Psychic dreamer who predicted 9/11 warns Islamic State will access Pakistan nukes

 

Also I do have to mention here the u.s. Army and the use of psychics.  Called the Stargate Project.  The Stargate Project[ was the code name for a U.S. Army unit established in 1978 at Fort Meade, Maryland, by the Defense Intelligence Agency and SRI International (a California contractor) to investigate the potential for psychic phenomena in military and domestic applications. This primarily involved remote viewing, the purported ability to psychically “see” events, sites, or information from a great distance.[2] The project was overseen until 1987 by Lt. Frederick Holmes “Skip” Atwater, an aide and “psychic headhunter” to Maj. Gen. Albert Stubblebine, and later president of the Monroe Institute. The unit was small-scale, comprising about 15 to 20 individuals, and was run out of “an old, leaky wooden barracks”.

Information in the United States on psychic research in some foreign countries was sketchy and poorly detailed, based mostly on rumor or innuendo from second-hand or tertiary reporting, attributed to both reliable and unreliable disinformation sources from the Soviet Union.

The CIA and the Defense Intelligence Agency decided they should investigate and know as much about it as possible. Various programs were approved yearly and re-funded accordingly. Reviews were made semi-annually at the Senate and House select committee level. Work results were reviewed, and remote viewing was attempted with the results being kept secret from the “viewer”. It was thought that if the viewer was shown they were incorrect it would damage the viewer’s confidence and skill. This was standard operating procedure throughout the years of military and domestic remote viewing programs. Feedback to the remote viewer of any kind was rare; it was kept classified and secret.

Remote viewing attempts to sense unknown information about places or events. Normally it is performed to detect current events, but during military and domestic intelligence applications viewers claimed to sense things in the future, experiencing precognition.

  • Caroll, Robert Todd. (201 In the Skeptic’s Dictionary. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 0-471-27242-6
  • Hines, Terence. (2003). Pseudoscience and the Paranormal. Prometheus Books. ISBN 1-57392-979-4
  • Hyman, Ray. (1996). Evaluation of the Military’s Twenty-year Program on Psychic Spying. Skeptical Inquirer 20: 21-26.
  • Marks, David. (2000). The Psychology of the Psychic (2nd Edition). Prometheus Books. ISBN 1-57392-798-8
  • Morehouse, David. (1996) Psychic Warrior, St. Martin’s Paperbacks, ISBN 978-0-312-96413-9. Morehouse was a psychic in the program.
  • Mumford, Michael D. et al. (1995).  Prepared for the CIA by The American Institutes for Research.
  • Ronson, Jon. (2004). The Men Who Stare at Goats. Picador. ISBN 0-330-37547-4. Written to accompany the TV series Crazy Rulers of the World. The US military budget cuts after the Vietnam war and how it all began.

 

Here is an excellent article about Psychic Detectives

I WOULD LOVE THE POLICE TO BE MORE OPEN ABOUT USING US

DIANE LAZARUS, 49, from Sutton Coldfield, Birmingham, has been a professional psychic for 20 years. She has traveled all over the world helping the police in investigating crimes.

I FIRST saw spirits at a young age so for me it’s nothing out of the ordinary. When I’m working on a case I don’t refer to the dead as spirits, I call them “energy”.

The police give me a photo of the victim or they arrange a face-to-face meeting with a member of the victim’s family or occasionally the family member contacts me directly.

I always record these readings and take notes so the police can refer to them, which makes it easier if the case goes to court.

My first case was 15 years ago when I was living in Swansea.

Out of the blue, two police officers called at my home.

A man was missing and they wanted to see if I could pick up any details about what had happened to him.

Using my psychic skills I could see that the man had committed suicide and was slumped in his car. The police later found the man in his vehicle in the location I described.

Since then I’ve worked with police forces around the world. Whenever I work on a case I make sure that my methods fit in with the police force’s procedures and I never ask for payment.

A high profile case that I was involved with in the UK was the murder of Mark Green.

I did a reading for his aunt who thought he was missing but he came through and told me he was dead.

Mark then provided information about how he had been killed. His aunt passed the tape of her reading to the police.

At first the detective constable who was leading the investigation thought it was a missing person’s case. However I spent five hours walking around Birmingham with another officer and with Mark’s spirit guiding me.

I led the officer to the Highgate estate in Birmingham where Mark’s body was later found and provided more details about his murder and the materials involved.

Thanks to my input the case was upgraded to murder.

I also predicted that a TV show would smoke out the killer.

Mark’s parents later appealed on TV and afterwards a man called James McMahon came forward and confessed to helping the killer – his brother Robert McMahon – bury the body in his garden.

Both men were convicted. The killer was given life and his brother two years.

I would love the police in the UK to be more open about using trusted psychics and I agree with the new guidelines.

Yes there are questionable psychics but the good ones can provide valuable clues, all with the help of the spirit world of course.

MY SPIRIT GUIDES SHOW ME WHAT HAS HAPPENED

TRACY HIGGS, 45, from Hertford, Hertfordshire, has been a professional medium for 14 years. She first worked with police nine years ago.

IN 2006 I appeared on the TV show Psychic Private Eyes which investigated unsolved crimes and was aired on CBS Reality.

I had been a professional medium for three years but the show brought my gifts to the attention of grieving families and the UK police.

Soon people who had lost family members in a violent way started asking me for readings. They wanted to know what had happened to their loved ones.

When I do one of these readings the victim’s spirit gives me details about their death, the murder weapon, where the body is and so on. I relay this information to the loved one. I always tape these readings and the relative usually passes the details to the police.

Often these readings include details that haven’t been released to the public.

It’s at this point that I receive a phone call from an officer who’s investigating the case and I provide more information if I can.

Sometimes the police contact me directly. I tune into my spirit guides and I’m shown clairvoyantly what happened. It’s like watching a film. It’s upsetting but I’ve learned to deal with it. Often the police give me a photo to work with or a name, which helps me link in with the victim and the murderer.

My first police case was nine years ago. A woman whose daughter had been murdered came for a reading and I gave her specific evidence about the killer. I told her the killer was her daughter’s boyfriend and that he had stolen things from her flat, which were hidden at his workplace and not his home.

The mother passed this information to the police, who found the items at the killer’s workplace. Another case involved a woman called Bonnie Barratt. A relative came to me for a reading and Bonnie’s spirit came through immediately.

Bonnie told me she was a prostitute and was insistent her murderer was a client and that he had killed another woman.

I also picked up that the killer was from Preston, Lancashire.

This information was passed to police. Several months later, Derek Brown from Preston was convicted of Bonnie’s murder and sentenced to life.

When I hear of a conviction I feel glad that I’ve been able to help give the families closure. I’m pleased these new police guidelines have been issued and I will always try to help solve crimes. It’s one of the reasons why I have this gift.

 

By MONICA CAFFERKY

You can clearly see that psychic’s and mediums are helping, and bringing peace to many families that are suffering in the death, or murder or a family member or close friends.  More and more the police detectives are turning to the psychic’s and mediums for leads.

There is much data on this, so before you write to me wanting to know, Why we don’t do anything, take a look around, because behind the scene, or what you call reality, there are very gifted trained and tested psychic mediums helping.

 

Dr. Julie Beischel’s newly published research on assisted after-death communication sets a new standard of proof, but don’t expect science to change its stance on psychic mediums.

Before becoming the preeminent researcher of medium communication, or as she likes to call it, “assisted after-death communication”, Dr. Julie Beischel was a newly-minted PhD in pharmacology and toxicology who was trying to come to grips with the loss of her mother. Grief had led Dr. Beischel to the door of Dr. Gary Schwartz whose controversial research into medium communication had drawn national attention. After several years of collaboration during which Dr. Beischel designed and implemented experiments which have become widely recognized as setting the gold standard in such research, Julie left the University of Arizona to found the Windbridge Institute. Her research into medium communication and its effect on the bereaved continues to shed light on a phenomena that flies in the face of what science is telling us about life and death, and has the potential to redefine who we are.