Monday 11 January 2010

Well, now we know

[The following are excerpts from a post on the David Morehouse website.]

Is there precognition, is it possible to travel forward in time and see what’s going to happen? Or can you, as the pre-cogs do, too, go backwards and see what actually did happen? Can you harness these skills for policing? (...)

Yes, you can. The CIA is already there. There are pre-cogs already working and they are called psychic spies. Operating in blacked out, secret warehouses nestled in bucolic Virginia industrial parkland, they work for the Department of Defense, the National Security Council and a half dozen other intelligence agencies.

Meet one of them: Dr David Morehouse, former Army Ranger officer, CIA operative and remote viewer.

“In 1972,” he says, “Stanford Research Institute pulled together all the major psychics that they could get temporary security clearances for and could pay, to come in and explore this. And the job of these laser physicists was to take these greatest natural abilities and synthesize these abilities into a protocol under clinical conditions, scientific test conditions and establish a protocol that could be trained, reliable, measurable, credible.

“It took them $50-million and six years of trial and error to develop that protocol. And this is what they came up with: Stages One through Six of co-ordinate remote viewing. The protocol was turned over to the Defense Intelligence Agency in 1982. (...)

“I was training Jordanian Rangers in the desert and a Jordanian machine gun, a bullet traveling 2,832 feet per second hits me 2 1/2 inches above the eye, knocks me unconscious, and I have a vision.” The vision shifted and changed, but kept returning. He told no one, was brought home and tested, but there was no damage. After a few months, he left the Rangers. (...) he was recruited into a Special Access program that was codenamed Royal Cape.

“Royal Cape was to support logistically and develop an infrastructure to support clandestine and covert operations in Tier One and Two countries. When I finally told one of our counselors what had happened to me in the desert, I was recruited, very rapidly, into a top secret clan of psychic spies called remote viewers.”

According to Morehouse, one of this unit’s most distinct successes was the discovery of what and who brought down Pan Am flight 103, which crashed in Lockerbie, Scotland, in 1989 [sic]. Information produced by remote viewers just hours after the crash said that a bomb placed in a music box was the source.

“There was a backup on Pan Am 103: an Iranian woman who had lost her family as a result of the US shooting down an Iranian airliner from a missile frigate. She was seated on the left-hand side of the leading edge of the wing, which was exactly where the explosives in the cargo hold were, just below her. She had explosives strapped around her waist."

8 comments:

  1. That's about what I was thinking, until I realized I remote viewed this posting and just forgot it. Except it wasn't from Moorehouse's blog, it was from Sir-Mix-A-Lot, and it wasn't an article touching on Lockerbie, but a song touching on large butts. Also I didn't remotely view it, I viewed it on MTV, and a few years after the Lockerbie incident. So again,

    ?

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  2. Well, the CIA people (like other agencies)have already shown the public that they are able to go back in time to re-arrange everything :).
    How it works? That is told in
    "1984".

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  3. Well, I suppose it would be funny, if the subject weren't so completely unfunny....

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  4. It's not funny, just the closest thing I'd seen here (a notably non-funny place) in a bit. Well, some of the comments, etc...

    I did check again and it seems the cited page has already been deleted. Who knows why.

    My faith in remote viewing is unchanged, but I still hold that goat-exploding still has some potential, esp. in Afghanistan.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Men_Who_Stare_at_Goats

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  5. The most obvious error is that the author claims the downing of Pan Am 103 was a suicide bombing. That does not fit in with the Iranian doctrine of limited revenge, qesas.

    And why would the dear lady put the device in a music box and then strap it to her waist?

    Utterly, utterly barmy. I hope nobody's paying him to write this tosh.

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  6. This is "remote viewing" (a bit like your own theory actually!) Of course it's barmy.

    Mind you the bomb was in a music box!

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