Remote viewing was a frequent topic of conversation on a show that a guy named Art Bell used to host. I think the show was called Coast to Coast or something like that. Fit right in with many of the topics he used to discuss. I didn't buy much of what he talked about (I got the impression sometimes he didn't either) but it made for entertaining listening on long late might drives.
Fast forward a few minutes <<
Just for fun I googled coast to coast and found that the show is still on (http://www.coasttocoastam.com) but with a different host. I'm going to fly some folks over Sun Tunnels this evening. Maybe if we look from just the right angle at just the right time and the shadows are just right we'll see that Sun Tunnels is really some secret govment facility... :) patrick On 03 Sep 2010, at 12:38, Kim wrote:
Last week I saw for the second time the film, “Men Who Stare at Goats.” I was thoroughly entertained – again. Coincidentally, I heard a rebroadcast of some 1995 interview from a distant radio station that I couldn’t identify. This was late at night while driving home on 89 from SLC. Reception for SLC area radio stations isn’t good, so some times I surf to find something interesting I can listen to. I wish now that I had more details, but here’s the gist of what I heard, and couldn’t believe that I had really heard it:
The interviewee was a former high-ranking military officer, perhaps a colonel (I don’t remember now) who claimed to have been involved with a “remote viewing” program for the Pentagon. At one point the interviewer asked if he had ever remote-viewed Mars. The officer, or maybe I should call him Man in Black, claimed that he had indeed remote-viewed the “tetrahedron on Mars.” He further described the former inhabitants of Mars who he said were “men” – natives of Mars, but basically men (he didn’t mention women). Since hearing this I’ve done a couple of cursory Google searches for “remote viewing Mars” and was surprised to find a lot of what I consider to be utter nonsense on the subject. I’ve also Googled “tetrahedron on Mars” and usually come up with links to sites about the supposed face on Mars. (I think of myself as relatively open-minded, but this is stuff for which I have no patience whatsoever.)
So, I have two questions for anyone who might know: (1) Does the “tetrahedron” refer to anything else besides the “face”? and, (2) Does anyone have any first-hand knowledge regarding the military’s remote viewing program, especially as it may relate to remote viewing Mars or any other planet, star, galaxy – whatever?
And I’ll take my answer off-air…
Kim