Can You Kill With Telekinesis? - Alternative View

Can You Kill With Telekinesis? - Alternative View
Can You Kill With Telekinesis? - Alternative View

Video: Can You Kill With Telekinesis? - Alternative View

Video: Can You Kill With Telekinesis? - Alternative View
Video: The CIA’s Secret Experiments (Conspiracy Documentary) | Real Stories 2024, November
Anonim

The Turkish Inspection Commission cites telekinesis as one of the possible causes of a number of mysterious suicides.

A report provided by the Ankara city prosecutor's office as part of an ongoing investigation into suicides in 2006-2007 suggests that the victims may have been driven to suicide by telekinesis.

The claim is based on work carried out by Nevzat Tarkhan, an expert in neuropsychology. Hussein Basbilen, an engineer at the Turkish military research and development company ASELSAN, was found dead in his car on August 7, 2006. In 2009, a court ruled that he had committed suicide.

Two more engineers who worked for ASELSAN died shortly after Basbilen. Halim Ünal was killed with a single shot in the head on January 17, 2007, and Evrim Yantseken fell from the balcony of his six-story house nine days later.

In 2009, Burhanettin Volkan died, presumably committing suicide. In his research, which was included in the commission's report, Tarkhan asked the investigators not to neglect the fact that telekinesis could be a possible cause of suicide, which is capable of delivering anxiety and severe headaches to victims, leading to suicide.

As Tarkhan told Turkish media outlets, the waves of telekinesis can act at a distance of one and a half kilometers from the one who sends them and have the ability to induce a suicidal mood. Tarkhan also added that a similar effect on engineers could also have an excess of the norm of exposure to electromagnetism on their body, which later led to the development of the syndrome of ignorance in them.

At the time the suicides were committed, all three engineers were working on a system for recognizing allies and adversaries for Turkish military aircraft. This fact again became the object of public controversy during the attempted coup d'état in Turkey by the Ergenekon organization.

Telekinesis was reported in Turkish news recently after journalist Yigit Bulut claimed that someone tried to kill Turkish Prime Minister Erdogan through telekinesis. Several weeks after Bulut expressed his theory, he was appointed as Erdogan's chief consultant.

Promotional video:

ASELSAN is one of the country's leading military electronics companies with several awards for defense and technology.