Missing 411-Western United States & Canada: Unexplained disappearances of North Americans that have never been solved: Volume 1

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Missing 411-Western United States & Canada: Unexplained disappearances of North Americans that have never been solved: Volume 1

Missing 411-Western United States & Canada: Unexplained disappearances of North Americans that have never been solved: Volume 1

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If the person was seen, say, falling of a cliff, then that would be an explanation, just like it should be easier to find someone when you’d seen where exactly they entered the forest, at what speed, and in what state of mind. Though there are Missing 411 cases where that didn’t help, like when a person was seen chasing a dog into the forest, which only helps explain how people can get lost more often while walking a dog. Like the case of Zigmund Adamski — criminal activity was not ruled out, which rules it out as a Missing 411 case, but it was not ruled out precisely because there was evidence of foul play. Making an error on the part of Missing 411 perpetrators means that people won’t go missing, that there will be evidence that will be interpreted as human crime (because what else would be a serious suspicion of the police in any scenario), or the person will see and report things that will make him or her sound mentally ill, and perhaps even diagnosed. This is why one should look into the work of people like Steph Young or various other paranormal investigators.

Marsh, Roger (September 26, 2013). "Missing Person Cases: Never Be Last in Line". The Huffington Post. Archived from the original on August 20, 2014 . Retrieved August 19, 2014. The Lost Kids is the first film in the series, and it focuses on the cases of five young children who vanished without a trace. Yes, you are supposed to be thinking of Dirk Gently. The concept of a holistic detective may be a fiction invented by Douglas Adams, but the interesting aspect of his science fiction ideas is that while crazy-sounding and hilarious, they are logically consistent and potentially realistic. Like his idea of a probability-based engine — many macroscopic physical “laws” are only aggregates of chaotic movements and interactions going on at the subatomic level. Objects can spontaneously teleport, it’s just very, very, very unlikely.From that point of view, this profile point should always be analyzed together with other variables. If a criminal group with the same unusual means and methods of abducting people in a forest setting is taking advantage of bad weather to kidnap and do god knows what with people in the same unusual ways, then the bad weather compromising searches should correlate more often with cases that contain other unusual elements to them than with normal cases of people going missing in a forest. If you’re not interested in signing up for Audible, you can also find the podcast on iTunes, Spotify, or Google Play. Just search for “Missing 411” and you should be able to find it easily. Regarding this profile point, I tend to agree with a number of people who say that Dave overestimates the weirdness of people leaving essential items behind, as you can easily do that when you don’t think you’ll be gone long or when you just have a standard brain fart. But I totally agree with Dave that the disappearing-while-on-the-phone stuff is weird. Especially in the one case when the phone was later found shattered into a million pieces. Similarly, I would also like to see a chart of Missing 411 cases by date of disappearance, or ideally both date and time, so that there’s more to compare again with normal disappearances, and in the case of dates, also with tourist and hunting seasons, like any numbers of how many tourists or hunters can be found in the forest at what time of year. If those exact statistics aren’t available, similar ones should exist to give us an estimate. The latter type of accounts, mainly collected by folklorists in connection to fairy lore, is consistent with natural spacetime distortions, but it can also be indicative of a special kind of traps being laid in the forest. This type of account would go some way toward explaining the seemingly missing failure rate of the perpetrators, as these would be the cases where the predators let the captured prey go, or when their traps, even though advanced, failed.

Since the information is so valuable, it’s only right that the books should be expensive. 2. The Books’ Primacy He also limited the number of copies for each release to make it harder for counterfeiters to reproduce them. As a result, the books are hard to come by, even in popular libraries. Forgotten the title or the author of a book? Our BookSleuth is specially designed for you. Visit BookSleuth The ability of any perpetrator to remotely confuse, lure, or in some sense mind control targeted people would also be consistent with the victims leaving essential items behind — it would just be an induced brain fart. The people who were disappeared while on the phone would only be different in the sense that they must have been targeted after they were already outside. Which brings me to some espionage-related implications. So while it is fun to imIn the Missing 411 cases, I believe that the percentage of how many causes of death are reported as unknown is far higher than 5%, while even many of the deaths that were reported as death by exposure or drowning seem to be questionable. In a normal sample of deaths, you’d expect roughly 500 unexplained deaths in 500,000. Here, you could have 500 in a 1,000. The locations often have “devil” in their name and tend to be close to water, boulder fields, and large granite formations Paulides, David (2014). Missing 411 The Devil's in the Detail. North Charleston, South Carolina: CreateSpace. p.xiii. ISBN 978-1495246425. Paulides, David. "Blog #188". NAbigfootsearch.com. Archived from the original on February 9, 2017 . Retrieved February 8, 2017. The interest in the book series prompted the creation of a documentary film based on the Missing 411 books; this film was released in 2017. [ citation needed] Images of maps made by Paulides regarding his theory have been frequently shared on social media. [18] The theory has also gone viral on TikTok. [19]

As for any data points or theories that may shed some light on why the clothing tends to be missing, the only explanations provided by the survivors of something like a Missing 411 incident are either that they removed it themselves (without understanding why and later regretting it), or the story of one little girl that a dog/wolf man “ate” some articles of her clothing. Dave also mentions legends from Hawaii and Indonesia which explain that you should not wear bright clothing if you don’t want to offend some kind of spirits, or that some spirits demand that you lie naked face down in their presence, which is how Missing 411 people often are found. If some sort of targeted infrasound, microwave, or EM-based device is used, I bet you can make someone feel unwell at a distance, or make them hallucinate, or start behaving irrationally. The science is almost there. Paulides, David (2011). Missing 411. Western United States & Canada: unexplained disappearances of North Americans that have never been solved. North Charleston, South Carolina. ISBN 978-1-4662-1629-7. OCLC 793231911. {{ cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher ( link)

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Subjects found alive having no memory of the disappearance, or giving an account that sounds incorrect, confused, or outright fantastical Following his work on Bigfoot, Paulides' next project was Missing 411, a series of self-published books and two documentary films, documenting unsolved cases of people who have gone missing in national parks and elsewhere.

In this analysis, I will not be going in depth on any of the individual cases, since that is covered quite well by many different videos on this subject that you can find on YouTube, including many hours of interviews with David Paulides on various paranormal podcasts. What I will try to do is use my social science education and research methodology expertise to try to bring some clarity into how all of the variables in these cases seem to be connected. Burning the Witchfinders Read Also: Why are Barnes & Noble Books So Expensive 2022? Where to Buy the Missing 411 Book Series for Cheap The religion and military connection may also be connected to a specific cultural grudge, but what they imply to me is that maybe any targeting would be more of an issue of neurology rather than genetics. Especially since weird perception and memory issues are common among the Missing 411 cases. If there is someone out there with some kind of tech doing this, the tech clearly should involve remote brain or full-body scan capability (to ascertain hidden health issues or intelligence), perception altering, and memory editing. And even if the issue was some natural phenomenon, state of mind or mentality can affect awareness and behavioral responses. Killelea, Eric (March 1, 2017). "The 10 Most Deadly National Parks". Outside Online. Archived from the original on January 18, 2021 . Retrieved July 5, 2021.

There are many reasons why people might want to believe in the existence of feral people, such as the appeal of a hidden society living off the land, but there is simply no evidence to support these claims. It’s too bad that the history of these names isn’t particularly well documented in the Americas, but using common sense, one would use such names for places where bad things happen, where people die or go missing, where they feel bad, or at least for remote, haunting areas. The latter option seems especially plausible, since in none of the recorded calls were any of the victims able to relay any coherent, useful information. At most, they managed to say that someone is following them, but not exactly who or where they are, or if they described a specific location, they were already gone within moments (if the location they gave was accurate in the first place). Mostly, they just managed to say something like “oh my gosh”, or “my phone is about to go dead”, or gave out unsettling noises. Missing 411 – Eastern United States: Unexplained Disappearances of North Americans That Have Never Been Solved (2012) ISBN 978-1-4680-1262-0 When you have such data, a lot of it, about a state of an object, and it doesn’t make any sense how it got there from its last known state, what you’ve got is a proper anomaly. If it keeps happening again and again, what you’ve got is a systemic anomaly, an anomaly on which you will keep getting more data, an anomaly that you can try to predict. This one is of course extremely tragic, but that only gives you literally all of the reasons why everyone should study this.



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