Introduction   |   The Pigeon Resistance   |   PAPA
07 October 2008
 
What is the Pigeon Conspiracy?

Many people believe that pigeons are intent on world domination, and that they will stop at nothing to get their way. The Pigeon Conspiracy first came to light on the Internet, but rapidly spread to the international consciousness.  more >>


Links of interest

»  BBC profiles Andrew Wood, author of The Pigeon Conspiracy
»  The Evening Standard's This is London features The Pigeon Conspiracy
»  The Pigeon Conspiracy reviews
at Amazon.co.uk


The original Pigeon Conspiracy website - 191.40.90.1!

For a limited time only, PigeonConspiracy.com is hosting the original conspiracy website set up by the mysterious Richard Pierson. See it exactly as it was when the conspiracy first came to light.  more >>
 
 

A battered original poster, one of many
that Londoners became familiar with during the initial growth of the Pigeon Resistance

  The Pigeon Resistance

SEVERAL MEMBERS OF Richard Pierson's alpha group who had experienced what they suspected was the onset of pigeon paranoia formed the Pigeon Resistance as an underground organisation dedicated to opposing the pigeons. After the Dove Bug brought the Pigeon Conspiracy to light, the Pigeon Resistance greatly expanded its operations.

With a large part of its operations co-ordinated via email and its website, www.pigeonresistance.com, the Pigeon Resistance set out to establish awareness of the Pigeon Conspiracy in almost every major city in the world. Its membership swelled, reaching as high as 230,000 registered users across the globe, including 18,000 who regularly attended meetings and rallies organised in big urban centres.

The Pigeon Resistance set out to:
  • Confront pigeon aggression wherever it occurred
  • Offer "restoration" via inverse hypnosis to people caught by the pigeon hive mind
  • Spread awareness about the threat posed by pigeons
  • Lobby governments to take the danger seriously
In this it has been largely successful. Using funding granted by numerous private donors and a few key big corporations, the Pigeon Resistance has been able to single-handedly reduce pigeon populations in many cities. It has also gathered a huge loyal base of members, many of whom have been "restored". Some governments have responded favourably to Pigeon Resistance pressure, but others (such as that of the United Kingdom) have remained steadfast in their assertions that there is no pigeon problem (despite simultaneously suggesting otherwise by passing minor anti-pigeon laws).

The Pigeon Resistance is currently preparing for International Pigeon Day (P-Day), intended to be a day of vast mass action.

For more, visit www.pigeonresistance.com.