Will this be the end of the Amanda Knox saga?![]()
Every time I think that people can't get any dumber, I am proven wrong.![]()
.Google did a pretty good job of translating this page, though of course I'm not familiar with this site so I can't speak to its credibility.
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Yeah, I just heard this on Radio 4 news and thought I'd check back here to see if anyone else had picked up on it. Here's the BBC story, with nice map:Well three and a quarter hours to go and no quake, though there was a 5.3 in Spain.
Mark my words, this startlingly big miss will be heralded by woosters as undeniable proof of precognition!!!I do wonder how many failed predictions does it take for people to realize they're full of ****.

Will Rome be destroyed tomorrow?
catsmate1 (Yesterday)
And 5.3 isn't exactly city obliterating.Yeah, I just heard this on Radio 4 news and thought I'd check back here to see if anyone else had picked up on it. Here's the BBC story, with nice map:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-13368599
So he was out by 800 miles. I think powers of precognition have got to get a bit better than this before I'm a believer!
And 5.3 isn't exactly city obliterating.
Rember thatLooks like it's had a surprising amount of damage associated with it, though:
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/42993156/ns/world_news-europe/
Thankfully it wasn't in Rome, though-- that would have been a horrible coincide with these "predictions."
If he had adhered to the rules that govern over a legitimate scientific research, he wouldn't have misinterpreted the Mars position that clearly said Spain, not Italy: MARS = SPAIN.One self-taught pseudoscientist, Raffaele Bendandi, allegedly predicted before his death in 1976 that a devastating earthquake was going to strike Rome on Wednesday.
Brigitte Nielsen?Mark my words, this startlingly big miss
It's actually "Colosseum."The Colloseum is still in ruins!