Mysteries – What “Mysteries”?
16 June 2026
The amount of “mysteries” that exist is really amazing –from accounts found in books to those given in documentaries – there's got to be at least one mystery somewhere that will be interesting and is not a con – but no – there is a simple answer to every known “mystery”. All you have to do is simply be sceptical.
Three examples:
Did you know there wasn't enough food in Loch Ness to sustain even one monster? In order for just one monster to exist, there has to be a whole colony of them. Scholars have known about this from the get-go.
Did you know that a lifeboat was missing from the ship Marie Celeste? This basic fact is always missing.
Did you know that the birth of the Flying Saucers as started by Kenneth Arnold on 24 June 1947, involved the sighting by Mount Rainier, Washington – that is only classified as an active, potentially dangerous stratovolcano. Although it has laid dormant for roughly 1,000 years, it still produces steam and is capable of erupting again? “Flying Saucers” are Unidentified Terrestrial Objects often sighted by geological faults and the lights that people witness are usually associated with them originating from beneath the earth’s surface. The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) ranks Mount Rainier as one of the most dangerous volcanoes in the United States. This is largely due to the millions of people living in the valleys below, making them highly vulnerable to massive volcanic mudflows (lahars) if it ever erupts.
Not one observatory in the world has ever spotted a “Flying Saucer”.
The real mystery has got to be: “Why do people believe in mysteries?
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