?
Schroeder. She said, David was an asshole. He was arrogant, but he was not manipulative.
Right. Like, how much truth do you think is in that statement? And how does that sort of relate, I guess, back to Jim Jones and what you just told us?
I think David Koresh plagiarized Cyrus T. But I don't think he knew he was doing it.
He was nurtured by the previous leader of the Branch DeVidians, Lois Rodin.
And we know, and it's documented, that Lois cribbed from Cyrus Teed years before she even met Vernon Wayne Howell, who would become David Koresh.
Lois is dying of breast cancer.
She believes in the mission of the Branch Dividians.
and her crazy son George looks like he's going to take over and Lois is praying that some
some savior will emerge and here it's 21 year old Vernon Wayne Howe who are right in the book
by secular standards wasn't qualified to lead a one-man parade.
Now out of nowhere this guy Vernon suddenly returns from Israel claiming that he has been given
these great visions. He's fresh, the reincarnation of Cyrus. He's a lamb from the book of
Revelation. He's going to lead his followers in the final battle against Babylon, and they'll be
exalted for it, which is the exact same thing Cyrus Teed had been saying. But if he believes
that, and you've got to remember, he has believed from the time he's a kid that God is there with him,
that God finally communicates with him every once in a while.
All you guys, if you know, you get out much and you have friends who are part of a fundamentalist church,
and if you haven't, maybe you should just to hear the other side of things,
you are going to see people who truly honestly believe,
and if you put them on a lie detector test, it would say it was true,
that God has told them this or that.
They've had this vision and angels appeared.
They believe it.
So, Peresh was an asshole.
Kathy's right.
I've listened to tapes.
You know, he was the lamb.
Everybody else was beneath him.
If he wanted sex with your wife, well, the Bible said you have to honor the lamb.
He gets sex.
Nobody else can smoke with the Bible said smoke emerged from God's nostrils.
He gets to smoke.
All these different things.
And yet.
and yet, every time they challenge him, and they do, he finds something in the Bible and presents it to them in such a way that they decide they can't argue with him. It has to be right. And if you think they're ignorant, in this book, I consulted three of the most esteemed biblical scholars in the country, Catherine Wessinger, James Tabor, and Jay Philip Arnold, the last two actually got
involved in the siege after a while.
Every one of them, and these are people who have studied the Bible their whole lives, have written extensively on it.
If one of the big TV networks is doing a special on religion, they'll be the ones called in to explain it.
They say David Koresh stunned them. He saw things in the Bible had missed completely.
So was he delusional?
Yep. Was he a demagogue? Yep. Was he an idiot savant? Absolutely not. For whatever reason, he had that down cold. And that is what mattered. Remember, all his followers, pretty much, came from the Seventh-day Adventist Church, where the belief is that God sends human messengers from time to time. They have been imbued with this.
from childhood, and out of all the people they have heard, they think David Koresh fits it.
They're not like those drug-addled kids with Manson.
They're not even like the people in people's temple who didn't really care about God one way or the other,
but were committed to social change.
These are people who spent their whole lives trying to understand the Bible and in their minds, learn what God wants them to do.
And here's the man who can do it.
So, yeah, he's an asshole.
But he never, ever tries to trick them.
He always uses the Bible and we'll talk with them, talk it out, until finally they see his side.
But he wasn't like Manson saying, well, if you don't understand me, that's because you're not sophisticated and advanced enough to do it.
It's your ignorance.
Do you think it helps that you're already born into that?
I was reading, I've been following the Chad Daybell Lori Valo case.
I think it's fascinating.
But what they say to each other is ludicrous, like talking about death percentages.
Like, he is a, the way we now know Mormonism works is that it helps franchisees, like little
profit franchisees to create their own little religions.
And I guess that if you have a base that you believe that all this is actually to the letter
real, it's much easier to jump off of that material.
everybody who followed David Koresh was predisposed to believe and he did not so much play to that
as focus on that and because he did because he lived pretty much what he preached and because the
Bible said you had to give honor to the lamb and that one of the messias was going to be a sinful
Messiah and Koresh told everybody I'm not perfect I don't have any other powers I can't turn
water into wine I can't raise the dead all I can do is open the seven seals bring about the end
of days and lead you to the glory of God and we're all going to get swept up in the wave sheath
and we're going to be the exalted in the new thousand-year kingdom.
And these were people who, through their background, through their own seeking and beliefs, it fit.
So fascinating.
I think the last question that I have for you, and it does fit into, I guess, belief, the fire.
How the fire started.
is that in the book, you present four different theories as far as how the fire started.
You know, like the Branch Davidian started, that the ATF started it.
But this fourth more theological theory that I found fascinating, could you talk about that for a little bit?
Sure.
Waco, you know, the subtitle of the book is Legacy of Rage.
And I write in the book about how so much of what's divine.
us today grew out of Waco, from Timothy McVeigh, two years to the day, blowing up the
federal building in Oklahoma City, to the people who stormed the capital of their different
groups in 2021 January, their leaders originally got into the militia movement because of Waco.
And a big part of that, the big part of the visceral angry reaction to Waco from a lot of people,
is that the government just decided to kill off some gun-owning Christians who hadn't got out to bother anybody.
And just like the gentleman from Tennessee, they don't need to read anything that would tell them differently.
They just know.
So when we look at Waco, if everything had ended peacefully, would we be talking about it today?
No. But it didn't. And how it ended, there are only a couple possibilities. The first is that the FBI, that last day, just decided they're going to burn all these people up, get rid of them. Well, that's easy for a lot of people to accept because it fits what they want, but it's absolutely ludicrous. For the FBI, as well as ATF, particularly after Ruby Ridge, only a few months before.
The best way for this to end would be peacefully, absolutely no bloodshed.
And the FBI did so many stupid things.
I mean, we could kill a whole day just talking about those.
And I should use the word kill.
It's in poor taste.
But the main thing is, no, they didn't do it because they would have had no reason to do it.
The second thing is it was a complete accident maybe.
You got tanks smashing into this rickety house, they've imparted the roof in,
electricity's off. They've got Coleman lanterns for warmth in life. A lantern gets knocked over
the places as a fire trap. Bush, up it goes. And that's certainly possible. Third possibility,
the Branch Divideans themselves decided they were going to, as a group, die and translate up
because that fit what they believed. They're setting the fire, but they don't think of it as suicide,
the end of their lives, but freeing them to go up and do the next thing.
And so those were the three possibles that I thought things were limited to, until I'm doing the
research, and I've spent so much time with those biblical scholars I told you about.
And one of them, Phil Arnold, is an absolute genius.
And he, before I started looking at Cyrus T, had been trying to track it down.
And if I succeed in the book, it's because he's the guy that showed the way, and I just kind of jumped in at the end and found some things.
Phil Arnold said that he thinks there was something that was never considered.
David Koresh, right up to the end, believes he is the Lamb.
He is the chosen of God.
In the days coming up to this final end, he's writing about the seventh seal.
He's doing what the Lamb is supposed to do, revealing these things.
And as soon as it's all written, he'll get that passed out,
and then he and his followers will come out.
The FBI don't believe that.
If we look at the passages in the Bible that were favorites of Correction,
and they're noted in the book,
it's how God promises that he will save Jerusalem with a wall of fire
where the believers will not be touched,
or that God says he will protect his followers with fire and fire,
and they will walk through unhurt.
Now, if you're David Koresh and you believe you're the Lamb
and you're really in the spiritual mood and you're surrounded, right?
One way or another, this is about to be over.
Yeah, Babylon's here.
Yeah.
Right.
This is it.
For better or worse.
Well, what's the best way?
You know you're on TV.
You know, everybody in America is watching.
What if there's a fire, but it's a holy fire, and God uses this wall of flames to protect them from the agents of Babylon?
That's fascinating.
Yes, but you see, they would believe that would happen.
Yeah.
And then they wouldn't be hurt, that the fire would go and they'd like,
walk out and be like, see, it's all real.
Right. Absolutely. What's you got to lose? Think about it.
My God. I mean, when you put it that way, that almost seems like the most plausible thing.
That's very interesting. Either that or an accident, you know, is it like seem like the two most
plausible things. I note in the book, if you look in the chapter notes, after three and a
half years of working on this 24-7.
After talking to hundreds of people, having read countless thousands of documents, and even
reading the Bible, the King James version that Koresh used, read it through four times.
I truly believe that at the last, just personally, at the last minute, Koresh thought
that was going to be holy fire, and he was going, God was going to prove in this way that
David Koresh was right and everybody else was wrong.
That's fascinating.
Wow, that's really interesting.
And I guess I'll just add, like, you know, you don't have to answer this, but you could
decide if you want to mold this over, what do you do with the critics who say that you got
into writing nonfiction for the money and the sex?
Well, I would say one out of two ain't bad.
You know, when I wrote a book called The Last Gun Fight about the OK Corral and the gunfight that wasn't a gunfight and didn't happen in the OK Corral.
Yeah, that's so sad.
Yeah, it's boring, right, because it's sad because it didn't happen.
Well, I didn't get a real great response from, you know, a lot of Wild West historians.
And, you know, some of them are pretty sharp in.
their criticism, which is okay. I mean, talk about belief systems again.
One of the reasons I write these books is I write books about something I don't have a
belief system about. But there are people who've devoted, you know, maybe they work at
Walmart during the week. But at night and on the weekends, they're researching tombstone
in the okay corral for the great book they're going to write someday.
I don't know. The Wild West is American mythology.
Right. Well, here comes this interloper, right?
this outsider, this guy who never has written about cowboy history before, and he's trying to say,
Wyatt Earp wasn't a hero, and it wasn't a real gunfight, you know, and all this stuff, and they pissed them off.
So I risked my life.
There's a group called the Wild West History Association, and these are nice folks who are devoted to that history.
and at their conventions they like to dress up, you know,
saloon girl costumes and little cowboy stuff and everything.
And they're all working on, you know, self-published books.
And I was asked to come in and talk to them
about trying to write for a larger audience.
And I had the feeling this would not end well.
And I was right.
These are lovely people, okay?
They gathered in a little New Mexico auditorium, and they're nice folks.
They're the kind if they pass you, you know, and your car's got a flat on the side of the road, they're going to stop and want to help.
You know, they're nice people.
And I got introduced, and you could feel the hatred.
I started to talk about how history only is made better by sharing it.
with people, that a lot of us, when we write history, make the mistake of just writing for ourselves
and ten of our friends.
And there was grumbling.
And, you know, I, you know, I didn't see any flaming torches lit yet, but the possibility
was there.
And so I just said, look, it's obvious that if I talk, I'm not going to say anything you want to hear.
So let's talk with each other.
you know, what do you want to ask me? What do you want to say? And a guy stood up and said,
do you deny that you write your books for personal financial reasons?
And my answer was this. What I do for a living I love. What I would always want to do is
pick some subject I want to know about and travel and spend years finding out. And
write about it. And I make enough money from my books that I get to do that. There probably are
not 200 writers in America who just make enough money from their books that they don't need a day job
or some other form of getting income. And I've been extremely lucky. I'm not a great writer,
but I'm a lucky one. And I have been able to spend the last 20 years doing nothing but picking subjects
I want to know more about
and going out and finding what
there is to find. I said, so yes,
I don't apologize for it.
And wouldn't you do the
same thing if you could?
And he muttered, fuck you.
Technically, you're darn
tootin, and I hate to admit it.
I waved. I said, well, take care.
Everybody get home safely.
And I got the heck out of there.
Yeah, yeah.
They're running out of town.
What a great conversation.
Thank you so much, sir.
Thank you so much, Mr. Gwit.
We appreciate you so much.
You're amazing.
Everything about you.
Look, thank you for reading my books.
Thank you for letting other people know about my books.
I owe you guys.
Take care, and I hope I keep writing things you enjoy.
Oh, yes.
We will continue to use all of your imaginations.
Same to you, buddy.
I hope you, Gwynne.
I hope you, Gwynne.
acts are satisfied
because you just
got pure unadulterated
main line
Jeff Gwynn, can you
handle it uncut?
I can't tell if I feel smarter
or dumber. We're dumber. We are
stupider than that man.
Yes, you may have been
proved, you have been made smarter, but
we have all been proved dumber.
He's a thinker. No,
he's incredible. He
talks with the same
amount of engagement that he writes
with. I was
hanging, I was hanging on every word. Every single word.
It's fantastic stories. He did a lot of
work. My God. Patience.
That man has lots of patience. I will say nothing
as thoroughly as the author of the book
speaking with the Sasquatch
who told him about the actual nature
of the Sasquatch through various meditative
conversations with the
Sasquatch Ashley projected to him. I like
I understand what that guy's saying more.
But Jeff's pretty good.
Jeff's incredible.
This has been last update on the left, everyone.
Thank you so much for listening.
Go to patreon.com slash last podcast and left.
Watch full videos of our episodes.
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And don't forget to go check out all our shows,
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Go to Last Podcast on the Left.com to check out all of our North American,
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Thank you so much.
much for listening, everybody. Helguine.
Hey, Satan.
Hell quit.
Hell quit. Oh, yeah. Always.
