Musicians of all kinds are being asked to play at festivals that turn out to be Neo-Nazi gatherings. Peter Haworth and his Celtic band were getting ready to play at “Euro-Fest 2003” when he noticed something wrong. He says, “You should have seen what they were selling there! They had Mein Kampf and little baby blankets in blue and white with little swastikas all over them. It was horrible.”

Mark Potok reports in the Southern Poverty Law Center that many innocent musicians are being seduced into playing at Nazifests. At the “Euro-Fest,” women in Bavarian outfits sold copies of “ABC: Aryan Beginnings for Children,” and “Talk Back,” a White Student Alliance publication. Photos were on sale of beautiful blonde girls giving the Nazi salute.
read more

In 1978, there were reports of a UFO sighting in St. Helen’s in the U.K., when a UFO hovered over the power station before shooting away at speed. One of the witnesses, Robert Bennett, has revealed that as he sat in his living room with three policemen, listening to sighting reports over the police radio, he overheard a conversation saying that the UFO had landed in a nearby field.

The St. Helen’s Star says that Bennett came forward with his testimony after local journalist Ian Brandes wrote that he saw a report about the UFO in a police database, where it was classed as an incident of “Defense Significance.”
read more

We recently reported that astronauts on board the International Space Station said they saw strange lights in space. NASA has discovered these were incredibly high auroras, produced by the recent solar storms, although they still don’t know how this was possible.

Auroras are usually only seen from Earth, close to the poles. They are generated by solar storms, and with space storms at a historical high, people recently saw auroras in 49 states. But until the recent astronaut reports, researchers didn’t realize they could also be seen from space.
read more

Mick Henry, a retired builder from Yorkshire, England, has discovered he’s actually a chief of the Ojibway tribe in Canada, and owns thousands of acres of land there. He’s the son of an English mother and a Canadian father, but since his father returned to Canada shortly after his birth, he never knew about his Ojibway relatives. He says, “I never thought something like this could happen to anyone, certainly not someone like me.”

Going home doesn’t mean he has to go native. He says, “They are still looking for a proper ceremonial name for me. I thought they still lived in tents and went hunting for their food. In fact they all have lovely houses and enjoy a wonderful lifestyle.”

read more