« Not War of the Worlds but Peace among Worlds, Futurist Says | Main

Former Commanding Officer of the U.S. Army Intelligence and Security Command confirms remote viewing data about intelligent life on Mars

Lecture on Remote Viewing as a Research Tool

MAJOR GENERAL ALBERT N. STUBBLEBINE, III - Former Commanding Officer of the U.S. Army Intelligence and Security Command.

The following speech was given by Major General Stubblebine, an important advocate of the military use of Psi and related techniques. This took place at the International Symposium on UFO Research Sponsored by the International Association for New Science Denver, Colorado, May 22-25, 1992.

EXCERPTS:

"Let me talk to you about where you might take this kind of a tool and do something with it, and again I am not sure I want to be on tape for this. We have looked at Mars, we have looked at UFOs, we spent some time looking at Mars, tomorrow I believe that you are going to hear a presentation on the Mars phenomena, and if I am correct, that you will be told that there are structures on the surface of Mars. I will tell you for the record that there are structures underneath the surface of Mars that cannot be seen by the Voyager cameras that went by in 1976, which is what you are going to hear tomorrow; I will also tell you that there are machines on the surface of Mars and there are machines under the surface of Mars that you can look at, you can find out in detail, you can see what they are, where they are, who they are and a lot of detail about them."

(Question on Mars machinery).

"It's moving, the machinery is moving, so I don't know, if its from a leftover civilization its got a long-live battery, its better than any of the dolls we put out on Christmas, I tell you, OK?" 

Read Full Speech

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.typepad.com/t/trackback/3053323

Listed below are links to weblogs that reference Former Commanding Officer of the U.S. Army Intelligence and Security Command confirms remote viewing data about intelligent life on Mars:

Comments

Post a comment

If you have a TypeKey or TypePad account, please Sign In