Remote Viewing

"Remote viewing is an ability that we all have to describe and experience what's going on a distant place."
Russell Targ, author and physicist.


On this page, you'll find the basics on what's Remote Viewing, (RV), or Controled Remote Viewing (CRV), links to RV Institutions where you can join and learn this skill for yourself, some articles, (or links to articles), where you can read from the 'Father's' of this skill. Also included are News articles regarding this subject.

On this page:

-What is Remote Viewing?
-Tips to Test Oneself of Remote Viewing Abilities
-STARGATE Controled Remote Viewing [Article Quote]
-Top Remote Viewers [Founding 'Fathers']
-RV & CRV Links
-News Articles 2003-2004-2005-2006-2007-2008


What is Remote Viewing?

Remote viewing (RV) is a skill by which a person (a "viewer") can perceive objects, persons, or events at a location removed from him or her by either space or time. The person does not actually have to be there, nor do they need objects such as television, telephone, etc., to gain information about the target. RV exploits and improves upon what is more commonly called "psychic" ability and works whether the target is in the next room or on the other side of the planet. Neither time nor any known type of shielding can prevent a properly-trained remote viewer from gaining access to the desired target.

Do you have to be 'gifted' to learn Remote Viewing?

One of the wonderful things about RV is that virtually anyone can learn to do it. Much like studying the piano or art, nearly all of us have the capability to acquire the techniques and put them into practice. It just takes desire, time, the right teacher, and the belief that it is at least possible.

How well does it work?

After long practice, experienced viewers can access a target nearly one hundred percent of the time. This does not mean their data is 100% accurate, nor does it necessarily mean they get all the data they were looking for. All it means is that they retrieve information indicating that they were "there." However, these experienced viewers regularly obtain extremely accurate, often error-free information from the target.

Even novice viewers may surprise themselves at the accuracy of some of their sessions. Though beginners will perform less consistently than those who are more accomplished, they do frequently turn out commendable results.


Tips to test oneself for remote viewing abiliy:

1. Try and clear your mind of any preconceived ideas and beliefs. Start by asking yourself, "Is it okay with me if psychic functioning is really a natural part of the world?" Next ask yourself, "Is it okay with me if I have psychic ability?"

2. Take a positive tone. Say to yourself, "I can remote view a location." If you sense any resistance to the idea that you can remote view, thn take some time to work this out and become comfortable with the idea that you can fuction psychically, even if it's only temporary.

3. Sit comfortably in a quiet, undisturbed location. Try to find a place that is neutral in color and atmosphere. Avoid places with many distractions. Dim the lights, but darkness is not necessary.

4. Sit upright and remain alert. Have some clean sheets of paper and pen or pencils at hand.

5. Begin to quiet your mind. Relax and take deep breaths. With each exhalation, relax both your body's muscles and your mind. Let your mind go blank but do not try to stop thoughts which come. Simply let them go without focusing on them. No special meditation is required, although one useful technique is to imagine yourself in an empty theatre staring at a blank screen. Relax until images appear on the screen.

6. When images come, describe what you see, not what you think. View the images as if you were an unaffected observer. Observe them carefully, since the images often flash through the mind rapidly. The more basic the impressions, the more likelihood of an accurate viewing.

7. Try drawing what you see, even if you don't know what the drawing represents. Don't attempt to connect images. Simply draw or describe them. Try for an initial ideogram, which is a simple line drawing representing the whole idea of the target. Concentrate on the idea of the target and let your pencil hand move automatically.

8. Next, concentrate on shapes, forms, colors, and textures. Don't be concerned if something doesn't seem to make sense, just record it.

9. Try to get a feel for your target, then interrogate yourself about it. Is it a person, place or thing? Is it natural or manmade? What is it used for? Who goes there?

10. Limit your remote viewing session to 15 or 20 minutes. Whenever possible, a novice remote viewer should visit the target site as soon as possible after the RV session. Look about carefully and compare what you see with the images you received. If feedback is done while images are still fresh in your mind, the comparisons made will benifit you during subsequent RV sessions.

Simple remote viewing test that requiers only some time and at least three persons:

One person is the remote viewer, the second acts as monitor, while the third is the target contact.

While the viewer and the monitor go through the above list for conducting a successful RV session, the target contact should journey to a predetermined target site. Do not let the viewer or the monitor know the location of the site. Choose a site with distinguishing features that can be readily identified.

At the predetermined time, the target contact should be at the target site. He/She should simply be alert and paying close attention to the site and it's environment. There is no need to try and send mental pictures or messages to the viewer.

At the same time, the monitor should encourage the viewer to describe the location of the target contact. Again, do not attempt to analyze the incomming data. Simply describe or draw the basic shapes, forms, or colors that are seen.

This test should not last more than 15 or 20 minutes. At it's completion, both the viewer and the monitor should be taken immediately to the target site for feedback.


Sources/References: Remote Viewing Instructional Services, Inc. by Paul H. Smith
and PSI SPIES by author Jim Marrs.


STAR GATE [Controlled Remote Viewing]

STAR GATE was one of a number of "remote viewing programs" conducted under a variety of code names, including SUN STREAK, GRILL FRAME, and CENTER LANE by DIA and INSCOM, and SCANATE by CIA. These efforts were initiated to assess foreign programs in the field; contract for basic research into the the phenomenon; and to evaluate controlled remote viewing as an intelligence tool.

The program consisted of two separate activities. An operational unit employed remote viewers to train and perform remote viewing intelligence-gathering. The research program was maintained separately from the operational unit.

This effort was initiated in response to CIA concerns about reported Soviets investigations of psychic phenomena. Between 1969 and 1971, US intelligence sources concluded that the Soviet Union was engaged in "psychotronic" research. By 1970, it was suggested that the Soviets were spending approximately 60 million rubles per year on it, and over 300 million by 1975. The money and personnel devoted to Soviet psychotronics suggested that they had achieved breakthroughs, even though the matter was considered speculative, controversial and "fringy."

The initial research program, called SCANATE [scan by coordinate] was funded by CIA beginning in 1970. Remote viewing research began in 1972 at the Stanford Research Institute [SRI] in Menlo Park, CA. This work was conducted by Russell Targ and Harold Puthoff, (also see: DR HAL PUTHOFF: From SRI to ZPE ), once with the NSA and at the time a Scientologist. The effort initially focused on a few "gifted individuals" such as New York artist Ingo Swann, an OT Level VII Scientologist. Many of the SRI "empaths" were from the Church of Scientology. Individuals who appeared to showed potential were trained and taught to use talents for "psychic warfare." The minimum accuracy needed by the clients was said to be 65%, and proponents claim that in the later stages of the training effort, this accuracy level was "often consistently exceeded."

Source (and to read FULL ARTICLE on Project Stargate): http://www.fas.org/irp/program/collect/stargate.htm
Author: Steven Aftergood
Quote from Original Article granted with Permission by Steven Aftergood, and cannot be reproduced without said permission.


TOP Remote Viewers in 'The Field':

Ingo Swann:
Ingo Swann is generally thought of as the most famous, researched, and accurate psychic in the world today. He has successfully participated in scientific and governmental research projects for the past 30 years. He has also been a psychic subject at the think tank, SRI (Stanford Research Institute), in Palo Alto, CA.
websites: http://www.biomindsuperpowers.com/Pages/2.html and http://www.biomindsuperpowers.com/

Lyn Buchanan:
Leonard (Lyn) Buchanan is currently the Executive Director of Problems Solutions Innovations (P>S>I). P>S>I started as a small data analysis company in the Washington, D.C. area in 1992, on Lyn's retirement from the military. Website: http://www.crviewer.com
Also Recommended reading: Controlled Remote Viewing in Iraq: The Secret Weapon the U.S. Abandoned By Lyn Buchanan.
Lyn Buchanan is the author of The Seventh Sense: The Secrets of Remote Viewing as Told by a "Psychic Spy" for the U.S. Military  (Paraview Pocket Books, 2003). He also operates P>S>I, a firm that helps corporations develop solutions for intelligence-related data acquisition.

David Morehouse:
Dr. David Morehouse, International Best-Selling Author and the World's Leading Teacher of Remote Viewing and Spiritual Transformation.
website: http://www.remviewtech.com/main.htm

Dale Graff:
Dale E. Graff, facilitator and author, is a physicist and a former director of project STARGATE, the government program that investigated remote viewing phenomena. Website: http://www.dalegraff.com/

Edwin C. May:
Dr. Edwin C. May is Executive Director of the Cognitive Sciences Laboratory, Palo Alto, CA. Website: http://www.lfr.org/csl/index.shtml

Mel Riley:
Melvin (Mel) Riley is now associated with Problems>Solutions>Innovations as a viewer, monitor and technical advisor. Mel may also be teaching certain new post graduate courses that P>S>I may offer. Also see: http://www.suite101.com/article.cfm/intuition_remote_viewing/94984

Joe McMoneagle:
Many unusual experiences have formed the foundation of his present company, Intuitive Intelligence Applications. A near-death experience (NDE), a UFO sighting, and numerous spontaneous out-of-body (OBE) episodes have caused him to spend the larger portion of his life seeking more effective answers to questions concerning reality. He became interested in remote viewing after participating in experiments at SRI International in California. He is considered as one of the best in this field.
website: http://www.mceagle.com/

Paul Smith:
Paul Smith is the Executive Director of Remote Viewing Instructional Services, Inc.
website: http://www.rviewer.com/


Links:

-THE CONTROLLED REMOTE VIEWING MANUAL: USED AS A MANUAL FOR TRV TRAINING
USED AS A REFERENCE MANUAL FOR CRV TRAINING -AN HISTORICAL DOCUMENT http://www.firedocs.com/remoteviewing/answers/crvmanual/

- JOE McMONEAGLE Remote Views Mars
http://satwater.www9.50megs.com/simpleMars.htm

-Remote Viewing Books on amazon.com: http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/1571741593/102-3751719-9393761?vi=glance

-Stargate
An informational view on each person involved in the 'PSI-SPIES', targets, methods, history, etc. http://www.stargate.net-hed.co.uk

-Controlled Remote Viewing
Several interesting articles, mostly by Ingo Swann, on remote viewing, its history and how people can learn to develop it. http://www.crviewer.com/crviewer/articlesindex.asp

-The Farsight Institute
This site has lots of information and resources, including the results of a public demonstration. http://www.farsight.org/

-Firedocs Remote Viewing Collection
A terrific resource of RV information, including articles, manuals, interviews, transcripts and much more. http://www.firedocs.com/index.cfm

-Straightline Remote Sensing
Want to learn remote viewing? Here are lessons and exercises in 7 installments from Dr. Max Sandor in a technique he calls "straightline remote sensing."  http://www.viewzone.com/max11.html

-RVIS: Sample Sessions
Seven actual sessions with trained remote viewers, including their drawings and written comments. http://www.rviewer.com/main/sessions.html

-Remote Viewing Systems
Includes information on the history of RV, FAQs, target examples and more. http://www.theremoteviewingsite.com/

-Remote Viewing: Conditions and Potentials
Author Christophe Brunski believes the potential implications of the ability to gather information from any point throughout time-space are so staggering, that he wonders if the extent of these implications is ever fully appreciated. http://www.anomalist.com/commentaries/rvcp.html

-Remote Viewing
An overview, from a psychic's point of view, of the U.S. government's remote viewing program. http://www.berkeleypsychic.com/Reader/archive/July98/remote.html

-The Real Secrets of Remote Viewing
Here is the first public disclosure, this site says, as to how and why remote viewing operates. Something to do with the "universal mind." http://www.mindsafari.com/p558.htm

-PSI Tech
Home to the breakthrough skill of Technical Remote Viewing with which, they say, an individual can gather information about any person, place, or thing, anywhere in time or space. http://www.psitech.net/index.htm

-Paranormal Paratrouper
According to the CIA and the Pentagon, any official attempt to develop and psychic forces for military purposes was short-lived. http://atlantisrising.com/issue10/ar10paranormal.html

Extra:

-Anime Game: Psychic Force DVD

Synopsis: In the near future a choice few humans have evolved psychic abilities. The government, hoping to perform expieriments these gifted citizens, abducts them and plans to use them as weapons. Keith Evans is one lucky psychic who escapes them. During his flee from the government he meets Burn Griffith, who takes him in and treats him as a friend. When the government tracks down Keith they take him from Burn's home. Burn, enraged, goes off on a quest to seek out Keith, and finds a journey that will test theur friendship in an unlikely change of events.

http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/reviews/display.php?id=362

-ESP (extrasensory perception)
History of ESP, The Rhine experiments, and more. http://www.themystica.com/mystica/articles/e/esp_extrasensory_perception.html


News Articles 2003-2004-2005-2006-2007:

Forget spies, let psychic viewers do the job: Experts to Centre

BANGALORE: At the height of the Cold War, the Americans experimented with a spying technique -- remote or clairvoyant viewing -- dismissed as pure fiction by much of the scientific world.

In July 1995, when the CIA partially declassified these experiments, the world found that America's ''remote viewing'' spies, sitting in the confines of their US laboratory, reported with uncanny accuracy, military developments in distant Russia.

Now, a former physicist with the Bhabha Atomic Research Centre Dr M. Srinivasan and one of India's best known parapsychologist Prof K. Ramakrishna Rao have placed a proposal before the Indian Government to experiment with ''remote viewing'' for security purposes. Both scientists were part of the Science and Spirituality conference, which was held in the city a week ago.

''Since remote viewing or psychic spying has been reported in ancient Indian scriptures, it is high time India itself studied it. We have proposed to study the phenomenon and have sought the Government's assistance,'' says Chennai-based Dr Srinivasan, a former associate director of the physics group and head of the neutron physics division at BARC.

The proposal placed before the Centre describes the experiments conducted in the US and proposes similar efforts to identify Indians with remote viewing capabilities, says Dr Srinivasan who has a special interest in parapsychology.

''The intelligence community in the US seems to value remote viewing data whenever it is available. They use it to compliment information gathered through other means,'' he says.

During the Cold War years, two sets of the now-famous remote viewing experiments were carried out in the US. The first set involved ''remote viewers'' describing sites within the US -- where activities unknown to them were happening. Researchers have reported a high degree of accuracy in these experiments.

The second set of experiments supervised by US intelligence agencies involved actual ''spying'' on Russia. In one case, an American ''remote viewer'' was given the co-ordinates of a mysterious site in the former USSR. The ''remote viewer'' was asked for information about the site and was told that it could be a research and development facility.

After ''remote viewing'' the site, the spy described to US authorities the activities at the site, which were later verified by satellite pictures and actual ground information.

The site was the super-secret Soviet atomic bomb laboratory at Semipalatisk and the ''remote viewer's'' illustrated and written description was remarkably accurate, as researchers found.

In another famous example, when no US intelligence agency had picked up the information, a ''remote viewer'' -- given the co-ordinates of a site in Russia -- told the American National Security Council that Russia was building the world's biggest submarine. Four months later, in Jan 1980, the ''remote viewer's'' information was proven right.

In his presentation, at the Science and Spirituality meet in the city, Prof K. Ramakrishna Rao -- former editor of the journal of parapsychology and former head of the US-based Foundation for research on the nature of man -- stated that the paranormal mind ''transcends the usual sensory processes and has extraordinary experiences''.

Article by: Newindpress.com

Also See: 'Remote Viewing' Keeps Attracting Believers

~*~

Astral travelers touch down in Beirut
Top secret art once employed by CIA can maybe even lead to love ­ though not in the physical world.

Hannah Wettig
Daily Star staff

The CIA supposedly did it, and probably the KGB. Now a small group of Beirutis meets every week to learn how to do it.

Astral traveling, or remote viewing as it is also called, is just one form of spiritual experience, like transcendental meditation and reiki, that is becoming increasingly popular in Lebanon.

According to supporters, a trained remote viewer can make his energy leave his body and use it to go where ever he wants. He can check out his friend's bedroom, visit outer space or even find hidden nuclear sites, as the CIA attempted to do in the late 1970s.

"It works, everybody can learn how to do it," says Fouad, a practitioner of astral travel, who doesn't want his real name mentioned because the practice is controversial in Lebanon's multi-religious community.

He is leading the weekly session in a private home in a suburb of Beirut. About 10 middle-aged women and one man are gathered in the living room.

Fouad explains terms he has written on a white board ­ Astral Planes: Heaven, Hell, Angels.

"Our consciousness can not only fly to places on earth, but also to heaven," he says. "But I can tell you, this is really difficult."

He advises to start slow, to go step by step. Astral energy can make contact with angels or spirits, he explains.

"Many cultures believe in calling spirits, the Chinese, the Indians called spirits of ancestors. Jews, Muslims and Christians believe in angels."

One woman asks if it is possible to find out about the future from these spirits.
Fouad answers diplomatically: "This is just a belief. Muslims kiss the Kaaba, and think it helps, Christians hold the cross and believe it helps. We don't exactly know."
"Astral traveling is no ritual," he says, "but (about) developing your consciousness."
He says the Soviet Union and the CIA allegedly used remote viewing for espionage.
"From the USSR we received information how accurate this method is. Almost 99 percent of the information was correct," Fouad says.

But he also draws on the major religions, Eastern and Western, to prove his point:
"When the Prophet Mohammed traveled miraculously between Mecca to Jerusalem, we can explain this by astral travel."

He has to be careful, he explains, because religious groups in Lebanon are not fond of these kind of activities.

"They consider it a threat to religious beliefs. That's why we meet in a private home."
There wasn't anything religious about remote viewing when the CIA started its psychic unit in the late 1970's.

It was the Cold War, and the Americans had found out by conventional spying methods that the Soviet Union was spending a lot of money on experimenting with the paranormal.

At the same time a New York artist, Ingo Swann, was experimenting with out of body experiences, and had made a name for himself with his American Society for Psychical Research.

Fearing that the Soviets could outrace them in the over worldly, the CIA, contacted Swan and began a project called Grill Flame or Stargate.

Some information from the highly secretive logs was disclosed in 1995 after the CIA announced the closure of the program.

The main activity of the ghost-finders had been to discover the whereabouts of hostages ­ with breathtaking results, claim the supporters of the program. But it never led to the recovery of a single missing person, say critics.

There was the case of Marine Corps Colonel William R. Higgins, who was taken hostage in Lebanon in 1988. Six psychics conducted 113 sessions. They described the building in which Higgins was presumably held, and another hostage later confirmed that this was, indeed, the building Higgins had been in at the time of the session.

"The psychics also accurately said Higgins had been killed at a time when other US intelligence information suggested that he was alive," reported the Washington Post in 1996.

Many times the psychic unit was able to describe details of buildings and rooms correctly. However, they could not find out crucial information like the street name or house number.

On tracking down Saddam Hussein, the psychics' hints proved useless all together. And not everyone was able to cope with leaving his body and letting his energy fly around the world.

"One of the remote viewers left the army when he became convinced there was a Martian colony hidden beneath the new Mexico desert," reported Newsweek in 1995.
Far from Fouad's claimed 99 percent, the supporters of remote viewing within American intelligence admit that it leads to wrong results about 80 percent of the time, but say the other 20 percent can be helpful.

There are other things the American intelligence officers may have never heard about, like astral love ­ having a rendezvous with your loved one without ever physically meeting.

"Just do the exercise at the same time," says Fouad, then adds, "Let me tell you a secret, sometimes you can make astral love without his help, without him even knowing."

This may be due to women being more spiritual, he explains. Therefore, they also have more fun when making astral love.

"Women have a complete experience. We men, let's say it makes us happy, but not really satisfied."

But the Beiruti remote viewers are far from reaching such over worldly joys. First, they have to learn how to emit their astral energy.

The lights are turned off. Fouad tells the participants to close their eyes and relax ­ not an entirely easy task in a bending couch chair.

After some breathing exercises, he asks us to collect astral energy in the solar plexus. "Feel it," he encourages people.

He explains, that once you feel lots of energy collecting in the center of your chest, you can let it out. "It stands in front of you like a cloudy substance," claims Fouad.
Of course, you can only see that with your inner eye, since your physical eyes remain shut.

"Form a body shape with your energy," he says. "Give it a nose, a mouth, hair, just
like yours."

The better you manage to make that substance look like yourself, the better you can travel, is Fouad's prediction.

Now, the participants are told to move across the room and look at themselves from a distance. The session is short. After five or 10 minutes Fouad tells us to let the energy back in.

Omar says, he felt a strong heat in his breast. Giselle says, it felt like having a baby. Another woman is not so happy; she says she fell asleep. But Fouad assures her that she did well: "That is no sleep, it's the highest form of trance."

I say, that I only felt a little tickle in my left breast. Everyone bursts out laughing, Fouad comments: "Maybe some spirit was up to something dirty."

Even though it isn't clear whether anyone has actually left their body, the participants seem to have enjoyed the exercise.

"I do anything that develops my consciousness," says Giselle afterward. "But you must find out what works for you."

~*~

Is the CIA using psychics to find Osama Bin Laden?
Apr 3 2003

The Western Mail - The National Newspaper Of Wales

AUTHOR Lynne McTaggart, who has written a new book on the paranormal, believes the CIA is using psychics to track down Osama Bin Laden. She said, "As far fetched as it sounds, the CIA started a project during the Cold War to see what uses the paranormal could have in finding information about the Russians.

"Scientists who looked at the project from the respected Stanford Research Institute concluded psychics did have the potential to provide useful data."

She believes the CIA still uses "remote viewing" to a limited extent and could be using the method as one of hundreds of different methods of ascertaining the whereabouts of the Al-Qaeda leader.

The film Minority Report, based on the Philip K Dick story, directed by Steven Spielberg and starring Tom Cruise, used psychics.

Called `pre-cogs', a future police force calls on their services to catch criminals before they commit a crime.

~*~

Thursday, April 03, 2003
Copyright © Las Vegas Mercury

Psychic warfare
By George Knapp

The last time the U.S. military was trying to paint a bullseye on Saddam Hussein's surly mug, during the Gulf War, intelligence officials quietly turned to a secret panel of "psychics" for information about his whereabouts. History suggests the psychic spies weren't successful in helping to pinpoint the Iraqi dictator--he is still alive, after all, or was until recently--but the fact that the Pentagon would rely on psychics at all during wartime suggests people in high places give some credence to the potential power of mental abilities.

"Is it real? The answer is yes. Does it work 100 percent of the time? The answer is no," says Col. John Alexander, a retired Army intelligence officer now living in Las Vegas. "We've had some spectacular hits and some spectacular misses."

Alexander should know. He was involved in the Army's psychic research program dating to the early '80s, and he co-authored The Warrior's Edge, a book about government research into psychokinesis and "remote viewing." Overall, the U.S. government spent nearly 30 years and tens of millions of dollars trying to unlock psychic secrets, spurred in part by the perception that America was well behind the Soviets in psychic research.

"We used remote viewers to try and locate Saddam during Desert Storm," Alexander says. "The problem for 'the unit' was that Saddam moved around so much, staying in a different place every night, slipping around Baghdad in Winnebagos or whatever. And there is a time lag involved, so even though remote viewers might find out where Saddam was hiding at a given moment, he would likely be gone by the time we targeted that location with cruise missiles."

According to published reports, remote viewers had more success during Desert Storm in helping to locate hidden Scud missiles, as well as stashes of chemical and biological weapons. The same psychic technique had been used years earlier in U.S. attempts to bomb Libyan dictator Muammar Khadafy, who narrowly escaped being blown to bits. Remote viewers have also successfully tracked Russian submarines, kept tabs on Soviet nuclear missiles and leaders, were right on the money in locating the American hostages in Iran, and have achieved other successes, many of which remain classified.

"A Soviet spy plane filled with sensitive electronics crashed in South Africa, and no one knew exactly where it was," Alexander recalls. "Using remote viewing, we were able to narrow it down and put a search team within 100 meters of the crash. We ended up beating the Russians to their own plane."

Essentially, remote viewing is the projection of human consciousness through space and time, allowing for access to information that may be unavailable by any other means. Some remote viewers claim to be able to travel into the past or future, and can traverse vast distances and penetrate any walls or defenses. A few have claimed accuracy rates of 80 percent or higher.

The first serious studies of the technique were conducted in secrecy in the '70s. Discreet contractors such as Stanford Research Institute and Science Applications International Corp. (SAIC) found that the ability is real and that, with training, remote viewers can accomplish what would seem impossible. Based on the Stanford Research Institute studies, the Army started its own remote viewing program, and in the years since RV teams have assisted the FBI, DEA, DOE and numerous other alphabet agencies, with varying degrees of success.

In the mid-'90s, the CIA's interest in remote viewing became public knowledge. The agency responded by distancing itself from a technique it had funded for 20 years, suggesting to congressional budget overseers and the public that remote viewing really wasn't very reliable. In the face of a publicity furor, the Army ended its program.

"There was an embarrassment factor within the CIA , and this was damage control," says remote viewer Angela Thompson Smith. "But if you talk to key players in the field, they'll tell you the program had been declining for years. Management didn't want to manage it, and people were leaving to enter the private sector, writing books and starting up companies."

Thompson Smith learned remote viewing from a disciple of Ingo Swann, the gifted psychic who is most responsible for the development of RV. She's written a book about the technique, Remote Perceptions, and recently opened a school for remote viewing in Boulder City. Students are taught the basics in Smith's home office, then quickly get started giving it a try.

Ed Taupin, a local writer and software engineer, took the class. His first RV target was New York's Central Park, although the target information wasn't revealed to him until after the experiment. Beforehand, the only information he was given was a series of random numbers and symbols, representing the coordinates of the target.

"By the second session, I was amazed. I felt I was at Central Park and was able to describe it right down to the tiniest details," Taupuin says. "Now, my wife and I practice our abilities by picking an address out of the phone book, then seeing if we can accurately describe what the place looks like. We remote view the place, then go over and take pictures of it to see if we got it right. My wife has been so accurate that she was able to correctly identify a word that was written on one building."

Thompson Smith, who earned her doctorate in psychology, says the scientists who've studied remote viewing think it works by tapping into something akin to a gigantic universal database. She contends that everyone has the ability to remote view to some extent but says it requires training and practice. She notes that several commercial RV operations have opened around the country, along with perhaps two dozens schools, including her own.

Col. Alexander agrees that everyone has some ability to remote view, but he cautions against blanket acceptance of the claims of some RV practitioners. "The skills are universal, " Alexander says. "But it's kind of like photography. Everyone can take pictures, but not everyone is photographer."

Remote viewing instructor Angela Smith Thompson can be reached at 293-2696 or CATALYST@peoplepc.com. Interested folks can also check out the website of the International Remote Viewing Association.

~*~

April 17, 2003 - Wireless Flash
Remote Viewer Knows Saddam's Secret

ALAMOGORDO, N.M. (Wireless Flash) -- If there's a remote chance that Saddam Hussein is alive, a remote viewer in New Mexico is sure to know it.
Lyn Buchanan spent eight years as a so-called "psychic spy" for the U.S. military and CIA. One of his duties was to spy on Hussein via his mind and pick up his plans for the day.

Buchanan doesn't think the fallen dictator is evil -- just crazy. In his words, "He thought God wanted him to rule the world and couldn't understand why anyone else would question that."

Buchanan retired as a remote viewer back in 1992, but admits old habits die hard and he has spied on Hussein since the dictator went missing.

He admits he has some interesting information about Hussein's whereabouts but, as a former military man, Buchanan refuses to release it publicly until he's "called for action."

Nevertheless, Buchanan says remote viewing is a skill that can be taught and offers up some tips in a new book, "The Seventh Sense" (Paraview Pocket).

~*~

Also see: Is Remote Viewing Bunk? by: James Donahue
and Remote Viewer "Sees" Lottery Numbers Before They Are Drawn

July 21, 2003: Psychic Link to Lockerbie Bomb Probe

~*~

Psychic spies knew of raid
By Henry Cuningham
Military editor
12|28|03

For audio:
Retired Chief Warrant Officer Joseph McMoneagle describes the role of psychics in the 1980 Iran hostage rescue operation (MP3)
http://www.fayettevillenc.com/multimedia/audio/2003/dec/1228mcmoneagle.mp3

As Delta Force was trying to rescue U.S. hostages in Iran in 1980, a psychic spy monitoring the operation from the United States reported an explosion.

The National Security Council received the report 48 seconds before getting an electronic call about the fatal explosion at the site known as Desert One, said Joseph W. McMoneagle. He started working as a psychic spy in the 1970s.

McMoneagle and Lyn Buchanan, who also worked on the once-secret project, describe the incident in books as "remote viewers." The controversial $20 million CIA-military program was known as the Stargate Project. It ended in 1995.

In a study of the project, Ray Hyman, a professor emeritus of psychology at the University of Oregon, questioned the reliability of the program's results.

Charlie Rose is a former congressman from Fayetteville who lives in Marshall, Va. He talked to some of the people in the program when he was on the House Intelligence Committee. Rose said a former director of Central Intelligence told him he was not convinced that psychic spying was reliable enough to play a role in military intelligence.

"I don't think our military or intelligence community at this point is spending very much money on any psychic program," Rose said.

McMoneagle, who retired from the Army as a chief warrant officer, wrote about his role in his 2002 book "The Stargate Chronicles." He discussed his experiences during a lecture earlier this month at the Rhine Research Center in Durham.

Practical problems

A psychic trying to gather military intelligence faces some practical problems, he said.

"During the Iran hostage problem, we were revisiting targets for the 100th time," McMoneagle said. "As a psychic, when you are looking at the same problem over and over and over on a daily process, it gets extremely difficult to look at it with an open mind."

Either things don't change, or they change very little, he said.

"We were being asked some pretty critical questions, like, 'Are the guards getting tired? Are they changing their armament? What's different about the room?' The smallest changes could be critical to people engineering hostage retrieval."

The project tried to gather information about Grenada during the U.S. invasion in 1983. It also looked for information on the whereabouts of Manuel Noriega, the deposed leader of Panama, during the 1989 invasion, and the intentions of Saddam Hussein during the first Gulf War.

That's according to Buchanan in his 2003 book, "The Seventh Sense: The Secrets of Remote Viewing as Told by a 'Psychic Spy' for the U.S. Military."

Sensitive operations

McMoneagle said planning for the Iran hostage-rescue operation was so sensitive that only a few people knew about it; the psychic spies accidentally became aware of preparations through extrasensory perception, he said.

"It was one of the most sensitive secrets," McMoneagle said. "In our remote viewings, it started to pop up. We started seeing American soldiers stockpiling weapons inside Tehran, to include trucks and munitions and things. We started seeing some of the safe houses."

The psychics reported their findings, and the planners agreed to let them in on the secret, he said.

"They decided since we were already picking up on that they would allow us to continue because we were obviously seeing things ahead of time," McMoneagle said.

"They decided we might in fact see the issues that they did not have resolution for and thereby give them the answers that they lacked."

Psychic spies might get lots of information about a particular situation, but it's not always necessarily what is relevant, he said.

"In the military projects, they would want to know what the agents were doing on the second window over," McMoneagle said. "They would get everything but what the agents were doing. They would get a detailed, perfect picture of this tower. They'd say, 'That's a miss. You didn't tell us what the agents were doing.'"

Military editor Henry Cuningham can be reached at cuninghamh@fayettevillenc.com or 486-3585.

Article by: Copyright 2004 The Fayetteville (N.C.) Observer


Euro Remote Viewers Successfully Predict UFO Event - March 3, 2004


Psychic researcher uncovers the secrets of the Great Pyramid and Sphinx
04/15/2004 17:34

A psychic researcher and a clairvoyant, author of 'The Book of Ahau' disclosed his findings this week.

A reader and writer with keen interest in the mysteries of the ancient world, Govany Perony opens a window into concealed reality via his mind in the form of extrasensory visions and archaeological research.

His method, 'Remote Viewing' is the act of seeing without being present at the target site. He used this method to penetrate the inside of the Great Pyramid and see the secret chambers.

What he discovered was amazing. In the King Chamber of the Pyramid, behind the west wall he saw a chamber still intact with a mummy and offerings.

Two pillars adorn the doorway and a corridor. The entrance to this chamber is a small pivoting door at the bottom of the south west corner. Also the Coffer in the King Chamber serves as an opening mechanism. Ancients had to grab one corner and push, that"s why we see it chipped on one side.

Under the King Chamber there is a chamber with a structure that looks like the radiator of a car. Perhaps it was used to refine some kind of liquid. Most locks for these chambers are deep inside tunnels carved of the rock reachable only with telescoping staffs like the one PTAH is holding depicted in Egyptian history. The Gantenbring door is a good example, only these special staffs could reach it.

Behind the west wall of the Queen Chamber lays also another chamber, only this time its full of thousands of rolls which the ancients have written.

Underneath all this, deep beneath the Pyramid is a cylindrical room with  a tall cylindrical object in the center. It looks like a generator of some sort. The heart of the System, why the Pyramid was built. The room walls are covered with a black insulating matter. There are no wires, hence the transmission was resonance or production of ions etc  Piezoelectric using the great pressure generated by millions of tons of the Pyramid. A tunnel connects this area with the Sphinx.

The Great Pyramid lacks a top. There never was one. His research found that the Great Pyramid is a pyramid 'covered with stones'. Meaning there is an intact pyramid with a top beneath the stones we see today. To prove one could take off a few blocks of stones from the top, where a walkway or tunnel will be found. This tunnel which may have been built to transport the block of stones higher, spirals around the Pyramid all the way to the bottom. The tunnel is wide enough to drive a small car through.

As for the Sphinx, underneath it, there is an ancient museum that houses the remains of previous kings and written records of 'Man's history'. Previously it sat on a building painted in gold. Present day bottom of Sphinx is false. Those stones were laid to look like the floor, underneath is the building.

All these will be found intact once Egyptian authorities give permission to drill. Mr. Perony said that other Psychics like the 'Boriska Boy' from Russia, or other Russian Parapsychologists should investigate the Great Pyramid.

The reason is because if the ancient technology is discovered we shall not need petroleum anymore, therefore the air will be much cleaner.

Summary from, "The Book of Ahau" by Govany Perony, available at Amazon.com

Article by: Pravda

CIA's remote viewers initiated quest for WMD in Iraq

12/06/2004 17:55
Extrasensory agents helped the CIA arrest KGB spies and detect secret objects in the USSR

Seventy-three thousand pages of secret documents have recently been declassified in the United States. The information unveiled the activity of two special groups that worked with extrasensory individuals. The CIA had to acknowledge that it used remote viewers and other individuals possessing paranormal abilities for intelligence purposes.

The groups of extrasensory individuals apparently worked without having any links with each other. One of those groups was searching for information about spying on the territory of the USA (counterintelligence), another one was dealing with identification of nuclear and other secret objects in the country of an enemy (strategic intelligence).

The two groups achieved quite impressive results in their work. The Polish and East-German residents, as well as other agents from several "NATO-friendly" countries of Western Europe were destroyed owing to the efforts of the first group. Aldrich Ames, a KGB agent, was detected with special groups' help too.

American counterintelligence officers had a suspicion of having a spy within the CIA, although there was absolutely no information about him. A remote viewer involved in the detecting process gave the following description: "The man lives on the outskirts of Washington, owns a very expensive foreign car, he is married to a Latin American woman, most likely a Colombian, and he likes grey." Six CIA agents matching the description were put under strict observation - Aldrich Ames was caught as a result of the further investigation.

Extrasensory individuals from the strategic intelligence unit helped the CIA find a Soviet nuclear test ground in Semipalatinsk and a Chinese test ground in Lop-Nor. American agents had information about certain objects of paramount importance in those areas. However, it was impossible for them to find out, what kind of object they were exactly - secret factories, military grounds or powerful centers to test and launch ballistic missiles.

"Psychic spy" Joseph McMoneagle also known as "remote viewing agent #001" was shown a spot on the map of the USSR, where the mysterious secret object was supposedly located, as CIA agents thought. McMoneagle put his finger on the map and described the image that he saw in his mind:

"It is a congregation of low stone and concrete buildings. A huge underground warehouse filled with lethal weapons.Not only missiles. There are other square and round items there. I see a very high column of smoke, bearing some semblance to a huge lifting crane, rising above the area (it was most likely the smoke of a nuclear blast). The people inhabiting that place are sick. Their hair is receding, their bones are putrefying. They deliver sick children, and they are still obsessed with some idea."

It was quite an eloquent description for secret agents to understand, what kind of an object was located in Semipalatinsk (which is now a town in the republic of Kazakhstan). Then CIA Director Richard Helms moved the paranormal espionage from the category "Research" to the category "Practice." Joseph McMoneagle's success as a remote viewer increased the funding of such unusual activities, not to mention the improved moral aspect. The US authorities spent about $2 million a year on a rather small group of 20 extrasensory individuals in the 1990s.

Other achievements of American psychic agents include: factories making weapons of mass destruction in third world countries, including Iraq (it is not ruled out that the information about WMD in Iraq sprang from remote viewers. Extrasensory intelligence officers also developed certain recommendations to recruit CIA agents and rendered some other services too.

The CIA administration has apparently come to conclusion that it was not profitable to spend time and money on paranormal activities against the background of the up-to-date technological development. The above-mentioned declassified materials were accompanied with a statement that the work of psychic groups was shut down within CIA's framework in 1997. Now the agency prefers to use spying satellites and "live bugs" - microchips, which can be implanted in flies, thingyroaches and ants.

Journalists thanked the CIA administration to exposing such interesting materials, although they did not believe that the remote-viewing project had been closed. Reporters managed to find out that the paranormal project had been handed over to the Pentagon's intelligence, the directors of which declined all comments. An anonymous colonel of the US Air Force said that the American government would eliminate the project completely only if Russia abolished it first.

Sergei Nechiporuk

Article by: Pravda RU


CIA's remote viewers initiated quest for WMD in Iraq
Dec. 13, 2004

Seventy-three thousand pages of secret documents have recently been declassified in the United States. The information unveiled the activity of two special groups that worked with extrasensory individuals. The CIA had to acknowledge that it used remote viewers and other individuals possessing paranormal abilities for intelligence purposes. The groups of extrasensory individuals apparently worked without having any links with each other. One of those groups was searching for information about spying on the territory of the USA (counterintelligence), another one was dealing with identification of nuclear and other secret objects in the country of an enemy (strategic intelligence). The two groups achieved quite impressive results in their work. The Polish and East-German residents, as well as other agents from several "NATO-friendly" countries of Western Europe were destroyed owing to the efforts of the first group. Aldrich Ames, a KGB agent, was detected with special groups'' help too. American counterintelligence officers had a suspicion of having a spy within the CIA, although there was absolutely no information about him. A remote viewer involved in the detecting process gave the following description: "The man lives on the outskirts of Washington, owns a very expensive foreign car, he is married to a Latin American woman, most likely a Colombian, and he likes grey." Six CIA agents matching the description were put under strict observation - Aldrich Ames was caught as a result of the further investigation. Extrasensory individuals from the strategic intelligence unit helped the CIA find a Soviet nuclear test ground in Semipalatinsk and a Chinese test ground in Lop-Nor. American agents had information about certain objects of paramount importance in those areas. However, it was impossible for them to find out, what kind of object they were exactly - secret factories, military grounds or powerful centers to test and launch ballistic missiles. "Psychic spy" Joseph McMoneagle also known as "remote viewing agent #001" was shown a spot on the map of the USSR, where the mysterious secret object was supposedly located, as CIA agents thought. McMoneagle put his finger on the map and described the image that he saw in his mind: "It is a congregation of low stone and concrete buildings. A huge underground warehouse filled with lethal weapons.Not only missiles. There are other square and round items there. I see a very high column of smoke, bearing some semblance to a huge lifting crane, rising above the area (it was most likely the smoke of a nuclear blast). The people inhabiting that place are sick. Their hair is receding, their bones are putrefying. They deliver sick children, and they are still obsessed with some idea." It was quite an eloquent description for secret agents to understand, what kind of an object was located in Semipalatinsk (which is now a town in the republic of Kazakhstan). Then CIA Director Richard Helms moved the paranormal espionage from the category "Research" to the category "Practice." Joseph McMoneagle's success as a remote viewer increased the funding of such unusual activities, not to mention the improved moral aspect. The US authorities spent about $2 million a year on a rather small group of 20 extrasensory individuals in the 1990s. Other achievements of American psychic agents include: factories making weapons of mass destruction in third world countries, including Iraq (it is not ruled out that the information about WMD in Iraq sprang from remote viewers. Extrasensory intelligence officers also developed certain recommendations to recruit CIA agents and rendered some other services too. The CIA administration has apparently come to conclusion that it was not profitable to spend time and money on paranormal activities against the background of the up-to-date technological development. The above-mentioned declassified materials were accompanied with a statement that the work of psychic groups was shut down within CIA's framework in 1997. Now the agency prefers to use spying satellites and "live bugs" - microchips, which can be implanted in flies, cockroaches and ants. Journalists thanked the CIA administration to exposing such interesting materials, although they did not believe that the remote-viewing project had been closed. Reporters managed to find out that the paranormal project had been handed over to the Pentagon's intelligence, the directors of which declined all comments. An anonymous colonel of the US Air Force said that the American government would eliminate the project completely only if Russia abolished it first.

Article by: India Daily