The Wild Hunt: A modern Pagan Perspective.

4.19.2007
 
My (Hopefully) Last Witch School Post

It seems that this story is finally coming to a close. Witch School, the infamous online school founded by Ed Hubbard, has been sold to a coalition of buyers from the Correllian Nativist Tradition with Don Lewis at the head. This follows much speculation following the initial announcement that Witch School would be auctioned off on eBay.

"No one takes Witches and Pagans as a serious market force. By using eBay as a platform for selling, at least we can get fair exposure. It is not like we can list this in an ordinary newspaper and be taken seriously. Of course, everyone will probably take this as a joke. But Witch School is a serious business and opportunity for the right buyer"

Since then students tried to form a coalition to buy their own school, outside Pagans tried to purchase the school, and the auction was pulled from eBay due to claims that someone was hacking Witch School's account. In the midst of all this, Ed Hubbard started making the news for criticizing Hoopeston, Illinois' for its lack of acceptance.

"Hubbard sold his interest in the Witch School recently to add to his financial base for Illiana Web. He announced this fact at the Hoopeston City Council meeting on Monday, when he also told the council the Witch School would be gone May 1. Hubbard asked a simple question at the meeting of the mayor and each individual alderperson: "Do you want me to stay? Illiana Web is fully ready and Hoopeston can become a regional hub. Do you want a Regional WIFI hub here?" No one answered the question. Hubbard turned and left the meeting. Mayor Bill DeWitt said it was Hubbard's prerogative to stay, but added after Hubbard left the meeting that, 'If I was engaged in any business and had to take a public-opinion poll, by hell, I would move.'"

Now that the sale finished, one wonders if it being sold to a Correllian-affiliated group was the planned outcome all along? One of the few serious non-Correllian coalitions to attempt purchasing the school seemed to not get very far in their attempts to discuss a bid.

"We wished to meet with Witch School partners to discuss the matter, but that didn't happen. We made an offer to the majority partner, but not on E-bay. We also had a lot of questions about finances, philosophy of the school, assets, etc."

Ed Hubbard is planning to make a formal announcement regarding the sale soon (feel free to post a link to it in the comments once it surfaces). No doubt he will discuss how the final sale came about, and reveal the new status of the school under the leadership of Don Lewis. One can only hope the buyers, sellers, and Witch School students will be happy with this new/old arrangement. Some of the ethical questions raised by this entire process will most likely go unanswered, but it seems the matter of the sale is finished.

Labels: , , , , ,



4.11.2007
 
Wanna Buy Witch School?

On Monday Ed Hubbard publicly announced that he is selling off Witch School (here is the official eBay auction for the site), the infamous online school for aspiring Witches.

"Imagine, if you could buy Harry Potter's Hogwarts? Well, the world's first and largest public school of Wiccan and Witches has become available for sale. Starting Tuesday, April 10th, WitchSchool.com will be auctioned off to the highest bidder during an eBay Auction. If you ever wanted to have your very own cyber school of magick and witchcraft, this is the auction for you. So you can own and run your very own Academy for Magick and Witchcraft. If you would love to become the next Dumbledore, this is your chance to do so."

This announcement has come after a strange series of shake-ups and developments. First a schism between two factions of the Witchcraft tradition that the school was associated with, then the installation of a new president (from one of the factions), and then the news that a reality program was being developed around the school. But now it seems everything must go, including their "Minispells" business, the proprietary software that runs the school, and even their MySpace page.

"The Comprehensive Site for online Wiccan and Pagan Education. With over 85 courses, plus tons of features that have been developed over the last five years. With over 145,000 currently actively registered students, and hundreds of thousands have passed through. It offers a lot of interaction including testing, transcripts, etc."

In a letter to me* (full text here, with permission for his comments to be made on the record), Witch School founder and owner Ed Hubbard explained that the school is a completely separate legal entity from the Correllian Witchcraft Tradition and that Hubbard resigned from any formal position within both of the feuding Correllian factions (though the Correllian web site still claims he is affiliated).

"I offered to give the school to the tradition and the church and Davron refused. At that time, I informed Don and Davron that I would give WS one more year, and that I would turn it into NFP ... I resigned from Correllian Nativist Church International, Inc. and The Correllian Mother Temple which were two separate organizations."

There is no word on how this will affect their bricks-and-mortar campus in Hoopeston, Illinois. Will the property go to the Correllian Mother Temple and Don Lewis (who is acting president of Witch School), or will it be sold off? It seems strange that the Witch School site is conducting a fund raiser in which it urges all its online students to donate money to fix up their building in Hoopeston.

"We are asking our students, friends, and supporters to 'Adopt' a brick, and have your name (or craft name) put on it. We are creating a wall that includes everyone who helps us in this fundraiser ... His exact words 'If each basic student were to give a dollar the building would be able to be fixed up pretty quickly.' And he came up with this fundraiser. We hope that Michael is correct and the blessing of the three fold law is given full rein in this project."

As for the online school, Hubbard seems to hope it will be scooped up by a major Pagan-oriented business like Llewellyn Worldwide or New Page publishing, but seems just as open to the idea of it being bought out by a non-Pagan corporation like Google or Disney. In an addendum to the auction, Hubbard explains that the new owner of the school will have to honor the development deal with the SciFi Channel, and that the new owner will have the power to grant religious initiations within Correllian Wicca, and will control the Copyright to Don Lewis' (head of the Correllian Mother Temple) writing.

"The Main Thing it holds is the License to Don Lewis Correllian Wicca, and the right to use it in many different ways. It has a perpetual right to provide FIRST, SECOND and THIRD DEGREES. It has many other rights to sell product. Witch School also negotiates and handles Don Lewis Copyright licenses exclusively since the Year 2000. Currently, a major publisher has the option to publish Don Lewis books, and will be likely exercise this right."

Of course given the rules of eBay, it is entirely possible that a stealth organization hostile to Witch School (like an evangelical church) could buy it out, or that the winner of the auction will be a non-Pagan who will start selling off initiations. Which makes the eBay selling method somewhat surprising (top bid as of this writing is $1,625.01). But aside from the pitfalls of a public auction, there are all sorts of troubling ethical implications, like what will happen to personal data once its sold, the selling of the power to "initiate" someone as a Witch, and the strange legal intermixing of the school with the Witchcraft tradition it has been affiliated with. It remains to be seen what the final fall-out of this sale will be.

A big thanks to Lupa for tipping me off to this story!

* The letter in question mostly concerns Ed Hubbard's take on the split between the two Correllian factions, so it might be useful for those wanting more information on the split (from one point of view).

Labels: , , , , , ,



Subscribe to The Wild Hunt

What is modern Paganism?
Being A Pagan
Drawing Down the Moon
Her Hidden Children
Modern Pagans
The Paganism Reader
Triumph of the Moon

What is polytheism?
The Deities Are Many

The Pagan Blogosphere
[directories]--
Blog Elysium
Heathen Blogs Directory
Pagan Blogs
Witchvox Blog Directory
Witchvox Podcast Directory
My Old Blogroll
[individuals]--
Blue Pagans at the DNC
Angela-Eloise
Anne Hill
Anne Johnson
Astrid
Brenda Daverin
Byron Ballard
Caroline Tully
Cat Chapin-Bishop
Chas Clifton
CJ Stone
Constance Parker
Cosette
Dave Haxton
Deborah Lipp
Deborah Oak
Dianne Sylvan
Evnissyen
Fiacharrey
Grian DeBandia
Gus diZerega
Hecate
Inanna
Isaac Bonewits
James French
Jaspenelle Stewart
Jennifer Emick
John Michael Greer
Kathryn Price NicDhana
Knowledge Sojourner
M. Macha NightMare
Medusa Coils
Patrick Kelley
Patti Wigington
Peg Aloi
Robin Artisson
Sage Starwalker
Sara Sutterfield Winn
Sia
Starhawk
T. Thorn Coyle
Victoria Slind-Flor

Religion Blogs
Bartholomew's notes

Canonist

Guruphiliac
Get Religion
Killing The Buddha

Non-Prophet

Philocrites

John Morehead
Religion Writers
The Revealer
Religion Clause
RNS Blog
SoMA Review

Matt Stone
Street Prophets
John Smulo
Talk To Action
Thinking Religion

The Velveteen Rabbi

Other Blogs/Sites of Note
Arts & Letters Daily
Boing Boing
Bread and Circuses
Cursor
Daily Feminist News
Grist
Indianz
J.C. Hallman
Journalista
Lashtal
PressThink
Sepia Mutiny
The Celluloid Bough
The Secret Sun
Tibet Will Be Free
Whirled Musings

Blogs that link here.
Search this site.



This is an ad-free blog

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License permitting non-commercial sharing with attribution.