How could I not list this in "Breaking News?"
If this is valid evidence, it seems a clear example of the wonders of the "species" Homo Sapien and of the great number of events that are difficult to impossible to fully explain with either science or our philosophies, Horatio.
Make that "all events."
Afterall -- how's a body to know?
Do we have eyes to see?
1 posted on
01/28/2004 4:27:04 PM PST by
unspun
To: unspun
Ludicrous.
To: unspun
I think a rather more likely explanation is that this is a fraud, but I guess anything is possible if you're credulous enough.
I'm waiting to be amazed.
To: unspun
My dad saw broken bones before they became broken.
4 posted on
01/28/2004 4:30:27 PM PST by
Cagey
To: betty boop; Alamo-Girl; logos; Kudsman; Dataman; lockeliberty; general_re; stuartcr; bondserv; ...
Submitted for your perusal, my fellow observers of the observable and thinkers of thoughts.
Or, can you see through this story?
5 posted on
01/28/2004 4:31:09 PM PST by
unspun
(The uncontextualized life is not worth living. | I'm not "Unspun w/ AnnaZ" but I appreciate.)
To: unspun
Walking downtown, I can tell when certain people are broke. I avoid them.
6 posted on
01/28/2004 4:31:51 PM PST by
glock rocks
(Badges? We don't need no steenkin badges...)
To: unspun
She is the first known X-MEN.
Maybe someone will make a movie.
:>))
9 posted on
01/28/2004 4:32:03 PM PST by
CROSSHIGHWAYMAN
(I don't believe anything a Democrat says. Bill Clinton set the standard!)
To: unspun
Weird. I'll reserve judgement, but this is coming from Russia, home of the Weekly World News-uh, I mean, Pravda. :-)
To: unspun
This is pathetic. Drudge needs to lighten up on the caffeine.
12 posted on
01/28/2004 4:33:43 PM PST by
4Liberty
(Got income? -- Run, taxpayers ! Vote no on PROP 56 (Calif.)!!!!!!!!)
To: unspun

Try this one, sweetheart.
To: xzins; BibChr; drstevej
great signs & miracles ping
18 posted on
01/28/2004 4:38:56 PM PST by
Starwind
(The Gospel of Jesus Christ is the only true good news)
To: unspun

Yeah, just like Uri Geller can bend spoons with his mind. Never mind that he's touchin the spoon with both hands.
To: unspun
Let's say I take her claim at face value. OK. She can do one simple thing to convence me. If she can see through a body and see broken bones, then she should have no trouble at all seeing through her own eyelids. I want her to read aloud a book chosen at random with her eyes closed.
To: unspun
Even more surprising is that anyone cares.
33 posted on
01/28/2004 4:53:50 PM PST by
lawdude
(Liberalism: A failure every time it is tried!)
To: unspun
Who knows the power of the human mind? I find this interesting.
37 posted on
01/28/2004 5:10:00 PM PST by
cyborg
To: unspun
Is she a witch?
38 posted on
01/28/2004 5:12:26 PM PST by
Jorge
To: unspun
"As for the future, she hopes to study medicine"Maybe she'd like radiology.
40 posted on
01/28/2004 5:30:17 PM PST by
Savage Beast
(Whom will the terrorists vote for? Not George Bush--that's for sure! ~Happy2BMe)
To: unspun
It seems that biblical-style miracles only happen today in Russia and places where word of mouth is taken as news. Thank goodness America isn't full of superstitious fools. Now, as for the face of the Queen of Heaven on my mud flap...
42 posted on
01/28/2004 6:34:51 PM PST by
gcruse
(http://gcruse.typepad.com/)
To: unspun
This is evidence that newspapers will print anything. This kind of crap seems to come around every ten or twenty years.
When I was younger the Russians had a woman who could read and see colors with her fingers. She had confounded all the Russian "scientists". About that time we had plants with feelings and ESP.
The constant here is the public's willingness to buy newspapers based on their hope that doing the same thing over and over again will somehow produce different results.
50 posted on
01/29/2004 7:44:12 AM PST by
js1138
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