
March 31, 2000: Remote Viewing - Ed Dames | Antarctica News - Richard C. Hoagland
Major Ed Dames follows, discussing the evolution of remote viewing from Ingo Swann's natural abilities into the structured discipline of technical remote viewing. Dames explains how coordinate remote viewing achieved 60 to 65 percent accuracy in military operations, while his refined technical approach reaches 85 to 90 percent, and claims 100 percent accuracy is possible with a six-person team given sufficient time.
Dames addresses remote influencing, stating that Soviet efforts to stop animal hearts through psychic means produced only sporadic results. He asserts that no active government remote viewing program exists despite his own training requests from military war fighters, though he acknowledges the Chinese are actively pursuing the discipline.
Key Moments
Second giant iceberg breaks off the Ross Ice Shelf: Art opens with breaking news that a second iceberg, B-17, measuring 80 by 12 miles, has calved off the Antarctic and is bumping into last week's 183-by-23-mile berg, framing Hoagland's discussion of accelerating climate signals.
Art Bell breaks public silence on his son's assault and the WWCR smear: In a long prepared statement Art reveals his son was kidnapped and raped by an HIV-positive substitute teacher in May 1997, then explains how a December 9, 1997 WWCR broadcast by Ted Gunderson and David Hinkson falsely accused Art of the same crime, triggering his October 1998 on-air resignation and ongoing litigation set for April 28 in Nashville.
Dames: Project Sunburst predicts a radical solar event near 2000: Ed Dames says every important question his sessions ask now resolves to the sun, that Project Sunburst determined the sun will do something very radical, and using the Y2K non-event as his only timeline marker he places the solar flare event very close to the year 2000.
