Well, I was with two friends at the time and I said out loud: “Something bad is going to happen here.” They just looked at me. End of conversation.
You’re right there were a lot poor conditions that led to riots, price gouging especially. This is why I made it point to include in my post that it was a day before the event was scheduled to start.
The most I can give your argument is that I made the prediction in relation to the man stepping on a field mouse. If the concert is supposed to be about peace and love, this instance with the mouse, is not a good start towards those two ideals. I may have attributed the actions of one to the arriving multitude. A real stretch, though.
Making announcements public has not in my experience been much different than saying predictions have worked out after the fact. In one of the above posts, I mentioned that I asked a friends sister if she was worried a plane would crash into her house. She said no. Laughed at me. Doubted. The facts were even on my side. An increasing number of planes were crashing, whether I predicted them or not. A few months later a plane crashed into a building across from her house.
Now you would think a normal person would recognize that a prediction was made. Did she ever congratulate me? Pat me on the back? Or become more believing of my ability? No. It was still her tendency to overlook the prediction. Deflate my ego. To double down on doubt. Human beings throughout history don’t respond well to warnings of any kind, even reasonable ones that many agree on. And will claim scaremongering before taking any action to prevent anything.
I wish I could predict the stock market or lottery ticket numbers, but I can’t. Most of the the predictions have involved danger, and another half of them have be neutral or personal and I still can’t figure why it was those events that entered my mind beforehand at all. Sorry to disappoint. I wish I could control it. Or use it. I can’t. I was only asking if others experience similar odd occurrences. Now I’m confronted with proof requests. Intuition doesn’t lend well to proof. It is very much an internal mystery.