THE QUESTION NOBODY ASKS OUT LOUD
What if there was a skill validated by the U.S. government, tested on military personnel, and used in real intelligence operations, and nobody ever told you it existed?
Between 1972 and 1995, U.S. intelligence agencies quietly spent over $20 million training people to perceive targets they couldn't physically see. Locations. Objects. Events. Sometimes across the planet. They called it remote viewing, and they kept it classified for two decades.
This wasn't fringe science or back-room mysticism. It was funded by the Defense Intelligence Agency. Tested at Stanford Research Institute. Deployed in real operations. And when it was finally declassified, the statistical evidence was strong enough that one of the evaluating scientists, a UC Davis professor, concluded the results were not due to chance.
The question isn't whether remote viewing is "real." The question is: why did they keep training people to do it for 23 years if it wasn't?