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Opening to The Mothman Prophecies 2002 VHS [Columbia/TriStar] Here is the opening to the 2002 VHS of .The Mothman Prophecies.. 1. Columbia/TriStar Home Entertainment logo (2001-2004)/ 'Coming Soon to Theaters' 2.
(Image by YouTube, Channel: LNK the VHS Guy) Details DMCA
Well, the "Mothman" movie stirred thoughts about the eagerness of some people to believe nutty things.
Back in the 1960s, I wrote newspaper reports on the original Mothman craze. After West Virginia witnesses reported a "man-size" bird with a 10-foot wingspan and glowing red eyes, I figured they had seen a huge crane in the night and gotten overexcited. But the Mothman tale was unstoppable. Ardent fans didn't want an ornithological explanation. Speculation grew.
Flying saucer buffs - who flock to such bizarre happenings like, uh, moths to a flame - held a worldwide "Congress of Scientific Ufologists" at a Charleston hotel in June 1969. Sponsors said a Philadelphia mystic who communicated with "space intelligences" foresaw a wave of West Virginia UFO appearances during the session. But none occurred.
The ufologist meeting was held behind locked doors. The public wasn't allowed to hear what I assume were startling revelations. I wrote that participants planned to discuss Mothman, and also discuss a local couple who claimed they had been visited by many angels. In fact, the couple said they, themselves, had turned into angels. That was the last I heard of the angelic West Virginians. I wonder if they're still around.
The Mothman craze was similar to the much-publicized Braxton County Monster uproar during the same era - but I won't bore you with the 584th retelling of the Braxton sighting.
In fact, I was trying to ignore all such dingaling topics, but someone sent me a book titled The Abduction Enigma. It says matter-of-factly that "between three million and six million Americans have been abducted" onto UFOs by space aliens who experimented on them. A Web site (www.abduct.com/irm.htm ) offers to perform "alien implant removal and deactivation" for victims. The price is $65 to remove implants inserted in your body by "gray" aliens, and $95 to extract those of "reptilian" aliens. That's a bargain, when you think about it.
I'll offer a wager: If you concocted the most preposterous claim imaginable - say, that Mothman reappeared and told you to start a cult worshipping him - I'll bet some followers would join your movement and give you money. The record contains plenty of corroboration. For example:
"- The mystic Judy Knight "channels" the voice of Ramtha, a warrior who lived in Atlantis 35,000 years ago. Hundreds of believers flock to hear Ramtha's revelations, and pay up to $1,500 per session. Actress Shirley Maclaine says she wept with joy upon learning that she was Ramtha's sister in Atlantis.
"- Members of the Heaven's Gate commune believed that if they "shed their containers" (committed suicide), they would be transported magically to a UFO behind the Hale-Bopp comet. So they did it.
"- Some New-Agers proclaim that magical "Lemurians" live inside Mount Shasta in California.
"- Members of Japan's "Supreme Truth" sect worshipped their guru so fervently that they kissed his big toe, paid $2,000 each for a drink of his bathwater, and paid $10,000 to sip his blood. At his command, they planted nerve gas in Tokyo's subway to kill commuters.
"- Americans spend $300 million a year on calls to psychic hot lines.
"- Armed militias out West contend that ZOG (the Zionist Occupational Government) is plotting to seize America for the Antichrist.
"- Science fiction writer L. Ron Hubbard declared that planet Earth was an alien colony 75 million years ago, and troublemakers were exterminated by nuclear explosions. Their spirits, called "thetans," became the souls of all humans. This assertion turned into Scientology, a billion-dollar religion that attracts Hollywood stars.
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