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In 1977, I became the Operations and Training Officer for the newly formed U.S. Army Intelligence remote-viewing program. It was my responsibility to develop and implement a comprehensive military remote-viewing training plan.
To develop background material, I read about different remote-viewing programs at various organizations such as Stanford Research Institute, the Psychophysical Research Laboratory, and The University of Houston.
My own "remote viewing" experience was more an intuitive process or direct knowledge coupled with introspective observation.
Bringing together what I learned from the research labs and a review of the pertinent literature, as well as my own personal experience, a generic framework for training emerged. At that time it seemed that remote viewing could be divided into five categories or behaviors that could be reinforced using conventional learning techniques.
Using examples from such remote viewers as Ingo Swann, Pat Price, and Joe McMoneagle, this video describes these behaviors in detail and explains the methods used to teach remote-viewing skills to military and civilian personnel in the secret U.S. Army Intelligence program.
This is not a fancy production designed just for entertainment purposes only but a straightforward, truthful rendition of the facts.
You've been told, "The truth is out there." Well, here it is.