Sunday, September 6, 2009

Explore Mars: Google Mars


Google made it easier to take a stroll on Mars with it's "Google Mars". Similar to Google Maps, Google Mars allows users to scan the surface of Mars, keep track or orbiters, and search for anomalous features. This new Mars Scanning Technology makes the possibility of finding life on Mars much greater. Extraterrestrial life researchers can now use this great tool to gather new data that may ultimately lead to the discovery of life on another planet.

If we think about the possibilities that can transpire from this new tool, we will find many new avenues to explore. I was trying out some of the features available on the site, and although there are still many limits of usage, a lot of the features were impressive.

The map views currently offer three views. Elevation, visible, and Infrared. The elevation and infrared views are very impressive and should prove to be a huge asset when searching for anomalies. The elevation feature works with colors that represent different altitudes of the surface. Using the elevation feature, the viewer gets a better view of structural and dimension displaying features. This should make it much easier and more accurate when searching for artificial or intelligent designed features. The infrared view will display a black and white imagery, but the outline of ridges and dividing marks becomes apparent. This feature will also prove useful when examining surface features.

I have noticed that some areas allow you to zoom very close and observe features with detailed imagery, as where other areas only allow far away views. I have been unable to use this tool to see "The Face On Mars" closeup as of now.

Google Mars is equipped with a search box and will provide a direct link to any location with the click of the mouse. As more researchers start trolling around the surface of Mars, I am 100% confident more anomalies and viewpoints will surface that may ultimately prove to be solid evidence of intelligent life.

Here's a link to Google Mars. http://www.google.com/mars/

As a word of documenting advice, if you do come across anything that appears anomalous, I recommend you take a print screen of the image in addition to the link. I am not saying Google or NASA will cover up any unordinary imagery that slips in, but there are many conspiracy theories floating around about this subject.

[Source]

Cincinnati Tour Founders Bring the Paranormal Community Together

The Miami Historical Society of Whitewater Township and Miamitown Ghost Tours will come together to bring the paranormal community into Cincinnati! Ghost tour founders, Michael and Jeff Morris, will be hosting the first ever paranormal convention in Miamitown, Ohio on October 10, 2009.

This convention will offer each guest the opportunity to speak with many of the well known figures in the paranormal community, including but not limited to:

· James A. Willis: the co-author of Weird Ohio (2005) and Weird Indiana (2008) and was also a contributing author to Weird US (2004), Weird Hauntings (2006), Weird US: The ODDyssey Continues (2008), and Weird, Scary and Unusual (2008). Additionally, he is the founder of the paranormal research team Ghosts Of Ohio. He currently resides in Columbus, Ohio, with his wife, a Queen-loving parrot, and three narcoleptic cats.

· Jeff Craig: the creator and mastermind behind the Hidden Ohio Map and Guide. He currently is a member of James A. Willis' paranormal research group Ghosts of Ohio and resides in Blue Ash, Ohio. Aside from his map Jeff is a freelance cartographer with Celtic Maps.

· Paranormal Outreach Radio: Mike, Matt, and Christel host Paranormal Outreach Radio every Wednesday night at 9:30pm on www.asprn.com. On October 10th they will be broadcasting from the Miami Historical Society live! Mike, Matt, and Christel are also members of the Northern Kentucky Paranormal Society.

· Cincinnati Area Paranormal Existence Research: CAPER has been researching the paranormal for 5 years and has become one of the largest Cincinnati paranormal groups. Meet the members and hear about their past 30+ years of combined paranormal experience including their travels around the world!

· Rayne: a Medium and Tarot reader and works with Paravizons as well. Rayne will be offering readings and information for everyone interested!

· Miamitown Ghost Tours: tour founders and authors will present their new book Haunted Cincinnati and Southwest Ohio. Michael and Jeff Morris have been working in the paranormal community for about 4 years and began touring Miamitown in December of 2006.

Admission into the convention will be $5.00 at the Miami Historical Society town hall. All of the proceeds will be donated to the Miami Historical Society in order to help Miamitown grow and become what it once was. The doors will open at 2:00pm and presentations will begin at approximately 3:00pm. The convention will last about six hours, closing the doors around 8:00pm.

Invisible poisonous skyfish?

Recently many reports appeared talking about the weird creatures, the so-called skyfish. It remains unclear whether the animals are fish, birds or worms.

Mysterious creatures are caught on film everywhere
Mysterious creatures are caught on film everywhere





The mysterious beings have long worm-like bodies with wide projections on their sides (like those of fish). The trouble is, they don’t live in water – they live in the air.

No one has come up with a decent name for the animals as of yet. Some suggestions include “flying sticks,” “solar entities,” and “skyfish.”

The first time skyfish was photographed ten years ago by a film director Jose Escamilla. He originally thought that it was a UFO but then he realized that it was some living thing moving at a very high speed.

He began studying them and realized that the animals invade the space everywhere. Besides he discovered that the creatures began reproducing at a much faster rate as a result of the global warming.

Without a specimen in hand to examine, it's impossible to determine whether or not skyfish are living organisms, but it's Escamilla's best guess that they are.

Skyfish have only been captured on film and videotape. No one knows what they are, where they come from, but there are already specialized people – the catchers of skyfish, who mainly live in Japan.

They say that their hobby is not very safe: the animals are terribly poisonous during the fall season. In Japan the skyfish are extremely fast and fly at 300 km/h.

Analysis of film and video of skyfish from around the world indicate that they might range in size from just a few inches to perhaps over a hundred feet in length! How could something that large be unknown? That’s the essence of the mystery.

Source: agencies

Translated by Natalia Vysotskaya
Pravda.ru

The Second Montauk Monster Case



Another Montauk monster has seemed to have washed up ashore at the founders Landing Park shore in Southold, New York. This marks the second case of the so-called "Montauk Monster Sightings." The carcass was said to be discovered by a couple who contacted Nicky Papers of Montauk-Monster.com.

According to reports, the remains of the newest Montauk Monster were taken to an undisclosed location in Southold. Nicky Papers describes the Montauk Monster remains as horrible smelling and he doesn't think the pictures do it justice.

This latest Montauk monster report follows the original, yet unsolved, Montauk monster event which took place last summer.


Habbo Creates Twilight Space For Virtual Vampires


Forbidden love is about to go virtual.

In November, fans of Stephanie Meyer's "Twilight" series will be able to indulge their paranormal passions in Habbo, a virtual world played by more than 12 million users worldwide.

While its audience is geographically diverse, Habbo's deliberately pixelated aesthetic (right) has appealed mostly to teenagers who grok its retro vibe and can appreciate the game's campy, playful humor. The average age of a Habbo player is 15, according to Teemu Huuhtanen, executive vice president of Sulake, Habbo's developer in Helsinki, Finland.

As a result, a number of Hollywood properties have used Habbo as a doorway into the fickle world of teens, including "American Idol," "Heroes" and "Spiderwick Chronicles."

The latest to jump on the Habbo bandwagon is "Twilight." The four books in the series have sold 70 million copies worldwide, and the first movie, produced by Summit Entertainment, generated $400 million in box office sales last year.

Twilight To kick off the Nov. 20 release of the second movie, "The Twilight Saga: New Moon," Habbo's developers will be opening up Twilight-themed rooms and hosting related online parties to stir up fan fervor in early November. In addition, players have the option of buying virtual items associated with the franchise.

If you've read the books or watched the movie, you may be interested in knowing that among the virtual items for sale on Habbo are a water fountain, a clock tower, the Volturi Crest and Jacob's barn door.

If you're not a Twilight fan, it could just be a matter of time before you get bitten by the vampire epidemic that's spreading faster than swine flu among the world's women and teens.

-- Alex Pham

Moon Music

It uses radar data from the Japanese lunar orbiter Selene to generate music... Does midi and you can actually 'scratch' the surface of the moon like a turntable!

[Link]

An Account Of SkinWalker Ranch

Not sure where the so-called Skinwalker Ranch was located, we thought we'd just go out near there and see if we could find it by feel. We were right around the Hilltop Road area adjacent to Bottle Hollow Reservoir when we got out to have a cigar.

The landmark we were after was an escarpment that stood between the reservoir and the boundary of the ranch. Both of us had a feeling specifically to the south and slightly east from the Southwest corner of Bottle Hollow, but it seemed too far away. So we got back in the truck and went tooling off on some rural roads looking for anything, a landmark, a UFO, an otherworldly beast, whatever.

This took us across a creek that feeds Pelican Lake, a beautiful waterfowl reserve, and we more or less followed that stream until we reached Randlett, Utah, which is on the Ute Indian Reservation. We passed a store in Randlett, turned around and went back. Inside there were the store employee, a rancher, and a Ute Indian.

When the time was right to ask someone, we asked the store employee if she knew where the Mystery Ranch (as it is known in that area), and she said she didn't know, "Don't get out much," she said. But when she said it, she was clearly nervous. We asked the Ute Indian, and he said something to the effect, "You want to see a UFO? They're everywhere. You'll see one if you can see one." Something like that. He was a bit obscure, but I knew what he was getting at. To him, seeing one is a mystical experience, like a vision quest, and you'd see one when it was time for you to see one. That sort of thing. We wound up giving him a cigar and left.

We continued east. We called someone who had an idea of where it was and got some pretty rough directions, which led us in the wrong direction a little further. She told us that we were looking for the big 45 degree angle in the road, and "it's right there." Turned out there were a few of those. I knew it was somewhere nearer Fort Duchesne (right next to Bottle HOllow) so we headed back there. At a crossroads, where in fact the road takes an angle somewhere between 45 and 90 degrees, there were some workers we'd passed earlier working on a power box.

We pulled up and got out and asked them if they knew. The younger of the two perked up and said a friend of his had been talking about it, and knew right where it was. He gave us directions to go up the road that pretty closely matched the road landmark given by the person we'd called. The worker told us if we reached the power substation we'd gone a little too far. We passed a dirt road on the left, just like the worker described, but decided to get our bearings against the power substation, which we reached within another thousand feet.

We turned around and went back down to the dirt road and took it. Handy landmarks along this paved and near this dirt road were the high-tension power towers and lines connected to the substation. We could spot these from quite a distance in any direction.

Down the dirt road that led to one of the entrances, we reached a gate. The gate was locked. I knew it was the place because property that prime doesn't have locked gates on it. It's either a going concern or it's for sale. If it's a going concern you don't have a locked gate in the middle of the day. If it's for sale, there's more than likely a sign on who to contact. If it's abandoned and there are no further plans, you'll most likely find a locked gate. We were tempted to go onto the property, but we had a hunch that the residents on the mini-ranches we'd passed on our way in keep an eye on the place.

We hung out and took a few pictures shot some video, used the binoculars to look around. Directly to our north was an escarpment that struck me as that talked about in one of the books about the place. It bordered the entire property on the north. You can clearly see it on Google Earth at 40 15'32.80 N 109 53'12.85 W.
[Source]

Reincarnation Claims Verified in Australian Documentary




In 1983 noted Australian Hypnotherapist, Peter Ramster, produced a stunning television documentary in which four women from Sydney, who had never been out of Australia, gave details under hypnosis of their past lives. Then, accompanied by television cameras and independent witnesses, they were taken to the other side of the world in order to confirm their claims. The film forms part of the basis of Mr. Ramster's book, "In Search of Lives Past" (1990), and a speech he delivered to the Australian Hypnotherapists ninth National Convention at the Sydney Sheraton Wentworth Hotel on the 27th March, 1994. Or as Voltaire once pointed out, "Why should twice born be harder to believe than once born?"

Demons, UFOs and strange voices

by Roy Stemman

John A. Keel

John A. KeelLou Gentile

Lou Gentile

The beliefs of John Keel and Lou Gentile, two high-profile US investigators of the paranormal who died in recent weeks, suggest that reality is far more bizarre than most of us dare imagine. And demonology, in various guises, was central to those beliefs.
To many people, John Keel was simply a UFO researcher or ufologist. That may have been true at the start of this highly competent investigative journalist’s quest, but while others readily subscribed to the extraterrestrial hypothesis to explain UFO sightings, Keel soon took a very different approach.

For him, there were too many puzzling aspects of UFO reports, such as associated sightings of strange creatures, to accept the simplistic view of aliens in space ships.

Instead, Keel concluded that UFOs and the creatures that sometimes seemed to be associated with them, emanated from somewhere closer to home: another dimension which occasionally interacted with our physical world.

It was possibly a strange, nether world peopled by demons and other strange creatures, including Mothman – the subject of Keel’s 1975 study The Mothman Prophecies which was made into a movie in 2002. It was a theme he explored in some of his other books, including Our Haunted Planet and The Complete Guide to Mysterious Beings. It was Keel who also coined the phrase “Men In Black” to describe the strange visitors who reportedly attempted to silence UFO investigators.

A follower of Charles Fort, the collector of oddities, Keel (real name Alva John Kiehle) preferred to be described as a Fortean rather than a ufologist, and came to the conclusion that UFO-like objects and apparitions “do not necessarily originate on another planet and may not even exist as permanent constructions of matter. It is more likely that we see what we want to see and interpret such visions according to our contemporary beliefs.”

But Keel, who died in New York on 3 July, at the age of 79, also declared: “Ufology is just another name for demonology.”

Excellent overviews of his contribution to our understanding of UFO-related phenomena and the paranormal can be found in obituaries in The Daily Telegraph and also on Cryptomundo.

Lou Gentile’s passing at the age of 40 in Philadelphia, six days before Keel, has not been as widely reported, but in his own way he did much to promote the paranormal and, in particular, a belief in demons. An active investigator who helped those troubled by hauntings or possession, he also ran The Lou Gentile Show, originally a radio broadcast but more recently an online subscription service.

Despite the fact that he was losing his battle with cancer, Lou continued working on various cases, as well as writing a book about his investigations and working with a British TV network on an in-depth documentary on paranormal activity.

I first wrote about this self-styled “lay demonologist” in 2006 after it was announced that he had accepted conjuror James Randi’s $1 million challenge to prove paranormal ability. The challenge was lodged on 20 January 2006.

Gentile claimed to be able to produce electronic voice phenomena (EVP) – also known as instrumental trans-communication (ITC) – using a digital recorder. These were not, apparently, stray radio communications picked up by the recorder, as sceptics suggested, but voices that could give intelligent responses to questions posed by Gentile.

This claim was never put to the test because, in the first instance, James Randi needed heart bypass surgery and, by the time he had recovered, Gentile was suffered a serious back injury. The claim was then either withdrawn or not pursued.

Gentile’s beliefs and abilities were given a great boost in 2006 when Will Storr vs The Supernatural was published in the UK and a year later in the US. The writer’s own website explains that he didn’t believe in ghosts, adding, “Not, that is, until he is sent on a journalistic assignment to follow Lou Gentile … [and] what Will expects to be a straightforward piece, poking fun at an amusing eccentric, turns into a terrifying nightmare of spectral ghost lights, suburban possession and horrific demonic growling.”

The best feature I have read on Gentile and his work was published in The Philadelphia Weekly. There are also tributes to Lou and a family statement here.

I was intrigued to learn that John Keel took an early interest in paranormal telephony (phone calls from the dead), where spirits appear to communicate electronically, in the days before EVP was well known. During this period of research he found his phone calls being mysteriously re-routed to another number, one digit different to his own, and the person who answered it not only claimed to be called John Keel but also sounded remarkably similar to the author.

Even more intriguing is an experience reported by Will Storr* after publication of his book. He describes it on his website as “so utterly bizarre I still don’t know what to make of it” that he contacted Prof David Fontana, former president of the Society for Psychical Research, to ask his opinion.

Storr explained that the subject of EVP came up during a telephone interview from his work number with a radio station to publicise his book. He began to elaborate on the phenomenon “when this hectoring voice cut in for about 10-15 seconds”. It was difficult to make out what the voice was saying because “it sounded staticy and a little angry”. The interviewer also seemed angry because he thought Storr was playing a prank on him.

A couple of minutes after the interview ended, his work phone rang. “I picked it up and it was the same voice saying the same thing”. After it had finished, the phone went dead.

That’s an experience that would certainly have fascinated both Keel and Gentile.

*Will Storr is currently based in Sydney and won a National Press Club of Australia award for excellence in journalism in August 2008.

[Source]

Past-life hypnosis ban in Israel

by Roy Stemman

Authorised hypnotherapists whose work is recognised by Israel’s Health Ministry have been banned from exploring their patients’ past lives. The Advisory Committee on the Law on Hypnosis has made the ruling following complaints that some clients had suffered serious emotional damage through reincarnation hypnosis sessions.

The ban does not affect unauthorised hypnotists, in line with the Health Ministry’s decision to allow various alternative treatments that are not recognised as therapeutic by modern medicine.

Commenting on the restriction, which was announced in Israel’s oldest newspaper, Haaretz (24 July, 2009), Dr Alex Aviv of the Abarbanel Mental Health Centre in Bat Yam, who heads the advisory committee, argued that hypnosis and reincarnation had nothing to do with one another.

“This is a mystical practice for people who believe in reincarnation,” he explained. “We’ve seen a number of cases where practitioners tried to perform this on patients and things went bad.”

He did not say whether the committee examined any cases where patients had a positive outcome from hypnotic regression to an apparent past life.

The newspaper said discussion on past-life regression therapy began two years ago within the ministry and ended with “an explicit ban on offering the practice, or for hypnotists to present themselves as experts in the field.”

One of the cases cited involved a 23-year-old man who suffered depression after breaking up with his girlfriend. The psychologist treating him suggested that an event in a past life might now be making it difficult for him to let go of his partner and offered to hypnotise him.

The regression session went wrong when the man became emotionally stuck in an experience which made him feel he was enclosed in a coffin, leaving him suffering repeated panic attacks and respiratory problems after he returned to a normal conscious state.

Haaretz did, however, quote a supporter of regression therapy, Dr Lianna Sofer, who said that correcting problems which began in a previous life could be beneficial in this life. She had, for example, cured a woman from chronic neck pains after “discovering she had been decapitated in a previous life”.

Hypnosis, in inexperienced hands, can be dangerous and Israel was the first country to introduce legislation to control its use. Dr Aviv Alex, the advisory committee’s head, was one of four authors of a paper which appeared in The International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis in 2008: “Examining hypnosis legislation: a survey of the practice in Israel”.

Its findings were based on responses to a questionnaire sent to “470 licensed hypnotists and 1250 unlicensed professionals”. Practically all of the first group (94.4 per cent) reported using hypnosis in their clinical work, and 45 per cent of the second group did so. The authors suggested steps to increase the efficiency of the law as part of a regulatory system and the new ban is clearly a result of that recommendation.

Adrian Finkelstein, MD

Adrian Finkelstein, MD

The news will certainly come as a surprise to Adrian Finkelstein, MD, who was born in Romania but emigrated to Israel with his family in 1960. It was while studying at the Hebrew University Hadassah Medical School that he was first exposed to hypnosis.

He qualified as a doctor in 1968 and went on to study psychiatry. Now based in the United States, he has been performing past life regressions for almost 30 years and has written extensively about his work and the benefits it brings to his pupils.

His book Marilyn Monroe Returns: the Healing of a Soul tells the story of singer Sherrie Lea Laird and explores her memories, under hypnosis, of her previous life in which she believes she was the famous movie star.

I’m sceptical about the value of hypnotic regession in providing evidence for reincarnation, but in the right hands it does seem to be a powerful therapeutic tool.

You may also find these related articles of interest:

  1. Two boys and two past lives
  2. The Baby and the Buddha
  3. The day the music died
  4. Did psychic save Bush’s life?
  5. Karma catches up with China?

Navajo Witches--Skinwalkers

Navajo witches differ greatly from the European variety and can't be recognized with the same methods. Unlike main stream European black-witchcraft there are no warning signs for the presence of a witch at work if they are in human form [i.e. blue flame, spoiled milk, etc., a la Warlock]. It would behoove you to know the behavior of a Navajo witch in order to spot and stay clear of this maleficent being.

All Navajo witchcraft categories, with one exception (see notes below bibliography), are associated with the dead and death. A couple of generations back this association was the easiest way to identify a witch. With the proliferation of weirdness in the Navajo youth population a witch can no longer be spotted by a person's romance with the ghastly things in life. If black clothing decorated with skulls were enough to designate witchcraft then a large chunk of the Navajo population, the writer of this paper included, would be labeled as a witch.

Apprenticeship

A person who has just become a witch's apprentice can be identified by new strange habits or a peculiar event. A common event is the murder of a close relative, usually a sibling, for his or her required initiation. Somebody with a relative buried with less than a whole body, with no plausible explanation, should cause a red flag to go up.

A common new habit for the novice is to take off in the middle of the night. It is believed that the local witches convene in an underground room littered with corpses. At these meetings they may make a sand-painting of the new victim with colored ash and mar it with human excretions. In this case getting drooled over is not a good thing. The members of this sect may also practice necrophilia with their latest female victim or prepare corpse powder with a male victim's flesh.

Shape Shifters

Skinwalkers are another type of witch closely associated with underground gatherings. They are "wer-animals" and own an animal skin that is used to transform them into these animals. Any real animal can see through the skinwalker's disguise but even a human can recognize the unnatural creature. For some unexplainable reason even a well seasoned skinwalker cannot obtain the perfect animal gait or leave the proportionally correct sized animal tracks.

Methods of Sickness

A strange habit that indicates witchcraft is the burying of stolen objects due the use of these personal items as props in spell castings. It might be hair, nail clippings, clothing, and favorite objects that are filched. These items are put into a bundle, sung over with a prayer that has been twisted into perversion and ending in the bundle's burial. Waking up with a bad hair cut or more chipped nails than before is a bad sign.

A witch who shoots "arrows" to cause harm are hard to spot. They might be recognized by the instruments used to infect victims with. Small objects such as pebbles, bone fragments, or shell shards along with the possession of a blow gun may be an indication of a witch.

Wild Kingdom

Some wild animals have the ability to use witchcraft. It is an inherent ability in the species and is not considered evil, even if it kills you. Even the ants are able to cause illness in humans so it's best to leave any wild animal alone, no matter how harmless they may appear to be.

The usual effect of any witching, left untreated, is a gradual loss of the ability to function in society, either physically or mentally [insanity]. In each case it is considered an "illness" to be treated by a prescribed ceremony that should restore the victim to full function.

Bibliography

Kluckhohn, Clyde. Navaho witchcraft. Boston: Beacon Press, 1989

Notes:

For the purpose of this paper I applied the label "skinwalker" only to the shape shifting type of witch. Be aware that even though the word for skinwalker in Navajo is "yee nadlooshii" and means "walk/travel like an animal" the label is usually applied to all witchcraft sorts regardless of their means and methods.

There is one type of witchcraft that is not closely associated with the dead: witchcraft used solely for generating business for the medicine man or woman. In these cases the victims will hire the victimizer to be rid of their illness. It is a despicable practice that might backfire since the methods for curing are not one-hundred percent safe for the practitioner.

[Source]

What is Navajo Witchcraft?

The Four "Ways" of Navajo Witchcraft

The Dine (Navajo) believe that there are natural places where powers for both good and evil are concentrated, and that those sacred powers can be harnessed for good (healing) or evil (harm). Navajo witches also believe that objects such as hair or personal items can be used for good or evil. Within Navajo spirituality, the supernatural and the physical worlds are tightly intertwined, so pieces of physical objects like bone, hair or other items hold strong supernatural properties that can be manipulated. For the most part, only a very thin line separates the living from the dead, the good from the evil, and the medicine man from the Navajo witch.

In his 1944 book Navajo Witchcraft, anthropologist Clyde Kluckhohn lists the four "Ways" of the Navajo witch as follows.

  • Witchery Way focuses on corpses in all of their rituals and ceremonies.
  • Sorcery Way involves burying a victims' personal objects or body parts (like hair) during ceremonies.
  • Wizardry Way focuses on injecting foreign objects such as poison or cursed darts into the victim.
  • Frenzy Way is focused on using charms that influence the emotional or mental state of others.

The Skinwalker

The "Witchery Way" is the best known form of Navajo witchcraft. Those who practice the Witchery Way, like all Navajo traditions, learn it from the elders of their family. Very little is actually known about those who practice the Witchery way, as very few Navajo are actually willing to speak about it. Every form of this witchcraft is based on death, and the Witchery way focuses on corpses. Although little is known about Navajo witches, witnesses have reported that they gather in caves or any secluded place where they go into "animal form". During these gatherings, they perform ceremonies similar to other Navajo ceremonies that involve rituals, dance and sand-painting. However, they perform these ceremonies with some dark alterations, such as using ash instead of sand, or modifying other Navajo rituals in "corrupted" ways. These gatherings are also rumored to include necrophilia and cannibalism.

"Skinwalkers" are the famous Navajo witches who follow the Witchery way and transform into animal form in order to take advantage of the unique characteristics and special powers of those animals. The Skinwalker is the most famous Navajo witch throughout western culture, due to recent books and movies. The accuracy and truth of these stories can only be judged by the Navajo who live as neighbors to the real world Skinwalkers in Navajo Nation. Witness sightings of strange creatures, and odd phenomenon, are common throughout this part of the country.

Some interesting witness accounts of real life skinwalkers are provided below:

  • James Donahue published an article that describes a case where anthropologist Clyde Klukhohn reports an eerie event where he and his wife spotted a strange wolf standing in the yard. After disappearing, the couple learned that the wolf had left small female human footprints.
  • John Salter III also reported that during the time he and his family lived in the Navajo nation in 1980, they were visited and spooked by practicing Skinwalkers.
  • In 1996, an organization of scientists called NIDS decided to scientifically investigate the many outrageous claims reported at the "Skinwalker Ranch," and this investigation is outlined by reporter George Knapp and scientist Colm Kelleher in the book Hunt for Skinwalker. The book relates a number of witness accounts of real Skinwalker phenomenon that reflect aspects of the Witchery way.

Romania Legalizes Witchcraft

Romania's first official witch was registered Monday after months of negotiations with the government that finally introduced witchcraft as a legal occupation.

31-year-old Gabriela Ciucur will stay in history as the country's first legal witch, after she registered a company dealing with "astrology and contacts with the spiritual world", media reported.

Ciucur spent quite a lot of time arguing with various officials until she convinced them that witchcraft was a sound area of work. At first everyone laughed at her, but they finally caved in.

Now Ciucur charges her clients GBP 3 to 6 to peek into their future, to help them get in touch with the spirits of loved ones, or to unravel what's in the stars.

Witchcraft is quite popular in Romania as many local people believe in the occult, especially in rural areas where legends of Transilvania's count Dracula are still taken quite seriously. All over Eastern Europe women tend to believe in the powers of witches and some often resort to their help when settling a love score, healing a broken heart, or punishing a rival.

Pagans Aren't Americans - Gingrich

Newt Gingrich, the thrice divorced defender of family values and Catholicism, warned "I am not a citizen of the world. I am a citizen of the United States because only in the United States does citizenship start with our creator." Which would be news to our Founders as well as to the Constitution, that gives rather different requirements.

Apparently from Newt's perspective we Pagans are not Americans, for in his fatwa he warned Americans that they are surrounded by "Paganism."


Mike Huckabee, who had earlier explained the relationship between our constitution and his theology: "I believe it's a lot easier to change the Constitution than it would be to change the word of the living god. And that's what we need to do -- to amend the Constitution so it's in God's standards rather than try to change God's standards so it lines up with some contemporary view. . ."

That Pride and Power are Huckabee's real deities was made clear when he criticized President Barack Obama for saying in Cairo, Egypt, last Thursday that one nation shouldn't be exalted over another.

"The notion that we are just one of many among equals is nonsense," this Servant of Sauron said.

These examples of moral and intellectual vacuity were supported by convicted felon, http://www.fas.org/irp/offdocs/walsh/summpros.htm Oliver North.

Three old white geezers giving their race and gender a bad name, speaking to a crowd that gives its religion a bad name.

[Link]

Bulgaria: an Archaeology and Treasure Hunting Paradise. Or Hell


Note: This article is mostly based on my work for David O'Shea, a journalist from the Dateline current affairs program of the Australian SBS TV, who worked on a documentary on treasure hunting in Bulgaria in June 2009; on this project we were aided by Bulgarian archaeologist Ventsislav Gergov.

Premise, i.e. Prelude to the Tragedy

An ordinary field trip back in high school to an archaeological site in Northern Bulgaria left a very lasting memory in my mind. It was just one simple thing but it absolutely astonished me: the archaeologist accompanying my class would simply lean, pick up seemingly random objects off the ground, and would say, "Roman tile - 2nd century AD", or "Byzantine vessel - 5-6th century"; or "Bulgarian ceramics - First Bulgarian State"...

He would just date back to some historical period items lying right there on the surface without having to do any digging whatsoever... And the archaeology site that my class visited turned to be a whole bunch of ancient and medieval sites located within an area of 1-2 square kilometers...

To put it briefly, many people - including most Bulgarians - do not realize that all of Bulgaria's territory is literally dotted with archaeological objects from all time periods. Any single rock you pick up from the ground in Bulgaria often would turn out to have a several-thousand-year history of human interaction!

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