January 31, 2000
Just out of body not out of their minds
ONE
tennis shoe, abandoned and rotting. There could be nothing more insignificant.
But this tennis shoe could have a profound impact, as it kicks religion
and philosophy in the backside.
This
shoe appears to prove there is life after death. It was seen by Maria,
a migrant worker visiting friends in Seattle, who suffered two serious
heart attacks. During the second, at Harborview Hospital, she "died"
and had an out-of-body experience (OBE).
Some
parapsychologists suggest that the near-death experience, when a person
feels consciousness drift away from the body and can even look down
on the "corpse", is the separation of the soul from the flesh.
Maria's
spirit breezed through the hospital walls and, on a ledge on the north
wall, three stories up, she saw a sports shoe with its laces gummed
under the sole and its toe worn and scuffed.
Maria
survived, her spirit returned, and she told her story to a sceptical
critical care social worker named Kimberly Clark. Clark went to look
for the shoe - and to her shock, found it.
"The
only way," Clark insisted, "she could have had such a perspective was
if she had been floating right outside and at very close range to the
tennis shoe. I retrieved the shoe and brought it back for Maria - it
was very concrete evidence for me."
If
Maria had suffered her heart attacks in London instead of Seattle, we
would probably have never heard the tale - compared to the survival
rate of 30 per cent on America's West Coast, just 2 per cent of patients
in British hospitals can hope to come back from cardiac arrest, according
to figures released late last year. (That statistic isn't weird it's
horrifying.)
Maria's
experience is just one of 20 or more well-documented cases at Kevin
Williams' near-death.com.
Stories
of dazzling lights, the appearance of friends and angel guides, the
murmur of heavenly music and the pervading sense of peace vie with visions
of hell and purgatory that will make you sweat.
One
of the most moving, since he is so loved by millions, is Peter Sellers's
account of a near-death experience, revealed to Shirley MacLaine in
the mid-Sixties.
He
told her: "I felt myself leave my body. I just floated out of my physical
form and I saw them cart my body away to the hospital. I went with it.
I wasn't frightened or anything like that because I was fine; it was
my body that was in trouble.
"I
looked around myself and I saw an incredibly beautiful bright loving
white light above me. I wanted to go to that white light more than anything.
I remember thinking 'That's God'. I'll never fear death again."
Peter
Sellers died from a heart attack in 1980.
www.near-death.com
Lawmen
encounter the space patrol
Policemen
talk like policemen the world over. Even when they meet aliens from
outer space. Officer Craig Stevens of Millstadt Police Department, Illinois,
noted in his patrol report for January 5: "I drove to the north end
of town. While I was sitting there I observed a large flying object
coming from a southward direction."
Officer
Stevens was not the only policeman to see the vast UFO that night. Police
departments in Highland, Lebanon and Shiloh, all east of St Louis, tracked
the craft.
One
Lebanon officer called the National UFO Reporting Center hours later
and said he had pursued the object at high speed, with his flashers
blazing, until the unknown craft changed course to meet him.
The
noiseless, dark triangle hovered above his car at 1,000- 1,500ft, as
though studying him, before streaking away to the west, seeming to cover
several miles in just a few seconds.
Many
UFO experts believe that the silent triangles are part of a secret US
military project. This one was certainly sighted within two or three
miles of Scott Air Force Base. But why a secret aircraft would fly low
over built-up zones with all its lights burning is a tough question.
Officer
Stevens's priceless report is online at the Millstadt station site.
He added a sketch to his report, showing a boomerang shape with big
headlamps, and also attached a Polaroid that reveals a scattering of
yellow lights in a mottled sky. The morning was bitterly cold, Stevens
reports, and "the picture did not seem to exit the camera properly".
"The
object was flying very low," he records, "from 500ft to 1,000ft, and
was flying very slowly. The object was making no noise. I could only
hear a very low-decibel buzzing sound. Then the object began banking
to the northeast, and continued to cruise away from me."
Millstadt
officers are not commenting on the case and simply refer callers to
their website.
A local
newspaper reporter, Heather Ratcliffe, says: "The police don't believe
the sighting was a visitor from outer space. But they won't make any
assumptions about what it is."
One
thing must be certain - Officer Stevens would not threaten his own career
and expose himself to ridicule by filing such a report unless he was
sure it was accurate.
www.millstadtpolice.homepage.com/aircraft.html
January 24, 2000
FORGET
genetic modifications, forget organophosphate pesticides - simply cooking
an organic lentil could be bad for your health, according to Kirlian
evidence on the web.
In
the 1940s, Soviet parapsychologist Semyon Davidovitch Kirlian developed
high-frequency, high-voltage snapshots of the energy fields that surround
living creatures. Vivid starbursts of lightning and glowing arcs of
colour shine from fingertips, palm prints and even vegetable matter,
such as leaves.
Or
lentils. The network provides images of a living, organically grown
lentil sprout straight out of the health food store packet, and the
same sprout after being cooked at 140F for three minutes. The live lentil
is vibrant; the baked lentil is not - and as a vegetarian for 25 years,
I feel bad about the millions of lentils I've cooked.
More
shocking is the difference between an energy-packed, organic new potato,
and a McDonald's French fry.
The
most beautiful image is a web of blue and scarlet lightning, shaped
like a cross-section through the human brain, that emanates from an
artefact taken from the King's Chamber of the Great Pyramid at Giza.
Inanimate
objects usually possess insubstantial Kirlian auras, and the researchers
suggest this electric lightshow could mean the pyramid stone was a psychic
healer's tool.
The
researchers want hands-on healers to have their auras photographed as
they work, in the hope of discovering how health-giving energy can seemingly
be transferred from one human to another.
Whether
you're sceptical or not, these images are worth seeing - like the infinitely
complex shapes of fractal geometry, Kirlian photos possess a beauty
that transcends their scientific value.
URI
GELLER
www.kirlian.net
January 10, 2000
Return of the prophet
December 13, 1999
It
is a sound that raises the hairs on your back, a long, low, distant
howl that is neither human nor animal. It is the call of the Sasquatch,
America's fabled apeman. And you can hear it on the web.
Two
spine-chilling soundfiles have been posted by Sasquatch hunter Matt
Moneymaker at the Bigfoot Field Researcher's Organisation site. Dogs
bark, owls hoot and, echoing through a mountain valley, the legendary
beast howls.
Bigfoot
is, according to sceptics, a "crypto-zoological hominoid", a mystery
creature that might look like a man, if it existed. In fact, its existence
is all but proven, with thousands of sightings stretching way back.
There
is only one common thread in North American native myth - and that's
the Sasquatch - a nine-foot man-beast coated in hair that forages by
night and lives on mountains.
Famous
video evidence produced by rancher Roger Patterson in 1967 has been
declared "unfakeable" by Hollywood experts. The creature which lopes
away from a Washington creek is no actor in a suit, say the special
effects analysts, who point to its rippling thigh muscles.
The
latest Bigfoot sighting was in Pennsylvania in October, where three
people on a remote rural road saw an upright animal with hands dragging
below its knees. Its fur was a dark reddish-brown, and its head sloped
back into a cone.
URI
GELLER
http://bfro.net/
December 6, 1999
End of world
is nigh
Heavyweight
scientists have been taking out full-page adverts in newspapers across
America warning of the end of the world. They believe that the world
faces a spontaneous nuclear holocaust.
On
their World Atomic Safety Holiday (WASH) site, they predict reactor
meltdowns as national electricity grids fail, nuclear fuel pools boiling
dry, radiation clouds mushrooming over cities, and hundreds of thousands
dead.
This
year's accident in Japan revealed how a breakdown could lead to crisis.
WASH
is spearheaded by Nobel peace laureate Sir Joseph Rotblat, MIT physics
professor Philip Morrison and Dr Patch Adams, immortalised by Hollywood's
Robin Williams. Bill Clinton should take such names seriously - and
WASH want you to add your voice, by e-mailing to president@whitehouse.gov
with this plea: "Reactors off-line and missiles off high alert by December
30, 1999."
My
home is equipped with a blast-proof underground bunker. If the WASH
manifesto is ignored, my family could be taking our champagne down the
concrete staircase, turning the giant wheels on the steel doors, sealing
the airlocks and toasting the millennium 100 feet underground.
URI
GELLER
www.y2kwash.org
November
29, 1999
Warp speed
on UFO physics
Stardrive
Alien spaceships are an impossible concept. How could they find Earth?
Did they set out from home planets thousands of light-years away,
aiming for a speck in the universe that was showing no signs of intelligent
life, no radio, no television, not even electric light?
How
could their crews survive? What kind of fuel could propel a craft
across galaxies? These basic questions expose the myth of UFOs.
And
yet, tens of thousands of reliable witnesses report UFO sightings
each year. Whole cities, as in Mexico last year, capture spaceships
on video. Experienced flyers, such as the former USAF F-16 pilot at
the controls of a passenger jet over Texas on October 26 this year,
offer detailed descriptions of massive triangular craft spotted above
35,000ft.
Physicist
Jack Sarfatti doesn't want to believe in UFOs. He wants to know. To
know how they could function. To know the hidden laws of physics they
must exploit. To know if mankind can replicate the technology.
His
Stardrive project is drawing some of the most adventurous and reputable
scientists in the world, to examine the impossible questions from
a new angle - deducing new laws of science to explain interstellar
travel. Instead of parroting the general relativity dictum that nothing
travels faster than light, Sarfatti wants to discover a way to outstrip
186,000 miles a second without cheating on Einstein.
The
project has already discovered a formula that lets UFOs perform their
zig-zag acrobatics without having gravity forces inside the spaceship
crush the crew.
Sarfatti
is a tanned Californian with a white mane and black wraparound shades.
When Hollywood makes the movie, Jack Nicholson could take the role.
And
if his physics proves feasible, you can expect the film to premiere
on Mars. Or a million light-years beyond.
URI
GELLER
www.stardrive.org
November
22 1999
THE
PROBLEM with most gurus today is that they don't understand how busy
everyone is. Most people would like to achieve spiritual ecstasy and
everlasting life, but there is so much else to do - microwave meals
to prepare, school runs to squeeze in, videos to program, motorways
to commute.
Mother
Meera is a 21st-century guru. Her disciples call her an Avatar of
the Divine Mother, but she accepts we don't all have time to call
our mothers as often as we'd like.
She
doesn't ask much. "If you have time, meditate," she advises, but only
if you have time. "It is not necessary to devote your life or even
to believe in me." There are no embarrassing demands for money either.
Her books sell for $20 or $30, and colour photos are $5 plus shipping.
Mother
Meera, a serenely beautiful woman of 39 from Chandepalle in southern
India, married a German businessman in 1982 and now lives in a Teutonic
castle near Limburg, overlooking the Lahn Valley. Hundreds of visitors
annually are given audiences - there is no charge, though booking
is essential.
In
return for so little devotion, Meera offers a lot. Disciples may pray
for anything, as often as they wish. "My force changes people completely,"
she promises. "Some people ask for each and every small thing, and
others go on asking. Whether you ask or not, I will give what is necessary."
We
attain our goals more easily when we overcome stress, so her claim
may not be so ridiculous. A guru of calm will help people to help
themselves. And in a time-hungry culture where people think they don't
have time to pray, Mother Meera's brand of low-commitment spirituality
could be a good starting-point.
www.mothermeera.com
November
15, 1999
Wearable
computers became a serious trend for the new millennium when shares
in Xybernaut leapt 115 per cent in one day on the Nas daq stock exchange
this month.
Xybernaut
has been design ing PCs as clothing for a dec ade. Now, for $8,994
(about 5,600), you can don the Mobile Assistant. IV, a 233MHz Pen
tium processor weighing less than a kilo which slots, with its battery
pack, into a heavy-duty nylon vest.
Lightweight
cables connect it to a keypad worn on the wrist and to a padded helmet
with headphones and a video camera with a high-definition screen barely
bigger than a stamp. Suspended 5cm from the right eyeball, this VDU
retains its definition in all lights' except strong sun.
Xybernaut
say the MA IV "makes it possible for workers to file reports,
send and connect with the Internet virtually anywhere".
But
senior systems engineer Roosevelt Elison admits; ."Right now, it’s
still sort of a wealthy man’s desire. But we know the interest is
there."
Reuters
reporter Susan Kuch-inskas believes on-line advertising is the real
power behind such PCs, and predicts pocketsized internet devices that
interpret our moods and serve up appropriate ads will be on sale within
a few years.
Professor
Kevin Warwick, head of cybernetics at Reading University, became a
walking computer by having a chip implanted in his arm. It was breathtakingly
successful - security doors opened as he approached and computers
greeted him by name.
But
he had it removed after a week. ‘The sample was not designed for humans.
Any longer and the implant could have . become lost in my body."
www.xybernaut.com
November
8, 1999
WHO
could this be? "Deep with in,your heart there is considera tion, sincerity
and graciousness for others, and you have a fine appreciation for the
refine ments of life." Diana, Princess . of Wales perhaps? Read on!
"You depend on others, perhaps more than you care to admit, and you
often fear to tust your own judgment." Bill Clinton?
In
fact it’s two people – John F. Kennedy and Jacqueline Bou vier – and
it’s taken from a 25-page online investigation into their romantic compatibil
ity, based on numerology.
The
instant numerology check is the best of the free prophecy tools at artist
Amy Zerner and author Monte Farber’s Sun-Angel site. Key in your name
and birthdate for an analysis describing your Expression (the way you
think and act), Soul Urge (the way you’d be if your dreams came true)
and Persona (how others see you).
Even
more fun was the house numbers decoder. It explains who should live
where. At 23 High St, for instance, you ought to find a writer, because
2+3=5 and five is for bookish types. At No 45 expect a doctor, for 4+5-9:
and nine is a healer’s number.
www.sunangel.com
November
1, 1999
The spirit
in the sky
GOD
is everywhere. That's the point of God. On the other hand, he is more
present at some places than others - in the Jewish Temple's Holy of
Holies, or in the Communion wafer, or in the gurgle of a new- born baby.
And if God shows a preference for certain places and situations, maybe
there's one spot in the universe we could call His home.
The
universe is a big place - but it hasn't always been. It started out
unimaginably small, a point at which everything converged. Then the
Big Bang came and the universe became vast, very quickly. We know exactly
where it happened; radio telescopes can trace the starting place. And
if God exists, he must have been at that point, 15 billion years ago,
The Big Bang is, in fact, God's last knovyn address.
This
deliciously lunatic piece of philosophy is the logic behind the New
Prayer project. A directional radio transmitter pointed out into the
stars, to broadcast our prayers directly at the Big Bang's starting
point. Directly at God.
To
submit a prayer, fill in a form. A second form invites feedback - was
your prayer answered? Does God answer e-mail prayers quickly? Or does
he let them pile up for days, like the rest of us, until he has tens
of thousands in his in-box?
It's
a great site. It made me laugh. And before I logged off, I offered up
a prayer.
www.newprayer.com
October 25, 1999
What
would you give to know what the future holds? To see the outcome of
a romance, the payback on a gamble, the verdict of history? Does £500
sound too much.
I’m
writing this in New York, where palm-reading is legal and more than
200 psychics make a rich living. NYPD’s fraud squad is running Operation
Crystal Ball and police say some pseudo-psychics are making $200,D00
a year. Manhattan customers are seduced with promises of the paranormal
for $10, but inside the booth they can face demands for thousands of
dollars to exorcise future doses of bad luck.
The
web reflects this frenzied fortune-hunting, with two big groups devoted
to promoting psychics – the Online Psychics and Divination Readers Web-ring
and the Psychics Around The World Webring.
Both
associations promise to screen out the 0800-number dial-a-psychics and
the convict
ed
fraudsters – that still leaves some scary operators, like JM Suka Umum,
who offers "Instant body invulnerability! For martial and combat performers,
or just plain self-defence. No bullet or knife thrust will harm you."
How
much will online psychic help cost you? LeDawn of Austin, Texas, does
Tarot at $20, chatroom seances at $40 and phone consultations at $60.
Gordon
Louis Banta II of Swampscott, Massachusetts, charges $45 a 15 minutes.
Sun
Wizard of California City will do you a three-card Tarot reading for
$10.
Several
astrology and Tarot programs generate instant readings, though of course
I am not suggesting that any of these psychics would stoop to using
such a thing on their own PCs.
Psychic
readings can be immensely positive. They can change lives. One thing
is sure, though – you don’t always get what you pay for.
October
18 1999
Hitler's
stealth
Hitler's
obsession with the occult and astrology is well known – but evidence
that his aerospace and rocket scientists were plundering alien technology
to build Nazi UFOs has never gripped the public imagination.
Maurizio
Verga's tantalising web pages reveal Werner von Braun and the Luftwaffe
design teams could have been guided by extraterrestrials, perhaps looting
interstellar components from a crashed spaceship.
Rumours
of the Third Reich's underground bases first surfaced in the late Forties,
coinciding with the birth of UFO sightings. America's Operation Paperclip
was at full throttle, with the FBI smuggling Nazi war criminals into
America to take advantage of their scientific expertise.
Former
Nazis gave America the space race edge, and von Braun's career followed
a smooth flightpath from pilotless V2 rockets to Apollo 11 and the first
manned moon landing.
Verga
believes the Luftwaffe developed a flying disc, in the classic saucer
shape, which flew at Prague on February 14, 1945. His photographic evidence
is almost certainly faked by Fifties sci-fi fans. Visit his site to
enjoy the artist's impressions, which are a glorious delight. It may
not be a coincidence that Americans began sighting flying saucers within
three years of the alleged Prague test-flight and von Braun's escape
to America.
Countless
UFO reports of the early Eighties turned out to be sightings of America's
Stealth Bombers. Is it possible that the US Air Force did develop Nazi
technology to build a fleet of saucers 50 years ago,
producng
the first wave of Unidentified Flying Objects?
And
if those spacecraft were for real, the chilling question remains: what
are the menacing objects reported nightly in Nineties skies?
www.ufo.it/german
October 11, 1999
Sometimes we can’t
see what’s before our eye's. Relationships break up, and we deny it.
Strange lights flash in the sky, and all our vision registers is the
clouds.Cameras are not like eyes. They are not subject to emotions,
they see wrinkles
and capture infidelities. They see UFOs and thousands of such films
are downloaded daily onto the net.
If you want to photograph
UFOs, two simple methods are available. On dry days, prop your camcorder
against the side of the house, so that the lens points towards the sun
without focusing directly into the light. And on clear nights, take
a disposable camera and point it into the darkness.
The possible results
are graphically displayed on Anthony Alagna’s site. He re
veals the best images
he has acquired in North Arizona's Sedona desert, including a mind-blowing
picture of a ghostly blue globe floating above reeds like a full moon.
Alagna did not invent
the idea of filming UFOs by pointing a video camera at the sun’s cusp,
this technique has been promoted on the web for at least two years –
but I believe he is the first to display his results in movie format.
On his pages, classic
flying saucers glide across the screen, clearly visible for five or
six frames. Cigar-like rods flash in and out, tiny bolts of lightning
Alagna suggests they might be aerial lifeforms.
The pictures are
available as postcards, along with Sedona Indian jewellery, but this
is not a truly commercial site Alagna is so anxious to prove his psychic
credentials that
he offers a free Tarot reading to all visitors. Perhaps a pilot from
Alpha Centauri will take him up on the offer.
6th
October 1999
Galactic
guide for astral travellers
Since
my teens I have wondered why people use alcohol or drugs to get out
of their skulls. Substance abuse is expensive, addictive and harmful
- and a pale imitation of the real thing. For the trip of a lifetime,
get "right" outside your skull.
Out-of-body
experiences (OOBEs) are among the most controversial paranormal phenomena.
Some researchers claim astral travel is just a vivid dream, or a sleep
dysfunction. Other say that the soul seems to step out of its flesh
as if stripping off its clothes - the spirit returning to its natural
state.
The
best-known OOBE is the near-death experience, when a patient suddenly
sees the surgeons and the operating table from above, or a crash victim
floats around the wreckage. Often a tunnel of light seems to pull the
spirit towards other spirit people.
It's
a unique and profoundly moving sensation - and can also be terrifying.
Charles Goodin's Astral Projection website is designed to take the fear
out of flying, not least because fear puts the brakes on an OOBE and
frequently sends the spirit back home with a jolt.
In
75 soundbites Goodin, who lives in Hawaii, takes beginners from choosing
a place to start - don't try to get out of your body while lying next
to someone who snores - to roaming the universe.
Much
New Age writing is mushy, particularly on the web, but Goodin's text
is sharp and spiced with clever quotes, the mark of a devotee who has
spent a lifetime honing these ideas. "Fear is like a 'Go to jail' card,"
he remarks, "and the jail is your body."
"Don't
just read, Do!" he exhorts. "I never met anyone who simply read books
about guitars and magically developed the ability to play."
He
doesn't have much time for expensive machines which claim to make OOBEs
easier. "There's a fantastic machine which can help you to leave your
body. It's called the brain ."
But
he does include several beautiful animations, of spiralling tunnels
and undulating landscapes, that could help to coax your spirit into
the ether. They resemble moving versions of 3D stereograms and seem
to lift right out of the screen, floating in the air above the keyboard.
Maybe computers can have OOBEs too.
http://www.tanega.com/astral/astral.html
Uri
Geller's novel Dead
Cold is published by Headline Feature at £9.99, Ella
is published by Headline Feature at £5.99, his Little
Book Of Mindpower by Robson Books at £2.50 and Jonathan Margolis's
Uri Geller, Magician
or Mystic? by Orion Books at £17.99. Visit his website at http://www.urigeller.com
and e-mail him at urigeller@compuserve.com
29th
September 1999
Scramble!
Aliens about
Aliens are controlling
Tony Blair’s brain, according to Serb newspapers. Dr Todor Jovanovic says:
"The extraterrestrials radiate something diabolical. They have a
hold over the brains of Bill Clinton, the British PM and other world leaders."
French
air force chiefs and space satellite engineers have sent a 90-page report
to President Chirac warning that, beyond any shadow of a doubt, UFOs
have been sighted repeatedly over Western Europe. Nato should be prepared
for the threat, they say.
The
first of these newsflashes is ludicrous. The second is sinister. I want
to know about both, and all the news in-between - the abductions, the
conventions, the videos, the artefacts. For decades UFOlogists relied
on phonecalls from friends and faded photocopies for the latest spacecraft
sightings.
Now
there is the web. And, most vitally, there is Michael Lindemann’s CNI
News. Lindemann’s fortnightly newsletter, so comprehensive it arrives
in three sections, is e-mailed to subscribers for a nominal fee. But
if you want to read the most astounding reports, the CNI team can’t
resist posting them for free on their website.
If
you’re a UFO sceptic, point your browser at CNI’s account of the four
of the best documented sightings. A policeman steps on board a UFO in
Nebraska; a famer is abducted in a field of lavender; three Texans in
a car are hospitalised after a saucer attack; US Army reservists in
a Bell Huey helicopter are pursued by weird lights.
Lindemann
is eloquent and furiously devoted to telling UFO truths. His CNI pages
show clearly why the web is a unique advance in communications - instead
of struggling to put his views across in books which appear years too
late under obscure imprints, he can e-mail the world as the news breaks.
His
revelations about a possible alien-human hybrid skull, for instance,
which I reported in Weird Web weeks ago, are only now being published
in specialist magazines - and it will be months more before the story
appears on bookshelves.
If
the French air marshalls are right and UFOs truly could be a threat
to Western security, our lives will depend on instant responses.
http://www.cninews.com/
Uri
Geller's novel Dead
Cold is published by Headline Feature at £9.99, Ella
is published by Headline Feature at £5.99, his Little
Book Of Mindpower by Robson Books at £2.50 and Jonathan Margolis's
Uri Geller, Magician
or Mystic? by Orion Books at £17.99. Visit his website at http://www.urigeller.com
and e-mail him at urigeller@compuserve.com
22nd
September 1999
No small
step for man, Apollo landings hoax?
Dozens of readers have
been emailing to alert me to strange sites - the web is getting weirder
every week. Maxine Amphlett made contact from a Hotmail address to tell
me the Apollo landings were hoaxes.
She
added angrily, "As a teacher of young children, I have a duty to
tell them history as it really happened, not a load of fantasy rubbish."
One
of my closest friends and mentors, Captain Edgar Mitchell, was the sixth
man to walk on the moon, as an Apollo 14 astronaut. I’ve never had much
interest in the NASA conspiracy theory that Neil Armstrong made his
‘giant leap’ in a TV studio. Ed Mitchell is a ferociously honest man
- to suggest his moonwalk was a hoax is ridiculous.
I liked Maxine’s email,
though, and visited the site she recommended. The picture archive and
analysis were a revelation. If these are genuine releases from NASA, one
thing is clear - the moonshots may have been for real, but some of the
photograph evidence appears to be crudely faked.
The
recurring flaw which mars almost all the 20 photos on display is their
backdrop. Pictures allegedly taken at different sites on different missions
share identical backgrounds. The same hills undulate, the same boulders
cast the same long shadows. And between each foreground and its background
runs a rough line, as if the picture was a collage pasted together badly.
Conspiracy
hunter David Wozney claims the photos were set up in remote US deserts,
and even points to hints of high-heeled shoe-prints in the sand round
astronauts’ feet. If he is right - and this evidence is less clear-cut
- there are only two explanations. Either the pictures were badly faked
on earth, possibly by a woman photographer with fashionable footwear
ill-suited to desert shoots ... or there are aliens out there in stilettos.
Wozney
doesn’t believe any astronauts ever made lunar landings. He calls them
AstroNots. I’m certain he’s wrong, but his damning gallery makes me
suspect NASA didn’t tell the world the whole truth about what it found
in space, and faked a lot of its evidence.
And
that leaves a big question hanging in orbit: Why?

[Clues:- Remember
that in a vacuum distant objects may be further than expected, that
nearer objects and horizons appear to move, depending on vantage point,
shadows may be off camera or hiden by uneven ground; a dark object nearby
may be misinterpreted as a shadow. Some shots may use different focal
length lenses etc.]
http://www.zyworld.com/apolloscam/h.htm
Uri
Geller's novel Dead
Cold is published by Headline Feature at £9.99, Ella
is published by Headline Feature at £5.99, his Little
Book Of Mindpower by Robson Books at £2.50 and Jonathan Margolis's
Uri Geller, Magician
or Mystic? by Orion Books at £17.99. Visit his website at http://www.urigeller.com
and e-mail him at urigeller@compuserve.com
15th
September 1999
The right
to know - pushed to extremes
Editors
can be difficult. They ask pointed questions. When I finished the first
draft of my mystery novel Dead Cold, the
editor wanted to know about pocket flamethrowers.
I
had been callously torching some of my characters, including a pompous
parapsychology skeptic - the plot was sheer wish-fulfilment. The killer
set up the crime to look like spontaneous human combustion, with nothing
left but the ashes and the wristwatch.
A
mini-blowtorch was the murder weapon, as the hero deduces, very nearly
too late. But, my finickitty editor asked, do these things exist?
Of
course they exist. In my imagination ... And this was fiction. But to
please my editor, I went fact-hunting, certain that somewhere on the
web someone would be sick enough to present a step-by-step guide to
making your own hand-sized napalm burner.
I
was right. I found it in the Temple of the Screaming Electron, a vast
archive of the type of information which gets the internet a bad name.
This is why another difficult editor won't let me give the URL in a
part of a newspaper read by families, although the story is worth telling
because it raises serious issues.
&TOTSE,
as its creators acronym it, began as a bulletin board, an on-line service
which had to be dialled direct. Now its electronic library of anonymous
submissions on everything from anarchy to Y2K are being switched to
the web, with access open to all. The US media has been aware of its
content since 1992, when it was labelled 'a clearing-house for crime'
by the National Enquirer.
Pocket
incinerators are baby stuff here. An efficient index steers visitors
swiftly to a recipe for serving human flesh, including a detailed guide
to skinning and butchering a corpse. Vengeance seekers can learn how
to destroy a car's engine with a plastic film container and a squirt
of soap, shoplifters can discover how to evade security cameras, high
school killers - like the duo who committed mass slaughter at Littleton,
Colorado - can make their own pipebombs and pistols.
For
light relief, discover how to go fishing with depth charges. There are
numerous non-violent topics, but the advertising will deter most studious
browsers - I clicked to read the entries on Judaism, and was connected
to an explicitly illustrated banner ad for voyeur webcams.
The
Temple's online priests justify their archiving by citing the First
Amendment to the US Constitution which guarantees free speech. They
claim to be making information available, rather than condoning it.
My
novel is light entertainment, and I was grateful to find the background
facts I needed at &TOTSE. But
the experience left me deeply uneasy - where is the border between background
for fun and background for mass murder?
www.totse.com
Uri
Geller's novel Dead
Cold is published by Headline Feature at £9.99, Ella
is published by Headline Feature at £5.99, his Little
Book Of Mindpower by Robson Books at £2.50 and Jonathan Margolis's
Uri Geller, Magician
or Mystic? by Orion Books at £17.99. Visit his website at http://www.urigeller.com
and e-mail him at urigeller@compuserve.com
8th
September 1999
Can a click
a day keep world hunger at bay?
Click
here to save a life ... or quit the site and leave a human being to
die from starvation.
The
Hungersite has created the most compelling reason ever to click and
view an advertiser's message - but is it callous product placement,
humanitarian aid or the weirdest slice of virtual reality yet to hit
the web?
And
the Hungersite's world map, where one of the poorest nations in Africa
or Asia will flash ominously every 3.6 seconds, to indicate another
death from hunger - is that a unique use of Javascript, conveying essential
information, or just the web's sickest screensaver?
The
United Nations, whose World Food Program is boosted by every cent this
site generates, is in no doubt. "It's great. We're absolutely happy,"
says UN spokeswoman Abby Spring.
Since
the launch on June 1, more than three million visitors have clicked
the 'Donate Free Food' button at http://www.thehungersite.com/
which connects to a page of advertising logos. Each sponsor pledges
to give half of one US cent to the World Food Program for every hit
on the page. Half a cent buys a quarter of a cup of food - rice, wheat,
maize or other staples.
With
four advertisers on the site, your click adds one cup of food to the
next lorryload. The Hungersite permits you only one click in 24 hours
- is it worth it going back tomorrow ? Your click costs global resources,
in electricity, bandwidth and PC pollution, and you might think it's
more economical to drop 2p in the next collecting box you see.
But
the site's mission statement is in no doubt: "Is it worth your time?
For a mother watching her child die in front of her from hunger, the
food that you donate is worth everything in the world."
The
site will really become valuable to the UN when it has dozens of sponsors,
and every click is worth bagfuls of food. That won't happen until its
popularity is proven - so your daily visit will have long-term benefits
for this entirely non-profit-making site.
UN
statistics say 24,000 people will die today from hunger and malnutrition.
The world has always known starvation - but this is the first time in
history that anyone in the insanely wealthy West can save a life without
lifting a finger. All your finger has to do is click.
Uri
Geller's novel Dead
Cold is published by Headline Feature at £9.99, Ella
is published by Headline Feature at £5.99, his Little
Book Of Mindpower by Robson Books at £2.50 and Jonathan Margolis's
Uri Geller, Magician
or Mystic? by Orion Books at £17.99. Visit his website at http://www.urigeller.com
and e-mail him at urigeller@compuserve.com
1st
September 1999
Telepathic
machines
A computer operated
by thought waves will be launched later this year, claims a US microelectronics
firm. MindSong, based in St Paul, Minnesota, is already patenting technology
which responds to human telepathic signals.
It
is not only PCs which will start up when our mind waves sweep over their
sensors - any electrical device, including light switches, will be sensitive
to thought power, according to MindSong president John Haaland.
"We
recognise," says Haaland, "that for most people, including the technically
and scientifically trained, the concept of a nonlocal field created
by intentions, which alters information states and affects physical
reality, is mind-boggling."
The
key word is 'nonlocal'. In twentieth century physics, as defined by
Albert Einstein, nothing moves faster than light. When we feel heat
from the sun on Earth, those heat waves have been travelling towards
us no faster that 186,000 miles per second - the absolute speed of light.
It's a 'local' effect.
But
according to quantum physics theory, the rules of the universe as applied
to sub-atomic particles, 'nonlocal' effects can occur, and some information
can be transmitted at faster-than-light speeds. That data includes our
thoughts.
MindSong
chips create a cacophony of white noise, chaotic random data which has
no pattern. Our brains, on the other hand, exude very pronounced patterns.
The most casual thought has a profound and elegant structure. Really
beautiful thoughts - such as the meditations of a mind absorbed by Bach
or Mozart - create mental fields which can apparently be photographed,
using techniques developed by the KGB during the Sixties and Seventies.
MindSong
has taken this research one step further, by identifying the patterns
of insubstantial thoughts, such as: "I wish my computer would switch
itself on." The white noise generators, tradenamed "ShifterCell," sense
the onset of a pattern, however faint, and react. The patent calls this
'an apparatus and method for distinguishing events which collectively
exceed chance expectations and thereby control an output'.
Other
Mindsong products include a Windows program called ShapeChanger, which
displays random pixels on the screen and invites you to mix two clusters
by exerting your mind. "Research shows," the website claims, "that through
willpower alone people are able to influence these shifting pixels far
beyond what could be expected by chance."
http://www.mindsonginc.com/
Uri
Geller's novel Dead
Cold is published by Headline Feature at £9.99, Ella
is published by Headline Feature at £5.99, his Little
Book Of Mindpower by Robson Books at £2.50 and Jonathan Margolis's
Uri Geller, Magician
or Mystic? by Orion Books at £17.99. Visit his website at http://www.urigeller.com
and e-mail him at urigeller@compuserve.com
25th
August 1999
Qi'gong's
healing power
China's Communist leaders,
terrified of the power wielded by an ancient Chinese cult, have banned
the Falungong movement. Its 30 million followers, many elderly, practise
a qi'gong regime of meditation and exercise which promotes health and
even miracle cures.
A
second qi'gong sect, Xiang Gong, is also being monitored. It too claims
to have 30 million adherents. And if one per cent of the stories told
about the wonders worked by qi'gong are true, Beijing will have to face
a hard fact: Communism has existed for less than a century, but the
paranormal has been changing lives in China since the beginning of history.
One
tale told by a qi'gong teacher crystallises the appeal of the 5,000-year-old
teaching, a hybrid of Tao and Zen. A young Chinese mother, riddled with
disease, lacked the strength to kill herself with a kitchen knife. As
she lay on the floor of her hut, she resolved to end the pain by starving
herself to death.
But
she had reckoned without the love of her children. As the six-year-old
spooned warm milk between her dry lips, the 11-year-old held a cloth
to wipe away spills. The woman was so moved by their love that she determined
to live at any cost, and dragged her dying body to a qi'gong clinic.
She was cured; now she cures others.
The
Huaxia Zhineng Qi'gong Clinic and Training Centre at Fengrun, two hours
from Tiananmen Square, has opened its doors via the web. Four thousand
people live there, including doctors, patients, teachers and students.
Run by Dr Pang Ming, it claims to be the largest alternative hospital
in the world, eschewing medicines and diet regimes in favour of its
own prescription: "exercise, love and life energy".
Life
energy is little different to faith healing in the Western tradition,
though the Chinese have been studying it far longer. Healing power flows
through the hands, controlled by the mind. Pang's clinic, which is a
non-profit organisation, claims an overall success rate of 95 per cent.
Little wonder the successors to Chairman Mao are so scared.
http://www.chilel-qigong.com/
Uri
Geller's novel Dead
Cold is published by Headline Feature at £9.99, Ella
is published by Headline Feature at £5.99, his Little
Book Of Mindpower by Robson Books at £2.50 and Jonathan Margolis's
Uri Geller, Magician
or Mystic? by Orion Books at £17.99. Visit his website at http://www.urigeller.com
and e-mail him at urigeller@compuserve.com
18th
August 1999
Guru on
the run
The family pleaded
and the neighbours protested, but Philadelphia detectives did not search
Ira Einhorn's apartment until Holly Maddox had been dead for 18 months.
When her dismembered body was found in a trunk, it had mummified.
Einhorn,
a New Age guru to rock stars and scientists who advocated LSD as a mind-expander,
paid his $4,000 bail and disappeared. The next 35 years were an era
of pursuit, crushing disappointment and reborn hopes for Holly's family.
The ex-cheerleader was Einhorn's lover and, when an American court tried
him in his absence, the jury had no difficulty in finding the fugitive
guilty. Neither did a civil court, which handed down a staggering $907
million penalty to Einhorn, who is currently in France and fighting
extradition to the US.
I
knew Einhorn in the Seventies. Not well - we were never friends, but
he regarded my mentor Dr Andrija Puharich as a father-figure. When Ira
and I met again through a private parascience mailing list run by Californian
physicist Jack Sarfatti, I contacted the alleged murderer and persuaded
him to appear on my US radio show, Radio America Network with host Doug
Stephan. It was virtually Ira's first interview for 37 years, and he
was angry with everybody.
"I
was a superstar, with incredibly good press, and overnight I was turned
into a demon," Einhorn raged. He claims Holly's body was planted in
his apartment by the CIA, or the KGB, who were desperate to stop him
from revealing their UFO secrets.
His
defence is an affront to the family, who have every right to be outraged
that Holly's killer is still at large and who maintain a website in
her memory. Yet Einhorn is truly convinced of his innocence and, self-deluded
or not, he still wields enough charisma to make anyone doubt their own
conclusions.
He
pronounces every word with conviction and a deep belief which is chilling.
As I close the phone on France, my soul is stirred with a profound uneasiness.
The only thing that is certain is Einhorn's reluctance to run again.
He has been in hiding for almost four decades. The end is near now.
http://www.amgot.org/holly.htm
Uri
Geller's novel Dead
Cold is published by Headline Feature at £9.99, Ella
is published by Headline Feature at £5.99, his Little
Book Of Mindpower by Robson Books at £2.50 and Jonathan Margolis's
Uri Geller, Magician
or Mystic? by Orion Books at £17.99. Visit his website at http://www.urigeller.com
and e-mail him at urigeller@compuserve.com
11th
August 1999
Dharma in our
digital age
As the stock exchanges
pump internet share prices into the stratosphere, web-sites are becoming
daily more desperate to clock up hits. Already today I’ve been invited
to click on the monkey and win $20, buy a car at cost price, put points
on my credit card with every mouse-click, and get a free PC.
Everyone
wants you online. Only Deepak Chopra could possibly reverse the flow.
On his elegant site he recommends: "The best thing to do might
be . . . turn off your computer, breathe deeply, and go for a walk,
or sing, or dance, or meditate ..."
Deepak
and I met for the first time on Wednesday, and we were both taken aback
by the sensation we had known each other a long time. Perhaps it was
a connection between like minds, or perhaps the vedic theory of reincarnation
is in action, as Deepak teaches at his Center for Well-Being.
His
site is full of fascination. It is commercial - he runs ‘the online
store of infinite possibilities’ - but the bulk of material is all free.
If you want to change your life and need positive inspiration, but you
can’t afford to buy Deepak’s books and tapes, log on. Each day he offers
a thought for meditation and explains a universal law - on Wednesday
the law is to do less, try less and fight less. Dr Chopra’s greatest
skill is in advising entirely the opposite to every other guru, and
instilling real sense into his advice.
The
multiple choice quiz is deeper than most - you answer dozens of questions,
not just with Yes and No but on a scale of 1 to 5. This made me think
hard about my answers - of course I would call myself forgiving, but
how forgiving? Am I a 5 out of 5?
Deepak
believes in dharma, a force which directs your life when you agree to
go with the flow. You cannot shape dharma - it happens. The multiple
coincidences that appear to buffet your path are really synchronised
aspects of destiny - synchrodestiny. It’s an intriguing notion and one
which he explains for free online, in a long and entertaining essay.
When
he and I met in Oxford last week, there had been no deliberate intent
on either side. Maybe it was our dharma.
www.chopra.com
Uri
Geller's novel Dead
Cold is published by Headline Feature at £9.99, Ella
is published by Headline Feature at £5.99, his Little
Book Of Mindpower by Robson Books at £2.50 and Jonathan Margolis's
Uri Geller, Magician
or Mystic? by Orion Books at £17.99. Visit his website at http://www.urigeller.com
and e-mail him at urigeller@compuserve.com
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