IN 2004 SYLVIA BROWNE PREDICTED OSAMA BIN LADEN DEAD–WRONG AGAIN

On December 28, 2005, on CNN’s Larry King Live I had this exchange with alleged psychic Sylvia Browne after another guest asked Sylvia the whereabouts of Osama bin Laden: (from the CNN transcript):

KING: All right, Dr. Farha what’s your complaint? I know you took on Sylvia in an article but what’s your complaint about the overall concept here?

FARHA: Well, first of all, let’s put this in perspective here. Last year on the Montel Williams Show, Sylvia predicted that Osama bin Laden is dead. I don’t know if Sylvia still thinks that or not but I’d sure like to know.

BROWNE: Yes, I do.

FARHA: My whole take on this is — OK, very good, well we’ll find out sometime Sylvia. We’ll find out.

Well, Sylvia—we found out. Of course we now know that he was clearly alive at the time of her 2004 prediction and he lived until early May of 2011. Add this to her recent idotic failed prediction that aliens would visit Earth by 2010. Another in the growing list of failed predictions by Sylvia Browne….

FOR MORE ON THE REAL SYLVIA CLICK HERE


KNICKS SAY SKIRVIN HOTEL HAUNTED

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From the New York Daily News (online version):

OKLAHOMA CITY – The Knicks were afraid, very afraid. And it had nothing to do with the Oklahoma City Thunder.

For two days, several players had trouble sleeping because they were convinced that their downtown hotel is haunted.

“I definitely believe it,” Jared Jeffries said. “The place is haunted. It’s scary.”

Eddy Curry claims he slept for only two hours Sunday night because he couldn’t stop thinking about ghosts roaming the hotel.

For years, guests staying at the Skirvin Hilton have reported ghost sightings and strange noises. Legend has it that sometime in the 1930s, a woman jumped to her death while holding her baby in her hands.

“They said it happened on the 10th floor and I’m the only one staying on the 10th floor,” Curry said. “That’s why I spent most of my time in (Nate Robinson‘s) room. I definitely believe there are ghosts in that hotel.”

Assistant coach Herb Williams teased Jeffries and Curry for believing that the Skirvin is haunted, but Curry wasn’t laughing.

“There are too many stories,” Curry said. “Something is going on there.” [END]

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Gimme an ever-loving break. Is this all it takes to get into the heads of one of professional sports’ most storied franchises? Let’s look at some key statements:

* “…they were convinced that their downtown hotel is haunted.” With what evidence?

* “I definitely believe it” (Jared Jeffries)–based on what?

 * “I definitely believe there are ghosts in that hotel” (Eddie Curry)–what happened?

Then the truth comes out. “There are too many stories” (Eddie Curry). Oh, so the legend, stories, and suggestion have convinced Eddie that the Skirvin Hotel is haunted. That’s how it happens for almost everyone, Eddie. I hope all NBA visiting teams stay at the Skirvin and feel the exact same way. If that happens, look for the Thunder to have come up with the perfect prescription to win an NBA championship. With this formula, the Lakers, Celtics, Spurs, Cavs, and all the rest, don’t stand a chance. File this one under “GIMME A BREAK.”


APOLLO 14 MOON HOAX THEORY DEALT SETBACK BY NASA CAMERA IMAGES

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…………     The NASA Luna Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) was launched on June 18, 2009 to address landing site certification and polar illumination–among other things. Its camera images reveal the Apollo 14 lander tracks as well as the astronauts’ footprints–damaging a longstanding belief (by some) that this lunar mission was a hoax. These images are not crystal clear, but clear enough for experts to draw the conclusion that these markings are from Apollo 14. So my question for conspiracy theorists is this: do you still maintain the Apollo 14 mission was a hoax? Do you still maintain the craft didn’t land on the Moon’s surface? Do you still maintain that the astronauts didn’t step foot on the lunar soil?

CLICK HERE TO SEE YOUTUBE VIDEO


GHOSTS: A SKEPTICAL PERSPECTIVE

With Halloween coming up, keep this definition (from The Skeptic’s Dictionary) in mind as the increased suggestion of ghosts makes their existence “feel” more real…

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ghost

 A ghost is an alleged disembodied spirit of a dead person. Ghosts are often depicted as inhabiting haunted houses, especially houses where murders have occurred. Why some murder victims would stick around for eternity to haunt a place while others seem to evaporate is one of the great mysteries of the spirit world.

Many people report physical changes in haunted places, especially a feeling of a presence accompanied by temperature drop and hearing unaccountable sounds. They are not imagining things. Most hauntings occur in old buildings, which tend to be drafty. Scientists who have investigated haunted places account for both the temperature changes and the sounds by finding physical sources of the drafts, such as empty spaces behind walls or currents set in motion by low frequency sound waves (infrasound) produced by such mundane objects as extraction fans. Some think that electromagnetic fields are inducing the haunting experience.*

Some ghost experiences may be attributed to sleep paralysis. For example, the description given by Geoff Hutchison, a miner turned medium, is typical of sleep paralysis. He says he had his first paranormal experience while he was in the Army during the 1960s when he saw a figure: “It was just a man with a big black coat and a big wide-brimmed hat. He just stood there bent over me. I couldn’t move my arms or legs and had to lie there.”

As I note in my entries on poltergeists and haunted houses:

Even if I provided plausible physical explanations for a million poltergeists [or ghosts] in a million different places at a million different times, there is always the possibility that the next one that pops up will be the real thing. So, those who believe in poltergeists, ghosts, and haunted houses can always take refuge in the fact that nobody ever has enough information to debunk every ghost story, and even if they did, the next one might prove the debunkers wrong!

As a skeptic, all I can say with confidence is that when one considers the requirements for a ghost story to be true, the most reasonable position is that there is a naturalistic explanation for all these stories, but we often do not or cannot have all the details necessary to provide that explanation. We must rely on anecdotal evidence, which is always incomplete and selective, and which is often passed on by interested, inexperienced, superstitious parties who are ignorant of basic physical laws. Thus, there will always be stories like the “Bell Witch” story that attract much attention, especially when made into movies, that will lead many people to think that maybe there is something to this one, even if all the other ghost stories are false. The “Bell Witch” is alleged to be “a sinister entity that tormented a family on Tennessee’s frontier between the years of 1817 and 1821.”* The likelihood that we don’t have all the evidence in this case is proportionate to the number of years that have passed since the events allegedly took place.

If one is selective enough, one can confirm just about any hypothesis. And, as the history of research into psychic phenomena has shown, the brighter one is the easier it is to rationalize and find reasons to support one’s beliefs. Witness Debra Blum’s latest book, The Ghost Hunters. This former science writer provides a selective history of psychical research to support the view that maybe some of these stories are for real. After all, we can’t prove they’re not.

It is said that ghosts like to work in the dark because it’s harder for people to see them than in broad daylight where their invisibility is more visible. It’s also easier to deceive and scare people at night because they can’t see what’s going on. It’s usually cooler and breezier at night, too, and both those elements assist the ghost in producing scary sounds and movements. Ghosts don’t like to work in conditions where people can easily see what they are doing because then people would see them for what they are rather than for what they imagine them to be. By appearing only in the dark they can maintain their mysteriousness better. Besides, ghosts have found that many people are afraid of the dark and that fear makes their work much easier.

There are numerous groups of paranormal investigators that spend their spare time investigating allegedly haunted places. They arrive with coffee pots, flashlights, tape recorders, EMF detectors, video cameras with night vision, metal detectors, and other devices that were not designed to detect ghosts and therefore have no instructions on how to use them for that purpose. (I know. There is no equipment designed for this purpose. How could there be?) The equipment looks scientific, but does that make the investigation scientific? I’d say you’re about as likely to detect a ghost with a Sony camcorder as you are to get the truth out of a house plant by hooking it up to a polygraph.


“KING OF POP” ON CLOUD 9?

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 WATCH YOUTUBE VIDEO

.………………MAN IN THE MIRROR; HEAD IN THE CLOUDS

Michael Jackson’s death has been all over the news and understandably so.  Even if you have disagreements about his life, his contributions to pop culture are undeniable.  So not surprisingly, Michael Jackson has instantly made his post-life appearance in the clouds.  I’m of course referring to a story that has been picked up by many news outlets including CNN.  The story states that in an odd cloud formation seen in New York City on Friday, people claim to have seen the face of Michael Jackson.

I must say that the clouds are very beautiful but nothing new for those of us in Oklahoma. As is the case with most of these stories, and pointed out by the video (at bottom), these are Mammatus clouds and are very common with thunderstorms.  These clouds can appear very ominous and it’s not surprising that people were concerned, since they can seem very unnatural.

As for the face, well, that’s just good old Pareidolia at work.  It is the process by which our brains try to make sense out of chaos.  This has caused people to see everything from the Virgin Mary in grilled cheese to Kermit the Frog on Mars.

I personally don’t see the face, but there may be an explanation for this.  According to a recent study, our pattern recognition can be increased by feelings of “lacking control”.  While this might be a bit of a reach, it still brings up some interesting questions regarding one’s likelihood to see these patterns.  If you are seeing many of these patterns, it might be saying more about your frame-of-mind than communicating a message-from-beyond.

Invited Blog by J.D. Church 

WATCH YOUTUBE VIDEOCan you see Michael’s face in the clouds?


SONAR, CONFESSION, TO END LONG-STANDING LOCH NESS LEGEND?

 

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 Modified from skepdic.com:

The BBC claims it has proved that Nessie the plesiosaur (a marine reptile) does not exist. What they did was use satellite navigation technology to aim 600 separate sonar beams through Loch Ness to ensure that none of the loch was missed and found no trace of the monster. The research team hoped their instruments would pick up the air in Nessie’s lungs as it reflected a distorted signal back to the sonar sensors. The only signal they got was from their test buoy moored several meters below the surface.

“We went from shoreline to shoreline, top to bottom on this one, we have covered everything in this loch and we saw no signs of any large living animal in the loch,” said Ian Florence, one of the specialists who carried out the survey for the BBC.* The show, called Searching For The Loch Ness Monster, was made for BBC One.

A confession further damages monster hopefuls.

For that story, watch this National Geographic video.

Will this end the belief in Nessie? Don’t bet on it.

CLICK HERE FOR FULL STORY


DOOMSDAY? 2012? Don’t bet on it….

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Scores of prophets have predicted the end of the world or large-scale destruction. According to the Skeptic’s Dictionary, Jehovah’s Witnesses “have been wrong so many times that they’ve quit making specific predictions, but they’re still warning us that the end is near.” Among others who missed the mark were Jeanne Dixon, and John Gribbin and Stephen Plagemann. Obviously, the most important thing to remember when thinking critically about this is that

EVERY SINGLE DOOMSDAY PROPHECY–WHOSE PREDICTED DOOMSDAY HAS PASSED–HAS BEEN WRONG

Are you worried about December 21, 2012? I hope not….I recall a student in a nontraditional spring, 1999 college class where his final exam was to occur in January of 2000. During the first few days of class he mentioned there was no need to study for the final exam since Y2K was going to wreak such havoc on the world that going to college would be rendered meaningless. I tried to talk some sense into him and on the day before the last class I asked him once and for all, “are you going to study for the final exam?” He nervously replied, “uhh, I think I should.” Do you think he made the right decision?

CLICK HERE FOR A LIST OF FAILED PROPHECIES


BIGFOOT IN ATOKA, OKLAHOMA?

Atoka Bigfoot? 

READ ARTICLE


WEIRD THINGS EXPLAINED

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                                                                                                            Michael Shermer

 Is this man really levitating? What are some logical explanations for this apparent defiance of gravity? No trick photography is involved. Submit a comment to answer. 

WATCH DR. SHERMER’S ”WHY PEOPLE BELIEVE WEIRD THINGS” (must see)


FIRE WALKING DEBUNKED?

firewalking-150.jpgrichard_wiseman.png Dr. Richard Wiseman

WATCH RICHARD WISEMAN’S EXPERIMENT SCORCH FIRE WALKING THEORIES