Despite the official scientific community’s reluctance to recognize extrasensory perception (ESP), special services have had a more practical approach. Their primary goal isn’t to prove the phenomenon but to gather necessary intelligence about adversaries.
In the 1970s, a secret report by the head of the US Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA), Lieutenant General Daniel Graham, mentioned “psi-operators” who could reportedly leave their bodies, complete missions, and return with detailed information.
For instance, in 1973, American military psychics Ingo Swan and Pat Price accurately located a new Soviet submarine base in Kamchatka that even spy satellites couldn’t detect. They also detailed the radar system at a newly deployed Soviet air defense center beyond the Urals. An article in the newspaper “Arguments of the Week” from 2006 provided more insights.
In another instance, American sensitives correctly identified the coordinates of 20 tunnels dug by North Koreans near the demilitarized zone. Initial suspicions that the Americans were misinforming others were dismissed after thorough checks.
The most impressive feat was when psychics assessed the silo-based system of strategic missiles “MX.” Initially considered highly reliable due to the movement of missiles between silos, it was revealed that skilled sensitives could pinpoint missile locations over time. This raised doubts about the missiles’ invulnerability, leading the Pentagon to abandon the silo-based system.
In response, the Soviet Union developed its own military psychics. Accelerated training for “cosmoenergospetsoperators” began at a military base, using the textbook of Wolf Messing. By the end of their third year, cadets were expected to “see” distant objects using alternative vision.
In the 1970s, final exams for the first domestic military psychics were held in Moscow. Cadets had to mentally visit specific addresses, where special personnel verified their accuracy.
One of the test-takers reportedly mentally “fell” underground, discovering a five-story deep, heavily guarded building with metal doors responding to electronic sensors. It was one of the most secretive Soviet intelligence facilities.
Regardless of the James Randi Foundation’s skepticism, these accounts suggest that special services worldwide have explored and possibly utilized ESP for intelligence purposes.
Dimensions beyond space and time
A declassified CIA document from the 1980s, released in 2003, reveals that the world around us is an illusion and that there are alternate dimensions waiting for us to access them.
The document starts by explaining that reality is an illusion created by your brain and senses. The brain creates virtual reality through perception, using raw sensory data to form a coherent picture of the world, similar to a computer processing software code to create a video game.
The project detailed in this document allows for out-of-body experiences and connection to dimensions beyond space and time. It offers a way to transcend the physical world and discover the absolute truth about oneself and all that exists. The Monroe Institute developed a training system called the Gateway Process, which alters brain frequencies to induce altered states of consciousness, granting access to hidden layers of reality beyond the physical world.
The CIA became interested in this process due to its potential for military and intelligence operations. Officers were sent to the Monroe Institute to train in out-of-body experiences. This training uses sound signals through headphones to synchronize the brain’s hemispheres, altering the mind and moving consciousness beyond physical reality. This concept may be difficult to grasp for those taught that the brain and mind are the same.
The document asserts that solid matter does not exist and that the brain does not generate consciousness. Instead, we are eternal systems of energy and frequencies, with the brain acting as a filter to allow us to experience the physical realm. It suggests viewing the brain and body as a “vehicle,” with physical reality appearing real only when connected to it, much like a dream.
The universe, according to the document, is an intricate system of interacting energy fields creating a complex hologram. States of matter are deviations in energy states. Everything, including the universe, body, and brain, is part of this non-physical energy system. The document also discusses God, referring to him as the Absolute—an infinite conscious energy that permeates all dimensions, including space-time.
The Absolute is described as a mental energy at rest, responsible for everything and experiencing itself through us. It projects the physical world and inserts itself as human beings to understand its own creation.
If this knowledge were widespread, taught in schools, and known to everyone, it could lead to a collective awakening to the reality that we are God experiencing our own world. This understanding could foster collaboration to build a new, brilliant world. The secret CIA project concluded this, and now it remains for the rest of humanity to grasp it.