Courtesy of Tim Beckley
Is the occult or poltergeist effective in this world? We’ve all heard of creeping doors, a mysterious cackling laugh; we’ve been haunted by dark shadows that escape our gaze so we shrug it off. But what about teleportation? Could these same etheric beings move people from one place to another without them knowing? With the advent of HD, we have an extra set of sensitive eyes, much more sensitive than our own, so we are able to capture these disappearances when they occur. But what about earlier periods? I discuss some of the news articles in Mysterious Disappearances. Some of the stories are frightening, some of them frightening and manage to be funny at the same time. In all of them, none of people have been found. Except for the story below, but then no one knows who he was.
Courtesy
of Expatriates Blogspot
Abduction
by Means of Teleportation
Nothing is worse than a child being kidnapped. According to Charles Fort in the years from
1907 to 1913, 170, 472 people disappeared from London. This day and
age, it’s doubled to 275, 000 Britons per year, according to The Independent
online newspaper. Back in 1910, an anonymous boy happened to have been
kidnapped from his home, school, playground, your guess is as good as anyone’s…somewhere.
Since the kidnapper never mentioned the location from which he kidnapped him,
nor the means he used to commit his crime, we’re left to draw our own
conclusions from the evidence which was found. Which was nothing at all. Even the
abductor’s reason for Kidnapping the poor English boy is mystery.
Sean Casteel, the author of this portion of the book, doesn’t specifically claim that the kidnapping
is a child-slave kidnapping, but he alludes to, and I think it’s a huge
possibility. See, when the boy was found, he was a grown man working at a
railway workshop in Gorakapur, India. The
poor guy remembered little of his home in England and needed to relearn his
mother tongue.
As far as how he could have possibly gotten to India in the
first place with scant evidence… How did that sneaky magician manage to pull
off that disappearing act without one shred of evidence left behind? Casteel poses teleportation
via occult means as the most likely possibility due to the lack of physical
evidence. Furthermore, no one saw him leave, no one- neither law enforcement nor
passengers on ships in England. And no one would have found the English
boy, if the dying magician didn’t send a letter to a Christian organization in
Nepal, confessing the abduction. Funny thing is, he actually cared enough for
the boy to want his memory restored (which was erased either through hypnosis
from the magician himself or amnesia from possible teleportation). Those are two
kidnappings he’s guilty of-kidnapping the English boy’s physical body and kidnapping his true identity. So, who was the boy? That will always be a mystery.
Courtesy of NBC News
Vanished
in an Instance
In 1985 painter John Osbourne had seen someone
vanish right before his eyes. As he was walking down a road in Wolverton,
England he heard hooves behind him, so he turned around. A man was having
trouble controlling his horse so he scurried out of the way, but when he looked
to see what was happening to the unhappy steed and his passenger, they had both
vanished. A newspaper, as if they had something to hide, retracted his story
after they published it. I guess they didn’t entertain hallucination or false
testimony as possible scenarios. No, according to the rewritten historical
narrative, the rider had been killed on the same road Osbourne witnessed the
disappearance, and the steed had been shot. But then they felt the need to
retract some more, so they claimed that the incident, rather than being days
old, was years old, and it involved a farmer on a hay field.
Snatched
from the Jaws of Nothingness
Could there be portals in time to explain these
disappearances? A man who was staying at Bristol Hotel in England actually
witnessed the floor open in front of him, and would have been dragged through
the vortex, if he wasn't rescued by his wife. There were ominous signs that
something was brewing that night, including some strange noise. It should be
noted, that though the painter in Wolverton was not suspected of schizophrenia,
the couple was. “Collective
hallucination” is what the police officially categorized it. Interesting that
they didn’t dismiss their case altogether as a fabrication, but that misstep
could indicate that they were aware something was going on. Perhaps even knew
what it was, and chose to hide it from the public for whatever reason.
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