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The Casanova of Cairo

@copyright 2020/Mike Consol  There was a national mania for spirituality at the time Lolita Firestone founded the Center for Cosmic Consciousness in Sedona, Arizona. Not all that much happened during the organization’s first year, but Lolita’s reach started growing decisively when she began recording videos and podcasts and using social media platforms to distribute her messages.   She aspired to a global audience and influence. Although many did not believe in Lolita Firestone’s cosmology, they found her dangerously charming. They might not have believed or even liked what she was saying, but they were mesmerized by watching her say it.   The Center for Cosmic Consciousness membership rose to more than 30,000 by the end of year two and started growing exponentially after that, as an international audience began following this  pied-piper  of spiritual thinking. Some Africans, men and women from Somalia, came to Sedona to attend the Cosmic Center’s astral projection workshop. Their arr