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To: tired&retired

This guy has made a lot of wrong predictions too.

According to this Major we should have been gone years ago.

This is dated stuff from 2011. Don’t waste your time with it.


15 posted on 09/05/2017 5:47:00 AM PDT by Enlightened1
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To: Enlightened1

Remote viewing involves using a “target-response” model. The remote viewer — also called a “receiver” — would sit in a room in a building at Fort Meade. He would be assisted by a “monitor.” A target would be selected — for instance, a chemical weapons facility in Libya. The receiver would be given 15 minutes to visualize the target. Then, with the help of the monitor, the viewer would compose a sketch of the target. Later the drawings and information were submitted to an analyst for further study.

Working in Buildings 2560 and 2561 at Fort Meade from 1978 until 1995, the remote viewers were credited with the following intelligence coups:

The attack on the U.S.S. Stark on May 15, 1987 — delivered by a French Exocet missile fired in the Persian Gulf by an Iraqi warplane — was predicted 48 hours before the attack in which 37 Americans were killed.

In the late 1970s, a woman in Ohio located a downed Soviet TU-22 bomber in the jungles of Zaire.

A kidnapped Marine officer was located and rescued in Europe.
A Soviet Typhoon-class submarine under construction was identified for the first time.

A search for stolen nuclear weapons by right-wing Afrikaners in the South African Defense Force was successfully undertaken in Zululand. The weapons were taken during the SADF pullout from Angola. In the mid-1990s, a book on this event was published, entitled “The Mini-Nuke Conspiracy: Mandela’s Nuclear Nightmare,” by Peter Hounam and Steve McQuillan.

A successful search for both biological and nuclear material and weapons in North Korea was undertaken.

Despite the vast successes of the Stargate Project, the program found itself surrounded by hostility from various departments in both the executive branch and the Pentagon.

For example, Frank Carlucci, who served as secretary of defense and national security advisor during Ronald Reagan’s second term, dispatched the inspector general to investigate the Stargate Project at Fort Meade. But Senators Ted Stevens, R-Alaska, William Cohen, R-Maine, Daniel Inouye, D-Hawai, Robert Byrd, D- WV and John Glenn, D-Ohio interceded and saved the program — keeping it going through the first term of Bill Clinton’s presidency.

The remote viewers were eventually kicked out of INSCOM and the DIA by Maj. Gen. Harry Soyster, who at various times headed up both INSCOM and the DIA.


16 posted on 09/05/2017 5:50:35 AM PDT by tired&retired (Blessings)
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To: Enlightened1

A stopped clock is right twice a day. Make enough predictions and some of them may actually turn out.


35 posted on 09/05/2017 9:12:20 AM PDT by Pecos (A Constitutional republic shouldnÂ’t need to hold its collective breath in fear of lawyers.)
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