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Missing 411-Western United States & Canada: Unexplained disappearances of North Americans that have never been solved: Volume 1

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Throughout history, there have been many mysterious disappearances that have baffled investigators. The reason why amnesia always seems contrived in TV shows and movies when used more than minimally is that it is rare in real life. Or it’s supposed to be, anyway. In contrast, hallucinations should be much more common. This is why it seems very suspicious to me that in Missing 411 cases, the majority of people who are found alive have amnesia and only a minority reports something strange happening. The proportion of the two should be inverse. Still, others believe that the disappearances are the work of aliens or other beings from another dimension. Whatever the cause, there is no doubt that Lake Mead is a place where people have mysteriously vanished without a trace. How Many Missing 411 Movies Are There?

Subjects found deceased having no identifiable cause of death, or an unexplained fever if found alive In these cases, it is often the family and friends of the missing person who continue to search for them, long after law enforcement has given up. Unusually high percentage of subjects being male, very young, college-age, or old, with some kind of apparent or hidden injury or disability, or with exceptionally high or low intelligence (including specifically academically accomplished people like physicists or physicians, very physically fit people like runners, athletes, or soldiers, or people connected to religion or Germany) However, if you are running some sort of medical experiment, the three most logical things to do are to get a DNA sample (ideally reproductive cells), to perform a neurological exam, and to get a stool sample, which includes the gut bacteria. Anything to do with poop may be inherently silly, but as recent advances in medical science show, gut microbiome is essential for our physical health and it interacts with our brain, affecting our mood. Not surprisingly at all, these types of things are reported by alien abductees. Of course, that says nothing about who these “aliens” are, only that they’re organized. Dave may not be the best scientist or statistician, he may have lied or cheated in his life at least once or twice, and he was trying to find evidence for the existence of Bigfoot (plural) before he was approached to look into missing people in national parks. Does any of that mean that you should dismiss the evidence that he’s bringing forward? No, the evidence is the only thing that matters. He’s not putting forward his theories in the books, only data.

Missing 411

Sure, random things happen, even extremely unlikely things. How often you run into people with the same first name or surname as you is a function of how rare it is. When a Smith family runs into a Smith family, it’s probably no big deal. When Paulides runs into a Pavlides when on one of these cases, a thing that has never happened to him before or since and which doesn’t have to happen over an entire lifetime at all, that counts as a bit odd. Furthermore, if I understand the abstract of the U.S. study correctly, 5% of autopsy reports in the U.S. list the cause of death as undetermined, even though the real number of undeterminable deaths is much lower than that. But it’s true that on the other, more paranoid hand, if the storms are somehow being caused (or foreseen and taken advantage of) to thwart searches, them succeeding in thwarting searches is not a disqualifying factor. It would be an annoyingly good crime, however, as it is very difficult to prove such crime for the above-mentioned reasons. Especially if it’s only about taking advantage of naturally forming bad weather, as that would then maintain its normal, statistically insignificant rate of incidence.

Finally, being associated with Bigfoot research also doesn’t disqualify everything that you say about anything. Especially if it was research, like going places where Bigfoot might live, interviewing witnesses, collecting samples and sending them for laboratory analysis, and so on. That’s what Dave was doing regarding Bigfoot. Assuming that Bigfoot doesn’t exist, this is still a completely reasonable activity. Research is how we get to know things. Hikers may also fail to take proper precautions, such as letting someone know their itinerary or carrying enough food and water. a b Polich, Kyle (August 2017). "An Investigation of the Missing411 Conspiracy". Skeptical Inquirer. 41 (4). Archived from the original on July 5, 2021 . Retrieved July 5, 2021– via 54-58. {{ cite journal}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown ( link) At the moment, these are the only two documentary films about the Missing 411 cases. However, given the growing interest in the phenomenon, it is likely that more films will be made in the future. Are There Feral People in National Parks?The Missing 411 series consists of David’s self-published books and documentaries that document cases of people who have gone missing in national parks and other places. He started this series after the commercial success of the bigfoot series.

I do agree with Dave that it is safe to assume that places typically get named for a reason, especially if the name sounds ominous, like Devil’s, Demon’s, or Hell’s something or other. I guess I should look into places in the Czech Republic with our version of this, involving the word “Čert” in the name. Another famous case is that of the Mary Celeste, a ship that was found abandoned in the Atlantic Ocean in 1872. The crew and passengers were nowhere to be found, and the only clue was a single lifeboat that was missing from the ship. If you are in a remote area, it is best to wait for rescuers to find you. If you are in a more populated area, try to find a landmark that you can use to orient yourself, and then call 911.It would either mean that Jon Oliver was even more right than he thought when he was describing the current sorry state of how especially coroners (the ones without any actual medical training) operate in the United States, or it would mean that some of the Missing 411 profile points actually function as a cause of or significant contributing factor to the sudden adult death syndrome. What an apt name, by the way, SADS. While sudden arrhythmia can account for some of the Missing 411 cases, there are just too many. a b c Gerbic, Susan (February 3, 2017). "Local Skeptical Outreach & Activism: Monterey County SkeptiCamp". CSICOP. Committee for Skeptical Inquiry. Archived from the original on February 3, 2017 . Retrieved February 11, 2017. The latter type of accounts, mainly collected by folklorists in connection to fairy lore, is consistent with natural spacetime distortions, but it can also be indicative of a special kind of traps being laid in the forest. This type of account would go some way toward explaining the seemingly missing failure rate of the perpetrators, as these would be the cases where the predators let the captured prey go, or when their traps, even though advanced, failed.

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