An upcoming TV miniseries about a huge earthquake on the West Coast, which will air on NBC May 2 and 3, will scare people who live there, despite the fact that it has no basis in science, unlike The Day After Tomorrow, which will arrive in movie theaters on May 28 and is based on the science explained in The Coming Global Superstorm by Art Bell and Whitley Strieber.

In NBC’s disaster drama “10.5,” massive quakes topple the Golden Gate Bridge and tsunamis from the Pacific drown Los Angeles. Scientists attempt to interrupt the quakes by fusing the San Andreas Fault closed with atomic explosions.
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When Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria was assassinated, no one realized that World War I was inevitable. World War II can be seen as a war against the ideology of Adolf Hitler. Now Prince Hassan of Jordan warns that World War III may be a religious war pitting Christianity and Judaism against Islam, and that this war may have already started. Hassan says, “?I’m afraid the makings of a third world war are actually taking place in front of our very eyes.”
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In Whitley’s new journal, he talks about the Phoenix Lights of 1997, which he considers to be the most important UFO event yet. Part I of Whitley?s interview with Dr. Lynne Kitei, a local physician who interacted personally with them, will air on this week’s Dreamland. He writes, “The energy they offer will enable us to become more capable of coping with?negative unknown presences as well as human ones?If we are lucky enough to see them and open our minds to them, we can gain an ability to function intellectually in higher dimensions. What is on offer from them is nothing less than the ability to save our world from the negative forces that threaten to literally draw us all, our whole planet, into a state that will be indistinguishable from hell.”
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As part of our new Communion Letters series, “Deb” writes: At approximately age four I climbed into bed with my parents because I remember feeling sick that night, and it seems as if I had had a nightmare.

We lived in Phoenix, Arizona, and the house was one-story. I remember looking out of my parents bedroom window and seeing the moon in our front yard, which, for some reason, didn’t seem odd to my 4-year-old mind. It was parallel to the bedroom window, big and bright. I slept for awhile, then woke up to see that a transparent window-like device had telescoped through the bedroom window. The only thing I can compare it with is a glass display case in a bakery.
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