Remote Viewing and “Transcendent Warfare”
Posted Jul 07, 2007
With remote viewing recently showing up in the news again, it's a good time to re-introduce this 2001 paper by L.R. Bremseth. Official narratives of Remote Viewing programs within military and intelligence contexts are very suspect -- characterized by Micheal Aquino's curiously superficial dismissal of RV, "Stargate: 20 Million up in Smoke (and Mirrors)."
Bremseth offers some rational speculation on the real motivations at work:
One can legitimately ask, therefore, why the CIA, after ending "official" support in 1975 continued tasking the program for intelligence support until 1995, when it then orchestrated the program's demise? If the CIA considered the remote viewing program incapable of producing substantive results, why did it continue requesting remote viewing intelligence support for almost twenty-four years?
Did the CIA terminate the remote viewing program because it feared potential ridicule by association, or did it stage a "public execution" as a means of taking the program underground? Both are legitimate questions. The first is understandable given perception of paranormal activities by many within American society, as well as the CIA's past experiences involving controversial research efforts.
Arguably, the second question is more intriguing as it implies that the CIA recognized the value of remote viewing, yet intended to make it appear otherwise. By discrediting the program, was the CIA actually intending to continue using remote viewing but under its own supervision and for its own purposes under a newly established and more tightly controlled program? Or, was the CIA concerned that remote viewing could be used to access sensitive U.S. secrets by both U.S. and non-U.S. remote viewers, particularly if this ability was somehow to become publicly recognized and possibly regarded as intriguing or even stimulating by society at-large?
The report gets even more interesting when Bremseth begins to muse on "Transecendant Warfare" -- which sounds suspiciously like the "Open Source Occult Warfare" of the OTO and Discordians:
The real challenge for the United States is not asymmetrical warfare, but rather what this writer calls transcendent warfare, the ability to conceptualize and subsequently actualize an entirely new form of warfare that transcends all previously known models. Said ability could enable a nation state or other entity to redefine and to advance warfare to a completely different level or dimension, possibly comprehensible by only a selected but powerful few.
Bremseth also offers an excellent and cogent summary of "Local Sidereal Time," which has been fascinating us here at the BIPT for quite some time now:
Case in point: the discovery of a temporal/spatial effect (of cosmic dimension) that impacts human cognitive performance and serves as in intriguing yet transcendent-based result of the remote viewing program. Local Sidereal Time (LST) reflects the relationship between the center of our galaxy (Milky Way) and the earth's horizon in relation to an individual's location at any point on the earth. When the galaxy's center is below the earth's horizon, human cognitive and anomalous performance, such as remote viewing, dramatically improves by an order of magnitude as compared to when the galaxy's center is above the earth's horizon. An analogy might be a moving telescopic lens in front of an eye. When the lens lines up perfectly with the eye, vision is extremely enhanced, but only as long as the alignment lasts.
In some cases, remote viewer performance improved by over four hundred percent when LST was included in the protocols.
Utilizing a transcendent approach, LST could be factored into the planning and execution of a military or government agency operation in order to maximize human potential, thereby enhancing mission success. The benefit of incorporating LST into operational planning and execution at the training level is overwhelmingly obvious and could provide a unique venue for better understanding human performance and heretofore unrecognized influences. Such an approach, however, would necessitate educating select military and/or government agency members in substantially expanding their existing perceptions of reality prior to training.
Hopefully all this was more than enough to whet the reader's appetite for more. Enjoy.
Filed in: Future Tech
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