Brad Poe wrote:First off....no offense to the skeptics here, but you could do a Google search, using the terms "remote viewing" and "Stanford Research Institute" (or its initials, SRI) and look up the material so far released by the CIA... .
Brad, I took your advice to the extent I could. I consulted Google.
First of all, I had to decide whether specialized information, by its nature, is democratic or elitist. In other words, should I believe the searches that garner the most, or the least, hits?
I did a test. I typed in "earth is flat" and got 64,000 hits. Most people consider this false.
Then I typed "earth is bipolar" and got 15 hits. Most people consider this true...except perhaps those who fit the "people are bipolar" category. (These people got 91 hots.)
With the ground rules in place, I performed this high-level research.
Search results are followed by number of hits. (Lowest numbers
show the truth, as believed by the elite.)
Where is the emoticon for "I'm pulling your leg?
"Remote viewing"...................................................................... 318,000
"Stanford Research Institute"........................................................91,500
"Stanford Research Institute" + "remote viewing"...........................4,440
These 4,440 hits revealed urls for such sponsors as:
--biomindsuperpowers
--militaryremoteviewers
--handanalysis
--ufoconspiracy
I couldn't find any sites sponsored by Stanford or the CIA, and I don't like to rely on second-hand information. So, I continued my research.
"Stanford Research Institute" + "remote viewing" + "aliens".................757
"Stanford Research Institute" + "remote viewing" + "martians"...............41
I was staggered by the data at one of these exclusive, not-for-the-masses sites.
"Highly controversial data has come from remote viewing, developed by Stanford Research Institute and the CIA, suggesting that an ancient race of Martians have survived a cataclysm on their planet eons ago and some of them still exist today. This data suggests that most of them presently live below the surface of Mars while others have already migrated to Earth and have merged with certain latin American cultures. This paradigm shifting data even suggests that these humanoid beings, who apparently look a lot like humans, also reside underneath certain mountains on Earth. This data has been promoted by Dr. Courtney Brown, a remote viewer and Associate Professor at Emery University, through his books Cosmic Voyage and Cosmic Explorers."
(From a site called absoluteastronomy. It has its own encyclopedia, with the preceding entry on "Martian".)
Brad, Em
ery University is spelled wrong, but it did pick up 941 hits. In contrast, Emory University's hits totaled 2,970,000. Amazingly enough, Emory University did/does have a faculty member named Courtney Brown. (He's living testimony to academic freedom.) Here's what a member of the university's psychology department said about him...on an official Emory University site:
"The most recent example of this conflict at Emory involves Dr. Courtney Brown, an associate professor in the political science department. Brown's actions and words have, to put it mildly, aroused considerable ridicule and controversy at Emory and in the broader academic community. In his new book, Cosmic Voyages: A Scientific Discovery of Extraterrestrials Visiting Earth, Brown claims to use powers of "remote viewing" (an alleged psychic ability permitting individuals to "see" objects at enormous distances) to visit Mars and observe the actions of aliens. He purports to have uncovered indisputable evidence that two races of extraterrestrials, Martians and Greys, left the red planet centuries ago and have taken up residence in the dark recesses of Earth.
"But Brown does not stop there. His remote viewing methods, which are "as rigorously controlled as those used in any solid social science text," have revealed that Adam and Eve were architects of a genetic engineering project and that numerous Star Trek episodes were written with the assistance of aliens. In one of the book's more remarkable chapters, "The Grey Mind," Brown claims to have "entered the mind" of an extraterrestrial and investigated its psychological make-up. Brown, who directs the "Farsight Institute" in Atlanta, offers seminars--at a cost of $3,000 per head--that promise to provide attendees with the psychic abilities he has mastered."
Wow, what a deal. Three thou per person!
Brad, thanks for your posts. You have a great sense of humor. We are in your debt.
I am impressed with your research techniques...just as I'm sure you're impressed with mine. :wink: