The guy's big [in Japan].TennoChinko wrote:
Hot Topics | |
---|---|
Forbes Magazine
Simply divined
By Benjamin Fulford | Apr 1, 2002 | 661 words, 0 images
How a homeless man from New York became Japan's multimillionaire psychic.
The late Jeane Dixon may have correctly predicted the assassinations of Mahatma Gandhi and Martin Luther King Jr. But even while alive she couldn't hold a séance candle to Ronald. --not, at least, according to the Japanese celebrities and blue-chip executives who pay richly for the services of the U.S.-born 43-year-old "parapsychological consultant." For $5,000 an hour he tells them what the markets will do and how their careers will end up. Those sessions, plus revenues from seminars and sales of such "psychic" goods as bath oils, come to $1 million-plus a year. So claims Bard.
How did a guy, homeless at age 15, get to be Tokyo's Tiresias? When Bard's father died in 1976, he and his mother were evicted from their four-bedroom Scarsdale, N.Y. house and lived on Manhattan's streets until he joined the Army in 1978. By the time they reunited in 1980, Bard says, his mom, Yolana, had become a wealthy fortune-teller. She had hooked up with "psychic tester" Hans Holzer, a former adjunct professor of parapsychology (which attempts to apply scientific method to investigate claims of the paranormal) at the New York Institute of Technology. (The institute will neither confirm nor deny Holzer's status.) Her clients included designer Diane von Furstenberg and Akio Morita, the late cofounder of Sony. Bard followed her path, starting with a show on Manhattan Cable TV, where he read the fortunes of people who called in. Later, he got tested by Holzer, 82, who makes a living as a writer and TV producer.
A litmus test good enough to attract Asahi TV in 1990. The network offered him and his mother a one-time fee of $100,000 to come to Tokyo, along with the former police chief of Harrison, N.Y., to reenact the murder investigation of two girls, ages 14 and 15, who were found hog-tied and suffocated inside plastic bags. Bard and his mother had led the police to a site 20 miles from where the bodies were discovered. There the police found three drug dealers--one of whom confessed; all three were convicted. That launched Bard's career in Japan, home to half his clients, even though he does not speak Japanese.
Bard says that three-fifths of his clients are in the financial industry. "They come to me to talk about their personal lives," Bard says. "But after eight minutes they're asking me about the markets." No Ouija boards or tea leaves for him. He takes personal items, like photos or business cards, and questions his subjects, probing for reactions. His subsequent "revelations" about a client's past--whether ESP or informed guesses à la Whoopi Goldberg in Ghost --are followed by predictions of the future.
But the demonstrations have turned some folks into lasting clients. Satoru Ohyama, a managing director at Merrill Lynch Japan, claims Bard anticipated the boom in i-mode mobile phones by predicting a "telephone computer" that would be a hot investment. Shoichiro Irimajiri, former president of the game company Sega, insists that Bard foretold his rise to the top and "that I would end up consulting for many companies, which is exactly what happened."
Bard persuaded Richard Li, son of Hong Kong billionaire Li Ka-shing and onetime president of Pacific Century Cyberworks, to invest $750,000 in a cellular fortune-telling service. (Since PCCW's stock price imploded last year, Bard has sought new investors.) Biggest ambition: starting the Channel Channel, a U.S. TV network devoted to the paranormal.
This stuff may not stand up to scientific experiment, but a clever fortune-teller can make people think he can see around corners. During a visit, Bard stared at the left foot of this reporter and stated, correctly, that there was a big scar under the sock. He also predicted the visitor would have problems with his right eye, which became infected two weeks later. Or was it just the power of suggestion?
Screwed-down Hairdo wrote:I also predict that he is very shortly going to start suffering from a whole series of obesity related diseases.....of course, he already knows that, so I predict he's also thinking about weight loss surgery....
;)"Yeah, I've been always awkward toward women and have spent pathetic life so far but I could graduate from being a cherry boy by using geisha's pussy at last! Yeah!! And off course I have an account in Fuckedgaijin.com. Yeah!!!"
Doctor Stop wrote:The guy's big [in Japan].
Taka-Okami wrote:Doctor Stop wrote:The guy's big [in Japan].
Anyone who believes in this tripe are fucking morons. This fat cunt should go on a diet.
Ron Bard aka Ronald Bardnot (October 22, 1959 – January 23, 2016)
i guess hookers and drugs do that to some one with no heart
WOW even I learned something
This year will be the year that Japan becomes a world power again
TennoChinko wrote:I found the article by Benjamin Fulford -
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 91 guests