General Stubblebine and his wife Dr. Rima E. Laibow... what's the deal?

Started by MikeWB, December 13, 2008, 04:59:36 PM

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MikeWB

So what's the deal with these two? Why is AJ pushing them so hard?

1) Gen Stubblebine believes in a lot of crazy shit:
a) Remote viewing (LOL)
b) Psychics & Uri Geller's Spoon bending (LMAO)
c) Infamous for trying to walk through a wall!
d) Created and commanded a psychic warrior force (LMAO... I'm not making this shit up!)
2) General was commanding general of the United States Army Intelligence and Security Command from 1981 to 1984 (if that doesn't raise flags, not sure what would)
3) Married to Dr. Rima E. Laibow. She's a graduate of Yeshiva University's Einstein School of medicine. She's clearly Jewish considering her name + alma mater.
4) They live in Panama and don't want to set foot in USA.
5) They're promoting Natural Healing and Natural Foods and are begging for money on AJ show.

So wtf is going on?! Another AJ deception???
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joeblow



I don't think she could look more Khazarian Ashkenazi, even if she tried.

kolnidre

Stubblebine is too evasive about what programs he was and wasn't in charge of during his military career for me to trust him. I don't see evidence of his wife's deception, but she does seem to have the major general on a short leash, which is suspicious to me.

But what I found most suspicious was Stubblebine's reaction recently when a caller to AJ's show asked him about whether he knew any thing about Michael Aquino or ever worked with him. He sounded flustered and used the old tried and true evasion of "Who? That name doesn't ring a bell." Totally unconvincing.

I will never suspect someone just by virtue of the fact of their membership in a tribe, but these two seem creepy to me.
Take heed to yourself lest you make a covenant with the inhabitants of the land whither you go, lest it become a snare in the midst of you.
-Exodus 34]

Anonymous

I will explain this.

These guys are fighting the codex and have a complete set of new laws that they want implemented. They are the anti-thesis of the Hegelian dialectic where codex is the thesis and the result will be the synthesis.

It is just that simple.

kolnidre

Well said, Mr. Savage. I agree, but I don't see where the synthesis is going at this point.

I do take to heart Mrs. Stubblebine's suggestion to grow food indoors in a kind of victory garden. Stocking up on sprouts and seeds is a fine idea. Water is hard to store in an apartment, but we still have freshwater streams around.

Speaking of dialectics, I often can't stand the Collins brothers, but their recent interview with Vyzygoth on Zeitgeist Addendum breaks down the technocratic dictatorship's paradigm very nicely. It's been torrented on ConCen, but you can grab it directly while it's still on Vyz's front page:
http://beyondthegrassyknoll.com/audio/collins12-9.mp3
Take heed to yourself lest you make a covenant with the inhabitants of the land whither you go, lest it become a snare in the midst of you.
-Exodus 34]

MikeWB

The advice they seem to be offering seems to be solid but their backgrounds raise so many flags that there must be something behind it all. Something they're not saying.

They could be the playing the role of a flypaper and attract a massive audience which they will then steer in the direction their masters want.
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MikeWB

Well well well... Dr True Ott says that he confronted Dr Rima and she had a huge outburst after he said the "Zionist" word. She's also FUNDED by Rockafeller!

http://216.240.133.177/archives32/Hinkl ... 230000.mp3

Someone send this info to AJ so he doesn't have her on his show all the time (well, if he weren't corrupt).
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CrackSmokeRepublican

A couple of points about this one:

1. http://www.spike.com/blog/monarch-new-phoenix/67693

2. This Austin, Tx - So  A.J. has a more local contacts for action to report on.  Hal Putoff is a Prof at the Univ. of Texas and has a research group there. There are a couple of "mind-research" types around Austin.  

3. Remote Viewing was used as justification for the Iraq-war. They had absolute knowledge of "weapons of mass destruction" - Putoff's group likely gave Bush and NeoCons some descriptions of underground missiles or something.  I think in most cases it was Remote Lying with the help of the Mossad's Debka files.

4. http://rvconference.org/About.html

5. This is something that shows up and for whatever reason has a mesh of US military intelligence, Jewish Physicsts, and Think Tank types surrounding it.
Kind of like the US govt's UFO-Blue Book stuff that is all pretty vague yet well funded. This is always an area ripe for Jewish intelligence operations and may be door open for them since it is secret.

More Blabbing:
QuoteOne interesting character who might be worth a little research and reading about is Colonel John B Alexander and his article in the Army's MILITARY REVIEW journal entitled: "The New Mental Battlefield", in which he states that telepathic abilities can be honed to intefere with the brain's electrical activity in relation to the development of so called "soft kill" technologies. Armen Victorian wrote about this in LOBSTER back in 1993. Alexander has also written an interesting book called "The Warrior's Edge" in which he expands upon his Project Jedi aimed at making a super soldier.

Another charatcter you might want to browse is Major General Al Stubblebine who has also strongly advocated the use of so called "Psi" powers for military training and appllication. Stubllebine was formerly the Commanding officer of the U.S. Army Intelligence and Security Command (INSCOM), a powerrful figure in his day.

On Ingo Swann, youy may wish to scoot over to his website: http://www.biomindsuperpowers.com/Pages ... owers.html and browse around, noting the "femine rising" picture that greets you (that obviously doesn't contain even an iota of occult symbolism, naturally -- other than the triangles, the psychic eye, the atrological imagery, the diamond body etc). You could also click his "Remote Viewing - The Real Story" and - disregarding the symbolic picture that greets you, especially the three arches, read his book that is freelly available. His "Superpowers/ET" link has an especially nice Mandala to greet you - asubject upon which Carl Jung was a recognised expert.

QuoteCIA-Initiated Remote Viewing
At Stanford Research Institute

by H. E. Puthoff, Ph.D.
Institute for Advanced Studies at Austin
4030 Braker Lane W., #300
Austin, Texas 78759-5329

    Abstract - In July 1995 the CIA declassified, and approved for release, documents revealing its sponsorship in the 1970s of a program at Stanford Research Institute in Menlo Park, CA, to determine whether such phenomena as remote viewing "might have any utility for intelligence collection" [1]. Thus began disclosure to the public of a two-decade-plus involvement of the intelligence community in the investigation of so-called parapsychological or psi phenomena. Presented here by the program's Founder and first Director (1972 - 1985) is the early history of the program, including discussion of some of the first, now declassified, results that drove early interest.

http://www.biomindsuperpowers.com/Pages ... tedRV.html
After the Revolution of 1905, the Czar had prudently prepared for further outbreaks by transferring some $400 million in cash to the New York banks, Chase, National City, Guaranty Trust, J.P.Morgan Co., and Hanover Trust. In 1914, these same banks bought the controlling number of shares in the newly organized Federal Reserve Bank of New York, paying for the stock with the Czar\'s sequestered funds. In November 1917,  Red Guards drove a truck to the Imperial Bank and removed the Romanoff gold and jewels. The gold was later shipped directly to Kuhn, Loeb Co. in New York.-- Curse of Canaan

MikeWB

Remote Viewing is complete bullshit. It was invented by a bunch of Scientolgists who then left Scientology and started tricking people into RV by suggesting that they have scientific proof that it works. They're a more advanced "Uri Geller"-type of conmen. They found a bunch of military idiots like ALexander and Stubblebine who had big budgets and could swing few million their way to do more 'testing' at SRI. If you've ever hear those RV people on C2CAM, you'll see how silly they are and how none of their predictions ever come true. That fool Ingo Swan says he saw aliens on the 'dark' side of the moon. LOL.
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§N9sh2bj

Yup. She's a jew.

Why are you wasting time on the remote viewing crap, and reposting the vitrol? It's a total rabbit hole.
moved on.
the author does not adopt jewish \'race theory\' or \'darwinism\'.
and believes \'jewish culture\' is mostly one of supporting their organized crime syndicates, with a enough veneer and an organized system of destroying and reshaping other cultures, to obfuscate the truth to most people.

CrackSmokeRepublican

eSkeptic: the email newsletter of the Skeptics Society
Tuesday, April 26th, 2005

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


The following is a review of Jon Ronson's The Men Who Stare at Goats


(Picador/Pan Macmillan, 2004, ISBN 0330375474), which appeared in The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, May/June 2005.

The Pentagon's Psychic Friend's Network
a book review by Michael Shermer

Allison was an attractive Oregonian brunette in a new ageish way, before the new age bloomed in the 1980s. She wore all natural fibers, flowers in her hair, and nothing on her feet. But what most intrigued me in our year of distance dating were Allison's spiritual gifts. I knew she could see through me metaphorically, but Allison also saw things that she said were not allegorical: body auras, energy chakras, spiritual entities, and light beings. One night she closed the door and turned off the lights in my bathroom and told me to stare into the mirror until my aura appeared. During a drive one evening she pointed out spiritual beings dotting the landscape. I tried to see the world as Allison did, but I couldn't. I was a skeptic and she was a psychic. The difference doomed our relationship.

This was the age of paranormal proliferation. While a graduate student in experimental psychology, I saw on television the Israeli psychic Uri Geller bend cutlery and reproduce drawings using, so he said, psychic powers alone. Since a number of Ph.D. experimental psychologists had tested Geller and declared him genuine, I began to think that there might be something to it, even if I couldn't personally get with the paranormal program. But then one night I saw the magician James "The Amazing" Randi on Johnny Carson's Tonight Show, replicating with magic everything Geller did. Randi bent spoons, duplicated drawings, levitated tables, and even performed a psychic surgery. When asked about Geller's ability to pass the tests of professional scientists, Randi explained that scientists are not trained to detect trickery and intentional deception, the very art of magic. Randi's right. I vividly recall a seminar that Allison and I attended in which a psychic healer shoved a 10-inch sail needle through his arm with no apparent pain and only a drop of blood. Years later, and to my chagrin, Randi performed the same feat with the simplest of magic.

Randi confirmed my skeptical intuitions about all this paranormal piffle, but I always assumed that it was the province of the cultural fringes. Then, in 1995, the story broke that for the previous 25 years the U.S. Army had invested $20 million in a highly secret psychic spy program called Star Gate (also Grill Flame and Scanate), a Cold War project intended to close the "psi gap" (the psychic equivalent of the missile gap) between the United States and Soviet Union. The Soviets were training psychic spies, so we would as well. The Men Who Stare at Goats, by British investigative journalist Jon Ronson, is the story of this program, how it started, the bizarre twists and turns it took, and how its legacy carries on today. (Ronson's previous book, Them: Adventures with Extremists, explored the paranoid world of cult mongers and conspiracy theorists.)

In a highly readable narrative style, Ronson takes readers on a Looking Glass-like tour of what U.S. Psychological Operations (PsyOps) forces were researching: invisibility, levitation, telekinesis, walking through walls, and even killing goats just by staring at them (the ultimate goal was killing enemy soldiers telepathically). In one project, psychic spies attempted to use "remote viewing" to identify the location of missile silos, submarines, POWs, and MIAs from a small room in a run-down Maryland building. If these skills could be honed and combined, perhaps military officials could zap remotely viewed enemy missiles in their silos, or so the thinking went.

Initially, the Star Gate story received broad media attention—including a spot on ABC's Nightline—and made a few of the psychic spies, such as Ed Dames and Joe McMoneagle, minor celebrities. As regular guests on Art Bell's pro-paranormal radio talk show, the former spies spun tales that, had they not been documented elsewhere, would have seemed like the ramblings of paranoid cultists. (There is even a connection between Ed Dames, Art Bell, and the Heaven's Gate cult mass suicide in 1997, in which 39 UFO devotees took a permanent "trip" to the mother ship they believed was trailing the Hale-Bopp comet.)

But Ronson has brought new depth to the account by carefully tracking down leads, revealing connections, and uncovering previously undisclosed stories. For example, Ronson convincingly connects some of the bizarre torture techniques used on prisoners at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, and Iraq's Abu Ghraib prison, with similar techniques employed during the FBI siege of the Branch Davidians in Waco, Texas. FBI agents blasted the Branch Davidians all night with such obnoxious sounds as screaming rabbits, crying seagulls, dentist drills, and Nancy Sinatra's "These Boots Are Made for Walking." The U.S. military employed the same technique on Iraqi prisoners of war, instead using the theme song from the PBS kids series Barney and Friends—a tune many parents concur does become torturous with repetition.

One of Ronson's sources, none other than Uri Geller (of bent-spoon fame), led him to one Maj. Gen. Albert Stubblebine III, who directed the psychic spy network from his office in Arlington, Virginia. Stubblebine thought that with enough practice he could learn to walk through walls, a belief encouraged by Lt. Col. Jim Channon, a Vietnam vet whose post-war experiences at such new age meccas as the Esalen Institute in Big Sur, California, led him to found the "first earth battalion" of "warrior monks" and "jedi knights." These warriors, according to Channon, would transform the nature of war by entering hostile lands with "sparkly eyes," marching to the mantra of "om," and presenting the enemy with "automatic hugs." Disillusioned by the ugly carnage of modern war, Channon envisioned a battalion armory of machines that would produce "discordant sounds" (Nancy and Barney?) and "psycho-electric" guns that would shoot "positive energy" at enemy soldiers.

Although Ronson expresses skepticism throughout his narrative, he avoids the ontological question of whether any of these claims have any basis in reality. That is, can anyone levitate, turn invisible, walk through walls, or remote view a hidden object? Inquiring minds (scientists) want to know. The answer is an unequivocal no. Under controlled conditions remote viewers have never succeeded in finding a hidden target with greater accuracy than random guessing. The occasional successes you hear about are due either to chance or suspect experiment conditions, like when the person who subjectively assesses whether the remote viewer's narrative description seems to match the target already knows the target location and its characteristics. When both the experimenter and the remote viewer are blinded to the target, all psychic powers vanish.

Herein lies an important lesson that I have learned in many years of paranormal investigations and that Ronson gleaned in researching his illuminating book: What people remember rarely corresponds to what actually happened. Case in point: A man named Guy Savelli told Ronson that he had seen soldiers kill goats by staring at them, and that he himself had also done so. But as the story unfolds we discover that Savelli is recalling, years later, what he remembers about a particular "experiment" with 30 numbered goats. Savelli randomly chose goat number 16 and gave it his best death stare. But he couldn't concentrate that day, so he quit the experiment, only to be told later that goat number 17 had died. End of story. No autopsy or explanation of the cause of death. No information about how much time had elapsed; the conditions, like temperature, of the room into which the 30 goats had been placed; how long they had been there, and so forth. Since Ronson was skeptical, Savelli triumphantly produced a videotape of another experiment where someone else supposedly stopped the heart of a goat. But the tape showed only a goat whose heart rate dropped from 65 to 55 beats per minute.

That was the extent of the empirical evidence of goat killing, and as someone who has spent decades in the same fruitless pursuit of phantom goats, I conclude that the evidence for the paranormal in general doesn't get much better than this. They shoot horses, don't they?

http://www.skepticforum.com/viewtopic.php?f=6&t=376
After the Revolution of 1905, the Czar had prudently prepared for further outbreaks by transferring some $400 million in cash to the New York banks, Chase, National City, Guaranty Trust, J.P.Morgan Co., and Hanover Trust. In 1914, these same banks bought the controlling number of shares in the newly organized Federal Reserve Bank of New York, paying for the stock with the Czar\'s sequestered funds. In November 1917,  Red Guards drove a truck to the Imperial Bank and removed the Romanoff gold and jewels. The gold was later shipped directly to Kuhn, Loeb Co. in New York.-- Curse of Canaan

CrackSmokeRepublican

#11
This was used as a primary NeoCon B.S. reason for "WMDs" in Iraq. If they start this crap with Iran, you know the Israeli's are moving into "high gear".
I think the Ashkenazi Israeli's under "psychic IDF'ers  like Uri Geller made claims about killing "Jordanians" via "mind powers" in the 1967 war.
This likely caught on with the US Intelligence agencies who were spooked about what the Russians could do with these "powers".  The hoax simply allowed Israel agents to penetrate deeper into US Mil-Intel IMHO.  Created a lot of paranoia and confusion on top of the Soviet threat fears... typical Talmudics and scammers.

--The CSR

QuoteEarly Coordinate Remote Viewing experiments

Targ and Puthoff write about their pilot experiments, "We couldn't overlook the possibility that perhaps Ingo knew the geographical features of the earth and their approximate latitude and longitude. (It is Swann who suggests these Coordinate Remote Viewing tests, not the experimenters. He is in control.) "Or it was possible that we were inadvertently cueing the subject (Swann), since we as experimenters knew what the answers were." [27]

Soon Targ and Puthoff perform more experiments with Swann and the controls are tightened to eliminate the possibility of error. This time Swann is given the latitude and longitude of 10 targets, in the end there will be 10 runs for a total of 100. Only the evaluations of the 10 targets from the 10th run, the last, are disclosed. The results of the targets from the previous 90 (runs 1-9) are ignored. For the 10th run Swann has 7 hits, 2 neutral and 1 miss. The experiments come to a close. Targ and Puthoff are positive "Something was happening, but they are not clear what it is."[28] (This method of selecting a small number of "guesses" from a larger, sometimes never disclosed larger number, is known as the free response method in remote viewing.)[29][30] [31] According to Swann his RV has been correct probably 95% of the time. His personally trained students RV were 85% correct, 85% of the time.[32][33] See:Stargate Project

Swann and his colleague, Dr. Hal Puthoff, were Operating Thetan-level Scientologists in the 1970s.[citation needed]

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ingo_Swann

-------
Remote viewing provides insight on the big issues and our everyday lives


The phenomenon and technique called "remote viewing" that was utilized and developed by U.S. Army intelligence, the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA), the CIA and Stanford Research Institute (SRI) comes down to a very basic and familiar approach: Looking within for answers.

How can remote viewing help the average person, our nation and the human race at this point in time?

We are facing may questions and challenges that are sometimes truly frightening: Terrorism such as the 9/11 attacks, the Iraq war and other wars and conflicts, threats of pandemic disease, severe social problems in our country and globally, government corruption, and the list goes on.

A first step may be to understand this idea of remote viewing.

Is it simply enhanced and focused intuition and instinct?

Is it extra-sensory perception (ESP)?

Is it related to prayer and spiritual meditation?

Is it using our conscious minds to link to our unconscious minds and the larger mind out there?

Is it scientific in terms of our understanding of the physics in our natural world?

You guessed it – or did you remote view it? It is all of the above.

YOUR TAX DOLLARS AT WORK

Back in the 1970s, '80s and early '90s, ordinary U.S. military officers and non-commissioned officers, scientists, ESP researchers and practitioners, intelligence officers and others discovered that by looking within, intelligence information could be obtained by tapping into an apparent system that exists in the natural world.

This system in Nature appears to exist at the sub-atomic, quantum, or some may say, spiritual levels of our Universe.

In remote viewing, the connectedness of people, things, events, time and space is used to get answers to questions.

The program, at different points in time, was funded and managed by the CIA, Army Intelligence and Security Command, the DIA and the Air Force.

When it came to public attention in the ´90s, it was called Project STAR GATE. However, that was only the last of a series of code names. The program had also been called SCANNATE, GONDOLA WISH, GRILL FLAME, CENTER LANE and SUN STREAK.

People involved in these operations claim that they had great successes not only in developing and researching this phenomena, but also in using it for important U.S. intelligence operations. Some of these remote viewing successes are declassified and in the public domain. Some, of course, remain secret.

The words "remote viewing" are simply a name that the original researchers gave to a phenomena that has been around forever. It is a sixth sense that was used by ancient people in many cultures.

It is probably used by animals and various other creatures. It is simply another sense we can tap into just like our sight, hearing, smell, taste and touch.

DO TRY THIS AT HOME

Nowadays, there are many credible training programs available that teach remote viewing. Many books have been written about it too. And the Web is full of articles, reports and discussion about remote viewing. The original DIA remote viewing manual is also on the Web.

You can try simple and basic experiments yourself. Have someone put an object in another room, out of your sight. Then use your conscious mind to ask your unconscious mind what it is.

Is it large or small? What color is it? What shape is it? What is it made of? What is it used for? Is it something that moves or stands still? Even kids can have great success in these kinds of fun exercises. Mabye remote viewing will be taught in school one day.

The trick seems to be is to pose your question via your conscious mind, then let go and let your unconscious mind try to retrieve the answers. Get your conscious mind out of the way.

Remote viewers typically let their fingers do the walking and sit quietly with a pen and paper. They draw or sketch impressions that come to them, as well as writing down answers to their questions about the nature of the things they are trying to remote view.


The reason for this technique seems to be that our bodies and our nervous system are better at picking up the direct and clear information through this system, rather than our conscious thinking mind. So, let your arm and hand sketch impressions about what you are trying to remote view.

And don´t jump to conclusions about what you think you are getting back in terms of answers. Our conscious mind may interpret information incorrectly.

The government remote viewers called this "analytic overlay." It may walk like a duck, quack like a duck – but it might not be a duck. Our preconceived notions and imagination can get in the way of accurate remote viewing, experts say.

GATHERING INTELLIGENCE, FACING TRUTH

We can use remote viewing formally, like in intelligence operations and exercises mentioned above, to try to obtain particular information that is not directly known to us by our other senses.

And, we can just incorporate this knowledge into our everyday lives, knowing that sometimes our instincts, intuition and gut feelings may have a scientific basis to them.

Sensing danger, getting a bad feeling about something or someone, changing your plans because of a certain feeling can all be part of just keeping remote viewing in the back of our minds – or the bottom of our minds, and hearts.

The ideas of remote viewing may make us think about how our brains are connected to our minds, our minds are connected to our hearts, our hearts are connected to our spirits and souls, and all of these linked to a larger energy, force and intelligence.

When we use all of these resources, we might be able to enhance our personal intelligence and knowledge. Our IQ might go up in unique ways. The ability to get a sense of truth or deception, good or evil, might also be improved.

As we deal as individuals, families, communities and societies with the complex world around us, we may need all the help we can get.

When some people tell us we must go to a war and others tell us that the war is wrong, our remote viewing gut instincts may come in handy.

When we hear that there is more to the 9/11 attacks than what the official story claims, maybe even an inside conspiracy, our soul searching, prayer and remote viewing efforts may give us insight and guidance.

When our loved ones are in trouble or in pain, we can use these kinds of senses to try to understand and help them. When our troops are having a hard time of it in Iraq and Afghanistan, and when they return home, maybe we can apply remote viewing to help them too.

And, for those who have left us and passed on to another dimension of Nature, it is rumored that remote viewing techniques might be used to communicate with them.

The mysteries of our planet Earth and our Universe can also be approached using remote viewing. What does the future hold?

Is the Earth headed for some kind of environmental or geological catastrophe? Will extraterrestrial civilizations someday visit us – or are they already here? And, if so, are they good or dangerous?

Is there some kind of universal and powerful intelligence that has our best interests at heart? Can we get in touch with it, be part of it?

Will a miracle happen one day to help our planet and the people and living things on it? If so, when? And how would something like that occur?

Good questions. Interesting questions. Adding remote viewing to our array of skills, tools, intelligences and abilities can only help us in facing challenges now and in the future.

AUTHOR NOTE TO READERS: Please visit my Joint Recon Study Group blog.

http://www.americanchronicle.com/articles/view/11078
After the Revolution of 1905, the Czar had prudently prepared for further outbreaks by transferring some $400 million in cash to the New York banks, Chase, National City, Guaranty Trust, J.P.Morgan Co., and Hanover Trust. In 1914, these same banks bought the controlling number of shares in the newly organized Federal Reserve Bank of New York, paying for the stock with the Czar\'s sequestered funds. In November 1917,  Red Guards drove a truck to the Imperial Bank and removed the Romanoff gold and jewels. The gold was later shipped directly to Kuhn, Loeb Co. in New York.-- Curse of Canaan

CrackSmokeRepublican

U.S. military psychic spy manual

Category: Pseudoscience
Posted on: December 15, 2007 6:47 PM, by Mo

Remote viewing is a form of "psychoenergetic perception" (i.e. clairvoyance) developed as part of a long-term $20 million research program initiated by U.S. intelligence agencies in the early 1970s. Now known by the codename Stargate, the program was initiated largely in response to the belief that the Soviets were spending large amounts of money on psychic research.

Research into remote viewing began in 1972 at the Stanford Research Institute, "an independent non-profit research institute that conducts contract research and development for government agencies" (actually, a think tank that has nothing to do with Stanford university).

Led by Harold Puthoff, who had worked for the National Security Agency and was at the time a Scientologist, the research involved training people who were believed to be gifted psychics to use their alleged abilities for psychic warfare.  Among these individuals were the New York artist Ingo Swann, who claimed to have remotely viewed the planet Mercury, and Uri Geller, the psychic spoon-bending fraudster.   (Both are Jew Hucksters....)

In 1974, Puthoff and his colleague Russel Targ published the results of the experiments they had performed with Geller, in Nature, the most prestigious of scientific journals.The paper was accompanied by an editorial disclaimer, but nevertheless provided impetus for further research and funding (and gave Geller an air of authenticity that undoubtedly helped propel him to international stardom).

By 1985, the Stargate program was in full swing, and there were up to 7 full-time remote viewers, as well as support personnel, in the employ of the CIA. In that year, Puthoff and Swann published the remote viewing manual which was used to train the psychics to produced detailed information about enemy sites at specified geographical co-ordinates.

Hundreds of intelligence gathering "missions" have been conducted within the Stargate Program, including determining the whereabouts of Muammar Gaddafi, marines kidnapped in Lebanon, and North Korean plutonium. The U.S. military continues to employ psychics: it is reported that psychics were employed to help find Saddam hussein, and that the Department of Homeland Security hopes to adopt Russian "mind-reading" technology to identify terrorists.

Similarly, a classified report released recently under the Freedom of Information Act revealed that the British Ministry of Defence contracted commercial researchers to investigate psychic ability, perhaps so that they could use remote viewing to find Osama bin Laden and locate Iraqi weapons caches.

http://scienceblogs.com/neurophilosophy ... manual.php
After the Revolution of 1905, the Czar had prudently prepared for further outbreaks by transferring some $400 million in cash to the New York banks, Chase, National City, Guaranty Trust, J.P.Morgan Co., and Hanover Trust. In 1914, these same banks bought the controlling number of shares in the newly organized Federal Reserve Bank of New York, paying for the stock with the Czar\'s sequestered funds. In November 1917,  Red Guards drove a truck to the Imperial Bank and removed the Romanoff gold and jewels. The gold was later shipped directly to Kuhn, Loeb Co. in New York.-- Curse of Canaan

CrackSmokeRepublican

This link goes weird towards the end of it but has some interesting facts like the "SS Exodus" in 1947.
---------
The Men Who Stare at Zygotes
by Peter Fotis Kapnistos
(Copyright © 2009 Peter Fotis Kapnistos)

Posted: 19:45 August 17, 2009

The Men Who Stare at Goats (2004) is a book by Jon Ronson about the U.S. Army's investigation of psychic theories and the possible military uses of the paranormal. Its title alludes to efforts to kill goats by staring at them. In a Nov 7, 2009 online Twitter post, the well-known mentalist Uri Geller referred to actor George Clooney, saying, "His latest film is about my work." In a Nov 12 Twitter post, Geller added:

"George Clooney is Uri Geller in the movie The Men Who Stare At Goats? I believe I ignited the story when I told Jon Ronson about some of my adventures with a certain intelligence agency."

Jon Ronson's book examines the links between paranormal military programs and psychological techniques used today. The book follows the development of secret psychic activities over the past decades and explores how they are used today in U.S. security and military operations. Project Stargate, the CIA-run program that used remote viewing for psychic spying, came to an end in 1995, and thousands of pages of formerly classified material were released. Journalist Gary S. Bekkum has researched those secret government documents, as well as UFO information and psychic explorations.

According to Bekkum, The Men Who Stare at Goats (the 2009 comedy film) is more or less consistent, with polished performances from a first-rate cast headed by George Clooney, Ewan McGregor, Jeff Bridges, and Kevin Spacey. The America government has been involved in using the paranormal since the beginning of the Cold War. Bekkum now has 89,900 pages of documents about the psychic effort provided by the CIA:

In the 1970s, the American Intelligence Community, including but not limited to CIA, DIA, NSA, Army intelligence, the USAF, the Navy, and others, engaged in secret research to determine the usefulness of psychic phenomena. This is true, and this larger effort is mostly ignored by the film, which tells the story from the point of view of the characters, some who were inspired by real persons and events.

In the 1980s, Army intelligence did train operational military psychic spies, who were tasked against real targets of interest, including several high profile cases, such as the hostage crisis in Iran. Tasking for the units was handed down from highest levels of the U.S. government, including the Joint Chiefs of Staff, according to declassified government files.

Jon Ronson's book focused on one group of psychic spies in the U.S. Army. But if famed paranormalist Uri Geller is somehow related to Ronson's observations, perhaps we ought to also look into Geller's military background. Uri Geller was a paratrooper in the Israeli army. He fought in the Six Day War of 1967 and was wounded in action.

Geller's biographers disclosed a rather intense incident when Uri supposedly tried to "duck and dive" on military service: "His working out of a cunning plan of deception in the paratroopers was not only foolhardy at the time - for what he did, he could have been flung in a military prison for months and suffered a stain on his record for the rest of his life."

What actually happened to Uri Geller in the Israeli army? According to Uri, a miraculous switchover incident took place, with a machine gun. ('Ben Gunn,' says you, 'has reasons of his own.') But there was no one he could tell. "His first thought was that God had intervened, and as he has never had any other explanation for it, that tends to remain his belief."

Although Geller took a bullet through his left hand in the Six Day War, he still headed a crack unit to knock out a pillbox. After being shot at twice, he fired his gun and killed a Jordanian soldier. Shortly later, slices of metal flying off a stricken tank, or possibly bullets, hit Geller again. "He felt a blast, sensed something entering his right arm and the left side of his forehead, and, as he blacked out, assumed with resignation that he was dead."

Is there anything in the army records to suggest that Uri Geller might be able to stop someone's heart by staring at him or her? Uri has been filmed staring at fertilized cells (zygotes) and plant seeds in order to make them germinate and sprout. But do certain psychic techniques involve martial arts and self-defense? Why does Geller relate to the men who stare at goats? Should we take a more careful look at Gary Bekkum's files?

Uri Geller once said he had a dream he would die during a paratrooper jump: "He appreciated that dreaming of dying on a jump was a fairly normal thing for a paratrooper to do." Did something weird happen to Uri Geller when he jumped as a paratrooper in the Six Day War? Did he in some way set off from this life? Was Uri's miraculous switchover incident a reference to an out-of-body experience (OBE), or a significant UFO intrusion?


In the Second World War, UFO sightings were called "foo fighters." Nowadays, if the blip of an unidentified paratrooper shows up on a radar screen, it's sometimes called a "Mary Poppins" (the one-liner joke is that someone jumped down from the sky).

When the 11th blip abruptly arrived on Israeli radar in June of 1967, it was far more life threatening than a pathetic joke of duck and dive. Ten Israeli soldiers had volunteered for a critical mission to defend Israel's right to exist. The radar screens showed eleven. Who was the 11th paratrooper of the Six Day War?

For what he did, he could have been put in prison. His mind raced beyond the limits of past and future. His body was a weightless force, faster than a speeding projectile. His right hand was outstretched. A shock wave roared and thundered in the sky behind him. The eleventh paratrooper was descending to the Mount of Olives.

There would be no picnic tables set with refreshments or well-dressed pastors waiting with Bibles at the moment. Jerusalem was a battle zone with heavy fighting –– a desert theater of fortifications and tanks. Pieces of someone's dismembered leg marked the burning ground. "Where's your parachute?" asked another soldier. "Over there," the eleventh replied and pointed to a near graveyard. His shirt was saturated with color, dipped in his own blood.

He projected phases of his life as several dimensions, from a playful child to an elderly peacekeeper. Those aspects he embedded into terrestrial reality –– past and future –– when his feet touched the ground, and his body descended to the Mount of Olives. Who was the 11th paratrooper?
* * *

Cause tonight for the first time
Just about half-past ten
For the first time in history
It's gonna start raining men.
It's Raining Men! Hallelujah! - It's Raining Men! Amen!
(The Weather Girls, 1982)
* * *

The eleventh paratrooper was at last identified and a background check was conducted. The niece of Sigmund Freud became a refugee when book burning and violent outbursts of anti-Semitism began in Vienna. Sigmund Freud and his family received visits from the Gestapo. Many would perish in the Holocaust.

The niece of Sigmund Freud was put at great risk with numerous forced abortion incidents –– enough to bring about female infertility. It would have been a medical wonder for her to be his biological mother.

The "SS Exodus" was a ship that carried Jewish emigrants from France in 1947 with the goal of taking its passengers to Israel. Most of the emigrants were Holocaust survivors who had no immigration certificates. Homeless orphans had no legal birth certificates or given names.
* * *

Uri Geller said that his paratrooper switchover was under the protection of some outside force, which was unfathomable. His first thought was that God had intervened. The American psychic Ingo Swann worked with Uri in the 1970s. Russel Targ and Harold Puthoff conducted experiments with them at the Stanford Research Institute (SRI). They believed that Uri Geller, retired police commissioner Pat Price, and artist Ingo Swann had genuine psychic abilities. The CIA and the Defense Advance Research Projects Agency (DARPA), directed by Andrija Puharich, allegedly worked with Geller, Price, and Swann to develop psychic powers for the military.

In November 2009, NASA scientists made the thrilling discovery that the moon has lots of water and could probably support life. NASA's October 9 mission involving the Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing Satellite provided the stunning confirmation of water in the forms of ice and vapor. "Having definitive evidence that there is substantial water is a significant step forward in making the moon an interesting place to go," said John Logsdon, a space policy researcher for George Washington University.

In 1998, Ingo Swann wrote of water on the moon and said the moon also supports life. Swann claimed that men in black had taken him into the wing of a covert black ops survey into lunar anomalies to learn what aliens were doing there. Swann said he had made government connections with human looking moon visitors that were living on earth.

"VALIS" is a 1981 science fiction novel by Philip K. Dick. (The title is an acronym for Vast Active Living Intelligence System.) Dick's theory was that we have been contacted by a transcendental mind he called VALIS:

In 1973 world-famous psychic showman Uri Geller had also been receiving messages and regular UFO sightings from something calling itself SPECTRA, which claimed to be a super computer in orbit around the earth. Not normally reticent about his bizarre beliefs, Geller has been suspiciously quiet about his experiences of SPECTRA - which may or may not relate to the publicly recorded interest the CIA paid to this particular aspect of his unusual career. However, the maverick, but world-renowned physicist, Dr. Jack Sarfatti, was prepared to commit almost certain professional suicide by publicly declaring that he too had been contacted by, in his own words, "a VALIS-like being." Despite knowing he was going to face ridicule and scientific crucifixion, Sarfatti went on record to recount how, in 1952 at the age of 13, he had received a telephone call from an inhuman, metallic voice. The voice declared himself a sentient computer on a spacecraft from the future and instructed him to pursue a career in science.

After Sarfatti went public about his phone call from VALIS as a teenager, it emerged that he was not the only scientist to have had a similar experience. In recent years, researchers have discovered that at least a dozen other senior players in the international scientific community received a mysterious call claiming to be from a computer or other being from the future encouraging them to study science.

(David Southwell and Sean Twist, "Conspiracy Files: Real-life Stories of Paranoia, Secrecy, and Intrigue" 2004)

Tim Boucher freshly considered Philip K. Dick's premise and said that Geller is also responsible for stories regarding John Lennon's UFO contacts. Today, the prospects for life on the moon are better than ever before. "Rather than a dead and unchanging world, it could in fact be a very dynamic and interesting one," said Greg Delory, a researcher for the University of California.

Former astronaut Buzz Aldrin recently said in an interview that there's a "monolith" on a moon. Benjamin Creme, a writer of esotericism for Share International magazine, claims that the modern "Messiah" already entered the earth's atmosphere –– decades ago –– and is now living in England. The modern messiah-figure is making his policies known to the world as the current global systems give way.

As the "megachurch" movement spreads worldwide and "televangelists" make use of home entertainment media to provide teaching and support to believers, a new inquiry has been put forward: "If Jesus had a TV show, what would he broadcast?" The men who stare at quotes think he should probably instruct Bible and Sunday school studies. The men who stare at notes think he should explore lost archeology, ancient biology or stellar explosions in space. But the men who stare at votes think he should perform more miracles –– in harmony with our current laws. Today it is unlawful for a layman to heal without a medical license (very soon, it might also be forbidden for one to offer security related help).

"Another world," the stranger said to the small crowd of men. "Why do you stand there, looking up at the sky? He will return in the same way that you saw him go."

According to Benjamin Crème (and maybe Dan Brown), the modern messiah-figure's intention is to marry and live the dream of Eden. His legendary wedding feast is supposed to last for a thousand years, to mark the "technological singularity" or scientific era of eternal life.

Some critics may perhaps argue that men who stare at goats use the evil side of the mind. But a more angelic inspiration for Jon Ronson's weird tale can be found in Acts 5:

Now a man named Ananias, together with his wife Sapphira, also sold a piece of property. With his wife's full knowledge he kept back part of the money for himself, but brought the rest and put it at the apostles' feet.

Then Peter said, "Ananias, how is it that Satan has so filled your heart that you have lied to the Holy Spirit and have kept for yourself some of the money you received for the land? Didn't it belong to you before it was sold? And after it was sold, wasn't the money at your disposal? What made you think of doing such a thing? You have not lied to men but to God."

When Ananias heard this, he fell down and died. And great fear seized all who heard what had happened. Then the young men came forward, wrapped up his body, and carried him out and buried him.

About three hours later his wife came in, not knowing what had happened. Peter asked her, "Tell me, is this the price you and Ananias got for the land?"

"Yes," she said, "that is the price."

Peter said to her, "How could you agree to test the Spirit of the Lord? Look! The feet of the men who buried your husband are at the door, and they will carry you out also."

At that moment she fell down at his feet and died. Then the young men came in and, finding her dead, carried her out and buried her beside her husband. Great fear seized the whole church and all who heard about these events.

http://site.uri-geller.com/en/the_men_w ... at_zygotes
After the Revolution of 1905, the Czar had prudently prepared for further outbreaks by transferring some $400 million in cash to the New York banks, Chase, National City, Guaranty Trust, J.P.Morgan Co., and Hanover Trust. In 1914, these same banks bought the controlling number of shares in the newly organized Federal Reserve Bank of New York, paying for the stock with the Czar\'s sequestered funds. In November 1917,  Red Guards drove a truck to the Imperial Bank and removed the Romanoff gold and jewels. The gold was later shipped directly to Kuhn, Loeb Co. in New York.-- Curse of Canaan

scorpio

Quote from: "MikeWB"Remote Viewing is complete bullshit. It was invented by a bunch of Scientolgists who then left Scientology and started tricking people into RV by suggesting that they have scientific proof that it works. They're a more advanced "Uri Geller"-type of conmen. They found a bunch of military idiots like ALexander and Stubblebine who had big budgets and could swing few million their way to do more 'testing' at SRI. If you've ever hear those RV people on C2CAM, you'll see how silly they are and how none of their predictions ever come true. That fool Ingo Swan says he saw aliens on the 'dark' side of the moon. LOL.

MIKE - you might enjoy watching the movie "Men Who Stare At Goats"
It is a satirical look at the phony remote viewing programs within the military.
I think one of the characters may have been based on Stubblebine.
It was FKN funny, IMO.
Written by Jon Ronson, the BBC guy that helped AJ "infiltrate" the Bohemian Grove.

BTW, Uri Geller is an Israeli. He was such a fraud that he had to leave Israel
because no one was buying his BS dog and pony show over there  :roll:
He came to the USA to work his scam on gullible new age touchy-feely morons.