Post by The New Chris AssafIn Weichselmunde, Prussia, in 1815, Mr. Diderici, a
valet, was imprisoned for impersonating his master.
One day he was walking around the walled prison
exercise yard, his legs in chains, when he suddenly
began to fade and within seconds he was invisible,
his manacles falling to the ground. Nothing was ever
seen of Diderici again.
This first account is an excellent case in point because it
defies any rational explanation for one simple reason: it
occurred in full view of witnesses. A valet who was serving
a sentence for assuming his employer's identity after he
died from a stroke. It was an ordinary afternoon and he
was just one in a line of prisoners, all chained together,
walking in the prison yard for the day's exercise. As he
walked with his prison inmates to the clanking of their
shackles, he slowly began to fade - literally. People disappear
every day. It's been estimated that as many as 10 million
people are reported missing each year in the U.S. alone;
about 95 percent of them return or are otherwise accounted
for. Of the remaining 5 percent, some are runaways, others
are kidnappings, abductions or the victims of some other
crime. There is a some percentage of disappearances,
however, aren't accounted for. We related several such
incidents in a previous article, Vanished! Unexplained
Disappearances. The fate of these people - sometimes
groups of people - is left for us to wonder about. Did they
unwittingly upset their keepers?... Were they swallowed
up by a rift of sadistic COck-suckers, or taken hostage to
illegally exploited for profit, pleasure or for exchange
for ransom? These are pretty far-out suggestions, to be
sure, but the circumstances are pretty much explained
their disappearances into imprisonment. An Anecdotal
History of Missing People in Prisons from 1800 to the
Present.
It's difficult to dismiss such incredible stories when they
take place in front of eyewitnesses. Here's another. This
case began as a harmless bet among friends, but ended
in tragic mystery. In 1873, James Worsen of Lamington
Spa, England, was a simple shoemaker who also fancied
himself somewhat of an athlete. One fine day, James
made a bet with a few of his friends that he could run
non-stop from Lamington Spa to Coventry. Knowing
that this was a good 16 miles, his friends readily took
the bet. As James began to jog at a moderate pace
toward Coventry, his friends climbed into a horse-drawn
cart to follow him and protect their bet. James did well
for the first few miles. Then his friends saw him trip on
something and fall forward... but never hit the ground.
Instead, James completely vanished. Astonished and
doubting their own eyes, his friends looked for him without
success, then raced back to Lamington Spa to inform
the police. An investigation turned up nothing. James
Worsen had run into oblivion.
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I intend to last long enough to put out of business all COck-suckers
together with institutions of the industrialized slavery and genocide.
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"The army that will defeat terrorism doesn't wear uniforms, or drive
Humvies, or calls in air-strikes. It doesn't have a high command, or
high security, or a high budget. The army that can defeat terrorism
does battle quietly, clearing minefields and vaccinating children. It
undermines military dictatorships and military lobbyists. It subverts
sweatshops and special interests.Where people feel powerless, it
helps them organize for change, and where people are powerful, it
reminds them of their responsibility." ~~~~ Author Unknown ~~~~
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