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The Consp----- Journal. Part 6.

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John Winston

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May 16, 2012, 5:56:27 PM5/16/12
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Subject: The Consp----- Journal. Part 6, May 16,
2012.

I have been asked to write a couple of paragraphs to a book
called, "America In Decline & Rise of the NWO", by Phillip
OConnell. I have written it and sent it to him. He has asked me
to see if their are any more people who would like to participate
in this project in this way. If you would like to do this, contact
him or contact me and I'll send him your e-mail address. This
book tells what is bad about the NWO.

This part of this posting has to do with a creature that had the
ability to change it's form.

................................................................
................................................................

Then just a second after the creature was gone from sight
something else odd occurred. A large bird, possibly an owl,
suddenly rushed at the passenger side window, almost hitting the
glass, then took off and did not return. It happened so fast
they were unsure if it was an owl or not.

The witnesses indicated that this creature appeared to be
changing form. The driver said, "Its shape was nothing like when
it was squatted". The woman stated to me that it "shaped into
another form." She thought it was a dark brown color, and looked
like a w-rewolf with a little back hair. She estimated that when
it was leaping into the woods, she thought it stood about 9 feet
tall. The woman while reluctant to say it said, "I think it was
a man changing into a we-ewolf". The man after the experience
went onto the internet to try to figure out what he saw, and
told me that the closest way he could describe the creature
would be a gargoyle with no wings. The man commented, "I will
never forget what we saw that night".

March 18, 2012
Fayette County Dragon
Fayette County, Pennsylvania

This incident occurred on March 18, 2012, in the southern part
of Fayette County in Pennsylvania. A man was walking his dog in
a rural location at about 11:45 pm. He was in the front yard and
away from any lights when his attention was drawn to look
upwards after hearing a whooshing sound coming from overhead.

Flying above him at a distance of about 55 feet was a large
flying creature that, "looked like a dragon". As the flying
creature passed over an automatic dusk to dawn light, the
witness was able to get a good look at the strange flying
animal. The body was about 22 feet long with a wingspan of about
18 feet wide, and looked to be shiny with almost a reflective
body with no scales.
Fayette Country Dragon

The color was dark, possibly brown and red, similar to auburn
brown. At the end tip of the wings there appeared to be talon-
like fingers about 3 to 4 in number. The arms of the wing
structure appeared muscular. The wings were quite thick, not
like skin. There appeared to be a rear fin on both sides of its
body, and the creature displayed at arrow head shaped tail. The
witness also saw what appeared to be two extended rear legs. The
creature had a cone shape around the head and it stopped flat on
the base of the neck.

The oddest physical feature that the witness mentioned to me
was that the mouth and eyes were illuminated with, "a very
ominous orange glow". As the creature flew over a tree at the
bottom of the yard and moved off in the distance, the fellow
heard a deep-throaty sound, similar to the fog horn on a boat.
The entire observation lasted about 20 seconds.

April 23, 2012
Creature with Glowing Amber Eyes Flies Away
Washington County, Pennsylvania

It was between 12:30 and 1:00 am, on the morning of April 23,
2012, when a man heard an odd animal sound coming from
outside.The sound was a level growl or screeching sound that he
listened to for about five minutes. The sound seemed as though
it was just outside the window. The witness, intrigued by the
odd noise, awakened his wife to see if she could recognize what
type of animal it might originate from.

When his wife got up and they both heard the sound, she looked
out the window across the road to a creek about 15-20 feet away.
She then noticed what she thought was a deer standing up in the
middle of the creek. Her husband questioned why there would be a
deer standing in the creek, and why it be making such a strange
noise. He then looked out the window and saw an undetermined
creature dark brown in color and about the size of a deer. It
could have been actually larger than a deer if it was peering
over the retaining wall. The fellow said when it turned its
head, it appeared to have an elongated face, almost deer shaped,
but not as stubby in the snout. It appeared to be more pointed
in shape.

What could be easily seen were two big round amber colored eyes
that seemed to be glowing. The man estimated that they looked to
be the size of a golf ball. He didn't think that they were
reflecting as a result of some street lights some distance away.
The witness commented that the freaky part was it was starring
right at their house towards them.

The couple noticed that whatever it was, the glowing eyes were
staring directly in their direction.

The man told his wife he was going out to check out what it
was. Just then something very strange occurred. Suddenly the
creature took one step, and took off into the sky at a 45 degree
angle and was gone. The witness stated, "the speed was insane. I
never saw anything move that fast." He also stated that he never
saw a bird that big and that he saw no signs of wings flapping.

If you have any information on these or other similar cases,
please contact Stan at
pa...@comcast.net

Source: stangordon.info
http://www.stangordon.info/wp/special-reports/three-mysterious-creature-encounters-reported-from-pennsylvania/

- TAKE A WALK ON THE DARK SIDE DEPARTMENT -

Hungry Ghosts: The Dark Side of the P-ranormal
By Michael P-escott

Years ago, on a whim, a friend led me into a New A-e bookstore
in Los Angeles. At the time I was a committed rationalist and
knew nothing about pa-anormal phenomena except what I'd read in
skeptical, debunking books. Unlike my friend, who found the
bookstore's atmosphere amusing, and who enjoyed pointing out the
bizarre titles and covers, I felt distinctly ill at ease. There
was something disturbing about being immersed in all that o-cult
literature. I felt as if I'd ventured into unknown territory -
dangerous territory. And I was glad to leave.

Later, as I became interested in the paranormal and began to
grasp the extent of the evidence for such phenomena, I chalked
up my earlier reaction to a form of culture shock. There I was,
a rather repressed rationalist, coming into close contact with
ideas I found threatening to my worldview. After all, there was
nothing actually dangerous about that little bookstore - was
there?

Maybe there was. Over the years, as I've studied this subject,
I've encountered a fair number of cautionary tales. People who
become unduly interested in p-ychic phenomena - interested to
the point of obsession - can find their mental health
deteriorating, their relationships fragmenting, and their social
status undermined. Of course, obsession is a bad thing
regardless of its focus, but I suspect that it's easier to
become obsessed with the par-normal than with, say, stamp
collecting. Something about this field of inquiry tends to draw
people in and make them vulnerable to harm.

The Curious Case of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle

Since I'm a writer, I take particular interest in the case of
Arthur Conan Doyle. Doyle was one of the most popular writers of
his day, and his Sherlock Holmes stories are still widely read
and dramatized. Fairly late in life he became convinced that it
was possible to communicate with the dead through mediums. As
his interest grew, he neglected his fiction writing and spent
most of his time traveling the world to attend sances and
deliver lectures on s-iritualism. His reputation suffered, and
he was the target of ridicule from some quarters. He had a
widely publicized feud with the debunking magician Houdini.
Editors began to dread getting Doyle's manuscripts in the mail,
for fear that his latest contribution would be yet another essay
on the talkative d-ad. Doyle's fame was such that his essays
were invariably published, but his editors weren't always happy
about that fact.

With the passage of time, Doyle's critical faculties suffered.
He became more credulous, more willing to vouch for even the
most dubious phenomena. Many of the mediums he endorsed were
later exposed as fakes. Doyle refused to accept some of these
exposures. Famously, he even accused Houdini himself of using
ps-chic powers, since - he felt - there was no way the escape
artist could have carried out some of his stunts without
pa-anormal gifts.

Most embarrassing was the often retold affair of the Cottingley
fairies. Two girls, ages 16 and 10, shot some photos of
"fairies" they'd allegedly found in their garden. The fairies
were paper cut-outs, and the photos were obvious fakes.
Nevertheless, Doyle endorsed the photos as genuine, even
publishing an article in The Strand Magazine with the
regrettable title "Fairies photographed - an epoch-making event."

Later he put out an entire book devoted to the subject, The
Coming of the Fairies. Skeptics have enjoyed skewering him for
his gullibility and foolishness ever since. The Cottingley
FairiesJames Randi devotes a chapter of his debunking book Flim-
Flam to a detailed dissection of the Cottingley case. And yes,
there is something funny about a presumably worldly and
sophisticated man, rich and internationally famous, falling for
a rather inept hoax perpetrated by two young girls. At the same
time, there is something about it that's both sad and troubling.

Part 6.

John Winston. joh...@mlode.com


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