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THE BIBLICAL "ABOMINATION OF DESOLATION":   Message List  
Reply | Forward Message #1267 of 2628 |
THE BIBLICAL "ABOMINATION OF DESOLATION":
THE WHOLE WORLD IS LIKE AN ANIMAL! (NOT GNOSTICS)
RE: WHY WE COMPLAIN MORE ABOUT AMERICA
ALSO: A CHRISTIAN APPEAL TO THE CIA FOR HELP
http://learnremoteviewing.com/category/cia-remote-viewing
http://www.salvationscience.com

There are two reasons why we pick more on Americans than we do on
the people of other nations, who can also be just as bad or even
worse, in their hell-bent mad quest to knowingly do that which is
wrong:

1. The socio-economic boycott, with all its threats and insults,
originated with the people of the USA. Then it was exported overseas
for subordinate nations and peoples to "copy", like "monkey see
monkey do", which they did, no doubt far surpassing all Republican-
corporate-Catholic dreams. Many of us in India remember such foreign
interference in theology, during the period of the Kumba Mela at
Allahabad, in the winter of '88-89. Repent, or suffer the effects of
bad karma.

2. The CIA Remote Viewing programs, operations and projects are
intended to use the Siddhis or "Gifts of the Holy Spirit" for the
purpose of espionage, money, and power; and not for the benefit of
all mankind, for which this Healing Inner Energy Force was intended.
In other words, it has become a commodity to be monopolized by the
few elite to put further distance in the "power gap" between rich
and poor, instead of part and parcel of the "Second Coming of
Christ", as it were, which was intended to benefit all mankind -
both rich and poor. Jai Om. - Sw. Tantrasangha
-------------------------------------------------------

Archive of the 'CIA Remote Viewing' Category
Remote Viewing - Was the Pat Price Experiment Successful?
June 11th, 2007 | Category: Remote Viewing Articles, CIA Remote
Viewing

As the following article explains the Pat Rice Remote Viewing
experiments of 1974 are surrounded in a huge wave of controversy
that still to this day hasn't subsided.

According to the CIA and the military it proved to be a resounding
failure, however this neglected some quite astonishing occurrences
involving Pat's Remote Viewing skills.

The whole truth has never been uncovered as well, due to the
untimely nature of Pat Price's death in 1975.

In 1977 the Chicago Tribune reported that:

"CIA Director Stansfield Turner has disclosed that the agency found
a man who could "see" what was going on anywhere in the world
through his psychic powers. Scientists and officials would show the
man a picture of a place and he would then describe any activity
going on there at that time."

The tight-lipped CIA chief wouldn't reveal how accurate the man was,
but said the agency dropped the project in 1975. "He died," Turner
said, "and we haven't heard from him since."

Read this great article on Remote Viewing from Alternative Science
and make your mind up about Project Scanate . . .

Remote viewing — The experiment that was too successful
Remote viewing experiments (the respectable modern way of describing
second-sight or clairvoyance) by the US intelligence services has
been the subject of much speculation but concrete facts have been
thin on the ground. Now, a detailed account of one remote viewing
experiment, conducted by Drs. Hal Puthoff and Russell Targ at
Stanford Research Institute in 1974, has been recently declassified
and released in sanitised form on the National Security Agency
website. (Click Here to view). The report makes interesting reading
for several reasons; first because it is so detailed and second
because its CIA author judged the experiment to be unsuccessful from
a military standpoint. Yet in reality, the experiment was, if
anything, too successful for comfort and provoked a panic reaction
from the military authorities.

In the experiment, the subject (known only as SG1J but actually Pat
Price, a retired police commissioner) was informed of the existence
of a top secret Soviet military base at a place called
Semipalatinsk "25 to 30 miles south west of the Irtysh River" in
Siberia. It is inconceivable that the subject could have had any
knowledge of such a secret installation by normal means and he was
given only its map coordinates. Not only was it one of the Soviet
Union's most secret nuclear weapons centres, but it was also
physically very remote, and some 10,000 miles away from the site of
the experiments.

Over three days, Price was asked to describe features of the Russian
base by paranormal means in a number of remote viewing sessions. In
several important respects, the experiment was considered a failure
by the military officer tasked with analyzing the results. Price
failed to draw the perimeter of the site even though he was asked
twice. When pressed for details he made remarks like, `I'll come
back to that', but seldom did. And when pressed further for concrete
specific facts, he did what many `psychics' do — he produced a
stream of specific facts that proved to be incorrect. He thought,
for example, that the site was connected with the Soviet space
program and 'saw' cosmonauts in space suits when it is in fact a
purely military weapons installation.

However, Price made one statement that proved to be astonishingly
accurate. He said that he could see a mobile gantry crane built on a
huge scale — its wheels taller than a man. The crane he said was 150
feet tall and its railed tracks 50 feet apart. He also said this
crane ran on tracks over an underground building and made a number
of detailed sketches, almost of engineering drawing quality.

In his analysis, the anonymous evaluating officer wrote, `[Price]
supplied the most positive evidence yet for remote viewing with his
sketch of the rail-mounted gantry crane. It seems inconceivable to
imagine how he could draw such a likeness to the actual crane at
[Semipalatinsk] unless:

1) He actually saw it through remote viewing, or 2) he was informed
of what to draw by someone knowledgeable of [the site].'

The analyst continued, `I only mention this second possibility
because the experiment was not controlled to discount the
possibility that [Price] could talk to other people - such as the
disinformation Section of the KGB. That may sound ridiculous to the
reader, but I have to consider all possibilities in the spectrum
from his being capable to view remotely to his being supplied data
for disinformation purposes by the KGB.'

In his final, overall report on the experiments, the officer had,
for reasons not fully explained, become much more skeptical. He
says, quite baldly, `The remote viewing experiment of
[Semipalatinsk] by [Price] proved to be unsuccessful.'

In reality, the experiment was too successful, as one of the
experimenters, Dr. Russell Targ, has subsequently revealed on his
website (Click Here). Says Targ, `This trial was such a stunning
success that we were forced to undergo a formal Congressional
investigation to determine if there had been a breach in National
Security. Of course, none was ever found, and we were supported by
the government for another fifteen years. As I sat with Price in
these experiments at SRI, he made the sketch shown, to illustrate
his mental impressions of a giant gantry crane that he
psychically "saw" rolling back and forth over a building at the
target site!'

The Price experiment is not conclusive evidence of remote viewing.
But it does represent a remarkable controlled experiment that
deserves to be taken seriously scientifically. The huge gantry crane
at the target site was purpose built and thus a rare feature
anywhere — indeed a feature that the overwhelming majority of people
have never seen. That Price's identification should be merely a
guess thus has a very low probability and, as an explanation, is
lacking in credibility.

Read the Original Story

Why not read more information on how you can indeed Learn Remote
Viewing.

US Remote Viewing "Spy" Criticizes UK Military's Use of Remote
Viewing, April 08th, 2007 | Category: Remote Viewing Articles, CIA
Remote Viewing

A few weeks ago I wrote about the UK Military's Use of Remote
Viewing for Spy Operations. Well it turns out that some US Remote
Viewers feel that the experiments conducted by the UK are pure
hogwash…Read on.

A psychic spy who participated in the Pentagon's remote viewing
program from 1983 until 1990 claims that the British Ministry of
Defense remote viewing studies of 2002 had more holes than Swiss
cheese.

Major Paul H. Smith, currently President of the International Remote
Viewing Association (www.irva.org) said: "The British media
uniformly got it wrong. They reported stuff that wasn't in the
report. They reported things that were not said that actually were
in the report."

Major Smith, a retired U.S. Army officer, was one of the first
members of the U.S. military recruited for the Pentagon's remote
viewing studies. He recalled that when he was recruited into the
U.S. Army's remote viewing program, "It was like that scene from Men
in Black.'" Major Smith is the author of Reading the Enemy's Mind:
America's Psychic Espionage Program.

According to the BBC and other media outlets in the U.K.,
researchers under contract to the Ministry of Defense in 2002 tried
to recruit psychics who advertised on the Internet. "That's what the
news reports said. What really happened was this: The researchers
tried to contact 12 people who claimed to be remote viewers," said
Smith who was not asked to participate in the project despite his
expertise. "I may have been asked by someone using a cover story
that was so vague, I had no idea what he really meant," Smith said.

Of the 6 self-described remote viewers who responded, "none showed
any interest in participating" and the remaining 6 allegedly never
responded to the query, according to him.

In seeking out experienced remote viewers for the MoD research
program, Smith alleged that British researchers who used sloppy
recruitment criteria. Thus, "recruiting remote viewers of the
internet because their websites say they're remote viewers is a sure-
fire recipe for questionable success."

A BBC Report of February 23, 2007, quoted a Ministry of Defense
spokeswoman as saying, "The study concluded that remote viewing
theories had little value to the MoD and was taken no further."
However, if inadequate measures were taken to ensure sensible
recruitment and protocol for the study, how can the results be
fairly assessed? Said Smith, "When you put something together with
people who didn't know what was going on, they did not have a good
grasp of the protocol." He further alleged that the remote viewing
researchers did not appear to have read such classic reference works
as Mind-Reach by Russell Targ and Hal Puthoff or the studies
reviewed in the Journal of Parapsychology.

In fact, the protocol was flawed because the MoD program was based
on a report downloaded from the internet. A report that was never
intended to serve as a model for beginners.

After reviewing a 168-page declassified report released under the
British Freedom of Information Act, Major Smith learned that the
manual in question was, in fact, one that he wrote in 1986. "The
Coordinate Remote Viewing manual I wrote while assigned to the
Defense Intelligence Agency was never intended to be used to guide
experiments," Smith said. "It was intended to help train viewers in
applying practical remote viewing skills, rather than for research."

In defending his manual as a useful one for operational tasks, he
said, "That manual wasn't meant for training." Although the manual
was based on solid research by Ingo Swann, Hal Puthoff, Russell Targ
and others who participated in remote viewing research at SRI
International in Palo Alto, California in the 1980s, Major Smith
maintained that had MoD program leaders actually read the Coordinate
Remote Viewing manual, they would have known it was designed for
operations not preliminary studies.

The Ministry of Defence remote viewing experiments which cost
British taxpayers 18,000 pounds sterling asked blindfolded volunteer
subjects who were kept in a secret location to describe the contents
of sealed brown envelopes. These contained photos of a knife, Mother
Theresa, and an "Asian individual." Perhaps an image of a dead
parrot would have yielded more successful results.

Major Smith observed that although the MoD report concluded that 28
percent of these sessions produced positive findings, the British
media made fun of the study. Which is too bad, according to Smith.
Despite the lack of a proper research protocol, a 28 percent success
rate has signficance for future research. He said, "Even though they
had 18 sessions which is a drop in a bucket for a project like this,
and they had no trained sources and used naive sources who had not
done remote viewing before, the report concludes this study gives a
baseline for how inexperienced viewers function. They can compare
that in future research with experienced viewers."

Although the official statement from MoD is that "remote viewing has
little value," Major Smith noted that the report was not dismissive
of the experiments. Given the findings, he hypothesized that perhaps
more research was conducted within MoD. However, he added, "It's
possible someone at HQ said, `This is just silly.'"

Not silly, however, is the ongoing negative publicity about remote
viewing on both sides of the pond. The C.I.A. closed the door on
remote viewing programs in 1995, despite a 12-year record of
significant scientific progress. "The problem is that most
scientists will see what they believe, rather than believe what they
see," said Russell Targ, a physicist who helped to pioneer the
United States research program.

The negative reporting of this and other paranormal studies in Great
Britain is contradicted by its own historical interest in this
field. The Royal Society for Psychical Research was founded in 1880
and continues today. The Koestler Parapsychology Unit at the
University of Edinburgh is one of the most respected paranormal
research institutions in the world. Perrot-Warrick Research Unit at
the University of Hertfordshire is also respected for its scientific
research into psi phenomena. " The U.K. is further ahead on the
power curve than the U.S. Europe has more serious laboratories than
we do in the States," said Smith, adding, "The negative reaction to
the Ministry of Defence study shows just how far down into the
depths the public perception of psi has gotten in the media."

Dr. Laurie Nadel is the author of Sixth Sense: Unlocking Your
Ultimate Mind Power with Judy Haims & Robert Stempson (ASJA Press).
Copyright 2007, Viking Rain, Ltd.

READ MORE:

UK Military Admits to Remote Viewing
Remote Viewer Lead to Capture of Saddam?
March 26th, 2007 | Category: CIA Remote Viewing

Found this news article. Can Uri Geller be trusted or is this just a
broad exaggeration? I can believe that it could have happen. Given
the evidence for Remote Viewing it certainly seems plausible.

Herzliya, Israel (AHN) - According to an Israeli-born psychic Uri
Geller, the December 2003 capture of former Iraqi leader Saddam
Hussein was not simply a matter of luck or the work of sophisticated
intelligence gathering. Rather, members of a US paranormal program
used psychic powers to locate the tiny hole containing the bearded
and bedraggled dictator.

Geller claims to have worked for the Central Intelligence Agency
during the Cold War. He said on Monday that his knowledge of the
psychic discovery of Saddam is gathered from a high-level source in
the secret US paranormal program.

He said he held letters revealing the information but refused to
name his source.

In an interview with Reuters, Geller said, "You remember when they
found Saddam Hussein in Iraq? A soldier walked over to a rock,
lifted it and then found a trap door and found him in there. Well, I
know that that soldier walked over to that rock because he got
information from a `remote viewer' from the United States."

The `remote viewer' according to Geller is a kind of psychic who
located Saddam with his or her mind thousands of miles away.

Officials for the U.S. did not take time to comment on the subject,
only noting that a source close to Saddam had spoken of his
whereabouts under interrogation.

Last year, a Brazilian psychic attempted to collect a $25 million
reward for Saddam's capture. The psychic said that he had written
letters to the U.S. government with explicit descriptions of the
ousted leaders hiding hole.

Full Story Here >>
----------------------------------------------------

UK Military Admits to Remote Viewing Experiments
February 23rd, 2007 | Category: Remote Viewing Articles, CIA Remote
Viewing

It seems that the UK military establishment has decided to
experiment with Remote Viewing to locate high-value targets. Read on…
-------------------------------------------------------------

How UK attempted bizarre X-Files tests on soldiers
by RUSSELL JACKSON, on News.TheScotsman.com

The Ministry of Defence funded a secret study to ascertain
whetherpeople with psychic powers could help protect the nation, it
emergedlast night.

The MoD arranged the tests to discover whether volunteers were
ableto use psychic powers to "remotely view" hidden objects.
Thestudyinvolved blindfolding test subjects and asking them to "see"
thecontents of sealed brown envelopes containing pictures of
randomobjects and public figures.

Defenceexperts tried to recruit 12 "known" psychics who advertised
theirabilities on the internet, but when they all refused they were
forcedto use "novice" volunteers.

The MoD last night defended the cost of the experiment, carried
outin 2002, in which commercial researchers were contracted at a
cost of£18,000 to test them to see if psychic ability existed in
case it couldbe used in defence, according to previously classified
report releasedunder the Freedom of Information Act.

Surprisingly 28 per cent of those tested managed a close guess atthe
contents of the envelopes, which included pictures of a knife,Mother
Teresa and an "Asian individual".

But most subjects, who were holed up in a secret location for
thestudy, were hopelessly off the mark in their guesses. One even
fellasleep while he tried to focus on the envelope's content.

A former Ministry of Defence employee who received a copy of
thereport has claimed that the timing of the study suggests
securityservices wanted to "remotely view" hidden weapons caches in
Iraq andfind Osama bin Laden.

Nick Pope, who ran the MoD UFO research programme and worked at
theministry for 21 years, said: "It can only be speculation, but you
don'temploy that kind of time and effort to find money down the back
of the sofa.

"You go to this trouble for high-value assets. We must be talking
about bin Laden and weapons of mass destruction."

The MoD last night refused to discuss the possible applications
ofsuch a technique, but said that the study had concluded there
was"little value" in using "remote viewing" in the defence of the
nation.

A spokeswoman said: "The remote viewing study was conducted to
assess claims made in some academic circles and to validate
researchcarried out by other nations on psychic ability.

"The study concluded that remote viewing theories had little value
to the MoD and was taken no further."

Mr Pope said he had suspected that the MoD were considering such
astudy during his time there, but it was only when friend and
authorTimothy Good requested documents on the subject that he
discovered theyhad actually commissioned it.

The documents refer to similar study conducted by the CIA but,
saidMr Pope, "there has never been a whisper of a British
programmebefore."

"This is what I call a low probability high-impact study. They
musthave thought that the chances were it wouldn't work, but if it
had theintelligence applications would have been endless."

"I don't think this was a waste of public money. Many people willsay
so, but I think it is marvellous that the Government is prepared
tothink outside the box. And this is as outside the box as it gets."
------------------------------------------------

CIA Funded Remote Viewing and ESP Experiments
February 22nd, 2007 | Category: Scientific Studies, Remote Viewing
Articles, CIA Remote Viewing

This is an excellent article in a reputable news source, US News and
World Report.

Enemies in the mind's eye

For more than 20 years, the CIA funded psychic experiments
By Marianne Szegedy-Maszak and Charles Fenyvesi, Jan 27 2003.
His name would eventually be revealed as Joseph McMoneagle, but for
the purposes of the Army's psychic intelligence unit, he was simply
Remote Viewer No. 1. One fall day in 1979 he reclined in an easy
chair in an office at Fort Meade, Md. The lights were dim. Sitting
nearby was an interviewer, who gave him a series of geographical
coordinates that were supposed to be his mind's destination.

After about 20 minutes, McMoneagle brought himself out of a deep
meditation and, as he describes it, "opened my mind." Gradually
images began to appear: a low, windowless building; a smokestack. He
smelled "a strange stink," a mixture of sulfur and natural gas.
There was also a "smelting or melting activity." After an image came
to mind, he drew it roughly on a piece of paper. Another viewer, No.
29, could "see" heavy metal equipment, including tubes conducting
a "heat exchange." For him, the site emanated a "sense of power."

Far-fetched as it sounds, the remote viewers at Fort Meade were
engaged in deadly serious work–an odd marriage of American
intelligence-gathering and paranormal experimentation. Unbeknownst
to themselves, viewers No. 1 and No. 29 seemed to be describing Lop
Nor, a Chinese nuclear complex.

The experiment was only one episode in a remarkable research program
run by the Defense Intelligence Agency and CIA from 1972 until 1996.
The project, known variously as Grill Flame, Sun Streak, and finally
Star Gate, explored a variety of parapsychological phenomena but
especially one known as "remote viewing," the process by which
someone in, say, Maryland visualizes an office in the Kremlin and
describes it both in words and drawings. The viewers were shadowy
and unacknowledged participants in the quest for intelligence about
a range of security concerns: nuclear weapons sites, the Iranian
hostage crisis, the kidnapping of Gen. James Dozier by the Red
Brigades, the location of Col. Muammar Qadhafi during the raids on
Tripoli in 1986, and the espionage case of Aldrich Ames.

The outlines of Star Gate have been sketched before, but new details
of the project have come to light in 73,000 pages of previously
classified records released by the CIA last November and made
available just this month. (An additional 20,800 pages are
undergoing review, and 17,700 pages were deemed too sensitive to
release.) The documents illuminate a chapter of spying that bears
closer resemblance to Miss Cleo than to James Bond.

In a sense, it was inevitable. From the early 1950s on, United
States intelligence explored psychic research, hoping to use
extrasensory perception (ESP) for intelligence operations. After
all, the Soviets were doing it. Nonetheless, officials were torn
between worries that the Soviets–and later the Chinese–were ahead of
the United States in the psychic arms race and the skepticism of
many American officials about spending money in the field seen as
dominated by kooks.

Even such hardheaded operatives as Richard Helms, who later became
the director of the CIA, were intrigued. The declassified documents
reveal a memo written when Helms was deputy director for plans in
1963. For 10 years a small group in the Technical Services Division
had been studying hypnosis and telepathy for use in clandestine
operations but concluded that these fields were not ready for
operational applications. Helms disagreed and sent a memo suggesting
more research in "this somewhat esoteric (and perhaps scientifically
disreputable) range of activities." He argued that given the Soviet
preoccupation with "cybernetics, telepathy, hypnosis, and related
subjects . . . recent reported advances . . . may indicate more
potential than we believed existed."

Remote viewing was added to the roster of psychic phenomena in 1972
when the CIA became interested in the published viewing experiments
of Hal Puthoff at the Stanford Research Institute. In 1972, the CIA
gave the institute $50,000 to study remote viewing. Russell Targ,
who joined the project in 1972, recalls a CIA official telling
him: "You are wasting your time looking at churches and swimming
pools in Palo Alto." Two years later, the institute received the
geographical coordinates of a "Soviet site of ongoing operational
significance."

"Turning point."

The target was Semipalatinsk, in what is now Kazakhstan. Aside from
suspicions that the site was important, nothing was known about it.
Given the coordinates, a remote viewer provided a layout of a
cluster of buildings and drew a puzzling, "damned big crane." He
identified the underground facility as storage for Soviet missiles.
Satellite photos verified the viewer's report, according to Donald
Jameson, then a senior CIA Soviet specialist, who called the event
a "turning point." One group within the agency refused to look at
the Semipalatinsk data, objecting to the unscientific methodology.
Another group allowed that the data might be real but called the
process "demonic."

Still, officials were convinced enough of the program's potential
that a training program was designed, as well as an ESP teaching
machine. Questions designed to detect ESP talent supplemented the
standard personality test used by the CIA. Some employees were
deemed psychically gifted. When the CIA cut the program in 1975, the
funds shifted first to the Air Force and then, in 1980, to the
Defense Intelligence Agency. The military also looked for potential
talent. That meant, says Paul H. Smith, a retired intelligence
officer who spent seven years in Star Gate, "certain odd
proclivities, like a creative pursuit in music or art, an interest
or aptitude in foreign languages. They were also looking for people
who didn't report any ESP experiences."

Between 1979 and 1994 Fort Meade's viewing site conducted roughly
250 projects involving thousands of missions. One, in 1987, was an
attempt to find a mole in the CIA. The viewers came up with a
composite: The man lived in the Washington area, drove an expensive
foreign car, perhaps gray, lived in a palatial home, was intimate
with a woman from Latin America, possibly Colombia. Aldrich Ames
lived in a palatial house in the Washington area. He drove a Jaguar
and was married to a Colombian. The car was red; the house was gray.
Not that the information was used; Ames was apprehended in 1994.

By 1995, the end of the Cold War, along with increasing concerns
about unfavorable scrutiny, drained the remote-viewing program of
both its vitality and its supporters, and CIA director John Deutch
ended it. All told, it had cost $20 million. The CIA says it no
longer funds remote-viewing research, but the military is less
emphatic in its denials. In the end, the weakness of remote viewing,
says Smith, "is the weakness of any phenomenon that deals with the
threshold of human perception. There are false positives, vague
notions, and confused data that go with the territory."

Paradoxically, for nearly a quarter of a century of American spying,
that was also a strength.

Article from US News and World Report >>
---------------------------------------------------

Why Learn Remote Viewing?
February 22nd, 2007 | Category: Remote Viewing Exercises, Remote
Viewing Articles, CIA Remote Viewing

Paul H. Smith served for seven years in the government's remote
viewing program at Ft. Meade, MD (from September 1983 to August
1990). During 1984, he became one of only a handful of government
personnel to be personally trained as coordinate remote viewers by
Ingo Swann at SRI-International.

Paul was the primary author of the government RV program's CRV
training manual, and served as theory instructor for new CRV trainee
personnel, as well as recruiting officer and unit security officer.
He is credited with over a thousand training and operational remote
viewing sessions during his time with the unit at Ft. Meade.

In this excellent article, Paul explains why the average person
should learn remote viewing.

Why Learn Remote Viewing by Paul H. Smith
Many times since starting to teach controlled remote viewing
commercially, I've been asked variations of the question "Why do
people want to learn remote viewing?"or "What good is remote
viewing?"

I've thought about it for a long time, and have come to the
following conclusion. Maybe people want to learn remote viewing for
reasons similar to why others learn to skydive. This may seem a
little surprising at first, but let's start off by asking, "what
good is skydiving?" There are of course a number of answers: It is
useful in military and commando operations; it is handy for getting
people to remote places to fight forest fires; it can be used to
insert rescue personnel into certain emergency situations.

However, the vast majority of people learn to skydive, and continue
doing it, not for any so-called practical reason. They do it because
it presents a challenge–the thrill of overcoming nature (gravity)
and the natural human fears that come with it. Or it puts them in a
class of people who do something beyond the ordinary–something that
takes skill and self-mastery. Or they simply glory in the experience
of hanging all alone, however briefly, thousands of feet above the
earth.

This seems also to be the case with remote viewing–though not
literally, of course. Like skydiving, RV has its practical
applications. Within its inherent limitations remote viewing has
been used in intelligence collection, crime-solving, finding missing
persons, market predictions, and–more controversially–space
exploration.

Yet most people who learn it do so not because of practical
applications so much as the challenge it represents–learning to do
something that few other people as yet know how to do; or acquiring
a skill deemed impossible under the currently ruling scientific
paradigm; or because it provides convincing and satisfying proof
that we are, indeed, much more than our physical bodies.

While skydivers learn that it is possible to transcend the physical
fears and bodily limitations that we normally think we are subject
to, remote viewers learn something analogous: that it is possible to
transcend not only those limitations, but the boundaries of space
and time as well.

For more info on Paul, visit this link >>
---------------------------------------------------

Ed Dames Exclusive Interview on Remote Viewing
February 22nd, 2007 | Category: Remote Viewing Videos, CIA Remote
Viewing

In this video, The ESP Affair, Ed Dames, a former American "Remote
Viewer Spy" talks about his experiences using his mind to Remotely
View and penetrate Soviet military installations during the Cold War.

It's some exciting stuff - although I wish their background music
was no so sinister and heavy. Remote viewing really should not be
made to sound sinister and mysterious.

Still, watch the video and share your comments.

Part 1 - 2.46 seconds

If you liked the Video Above, Scroll below to Watch the Remaining
Parts of the Series, Parts 2, 3 and 4.

Who Is Ed Dames?

"Major" Edward A. Dames is a retired U.S. Army and CIA intelligence
officer, known for his claim to be able to conduct remote viewing,
and for his appearances on the Coast to Coast AM radio show.

After remote viewing training under Ingo Swann, who developed the
original RV protocols, Dames went on to found PSI TECH, a company
that sells home remote viewing kits.

In 2004 he was hired as a consultant for the feature film Suspect
Zero. He also made his acting debut in the film, playing the small
role of a CIA remote viewing instructor.

He is mentioned, along with other proponents of parapsychology
within the U.S. military, in "The Men Who Stare at Goats" by Jon
Ronson.

http://learnremoteviewing.com/category/cia-remote-viewing
http://www.salvationscience.com




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9:23 pm
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