Thursday, December 7, 2023

If only this letter was taken seriously, what the world would be like, read on

 


On November 26, 1963, the day after the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, a British local newspaper, the Cambridge News, received an anonymous phone call claiming to have foreknowledge of the assassination. The caller said that they had seen a vision of the assassination in a dream, and that it would happen in Dallas on November 22. The newspaper reported the call, but did not take it seriously.

The caller's prediction was eerily accurate. President Kennedy was assassinated in Dallas on November 22, 1963. The caller's identity has never been revealed.

The Cambridge News' story about the anonymous call is one of many accounts of people who claim to have had premonitions of the assassination. Some of these accounts are more credible than others, but all of them raise questions about the possibility of precognition, or the ability to predict the future.

There is no scientific evidence to support the existence of precognition, but there are many people who believe in it. Some people believe that premonitions can be caused by extrasensory perception (ESP), or the ability to perceive things that are not physically present. Others believe that premonitions are simply coincidences, or that they are caused by anxiety or fear.

The possibility of precognition is fascinating, but it is important to remember that there is no scientific evidence to support it. Until there is more evidence, we can only speculate about whether or not premonitions are real.

No comments:

Day to Day events

Spring time

  The sun awakes in a sleepy stretch,  Yawning warmth on a winter's wretch.  Birdsong flutters on the breeze,  Waking trees from slumber...