In Coast You Missed It 12/2/22

By Tim Binnall

Mind control experiments, a Divine Council of spiritual beings, and haunted Scottish locations were among the fascinating realms explored this past week on Coast to Coast AM. And, here at the C2C website, we told you about an 'alien' hand found on a Brazilian beach, 40 cattle mysteriously killed in Colorado, and an Indian man who had 187 coins removed from his stomach. Check out our round-up of highlights from the past week ... In Coast You Missed It.

The tantalizing possibility that each individual has a group of spiritual beings who oversee their lifetime was explored on Tuesday night's program as filmmaker Rich Martini shared insights from what he says are communications with members of this coterie. He explained that, by way of meditation, he has been able to speak to these entities, which he calls the Divine Council. According to Martini's conversations with the beings, three to fifteen of them are assigned to every person and, although they cannot directly interfere in our lives, they serve as a veritable support system with the ultimate goal of helping the human race evolve to a higher level of consciousness.

This past week saw news of a strange mystery unfolding in Colorado, where wildlife officials are stumped by an odd incident wherein a whopping forty cattle were killed under mysterious circumstances. The peculiar puzzle started in October when a rancher found that 18 of his animals had been killed by what he thought was a pack of wolves. However, as the seemingly standard case was investigated, authorities wound up scratching their heads when another 22 dead cattle were discovered. They were further perplexed when an exhaustive search turned up no sign of wolves in the area, leaving them to wonder what exactly killed all of the creatures.

Could nefarious forces within the government be conducting mind control experiments on people? This troubling scenario was explored on Saturday night's program as Ron Alan shared his account of allegedly being an unwitting victim of just such a sinister agenda. Claiming to have been the subject of a program akin to MK-Ultra since he was a child, he lamented that he has no escape from the clutches of those behind the endeavor. To this day, Alan asserted, his dreams are infiltrated by operatives from the program and he has even been subjected to involuntary astral projection as those behind the operation continue to experiment on his mind.

'Alien' oddities found their way into the news this past week by way of two stories featuring unusual objects that seemed to come from out of this world. First, in Brazil, a couple walking along a beach found the nightmarish skeletal remains of an appendage that they likened to the hand of an extraterrestrial being. After their video of the unsettling remains went viral, a marine biologist suggested that the strange find had likely been part of a dolphin. Later in the week, an anomaly hunter looking for possible signs of ancient aliens in NASA images of Mars spotted an unusual formation that bears an uncanny resemblance to a toppled alien statue, complete with two eyes, a nose, a mouth, and curious-looking crown.

The spirits of Scotland took center stage on Wednesday night's program as ghost hunter Rick McCallum recounted his recent investigations at some the country's most haunted locations. Given its rich and bloody history, he observed that the hauntings in Scotland appear to be more intense than those found in America. McCallum detailed a visit to a site known as Balgonie Castle, where he was seemingly struck by a spirit and a haunted theater in Norwich, where he spotted a full-bodied apparition. He also talked about a special gathering of ghost hunters at Real Mary King's Close in Edinburgh, where researchers from America and Scotland exchanged ideas and techniques.

By far the most bizarre story of the week came to us from India, where doctors treating a man for abdominal pain discovered a staggering 187 coins in his stomach. The jaw-dropping case began when the unnamed patient was rushed to the hospital by his family after he had complained of a persistent internal ache that had left him bloated and vomiting. When medical personnel set about solving the problem, they were stunned to see that tests showed a massive mound of metal inside of him. Rushing him into surgery, doctors spent the next two hours removing a veritable treasure of 187 coins, which they later found out that, due to a psychiatric condition, the man had eaten over the last two or three months.

Coast Insiders can check out all this week's shows as well as the last seven years of C2C programs in our enormous archive. Not a Coast Insider yet? Sign up today.

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