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Dr. Carl Wickland, born in Sweden, got his medical degree at Durham Medical College in Chicago, graduating in 1900. After obtaining his degree, he became a general practitioner of medicine specializing in researching mental illnesses. He married Anna Anderson in 1896. Anna was a natural-born psychic of impressive ability. In 1909, Wickland became chief psychiatrist at the National Psychopathic Institute of Chicago. He continued in that position until 1918 when he and his wife moved to Los Angeles, California. Anna Wickland proved to be an excellent psychic intermediary and was easily controlled by discarnate intelligences. In answer to her doubts concerning the right “disturbing the dead,” these intelligences asserted that a grievously wrong conception existed among mortals regarding the conditions prevailing after death. These intelligences also stated that by a system of transfer, that is, by attracting such obsessing entities from the victim to a psychic intermediary, … conditions could be shown as they actually exist. … They claimed they had found his wife to be a suitable instrument for such experimentation and proposed that, if Dr. Wickland would cooperate with them by caring for and instructing these ignorant spirits, as they allowed them to take temporary but complete possession of his wife’s body, without any injury to her, they would prove their assertions were correct. Desirous of learning the truth … we accepted what seemed to be a hazardous undertaking. The book then describes multiple instances of these “experiments” where an ignorant spirit would be “allowed”, and even “guided” (by intelligent spirits working in tandem) to take temporary control of Mrs. Wickland’s body, enabling Dr. Wickland to have a dialogue with them, attempting to educate them about their true condition, and attempting to persuade them to change their behavior and outlook. Mrs. Wickland had no recollection of the dialogues that took place while she was “absent.” What is Creator’s perspective of this project and the resulting book by Dr. Wickland, “Thirty Years Among the Dead,” published in 1924?
ClosedNicola asked 1 week ago • 
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Are apricot kernels a valid treatment for cancer?
ClosedNicola asked 1 week ago • 
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A news story reports that Rep. Neal Dunn (R-Fla.) joined The Epoch Times Senior Editor Jan Jekielek on his show American Thought Leaders to discuss what he considers one of the gravest crimes of our time: the Chinese Communist Party’s (CCP) state-sanctioned forced organ harvesting. “I’m one of the few members of Congress who’ve ever actually done transplant surgery,” Dunn said. “I understand a lot of it is coming near and dear to my heart, and the idea of actually murdering someone—to take their organs and give them to somebody else—that is as appalling as anything that anybody’s ever done in the history of the world. That’s right up there with the Nazis and the Holocaust.” A surgeon by training and a member of the House Select Committee on the CCP, Dunn has made combating China’s forced organ harvesting one of his top priorities… For over two decades, mounting evidence has indicated that prisoners of conscience in China, particularly adherents of Falun Gong—a spiritual practice persecuted in China since 1999—have been killed on demand for their organs. Independent tribunals, human rights investigators, and medical experts have documented thousands of cases, estimating that tens of thousands of transplants occur each year without identifiable voluntary donors. “Now they advertise that you can actually make an appointment sitting in America for a heart/lung transplant in China right now, but I want to make that illegal,” Dunn said. What is Creator’s perspective?
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