News

“These phenomena are real. Psychic phenomena are real,” Dean Radin, Ph.D., chief scientist at the California-based nonprofit ...
In a remote viewing session on 5 December, 1988, remote “viewer #32” was tasked with identifying the coveted Ark, according to CIA documents recently circulating on social media.
Alongside physicist Harold Puthoff, Targ co-founded the remote viewing program at Stanford Research Institute (SRI), which garnered attention and funding from US government agencies for 23 years.
Joe McMoneagle, a prominent figure in the CIA’s remote viewing program, criticized the use of such techniques for unverifiable targets, calling it a misuse of time and resources.
The CIA eventually shut down the remote viewing program in the 1990s, concluding that it provided no tangible benefit to intelligence operations.
Alongside physicist Harold Puthoff, Targ co-founded the remote viewing program at Stanford Research Institute (SRI), which garnered attention and funding from US government agencies for 23 years.
Alongside physicist Harold Puthoff, Targ co-founded the remote viewing program at Stanford Research Institute (SRI), which garnered attention and funding from US government agencies for 23 years.