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The Surreal World Of Urban Legend

 

By James Donahue

April 2006

 

While digging through news clips from around the world, searching for Luciferian News links, we occasionally come on stories that appear so fantastic we reason that they cannot be true. Yet some of these events are witnessed and/or experienced by so many of the local residents in the area in which they happen, they become urban legend.

 

We offer a few examples to make our point.

 

People in Frontera, Argentina, say they are terrified of the ghostly figure of a woman in a white flowing wedding dress that haunts the streets of their town. Children refuse to go to school without escorts early in the day, and street cleaners refuse to work the night shift after catching glimpses of this apparition. The stories prompted a local priest to conduct a special mass in an effort to calm what is believed to be an angry spirit. The ghost is said to be the spirit of a bride left at the altar, who died of sadness. Now she haunts the town.

 

In India, about two years ago, people in the state of Uttar Pradesh were dealing with something they called “muhnochwa,” a shining lying creature that swooped down on them and scratched their faces before flying off again. They called it the face-scratching creature for lack of a better name. Nobody knew what this thing was, or why it was scratching the faces of people. The creature hung around, terrorizing the place for a few months and then disappeared as mysteriously as it arrived.

 

Now people in the eastern India state of Orissa have something even more troublesome to deal with. They say they are receiving “devil calls” on their mobile phones that kill, or at least make the receiver sick. While the telephone company says the story is baseless and is probably a prank, the locals are switching off their mobile telephones rather than take a chance. They said calls from 11 to 14-digit numbers, instead of from the normal 10, are causing them to fall sick and sometimes die. The stories caused a state government official to investigate. He said he found nothing to support the story. It was dismissed as just one more urban legend.

 

The crop circle believers have been excited about a couple of unusual formations that appeared in a field near a British radio telescope. One of them has appeared in the exact shape of an image transmitted by the radio telescope into space in 1974. The story is that the transmission, a pictorial message, was beamed toward a particular star cluster that is 21,000 light years from Earth, near the edge of our galaxy. Within that cluster astronomers say can be found an estimated 300,000 stars. Was it a message returned from ET, or is it another urban legend?

 

 

 
















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