Originally posted by Sally
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The idea that a fake who was about to carry out a tour of Britain would somehow find people in all the different towns (by advertising in the local paper, perhaps?), employ them to trace the homes of people intending to attend her public events, rake through their bins in the hope that inside those bins will be written details of their dead relations, and then pass all this information to the fake, who must then locate these people within a few seconds, inside a theatre of 1,000 people, and enforce the silence of all these paid accomplices, is equally as unlikely as the possibility of speaking to the dead.
On a purely financial basis it would cost more to employ such accomplices the length and breadth of Britain than the income from the tour. And the number of temporary accomplices would be growing every year, how do the fakes prevent them from speaking to the press? I mean, someone might earn £100 for snooping (if the above-described snooping was even possible and effective, which it isn't) but the press might pay £10,000 for the story which would discredit the fake medium.
Helena
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