UnTrickaBLe said:Of course, it's a well-known psychological phenonmenon that many people who have been tricked and swindled by mediums and other frauds will refuse to admit to themselves that they have been played for fools.
Indeed. What is interesting with Clancie's example is that, although she admits that she has been conned again and again and again, she keeps seeking the next medium, and the next, and the next.
I think that her belief runs much deeper than most of the poor sods that are swindled by the mediums. What I find very interesting is her need to find as many mediums as possible that she can claim are "real". She's not like another poster here, neofight, who clings on to just one medium. No, Clancie collects "real" mediums like a hunter collects trophies from the African savannah.
This fanatic drive to get as many mediums under her belt might have something to do with the way she thinks. Note how she constantly refers to the many anecdotes - she truly believes that the greater number of anecdotes, the better a claim is supported. If she can point to a number of self-experienced mediums that she can claim are real (without providing real evidence, of course), she thinks her belief is validated.
Her habit of ignoring contradictory evidence is nothing more than standard procedure for believers.
I know she pretends to ignore me, but try to ask Clancie just how many mediums she has seen. You will not get a straight answer - mostly because I honestly think that she has lost count herself.
UnTrickaBLe said:The "Carlos" hoax in Australia is a perfect example of that. Even once the hoax was revealed, many of "Carlos's" devotees came up to him and swore that he was "the real thing" -- even though he was a complete and utter fraud!
Yep. Scary.