DWQA QuestionsCategory: Extraterrestrial Mind ControlSince 1957, the Detroit Lions have won just one playoff game. A simply unmatched history of futility. However, that one year, 1991, was exciting, and the Lions got just one game away from the Super Bowl. But it wasn’t without tragedy. In November of 1991, right offensive guard Mike Utley suffered a neck injury that left him paralyzed for life. Seven months later, the Lions’ left offensive guard Eric Andolsek was struck and killed by a semi-truck that ran off the road while he was trimming his lawn. The driver lost control of the vehicle while wiping his face with a rag. And just like that, the Lions lost two of their best offensive linemen, perhaps in Lions franchise history. This all but guaranteed that any chance the Lions had of winning the Super Bowl in January 1993 simply vanished. Two freak accidents so close together that paralyzed the team, and removed two of their most important players, suggests this was a vicious backlash to keep a targeted group from ever succeeding. What can Creator tell us?
Nicola Staff asked 12 months ago
This is what happened in a nutshell. One of the favorite strategies of the interlopers is, having battered someone to a fare-thee-well, they might ease up and allow them to begin to recover, regain higher ground, so to speak, and begin to make headway once again in life only to have the rug pulled out from under them, perhaps even when in sight of victory in some way. This the interlopers find to be great fun, it is how they view sports, not something that is a fair competition, but a manipulation always where they are in control and they decree winners and losers, deciding this in advance, and then doing whatever they need to, to bring about their desired endpoint. This is the measure of who they are. For a normal healthy human being, engaging always in a rigged contest, guaranteeing victory for a normal person would become boring and they would take no joy from knowing they were winning something undeserved, because they would be able to see that any act of manipulation to rig the outcome takes away the meaning of victory, and the apparent success would ring hollow and leave them not only unsatisfied but feeling quite guilty about the matter. Psychopaths do not think like that, they think only of themselves, and the perversity that eventually produces is that in order to feel much of anything that is positive, they must look to a contrast between their own power and the fate of someone they can manipulate and cause to suffer. The greater the suffering the better because it thrills them to know their power to do such things. They cannot identify with the suffering of another because they lack a conscience and will have no empathy or compassion, but they do know when someone is losing and they are winning and it is that pain and suffering of their enemy that is their only pleasure. It is a perversion of reality, but keep in mind these are damaged and incomplete beings having lost the ability to love long, long ago.