Want some seriously bent music and sounds to feed your ears on? Sure you do…
- From Flying Saucers to Mind Control: Seven declassified military and CIA secrets.
- Scientist who mapped the human genome says we will be able to print alien life on Mars.
- Who owns the Moon?
- An album of images of an ancient Bronze Age sundial.
- This ain’t Indiana Jones’s type of archaeology: tombs of the Pharaohs explored with robotic snakes.
- Extinct tree grows anew from ancient jar of seeds unearthed by archaeologists.
- A human brain preserved for 4000 years after being boiled in its own skull. Alas, no human grew anew from it.
- The statistics behind ghostly visions.
- ‘Demons‘ invade Namibian school.
- Thomas Edison’s talking dolls sound like they’re possessed by Satan.
- Man spontaneously combusts…and survives.
- The dumbest explanation yet for the near-death experience.
- Skeptics like James Randi are a necessary evil. If only there was some sort of article rebutting the silliness about the usefulness of the million dollar challenge…
- The latest season of the Binnall of America podcast (Season 8!) opens up with the legendary Jim Marrs discussing his new book Our Occulted History.
- Shades of Westall, 1966. UFO crashes into British school playground.
- Neuro-enhancement in the military: far-fetched or an inevitable future?
- Researchers at a US lab have passed a crucial milestone on the way to their ultimate goal of achieving self-sustaining nuclear fusion.
- Giant channels as tall as the Eiffel Tower discovered beneath Antarctic ice shelf.
- Taking the drug that is inspiring musicians everywhere.
- Beach-goers in Spain discover 30-foot giant squid.
- Earth is an Alien planet: meet the bizarre lizard that bleeds green poison that can kill you.
- Over 100 long-lost Doctor Who episodes found by dedicated fans – in Ethiopia.
- Images of the Day: Faces of fear at Canadian ‘haunted house’.
Quote of the Day:
You know the person who had the greatest positive impact on the environment of this planet? Genghis Khan, because he massacred 40 million people.