Wednesday, January 4, 2012

News of the Strange: "Devil Inside" (scary)

Dhr. Seven, CC Liu, Ashley Wells, Pat Macpherson, Wisdom Quarterly
It's contagious? A daughter becomes involved in a series of unauthorized exorcisms. Her mission is to find what happened to her mother, a murderer of three during an exorcism.

There really are hells. They are not permanent, but they really do exist. Demons (asuras, yakkhas, nagas) do not inhabit them, Hellions (narakas) do. Demons inhabit this world. Humans are susceptible to influence, illness, and "possession" by many kinds of unseen beings. Casting out harmful, parasitic, "unclean" spirits is not limited to the Vatican (itself apparently overrun by diabolical forces) but happens in all of the world religions and older shamanic traditions.

Exorcisms are most associated with Roman Catholicism, but as ABC News (20/20 In Touch) found, it is practiced in many traditions.

Islamic imam cures Muslim of possession by d'jinn (genie, spirit) in Indonesia. He tries to have a rational conversation with the spirit possessing the lady.

Is anyone helped, influenced, or protected by "guardian" angels (devas)?


Is Israel pushing for worldwide war? A former Jew explains.


One of the lowest, most miserable Buddhist "hells" (narakas, nirayas), a world of uninterrupted torment, depicted here at a Thai theme park (forums.somethingawful.com).

Unseen in the Human World
Fallen angels (asuras, titans, giants, demons, nagas, reptilians) in world history angered more powerful overseers in space (gods versus diabolical beings).

(Starts at 06:00) Reptoids and reptilians (nagas) are human-alien hybrid creatures, dragons, djinn, underground rulers.

Skeptic: Why Humans Believe Strange Things

(, TED.com) Why do people see the Virgin Mary on cheese sandwiches or hear demonic lyrics in "Stairway to Heaven"? Using video, images, and music, skeptical zealot Michael Shermer (skeptic.com) explores these and other phenomena, including UFOs and alien sightings. He struggles to psychologize what witnesses see: In the absence of science he approves of, incomplete information can combine with the power of suggestion. In fact, he says, we humans tend to convince ourselves to believe: We overvalue the "hits" that support our beliefs and discount the more numerous "misses." More

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