Rebecca Rosen Psychic Medium Interview VIDEO
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The popular psychic medium Rebecca Rosen is known worldwide as the “Psychic Mom”, and is sought after for her medium readings which can sometimes be stunningly accurate.
Rebecca Rosen’s site bio
Rebecca has mesmerized thousands of clients and audience members with her down-to-earth style and gentle nature, along with her stunning accuracy in her ability to connect with spirit. Rebecca’s broad appeal has led to many guest appearances, including Entertainment Tonight, The Rachael Ray Show and Nightline. Her uniqueness lies in both the amount of accurate, quantitative, and detailed information given to those she reads, as well as her graceful, healing approach in which she delivers the messages.
Astrology 2010 Predictions VIDEO
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Astrology 2010 Predictions by Susan Miller, in this great interview video. Learn what the future holds for you over the coming year 2010, and Susan offers some great insight all the way into 2012.
Allison Dubois Secrets of the Monarch VIDEO
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Allison Dubois renowned Psychic Medium talks about her new book Secrets of the Monarch where she explores life and death, along with their meanings.
From the Psychic Medium Allison Dubois:
In SECRETS OF THE MONARCH, Allison explains that if you want to understand life, you must understand death. She shows readers how communicating with the dead has taught her important lessons about life and how people can apply these principles to their own lives.
Allison stresses that every person’s life is part of a bigger story, stretching past family and friends to neighbors, community members and society as a whole. By making the most of your life now, she says you can positively affect that story. After all, if you already know the story will end, why not make the content a true masterpiece?
‘Essentially, it’s psychic nudism’
As Reported by irishtimes.com by Fionala Meredith, Psychic parties with specially equipped photographers to capture party-goers spiritual self are all the rage.
By Fionala Meredith
A new trend for ‘aura parties’ sees groups hiring specially equipped photographers to create images of party-goers’ spiritual selves. Feel-good fun, New Age nonsense – or both?
HAVING YOUR aura photographed feels alarmingly akin to laying bare your soul. Even if you approach it, as I did, with more than a little scepticism, you still feel wary of exposing your own personal energy field to the public gaze. Essentially, it’s a form of psychic nudism, and indulging in it exposes all the fears and hang-ups you never knew you had. What if my aura is all dark and murky? What if my chakras have stretchmarks? Worse still, what if the picture shows I’m pulsing with evil kinetic force on a scale to rival Lord Voldemort?
According to aura photographer Fiona Steele, fear of having a “bad” aura is the main concern that people have when they come to have their images recorded and interpreted. But there’s no need to worry. Steele won’t be showing or telling you anything you don’t want to hear.
Steele mainly practises her paranormal portraiture at fairs or at private gatherings. Aura parties, she says, are very much in vogue at the moment: groups of friends bring in an aura photographer and then compare results. Today, Steele has a stall at a New Age fair. Surrounded by tarot and angel card readers – including one burly practitioner who has tastefully draped the partially-unwrapped effigy of an Egyptian mummy over the chair beside him, where it lolls menacingly – Steele’s set-up, by comparison, looks refreshingly straightforward and business-like.
It’s not an invasive procedure; there are no wires or monitors strapped to your body. Instead, Steele seats me in front of a black screen, facing a specially adapted camera. My left hand rests on a device called a “biofeedback sensor”, a rather low-tech-
looking small blue box with raised silver buttons in the shape of a hand. These buttons, says Steele, correspond to reflexology points in the body, and can measure the electromagnetic field of the user, their spiritual energy, as well as the temperature, humidity and static electricity around them.
The box is wired up to Steele’s computer, where she can display the information as a radiant, colourful glow around the head and body, providing deep personal insights into one’s emotional, mental and spiritual state. This image purports to be “an electronic interpretation of the aura” rather than a picture of the pulsating energy itself, which apparently can only be seen by psychics.
Luckily, my aura emerges as a tasteful halo of luminous blues and greens. It looks good. It turns out that, despite my Voldemort fantasies, I am a lovely person, brimming with healing energy. According to my print-out, I even have a turquoise third eye, which apparently means I have “a compassionate, sensitive yet practical nature . . . helping, encouraging and nurturing others with equal amounts of firmness and affection”. My “green” heart means I desire only the best for everyone, and I do so “with a quiet, patient strength”, while my aquamarine solar plexus indicates “a mysterious ‘oneness’ or connection with all other living beings”.
Unfortunately, though, my mind/body/spirit balance isn’t all that it could be. Ideally, it should be cut into nice, even sections, indicating open-mindedness and the ability to hang loose. But my pie-chart shows that I approach the world predominantly with my mind – 73.13 per cent mind to be exact – as opposed to through my spirit and my body, which come in at a measly 13.21 per cent and 13.66 per cent respectively. Apparently I am happiest when I can use logic to substantiate my ideas – which would at least explain where my lingering scepticism comes from. A nice, relaxing holiday is in order, it seems.
The software Steele uses was designed in California, and the language, she admits, can be a “a bit cheesy”. Her own interpretation of my colours is more down-to-earth, less influenced by generic new-age speak. “You’re a sensitive soul,” says Steele, “and you need to watch you don’t over-do and forget about your own needs. You’re a bit inclined to over- analyse and worry. Try to concentrate on one thing at a time, to stop your mind going haywire.”
Good advice, and a fairly accurate diagnosis – although I’m still not convinced it has much to do with the power of the biofeedback sensor. But Steele insists that “nine out of 10 people say that the reading is accurate . . . they often say it’s something they knew already, but they just needed to confirm it.”
Fiona Steele herself is surprisingly un-mystical. “I’m a scientist at heart,” she says. “I like proof. But I believe that science and spirituality can meet.” Although she sees it as fate that she fell into aura photography (she trained in the United States two years ago), Steele is adamant that the whole thing is “a bit of craic”, not to be taken especially seriously.
“People sometimes want me to predict what will happen to them in six months’ time, and other things like that. I would never do that. I’m upfront, I just tell them that’s out of my jurisdiction. People can be vulnerable, and you get into dangerous territory when you take it all too seriously.”
In common with several other New Age practices, aura photography seems to offer a warm, nurturing blanket of unchallenging diagnosis and gentle advice. There’s nothing harsh or difficult involved, no unpleasant home truths to swallow. Everyone is a lovely person, and there’s no such thing as a sludge-coloured aura. But Fiona Steele believes that’s the strength of it. “If people leave me feeling good about themselves, then my job is done.”
AURA YOU FOR REAL?
THE CONTROVERSIAL practice of aura photography is broadly based on the work of Russian inventor Semyon Kirlian, who in 1939 discovered that if an object on a photographic plate is connected to a source of high voltage, the resulting “air glow” or “aura” that is created can be recorded directly on to film or paper. Such Kirlian images show fuzzy glows around fingers, leaves, and other objects.
Today, most aura photographers use an AuraCam 6000, a Kirlian-inspired camera invented by Guy Coggins, a Californian entrepreneur with a background in electronic engineering. Coggins’s company, Aura Imaging, claims it has worked with psychics to ensure that the colours produced by the camera match those seen by aura-reading psychics.
According to Aura Imaging, “the biofeedback apparatus measures the electral potential along the meridian points of the palm of the hand, then converts that information into an electrical frequency and displays this as colors and pattern which are shown directly over the portrait to represent the Aura.”
But sceptics remain unconvinced. Joe Nickell, of the Skeptical Inquirer journal, describes it as a “torturous process” involving “dubious electrically stimulated data from the hands, extrapolating it . . . to the entire body, translating the electrical frequencies into alleged colour equivalents, and then substituting for them simple flashes of coloured lights. [It]can scarcely be called photographing the aura.”
Irish aura photographers include Fiona Steele (auradiscovery.co.uk), Dublin-based Keith Kavanagh (www.keithkavanagh.com), who claims to be the Republic’s first aura photographer; Fiona Stewart-Williams, (www.psychicfiona.com) who says she can see auras as well as photograph them; and Stress Busters Ireland (stressbustersireland.com), which also offers reflexology and massage.
Christians Must Use Their Psychic Abilities
By Kelly Jadon
REALITY: A NOW SERIES
An Interview With Former U.S. Government Psi Spy Lyn Buchanan About Why Christians Need To Accept The Use Of The Subconscious
Controlled Remote Viewing (CRV) is a “specific form of applied parapsychology.” Civilians consider it Psi Spying. A taught science, CRV involves using highly controlled physical and mental protocols, allowing a viewer to locate information hidden within the subconscious mind and bring it to the surface of the conscious using the human body as the go-between or translator. Surprisingly, CRV is utilized by every government in the world. It has helped the U.S. Government locate the perpetrators behind the Lockerbie bombing, predict the movements of Saddam Hussein and his troops in Desert Storm, and find Colombian drug lords.
Today, in the civilian world, it is utilized in the search for missing children, medical diagnostics, business information collection, and other types of police work. Almost anyone can be trained in CRV. Because Controlled Remote Viewing can also be used in a negative manner, there are ethical considerations to the science that must be considered. Out of ignorance, the Christian community has generally steered clear of the subject of CRV, labeling the application as evil, or satanic. However, Lyn Buchanan, Christian and former Psi Spy for the U.S. Government, has a different view:
KJ: Lyn, when you were a youth, you had an incident with local Pentecostal church leaders in California attempting to “cast the Devil out” of you. You write in your book though that your ability to use your mind to cause things to happen—physical manifestations did not feel wrong. Yet you continued with your emotions about guilt and horror, “It had nothing to do with conscious and subconscious talents. To my fourteen-year-old mind, it meant only that God and Satan both were testing me. I was in a huge tug-of-war between them, and it required even more diligence of me, or my soul would burn forever in Hell.”
If you could go back to that time and place, and perhaps you already have, through CRV—what would you say to that boy who was accosted by local Christian leaders?
Lyn Buchanan: I think that I would now tell him that alongside Christianity, there is a thing called “Churchianity.” That is, beliefs and practices which are held by local churches and denominations, but not really a part of Christ’s teachings or goals. I have found over the years that when there is a conflict between the two sets of beliefs within a church or within a church leader’s belief system, the “Churchianity” seems to always win out. My father worked for the railroad, so we moved a lot. As we moved from city to city, we moved from Baptist church to Baptist church, and even at that young age, I was aware that the things that would send you to Hell in one church were always slightly different than what would send you to Hell in another. I also realized that beyond all the differences, there were things that remained the same. As I grew up, I realized that there are universal constants in God’s and Christ’s teachings which, to me, at least, overrode the local ones created by preachers and local congregations. I began testing local beliefs against the word of God and found that most of “Churchianity” is only interpretation. That little boy, back on the streets of California didn’t know that, and so, he trustingly believed that “if the preacher says it, then God says it, too.” He didn’t know that you can’t just accept what someone else says about God in order to know what is right and wrong. You have to have a personal relationship with God. You can’t just let someone else be religious for you – you have to know Him, yourself.
What would you have children/youth today know about psychic abilities if they believe they have more talent than others?
Well, this is probably going to sound a little strong, but the bottom line that I’ve come to understand in my own life is that if God gives you a gift, it’s for a reason, and that it’s probably a sin NOT to use it. There have been a lot of people come to me and condemn me for “being psychic.” I am what God made me.
A lot of people think that “psychic” is a four-letter word, and that it is automatically evil, in and of itself. They just automatically assume that in the military, we used the science of Controlled Remote Viewing (CRV) to kill people or bring occult forces into play, etc. The fact is that we used the science to find and help rescue hostages, to save soldiers’ lives, to warn our leaders of what evils other leaders had planned, etc.
I always talk to the Jehovah’s Witness missionaries when they come by. They are dedicated to their beliefs and I respect that. They are almost always very sincere and honest. But once, one of them brought his higher-up (whatever they are called) to talk to me. He kept saying that Satan was only letting us do such good things in the military in order to steal our souls… that the fact that I had used intuition in the military meant that our entire country would go to Hell. He looked around the room (never at me) and recited rhetorical phrases from church doctrine, not from the Bible. When I asked about Jesus saying, “…by their fruits ye shall know them,” I was ignored.
I was in a store some weeks later, and was approached by a young girl who had visited with our regular Jehovah’s Witness missionary. She said that our regular missionary always briefed them before coming to my house that they would be meeting the Satan incarnate (me), and to pay attention to the fact that he didn’t seem evil on the surface, but that was just his way to fool you. She then confided in me that she had had many psychic events take place in her life, and that she was both afraid of them, and lived in mortal fear because her church told her she would go to Hell for things over which she had absolutely no control.
To answer your question, I would tell the children/youth of today that God gave us many more abilities than we can ever realize. I would also tell them that an ability is both a gift and a responsibility. Being what God made you is not going to send you to Hell. Using it for evil or refusing to use it at all is wrong, but using it to bring good about in the world, and using it to His purposes is neither evil nor wrong.
How should our church leaders begin to understand the mind—conscious and subconscious—and its workings?
Our church leaders should get their heads out of the sand and deal with the fact that God made us wondrous. They should stop basing their faith on religious sound-bytes and start realizing the wonderful array of natural tools God has given us to perceive His world and do good in it. Instead of just blanket condemning people for talents that they were given, they should teach people to use those talents for the good that can be done with them.
How is the mind’s capability NOT associated with the Devil?
Oh, I think that Satan can use anything and everything for evil that God gave us for good. The necessity to eat and drink can turn to gluttony and drunkenness. The ability to do anything can be turned to less-than-holy purposes. What we are and the talents we have are associated with God, but the Devil can associate himself with us through them. That is why I think that it is the church’s responsibility to stop ignoring this ability and to teach people the responsible and holy use of it. I believe that it is the church’s dismissal of this ability that has left so many of those who have it with no other place to turn to except to the occult. Then, the church has pompously declared that it was right to condemn it. That is no different than keeping a part of society from getting a good education and then saying, “See! I told you they were stupid!” Or keeping a part of society from getting jobs and working for a living, and then saying, “See! I told you they were lazy!” The church has its own self-fulfilling prophecies. In the case of intuitive ability, the church has taken a wondrous gift of God and wasted Christianity’s chance to use it for the good it can do.
You write that CRI –Controlled Remote Influencing, can be used to harm others. In fact, you were asked to kill Mikhail Gorbachev. I understand that you do NOT condone this, as you find it unethical.
I firmly believe that the use of both CRI and CRV can be used for both good and evil, just like any other thing we can do. I would never condone the evil use of either.
Obviously, this behavior could be viewed as evil.
Are you saying that CRI, in and of itself, is evil? No. It is just a tool. The evil use of CRI is obviously evil. But it can also be used to convince cruel leaders not to conduct mass killings and war. It has medical applications. It can be used to help people heal their bodies. It can even be used for such mundane things as helping people stop smoking, stop needing a drink, stop needing drugs, etc. Don’t assume that because something CAN be used for evil, that it is evil. The improper use of the word, “love” has done more damage throughout history than probably any other word. But I would never condemn the word as being evil.
How does CRV differ from CRI?
The only difference between CRV (viewing to gain information) and CRI (influencing) is that one is passive and the other is active. They are two sides of the same coin.
And what stops have been put in place to prevent its misuse?
Unfortunately, there are no humanly created stops put into place to prevent people from misusing anything. There are laws put into place to punish people afterwards, but by then, the deeds are done. The stops which are put into place to prevent the misuse of CRI or any other tool we’ve been given are God’s laws and teachings. Our society focuses on the human-created laws and often forgets teaching the God-created laws. Those are the laws which, if taught to our children, will stop the misuse of anything.
Lyn, you write that you have followed people and their spirits into Heaven and Hell. Would you describe these places.
I will amend that question to include both “reincarnation” and “nothingness.” In my sessions, I found all four cases when following people into the “afterlife.” I always believed that there was no such thing as either of those two, but in sessions, there were times when they also turned out to be the final end. I came to the conclusion from those sessions, that when the church teaches you that the only options are Heaven and Hell, it may be “Churchianity” more than “Christianity.” And, in fact, I have since learned that the early Christian church accepted all four of these possibilities, too.
But to your question – whenever the person went to what I would call “Heaven,” it was wonderful beyond anything I have ever been able to put into words. I would stay in that session as long as possible, knowing that I was only seeing a part of it, but also knowing that that part was more than I could ever see on Earth. After one of these sessions, I would spend the next month or so in a feeling of shared ecstasy. On the other hand, whenever the soul went to what I would call “Hell,” I would experience it in session for maybe a hundredth of a second and would immediately recoil in such horror that it would throw me completely out of session. For the next month, just from that one one hundredth of a second, I would have nightmares and night terrors. The misery would follow over to the daytimes and into almost every waking moment. My advice to everyone would be…. Don’t go there. Do whatever you can to not wind up in that place. I’ve seen people laugh and say, “Yeah, I guess I’m going to Hell for my ways!” If only they could realize – even for one one hundredth of a second what that means – their ways would change. Don’t go there. You won’t like it.
In a CRV session, you met Jesus. Would you say that he is real?
I have absolutely no doubt about that. He is real.
What was your perception of him?
Well, believe it or not, he looked like a short Jewish guy. He didn’t have long blond hair and a European look. He was wearing a modern business suit, not a robe. He was the most peaceful and self-confident person I had ever met, and just being in His presence gave me an assurance that evil had no chance to overcome, here. I have never met anyone like Him before.
And most importantly, what can you tell others about him?
The session that day was a practice session on getting personality profiles – a thing which we usually did on foreign leaders and military people. CRVers are never told what or who the target is, in order to keep their logical mind from polluting the session. In this session, the target (the name, “Jesus”) was sealed inside an envelope, and not even the monitor knew what the target was that day. He only had instructions that the session was to be a “personality assessment.” We both assumed that it was some foreign leader – some distant bad guy that the government needed to know about. But the very second I “made contact,” I immediately told the monitor, “Whatever evil they think this guy did, he didn’t do it.” As the session continued, I became aware that I was in the presence of the most amazing person I had ever met. He never spoke to me throughout the whole session. I gave physical descriptions and the only personality description I could come up with was that this target person was the purest, most perfect person I had ever met. The final summary for that session was the same as my first comment to the monitor.
Later, after the military, one of the other remote viewing trainers asked me once, “You met Jesus? What did He tell you to do? What did He say?” All I could reply was that He didn’t have to say anything to me or tell me anything to do. Just being in His presence, I already knew what I should and shouldn’t do. I already realized what I was and was not. One thing that also became clear were the differences between Christianity and the “Lyn-ianity” that I had built throughout my life. I learned that to Him, the worst evil that I had ever done in my entire life – as well as the greatest good I had ever done – were miniscule. He didn’t condemn me for my sins, nor did he praise me for any good or accomplishments I had done. Instead, He accepted me. The Son of God stood there and in spite of all that I am and am not, in spite of all that I have and haven’t done – He accepted me. That changed my life from then on.
I got two personality profiles that day… His and my own.
CRV today is used outside the government through your business. How do you help others with the application of CRV today?
We do a lot of public service work – helping locate missing children, criminals, and evidence for the police, etc. We also use CRV to help businesses, help in R&D, archeology, revealing those facts about historical events which were not written about by the victors, etc. We teach people how to do CRV, and teach courses in the medical applications of CRV – both diagnostics and helping others to heal themselves. We are still continuing to find new non-military uses for this science.
Parting words for readers?
…..I would simply repeat the last line of my book…… that no matter what anyone tells you to the contrary, “It really is OK to be psychic.” If God gave you this gift, then there was a reason. Learn to use it correctly and learn to use it for Him, and don’t ever let the teachings and preachings of man stop you from using it.
I think that I should also add that CRV is a science, developed in the laboratory. Other than things like doing personality assessments, it is physical world, only. No auras, no spirit guides, none of the stuff that you normally hear from psychics. I think that psychics are probably doing something right, or else they would have faded away long ago. But I have little or no interest in such things. When I came out of the military and all this was declassified, people assumed that I would know everything about UFOs, aura reading, “soul entrapment,” possession, etc. I didn’t. I had been a soldier, doing his job – performing a scientific process that I had been taught… albeit a process which would later come to be called “psychic spying.” Even still, when people want to talk to me about what I call, “woo-woo things,” I tell them that my interests lie in bringing missing kids home, getting criminals off the streets, saving lives, and helping people with real-world problems. That is where my interests lie.
Leonard (Lyn) Buchanan today is the Executive Director of Problems> Solutions>Innovations (P>S>I) which began after Lyn’s retirement from the military in 1992.
Lyn has been plagued throughout his life with “psychokinetic” events. One fateful day in Augsburg, such an event, parts of which are still classified, happened and brought about official recognition and record of his “ability.” Shortly thereafter, the commander of the U.S. Intelligence and Security Command decided, because of these abilities, to transfer him to the special “psychic spying” unit at Ft. Meade, Maryland, where he planned to have Lyn affect and/or destroy enemy computer systems. This plan was aborted for funding reasons, and Lyn became one of the unit’s Controlled Remote Viewers instead (1984). He remained there on special assignment for the rest of his military career.
In late 1995, when the U.S. government declassified their Remote Viewing project, information became public about Lyn’s prior involvement with that project as one of the unit’s Remote Viewers, Database Manager, Property Book Officer and as the unit’s Trainer. Public demands for training and applications became great, and P>S>I moved into the remote viewing field full time, bringing with it Lyn’s extensive databasing capabilities. At the present time, P>S>I possesses the most complete body of data on the use of remote viewing in real-world applications.
Lyn has a personal drive to take this technology completely out of the “spooky” realm and find the scientific and technological causes behind it. To this end, he maintains a strict database on all operations in order to conduct as much research as possible.
Source: Basil & Spice
Belinda Bentley Celebrity Sex Psychic
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Belinda Bentley is one of the only “sex psychics” around, giving advice to the stars and frequently appearing on numerous celebrity TV shows, as she describes on her site.
This is a truly unique discipline, focusing only on sex related issues has made Belinda a fast rising star in hollywood circles.
Belinda Bentley is now a Celebrity Psychic being featured in all aspects of media worldwide, including Star Magazine, Diva Magazine, Darkness Radio with Dave Schrader, Playboy radio,VH1, E! and her own radio show ?Disturbed Paranormal? with co – host, Hale S. Mednik. Although most celebrity clientele is kept confidential, Belinda has worked with Dave Navarro on Spread TV and has been named his “In House Psychic.” She has also been linked to other Hollywood celebrities!
In the beginning, being a psychic medium was far less glamorous. Born in Los Angeles, California, Belinda, was raised in a very religious home. Both of her parents were Jehovah’s Witnesses. They had very strict beliefs about the paranormal and the spirit world to them it was all demonic. Belinda, was terrified when the family moved into a haunted house when she was only five years old. “Everyone in my family had experiences with the ghost there”, she says. She remembers doors opening by themselves, seeing a female ghost, disembodied voices calling her name and objects moved on there own. Seeing shadows of people when she was home alone after school was so scary she’d spend hours alone outside waiting for someone to return home and at night her family would hear people splashing and playing in the pool, but the pool was empty.
Years later a friend discovered Belinda was psychic when she could describe events that happened long before the two friends had met. The friend began bringing family members to get readings from Belinda. “I didn’t know what I was seeing was considered psychic. I thought it was common sense.” After a short time, Belinda stopped doing readings and being a psychic was long forgotten.
In the year 2000, Belinda moved to New Zealand. Seeking answers and a new direction, Belinda received her first psychic reading. The psychic was very accurate in the things she told Belinda. This sparked her rediscovery of being psychic and the paranormal. She decided to completely throw herself into developing and discovering her psychic abilities studying and reading books by renowned psychic Sylvia Browne. Her stay in New Zealand was coming to a close, and Belinda had begun doing tarot card readings for friends, a few Lord of the Rings actors, and even strangers. Word had gotten out about this amazing psychic, and people began to travel to come see her, driving as far as three hours to hear her supernatural wisdom.
While on the plane returning home to the United States, Belinda felt it was only natural to start doing psychic readings professionally and teaching Reiki as she was a Reiki Master/Teacher. Belinda shares, “Reiki was the best thing I have ever done for myself”. You start to realize we are all connected.”
In the future Belinda will continue doing reality TV, donate time and readings to charities and she’d also like to get involved in scientific research of psychic phenomenon. “My gifts and focus will continue to change, but the out come for the common good of all will remain the same?!
Sex Psychic – Belinda is the ONLY sex psychic. Helping celebrities to house wives deal with sexual issues, unsatisfactory love lives or enhancing a healthy sex life. Single, gay, straight, lesbian or the 30 year old virgin…there is help for everyone.
Saudis Will Not Behead Lebanese Psychic
As reported by the AP, in a turn of events the Saudi’s have decided not to behead a Lebanese Psychic for witchcraft, which we had previously reported on.
A Lebanese TV psychic, who was condemned to death for witchcraft by a Saudi court while visiting the country, will not be beheaded, his lawyer said Wednesday.
May al-Khansa told The Associated Press that the Saudi ambassador in Beirut informed the Lebanese justice minister that the execution of Ali Sibat would not take place.
“He confirmed to me that there will be no execution,” al-Khansa said about her conversation with Ibrahim Najjar, Lebanon’s justice minister. She refused to go into details but said “matters are going in the right direction.”
“We have faith in Saudi Arabia’s judicial system,” she added, noting that Sibat’s actions are not considered a crime in Lebanon.
Sibat is one of scores of people reported arrested every year in the kingdom on charges of practicing sorcery, witchcraft, black magic and fortunetelling, which are considered to be polytheism by the country’s ultraconservative judiciary.
The father of five was arrested by the Saudi religious police while making a pilgrimage to the holy city of Mecca in May 2008 and sentenced to death last November on charges of practicing witchcraft.
Sibat, 49, made predictions on a satellite TV channel from his home in Beirut, where psychics, fortunetellers and astrologers operate freely. Many have regular TV and radio shows and some cafes even hire them to attract more customers. On Dec. 31, they jostle for air time to give their predictions for the new year.
According to his lawyer, he was the most popular psychic on his channel, especially among callers from the conservative Gulf.
After Mecca, Sibat went to Medina to pray at the Mosque of the Prophet. At his hotel, members of the religious police who enforce the kingdom’s strict Islamic lifestyle spotted him and grabbed him.
Earlier this week, a Saudi judicial official said the country’s highest appellate court had upheld the death sentence and asked the nation’s Supreme Judicial Council to set a date to carry out the execution.
Saudi newspapers have reported that the Court of Cassation had first rejected the case and asked the lower tribunal to offer Sibat a chance to repent. It was not clear if he was given that chance.
There has been sporadic media attention to his case. The report of his imminent execution earlier this month brought a flare of calls in the Lebanese press for his release.
Some Lebanese has also rallied near the Saudi embassy in Beirut to protest the execution sentence.
New York-based Human Rights Watch said last year Sibat’s death sentence should be overturned and called on the Saudi government to halt its “increasing use of charges of ‘witchcraft,’ crimes that are vaguely defined and arbitrarily used.”
Our thoughts and prayers go out to the family of the lebanese psychic, and we hope that a quick outcome occurs.
Psychic Joe Power Makes Waves In Britain
Psychic Joe Power claims his ‘gift’ began in his childhood with a heightened awareness of the spirit world, but it was not until the death of his brother under suspicious circumstances that he finally embraced his ‘ability’ and decided to explore his “vast talents”. Following ten years of study and practicing at the country’s top psychic schools, he has won various awards, assisted in numerous police investigations, and convinced countless cynics that there is life beyond the world as we know it.
From Joe Powers personal website:
Joe Power’s phenomenal psychic/medium ability began with a heightened awareness in infancy and exploded into a virtual army of spirit visitors who popped in unexpectedly, followed him around and invaded his every move. His remarkable odyssey through a frightening childhood cluttered with dead people, teen violence, gangs, prison and alcoholism is shared in pungent honesty in his new book The Man who Sees Dead People published by Penguin Bookstm May 2009.
It wasn’t until his brother died under suspicious circumstances and an amazing visit with him on the spirit side that he decided to explore his vast talents. He spent ten years studying and practicing psychic mediumship and now believes his difficult past was preparation for helping people with all levels of problems.
His psychic gifts are in constant demand and with private readings and he tours theatres across the UK with his Evening of Clairvoyance. He has appeared on numerous television and radio shows, been featured in many magazine and newspaper articles, promoted the X Files Movie “I Want To Believe” for 20th Century Fox, is a regular on radio stations nationwide, and is constantly featured in National Newspapers.
Joe’s true interest lies in using his psychic/medium abilities to help solve murder mysteries. The spirit world has actually called on him to help solve the tough cases that baffled detectives. Since 2000 Joe has been involved in several high-profile murder cases, including the country-wide search for nine year old Shannon Matthews. Joe has worked with The Met, Merseyside Police, Spanish Police and a criminal justice company.
His most recent exploration is the case of sixteen year old Amy Fitzpatrick, the Irish teen who went missing in Spain on New Year’s morning. A national Irish newspaper paid for Joe to fly to Spain and investigate. He appeared on Ireland AM the top morning chat show in Ireland, and hit headlines with his information leading him to meet with the Spanish Police to help with there inquiries. Joe continues to investigate and work tirelessly on other unsolved cases around the world, using his gift to help grieving families find closure.
Psychic Sorcerer Condemned to Death
As reported by livescience.com, Ali Sabat the host of a lebanese TV show has been condemmed to death for sorcery.
Ali Sabat was supposed to die last week.
Sabat, the Lebanese host of a popular TV show, for years gave his viewers psychic advice and predictions. This may cost him his life.
Many people around the world claim to foretell the future, talk to the dead, and do other amazing (if scientifically unproven) feats. So what’s the problem?
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Sabat is a Shiite Muslim, and many Muslims—like many fundamentalist Christians—consider fortunetelling occult and therefore evil. Making a psychic prediction is seen as invoking diabolical forces, perhaps even entering into a pact with Satan. Fortunetelling, prophecy, and other forms of divination have been condemned by Saudi Arabia’s religious leaders.In 2008, while on a pilgrimage to Saudi Arabia, Ali Sabat was arrested by that country’s religious police, the Committee for the Promotion of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice. His crime: sorcery. Yes, people can still be accused of practicing witchcraft and condemned to death for it nowadays.
According to the human rights group Amnesty International, a court last month upheld Sabat’s death sentence, with the judges deciding “he deserved to be sentenced to death because he had practiced ‘sorcery’ publicly for several years before millions of viewers.”
He was scheduled to be publicly executed last Friday, but his beheading was deferred.
Sabat is not out of trouble; he did not receive a reprieve, merely a temporary stay of execution.
In an ironic twist, Sabat might save his life if he confessed that his psychic predictions and powers were all a hoax (or an act merely for entertainment) and therefore not a true exhibition of occult powers. Hopefully Sabat’s death sentence will be repealed, but it does seem odd that his psychic powers didn’t predict this travesty in the first place.
Psychic Medium Allison DuBois: Are Spirits Bound To Us?
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Famed Psychic Medium Allison DuBois which the hit T.V. show “Medium” is based on, talks about Spirits which are bound to us in this excellent video.
Allison offers private readings and seminars on a regualar basis, from her website:
I do book private readings. To get on the list you must ATTEND one of my seminars and ask to be added to the Private Reading List. I do this, because those who attend my events are able to both witness readings and become aquainted with my style. They leave understanding the process of a reading and this puts us on the same page energetically. Powerful readings have resulted from this practice and that’s my intention for every custom reading. You may not add other people’s names only your own to the list.




