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The Redfern Files
Aug 15 2007

Psi-Spies

PSI Spies: The True Story of America's Psychic Warfare Program 

Those with a particular interest in the way in which Remote Viewing has been used in UFO and Crop Circle studies (among other issues) may want to get hold of a copy of Jim Marrs’ new book, PSI Spies.

Here’s the publisher’s blurb on the book:

PSI Spies will take you behind the scenes of the U.S. Army’s formerly top-secret remote viewing unit to discover how the military has used this psychic ability as a tool, and a weapon. Despite the fact that remote viewing was developed by various tax-supported government agencies, including the CIA, the Defense Intelligence Agency, and even the U.S. Army, a majority of Americans still have never heard of this faculty. In the 1970s, with the support of Congress, the Army formed a small unit of remote viewers to spy for America. These soldiers/psychic spies gained penetrating knowledge about a wide variety of subjects. They were consulted to stop a Soviet plot to kill President Ronald Reagan. They mentally prowled the halls of the Kremlin. They probed Iraq’s hidden weapons sites in preparation for the 1991 Gulf War. From insights into our future to the continuing mysteries of UFOs and crop circles, no subject has been immune to the military remote viewers—America’s Psi Spies.

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5 Comments to “Psi-Spies”

  1. drew hempel Says:

    I saw it in the store but thought maybe it was old as there’s been so many remote viewer books of late. Gee I hope he works the reptilian-Sitchin angle like in his conspiracy book. gag… But then Whitley Strieber also did a promo for Barry Lopez’ Wolves and Men book that I finally finished after you, Nick, reminded me of my previous aborted attempt at Lopez.

    Is Whitley Strieber the U.S. version of Colin Wilson for book promos on weird subjects? Wilson has a forward to Robert Lomas’ latest Freemason book and it’s super kooky! Gotta love the evolution of the outsider. If only I could remember all the weird forwards Colin Wilson has written to books that become instant classics of bizarre geekdom — Geoff Ward’s Spiral book is a recent one. David Foster’s DNA-consciousness book, Michael Hayes’s harmonic evolution book…. memory fading….

    But wait Hayes, the author of “High Priests, Quantum Genes” has a new article on Alien Extraterrestrial DNA.

    I knew this would all fit together.

  2. misteranderson Says:

    I just don’t think Jim Marrs has a lot of credibility. The reptillian thing seems prima facie false & ridiculous.

    I’m reading Heavenly Lights:The Apparitions Of Fatima & The UFO Phenomena from Anomalist Books. I guess I think the UFO phenomena may not be ET’s, but something like Jacques Vallee’s Ultraterrestial theory. It’s as if there are hidden realms nested right next to our experience of the Universe…

  3. red pill junkie Says:

    I have read a little about this remote viewing.

    From my understanding the Cia disbanded the project way before 1991, I think the reason was that the level of accuracy reached was not as effective as the agency expected. So they decided to rely entirely on conventional methods like satellite viewing. That of course does not deny the fact that remote viewing could be a real unexplained ability.

    So there was no remote viewing during Gulf War.

    If there was, and if remote viewing is still currently used, playing devil’s advocate here: why didn’t the CIA use remote viewing to check if Saddam really had WMD before invading Iraq in 2003?

  4. The_Sage Says:

    Remote Viewing is a poorly told joke…

    “As mandated by Congress, CIA is reviewing available information and past research programs concerning parapsychological phenomena, mainly ‘Remote Viewing’ to determine whether they might have any utility for intelligence collection. - CIA sponsored research on this subject in the 1970s — At that time, the program, always considered speculative and controversial, was determined to be unpromising” (CIA STATEMENT ON ‘REMOTE VIEWING’, by the CIA Public Affairs Office, 6 September 1995)

    “The information provided was inconsistent, inaccurate with regard to specifics, and required substantial subjective interpretation” (AN EVALUATION OF REMOTE VIEWING: RESEARCH AND APPLICATIONS by M. D. Mumford, A. M. Rose and D. Goslin, published by AMERICAN INSTITUTES FOR RESEARCH, pg E4)

    In other words, the RV ‘data’ was determined to be sloppy, vague, and supported only by a lot of wishful thinking.

    “In no case had the information provided ever been used to guide intelligence operations” (AN EVALUATION OF REMOTE VIEWING: RESERACH AND APPLICATIONS by M. D. Mumford, A. M. Rose and D. Goslin, published by AMERICAN INSTITUTES FOR RESEARCH, pg E4)

  5. drew hempel Says:

    Nick Begich’s new book “Controlling the Human Mind” details how some of the remote viewers did continue to receive government funding after 1991 — I think it went to the DIA or something. Also remote viewing privatized — like the rest of the military.

    As my blogbook covers, while remote viewing may be a joke, like the reptilians, there is a structural trajectory of technology that will utilize the human mind to bend spacetime. The human mind remains faster than any supercomputer and has great potential for some nano-quantum neural net computer.

    But, as Charles Seife reminds us in his new book on information theory, black holes remain the fastest supercomputers. Even though the information is not retrievable, by thermodynamics, it is processed in black holes and by quantum chaos, information is processed faster than the speed of light.

    Back to the black budget black ops controlled by, ironically, greys.

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