La Ligue du Masque Cancéreux

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Born 1667 in Tolosa, France, to combat the influece of La Ligue d'Agenda de la Pinque, under the banner of a True Pink doctrine.

The league enjoyed great popularity from the South of France to the Piedmont for forty years. Although its public activity seemed to have died out in the early 1700's, it flared up briefly again in 1775. The Cancerous Mask was forced underground during the French Revolution and thought extinct, but in the years following the Second World War, various manifestos were published by persons claiming the contrary. To this day an occasional broadside is mysteriously deposited at the Bibliothéque Nationale in Paris, as well as in the archives of the Haute-Garonne and Tolouse. Various newpapers also receive copies.

It is said that the contemporary league is an upstart with no authentic claim to a direct lineage, but Dr. Marie-Jeanne Sicre, of Mirail Université Toulouse, believes the current manifestation to be authentic. She points out that the old families of Tolouse never doubted the continued existence of the league. Her argument offers no conclusive proof but remains convincing nonetheless. Recent documents discovered in the archives of the Department of the Haute-Garonne, with highly-stylized and symbolic references to their enemies, including Scientology, the League of Gnomes and various Molech and Mormo Cults, are still being studied to determine if in fact such proof exists.

Suspected members include Paolo Grignotti, Pietri Biberoni and Copernicus Trowbridge.

Organizational Structure


The inner structure of the group is still a mystery to outsiders, though it's generally accepted the League eschews a rigid hierarchy, preferring instead a method of ranking and advancement based on the ability to lift bulky, ill-shaped objects.

Publications

True Pink, instruction manual and organizational bylaws

Property and Consorting

See Also