Archive for the 'Temporal Novelties' Category

McMoneagle on A&E Channel

Wednesday, April 11th, 2007

A video of the Dr. May & Joe (only) segments of a recent A&E show that had some remote viewing:
http://www.lfr.org/LFR/csl/media/videoclips/Precog/precog.html
It was a double blind precognitive RV with matching. The target received a first place match with the session.
I copied this notice to the McMoneagle blog as well.
Personally I thought the show aside from this was [...]

Blog Trivia

Thursday, March 1st, 2007

I have updated my blog software here from the dark ages to something very current. As a result it seems to have eaten my links list — or maybe I need to find that plug again — and it definitely did something very strange with my categories list. Please have patience while I figure it [...]

Rhea’s Most Exceptional Human Experience

Saturday, February 24th, 2007

I would like to share the notice of the death of someone I hugely respected and cared very much about, an exceptional woman named Rhea White. I’ve worried every time I’ve talked with her that this was coming… we spoke maybe a week or two ago, for hours. We could never shut up [...]

The Stargate Guys Keep Getting Older!

Tuesday, January 9th, 2007

I have asked them to stop this. It’s unreasonable of them to keep aging just because we do.
There’s only a few of them and their experience is invaluable. But until my Psychic-Crypto Brain-Transference experiments finally succeed, we have only their conversation about the past to maintain it.
Just to make everyone else look bad (like [...]

National Geographic and RV: The Real Story?

Sunday, July 30th, 2006

I’m posting this here, though I’m cc’ing it to the TKR board which has more readers.
Joe McMoneagle posted the ‘real story’ about his live Remote Viewing under full protocol on the National Geographic special.
Those who saw it know better than me how it went especially at the end — I only heard sad [...]

Yahoo Skeptic’s Dictionary Remote Viewing Rant

Wednesday, May 17th, 2006

It has always struck me as odd that, as critical as search engines are about tags, quantity of content on a given topic etc., that often, a simple one page article on the Skeptic’s Dictionary — usually replete with more inaccuracy than a jr. high paper and more bias than a political activist — makes [...]