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REMOTEVIEWING
Kindred Spirit Issue 44 - Autumn 1998 9
emote vie wing is
de scribe d by JoeMcMone a gle as a
marti a l art of the
mind. More thantw enty-one ye ars exp eri enceas a remote vie wer adds we ight
to his definition of it as be ing
a ble to produce a ccura te ,verifiable information about a
person, p lace or thing, to whi ch
I am kept blind, am shie ldedfrom, or tha t exi sts somewher e
e lse in time/space . I have no
acce ss to the targe t, and I am
operating within an approveda nd re pl ica ble scie ntif ic
protocol which precludes any
other me thod of obta ining theinformati on other than through
psychic functioning.
PSYCHIC HACKINGThe Adventures of a RemoteViewer
He was re cruite d by the
United S tates Army because, hebe li eve s, they liked the fact that
he w as open to the subject are a ,
as a result of a persona l ne ar-de ath expe rie nce in 1970, butwas a lso able to de monstra te
tha t he reta ined a critica l and
sce ptica l vi e wpoint of th eparanorma l a s we ll .
Origina lly, his job was to
le arn a ll tha t he could aboutremote viewing in the hope that
he could actua lly perform as a
psychic spy. He be gin a n
intense, nine-hour-a-day, six-day-a-we e k e ffort, where in he was
imme rse d in a l l aspe cts of
psychic functioning whil e undervery strict controls de ve loped
by the re se arche rs a t S tanford
R ese arch Institute Int ernationa l.
Then abruptly it was time foraction. McMone a gle reca lls: I
and five others we re very de eply
involved in that tra ining whenwe wer e suddenly faced withthe Iran Hostage Crisis. As a
r e sult of our de monstra te d
success with tha t particularproble m over a fourte e n-month
p e riod, w e w e re l i te ra l ly
swampe d with r e que sts forsupport from other agencies.
Th e r e w e re hundre ds of
proble ms which sudd e nly
appe are d out of nowhere, forwhich other methods had fa iled;
very much like an a lternative
he a ler who only ge ts the termina lpa tients aft er a ll conventiona l
medicine or techniques have
be e n thoroughly e xh auste d.
I think e ve ryone was stunne dat the degre e of succe ss w e
e njoye d a ga inst the se
proble ms.In every sense of the word
he could be ca l led a psychic
spy. Over a period of twenty-
one ye ars heestimate s tha t hehas probably pe rforme d ove r
two thousand missions using
Psi (re mote vie wing) i n supportof re a l-world inte l l ige nce
proble ms; at le ast that many
under controls whi le supporting
re se arch in nume rous l abs;a nothe r thousa nd-plus in
support of private clients and
busine sse s through his owncompa ny; and 4000-plus
practice sessions or in pursuit
Remote viewing is the ability to perceive people, places or eventsanywhere in time or space. Joseph W. McMoneagle was one of the
original six Intelligence Officers recruited for the then secret military
programme in October of 1977 to use remote viewing as a US intelli-
gence-gathering tool. As a psychic spy he gained c ritical information
reported in the highest echelons of the US military and government(including such national-level agencies as the Joint Chiefs of Staff, CIA,
DEA, and the Secret Service), informat ion that was not available from any
other source. Michael Breen interviewed him for Kindred Spir it.
Joe McMoneagle, the USA's N 1 remote viewer. Inset: As he was in the army.
SNAPSHOTSof McMoneaglesexperiences while
remote viewing
Most Memorable: I spentthree and a half years doing
pro -bono work, looking for two
missing four-year old boyswho
had been kidnapped. I did the
work for a State Pol iceDepartment in the North East.
I suc cessfu lly found th e kids
alive in Mexico and returned
them to their mother four days
before Christmas. I locatedwhere they had been on t wo
oc casions, but they had been
moved before we could get to
them.
Most Exciting: Identifying t hespec ific town a nd loc ation in
which General Dozier was
being held after he was
kidnapped by the Red Brigade
in Northern Italy (even tho ughmy information arrived in Italy
only minutes before he was
found and released through
other means).
Most Frightening: Trackingand d escribing the last two
weeks of the life of United
Nations Lieutenant Colonel
Higgins. This was when he was
being systematically and
brut ally killed by te rrorists in
Lebanon.Most Depressing: Climbing
into the mind of a typical
terrorist.
Most Inspirational: Knowingthat I ca n provide significant
support to nuclear non-
proliferation, anti-terrorism,
and unique or creative ideas to
major businesses.
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10 Kindred Spirit Issue 44 - Autumn 1998
REMOTEVIEWING
Case History: One Time Too Many
Target ParameterA Stanford Research Institute person and anoutbounder* target. [*An outbounder target is wh ere someone would
randomly select one of several envelopes out of a locked safe each
containing a different destination and task and then go to that
destination and perform that task. McMoneagle w ould attempt to
describe where th ey were and what t hey were do ing.]
Target DescriptionThe person went to a brick-yard. They madeconcrete cinder blocks and bricks.
McMoneagles Response I proceeded to draw squares and cubes
all over a sheet of p aper and th ats all I could get. The person who wasmonitoring the session said there must be mo re and they kept pressing
me for more information. Finally I had an impression of a metallic t ower
in with all these cubes and it had flags on top. So I drew that on the page
and th en we logged all the material. One hour later we all w ent to the
brick-yard so I c ould have my real-t ime feedback. We got there andthen of course the cubes and squares were the bricks but unfortunately
there was no metal tower with flags on it .
The Missing Part of the PuzzleThen the owner came out andasked them what they were doing. They explained that it was a
paranormal exper iment. When he saw McMoneagle s drawing hebecame very excited and went into his office and found a pict ure of the
opening day ceremony, when the brick-yard was opened about 5 years
previously. Parked in the middle of t he brick-yard was a constru ction
crane sticking straight up in th e air and it had flags hanging all over it.Essentially it was what McMoneagle had drawn.
Conclusion When you are open to information about something to
do wit h reality, most of it comes f rom t he particular time you are
focusing on, but there is also information available about that particularevent o r location, which may have occurred sometime in the past or will
occur at sometime in the future. You are not locked into a specific t ime.
Info rmation can leak th rough from other time periods. There is a
tendency to get the information through a lot of d ifferent ways. It is
unknown where the information comes from: the mind of the man whoowns the brick-yard who was there? through the eyes of the outbounder?
from the files in the brick-yard o ffice where the photos of the brick-yardwere actually stored? It could even have come from the brick-yard itself!
Theres no t elling where the information comes from. Things are
not as fixed in our reality as we may believe t hey are. And what webelieve or what we know really has a huge impact on how reality
operates for us, according to McMoneagle. He suggests that t ime and
causalit y are not a single directional view, but rather a perspective
dependent o n where you are v iewing from.
of his own answe rs to improving
th e t e chniqu e s of r e mo te
vie wing.
He s ve ry familiar to the
question one just has to ask
how accura te is he ? I makecontact with the target about
60 to 65 percent of the time.
Wh e n I make conta ct, my
accur acy ranges from about 35
to 98 perce nt. The scientists
who have tested me in l abs sta te
that ...about 20 percent of what
[Joe does] is about as close to
wha t one could ca ll a miracleas
you can ge t. Wha t they me an
by this, is that my drawi ngs of
the target w ill be as ne ar the re a l
thing as possible , a lmost picto-
graphic ove rlays.On simulate d inte llige nce
targe ts, whe re I have only be e n
give n the name of a targe ted
age nt, be e n told that the target
pe rson could be anyw he re in
the Contine nta l Unite d S tate s
and a ll othe r informa tion wa s
withhe ld by the tasking agency,I ve be e n a bl e to produce
dr a wings which e sta blish
whe re that a ge nt is wi th 98 to
100 percent accuracy, produce
drawingsand transcripts whi ch
de scribe the de ta ils of what
tha t agent isactua lly doing with
75 pe rcent accuracy, and a lso
provide many drawings and
tr anscripts on th e spe cif ic
classifie d syste ms the age nt is
working with what the y are ,
t h e i r funct ion, how th e y
ope ra te , and the ir primary andse condary purpose , with 88
pe rce nt accuracy.
Above: Wind Generation Grid. Below: McMoneagles remote
viewing drawing.
Above: Stanford Shopping Centre. Below: McMoneagles remote
viewing drawing.
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Beyond linearspace and time
No one knows how r e mote
vie wing works. At present, itsbe l i e ve d to b e a se nsory
function, probably loca ted in
the ancient or reptilian portion
of the bra in, but the mechanism
for transfer of information isunknown.
McMone a gle s sense of how
this actua lly ope rates is that the
way re a l ity works is somewhat
different from the way we liketo think it does. I have a firm
be lie f that eve rything tha ts re a l ,
including things that we would
conside r to ha ve actua l l y
happen ed to us in the past, or
things that w
ewould consid
erhistorica l facts, things tha t are
happeningaround us r ight now
as weare ta lking and things that
may or may not happen in thefuture a ll of these things that
represent our re a lity,e xist. It a l l
just is. Its like having a ll the
e le me nts of re a li ty pr esent and
what we add to th at huge ,compl ex colle cti on of re a lity is
an observation by our pr esence .
In other words, consciousness
produce san observati on which
puts a ll the e le me nts tha t arerequired for tha t specific point
in time into a picture which we
ca ll now. In a sense weare the
ultimate time machine we pick
where w ee nter re a lity, w e pickhow w e will construct our
observa tions in a line a r time
frame.
McMone agle came to this
notion through producingadditiona l information from
target locationsabout things that
hadnt happened or that had
occurre d ye a rs b e for e . Here a l ised that the targe t itse lfappe ars not to be tota lly fixed in
time. It conta ins some e lements
from both past and future. (S e e
case history: One Time Too
Many in box on previous page .)
Seeing the futureR emote view ing has be en used
many times to look into the
future. Accordi ng to McMon-
e agle , one of the things that it is
very va luable for, from both aninte lligence standpoint as we llas the applications format, is
be ing able to pre dict place s
where you can look for thingsof va lue or shifts and indica tors
of how situa tions might be
changing or about to change.
He gave a spe cific e xampl e
of the Typhoon submar ine :
We
wer
ech
all
eng
ed on th
e
information w e we re obta ining.
We w ere told that we w ere the
only ones who were pre dicting
some thing diffe re ntly fromeve ry other inte lligence agency
in the world. We sa id that we
could prove it. If they were to
go and look at things 120 days
from when we were re motevie wing they would find that
the submar ine w as inde ed be ing
l a unche d. S o th e y se t up
me thodologie s for going after
the submarine 120 days later.Within 4 days of our pr edicted
da te , the submarine wasactua lly
launche d.
S o w e w ere able to colle ct
ma teria l on tha t which wouldnthave ordinarily be e n se e n.
Remote viewingand historicaltruth-checking
P e opl e ofte n pre sume that
because something is w ritten in
abook or spok
en by som
e
authority t hat the data is true .
And tha t is not ne cessaril y so.According to McMone agle ,
the moreadept you be come at
remot e vie wing, the more you
ge t a fe e l or a characte risation
for the re a l ity of something. Heta lks about it asa sort of a taste
for informati on, or what he ca ll s
the he art truth or ground truth
about something. The data he
rece ives tha t has this groundtruth fe e l to it h as the same
fe e ling that he has when he ismost accurate with re a l targets.
This fe e ling to him ise ve n more
re l iable than w ha t others maycla im to be historica l facts. In
some cases it has produce d
information tha t is verifi able.
McMone a gle gave us an intrigu-
ing example of when he used
remote vie wing to get ananswe r
to a re l igious question: I went
to a conference whe re I met aman who was a Hassidic J e w.
He h ad be e n studying th e
Kabba lah for 18 ye ars and hewasa ve ry scholarly pe rson. We
got into a discussion about a
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12 Kindred Spirit Issue 44 - Autumn 1998
REMOTEVIEWING
MORE INFORMATIONJoseph McMoneagle is still an active
research associate with the CognitiveSciences Laboratory, and provides
support to private cus tomers andbusinesses throughhis own company:Intuitive Intelligence Applications, Inc.,
and is a full member of theParapsychological Association.
Hes written a book c alled MindTrek, Hampton Roads Publishing,1993, revised 1997 (available
throughKindred Spirit),which detailsmuch of what he has learned about
remote viewing, and has a secondbook beingprepared for releas e 1stOctober (same publisher), called The
Ultimate Time Machine.A works hop entitled: AdvancedApplications of NLP: ExtendedSensory
Performance, presented by MichaelBreen with Joe McMoneagle as aspecial guest will take place in central
London, 5th9th November 1998.
For details: McKenna Breen Ltd,Aberdeen Studios, 22-24 Highbury
Grove, London N5 2EA. Tel: 0171704 6604 Fax: 0171 704 1676.
specific re ligious point and Itold him that I had a sense that
something was not right about
a specific a rgument. He asked
me to go into de ta i l and I did.
It w as a ve ry complicate d
respons
eth
at I g
av
ehim. As Iwas giving him this re sponse he
started getting this very funny
look on his face. By the ti me I
got to theend of the re sponse Isa idAre you okay?He had this
very shocked look on his face.
He sa id that what I had just sa id
to him as a non-J e wish p erson,
he ha d spe nt tw e l ve ye a rsstudying the Ka bba l ah to
understand. S o I had arrive d by
remot e vie wing, and my own
curiosity, at exactly the same
place he had spent twe lve ye arsstudying to ge t to. I found that
remarkable . And it shocked him.
It a bsolut e ly shocke d him
be cause he vi e w e d i t as a
compl ex secre t that requiredgre a t scholar ly e ffort to obta in.
It w as like untangling a knot in
front of him tha t I shouldnt
have be e n able to untangleand
it stunned him.
Remote viewingabi l i ty
Absolute ly anyone can do it,a ccording to McMon e a gl e .However , i t is ve ry much likean
a thle tic ta le nt or musica l a bility.
S ome will be very good a t it.Others will not. However, just
like running, while you may
neve r compete in the Olympics,
you can cer ta inly le a rn e noughto enjoy a good S unday morning
jog.
From twe nty-five ye ars ofrese arch and applications, he
says that ne arly everyone who
has ever be en te sted in a labdisplays some remote viewing
capability. This is because it is
probably very much like one of
our norma l senses, but a sensewhich we do not ordinari ly use.
There se em to bea numbe r
of leve ls or stages of clarity,which equate to the degre e or
amount of exposure that one
has to remote viewing,and one sl e ve l of pe rsona l be l ie f and
openne ss to the phenome non.
It is a ma tter of practice. If you
are capable of te mporar i lysuspending your disbe lief, and
voluntarily a l low yourse lf to be
place d in the circumstance swhich support the possibility
of an experie nce , you are ha lf-
way there, he says. It is then
simply a case of be ing approp-
r i ate ly ste e re d through the
minefi
eld of mist
ak
es which donot ne ed to be re pe a te d in order
to arrive a t some unde rstanding
of how to replicate the skill. It
draws an ana logy with thosepeopl e who deve lopa very high
de gre e of paranorma l ability
who are usua lly the pe ople who
have had to depe nd on it as a
part of the ir norma l everydayfunctioning.
For instance , the typica l
soldier who spends a lot of time
wa lking point, the stre e t cop
who has wa l ked a be a t a ll hislife in a bad ne ighbourhood or
firemen who are ve ry good at
prediciting danger in the ir line
of work. These kind of people
tend to be far more psychicthan the ave rage person. The
re ason is that psychic function-
ing probably reside s not in the
higher orders of the bra in but
closer to the reptilian are a andhas more to do with surviva l
functioning than the kind of
deta il ed applications McMon-
e agle is using it for.
The implications ofremote viewing
There are a numbe r of very
important implications. S ince
re mot e vie wing is not time -constra ined it is possible to
predict the eventua l outcome
of events in the future, or change
the perception of events which
have happe ned in the past.According to McMone agle ,
what we invest in terms of
energy, constructi ve or destruc-tive , is what we are guarante ed
as harve st somewher e withinour future . He ca lls it the
ultimatee xpression of f re e will!
It implie s both a powe r as we l l
as a responsibility that most of
us have not eve n considere d.Understanding the full ramifica-
tions of what that me ans can
ha ve profound a nd e a rth-
shaking re sults in one s life .
How we apply our ta l ents,e specia lly r e mote vie wing, can
ope n an e ntire world to us,which ordinar i ly we would
ne ve r se e .
Also, theability to block aremote vie wer has neve r be en
de monstra te d, which holds
significa nt que stions with
regard to invasion of privacy,
both persona las we ll as govern-
ment
al; th
ef t of id
e as orindustria l espionage; and the
use of re mote vie wing for other
than wha t most people would
conside r to be appropriatemora l, the ologica l, socia l or
cultura l re a sons.
Personalconsequences
McMone a gle s life has be e n
buffeted by a varie ty of upsand
downsasa result of hisactivitie s
as a remote viewe r: Ive be en
autom
ati c
ally subj
ect
ed toridicul e , by the me dia, the
military, S e nators, Congre ss-
men, theologians, strangersand
ex-frie nds usua lly for no otherre ason than ignorance or fe ar.
Ive be en de luged with requests
for he lp in looking for missing
childre n, hitting the lotto,
assistance in tre a sure hunts,andfor pe rsona l re a dings. Ive be e n
warne d that I will e ventua l ly
burn in the fire s of He ll, and
suffer e te rna l damnation for
doing the work of the De vil.However, Ive me t some of the
most intere sting shakers and
makers of history, pe ople who
are dynamic, op en-minde d,
cre a tive and of gre at diversity.I ve se nse d a n e normous
amount of love, caring, pe ace ,
contentment and radiance of
enlightenment from far more
peopl e than the opposite. Iveenjoyed the fullest support from
world le a ders, famous actors,
a rtists, he a l e rs, judge s,
lawmakers, monks, prie sts, theDa la i L a ma , a nd e ve ryda yhouse w ive s a nd ordina ry
working stiffs.
Its be en excit ing, stressful,
joyful, a nd some ti me s so
profoundly pa inful th at Ivewondere d why I started the
journey in the fi rst place . But it
has neve r be en boring.
The last word fromremote viewer N001I r e a lly want to h e lp pe opl e
to know that they carry thepower of the Cre a tor within
them. That ne arly eve rything
we exp eri ence is of our owncre a tion. That the ma gic of l ife
and living be longs to everyone
equa lly, and we a ll have the
me a ns of transce nding th e
common or mediocre .
I want to h
elp m
ak
eth
e
world a bett er , sa fer and more
comforta ble pl a ce fo r a l l
humankind. I want to te ll peopl e
to le a rn to che rish a ll things asan expre ssion of the Cre a tor. In
simple r terms, to share my own
joy of discovery.
R e a l joy in l iv ing is
unde rstanding that a ll of ouractions, no matt er how sma ll
or how large , aff e ct our future ,
or wha t w e will eve ntua l ly
expe rie nce . We give up control
of our future wh e n we a llowourse lve s to make de cisions for
actions that are base d simply
on f e a r. Whe the r that fe ar is a
fe a r b a se d on possibl e
re pe rcussions, pe e r pre ssure ,governme nt action, possible
pa in, fe ar of others, whate ver
it doesnt matt e r. I be lie ve w e
can re cla im our future , and
improve it, by be ing pro-activein the de cision-making, by
choosing what w e wil l do
base d on mora l attitude , how
constructive it might be, orsimply because it is the rightthing to do. The gre a test world
le ade rs have a lways understood
this. Its now time for the
common man to be ne fit from
the same persona l expre ssionof power .