Fortune Telling Collection - Fortune-telling birth date - Spiritualism pretends to be science, and wizards also run clinics.

Spiritualism pretends to be science, and wizards also run clinics.

Spiritualism pretends to be science, and wizards also run clinics.

Since the prediction of 1930 was recognized as "science" and named "idealism" in the west, like many western countries, there have been schools of idealism in Argentina. Psychiatrists who graduated from psychiatric schools can open a "clinic" and put it on the market. Originally, prophecy and prophecy have certain scientific elements, which are by no means simple science. But recently, many witches and fortune tellers also took the opportunity to set up "clinics" privately to attract customers, so they became the targets of police pursuit. Lady Carla Eyre used to be a frequent visitor to witches. When talking about personal experience, Kara hit the nail on the head: many fortune tellers have a set of jargon, such as telling visitors that "you are in a bad situation and lack of money" or "you are upset and someone is plotting against you behind your back", which is actually fraud. They will say that if you want to be safe, you have to spend money to "sacrifice to God". In an old residential area in the Qin Lemaur district of Buenos Aires, Mrs Cristina made a living by playing cards. Silvina Schonell, a female reporter of The Horn, decided to visit her home as a customer. After the visit, she wrote: Christina said two questions in a row after playing cards, and it was useless. "At this time, her face obviously showed a very embarrassed look." Dorita inherited her mother's career and became a witch in Boca, the capital. She claimed that she could see the past and future of the soothsayer from a cup full of water. When the reporter accompanied a girlfriend to visit Dorita, Dorita stared at the water glass for a while and said to her girlfriend, "Someone around you is dead" and "Someone is plotting against you". My girlfriend denied these two things on the spot. At present, there are many ways to practice witchcraft in Argentina, from crystal balls and palm reading to various cards for fortune telling and signing. Some witches only charge a chicken or 20,000 Australian dollars (about US$ 4) for each "diagnosis", while others charge 654,385,000 Australian dollars. Witchcraft is becoming increasingly rampant, which is actually a by-product of Argentina's social problems. The shadow brought by the protracted economic crisis and the increasingly tense pace of urban life have made more and more people feel insecure. At present, nearly 6% of Argentines suffer from some degree of depression syndrome, and many people hope to get some "enlightenment and comfort" from witches. From the emphasis on prophecy and foreknowledge to the widespread establishment of schools of spiritualism and the rampant witchcraft, the social consequences have reflected a truth: if you don't respect science, you will be punished, and the extremes meet.