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Danis
By Joe Fay
The Register
Published Friday 23rd February 2007 13:57 GMT

QUOTE
Britain’s military spent taxpayers' money to test out “remote viewing” as recently as 2002, only to conclude the technique had little value.

According to the BBC documents secured through the Freedom of Information act show the MoD initially sought to recruit professional psychics to take part in the research, failing to foresee that the pros tend to steer clear of men in white coats.

Consequently, Whitehall’s finest drafted in volunteers who were subjected to a rigorous program of research which involved blindfolding them and asking them to guess what was in a series of envelopes

The research, the cost of which was a vertigo inducing £18,000 apparently, was seen as a ringing endorsement for psychic warfare, with the volunteers managing a “close guess” at the contents of the envelope just 28 per cent of the time.

Why the UK wasted thousands of pounds of tax payers’ money investigating remote viewing is a mystery. After all, the US military has already wasted millions of dollars of their taxpayers’ cash conducting its own table tapping research, without much to show for it. Not even a WMD or two.

Perhaps something spooked Whitehall into thinking the Americans were, after all, able to remotely view and even control people thousands of miles away, for example in a small sidestreet near the Palace of Westminster. But this is patent nonsense, at least according to the voices in our heads.®
Cypher
Another nice find, Danis.

I'm much surprised to hear thet the UK spent so much money on this. Heh, for £18k, I'd have told them that they'd not achieve very much better results than guesswork alone!

Joking aside - do you know if the project is still ongoing in the US? If so, I find it more than a bit creepy - seeing as Adolph Hitler was the last wannabe world dictator with a close eye on, and plentiful budget for matters of the paranormal / occult.

Mairi
Danis
The book: 'The Men Who Stare at Goats' indicates the US Army has tested many different forms of Mind Control, Supernatural and Psychic techniques. However, the book is written by Jon Ronson, whom appears to exaggerate and include fantasies that may not be true at all.

It's interesting that Uri Geller said he was 're-activated' in the book. I can only assume the CIA wanted him to use his 'skill' to find Osama Bin Laden.

I feel the military believes in more things than that they wish to inform us with. If they can obtain information through unique means, they will try anything out.
Danis
The MoD's Freedom of Information disclosure log has released the documents on the Remote Viewing tests that were conducted between November and September 2001, with the report being completed in June 2002.

http://www.mod.uk/DefenceInternet/FreedomO...moteViewing.htm

The report only tested Remote Viewing novices, because many professional RV'ers either declined to take part or
didn't reply to any requests by the MoD. The 'monitors' also had a lot of electronic equipment to record and scan the novice RV'er, which may have caused a distraction to any attempts made at Remote Viewing.

It was very interesting to read, but a lot of the text, and images, were blacked out.
Cypher
It's a shame that so much is blacked out - it makes it pretty much impossible to tell just how accurate the best results were.

Still, it looks like they're interested in conducting further tests, with this being largely for benchmark purposes. I do wonder how much more information on this is likely to be released.
Danis
There are somethings I would like to know about this report, that was blacked out:

1) Which professionals were contacted to take part in this experiment?
2) Were they found on the Internet or were they recommended by other military establishments?
3) How did these novices apply to take part in this experiment?
4) Was an advert placed in a newspaper and if so which one?

There's probably more I could ask, but I found it interesting that some of the drawings included scenes such as caves, star of david, and a man wearing a navy hat, which is probably the description of the taliban. To me it seems that September 11th and the media coverage of the War in Afganistan had influenced the drawings of one or two RV subjects.
Cypher
You could consider making a FOI request for some of that info - it might be interesting to see if they would consider a straight reply to any of the points you raise. Until you mentioned it, I completely missed the significance of the symbolism you picked up on there.
Curiouser & curiouser.

PS - great questions, I'd love to know the answers as well now!
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