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Post by bendflexglow on May 17, 2017 3:28:44 GMT
Zapruder film. And I also remembered being in B&W.
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Post by mecano04 on May 17, 2017 11:52:31 GMT
Thinking Mother Teresa was canonized years ago, shortly after her death, but it was only made in 2016.
For some reason I thought I had read and hear about David A Stewart death but he's still alive and well.
In all cases it seems like my memory is wrong more than a paranormal phenomena where events would be changed retroactively through time.
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Post by Nalkarj on May 18, 2017 2:19:06 GMT
Zapruder film. And I also remembered being in B&W. What specifically about the Zapruder film, may I ask, besides the color/B&W bit? I hadn't heard of a Mandela effect about it.
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Post by bendflexglow on May 18, 2017 3:00:23 GMT
Zapruder film. And I also remembered being in B&W. What specifically about the Zapruder film, may I ask, besides the color/B&W bit? I hadn't heard of a Mandela effect about it. You haven't??? Anyway, in this reality there's 6 people in the limo, and millions of people (including myself) remember vividly being only 4 people:
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Post by hi224 on May 18, 2017 13:40:24 GMT
Yet more reason to be creeped out as wwll.
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Post by Deleted on May 18, 2017 15:15:02 GMT
It's long been established that human memory is imperfect. Mandela effect debunked right there.
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Post by bendflexglow on May 19, 2017 3:17:39 GMT
It's long been established that human memory is imperfect. Mandela effect debunked right there.
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Post by bonerxmas on May 19, 2017 4:42:40 GMT
Zapruder film. And I also remembered being in B&W. how can you not remember that red gush across the screen?
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Post by bonerxmas on May 19, 2017 4:45:27 GMT
It's long been established that human memory is imperfect. Mandela effect debunked right there. people thought mandela was dead because they got him mixed up with one of the other south africa guys who died, werent really following the news, didnt realize there were a bunch of those guys, biko, chris hani...
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Post by Deleted on May 20, 2017 2:06:23 GMT
It's long been established that human memory is imperfect. Mandela effect debunked right there. people thought mandela was dead because they got him mixed up with one of the other south africa guys who died, werent really following the news, didnt realize there were a bunch of those guys, biko, chris hani... Yep. I experienced a good example of this. I've always been a space nut. And I had one of those "JFK know where you were" moments when the first shuttle blew up. The whole family had been on a day trip, we got back late and just caught the end of the extended news. I wondered what had happened so I went upstairs and found another news show on another channel, and there it was. I can describe it in detail, and I am absolutely certain that I remember it very clearly. A few years ago I mentioned the shuttle explosion to my brother, and he also remembered it very clearly. Only he remembered a completely different version of events. No family trip at all, no just missing the news, etc. We are both totally certain that we are right and the other is wrong. Yet one us us must be wrong. And the scary part is... if one of us is wrong, then it's entirely possible that we both are. Memory is a fluid thing. It changes over time. You are not aware of it changing, and the changed memory feels just as real to you as the original did. And yet, if you explain this to people, they are incredibly resistant to the idea that their memory changes. People will accept the general statement that memory is fluid, they will accept that specific memories can change... but completely refuse to believe that their memory of something is wrong because "No, I just KNOW this is true, I remember it perfectly." Well, guess what? If your memory is perfect then you are not a human being. And that's why the "mandela effect" is a thing.
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