Like To Learn Remote Viewing

intelligence operatives sit in focused silence. One agent, eyes closed, is engaged in a remote viewing session, surrounded by notes and sketches of distant locations. The atmosphere is tense and secretive, with shadows cast by the soft blue and green lights of the screens. Subtle details hint at covert operations, such as encrypted documents, surveillance equipment, and a wall displaying classified mission photos. The overall mood is mysterious and suspenseful, evoking the clandestine nature of intelligence work.

He sat and meditated, listened to the screams of various local Mincie boys, then he entered a trance like state, saw a large truck, a large red truck then gazed through the truck wall, saw the 25 kilos of heroin west bound Perth.

So you think all this psychic stuff is bullshit, Key people involved in the CIA's

Project Stargateinclude parapsychologists Hal Puthoff and Russell Targ, psychic subjects like Ingo Swann and Pat Price, and CIA/Army leadership. In its later years and review, the project involved researchers and scientific evaluators, such as statistician Jessica Utts and psychologist Raymond Hyman. The new American administration has announced plans for a grand AI initiative they call Stargate. That same codename was used during the Cold War for some bizarre CIA operations.

  • Fifty years ago, Project Stargate employed people who supposedly possessed extra sensory perception (ESP) for techniques such as ‘remote viewing’ and psychokinesis (the ability to move objects with one’s mind), among other activities.

  • How it began: CIA operatives believed that their Soviet counterparts might be engaging in the paranormal and therefore they couldn’t permit their rivals to get the upper hand. So in 1972, the US Congress allocated millions of dollars to fund the spy agency’s experiment in psychic techniques.

  • The program was initially overseen by Major General Albert Stubblebine, a career Army man involved in intelligence. Serving under him was Lt. Skip Atwater. In all, no more than 20 people were involved.

  • The project was subcontracted to the non-profit Stanford Research Institute in California (not associated with Stanford University). Russell Targ and Harold Puthoff, two parapsychologists, set about finding people who exhibited the talents required.

  • They sought people capable of ‘remote viewing,’ a term they coined. Think of it as a kind of psychic version of a satellite imaging system — minus the technology. People with this ‘gift’ were supposedly able to see the locations of certain places and things in their mind’s eye despite being many miles away.

  • Among the first individuals brought in was an Israeli nightclub performer named Uri Geller who professed psychic abilities. Tests were conducted, and Geller seemed like a natural fit. But he was soon deemed a fraud and was let go. He later became a world-famous celebrity who claimed to bend spoons with nothing but his mind.

  • Next, they brought in a psychic named Ingo Swann. Targ and Puthoff were so impressed with his abilities that they published papers about his feats of remote viewing. Their findings were easily refuted in a public rebuke, and one of Swann’s colleagues outed him as a clever manipulator.

  • Another promising candidate for the project was Rosemary Smith. She was an administrative assistant who proved…


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Latest Intel 6:52-02/12/2025