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Post by auntym on Apr 27, 2013 14:58:14 GMT -6
Remote Viewing by Joseph McMoneagle
Published on Dec 15, 2012
One of the few tools available that might tell us something specific about our future interactions with Extra-Terrestrials [ETs], or the impact such contact might have within our sciences and society, is Remote Viewing [RV]. Who better to employ this method of knowing, than Joe McMoneagle, Remote Viewer 001 of the US Army Star Gate Program?
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Post by auntym on May 13, 2014 13:50:41 GMT -6
REMOTE VIEWING ALIEN ON MARSHits Dhanak Interviews Rob and Trish MacGregor Published on Apr 29, 2014 Rob and Trish MacGregor are award winning authors of more than 70 novels and non-fiction books, 7 of which have been for Lucasfilm. In this interview we talk about the remote viewing of Aliens on Mars, the Bermuda Triangle and inter-dimensional portals. The Official website of Rob and Trish MacGregor www.synchrosecrets.com
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Post by auntym on May 16, 2014 12:51:42 GMT -6
narrative.ly/the-spies-among-us/journeys-of-a-psychic-army-spy/www.supernaturalufo.com/journeys-of-a-psychic-army-spy/JOURNEYS OF A PSYCHIC ARMY SPYWednesday, May 14, 2014 By Maria Smilios Trained by the U.S. military in the art of mentalist warfare, a clandestine intelligence agent travels the world and unlocks state secrets, all without leaving his desk chair.On the morning of May 15, 1987, Paul H. Smith, a robust thirty-four year old captain in the U.S. Army’s Psychic Espionage Unit, Center Lane (later known as Stargate), lay down in an all-gray room in Fort Meade, Maryland, and relaxed his mind by listening to music. Twenty minutes later, in a different gray room, he listened as his colleague, Ed Dames, recited a series of random numbers that represented a military target. Within minutes, he was no longer seeing the walls or the table or Dames. He was now somewhere else. “I perceived a large metal object, like a warship at night in a large body of water,” he says. “I saw an aircraft that dropped a metal object that started flying. I heard noises like clanging sounds and people screaming, and I saw smoke and fire and water. It was very chaotic.” For about an hour, Smith drifted in a reality that was beyond normal comprehension, seeing flashes of images, hearing snippets of sounds and feeling the terror of an event that he couldn’t fully grasp. As protocol dictated, he jotted down words associated with what he was seeing — “water,” “vessel,” “smoke” and “wings” — and then tried to sketch an image from those words and sensations. Unsatisfied and somewhat confused by what Smith was perceiving, Dames ended the session. “You’re off today,” Dames told him, and they both went home for the weekend. That Monday morning, headlines across the country announced that an Iraqi fighter-bomber had fired two anti-ship missiles at the USS Stark, a frigate patrolling the Persian Gulf. The missiles had ripped a hole in the port side of the ship, killing thirty-seven sailors and injuring twenty-one. The ship’s radar had failed to pick up the missiles. Smith, in a gray room thousands of miles away, had not. Now sixty-one and long-retired from the Army, Smith is a tall, burly man with an engaging and deeply pensive demeanor that makes him seem more like a nineteenth-century philosopher than a career military man. But at his core, he is a storyteller, and the Stark is one of his favorites. “I saw something that hadn’t happened yet,” he says. “I had never done that with such detail and precision, and it proved to me that we could see into the future, that the mind could transcend the body and see things.” That event, along with the revelatory tenets of his Mormon faith, inspired much of his post-military life. As the president of his own company, Remote Viewing Instructional Services, Smith now devotes himself to enhancing in others the power that he believes he has within himself. “I believe that people have this [psychic] power to access information that is somewhere else,” he says. “Everyone can do this. It’s just tapping into the fundamental basis of reality.” CONTINUE READING: narrative.ly/the-spies-among-us/journeys-of-a-psychic-army-spy/
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Post by Deleted on May 16, 2014 14:08:07 GMT -6
There's interesting stuff here. What we're trying to do with our little experiments IS remote viewing..baby steps. I don't absolutely trust it because much of what a psychic 'sees' is also a matter of interpreting flashes of images, or feelings or something sensed. Sorting it all out is where it becomes tricky. I believe in it....but I wouldn't bet anyone's life on what is seen. It's similar but totally different from reading for someone when you have their energy to focus on. As for seeing the future...well I think that's very tricky too. And naturally this is my own concept of it. I do 'future' readings for myself almost nightly...a heads up for the day ahead has helped me direct my own energy for many years. What I have figured out is that you can see events coming IF some alternate path doesn't happen along. You cannot predict the unpredictable. If...things stay the same and don't fluctuate...it works. But...the future is influenced by so many variables..that it does change. We could see that tomorrow world friction will be calm...right up to the point where some psycho leader is having a bad day cause he stubbed his toe and orders an air strike on his neighbor. Mankind has freedom of choice...we don't have to take the smarter path or the obvious one. Think about the latest school shooting...the gunman made up his mind to walk into a school and start shooting kids...did the kids decide to die that day? Where was their choice? Life isn't in stone..it's fluid..or that is MY belief from experiments of my own. I know remote viewing can work and it's stunning when we all see mostly the same. But...on this subject I think our motivation was strong. Concern...caring.. While other experiments were just curiosity and note that those who don't usually see much at all...did see the plane, I think because of that motivation. I do know..practice is the only way to improve
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Post by auntym on Aug 1, 2014 11:52:06 GMT -6
humansarefree.com/2014/07/numerous-studies-confirm-remote-viewing.htmlAugust 1, 2014 Numerous Studies Confirm Remote Viewing is FactRemote viewing can be defined in multiple ways. It’s the ability of individuals to describe a remote geographical location up to several hundred thousand kilometres away (even more) from their physical location. Although the concept has been proven, it’s not clear to the mainstream scientific community how it’s achieved. It’s important to note that a lot of the research within these programs remains classified, and the majority of the information we do have today was previously classified(2) only to be approved for release years later. It makes you wonder, what information with regards to the remote viewing phenomenon remains classified? Our world is full of information, the only problem is we don’t always know where to look. Scientific discoveries that are relevant to the human race are not always emphasized. Many types of phenomena we still deem to be false have been proven to be a true reality long ago. These realities have far reaching implications, and shedding light on them further confirms new concepts of reality that are yet to receive the attention they deserve in our scientific community. What happens when we come across information that goes beyond matter and into the realm of reality we can’t sense with our eyes, can’t feel with our hands, can’t hear with our ears or can’t smell with our nose? Does it cease to become scientific? Absolutely not, quantum physics has confirmed the non-physical reality in years past, and the human race is beginning to acknowledge these realities in its continual examination of the make-up of our reality. "The day science begins to study non-physical phenomena, it will make more progress in a decade than in all the previous centuries of its existence." – Nikola TeslaScience has studied non-physical phenomena before, unfortunately a majority of it remains classified(2). Many discoveries associated with non-physical phenomena is unknown in the eyes of the masses, but known in the classified world. It’s called parapsychology, a term used to replace the previous term “psychical research.” Studies concerning paranormal phenomena have long been associated with controversy for no good reason. With multiple studies and research confirming the validity of paranormal phenomena, more people are becoming aware that these concepts have been demonstrated and proven in multiple laboratories in years past (0). The intelligence community is of no exception to this. Beginning in the 1970′s, the department of defence has co-operated with researchers from various universities(1)(2) by conducting multiple experiments and creating programs designed to investigate the application of paranormal phenomena. One phenomenon that seems to receive the majority of their attention is remote viewing (1)(2). Let’s examine some of the research available in the public domain. Some of these findings may shock you. CONTINUE READING: humansarefree.com/2014/07/numerous-studies-confirm-remote-viewing.html
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Post by auntym on Jan 19, 2018 14:43:28 GMT -6
mysteriousuniverse.org/2018/01/remote-viewing-a-deadly-game/ Remote Viewing: A Deadly Game?by Nick Redfern / mysteriousuniverse.org/author/nredfern/ January 19, 2018 For decades, numerous nations, all around the world, have done their utmost to try and harness the mysterious powers of the mind and utilize them as tools of nothing less than espionage. Extra-sensory perception (ESP), clairvoyance, precognition, and astral-projection have all been utilized by the CIA, the KGB, and British Intelligence on more than a few occasions. As astonishing as it may sound, the world of psychic 007’s is all too real. It’s a subject that has been researched, with varying degrees of success, for decades. The earliest indications of serious interest on the part of the U.S. Government in the field of psychic phenomena are described in a formerly classified CIA document written in 1977 by Dr. Kenneth A. Kress – then an engineer with the CIA’s Office of Technical Services – and titled Parapsychology in Intelligence. According to Kress: “Anecdotal reports of extrasensory perception capabilities have reached U.S. national security agencies at least since World War II, when Hitler was said to rely on astrologers and seers. Suggestions for military applications of ESP continued to be received after World War II. In 1952, the Department of Defense was lectured on the possible usefulness of extrasensory perception in psychological warfare. “In 1961, the CIA’s Office of Technical Services became interested in the claims of ESP. Technical project officers soon contacted Stephen I. Abrams, the Director of the Parapsychological Laboratory, Oxford University, England. Under the auspices of Project ULTRA, Abrams prepared a review article which claimed ESP was demonstrated but not understood or controllable.” Kress added: “The report was read with interest but produced no further action for another decade.” Indeed, it was in the early 1970s that the research began in earnest (although, the FBI got involved in a strange affair in the 1950s). In April 1972, Dr. Russell Targ, a laser physicist with a personal interest in parapsychology and the power of the human mind, met with CIA personnel from the Office of Strategic Intelligence, specifically to discuss paranormal phenomena. Of paramount concern to the CIA was the fact that Targ informed them that the Soviet Union was deeply involved in researching psychic phenomena, mental telepathy and ESP. It did not take the CIA long to realize that the purpose of the Soviet research was to determine if ESP could be used as a tool of espionage. It was this realization that galvanized the CIA into action. As the Kress report stated, in 1973: “The Office of Technical Services funded a $50,000 expanded effort in parapsychology.” The initial studies utilized a variety of people who were carefully and secretly brought into the project, and who demonstrated a whole range of seemingly paranormal skills. Those same skills could not be reliably replicated on every occasion, however. As evidence of this, Kenneth Kress informed his superiors that, “One subject, by mental effort, apparently caused an increase in temperature; the action could not be duplicated by the second subject. The second subject was able to reproduce, with impressive accuracy, information inside sealed envelopes. Under identical conditions, the first subject could reproduce nothing.” Similarly, some government-sponsored psychics in the period from 1973 to 1974 located secret missile installations in the Soviet Union, found terrorist groups in the Middle East, and successfully remote viewed the interior of the Chinese Embassy in Washington, D.C. Others, meanwhile, provided data that was sketchy and, at times, simply wrong. And it was the continuing rate of success versus the frequency of failure that led to heated debate within the CIA about the overall relevancy and validity of the project. In Parapsychology in Intelligence, Kenneth Kress confirmed this. After the CIA’s remote viewing team attempted to broaden the range of its operation and secure extra funding in mid-1973, said Kress: “I was told not to increase the scope of the project and not to anticipate any follow-on in this area. The project was too sensitive and potentially embarrassing.” Despite this, the CIA’s research continued, with many of its advances due to a skilled psychic named Pat Price, who had achieved a number of extraordinary successes in the field of ESP, including successfully remotely viewing a sensitive installation that fell under the auspices of the National Security Agency and psychically penetrating missile sites in Libya. Price’s sudden and untimely death from a heart attack in 1975 indirectly led the CIA – according to the official story, at least – to minimize its research into psychic espionage. Tim Rifat, who has deeply studied the world of top secret, governmental research into psychic spying, says of Pat Price’s death: “It was alleged at the time that the Soviets poisoned Price. It would have been a top priority for the KGB to eliminate Price as his phenomenal remote-viewing abilities would have posed a significant danger to the USSR’s paranormal warfare buildup. He may also have been the victim of an elite group of Russian psi-warriors trained to remotely kill enemies of the Soviet Union.” Murder or just a heart-attack? Take your pick.
mysteriousuniverse.org/2018/01/remote-viewing-a-deadly-game/
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Post by jcurio on Jan 19, 2018 22:49:03 GMT -6
How many people have “implants” these days? Known or unknown? Will someone (someday) be able to kill someone through an implant?
Electrical and visual “attacks” may already be part of our military, or proposed crowd control.
(Don’t be paranoid 😂)
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Post by auntym on Feb 1, 2019 17:22:04 GMT -6
mysteriousuniverse.org/2019/01/psychic-warriors-and-project-jedi/ Psychic Warriors and Project Jediby Brent Swancer / mysteriousuniverse.org/author/brentswancer/January 28, 2019 In the long history of human warfare, we have constantly tried to one up each other on the battlefield, devising new technology, tactics, and weaponry to give ourselves the edge. In this sense it seems only natural that at some point we should turn to the vast wealth of supposed psychic powers lying within the human mind and try to use them to our military advantage, and this was, and perhaps still is, done on a surprisingly large scale within the American military and intelligence agencies. Here we have tales of psychic soldiers, men who stare at goats, and the American Jedi soldiers. One of the most famous psychic projects pursued by the U.S. military was a program that sought to delve into tapping into a wide variety of mental powers for military purposes, which was eventually called Project Stargate. Originally started in 1978 at Fort Meade, Maryland, it was the brainchild of the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) and a California company called SRI International, and its scope would become wide beyond what anyone could have expected. The idea was simply to try and develop psychic powers for use in military operations, initially focusing on remote viewing, wherein faraway objects and places can be seen by the psychic, but soon branching out to clairvoyance, manipulating computer systems with the mind, and even supposedly powers straight from a movie, such as levitation, invisibility, walking through walls, or killing with the power of the mind. It was largely overseen by the esteemed general and self-professed psychic General Albert Stubblebine III, and is a project popularized by the 2009 Hollywood blockbuster The Men Who Stare At Goats, starring George Clooney and Ewan McGregor, itself based on the 2004 book of the same name by journalist Jon Ronsonthe, the title of which refers to having psychics stare at goats or other animals and try to physically affect them with their thoughts. As absurd as it may sound, there were indeed many living creatures subjected to these sorts of experiments in an effort to create psychic assassins, and there were allegedly successes at times and even supposed real research that that was said to conclusively prove that negative mental energy could be focused upon mould to inhibit its growth, which is useful for the military? I suppose? Even the famed psychic and spoon bender extraordinaire Uri Geller was allegedly brought into the fold and asked to kill a pig with his mind for the military, which he says he refused to do, not because he couldn’t, mind you, but because he thought it was unethical. Geller would say of this: They asked me to kill the poor creature using thought alone. I cannot tell you how shocked I was. I love animals. My powers cannot be used to harm. In those days, I was young and naive, but in that moment I realised who I’d become associated with. I catapulted myself out of that room and left the program.While this might all sound like pure fantasy, it was bizarrely a totally real program that expanded quite rapidly. The Cold War in particular saw some in the American military war machine terrified that the nefarious Soviets were pursuing psychic warfare, spying on them, influencing them, or even trying to disarm nuclear weapons with the power of the mind, and efforts to counteract this were stepped up. As a result, the project began to give birth to other clandestine offshoot programs and sister programs, all with colorful code names right out of a comic book that these sorts of thing were known for, such as GONDOLA WISH, GRILL FLAME, CENTER LANE, SUN STREAK, and MK ULTRA, and all devoted to different areas of psychic phenomena. It was all very hush hush, and funded secretly, but inevitably word leaked out about these covert operations. It might sound ludicrous that the military would pour so much time and money into all of this, but it was apparently all taken very seriously, and one remote viewer and Special Forces Sergeant Glenn Wheaton has said of such secret programs: You have to understand that these ideas were not considered wacky. They were seen as the next military frontier. We needed to know whether it was possible to use paranormal forces for military ends. We also needed to know how to protect ourselves should they be used against us.One of these projects was called Project Jedi, named after the Jedi of the Star Wars films, and which sought to focus on creating soldiers who could use their mental powers not for merely spying, but for actively offensive purposes and to increase human performance on the battlefield. The program first started to come together in the late 1970s and early 80s, and was also known by such titles as the “Ultimate Warrior Training Program,” “The Jedi Warrior Training Program,” and the “Earth’s First Battalion,” and which was designed specifically for use by elite Special Forces and envisioned as potentially revolutionizing warfare. CONTINUE READING: mysteriousuniverse.org/2019/01/psychic-warriors-and-project-jedi/
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Post by auntym on Feb 27, 2019 13:59:12 GMT -6
Jim Marrs Presents Remote Viewing Aliens and UFOsUFO Congress Published on Feb 26, 2019 Jim Marrs - Remote Viewing Aliens and UFOs - Lecture from the 2011 International UFO Congress.Jim Marrs has written about government projects to establish remote viewing groups. An interesting side note to this psychic spying project is that many remote viewers have made discoveries regarding UFOs and extraterrestrials. Marrs will show us some of the amazing findings that top remote viewers have recovered. Jim Marrs is a former journalist and a bestselling author. He primarily focuses on government cover-ups and conspiracies. His book Crossfire, an investigation into the death of John F. Kennedy, was turned into the movie JFK by Oliver stone. While researching the power elite, he also discovered the reality of the UFO cover up and has written extensively on his findings on this matter. www.jimmarrs.comJim Marrs unfortunately left us early. He passed on August 2, 2017. Fortunately, we can still enjoy the fruits of his efforts. Enjoy.
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Post by auntym on Feb 22, 2020 14:26:46 GMT -6
www.ufoinsight.com/ingo-swann-cia-remote-viewing-experiments/ Ingo Swann And CIA Remote Viewing Experiments October 6th, 2019 Written by: Marcus Lowth The talents of psychics, mystics, or any of the other of the tags that are placed on those who can see beyond the limits of the majority of us, are embraced by some, and equally ridiculed by others. Perhaps it is surprising then that many government agencies, in the United States and elsewhere around the world, would seemingly be in the former category. The CIA took a particular interest in the abilities of people who claimed to be able to leave their body and travel to destinations hundreds, even thousands of miles away, completely undetected to boot. The possibilities for espionage were seemingly limitless with such a “weapon” at their disposal. Very recently in January 2017 – coincidentally or not at the same time as the mass attention of the Trump inauguration – the CIA released a huge amount of data files, some of which spoke of such remote viewing programs, essentially confirming what people in conspiracy circles had long suspected as fact. They really happened, and what’s more it seems, they really worked. Ingo Swann As well as the CIA, many other intelligence agencies around the world have investigated the possibilities of remote viewing. Most notable of these is the former Soviet Union during the Cold War. One of the people initially “employed” by the United States to remote view and spy on the activities of the Soviets was Ingo Swann, who was regarded as one of the best in his field. He had repeatedly proven his skills, and his success rate in terms of key espionage information was very high. In February 1975, Swann was instructed by a shadowy gentleman who worked out of Washington D.C., that he would be required to work on a top secret mission, and that a ”Mr. Axelrod” would be contacting him very soon to instruct him further. Almost a month went by before the mysterious Mr. Axelrod made contact with Swann. It was a quick, one-way conversation, and he was told to meet Axelrod at the National Museum of Natural History. Once there, a man representing Mr Axelrod greeted him, before hustling him into a car. They were driven to an unknown destination where a helicopter stood waiting. Already feeling rattled, Swann’s anxiety went up a little more when he was blindfolded once he was in the helicopter – such was the secrecy of their destination. When he finally arrived, still blindfolded, he was led to an elevator. The doors slid shut and he could feel it descending. It seemed to do so for some time, suggesting to Swann that he was being led into one of the rumoured underground bases said to be under the US military’s control. The elevator finally came to a stop, and Swann was led into a room where the blindfold was removed. In front of him, there stood Mr. Axelrod. Co-ordinates For A Colony On The Moon? Mr. Axelrod quickly introduced himself to Swann, whose mind was reeling with everything that happened since arriving at the museum that afternoon. He also volunteered that “Axelrod” was indeed a pseudonym and not his real identity. He began to grill Swann on the ins and outs of remote viewing and how he achieved his results. He also stated he was prepared to offer him an extremely large amount of money for his services. As if he needed reminding, the work would be of a top secret nature. Tentatively accepting the “offer” (not feeling as if he had much of a choice), Axelrod then began to ask Swann as to the extent of his knowledge regarding the Moon. He then presented him with co-ordinates and asked him to “remote view” what was there. Apprehensively, Swann did so. He found himself leaving the Earth and heading towards the Moon – the dark side of the Moon to be precise. He claimed he could see buildings and glass dome-like structures. His spiritual body entered this moon city. It was then that he noticed living beings. He described what he was seeing to Axelrod, including that these beings appeared to notice his presence. This prompted Axelrod to bring the session to an immediate end, calling to Swann urgently, “Come away from there right now!” Swann, extremely shaken by the experience, rushed back to his physical body, and after gathering himself, asked Axelrod what he had just seen. Was there really a colony on the Moon? Axelrod remained quiet. Swann asked again, indirectly insinuating that the beings might not be human, to which Axelrod was said to reply, “Isn’t that something, Huh?” Check out the video below that features Ingo Swann speaking of his experiences and the capabilities of the human spirit.
CONTINUE READING & MORE VIDEOS: www.ufoinsight.com/ingo-swann-cia-remote-viewing-experiments/
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Post by jcurio on Feb 26, 2020 2:03:00 GMT -6
.....took a particular interest in the abilities of people who claimed to be able to leave their body and travel to destinations hundreds, even thousands of miles away, completely undetected to boot. ______________
Undetected? Not always.
(From article on this page; this thread)
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Post by jcurio on Feb 26, 2020 2:15:45 GMT -6
More reading on this subject: www.urigeller.com/the-geller-effect/the-state-of-the-art/____________ and note to self and others: there was a book about Uri Geller in my elementary school library (early 70’s). I have distinct reference points in my mind: our library had been on the school stage in the gymnasium while a new library was being finished down the hall. I saw the picture of Uri Geller in his book, the first day we got to go to the new library. It stood out to me because I had not seen eyes as piercing as his, except on a missionary from India that we fed in our home 🙂. I didn’t hear, until I was an adult with my own grade school-age children, that Uri believed that his “powers” came after visiting with the occupants of a ufo.
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Post by jcurio on Feb 26, 2020 2:23:38 GMT -6
(Meaningless I suppose; to anyone but me) but this tidbit is from the article I posted directly above:
“ The first type of mental phenomena discussed was clairvoyance, or ‘remote viewing’ as they prefer to call it at SRI International, where Project Scanate got under way on 29 May 1973. The experimenters on that occasion were Harold Puthoff and Russell Targ, the two laser physicists who had begun to look into anomalous matters the previous year with Uri Geller. Their subject was a New Yorker named Ingo Swann, .....” ______________
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Post by jcurio on Feb 26, 2020 2:33:02 GMT -6
Project Scan..... 1973.
I turned seven years old. My life (and dreams/ sleepwalking) was already WEIRD.
These days (2020) If I want to entertain ideas that I was “kidnapped” as a child for some sort of “government” experiments, I lean towards the “monarch” project. Waaaaaaay too many “references” to butterflies in my early childhood and beyond. I started being “enthralled” with butterflies when we moved to our new home in October 1970..... and this move into new home is my first, conscious, “disappearance” or “missing time”; ......
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Post by auntym on Mar 19, 2020 14:17:00 GMT -6
mysteriousuniverse.org/2020/03/from-controlling-minds-to-burning-files/ From Controlling Minds to Burning Filesby Nick Redfern / mysteriousuniverse.org/author/nredfern/March 19, 2020 Over the years, and thanks to the provisions of the Freedom of Information Act, a great deal has been learned about the secret world of the CIA’s mind-control program, MK-Ultra. We could have learned much more about the program had it not been for one, particular thing: in early 1973 massive amounts of MK-Ultra files were destroyed on the orders of the CIA director at the time, Richard Helms. The reasoning behind the destruction was simple: the program was in danger of being compromised by the U.S. media and the U.S. Senate. And, as the work of MK-Ultra, by 1973, had long been perfected, the now, old, historical records – which told the stories of the abuses that went on in the program – were deemed vital to be destroyed. But, how did this situation come about? Let’s see. It was in late 1972, that certain high-ranking figures in the CIA had been carefully and quietly providing U.S. journalists with highly-classified information on MK-Ultra. And it wasn’t just information that was being clandestinely shared, but official MK-Ultra documents too. With such secret papers in the hands of the press – which revealed the long and shocking story of how the CIA had been using people, against their will, in their mind-manipulation programs – all hell broke loose in the CIA, Helms demanded to know who was doing the leaking. It was imperative, he said, that whoever was doing it should be found and arrested as soon as possible. The answer to who it was that was giving such material to the media was never firmly proved. But, there is no doubt that it was a Deep Throat meets Edward Snowden-type character. When the U.S. media began to write what it knew about MK-Ultra at the time (which was limited but certainly growing in clarity) the U.S. Senate took notice too. Matters were in danger of spiraling out of control. And rapidly so, too. Director Helms knew that something had to be done, otherwise just about everything MK-Ultra had ever been done would soon be in the public domain. Helms chose none other than Sidney Gottlieb to take control of the situation – Gottlieb having been the man who ran the occult-driven Operation Often program, which began in the latter part of the 1960s. Helms ordered Gottlieb, on the morning of January 30, 1973, to drive over to a certain installation owned by the CIA in Warrenton, Virginia. It was a facility which just happened to house hundreds of thousands of pages of MK-Ultra-themed documents. The director of the facility was outraged – after all, we’re talking about massive amounts of documentation from one of the CIA’s most significant projects being destroyed at what pretty much amounted to a whim. But, that same director was hardly in a position to argue, as the orders were coming from the most senior figure in the CIA, Richard Helms. Sidney Gottlieb arrived early in the morning and ordered that every single piece of paper on MK-Ultra be made available to him. Cart upon cart of files were taken to the facility’s furnace. Gottlieb then order personnel from the Technical Services Division to destroy the files by burning them all. Gottlieb stood in grim-faced silence as the documents were destroyed. It was an operation which took most of the day. When the task was over, Gottlieb returned to CIA headquarters in Langley, Virginia, and told a relieved Helms that the job had been completed. That was not the end of things though: an order went out to every CIA substation, to every college and university that may have conducted research on MK-Ultra for them, and to every other arm of the Intelligence community to destroy anything and everything linked to the program. Inevitably some – in fact, many – survived the order of destruction. A number of the pages that did survive Helms’ orders were leaked to the media – in much the same way that they had been back in 1972. Then, in December 1974, journalist Seymour Hersh wrote an article on MK-Ultra for the New York Times. For Helms and the CIA, this was just about the worst news possible. It got even worse: the U.S. Senate decided it was time for them to get involved. Which they did, in big-time fashion. Thus was created the U.S. Senate Select Committee to Study Governmental Operations with Respect to Intelligence Activities. It became far more well-known as the Church Committee – due to the fact that it was overseen by Senator Frank Church. The whole story came tumbling out and created shock-waves throughout the government, the CIA and the media. A significant number of the files were destroyed, but that didn’t prevent the story from surfacing. mysteriousuniverse.org/2020/03/from-controlling-minds-to-burning-files/
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Post by auntym on Jul 31, 2021 18:27:15 GMT -6
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Post by swamprat on Jul 31, 2021 20:21:53 GMT -6
Intriguing, to say the least!
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