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A News about the Unearthly Fates: Prophecies of  Joeseph DeLuise
A News about the Unearthly Fates: Prophecies of Joeseph DeLuise

On the night of January 16, 1969, Joseph DeLouise walked into a Chicago cocktail lounge and requested to find a newspaper. He wanted to read about the two trains which had crashed somewhere south of Chicago. The guys in the bar suddenly paid attention. What crash? They had heard nothing about it. There had not been anything in the papers. Where?


Two hours later, at 1 a.m. on January 17, two Illinois Central trains collided head-on from the fog, 45 miles south of Chicago. Forty-seven people were hurt and three killed. It was the worst train disaster in the field in the past 25 years.


DeLouise had spoken to a radio show on December 14, 1968, in Gary, Indiana, also predicted that the crash could happen in five or six months.


He works as a hairdresser, never completed the eight grade, and, like many scryers, utilizes a crystal ball to make his predictions. On television and in the media he's foretold many disasters.



On November 25,1967, he predicted the collapse of a bridge. Three months later, on December 16, the Silver Bridge across the Ohio River in Point Pleasant, West Virginia, collapsed. Thirty-six people were murdered, and another 10 were reported lost.


On January 8, 1968, DeLouise predicted that there would be no significant riots in the nation in the coming year but that there could be a real "insurrection." On April 7, 1968, the governor of Illinois announced an outbreak of violence in Chicago to be an insurrection; 5,000 federal troops were flown in.


January 1970, police report

Joseph DeLuise predicted that ''Zodiac'' who had a love for flowers. I do believe his prediction was prior to the Lompoc Domingos / Edwards connection.




Police Chief Kinkead joins the hunt for a notorious serial killer who began his murder spree by targeting beautiful young women, and was now threatening to kill school children.This is the true story of a killer's confession...a confession that quickly turned into a curse, for both a lawman, and an entire family.

On December 15, 1968, DeLouise predicted that the Kennedy family would be involved in a tragedy connected with water. Afterwards, he "saw" a girl drowning in that circumstance. On July 18, 1969, Mary Jo Kopechne was drowned at Chappaquiddick in an auto accident between Senator Edward Kennedy.


On May 21, 1969, DeLouise called the crash of a jet airplane near Indianapolis. He explained that 79 people would be murdered and that somehow the amount 330 would be involved. At 3:30 p.m. on September 9, 1969, an Allegheny Airlines DC-9 collided with a private plane near Indianapolis. The four crew members and 78 passengers were killed, in addition to the pilot who had flown the personal plane.


The Magical Side Of A Mind: Exploring ESP and the Psychokinesis
The Magical Side Of A Mind: Exploring ESP and the Psychokinesis

ESP is the capacity to feel or know of events that aren't clear to the standard five senses, whereas psychokinesis is a natural force that may be used to physically influence the planet, without there being any physical contact. Together, both of these talents are called psychic abilities or so, and lots of researchers believe they're inherent in us all. Other scientists think that they are only bunkum, hoaxes, or magical tricks that have been demonstrated in controlled laboratory conditions.



The topic of ESP has been in existence for centuries under the guise of telepathy and clairvoyance, and there's some substance behind the possibility of its presence. Animals are known to possess instincts and perceptions which are inexplicable if we rely purely on the five based receptors. By way of the instance, trained dogs can sense when an epileptic person is going to have fit and can provide the victim enough of a warning to get drug and safety precautions to be taken. Advocates of human ESP imply we have similar abilities ingrained with organic instincts but our modern, comfortable lifestyles have enabled them to become dormant and unused.


Rhine would ask the subjects in his experiments that one of five, cards which he had been holding, — it would show a circle, a square, a plus sign, a celebrity or three wavy lines. The package would comprise 25 cards, and the success rate of this subject in contrast to the pure a number of chances gave a reading of if some outside, unknown sense was at play.


Rhine concluded that ESP was a real phenomenon which could be impacted by the individual involved in the experimentation. He discovered that when people were more relaxed and comfortable, their success rate would improve but when those being analyzed were bored, fearful or simply disliked the thought of ESP, their results would really be worse than probability. Particularly stressful, or traumatic situations are thought to encourage a lot more receptivity to instinctive perceptions. People who call themselves psychics are thought to be naturally in tune with their inherent powers, and may feel unexplained senses as easily as normal folks get the known five.



Many researchers, who completely disbelieve the idea of psi, point to the history of so-called psychics being shown as charlatans, con men or illusionists. Similarly, they question every part of the controlled experiments utilized to show the existence of ESP and point to how successful tests tend to be unrepeatable. Some scientists are ready to state there isn't any known force or sense which may be obtained or manipulated by the mind. It also has to be emphasized that ESP tests could be shown successful only by pure chance playing a part, whereas psychokinesis experiments are much less prone to chance.



Obviously, the lack of public comprehension of psychokinetic energy is a result of the very fact there haven't been any substantially successful evaluations, and that the evidence we do have of its existence comes only from anecdotal evidence. Having said that, the occurrence of poltergeists is well documented — if not lab tested — and is thought to contain a lot of psychokinetic influence.



Certainly, many conventional biologists and physicists would refute the presence of any forces which aren't explained by known science, and if such powers are bolstered by suspicious evidence, their credibility is questioned further. However, the general perception of his ability is rather different and recent polls have revealed that two-thirds of American adults believe they've undergone some occurrence of A ESR In many ways, the topic is comparable to the question of God or the individual spirit. Are there really forces we can control and feel, but that our intelligence can't yet understand?

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