Remote Viewing

 

 

Remote viewing is the tern commonly used to describe the process of
psychically viewing distant locations. The viewers are usually given a
set of map co-ordinates and asked what they see there. The results of such
tests are astounding.
For example, we take the case of a former police commissioner from California,
Patrick Price. He was given a series of map co-ordinates and asked if they 
meant anything.
He replied with a five page report describing the landscape and the buildings
which were there. He went further and gave "tours" of each building. He went
further still, describing equipment in each building, names on rooms and
desks, even code names of files in a locked cabinet in one of the offices.
He didn't know it, but he had just described a top-secret National Security
Agency (NSA) communications centre about 200km outside Washington. He had
never been there and he had written his report in California, the other side
of the continent. His questioners were shaken, and so were the NSA. 
For the next two years, he was the head of one of the most extraordinary
military projects of modern times. Project Scanate was a series of 
CIA-financed trials to test Extrasensory Perception (ESP) as an intelligence
tool. If it went well, a new breed of agent would be unleashed on the world:
the psychic spy.
With the death of Price, the program stopped, or so people were lead to believe.
Despite denials, the US government continued to finance research into the area.
Later, a new venture, Project Grillflame, provided the military with their 
own team of psychic spies.
Grillflame officially ceased in 1983, but actually continued secretly, with
its budget being transfered to the Pentagon's "general" budget. The codename
also changed, first to Centerlane, then Sunstreak, and finally Stargate.
In 1986 Project Stargate at Fort Meade was effectively terminated.
Or was it??
In 1995 came the official announcement that Fort Meade was closing - a pretty
odd thing to say about a place that supposedly ceased to function over
nine years earlier. Given the fact that these projects have been declared
closed numerous times and have always been proved to be still in progress,
it seems likely that the military are still interested in remote viewing.
But is it real ? Only you can decide.

 

 | home |