https://www.afinalwarning.com/519721.html (Natural News) A new survey by
Only 56 percent of respondents believed in extraterrestrial intelligence at that time compared to 66 percent this year. In 2010, less than half of those surveyed thought that intelligent life on other planets existed.
“I’m pleased at these new poll results, but not surprised,” Nick Pope, a journalist and former unidentified flying object (UFO) investigator for the now-defunct
British Ministry of Defense, told
Daily Mail.
“They reflect the newfound respectability that the UFO subject is enjoying. The topic has come out of the fringe and into the mainstream, due to a stunning series of revelations in the last three years.”
El Yunque National Forest, formerly known as the Caribbean National Forest, lies sprawled out over 28,000 acres of thick rain forest in northeastern Puerto Rico, and is the only tropical rainforest in the United States National Forest System and the United States Forest Service and the biggest rainforest in the Caribbean as well as the. Read more »
The mask mandates are being lifted across the U.S. and many people are heading back to their gyms after a year or more of them being closed … well, except in Ashland, Ohio, where a woman leaving a 24-hour fitness center after her late-night workout encountered something she wasn’t in shape for – a nearly. Read more »
Some mysterious people in history have managed to create quite a lot of mysteries in their wake, often of a very supernatural kind. One of these was the woman born as Isabella Tomasi, who joined the Benedictine convent of Palma di Montechiaro, on the Sicilian island of St. Paul, Italy in 1645 at the age. Read more »
There seem to be certain haunting cases in which a person has been locked to a certain place, perhaps in a sense imprisoned there or tethered there by some calling. Born in upstate Syracuse on Sept. 18, 1833, Samuel Abbott became a decorated Civil War hero fighting for Union forces working his way up from volunteer ensign to first lieutenant before his duties there were done, serving in Company E of the 12th New York State Volunteer Infantry. He would go on to spend 50 years as a state civil servant, and even in his 70s he was working a job as a night watchman at the Capitol Building at Albany, New York, joining up at the age of 77. His shift usually began at 9 pm and lasted to 6 am, during which he would patrol 3 floors of the extensive State Library and Assembly Library kept there, encompassing 500,000 books and 300,000 manuscripts of great importance, often locking himself in so that he could better protect these treasures. The night of March 28, 1911 would start much like any oth