For C2C fans, Streamlink is a super offer! You'll get daily podcasts & downloads of George's M-F shows, Ian's Saturday program, and our special Sunday show. And you'll have access to the last 90 days of shows to download, collect, and listen to at your leisure. Plus weekly streamed broadcasts of Somewhere in Time with Art Bell and our rotating Classic offerings!




Wednesday May 7th, 2008

Host

George Noory

Guests

Full Show Streams

Win | Real  High Bandwidth
Win | Real  Low Bandwidth

Clip Streams

 
RV Program's Development
 
RV Tasks
 
Bobby Fischer's Life

Full Show Downloads

Recap

Memoirs of a Remote Viewer

Writer and physicist Russell Targ discussed his new memoir Do You See What I See?, which chronicles his tale as a visually impaired scientist who helped create the Remote Viewing program at SRI, and offers info on how to separate the psychic signal from mental noise. He learned remote viewing (RV) from the legendary psychic Ingo Swann, and in turn, he and Hal Puthoff taught these skills to a group of Army Intelligence officers in the 1970's. Running for over twenty years, the CIA's RV unit revealed information on such topics as Chinese atomic bombs, armed hostages in Iran, and lost planes in Africa, he detailed.

Yet in 1995, the CIA cancelled and declassified the program, claiming that with the end of the Cold War, America no longer had the kind of enemies that warranted using RV, Targ explained. He speculated that fundamentalist elements in the CIA/gov’t. may have exerted pressure to get rid of the program. RV can be used for financial gain-- his team at one point had success in predicting silver futures, he noted.

He described his "psychic UFO adventure" where in a meditation he perceived seeing bodies under something that resembled hair dryers. The late psychic Pat Price confirmed the vision, but warned him that it was a "theta trap"— a Scientology term referring to something that could take over your mind. Targ also shared memories of his brother-in-law, the renowned chess player, Bobby Fischer.

Related Articles

Goldfish Tricks

First half-hour guest Dean Pomerleau talked about how he trained his goldfish, Comet, to perform tricks. Using a system of food rewards, he was able to teach Comet to feed off his fingertips, swim through hoops, play fetch, and other games. Check out this video to see Comet in action:


Copyright © 2008 Premiere Radio Networks. Click Here for our Terms of Use.