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THE BIG PROFIT THE BALLARDS MADE

 
 
 
By Gerald B. Bryan
 
 
THE “MASTER” BOOK-SELLING RACKET
 
For five years a “Master” book-selling racket has been under way in America. No other series of books in the history of America has had such astonishing claims made for them.
 
“In those precious books there are no human concepts or opinions . . . They contain the answer to anything and everything . . . Never was there such a thing written on earth . . . They will remain the glory of the land for hundreds of years.”
 
And so on in ever-increasing hyperbolic utterances, all to be quoted accurately from the Ballard literature.
 
The Ballard flare for hyperbole is most manifest in their efforts to sell these books. To this end they brought forth mighty “Masters.” They had great “Cosmic Beings” institute sales campaigns. They said the covers of those “marvelous books,” as seen from the “Ascended Master’s Octave Light,” were made of “precious jewels.” That each successive book of the series was “more magnificent” than the first — a veritable “stairway” to the blessed students’ “glorious freedom.”
 
And there are still more blessings to be dispensed to the proud possessor of those priceless books:
 
Through a special process, known only to the “Ascended Masters, mighty “Cosmic Radiations” exude from each book. These “Radiations” are charged into the books sometime during their manufacture or sale. Mighty Ascended Masters come forth from cosmic space to attend to this. They sweep through the four walls of the commercial print shop where these books are manufactured. They invade the so-called “Saint Germain Press.” They enter the I AM Temples where these books are sold. All for the purpose of charging their “Ascended Master Radiations” into these books, for no book is complete without it!
 
In addition to this, the great Saint Germain himself gives a very special Radiation at the time his senior Messenger autographs any of the books. This is as it should be. The sale has been made; the cash is in the “I AM” strong box — or, as the saying is, “sent back into the work;” and the fortunate student has the book.
 
This is the way it is done: A crowd forms in the lobby for the special ceremony of having one or more of those precious books autographed. They must be new ones — freshly purchased. The old ones are refused an autograph.
 
Guy Ballard, chief autographer, sits serenely at his desk. Surrounding him is his bodyguard of “Minute Men,” whose job it is to keep process servers and other “vicious” individuals away. Saint Germain, chief “charger,” stands at Ballard’s right elbow. The voltage for each book is never stated, but is said to be high. The current flows down Ballard’s right arm and into his autographing fingers. Then somehow it spreads out into the book — which is never the same afterwards.
 
The book has, of course, as we have said, been charged at the factory, but this “special” charge given cooperatively by the Germain-Ballard combination is different. It is “transcendent.” So much so, that Saint Germain is never absent when this autographing ceremony is to be performed. European matters wait. Important conferences at Washington hold their fire. The important thing is the autographing and “charging” of those precious books. Charge accounts, however, are not accepted. The terms are cash. It is sufficient to “charge” the books!
 
On occasions, “St. Germain” as chief electric-charger for the Ballard organization, is ably assisted by “Lady Ascended Masters.”
 
When the latest of the large bound books came out, the “Goddess of Purity” came forth to celebrate the occasion and stimulate book sales. She made her own announcement (through Mr. Ballard of course) on the stage of the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles on January 1, 1939 —  a sort of New Years gift to prospective buyers of the new Ballard opus.
 
 “Henceforth,” she said, “I shall join your Beloved Saint Germain in charging My Purity into every book that the Messenger autographs.” (p. 8, Feb., 1939, V.)
 
She urged the fortunate purchasers to “place the books out of handling of other,” for the reason that these individually-charged Radiations should not be mixed with the lower-octave emanations from other people. Each I AM student is urged to buy and keep an individual set of books for his own personal use and not lend them to others — a beautiful system of increasing book sales! Five of their regularly bound books sell at $2.50 to $3.00 each, the total amounting to $13.75. Each student is urged to buy all these books by the great Saint Germain himself.
 
“If you have not the FULL SET of those books,” says this book-selling Ascended Master, “do not let another thirty days go over your head before you have them.” (p.2, Sept. 20, 1938, G.L.) The Ballards claim “over one million earnest students.” Therefore, if they can psychologize these students sufficiently to have a million of them buy a full set of books, there will flow into the Ballard strong box to be “used in the work” the startling sum of Thirteen Million, Seven Hundred Fifty Thousand good American dollars!
 
Their students make supreme efforts to own these books, and pathetic stories have come to the writer of sacrifices made to purchase them, some going without material food for days in order to secure the “spiritual” sustenance supposed to be contained in them. Then there is the Ballard monthly magazine, The Voice of the I AM, which also must net them quite a tidy sum of money. The subscription rate is $3.00 per year, or 35¢ per copy. When the first issue came out in February, 1936, they also brought forth “Jesus” (!) to boost its circulation.
 
“We shall endeavor to make the Voice of the I AM,” says this false Christ, “the most sought after periodical of the day . . . It is My wish and that of the Host of Ascended Masters that all students of the I AM firmly decree this . . .” (p. 9, Feb., 1936, V.)
 
The result was a “Circulation Decree,” which the poor students shouted and shouted until they were hoarse:
 
 “We decree that the circulation of the magazine, The Voice of the I AM, exceed ONE MILLION subscribers in 1937!”
 
Then there is in addition to this a miscellaneous lot of other articles of Ascended Master merchandise to be sold at good prices over the counter in the various I AM Temples scattered throughout the nation. There are pins, rings, emblems, bookmarks, seals, folders, flags, booklets, trinkets. There are songs, phonograph records, and transcription rentals.
 
Songs —and there are many of them— sell for $1.00. Phonograph records —and there have been dozens— bring $2.50. “I AM” pins sell at $1.00. I AM rings command $12.00. Books for the blind $5.25 to $7.75 each, or $26.75 for the set of four. Jesus’ picture sells for $2.00 and up; likewise the bearded Saint Germain. “The Old Man of the Hills” brings $2.25 postpaid; and large pictures of the Beloved Messenger, Guy W. Ballard, are tops at $25.00 each, express collect.
 
A small “Chart of the Presence” sells at $1.00; a larger one for $15.00; and their de luxe chart a bargain at $200.00! Their “Violet Consuming Flame” another bargain at $200.00! But express extra, and no discount to dealers and group leaders!
 
The brain grows weary in computing the possible income which might result from these articles of Ascended Master merchandise sold in I AM Temples and spread among “one million earnest students.”
 
The Ballard radio broadcasts are not only paid for almost exclusively by the students, but they also have to rent Mrs. Ballard’s transcription records at $20.00 per record, cash in advance.
 
“Money cannot be spent in any better manner,” says the great God Himalaya, who came all the way from India to say it, and adds: “There is no thing in the world which would render such transcendent blessing as money used in the broadcasting of the ‘I AM’ to the world.” (p. 311, A.M.L.)
 
The hard-pressed students do their best to meet the demands of these “Master” salesmen, as will be seen from the following notice which was passed out at one of the I AM Temples in New York:
 
“Word has been received that Mrs. Ballard would like at least seven nights (ten, if possible) over WMCA Broadcasting Station. The cost is about $185 a night. The Great Arcturus said that the blessing of those who make possible the broadcasting of this Mighty Truth shall know no bounds.”
 
Naturally, to secure Great Arcturus’ blessing, the students got busy at once to secure the $1850.00. An appropriate decree was selected, and the students began to work on getting this money with a vengeance. An informant writes:
 
“This decree was given in unison at all the meetings in New York, Connecticut, and New Jersey, and repeated at the meeting I attended thirty times, until toward the end the whole crowd was shouting and indeed some of the women were screaming it, bordering on hysteria.”
 
 
 
(Psychic Dictatorship in America, chapter 15)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

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