Icy curse

Blondin

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From this story: Alpine Iceman Reveals Stone Age Secrets

This quote (emphasis mine):
Science has also been unable to explain a series of sinister accidents since the iceman was discovered.

Forensic medic Rainer Henn, one of the first to touch the mummy, died in a car crash on his way to a lecture about Oetzi. A mountain guide who helped with the find plunged to his death, and a journalist who filmed the excavation died from cancer.

Last October, Helmut Simon fell to his death in the Alps after a sudden onset of bad weather near the spot where he had discovered Oetzi.

Walter Leitner was close to the scene the night Simon died.

At the time, he was explaining his iceman theory to a team of U.S. American journalists when they too were suddenly engulfed by the storm and had to be rescued by helicopter.

"At that moment I thought of my survival rather than the curse; of my family; my daughter's birthday the next day, and how I would maybe not be there," Leitner said.

"The next day, when I arrived at the institute, people were saying, 'Have you heard, Helmut Simon went missing in the mountains', and that's when I started feeling a bit queasy."

The archeologist explained Simon had been profoundly moved by his discovery, seeing it as a religious signal to convert to Christianity.

"But why should the mummy punish him for that?" Leitner added. "It doesn't make sense."
So let's see... over a period of 14 years 4 people died (two of them while mountain climbing). Not a very efficient curse if you ask me.

No doubt when Mrs Simon finally passes away (by whatever means) we'll see a "Curse of Oetzi Strikes Again" headline.
 
And the two who died on the mountain were in an area known to be dangerous - after all, it kill Otzi himself.
 
I'm just waiting for this to be linked to (a) the Tutankhamen curse, and (b) something homeopathic... It couldn't get any sillier, that's for sure.
 
CurtC said:
And the two who died on the mountain were in an area known to be dangerous - after all, it kill Otzi himself.

Heh, you gotta wonder about the thought process that day... "hmm, dead guy. Looks frozen. Hey, it's cold... Um, when are we heading back to base camp?"
 
Zep said:
I'm just waiting for this to be linked to (a) the Tutankhamen curse,

I seem to recall reading that if you took all the people who should have been affected by the Tutankhamen thing, their average life span was actually better than expected. It's the Tutankhamen blessing!
 
CurtC said:
And the two who died on the mountain were in an area known to be dangerous - after all, it kill Otzi himself.
Actually, no! A closer examination has revealed an arrowhead in his body, and it is now considered that he was killed. It also explains why he only carried broken arrows; the others he had probably shot at his killers!
 
The archeologist explained Simon had been profoundly moved by his discovery, seeing it as a religious signal to convert to Christianity.

"But why should the mummy punish him for that?" Leitner added. "It doesn't make sense."


Maybe the mummy wasn't christian?

Reminds me of the hoopla surrounding "The Passion of Christ" when it was claimed that the fact the lead actor was struck by lightning twice during filming was a sign of god's approval. It was the first time I ever heard it claimed that being struck by lightning was a sign of god's APPROVAL...
 
That was one of the more disgusting excuses for news I've read in a while. I looked for "new" discoveries from Iceman studies. Didn't see much. Sounds like the reporter didn't either so he put that drivel in there.
 

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