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  1. And that is the kicker, the information particularly dealt with channeling(How it was procured)...The "Entities" said that they did not want to have the material set up in such a way that it could be proven(Nor was it intended to be produced/turn into anything), but in such a way that it could be accepted or rejected at will by anyone. I guess it is a way to keep the material from being abused or jammed down someone's throat? Helluva kicker, sort of like the whole "So where is a Bigfoot? Why no hard physical evidence? Why can't I/don't I see one out in the woods?...Well it is because they are to smart, to fast, blend in to well, to rare, you did this wrong, it takes such and such years to get the needed experience..." you get the picture XD Either convenient facts, or quick excuses. Red pill or blue pill I guess. I figured some people may have been interested in it, especially the whole two-different-kind of "Bigfoot" part and the ones we are mainly interested in/encountering most of the time live in and around caves part...technically 3 different kinds, the third they said was a "Thought Form", a psychological phenomena I guess. Or maybe if you get enough people thinking something or believing in something, it sort of becomes real? I have no clue... Of course! And I do realize that such things are regarded as taboo, or not that well understood(By me or most other people), just sort of something I picked up over time I guess. Went from Bigfoot, to ETs(Via Native American cultures), to things of a psychic nature. Most of the material that I have been jumping into was put together by LLresearch.com, that is the website, all of it is for free. The main books are The Law of One, 5 books on the site. Just click on Publications in the tool bar on the site. Dangerous territory to be sure(The Psychic phenomena/ET phenomena when put into practice IE trying to get abducted by/communicate with aliens, channeling, and crap like that) , most people that venture forth in blissful ignorance, I have discovered, end up having to run away from it. And for that conclusion that I have come to, all I can say is none. I have never tried and won't for a few years to be sure. I cannot imagine how anyone could expect another human being to believe any of it, no proof and it is just so far out there from the norm imo. It is a huge field that reaches far and wide, and easy to get lost in. I am still largely ignorant of it all. It is probably bigger than any other field of study, especially of a paranormal nature imho. I want to see a Forest Giant, I want to deal with that for sure, but I am not so sure I want to meet a ET...I will probably try anyway though...From my understanding they will not do anything to you that goes against your free will. Sort of strange, because some of the abductions sound like hell on earth to me. Actually on the site, go to search and type in The Law of One, that brings it up, 5 volumes all in pdf format...
    2 points
  2. Since all of the Holiday eating, I have slipped into the 4th density.
    1 point
  3. I would think that British Columbia matches all 5 of the reasons you spoke of in regards to the US. With one notable exception, once you leave the Metro Vancouver area there is nobody here. Something like 80% of all Canadians live within 100 miles of the Can/US border. Canada is slightly larger than the US in total landmass but we have roughly 10% the population. 3,000,000 Americans could probably sneak into Canada and hide in the bush and we wouldn't know We have roughly 35 million people living in a total area of 9.9 million square kilometers (3.8 million square miles) Yes the best thing about my country is that no one is here Estimated Population of British Columbia (2005): 4,254,500 British Columbia, Canada's westernmost province, is located on the Pacific coast of North America, and has a land and freshwater area of 95 million hectares. It is Canada's third-largest province and comprises 9.5 per cent of the country's total land area. The province is nearly four times the size of Great Britain, 2.5 times larger than Japan, and larger than any American state except Alaska. BC is 1.35 times bigger than Texas! There are only thirty nations in the world larger than British Columbia. B.C.’s 7,022-kilometre coastline supports a large shipping industry through ice-free, deep-water ports. The province has about 8.5 million hectares of grazing land, 1.8 million hectares of lakes and rivers, and 950,000 hectares of agricultural land that is capable of supporting a wide range of crops. The province is bounded by the U.S. states of Washington, Idaho and Montana in the south, Alberta on the east, the Northwest Territories and the Yukon on the north, Alaska on the northwest and the Pacific Ocean to the west. From south to north, B.C. stretches 1,200 kilometres, and from east to west as much as 1,050 kilometres. Its deeply indented, island-dotted coastline features an offshore archipelago in the north and a large island in the south. British Columbia is characterized by mountainous topography, but also has substantial areas of lowland and plateau country. The province has four basic regions: a northwesterly-trending mountain system on the coast, a similar mountain system on the east, an extensive area of plateau and mountain country between the two, and a lowland segment of the continent's Great Plains in the northeastern part of the province. The province is blessed with an abundance of waterways in the form of rivers, lakes, streams and swamps. Freshwater surfaces total 1.8 million hectares. Major river systems include the Fraser, Columbia, Skeena and Peace Rivers. Approximately 21% (20.3 million hectares) of British Columbia is rock or consists of alpine barren icefields and glaciers. Approximately 62% of British Columbia is forest land, with 48 million hectares, or 51% productive forest. Approximately 5% (4.04 million hectares) of British Columbia is arable and grazing land consisting of 2.6 million hectares cultivated land; 10 million hectares open range; and 0.4 million hectares Alpine and sub-Alpine range.
    1 point
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