
November 21, 2002: Demonic Possession - Gordon Michael Scallion
Scallion describes possession as operating through the body's etheric field, with negative entities entering through the spinal column to influence the brain. He distinguishes between possession by agreement, as in mediumistic activity, and involuntary possession driven by a collective negative consciousness he associates with the Luciferian force. Fear, anger, depression, and sustained stress act as beacons that attract these entities, and he connects rising societal stress from terrorism, economic instability, and rapid technological change to an unprecedented vulnerability. He predicts 2003 will see a major outbreak tied to Mars approaching closer to Earth than it has in 50,000 years.
Art references his interviews with the late Father Malachi Martin, who reported an 800 percent annual increase in possession cases in New York. Scallion predicts possession will eventually become a legal defense in criminal trials, framed as a failure of collective society. The first hour covers antibiotic-resistant bacteria, truckers being stalked on highways, invisible aircraft sightings, and a man's attempt to auction his soul on eBay.
Key Moments
New Madrid stress and the road to 2012: Scallion warns of energy release at the New Madrid fault within six months and frames the next decade as escalating quakes, glacier melt, and continual Earth changes culminating around 2012 with land masses literally separated.
Possession by agreement: Scallion redefines possession as something theoretically open to anyone, drawing a line between trained channeling and casual Ouija-board experimentation, where 'you don't know who you're going to get on the other line.'
When mass possession began: Asked when mass possession started, Scallion ties it to the early 1960s, the sexual revolution, anti-war upheaval, drug culture and trip transcripts, arguing negative forces found 'plenty of bodies' to inhabit, and 'those people are now our leaders.'
The Arizona house and the man thrown across the kitchen: Scallion recounts touching a friend's husband on the shoulder in a house where a woman had been murdered; the man flew back, the lights went out, he hit the floor at the exact spot of the killing, and afterwards he no longer wanted to buy the house.
The 1789 diary in the Connecticut inn library: At a Greenwich-area wedding reception, Scallion and his wife are drawn by an unbearable cold and a voice telling them 'come into the library,' where they find an off-limits room and on the bottom shelf, third book, a young woman's hidden diary about loving a slave and fearing her father would kill her.
