
All Aboard The Transgender Death Cult Tugboat, Destination Unknown
The disastrous voyage and the sinister aftermath

Jack Amadeus ‘Ziz’ LaSota wanted to save the world, and he also hated paying rent, so he hatched a perfect plan. In 2017, he convinced some friends to help him buy the Caleb, a 94-foot tugboat, and sail her to the San Francisco Bay area. His plan was to live ‘anchor-out,’ away from shore, rent-free, “escaping the burdens of society” while they pondered the saving of the planet, according to the Chronicle.
LaSota was not an experienced mariner. He had lived on small sailboats, including one he shared with Gwen Danielson, an investor in the Caleb. But LaSota had his genius, and believed his genius was a product of his transgenderism. Being transgender was enough to turn a profit on owning a tugboat. People would pay to live on it with him, and his genius, and help him save the world.
It all went as well as one might expect. Boats are ‘female’ in language because owning one is as expensive as keeping a courtesan. San Mateo County Harbor District has already tried to sue LaSota, Danielson, and the other owners for $100,000 in towing and cleaning fees for the abandoned tugboat. The agency has a budget of $13 million a year while “Harbor District General Manager Jim Pruett said the price tag for removing the ship would be about $2 million.”
“That’s the problem with these types of boats. They get sold for a couple of bucks, and then these people come down and abandon it,” Pruett said. “And now it’s somebody else’s problem.”
Indeed, the Zizians cult are now everybody’s problem. At least five people are dead, including two members of the group. LaSota, Danielson, and others are missing. The remaining members at large are likely hiding out in the “well-outfitted stealth RVs” that Danielson dreamed up as their tugboat venture began to sink. The wreck of the Caleb was the beginning of a reign of terror on land.
Undisciplined, disorganized sailors are rarely successful at ship maintenance. An anonymous employee at San Mateo County Harbor told the Chronicle that the crew living on the Caleb were “shabby.”
“Feral humans we called them,” the employee said. “They’re just living, trying to get away with whatever they can under the wire. Most harbors have them, harbor rats that are just living the alternative lifestyle.”
When the employee boarded the vessel to inspect it, he said the living quarters were a “mess.” He recalled seeing sex toys and lingerie in “plain view” in one of the bunkrooms. “It was filthy,” he said. “They weren’t hiding anything, that’s for sure.”
One of the partners in the scheme cut ties with LaSota and his group when it became clear that he would not recoup his investment. Speaking anonymously, he says that he found LaSota “more confident than I thought [he] had the right to be … and [he] was abrasive about it.” LaSota was so confident that he even diagnosed the investor with gender dysphoria at sea.
At one point, LaSota confronted the crewmate about being transgender. “I am not trans,” he said he told LaSota. “And Ziz was convinced I was. I told [him] to drop it and [he] dropped it.”
Let us hope that the Chronicle will remember this reporting of theirs the next time they receive an op-ed from a gender lobbyist denying that anyone ever recruits any person into transgenderism because being transgender is innate and immutable.
LaSota posted a triumphant YouTube video about his tugboat voyage using the comedy song “I’m on a Boat.” Somehow, he managed to make it unfunny. Perhaps he meant it to be ironic, contrasting the visuals of the rustbucket with the yacht that appears in the famous Saturday Night Live short. Danielson is visible on the left at the 2:15 mark.
Afflicted with ADHD and autism, Danielson constantly talked to himself. It wore on LaSota while they were living alone together. The Chronicle has interviewed Danielson’s father, who uses she/her pronouns, or else the Chronicle has converted he/him pronouns in their interview quotes. They ask no questions about Danielson’s ‘transition’ into Gwen.
Of all the ideologies that shaped LaSota’s genius, only transgenderism escapes scrutiny. Just as the Epoch Times would never examine Falun Gong through critical eyes, the Chronicle does not challenge its editorial religion. Imagine that Charlie Manson used she/her pronouns and the Manson girls were men. Imagine that the People’s Temple, another famous San Francisco apocalypse cult, controlled the editorial line at the Chronicle.
They should take a cue from Andy Ngo, who has given up on wrong-sex pronouns. Here is a short video update he posted three days ago. At 2:35, he identifies a man wearing underwear and a gas mask in a Google Street View image as one of two cult members, either Emir ‘Emma’ Borhanian or Suri Dao. Borhanian was killed in the first murder attempt on Curtis Lind, who shot and killed Borhanian in self-defense. Suri Dao awaits trial for his participation in the crime. A friend of Lind tells the Chronicle that group members often walked around Lind’s storage lot nude.
This stage of the cult’s history began when the Caleb had gotten too expensive. According to the Chronicle, Danielson came up with the idea for “stealth RVs,” box trucks with solar panels on the roof, a tiny apartment, “plus extra items like a water-purification system, ‘yeast algae and bacteria bioreactors to create food’ and ‘materials for aldehyde-stabilized cryopreservation.’”
We have a disturbing hint of what Danielson and LaSota meant to do with their cryopreservation materials. After the first, unsuccessful murder attempt, Lind said that some workers found cache of samurai swords with “a big pot in it, and … it appeared like it was set up to put bodies in.” Perhaps the notion was to kill Lind, freeze him, and dispose of the corpse somewhere else, much later. Lind seems to have thought they intended to destroy his body with lye.
It all comes across as very antifa-like, but with science fiction theming. One anonymous Pillar Point Harbor employee told the Chronicle that the group “always seemed to be putting out this vibe like, ‘Don’t f— with us.’” Local law enforcement became concerned as they observed LaSota, who had come to be known to the employees as “Jedi Jack,” “lurking around at night, walking the beach” in a black robe.
For Danielson, the chief attraction of a stealth RV was a life “independent from the system of rent and social politics.” They were adopting an anti-social lifestyle. Harbor employees say the group “would enter and exit the box trucks by rolling under them and then accessing a hole cut in the floor, so as not to disturb the doors, which were padlocked.” They would save the world in secret. They knew how because they were transgender, and therefore geniuses.
Now they are on the lam, wanted by the FBI, though not with the kind of fanfare one would expect any other sort of murderous doomsday cult to receive. Despite their use of wrong-sex pronouns, the Chronicle is commendable for even covering the story at all. Transgender identification is a stealth ideology. It enables criminals to escape the notice of legacy media organizations as long as possible, and when those newsrooms are finally forced to recognize the Zizians, they must try to pretend the accused are not men, committing men’s crimes.
Whatever happens next, the American public will be more skeptical than before. As I wrote earlier this week, the case could become a watershed by forcing news organizations to confront the gap between their style guides, which are written by the gender lobby, and the demands of news consumers who have learned to distrust them. Andy Ngo has earned the trust of millions by telling them the truth. The contrast could not be any clearer.