Jodie
Philosopher
- Joined
- May 7, 2012
- Messages
- 6,231
I am not unsympathetic with how any of you view the evidence. I'm certainly not impressed with it so far. The only reason that I think they existed, and might still exist, is because I had a trusted family member that had an extended close encounter with a large primate of some kind years before the PGF, call it bigfoot, sasquatch, or whatever, it fit the typical description. If not for that, I would not waste another minute's thought on bigfoot.
Is that going to convince anyone? Well of course not, and I wouldn't expect anyone to accept it. It's the rare person's story that I accept, not that my litmus test for sincerity is any better than anyone else's.
There is one story I've never heard mentioned in regards to bigfoot in the couple of years that I've been interested in the topic.I was told by several different older folks in my area of the country of the people who went feral during the depression. There was no work, no jobs, if you lost your home you either died or reverted back to the stone age by relearning to live off the land because there was no welfare system to bail you out.
If this is true, it might be possible that some of their descendants survived, I just can't reconcile the description of a sasquatch with feral people as I don't think they would totally give up fire, the use of tools, etc... not to mention the morphological differences. Nothing about these creatures sound human to me other than they walk upright.
And bush pilot, there are many areas of the United States and Canada that are inaccessible unless you put forth great effort and expense to get there. You know full well that 97% of the population in the United States occupies just 3% of the land area. As a matter of fact, you could stand every citizen in the United States shoulder to shoulder and only cover the state of Rhode Island. So the argument that we've placed are feet on every square inch of the North American continent and have seen everything there is to see simply isn't true. That doesn't mean sasquatch is out there but your argument is equally flawed.
Is that going to convince anyone? Well of course not, and I wouldn't expect anyone to accept it. It's the rare person's story that I accept, not that my litmus test for sincerity is any better than anyone else's.
There is one story I've never heard mentioned in regards to bigfoot in the couple of years that I've been interested in the topic.I was told by several different older folks in my area of the country of the people who went feral during the depression. There was no work, no jobs, if you lost your home you either died or reverted back to the stone age by relearning to live off the land because there was no welfare system to bail you out.
If this is true, it might be possible that some of their descendants survived, I just can't reconcile the description of a sasquatch with feral people as I don't think they would totally give up fire, the use of tools, etc... not to mention the morphological differences. Nothing about these creatures sound human to me other than they walk upright.
And bush pilot, there are many areas of the United States and Canada that are inaccessible unless you put forth great effort and expense to get there. You know full well that 97% of the population in the United States occupies just 3% of the land area. As a matter of fact, you could stand every citizen in the United States shoulder to shoulder and only cover the state of Rhode Island. So the argument that we've placed are feet on every square inch of the North American continent and have seen everything there is to see simply isn't true. That doesn't mean sasquatch is out there but your argument is equally flawed.