In her new diary, Anne Strieber describes what it’s like to be having an operation in the hospital DURING an earthquake!

Art credit: freeimages.co.uk

It won’t take an earthquake to kill Unknowncountry, the kind of neglect we’ve been experiencing lately will do just fine. Please remember: We depend on YOU for the support we need to produce our fine radio shows and daily news of the edge, so do the right thing: Subscribe today!

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We are posting a number of early Whitley Strieber Dreamlandsin our subscriber section, thanks to a listener who hascollected them and is now offering them to us. The first,from 2001, features Whitley interviewing Jose Arguelles about the Mayan calendar, and elements of the interview arestartlingly prophetic. The second is Whitley’s FIRST interview with William Henry, which is about the hidden occult battle betweenHitler and Roosevelt during World War II. The interest neverstops for subscribers, so join us: subscribe today!

NOTE: This news story, previously published on our old site, will have any links removed.read more

In the play (and later movie) "Prelude to a Kiss," an old man manages to enter the body of a beautiful young bride when he kisses her, to the great consternation of the bridegroom (who somehow KNOWS his new wife is different, and he’s right: She’s now a grouchy old man in a beautiful young woman’s body!) When the old man is finally persuaded to leave, his parting words of wisdom are: "Don’t forget to floss." Well, I have some hard-earned wisdom for YOU: Drink lots of water!
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Now that the food shortage problem has reached the West, many people are considering growing their own vegetables in their back yards. But what can people in cities do? The answer: grow skyscraper gardens!

In the July 15th edition of the New York Times, Bina Venkataraman writes: “What if ‘eating local’ in Shanghai or New York meant getting your fresh produce from five blocks away? And what if skyscrapers grew off the grid, as verdant, self-sustaining towers where city slickers cultivated their own food?”

She quotes city planner Scott M. Stringer as saying, “Obviously we don?t have vast amounts of vacant land, but the sky is the limit in Manhattan.”
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