Question:

Why are people from other countries more accepting of the paranorma?

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Than people in the United States?

I see all the time, especially in Ireland, that if you don't have a ghost(spirit) enhabating your dwelling, you are the odd guy out.

Why is this? Or is it the same everywhere, that there are non-beileivers in the field of the Paranormal?

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  1. I think you'll find that every culture has its own set of superstitions, mythology and folklore.  Much of the US is relatively new and people also aren't as anchored to their communities, so it doesn't have the history passed down from generation to generation as is done in older countries.

    Oh, and many people here are too busy trying to turn this country into a theocracy to go bothering with ghosts.


  2. Many people round the globe are more open now then before bout the paranormal, i'm a spirit medium i see things all the time, ben the odd guy out isnt really tha bad, really.

    i feel many are scared because they do not understand or refuse to to believe it do happen.

  3. There's a lot of people in the USA who don't even believe in Santa. Whachagonnado???? I feel sorry for them.

  4. because USA is all about the dollar

    if something  isn't making the wealthy stay wealthy then its "crazy"

    the wealthy control all media

    everything we see and hear

  5. People here like to think they are above things like spirits. But believe it or not, religion is on the decline across Europe, has been for decades, yet they still hang on to their beliefs in ghosts and spirits. Kind of self canceling dont you think? It may be because they are a much older civilization too.

  6. The USA is very young in comparison therefore alot of the dwellings/structures are older in Europe and many more *tragic* deaths have occurred there, just look at Henry the 8th.  Stories of deaths and hauntings have been passed down from generation to generation too, we don't have much of that in the states so alot of the people here do not believe in that sort of thing unless they've seen it with their own eyes but yes, there are believers and non believers everywhere.

  7. l have never shared any place in lreland or anywhere else in the world with a spook or a ghost or spirit. If l thought l was sharing..l would certainly have demanded a split in the bills.

      I do not claim that there are no loose spirits..but have never met anyone in lreland who claims to have a spare resident.

    countries like Africa, India and China tend to believe in ancestral spirits..but not so much in ghosts.

  8. I think that many people here are used to seeing so many special effects in movies that we tend to think something is an illusion or fake. Seeing things in real time is usually more believeable. YA and especially the skeptics here can make just about anyone even doubt their own sanity at times. And trying to convince others here even when you believe it really happened can be.......um, pointless. I haven't seen any statistics on this, but the documnetaries on ghost sitings with psychics or paranormal investigators seems to be more interesting, especially in old buildings with a more popular history or folklore. These could still be staged for the ratings by the way. Once someones credibility has been exposed or ruined it can take a toll on your belief system.

  9. As a generalization, Americans are more closed minded about everything.  Europeans are much freer to speek openly about matters without taboo or the fear of being ostracized.

    On the topic of the paranormal, most Americans think the belief in it is primitive and that modern science can explain most of it away.  There are some of us out there that believe, and think that evidence will be on the way to prove to the skeptics.  Anecdotal stories are interesting, but they don't have the credibility of more "hard" scientific evidence.

  10. I think it is a sweeping generalisation to say this and yes there are sceptics and believers in the paranormal in all places. In Ireland maybe it's quaint to have a ghost and maybe it helps with tourism as it must do in York and Edinburgh with the ghostly tours round the haunted parts of the city. I find it interesting that people can believe in all sorts of strange phenomena yet mock people who have strong religious convictions e.g. believing that God is real and prayers can be answered, yet the same people might listen to a fortune teller hanging on to their every word.

  11. THERE ARE SCEPTICS AND BELIEVERS EVERYWHERE AROUND THE WORLD

  12. It depends on people's open mind and beliefs. Most religion link the paranormal to evil and other negative attributes. Many people fear  what they don't know, paranormal is a mysterious field for most, they prefer to ignore it and judge it often too fast. Internationally paranormal is viewed differently by their population depending on their opinions and traditions.

  13. I give you credit, this is an interesting subject worth discussion. I have noticed the same trend even in modern day.

    I believe that culture plays an enormous part in this. People in countries like ireland are probably more in touch with older generations who pass on stories and legends.

    It would be interesting if someone did some extensive research on why people are less accepting in USA.

    I notice that most people who are accepting come from parents who believe in the paranormal. This might be an important clue.

  14. the USA is all about 'self'

    there is no room in the american (begging pardon of the native american) psychy for otherworldly things unless there is a profit in it.

    hey Rob P!! ghosts are there for the people who need to see them,

    dont knock that what you know f/all about boy.

    open your mind and change your world ;)

  15. In the US, we are pre-occupied with putting the dead to rest and only visiting our beloved one's grave site's once a year on thier birthday or mother and father's day. We don't seem to need the advice or the guidance of spirits.

    In other countries the feeling is different, death is intertwined with life and most people respect that once a person has crossed over - even if they are bound to earth - that they will still be a useful presence in life- because they have gone through the realization of death. They find comfort in this way and eases the expectation of finality so that one can go about their day in a normal healthy manner.

  16. well as ivehear dit before and I also agree with Nuff, cregg, and Peter D. Well I think its because most of the US is new generation with new ideas, also more people get an education. Soin other countries some people just because they hear a noise they dont think of logical explanations, they jump into the conclusion of a haunting. So I would think its because the lack of all around education and the need for scientific explanations. I still believe in ghosts though. But hope that answers ur question.

  17. Ghosts are not real. We would have had CONCRETE PROOF by now. Derek Acora couldnt find one, Uri Geller is a fake and no one else has seen a real ghost -cos they DO NOT EXIST!

  18. I'm interested to know if there's any questionnaires etc which support this.

    While I recon it is unlikely, there could be less (genuine) "paranormal activity" in the States?

    Also if a person/their peer group hasn't experienced what they see as "defined" by paranormal then they would be less accepting of it. It wouldn't be "cool" to see ghosts, but it might be "cool" to have a belief in deity (but not see it as paranormal!)

    Maybe it's just as (unlikely ?) to be "uncool" not to have a haunted house in Ireland?

    For the field of the paranormal to find anything out, it needs both believers and unbelievers!

  19. I do believe in ghosts and i also believe ive had an experience here in little town kansas. heres the thing though remember that people from the us are mostly from migrants from other countries. when a lot of people left the old world they abandoned the old way of life and the "stories" that accompanied it.

  20. USA is not quiet as old as other countries and while we do have our share of ghost, they are not as old as the ghost of other countries.. Most other countries also have deeper roots of superstition. While in the US people don't believe anything until the see it with there own eyes..and sometimes not even then. Trying to find strings and such...

  21. Well, because it's exactly that. It's about culture. Religious Americans are less likely to believe in the like considering the stories in their own books are paranormal in nature.

  22. I believe this to be more generational based than country (citizenship) based.  For instance the 1970's were almost a golden era for parapsychology in people that were interested in exploring different states of consciousness (with and without drugs) and discovering "themselves" and other such self help movements. However, the 1980's (the Gordon Geckko - "greed is good era") replaced finding your self with how much is your self worth and what will it take for you to sell out.

    This flip is not unlike what occurred in parapsychology in the 1800's (then called psychical research). Where a few brave scientist (believer and skeptic alike) had the idea of using science to test their faiths (mostly concerned with an afterlife). They were attacked by religion for not honoring the "faith" but trying to test God, They were attacked by materialist science (as still happens today) for trying to take science back into prescientific (magical, religious) thinking.

    Thus, the United States has (and in many cases just thinks it has) lead the way in the development and application of materialism science (everything is matter and everything can be explained by matter and it effects). So, when something you do is wildly successful (antibiotics, Newton physics, etc.) you might forget that somethings aren't adequately addressed by your concept of how the world works. So you create elaborate models (planets that go backwards, gravity that doesn't follow the speed of light rule, complain that observations like PK can't be true because your limited theories can't fit them in).

    Luckily people like Einstein didn't listen and showed that gravity is effected by the speed of the light rule and publicly endorsed his friend (Upton Sinclair) efforts to find out about this thing called ESP.

    So, in summary the United States is currently in a very material science mode (which works great in some areas)

    and can't step out of it as easily as other countries that have made traditions of blending fields like philosophy and science.

  23. There are some people in the US who don't even believe in the Wizard of Oz.

    I know this because the aliens anally probed them.

    .

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