Talk:Michael Malloy
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
I can't believe many of these stories are true... although they still might be worth documenting as stories. What are the sources?
- Christ, there's books, programs and plays based on it, I think we can presume it's true. Troubleshooter 21:59, 8 September 2006 (UTC)
- So now anything anyone says is true, so long as other people agree? You don't happen to be religious, do you?Vegetable4 22:32, 4 August 2007 (UTC)
The original writer of this article almost certainly got his/her information from one of the People's Almanac books written by David Wallenchinsky and co. The latest one, I think, was The People's Almanac Presents: The 20th Century and Malloy's story is found in the chapter on death under "Famous Non-Survivors." At least, *I've* never seen it mentioned in any other book, etc.--Massofspikes 19:18, 31 January 2007 (UTC)
Why is there a link to Rasputin? Other than the fact that he was, in theory, also very hard to kill off, they're entirely unrelated. What gives? 66.159.76.67 04:56, 25 May 2007 (UTC) Because he was very hard to kill off, that is the whole reason, not many people could survive multiple murder attempts.Davie4264 20:22, 2 June 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Scientific discussion of this?
On reading the article, the whole story comes across sounding like an urban legend. Perhaps there could be a section on possible scientific causes of the phenomena he displayed, assuming of course that the story is true? That might lend the article a bit more credibility.FlamingSilmaril 13:20, 28 July 2007 (UTC)

