A new type of terrorist has emerged in recent years: the FEMALE suicide bomber. In his new novel Critical Mass, Whitley Strieber points out that in the Koran, committing suicide is a major sin, so these people are being seriously misled. We need to learn more about what’s REALLY going on!

In December of last year, during a declared state of emergency in Pakistan, the country experienced its first female suicide bomber. A woman set off explosives across a military checkpoint, near a Christian school in the city of Peshawar. She was the only casualty.
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and others DON’T – We have long wondered why some people are “chosen” to encounter the Visitors, while others?who are often in the same room, same car or even the same BED?somehow do not see them. Scientists may have solved this puzzle.

Shortly after Communion was published, a psychologist sent a questionnaire to a group of people who had communicated with us (we did not give him their addresses but sent out the questionnaire ourselves). It consisted of a list of questions, one of which was “Were you sexually abused as a child?” A statistically large percentage of these people responded to this question with “yes.”
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On February 17, Whitley Strieber’s new book Critical Mass was published nationwide. It is about nuclear terrorism and is so controversial that many publishers around the world were afraid to bring it out. Not so his longtime American publisher Tor/Forge, so we get the benefit of this astonishing thriller. What makes it so astonishing is the absolutely startling insight he offers into the minds of the terrorists, including a Russian connection that is assinister as it is possible. He has made an amazing video about “Critical Mass.” To view it,click here.

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

When it comes to attracting the opposite sex, every species has its own methods. Birds sport colorful plumage and inviting songs. We?re all familiar with the human ways of doing it. Elephants? Males listen for the inviting thumps of female footsteps.

When scientists played a tape of female elephant footsteps to a group of males, they headed straight for the sounds. In BBC News, James Morgan quotes elephant expert Caitlin O’Connell-Rodwell as saying, “You see the male in the video pressing his trunk against the ground. He’s on a mission?he’s looking for that female in [heat].”

Art credit: freeimages.co.uk
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