Joseph McMoneagle
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Joseph McMoneagle (Born January 10, 1946, Miami, Florida) is known for his involvement in the development of Remote Viewing by U.S. Army Intelligence and the Stanford Research Institute. He was one of the original Officers recruited for the top-secret army program now known as Project Star Gate. McMoneagle claims he had a remarkable memory of very early childhood events. He grew up surrounded by alcoholism, abuse and poverty. As a child he had visions of small rabbit that would come to him at night, to comfort him when he was alone and scared, and first began to hone his psychic abilities in his teens for his own protection when he hitchhiked. He enlisted in the U.S. Army to get away. It is unknown whether he was recruited as an experimental remote viewer due to his claims of paranormal experiences in his life or his reputation of survival premonitions in Vietnam. Certainly his out-standing background in military intelligence and security was looked on with favor by his superiors and the C.I.A. According to McMoneagle, Hal Puthoff's "eyes immediately brightened" when he disclosed he had a NDE in 1970. McMoneagle claims remote viewing is possible and accurate outside the boundaries of time. [1]This was championed by Jessica Utts in her evaluation of remote viewing in the Stargate Project. She said she saw precognition.[2] McMoneagle believes he has remote viewed into the past, present, and future and has predicted future events. Charles Tart supports McMoneagle's claims. [3]
Along with Ingo Swann he has become one of the most important figures connected to the development of Remote Viewing (RV) and the use of claimed paranormal abilities for military intelligence gathering. At his retirement McMoneagle earned his Legion of Merit for his last 10 years of service, including 5 years of work in SIGINT, SIGnals INTelligence, and 5 years in the RV program.[4][5][6] [7][8]
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[edit] The problem of accuracy
Version No. 1., 1997, given by Joseph McMoneagle about his remote viewing accuracy: "I would be surprised if my percentage of "direct hits" were better than 20-25 percent. Also, if I reviewed those projects which I know fell within the percentage of "hits" (20 percentile), they would probably range from 5 to 95 percent correct information." [9]
Paul H. Smith comments on Version No. 1. accuracy: "Concerning Joe's statistics -- any attempt at gauging accuracy will be no more than a guestimate. I think Joe is underestimating his degree of success, but perhaps he just wants to be conservative. But that can only be my opinion, rather than established fact, since for too many of the operational sessions we got no feedback from the customer. The best one could do would be to go through all the sessions for which target ground-truth is known, and compare results with the actual state-of-affairs on the ground at the time of the viewing. You could then draw an accuracy rating from just the known targets, and then extrapolate for the ones with unknown results. However, even that level of work would take months, if not years, and I doubt anyone has had the gumption, resources, or free time to do it. (There's also the issue of deciding what counts as a "direct hit," and so on. The terminology is pretty much at the mercy of the individual who is doing the estimating.)"
"As far as whether Joe's accuracy claims would be considered typical for other experienced viewers (obviously stats would vary dramatically for novices and viewers who had not cultivated their skills as rigorously) -- I can't say how that would compare, for the reasons stated above. However, though when Joe is wrong on a session he can be really really wrong, when he is right it can be pretty breathtaking. My (relatively informed) guess is that very few viewers could consistently compete with him (though occasionally, or even fairly often there are a few who might turn out sessions as good as his.)".[10]
Version No. 2., 1998, given by Joseph McMoneagle about his remote viewing accuracy: "Accuracy is difficult to measure. Operationally, it is a measurement of whether or not you gave someone the answer they were looking for. You could make 50 or 60 statements, the majority being unverifiable, but if you provided that one fact they were looking for, then you would be considered accurate. In truth, accuracy should only be measured in a laboratory, scientifically. That way, both the target and the circumstances of the "viewing" can be scientifically controlled. The scientists present know how much you said, how much of what you said was right, how much of what you said was wrong, and, usually, how much you could have said but didn't. My average under these circumstances ranged between 65 and 75 percent."[11]
See: Stargate Project Joseph McMoneagle has been respectively described by another remote viewer as "an old soldier and New Age explorer."[12]
The United States Military Intelligence originally took interest in Remote Viewing (RV) due to the Soviets' purported success during the Cold War.
[edit] Remote viewing the submarine and launch predictions
Version No. 1. In McMoneagles's words: "Well, in 1979, most U.S. Intelligence agencies had become aware that the Russians had built what was the largest building under a single roof in the world. No one in these agencies, however, knew what was going on inside. I was asked to remote view this facility, and I said I thought they were building a submarine. I was also able to provide specific details about this submarine, including its size, armament, hull configuration, and even the projected date of launch. As a result of this information I provided, the intelligence community was later able to confirm the existence of the new Soviet "Typhoon"-class submarine--the largest in the world!"[3]
Version No. 2. In McMoneagle's words: "One of the examples I can give had to do with a submarine that was being constructed in the extreme North of [the] Soviet Union in 1979. Essentially, we were given a photograph of a building, at least, a section of a roof of a building, and asked to describe what was going on inside the building. There were two or three of us Viewers, not just myself, but two or three of us who independently drew segments of what appeared to be a submarine. At the time, the consensus of opinion throughout the intelligence world was that they were actually building some kind of an assault ship, for loading and unloading helicopters and troops. As it turned out, we were able to predict a launch date, and they in fact photographed this submarine that we had drawn, with the appropriate number of missile tubes and what was not, and then it was launched within a few days of that date." [4]
Version No. 3. Around Sept 1979 a naval lieutenant commander assigned to the National Security Council decided to use RV for offensive intelligence-gathering purposes. McMoneagle is is given a set of geographical coordinates, he recognizes as clearly somewhere in the north, and probably in the Finland or Eastern bloc area. McMoneagle begins the session by describing a very cold wasteland with a very large industrial building with huge smokestacks. That is not too far from a sea covered with a thick ice cap.
Since this seems to be correct to the monitor, Fred Atwater, a photograph is shown to McMoneagle. He recognizes it as a large industrial building for targeting and development. It resembles a huge, extensive storage shed and has an unremarkable flat roof. It is numbered 402 and has common materials stacked up on its exterior. (Information may or not have been given to McMoneagle that this building is somewhere in Russia). Atwater asks what is happening inside. There is so much input, giant bays, mazes of scaffolding, huge cylinders being welded, machining noises, bright arcs of light McMoneagle found it difficult to report on what he saw, so he made some very poor general drawings of segments of features.
Two or three days later a second attempt at seeing inside is made. The NSC has been informed by all intelligence collection agencies that in this building the Soviets are constructing a brand-new type of assault ship-a troop carrie, possibly with helicopter capability. Instead, McMoneagle announces the vessel to be a giant submarine and draws it in detail.
McMoneagle guessed the submarine would be launched about "four months later", sometime in the month of January 1980. Satellite photos confirmed this in mid-January 1980 [13]According to Paul H. Smith, McMoneagle predicted "several months" in the future.[14]
[edit] McMoneagle's remote viewing time travel revelations
The Past: Humans came from creatures some-what like sea otters. They are not related to the primates. They were created in a laboratory by building eggs and injecting them with a mixture of DNA and gene parts or pieces. Their creators "seeded" the earth with these eggs and departed. The creators are very aquiline (beaked) featured and delicate. They are humanlike with no evidence of sexuality. They have prehensiled (grasping) tails. Their eyes are doelike and they have very long fine boned fingers.[15]
The Future:
2000: A bill authorizing a teenager's "Right to Work" will be passed, lowering the normal hiring age to fourteen.[16]
Between 2002 and 2005: There will arise a new view of religion designed to bring religion and science together without the emphasis of Christianity. This new religion will address the science of the soul. By the year 2050 it will have established a firm base in alternative healing practices as well as comforting the distressed and dying.[17]
Before the year 2004 a vaccine for AIDS will be discovered.[18]
Sometime between 2004 and 2006 a new movement will begin to eliminate television.[17]
By 2005 new temporary tattoos will be in vogue. Initially women will wear more tattoos than men. The greatest use of tattoos will be to emulate clothing not being worn.[19]
McMoneagle worked with Dean Radin when he was at the Conscious Research Laboratory, University of Nevada, Las Vegas. Radin conceptualized a future machine that as yet did not exist. McMoneagle used his remote viewing into the future in an effort to obtain information concerning this machine to produce patentable ideas.[20]
[edit] RV Experiment on the National Geographic Channel
An example of how remote viewing is tested was presented by the National Geographic Channel Naked Science program "Telepathy."[5]Ed May [21] tests McMoneagle and unwittingly reveals that the core method of testing is essentially subjective validation. The method of testing has an air of scientific rigor to it, but when deconstructed one sees that the rigor is an illusion. A researcher, Rachel Curran, photographs six locations in the San Francisco Bay area and puts a duplicate set of the photos in 2 unsealed envelopes. These are given to "a lawyer" who locks them in a file cabinet. The locations are: a yacht marina, a rock quarry, a giant redwood tree, Stanford University football stadium, the Palo Alto airport, and the Dumbarton bridge. When the test is to begin, the lawyer opens the file cabinet and tells us nobody had access but him. He takes out the envelopes. He numbers one set of the envelopes one through six. Then he rolls a die to select one of the six envelopes. He hands a numbered unsealed envelope to Rachel. He leaves her and she opens the envelope, sees the pictures she took of the Dumbarton Bridge, and drives to that location. She is to be a "beacon" for the remote viewer. McMoneagle and May meet in May's office. We are to believe that May has not looked at the pictures and doesn't know where the other researcher is when Joe McMoneagle is trying to use his powers of remote viewing to see what the beacon is seeing. Joe draws pictures and talks out loud while Ed sits across the table from him, occasionally shoving a picture of Rachel toward him. All McMoneagle supposedly knows about Rachel's whereabouts is that she is somewhere in the Bay area. Here are Joe's psychic impressions shown in the clip:
- Half arch
- Something dark about it
- Darkness
- A feeling she had to park somewhere and had to go through a tunnel or something, a walkway of some kind, an overpass
- There's an abutment way up over her head
- We have a garden, it's a formal garden
- Formal gardens get passed
- Open area in the center
- Trees
- Some kind of art work in the center
- This art work is very bizarre, set in gravel, stone
Only one of these eleven items is relevant:(5) the abutment overhead. The rest have to be stretched quite a bit to fit the place: the viewing area for the Dumbarton bridge. Still, as McMoneagle nears the location and is driven under an overpass, he declares: "Now I understand what I was getting. That's exactly what I was seeing." Rachel's looking out at the bay. There's no half arch, nothing dark about the place, she didn't have to park anywhere and go through any tunnels or walkways to get where she was (she drove right to the viewing area), there were no gardens or trees, no open area in the center, no art work, bizarre or otherwise. McMoneagle is convinced he is right on target! [22]
McMoneagle writes, "When I've worked on a target site, I know what my perceptions are. As I produce different transcripts for each of the target locations, I remember what I was thinking at the time. When I visit them later I see there are portions that look familiar and there are portions that don't. It's fairly an easy task for me to correlate my perceptions about a target after going out and seeing it." [23] See:Forer effect- selective validation
[edit] ABC Special:Put to the test
The ABC Special: PUT TO THE TEST, 1994, is another TV demonstration of McMoneagle’s remote viewing abilities. It may be seen here. *[5] This test is also described in his book Memoirs of a Psychic Spy.[24] Here it is dated June 1995. The camera briefly shows at least 5 sheets of paper that may contain an unknown number of drawings (there is a brief glance of one drawing that is not discussed) and written notes. Only the material "matching" the target area are discussed and shown on camera. Remember, as mentioned at the start, the show has been edited. Often on tv "documentary" is presented as entertainment. Parapsychologist, Ed May[25]offers balance and explains McMoneagle "is correct 20 percent of the time."
[edit] Inside Joe McMoneagle
In his own books when recording his narrative descriptions during his remote viewing attempts for a past period of eighteen years, McMoneagle generally relies on his memory. "As best as I can recall." His narratives while "viewing" may have lasted sometimes approximately for 15 minutes and later for 30 minutes. His reminising in his books is, of course, after being shown the target. [26] Rarely does McMoneagle rely on a past direct transcript, except when working with Robert Monroe as McMoneagle remote views through time and on Mars.[27][7] On his sketches McMoneagle has written and preserved short comments and descriptions.
McMoneagle is certain the closing down of the Stargate Project was not due to the scientific evaluation of the AIR study [28], but due to FEAR. He writes, "Whether on religious, political or scientific grounds, the issues surrounding psychic functioning, or in this case remote viewing, are highly volatile. It is a subject for which there never seems to be a rational or middle ground. The subject matter alone polarizes people to one extreme or the other." [7] McMoneagle concludes military intelligence should have evaluated Stargate Project and remote viewing not scientists. And something is better than nothing; especially when dealing with terrorist organizations.[7]
After 10 years of remote viewing McMoneagle's mind begins to become more open. He begins believing he can know things about other people they do not know about themselves. He starts seeing creatures and people no one else can see, except sometimes his wife and pets. He finds himself in contact with the dead.[29] McMoneagle writes," I had learned early on that a large percentage of people who begin to play in the paranormal field lose track of reality."[30]
[edit] Current
Joseph McMoneagle presently resides in Virginia with his wife Nancy, where they run a Remote Viewing business aimed at the corporate world called Intuitive Intelligence Applications, Inc. He is the author of several books including his most recent The Stargate Chronicles: Memoirs of a Psychic Spy and is a research associate for the Cognitive Sciences Laboratory. It is also noteworthy that Joseph McMoneagle is one of the few remote viewers to have conducted demonstration viewings for many TV programs, and is regarded as one of the more skillful remote viewers that is in the public eye to date.[citation needed]
McMoneagle writes "Now, I’ve been doing RV for over thirty years and I’ve done tens of thousands of remote viewings of somewhat demanding importance, under incredible stress. In all of those RVs, I’ve experienced perhaps twelve or fifteen Ah-has, so that’s how rare they are. If you have a great deal of expectation for them they usually won’t occur; they usually happen when you least expect them."[31]
[edit] References
- ^ Memoirs of a Psychic Spy : The Remarkable Life of U.S. Government Remote Viewer 001 by Joseph McMoneagle, Hampton Roads Publishing Co., 2002, 2006, Revised and updated version of McMoneagles' The Stargate Chronicles, first edition
- ^ [1]An Assessment of the Evidence for Psychic Functioning by Jessica Utts.
- ^ The Ultimate Time Machine: A Remote Viewer's Perception of Time and Predictions for the New Millennium by Joseph McMoneagle, Foreword by Charles T. Tart, Hampton Roads Publishing Co., Inc., 1998
- ^ See complete text of Joseph McMoneagle's Legion of Merit and Certificate in Memoirs of a Psychic Spy: The Remarkable Life of U.S. Government Remote Viewer 001 by Joseph McMoneagle, Hampton Roads Publishing Co., 2002, 2006, pp 287-288, This book is an updated version of McMoneagle's The Stargate Chronicles, The first edition
- ^ a b Publications by Laboratory Personnel, Cognitive Sciences Laboratory, Anomalous Cognition Remote Viewing Scientific Research
- ^ Reading the Enemy's Mind: Inside Star Gate: America's Psychic Espionage Program By Paul H. Smith, Forge Books, 2004
- ^ a b c d Mind Trek: Exploring Consciousness, Time, and Space Through Remote Viewing by Joseph McMoneagle, Hampton Roads, Publishing Co., Inc., 1997
- ^ Personal correspondence with Paul H. Smith. See: Kazuba discussion page 16 Jan 2008
- ^ Mind Trek: Exploring Consciousness, Time, and Space Through Remote Viewing by Joseph McMoneagle, Hampton Roads, Publishing Co., Inc., 1997, p 216
- ^ Personal correspondence with P.H. Smith. See: Kazuba discussion page 25 Jan 2008. Paul H. Smith is the author of Reading the Enemy's Mind: Inside Star Gate, America's Psychic Espionage Program, Thomas Doherty Associates, LLC, 2005
- ^ ]http://www.firedocs.com/remoteviewing/joe/9806-pw/index.html] Psychic World / Summer 1998
- ^ Reading the Enemy's Mind: Inside Star Gate America's Psychic Espionage Program by Paul H. Smith, Forge Books, 2005
- ^ Memoirs of a Psychic Spy : The Remarkable Life of U.S. Government Remote Viewer 001 by Joseph McMoneagle, Hampton Roads Publishing Co., 2002, 2006, p. 123, Revised and updated version of McMoneagles' The Stargate Chronicles, first edition
- ^ Reading the Enemy's Mind: Inside Star Gate America's Psychic Espionage Program by Paul H. Smith, Forge Books, 2005, pp. 128-129
- ^ The Ultimate Time Machine: A Remote Viewer's Perception of Time and Predictions for the New Millennium by Joseph McMoneagle, Hampton Roads Publishing Co., Inc., 1998 p.93 & 94
- ^ McMoneagle, The Ultimate Time Machine, p.173
- ^ a b McMoneagle, The Ultimate Time Machine, p.170
- ^ McMoneagle, The Ultimate Time Machine, p.244
- ^ McMoneagle, The Ultimate Time Machine, p.158
- ^ The Ultimate Time Machine: A Remote Viewer's Perception of Time and Predictions for the New Millennium by Joseph McMoneagle, Hampton Roads, Publishing Co., Inc., 1998, p.109
- ^ http://www.shiftinaction.com/discover/luminaries/ed_may Edwin C. May, Ph.D. is internationally known for his work in parapsychology. Having spent the first part of his research career in his chosen Ph.D.-degreed discipline, Low Energy, Experimental Nuclear Physics, he became interested in serious parapsychology in 1971. At that time, he was peripherally involved in a psychokinesis (i.e. putative mind over matter) experiment that was being conducted informally in the physics department at the University of California at Davis. Starting in August 1974, Dr. May spent nearly a year in India researching psychic phenomena with Yogis and other Masters. In 1975, he returned to the States and worked for eight months with Charles Honorton at Maimonides Medical Center in Brooklyn, NY. It was there where he was introduced to formal research parapsychology. Beginning in 1976, Dr. May joined the on-going, U.S. Government-sponsored work at SRI International (formerly called Stanford Research Institute). In 1985, he inherited the program directorship of what was now called the Cognitive Sciences Program. Dr. May shifted that program to Science Applications International Corporation in 1991. Dr. May’s association with government-sponsored parapsychology research ended in 1995, when the program, now called STAR GATE, was closed.
- ^ remote viewing
- ^ Mind Trek: Exploring Consciousness, Time, and Space Through Remote Viewing by Joseph Mcmoneagle, Hampton Roads, Publishing Co., Inc., 1997, p 55
- ^ Memoirs of a Psychic Spy: The Remarkable Life of U.S. Government Remote Viewer 001, Hampton Roads Publishing Co.,Inc, 2002, 2006, pages 230-236. This book is an updated version of McMoneagle's The Stargate Chronicles, the first edition
- ^ http://www.shiftinaction.com/discover/luminaries/ed_may Edwin C. May, Ph.D. is internationally known for his work in parapsychology. Having spent the first part of his research career in his chosen Ph.D.-degreed discipline, Low Energy, Experimental Nuclear Physics, he became interested in serious parapsychology in 1971. At that time, he was peripherally involved in a psychokinesis (i.e. putative mind over matter) experiment that was being conducted informally in the physics department at the University of California at Davis. Starting in August 1974, Dr. May spent nearly a year in India researching psychic phenomena with Yogis and other Masters. In 1975, he returned to the States and worked for eight months with Charles Honorton at Maimonides Medical Center in Brooklyn, NY. It was there where he was introduced to formal research parapsychology.
- ^ Mind Trek: Exploring Consciousness, Time, and Space Through Remote Viewing by Joseph McMoneagle, Hampton Roads, Publishing Co., Inc., 1997 p 46
- ^ The Ultimate Time Machine: A Remote Viewer's Perception of Time and Predictions for the New Millennium by Joseph McMoneagle, Hampton Roads Publishing Co., 1998
- ^ http://psiland.free.fr/dossiers/parapsy/psi_defense/remote.pdf
- ^ Mind Trek: Exploring Consciousness, Time, and Space Through Remote Viewing by Joseph McMoneagle, Hampton Roads, Publishing Co., Inc., 1997 Pages 206-210
- ^ Mind Trek: Exploring Consciousness, Time, and Space Through Remote Viewing by Joseph McMoneagle, Hampton Roads, Publishing Co., Inc., 1997, p 141
- ^ [2]Remote Viewing Visuals, 6 Sept 2006
[edit] Books
- Mind Trek: Exploring Consciousness, Time, and Space Through Remote Viewing
- Remote Viewing Secrets: A Handbook
- The Stargate Chronicles: Memoirs of a Psychic Spy
- The Ultimate Time Machine: A Remote Viewer's Perception of Time and Predictions for the New Millennium