The first 100 people to go to blinkist.com/MEGAPROJECTS will get unlimited access for one week to try it out. You’ll also get 25% off if you want the full membership.
@@prescriptivereasoning Thanks for the edification on grammar. I’m no expert I just know my experience and to me the evidence adds up if you scrub through all the B.S. I’ve watched most of her interviews and read her books. I also have strange unexplained phenomena happen. I will with no reason for knowing, know letters, words phrases and sometimes have visuals pop into my head before the next thing is said or happens and most of the time it’s spot on. There are others in my family that have the same things happen to them as well. Me and my aunt that I’ve seen twice in my life and my mom sometimes. The proof is in the pudding and they all once laughed at the thought that the universe doesn’t revolve around earth. People once thought that there could be no way there is life outside of earth but we are seeing micro organisms in space so anything is possible
@@prescriptivereasoning why should I find anything YOU say legitimate. Money has very little to do with the overarching conversion. Everyone knows the basic internet rule
This video is honestly so insulting. He is so ignorant of the fact that Remote Viewing is a very real and testable function of the human mind that pretty much ANYONE can learn to get good at. Although at the end of the day this guys content is like the equivalent of internet popcorn, mass produced and cheap.
@@rubiconnn SRI International literally did thousands of double blind experiments even most skeptics could easily find that, there was even a meta analysis of all experiments done with it from 1974-2022 on the Journal of Scientific Exploration, you can find all the data there, remote viewing is proven to provide statistically significant results beyond just guessing and this is testable for anyone, just takes time and a little investment of energy .
When Stargate shut down many participants went on to write books about their experiences. I borrowed several of them from the city library. Fascinating reading. Much more informative than many youtube videos.
@@danielaraujo5811 I don't remember the titles but the names Hal Puthoff, Russel Targ, Lynn Buchannan and Joseph McMoneagle spring to mind and you can begin a google search there.
@@flowshmo6536 Ah, thanks, that was another one. He was a decorated army ranger who quickly dispels any popular misconception that Stargate was a loopy project for flaky participants like the movie "The Men Who Stare at Goats" would have you believe.
I like how people think that the government would just spend millions in a defense program for decades and continue to fund it through the black budget if there was nothing to it. Flying cars was also complete ludicrous, now what? Fact is, technology and human capability has always been 50 plus years ahead of what is currently known to the masses.
Did you knew that cia was created by the rockfellers? i have no clue how they became to be official government agency when they were made by an oligarch.
Hard to take in the information when you continually state that you don't believe in it... You really drove that point man. Might be pretty informational but hard to finish due to the over scepticism
While it may sound outlandish, I think it's naive to completely dismiss projects like this, the way you've done in this video. It's not unheard of for the government to spend money on nonsense. But it's telling that these agencies would spend so much time and money on something "woo woo".
Yup this is what’s wrong with science, there’s no room for dogma, dogmatic thinking is for lazy scientists that are too lazy to even get started into thinking for a scientific explanation. It’s also a very arrogant way to think, the cia dumped millions into this for a reason
Not really. Its called a beurocracy. People want to keep getting paid even if their government job is empirically not helpful to anyone for any reason.
Woo woo? And you’re qualified to call this woo woo because? You could probably fill libraries with what you don’t know myself included. Not understanding of believing doesn’t mean woo woo it just means you don’t understand.
AGREE! Rather than disagreeing with the subject the utter lack of disrespect and constant bitching was a complete horror to watch. Cant watch it anymore bc the amount of bias negativity. Soo closed minded. Some one needs to send him to a real psychic.. LMAO it would put him in a psyche ward for sure.
👍HAHAHAHAAA! That author is batshit crazy! The goats were for "goat trials" for 18Deltas (US Army Special Forces medics): they shoot the goat and perform trauma surgery and have to keep it alive for 48hrs.
Love that movie. As a geek, I have to be sure I have not taken a sip of anything in the moment where George Clooney tells Ewan Macgregor he is a Jedi. I was in love with the film the first time I saw that.
As an American, it cracks me up to hear non-Americans describe the CIA's hijinks and be absolutely astounded while we're just chilling out here, completely desensitized to the ridiculousness.
Everything that exists today, especially our technology, began as a thought in somebody's mind. A lot of the time, these ideas were dismissed as nonsense at first. If a 150 years ago you told somebody there would be something like the "internet", you would have been called a demon and a lunatic. Yet, here we are. A lot of various programs are ridiculed, yet governments continue to support them. We in the public just don't know what they know.
why would you be called a demon or lunatic? the internet is simply a network of connects computers all around the world, which is an inevitable product of human advancement. you could argue that extremist religious people would think so, but anyone with any brain cells would understand it if you simply explained it
Yes. Two informative and fascinating books I read about the classified American remote viewing projects were, "Reading The Enemy's Mind: Inside Star Gate: Inside America's Espionage Program", by Paul H. Smith, and, "The Stargate Chronicles: Memoirs of a Psychic Spy", by Joseph McMoneagle.
The hosts attitude on this subject just confirming how brain twisted we all are. Our parents told us we were vanilla bland because this is what theirs said etc. Long ago we were still in touch with our skills that we have naturally. Now it is just called a hunch. We have been taught that woo is insane when in reality it is the truth and this is why the government has used it for decades. But to see legit in this day you must show that you are a staunch material reductionist. If you can't hold it why it doesn't exist. We are all starting to learn the truths. The skeptics are the fools in the end. Just wait and see.
The minute when they eventually get it is beautiful tho...I describe it like the pic on my profile... Master Ultra Instinct...but just a lable on and enlighten State of mind...it just sounds and looks badass 😁
@@tylersmith4412 If you're talking about the link I posted, that's not my video lmao. If you're talking about Simon, he has the right to express his opinion just like you. You sound crazy "broadcasting himself to our subconscious mind'
@@o1non "This video has a number of flaws detected. 1) Regarding intel agencies being "punked" - one principle of intel agencies is that a single source of information is not treated as intelligence until confirmed by a separate source. Having the same set of documents on micro film from 2 different human intelligence sources is the trick here. Source; "The Puppet Masters", an open source book on military intelligence by John Hughes-Wilson. 2) The claims is that the intial research was done by "just about anybody" as a research subject. This is false, SRI advertised for people having a track record on paper of working with experiments in a psi setting. The claim of "recruiting at a renaissence fair is untrue, and is being used to ridicule Nobel prize winning scientists Targ and Pathoff. The fact that they did jointly win a Nobel prize for scientific research is omitted. 3) Step 4 - the claim that observers accompanied the Outbounder target subject is unknown to me. I have never seen a reference to it. One would have thought that given that the experimenters were actually professional scientists rather than being a hick RUclips presenter suggests they were unnecessary. If they have any evidence that they were presented, I would like to know the source. Without such a source, it becomes merely a hearsay claim of observers being present. 4) The claim that there were 9 unedited transcripts from a viewer in Step 9 is simply not true. One transcript per target. Again, please provide evidence of this claim. 5) Step 10 - and further - is thus simply false, as their were not 9 unedited transcripts to match to 9 sites. There was 1 unedited transcript to match to 9 sites. I gave up watching at 2:27, proceeding further would have been a complete waste of my time." Also, the CIA basically admitted already that its real and it was useful for them.
Can I get one damn video covering this without getting bombarded with inherent skepticism,. I understand being skeptical but if you're going to make a video on a subject and just be extremely skeptical the whole time it's hard to actually learn anything from
Agreed, I am skeptical but Quantum Mechanics relating to oddities interests me. But using comments it’s luck without any math makes me laugh! If you state something back it up. Lol Gellar was a showman.
Wont get clicks not being overtly skeptical. Being labeled a "conspiracy theorist" is not helpful when your paycheck relies on ads and public opinion. I agree with you, it's tiresome listening to something that very obviously was made to cater for a echo chamber.
Sorry, this wasn't inherent skepticism, this was outright snickering derision. Please, if you're going to spend the time and effort required to cover a subject and post it for public consumption, at least have the decency to cover it with respect. Otherwise, why bother? It does you no credit and makes you look like a carnival barker: i.e. "Come see the freak show!" Maybe it is a "freak show" but it's still a subject of interest to many.
@@dbevry3424 it's a whole conundrum of "listen to me I'm obviously so very smart and correct because I used the informational RUclipsr voice that puts emphasis and lowers pitch slightly on every last worrrd" and and people just eat it up Dude didn't do enough research into the subject to be THIS neurotic about making an "informative video" on the subject. All the accounts of people that were involved, the people involved into unclassifying the documents who had first hand accounts in what happened during these documents, yeah at face value it seems like mumbo jumbo woo woo crap but anything outlandish like this always does especially when there's been "woo woo" types saying this stuff is possible for years
If we want to talk about psi we should base our belief on the findings found within parapsychological related scientific journals instead of some crackpot theory 40 years ago.
@@TheGuiltsOfUs No argument there. Crackpot theories are a poor basis for belief. I don't believe I was specific about what the belief should be based on however. Just that possibility existed.
If you live in a brick house and you have all neighbors who live in brick houses, it's going to be hard for you to understand how others live in anything OTHER than a brick house. The snarky condescension would be wiped right off your smug little face if you actually took the time to learn any of the remote viewing protocols and used them. They work, whether you like it or not. That's why they spent millions on this project and KEPT RENEWING IT FOR DECADES - because they got results. But it's easier to be a closed-minded git and dismiss anything that you don't understand instead of actually learning about it and using it.
I read somewhere that the success rate was less than 50%, and as the saying goes a broken clock is right twice a day. I get why they did it and went on to try and improve that percentage but were they not spending taxpayers money to invest in these projects?
@@contumaciousant382 MLB players hit home runs way less than 50% of the time and yet they still do hit home runs... just because a remote viewer isnt succesful every single time doesnt mean they arent doing something to remote view. also were not talking about successfully guessing a number from 1-5 or something like that. the successes in this project were things like successfully drawing a map of an area and saying what the area was used for and exactly how big/long the buildings that was being remote viewed without ever knowing what they were supposed to be viewing. this is NOT a case of a broken clock being right twice a day and you would know that if you did any research whatsoever into this project. The successes were NOT something that could have happened by chance. we are NOT talking about guessing a random number and the fact that youre acting like we are is just straight up SUS.
@@contumaciousant382it's not surprising at all. Read about intelligence gathering in the world wars. A 20% chance for a huge military opportunity could save billions. Imagine say, averting 9/11, or averting nuclear war. The military is all about efficiency, and the math checks out that if someone were clairvoyant even 5% of the time, there would be huge military value. It's an avenue of free opportunities. Especially if the tasks are to assist and not completely made or broken by the readings, which I'm sure they were given niche tasks that failing didn't have repercussions: you either squeezed and got juice, or not.
@@megaprojects9649 Neuralink will do some amazing things. I'm looking forward to seeing someone benefit greatly. But it's too slippery of a slope to not end up being used in ways we don't want. With great power comes great responsibility, right? 🤣😐😬
@@Real28 I doubt it'll see any use beyond giving disabled people back control over their limbs and robotic arms/hands which in itself is an immense boon upon humanity.
I went through the Stargate project at the Phelps center for gifted children in Springfield mo. in the early 90's with a group of other kids my age. A lot of work of synching both sides of the brain. Guided meditation and a lot of talk about building up the space between the two sides of the brain. A lot of imaging places in your mind.
Watch "ORIGINS OF SPIRITUALITY - Predictions from May 2020 follow-up ! ESP Engineering & Mechanics" on RUclips ruclips.net/video/pE_CJrqDGGU/видео.html
At China Lake they dropped liquid lsd through our eyeballs,attacked us with chimp's,murdered people and electrocuted us to sync our brains aka split them into alters with amnesia walls.We got weed brownies at Frankfurt for guided meditation.You guy's need to get your weight up.
Idk i find it funny that the type of person who falls into the overly skeptical is almost never a “creative” type. They always seem to be a very “black n white numbers” type of person and can’t see anything past what’s blatantly on the surface right in front of them. 100 years ago If you tried to describe the “internet” or any other incredible technology we use today these people they would have laughed in your face because their simple brains wouldn’t be open to something that isn’t already created or easily explained. I’m not saying this stuff if real but making jokes as if your skepticism is some sign of intelligence is funny……
Simon, would be interesting to interview people that participated in the Stargate project to tell their point of view, and maybe discuss more on the released declassified documents regarding analysis and perception on the phenomenons.
Terrible idea. This guy doesn't have the intelligence to interview such people due to his beyond closed off and limited mind. Let him play with stones instead
@@Johnkeav Well, he was right to not believe in it. Some researchers redid the experiment and got wildly different results. They then went on to explain why, here's a link to another video explaining all of it. ruclips.net/video/DVZ2P5pe0-Q/видео.html&pp=ygUcaGFsZiBhcyBpbnRlcmVzdGluZyBzdGFyZ2F0ZQ%3D%3D
A friend of mine, now deceased, used to do remote viewing for RAF Intelligence, based at RAF Rudloe Manor, a location known to many UFO enthusiasts. After Project Stargate and Grill Flame were declassified he started giving courses in Remote Viewing, one of which I attended. One of the recommended reading books was 'Psychic Warrior' by David Morehouse, a fascinating and enjoyable read, even if you don't believe in the 'woo woo' aspect of the phenomenon. During the course I was not a star pupil, but got enough 'hits' to convince me there was something in it. The course was 16 days over 8 weekends, but the participants in Stargate were trained for up to 18 months full time at Fort Meade, Maryland.
Ever been sitting with a friend and both of you were thinking about the same food? Ever had a random impulse to look up from whatever you're doing and instantly make eye contact with someone staring at you? Or conversely, been observing someone who just happens to look up and make eye contact with you? So our brains operate on electrical pulses, which can be read through our scalps with electrodes, and computers can map those readings and you can control RC cars, or videogames, or prosthetic limbs. So we know that those signals ARE making it past our skulls/scalps. It's really not that hard to think that an organ as sensitive as a brain might detect the overwash from another's synaptic discharges that occur during thoughts. If something is looking at you intently, and it's eyes are sending that information through nerves to the brain, and that brain is then also focusing on what it's seeing and actively cogitating over the visual input, and that intensity is being projected out as overwash, and your subconscious picks up on it, and recognizes that the image is YOU, you feel the subconscious directive to observe your observer and determine if they are a threat or not. There's a type of fungus that kills a specific species of ant by growing through its brain. After the ant dies, the fungus then hijacks the ant, through the connections it used to kill, and then moves the ant to a location more desirable for this fungi's reproduction. First, that a fungus, with no nervous system that we can perceive, much less a central logic center like a brain, is interpreting information in the ant's brain about gravity, temperature, and humidity, ontop of already understanding the ants body and how its nervous system operates. This is like an IMac that speaks Windows, except that it literally has no processor whatsoever. The implications of this one parasitic relationship is truly terrifying if you really break it down. Try intently observing a bird or cat or dog that's unaware of you, see if it doesn't make eye contact or some other reaction like becoming spooked and flees. I don't think this particular concept is paranormal. I think it is simply beyond our science currently. Kind of like a lot of stuff has been that was treated as fantasy but has become reality: lasers, cellular phones, maglev transportation, gene editing, etc. Maybe some minds are more apt or conditioned to be able to detect, filter, and/or focus on synaptic pulses overwash. Maybe it's an ability that's in its infancy for our species' evolutionary arc. Maybe we just don't know enough about it to effectively test it, much less harnessing it. Some people are persuasive in ways that seem unnatural. Maybe they've subconsciously tapped into this and aren't really aware of it. I think the idea has its merits, but is analogous to a person born blind trying to figure out what sight is.
I remember riding my bike on the trails out on our land when I was a kid, then suddenly stopping and getting a feeling like something terrible had happened. I didn't know what, so I started pedaling frantically back to the other side of our property. I get to half way there (about 1/2 mile) and stop to see what's up. Then I heard my dad shouting for help in the distance. He drove over one of our little log bridges with the tractor and it collapsed got pinned beneath the tractor. Thankfully his head was above water.
Dude they correctly predicted things like exactly where skylab was going to land BEFORE it happened. Its not just extreme deductive reasoning they quite literally predicted the future and proved it
Its quite telling that this “skeptic” dismisses remote viewing as a possibilty for human perception. Must be pretty simple minded to not comprehend that everything you see, touch, feel, taste etc is all an internal projection of external matter… Literally we walk around the earth actually completely insulated from whats outside of us and our only connection with the material world is the brain’s conglomerated estimation of what we encounter with sensory processing… everything you experience is a projection… it almost proves that remote viewing is entirely possible and probable if you understand the very basic nature of how consciousness is collected, projected and perceived in the brain. Makes the video creator’s assertion of falseness seem really basic and juvenile. How could someone flatly dismiss something so logically similar to the way the brain percieves local viewing?
Ya know, it's really sad to me that many intellectuals dismiss the existence of (proven) theories about spiritually (like the Gateway Process/Experience which literally proves the existence of astral projection, manifestation, different dimensions, and the spiritual or astral realm) because of their inability and unwillingness to open their mind to the possibilities of The Absolute/the universe/inner self/higher consciousness. We can LITERALLY ascend/transcend, as the CIA itself proved, and yet, many skeptics still remain. As an intellectual myself, I understand the skepticism because I once held the same beliefs, but I really realized how much was holding me back because of my own ego of wanting to be right/along with science being right, and therefore creating a further earthly tether, and it wasn't until I fully opened my mind to the possibilities of human consciousness that I was PROFOUNDLY humbled about how much I was incorrect about and how much I had yet to see and learn. I hope skeptics get to experience the freedom of transcendence at some point, because I pity my former skeptic self for how blind I was to the truth of ascension and interconnectedness with the universe. It's backed by science y'all 🤷🏻♀️ ancient eastern civilizations have been practicing this for CENTURIES for good reason. They know what they're talking about.
I recently started my spiritual journey to ascension. My family looks at me like I’m crazy but the truth is literally in front of everyone’s eyes they just refuse to open! I understand as it was overwhelming for me, it still is but I try keeping my vibrations high! Hoping one day I’ll be able to connect with my spiritual guides for better guiding. I recently found the gateway intermediate workbook so hoping I can take some of those exercises to ascend! 😊
This is occult demonology being practiced by our leaders. The Bible warns us against witchcraft and pay no attention to the warnings so here we are with a corrupt “free world” run by secret society occultists. Things like 9/11 happen when witches take over…
@@AM-nq7yk wow! My brother you are SPOT ON! And it's also insane how most people believe that they cannot perform at the same levels of divine as Jesus himself. The whole point of Jesus' life was to show us that everything he is doing we can also do since we are ALL Children of the Most High. I would actually like to talk to you my brother. Very few people understand; those who do I try to associate with, even if it's online lol. Lmk if you have like an Instagram or WhatsApp where I could message you. Much luv, and God Bless 🙌 🙏
Double slit experiment leads to entanglement which combined with big bang shows we are all interconnected and entangled at a single point in time so remote viewing could be accessing a map of the entangled world inside our brains
Whether or not it's real, I'm always cautious regarding testing of psychic abilities, specifically when it works "occasionally". It's comparable to shooting a bow. If the arrow only sometimes hit's the target, that doesn't mean the bow doesn't work. Have all the variables been taken into account? Wind direction and speed, distance to the target, skill of the archer? A similar principle could be applied to remote viewing. Is the technique actually ineffective, or are there certain variables not being considered, which could affect the accuracy of the reading?
I think similarly. Also to me investigating/testing to see if remote viewing has any promise wouldn’t have them dedicating millions of funds and 18 years towards? If it was such bullshit a month at least would of shown the CIA that.
Something of immense scientific value such as psi can't be hidden for long. We need all studies to be peer-reviewed and openly published in scientific journals, and those studies must be reproduced in other, unaffiliated laboratories. Not based on drug trip some cia spook was on.
This is why the Berkeley study was so important. It was run by skeptics that refused to publish anything that wasn't repeatable and founded. The methods they came up with and results were valuable and substantial enough for the CIA and FBI to take over the program and publish the methodology, as well as science behind it. It was redacted for many years, but the documents have recently been released on the CIA website.
Simon the ESP button in your car is to deactivate the Electronic Stability Program, which is always on by default to electronically stabilize the vehicle during loss of traction.
I was 11 years old I lived in Rogers Arkansas I went to Westside elementary and that is where they came to test me for project Stargate, they tested me with their little cards on a side of a partition I could not see them I got 45 out of 50 cards right they proceeded to call my mother she declined my involvement however I do not believe for a second that I have not always been involved. This is the first time that I'm actually getting to tell someone about it that knows.
Pretty sure they're still doing work on it somewhere; the opportunity to standardize and weaponize something like remote viewing is not one I think they'd give up too easy. Unless all of it was just a front for some other project the money was REALLY funnelled to, it seems very odd to spend millions on something you 'know' isn't a thing. Even as a distraction for an enemy. And the number of times the project gets 'dropped' only to be immediately picked up, renamed, and started all over again, is kinda telling.
I believe millions of tax payer dollars has been alloted to studies of Cocaine. The effects the mating in birds pigeons, doves and other avian species I'm sure they were grateful. Maybe a study following up with the post copulation cigarette......
It took 20 years of dabbling to decide there wasn't anything to it? Or If there is something to it, do you think they would turn it into a black project? Which is more likely?
Definitely a front, not even a single instance of psi has yet to be confirmed even with a large body of evidence found within parapsychological related scientific journals.
@@BoltRM Looks like a front to me, the document itself is a synthesis of bad 80s science fiction and the theosophical ideas of madame blavatsky. Who knows where the money actually went.
@@TheGuiltsOfUs lol. And somewhere some CIA or FBI specialist reads that, steeples his fingers and says "Good... they actually believe the 'false front' idea. They'll keep looking elsewhere and we can just keep publicly telling them about this and they just won't care because they think it's fake!" Followed by maniacal laughter and lightning effects from like, one of the support crew people.
Strange as it sounds 25 years is a long time to experiment on something that doesn't work and there a few points in my life where only experience would bring belief
Should do a late April fools video about the Airforce running the Stargate program under Cheyenne mountain to explore alien world, recount the entire development of the program in a mega projects style video!
I think the only differences between Megaprojects and Business Blaze are 1) Simon is sitting vs. standing and 2) Simon is in a different room (or at least is positioned with a different background). AND. I. LOVE. EVERY. SECOND. OF. IT.
I think it's a genius way to retrieve some information in a sketchy way, like from double espionage or by violating some constitutional right, and then cover up the source of the information with "Psychic guy told me! No law broken here!"
No law is broken except in the Bible it says not to have anything to do with psychics. But oh yeah church and state are separate. Except when you testify in court you raise your hand to so help you God tell the truth. Our money has in God we trust on it.
@@johns9543 considering how much the government sunk into the project, yes, he should be more unbiased, obviously the government took it seriously, it was worthy of investment.
I tried it and it actually works. Most people don’t make it far so it’s dismissed due to a minority succeeding. I learned there’s always a dude with a British accent trying to debunk this unfortunately😂
I agree, a more objective approach would have worked alot better. The film, Third Eye Spies and supporting declassified documents add alot to the argument that remote viewing has been and is used by US intelligence agencies.
I hope that after a year and criticism, you've changed the way that you talk about subjects. I don't see a reason on making a video about a subject just to mention that its nonsense through out the whole video. Yes the idea is crazy but nothing can be disproved because we know so little about anything. This is the type of behavior that made our technology advance so much slower than it should've had.
I think this guy is very shallow in his thinking, lack of research or knowledge of consciousness. Already the power of altering consciousness is proven in the area of meditation, yoga, psychic reader and healers.
Admitting to having any special abilities or gifts is a good way to ruin your life or get you locked up in a mental institution, especially if the government finds out thru social media.
I find it interesting he claims to have an open point of view but continues to describe the project from a very pessimistic point of view. While things like this long been the topic of pseudoscience it is 2022 now and we have a lot more than just the stargate project as reference which this guys has either not heard about or not put in this video to further his own opinion. Keep an open mind and do not let your mind be swayed by the use of undermining language. Keep searching for the answers you’re looking for ❤️
i’m not quite sure how to take the skepticism when you know they would not waste such money if it didn’t not amount to something , trust if you apply the practice they cia used which anyone can do then you’d notice some very odd occurrences to say the least lol
Well, he was right to not believe in it. Some researchers redid the experiment and got wildly different results. They then went on to explain why, here's a link to another video explaining all of it. ruclips.net/video/DVZ2P5pe0-Q/видео.html&pp=ygUcaGFsZiBhcyBpbnRlcmVzdGluZyBzdGFyZ2F0ZQ%3D%3D
There was this one guy back in the late 70s who said he saw a statue with the name Elon Musk on Mars in the future and the CIA kicked him out of the program.
I turned this video off halfway through because of the frustration with a sort of snarky cocky jokingly attitude that sort of got in the way of me learning about the topic
Yeah ive never seen someone make such a long video where they completely ignore all the actual evidence for what they're trying to disprove. You dont accidently make a video on this topic and ignore all of the best evidence for why it exists. unless youre trying to make people think it doesn't exist when it actually does
I think I understand the CIA's impulse to at least try this. Here's what it reminds me of: one of my hobbies is metal detecting. I've done it quite a bit since starting 3 years ago, not found anything fantastic, a few silver coins and mysterious items that look very old, but mostly just trash that litterers tossed on the ground. The instrument gives you a reading that indicates a range of metals that the object COULD be, but obviously alloys are a problem, as is the fact that some of the most valuable metals are close in range to the least valuable, namely, gold and aluminum (as in, this target is almost certainly a beverage can ..... but it could be a gold ring, so the question is, do you bother digging it?). But one thing that never gets old is the basic sense of having something like a magical power, something most people don't have. You look at an area of grass in front of you and it all looks the same, but I can assure you there are metal objects under the surface; I may not know what they are, but I can tell the exact 8-inch-or-so spot where each of them is. This has even proven a heroic power, as when it took me about 5 minutes to find a friend's eyeglasses that had fallen out of his pocket and into fallen leaves "somewhere" in his back yard. So when I lose something, even something non-metal, I have this automatic impulse that there should be something I can grab and use it to locate the item quickly. Or even when I'm out metal detecting, when I begin to get sore from all the walking, squatting and digging, usually hot, sweaty and mosquito-bitten because I live on the Gulf Coast, I start to wish my detector could do more, like why can't I just wave it around me in the air, and have some kind of flags appear above all the targets in a 50 x 50 foot area or something?! LOL. Same goes for when I watch something about a missing person, why isn't there a device for that? If the police have access to a cadaver dog that's better than nothing, but it can't detect a body buried deep, or in some weird location. So (FINALLY) going back to the CIA. Here they have spies, people who go into enemy territory to learn information, and they have equipment to gather some kinds of information from a distance, without endangering a citizen's life or trusting one that could be (or become) a traitor. But the instruments are unable to distinguish between important and unimportant information the way a person could. So I picture them CONSTANTLY having a desire to combine the strengths and eliminate the weaknesses of men and machines, to have people who can quickly and remotely just KNOW stuff, ha. It's a perfectly understandable desire, but just as silly as the ones I have from being a small time superhero.
Here are some things to consider: 1) When people were trying to create the first airplane, newspapers around the world disparaged the inventors and said that it would be a million years till humans could fly (the New York Times said that) . 2) When Tesla made his birthday speech and said that one day images and voices will be sent through the air across the globe, his own friends openly said that he lost his mind. He was ridiculed (even though he had created alternating current, radio transmission, and a host of other things). 3) When acupuncture was becoming popular in the West, people laughed it off and mocked it. There were many, many jokes about putting needles in your arm. It was mocked as pseudo science. But now it is well established as useful in increasing circulation to damaged areas (we studied its ability to correct frostbite when I was in the military). This video and his silly behavior will NOT age well. I guarantee it.
Perhaps the button in your car says ESC? (Electronic Stability Control) If it does say ESP, it may stand for Electronic Stability Program. They're both the same thing though; a system in the car that makes minor adjustments 100's of times a second during a skid to help maintain traction, and thus the ability for you to steer.
This is, in fact, false. The button is for Extra Sensory Perception. Coincidently also used for slip and skid management ... so overall you are correct I guess.
Sorry but they didnt dabble at all.....they went in full and developed procedures for such things as remote viewing, after a period of studying several subjects. It works but the info isnt always 100%....but there have been major hits showing that it works. Or you could actually ask remote viewer, but anyone who's know anything about this stuff wouldnt be watching this video Like myself
Well, from personal experience, I can say that ESP IS a real phenomenon. My father, who I lived with for 5 years of my adolescent life, was psychic......and not just a little bit!! He was always on point.......of course he spent a large portion of his life exercising this ability, which is something that I believe must be done vigorously if one hopes to achieve positive results. 🤯😱😂🤣
There was a time where me being able to view your content being many miles away from you was considered witchcraft or an outlandish fantasy. Nothing is impossible
I consider myself a critical thinker. Yet there is a surprisingly fine line between "skepticism" and "blind faith", which in my opinion has been more detrimental than the other way around lately. Yes - they have often been wrong. However, we're not talking about "will the eagle or the lord fall" here, are we? I mean, the odds aren't 50:50 or anything. For example - there was a crash in the African jungle in 1979. The plane was "intensively" searched for - unsuccessfully. Subsequently they deployed a "sensitive individual" who used "remote viewing" to determine: - the coordinates - the name of the country - and described the terrain And they found the plane there. I'm not saying this proves anything - but you certainly can't say that if you run a project and have them guess positions across the planet/continent, the result of "sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't" is proof that it's a fluke. I obviously don't know the success/failure ratio. However, to explain finding a plane in Africa by pure chance, how many repetitions would you need? I'd say we're talking in the upper millions. Understandably - I don't know what input the medium had and to what extent she could therefore refine her "guess". However, the custom is to tell the media less rather than the other way around in similar cases. At the very least, I find this topic interesting enough that I wouldn't automatically break my stick over it. Too many previously "impossible" things have been happening lately that the best thing you can do is keep an open mind and focus on the data, not preconceptions. I'm allergic to this "blind" skepticism lately. There was a recent study that documented the occurrence of UAP over Ukraine. According to the available data, there are objects moving 10 times faster than what we have available. The US military has reached out to Avi Loeb (physicist) for comment. He looked at the data and his conclusion, "it's wrong because it doesn't make sense, so it must be wrong. You have to divide it by 10, then it will be right and I'll tell you it's artillery shells." (paraphrase). This isn't "skepticism", this is an obtuseness that prevents us from progressing, not the other way around. Avi Loebe may be right (likely in the outcome), but this approach has nothing to do with science. ------- Sources to verify the above 1. The Lost Airplane: Unlike other cases, here we have two credible sources that you can check. The first is a published CIA document. Its number: CIA-RDP96-00787R000200020022-6 It's available at cia.gov. The second is a quote from President Jimmy Carter. It is available on the CNN website. It is the "News Briefs" of September 21, 1995. Verbatim: ATLANTA, Georgia (CNN) -- Former President Jimmy Carter said the CIA, without his knowledge, once consulted a psychic to help locate a missing government plane in Africa. Carter told students at Emory University that the "special U.S. plane" crashed somewhere in Zaire while he was president. According to Carter, U.S. spy satellites could find no trace of the aircraft, so the CIA consulted a psychic from California. Carter said the woman "went into a trance and gave some latitude and longitude figures. We focused our satellite cameras on that point and the plane was there." Carter made the disclosure after two students asked if he was aware of any government evidence pointing to the existence of extraterrestrials. "I never knew of any instance where it was proven that any sort of vehicle had come from outer space to our country and either lived here or left," the former president said. 2. UFOs over Ukraine Original study: Unidentified aerial phenomena I. Observations of events. B.E. Zhilyaev, V.N. Petukhov, V.M. Reshetnyk. 2022. Avi Loeb Reactions: "DOWN TO EARTH" LIMITS ON UNIDENTIFIED AERIAL PHENOMENA
its the same as claiming there is no skill involved in hitting a home run just pure chance because most of the time homeruns aren't hit. Imagine being so much of a "skeptic" that you argue someone randomly hit a 1/1,000,000,000 chance multiple times rather than accepting that it wasn't just luck.
Novel ahead. I'm not going to claim that this stuff is real or not. There are some interesting things that are hard to explain, not that they aren't explainable. I do find it fun to consider "what if". who am i hurting. What got me curious on the subject was from a personal experience that happened before i ever even heard of remote viewing or gave a thought to esp or whatever else. I don't practice this stuff at all or think about it much. too busy working and taking care of a family, but I did find myself down the rabbit hole for about half a year or so after I became interested in lucid dreaming years ago. I kept a dream journal and all that in college for a short while after i found a book called "hitchhikers guide to lucid dreaming". Fun read. Recommend Now the experience. I had a dream that I recorded, which is something you do to aid in becoming consciously aware in your dreams, and it came accurately true to a surprising degree just a few months later that has me still thinking about it from time to time almost a decade later, and scratching my head. The dream was of me filling in a trench by shovel about 4 feet deep, 3 feet wide, and 50 feet or so long. I was accompanied by a tall skinny guy also with a shovel, white t shirt, jeans, blond hair to his shoulders. the trench was along side an ugly light blue house going from the sidewalk out front, to the back yard. No shi#, I found myself doing a working interview for a job in Oregon, I'm from CA (born and raised. save ur apologies, im not happy about it either), and it was a plumbing job that was something I never saw myself doing, nor had i considered living in orego at that time either. When I found myself filling in this trench on my first day in real life, in oregon, I experienced intense de ja vu as i looked across the trench at the other guy backfilling. It made me pause for a bit, then I remembered I had dreamed of this exact event months prior with striking similiarities. Like over 80% at least. And what still has me scratching my head over it is the question, "how many similarities or coincidences do there need to be before its not a coincidence". The dream was from the very same visual perspective as when I had the de ja vu. Idk. I've never experienced anything like it before or since. I'm a very average working family man. But that happened wether u believe it or not, or think it's just a coincidental thing that happened, but I've been confused about it whenever it pops in my head ever since. I guess I just have a hard time saying it was all coincidence. There is just too much for me to brush it off. The dream was just so dang spot on. The trench, the house, the guys appearance and outfit, the fact that I wasn't even looking for that type of work when I had the dream, the visual perspectives matching up. Idk. Do what u will with that story. Thanks for reading
The sneering and mocking are ever so trendy but not very scientific. It must be great to be so smart you can run a RUclips channel on smirking down your nose at all the silly stupid people. Whatever you’re hawking I lost interest in 3 minutes in. I can get my sneer overload from reddit if I feel deprived
I think certain people are more intune with this kind of stuff than others. Things like gut feeling, premonitions in dreams, dreaming of future events or interactions that lead to a certain outcome or being able to feel peoples emotions or intentions ect ect. I knew a girl who was very, as I called her 'witchy' who was very tuned into this stuff, not reading minds and sci-fi stuff like that but just more intune with information we don't all pick up on. My 2 cents
@@Clay3613 youre most likely experiencing confirmation bias and context effects. Youre probably going places in your mind all the time, when you then experience some of them for real, they become singled out and they form a stronger memory.
I think some people are just very attentive and constantly mull over things in their head. Sometimes people do this thing where they simulate every outcome of a scenario constantly, and therefore they seem in tune with everything
There’s no way I could be skeptical about the possibility when so many smart people and some much money didn’t have enough scientific evidence to carry out
Randi wasn't great. He did a social service by exposing frauds and swindlers. Good on him. On the other hand he also misled many people by denying the possibility of extra sensory perception. ESP is real. There is deep reason why it is difficult to prove to the masses. When the flower blooms the Bee comes unbidden.
@@stefanschleps8758 Also, Randi explicitly said in multiple occasions, that supernatural phenomena might exist, but it had never been demonstrated to him, and all practitioners he'd met were either deluded or deceptive.
Simon, you need to educate all those professional academics and statisticians that concluded that the chance that these are just lucky guesses across the years of research was on the order of 1 in 10,000,000,000 . (Nice subtle dismissal of Utts btw, I notice you did not cast the same light on her skeptic colleague who came to the exact same statistical conclusion. Those poor mistaken statisticians never considered that with so many experiments there would have been some accurate results by chance. Unfortunate sods. No there is no such thing as people who think they are healthy skeptics when they are more accurately described as closed minded deniers who are too lazy to look close enough at the protocols and data to arrive at a careful and objective conclusion. I'm really glad those kind of people don't exist.
You ever watch his business blaze channel? If he doesn't snort a ton of blow he's certainly acts like it LOL not a jab at him and even if he did I don't judge but I find it pretty funny. I think I would party with Simon if I had the chance
A person sitting continents away from me is telling me face to face that it is impossible to look inside the buildings thousands of miles away. I mean, ... I give up.
It's fine to be a skeptic but to dismiss something out of hand, and not only that but also by mocking it as ridiculous, before even looking into it, is disappointing. This channel is known for being relatively factual. There's enough factual material to talk about on this topic, without having to dip into the fantastic or ridiculous. But that's not the road taken. It's just a big joke.
My aunt was one of the psychics that was hired by the government. She told me all kinds of storys of them finding missing people and criminals. I have heard the most insain storys about her from my whole family.
I understand why most people just dismiss this stuff out of hand, make a clever joke and whatnot, but this stuff is pretty fascinating when you dig into the facts, no matter what side you fall on the subject. There are, undeniably, plenty of con artists out there, but maybe we don't have all the answers yet, and maybe we should take a second before we pass a judgment, and close a door in our minds..maybe. Also, opinions are like ani. P.S. Great vid as always FactBoi
I'm surprised Simon didn't suggest any of those cases solved by Psychics may very well have been committed by the psychics. Honestly though... One of the tricks to being a psychic or a medium is to..... Actually listen to someone... which is something law enforcement is really bad at doing.
Well, law enforcement isn't known for working too hard are they? Why work hard and be effective when you can have a massive ego complex and be a sexist, racist a hole who gets paid too much by the government to do too little and still find way to always complain.
@@joeblow9657 Around 10... 15 years ago? There was a girl who was CLEARLY kidnapped in my home state of Kentucky. Parents found her car sitting in the driveway, and her phone was lying on the drivers seat and had 9 and 1 dialed. Clearly she was trying to call 911. Parents reported it. Police REFUSED to put out a missing person report and kept telling the parts "She's done runned away. She'll come back in a day." She was still alive at this point. Her uncle had taken her and was assaulting her and killed her when she said she was gonna tell her dad about it. There are entire police departments that aren't there to do their job. Their goal is to make work go away. That's why on a LOT of people end up falsely accused. Police look at the first possible person and tunnel vision. I believe this is an episode of the modern Cold Case Files on Netflix.
@@Varizen87 Warren vs district of Columbia. Not saying its right (it fucking isn't,) but the Supreme Court told all us tax payers to go fuck ourselves back in 1981.
The first 100 people to go to blinkist.com/MEGAPROJECTS will get unlimited access for one week to try it out. You’ll also get 25% off if you want the full membership.
ESP stands for electronic stability program. In America it's usually electronic stability control it's just a safety feature
Check out Annie Jacobson she has done allot of work understanding and gathering top secret information and has written several books
@@prescriptivereasoning Thanks for the edification on grammar. I’m no expert I just know my experience and to me the evidence adds up if you scrub through all the B.S. I’ve watched most of her interviews and read her books. I also have strange unexplained phenomena happen. I will with no reason for knowing, know letters, words phrases and sometimes have visuals pop into my head before the next thing is said or happens and most of the time it’s spot on. There are others in my family that have the same things happen to them as well. Me and my aunt that I’ve seen twice in my life and my mom sometimes. The proof is in the pudding and they all once laughed at the thought that the universe doesn’t revolve around earth. People once thought that there could be no way there is life outside of earth but we are seeing micro organisms in space so anything is possible
@@prescriptivereasoning why should I find anything YOU say legitimate. Money has very little to do with the overarching conversion. Everyone knows the basic internet rule
I was pretty certain you were going to mention Ted kaczynski. Maybe my thoughts on this whole thing was totally different
It is only "utterly insane" when your worldview is limited by a materialist perception of linear time.
This video is honestly so insulting. He is so ignorant of the fact that Remote Viewing is a very real and testable function of the human mind that pretty much ANYONE can learn to get good at. Although at the end of the day this guys content is like the equivalent of internet popcorn, mass produced and cheap.
@@ob3ythee.t.128 lmao "very real", despite it conveniently never working whenever it is tested in a double blind study.
@@rubiconnn SRI International literally did thousands of double blind experiments even most skeptics could easily find that, there was even a meta analysis of all experiments done with it from 1974-2022 on the Journal of Scientific Exploration, you can find all the data there, remote viewing is proven to provide statistically significant results beyond just guessing and this is testable for anyone, just takes time and a little investment of energy .
When Stargate shut down many participants went on to write books about their experiences. I borrowed several of them from the city library. Fascinating reading. Much more informative than many youtube videos.
Do you remember the titles of any of these books by any chance? It is of my interest
@@danielaraujo5811 I don't remember the titles but the names Hal Puthoff, Russel Targ, Lynn Buchannan and Joseph McMoneagle spring to mind and you can begin a google search there.
@@martineldritch I found a book called psychic warrior by David morehouse, might be an interesting read
@@flowshmo6536 Ah, thanks, that was another one. He was a decorated army ranger who quickly dispels any popular misconception that Stargate was a loopy project for flaky participants like the movie "The Men Who Stare at Goats" would have you believe.
@@martineldritch I’ve only just touched on this subject but it seems super intriguing, where do you suggest starting research?
I like how people think that the government would just spend millions in a defense program for decades and continue to fund it through the black budget if there was nothing to it. Flying cars was also complete ludicrous, now what? Fact is, technology and human capability has always been 50 plus years ahead of what is currently known to the masses.
Have you ever heard of money laundering lol
you underestimate human stupidity
Did you knew that cia was created by the rockfellers? i have no clue how they became to be official government agency when they were made by an oligarch.
Hard to take in the information when you continually state that you don't believe in it... You really drove that point man. Might be pretty informational but hard to finish due to the over scepticism
Sounds like Black covert programs maybe looking glass project idk
Yeah he’s not being objective
I agree. if youre that much of a skeptic, maybe this isnt the subject for you to be examining
I mean I don't believe in alot of things around the psychic area but I did try it and it actually worked pretty well 😂 kinda scared myself..
@@osintplayer6624if you meditate daily it will increase your abilities as well
While it may sound outlandish, I think it's naive to completely dismiss projects like this, the way you've done in this video. It's not unheard of for the government to spend money on nonsense. But it's telling that these agencies would spend so much time and money on something "woo woo".
according to the people in the project it worked.
Yup this is what’s wrong with science, there’s no room for dogma, dogmatic thinking is for lazy scientists that are too lazy to even get started into thinking for a scientific explanation. It’s also a very arrogant way to think, the cia dumped millions into this for a reason
Not really. Its called a beurocracy. People want to keep getting paid even if their government job is empirically not helpful to anyone for any reason.
Woo woo? And you’re qualified to call this woo woo because? You could probably fill libraries with what you don’t know myself included. Not understanding of believing doesn’t mean woo woo it just means you don’t understand.
AGREE! Rather than disagreeing with the subject the utter lack of disrespect and constant bitching was a complete horror to watch. Cant watch it anymore bc the amount of bias negativity. Soo closed minded. Some one needs to send him to a real psychic.. LMAO it would put him in a psyche ward for sure.
Men Who Stare At 🐐.
👍HAHAHAHAAA! That author is batshit crazy! The goats were for "goat trials" for 18Deltas (US Army Special Forces medics): they shoot the goat and perform trauma surgery and have to keep it alive for 48hrs.
What part of the goat?
That's what I said
The middle part. Ya know, the part with fur! 😁
Love that movie. As a geek, I have to be sure I have not taken a sip of anything in the moment where George Clooney tells Ewan Macgregor he is a Jedi. I was in love with the film the first time I saw that.
As an American, it cracks me up to hear non-Americans describe the CIA's hijinks and be absolutely astounded while we're just chilling out here, completely desensitized to the ridiculousness.
Everything that exists today, especially our technology, began as a thought in somebody's mind. A lot of the time, these ideas were dismissed as nonsense at first. If a 150 years ago you told somebody there would be something like the "internet", you would have been called a demon and a lunatic. Yet, here we are. A lot of various programs are ridiculed, yet governments continue to support them. We in the public just don't know what they know.
why would you be called a demon or lunatic? the internet is simply a network of connects computers all around the world, which is an inevitable product of human advancement. you could argue that extremist religious people would think so, but anyone with any brain cells would understand it if you simply explained it
👁️
Yes. Two informative and fascinating books I read about the classified American remote viewing projects were, "Reading The Enemy's Mind: Inside Star Gate: Inside America's Espionage Program", by Paul H. Smith, and, "The Stargate Chronicles: Memoirs of a Psychic Spy", by Joseph McMoneagle.
This is true, when ever I have a bowl of ice cream I can bend my spoons.
Which flavor
@@thesuncollective1475 bro you got me dead tffff😂😂
There is no spoon
Providing if the ice cream frozen
AGREED 👍 HELLO FROM SOFIA, BULGARIA 🇧🇬
The hosts attitude on this subject just confirming how brain twisted we all are. Our parents told us we were vanilla bland because this is what theirs said etc. Long ago we were still in touch with our skills that we have naturally. Now it is just called a hunch. We have been taught that woo is insane when in reality it is the truth and this is why the government has used it for decades. But to see legit in this day you must show that you are a staunch material reductionist. If you can't hold it why it doesn't exist. We are all starting to learn the truths. The skeptics are the fools in the end. Just wait and see.
He's in for a shock, isn't he? Not all see at the same time.
Fuck ya chosen one. Tell em
The minute when they eventually get it is beautiful tho...I describe it like the pic on my profile... Master Ultra Instinct...but just a lable on and enlighten State of mind...it just sounds and looks badass 😁
Woo woo I have some crystals to sell you you
2:25 - Chapter 1 - Extrasensory perception
4:25 - Chapter 2 - The cold war
6:05 - Mid roll ads
7:55 - Chapter 3 - Testing
10:30 - Chapter 4 - Operationnal use
12:35 - Chapter 5 - Other worldy ESP
14:30 - Chapter 6 - Project closure
15:25 - Chapter 7 - The stargate project
Thanks
Thank you!!
👍🏾
Hero
THANKS ❤️ FROM SOFIA, BULGARIA 🇧🇬
They didn't dabble and still use it. We can only assume they and others still use it because it works, but that remains in need of formal study.
For having such an ”open” head, this guy is very close-minded…
Doesn’t believe it then post a video broadcasting himself to our subconscious mind
@@tylersmith4412 If you're talking about the link I posted, that's not my video lmao. If you're talking about Simon, he has the right to express his opinion just like you. You sound crazy "broadcasting himself to our subconscious mind'
@@o1non "This video has a number of flaws detected.
1) Regarding intel agencies being "punked" - one principle of intel agencies is that a single source of information is not treated as intelligence until confirmed by a separate source. Having the same set of documents on micro film from 2 different human intelligence sources is the trick here. Source; "The Puppet Masters", an open source book on military intelligence by John Hughes-Wilson.
2) The claims is that the intial research was done by "just about anybody" as a research subject. This is false, SRI advertised for people having a track record on paper of working with experiments in a psi setting. The claim of "recruiting at a renaissence fair is untrue, and is being used to ridicule Nobel prize winning scientists Targ and Pathoff. The fact that they did jointly win a Nobel prize for scientific research is omitted.
3) Step 4 - the claim that observers accompanied the Outbounder target subject is unknown to me. I have never seen a reference to it. One would have thought that given that the experimenters were actually professional scientists rather than being a hick RUclips presenter suggests they were unnecessary. If they have any evidence that they were presented, I would like to know the source. Without such a source, it becomes merely a hearsay claim of observers being present.
4) The claim that there were 9 unedited transcripts from a viewer in Step 9 is simply not true. One transcript per target. Again, please provide evidence of this claim.
5) Step 10 - and further - is thus simply false, as their were not 9 unedited transcripts to match to 9 sites. There was 1 unedited transcript to match to 9 sites.
I gave up watching at 2:27, proceeding further would have been a complete waste of my time."
Also, the CIA basically admitted already that its real and it was useful for them.
@@o1non you people also forget completely about the berkley studies, which was done by skeptics.
@@purpose6113 I don't know what that is. Give me a link, and I'll read about it.
"If you believe in telekinesis, raise my right hand....."
-Steven Wright
Who
Can I get one damn video covering this without getting bombarded with inherent skepticism,. I understand being skeptical but if you're going to make a video on a subject and just be extremely skeptical the whole time it's hard to actually learn anything from
ruclips.net/video/lwySR8BOGQw/видео.html
Agreed, I am skeptical but Quantum Mechanics relating to oddities interests me. But using comments it’s luck without any math makes me laugh! If you state something back it up. Lol Gellar was a showman.
Wont get clicks not being overtly skeptical. Being labeled a "conspiracy theorist" is not helpful when your paycheck relies on ads and public opinion. I agree with you, it's tiresome listening to something that very obviously was made to cater for a echo chamber.
Sorry, this wasn't inherent skepticism, this was outright snickering derision. Please, if you're going to spend the time and effort required to cover a subject and post it for public consumption, at least have the decency to cover it with respect. Otherwise, why bother? It does you no credit and makes you look like a carnival barker: i.e. "Come see the freak show!" Maybe it is a "freak show" but it's still a subject of interest to many.
@@dbevry3424 it's a whole conundrum of "listen to me I'm obviously so very smart and correct because I used the informational RUclipsr voice that puts emphasis and lowers pitch slightly on every last worrrd" and and people just eat it up
Dude didn't do enough research into the subject to be THIS neurotic about making an "informative video" on the subject. All the accounts of people that were involved, the people involved into unclassifying the documents who had first hand accounts in what happened during these documents, yeah at face value it seems like mumbo jumbo woo woo crap but anything outlandish like this always does especially when there's been "woo woo" types saying this stuff is possible for years
First, I adore your channels. But. There's a difference between being skeptical and completely shutting out any possibility of it.
I wonder if he dismisses quantum physics? Pretty outlandish many would say... 🤔
Big difference...the opps tend to make u disbelieve before there is any proof to believe anything.
@@michaelredding1130 only because modern thinking is predisposed to assume anything out of the ordinary is fake
If we want to talk about psi we should base our belief on the findings found within parapsychological related scientific journals instead of some crackpot theory 40 years ago.
@@TheGuiltsOfUs No argument there. Crackpot theories are a poor basis for belief. I don't believe I was specific about what the belief should be based on however. Just that possibility existed.
ESP in cars: Electronic Stability Program
Wrong, its erratic speed power 😂
@@boziewz6125 errotic
@@TheBackyardChemist 🤣 that tickled me
Nah, I'm pretty sure my car is reading my mind.
Allegendly
Even a broken clock is right twice a day: the experiment
Well, you definitly should specify wich type of clock...
Depends. Even an analogue clock can break in a way so that it is never correct.
@@owenshebbeare2999
Even worse.... atomic clocks dont even actually show the time at all, wether broken or not !
@@alainmilette6460 that kind of timely "counter" argument ticks Me off.
Also that quote was said during beauty and the beast lmao
If you live in a brick house and you have all neighbors who live in brick houses, it's going to be hard for you to understand how others live in anything OTHER than a brick house. The snarky condescension would be wiped right off your smug little face if you actually took the time to learn any of the remote viewing protocols and used them. They work, whether you like it or not. That's why they spent millions on this project and KEPT RENEWING IT FOR DECADES - because they got results. But it's easier to be a closed-minded git and dismiss anything that you don't understand instead of actually learning about it and using it.
I read somewhere that the success rate was less than 50%, and as the saying goes a broken clock is right twice a day. I get why they did it and went on to try and improve that percentage but were they not spending taxpayers money to invest in these projects?
@@contumaciousant382 less than 20% accuracy with coordinate based protocols.
i have come to hate his smug face
@@contumaciousant382 MLB players hit home runs way less than 50% of the time and yet they still do hit home runs... just because a remote viewer isnt succesful every single time doesnt mean they arent doing something to remote view. also were not talking about successfully guessing a number from 1-5 or something like that. the successes in this project were things like successfully drawing a map of an area and saying what the area was used for and exactly how big/long the buildings that was being remote viewed without ever knowing what they were supposed to be viewing. this is NOT a case of a broken clock being right twice a day and you would know that if you did any research whatsoever into this project.
The successes were NOT something that could have happened by chance. we are NOT talking about guessing a random number and the fact that youre acting like we are is just straight up SUS.
@@contumaciousant382it's not surprising at all. Read about intelligence gathering in the world wars. A 20% chance for a huge military opportunity could save billions. Imagine say, averting 9/11, or averting nuclear war. The military is all about efficiency, and the math checks out that if someone were clairvoyant even 5% of the time, there would be huge military value. It's an avenue of free opportunities. Especially if the tasks are to assist and not completely made or broken by the readings, which I'm sure they were given niche tasks that failing didn't have repercussions: you either squeezed and got juice, or not.
THANKS FOR SHARING ❤️ HELLO FROM SOFIA, BULGARIA 🇧🇬
After Neuralink gets going in humans, this project will get picked back up.
Finally.
@@megaprojects9649 Neuralink will do some amazing things. I'm looking forward to seeing someone benefit greatly.
But it's too slippery of a slope to not end up being used in ways we don't want. With great power comes great responsibility, right? 🤣😐😬
@@Real28 I doubt it'll see any use beyond giving disabled people back control over their limbs and robotic arms/hands which in itself is an immense boon upon humanity.
@@edward9674 Lets hope. That's the intended use and I can't wait to see those benefits.
Neuralink is grossly exaggerated by Musk. In terms of human-machine interface, they're just now rubbing sticks together.
I went through the Stargate project at the Phelps center for gifted children in Springfield mo. in the early 90's with a group of other kids my age. A lot of work of synching both sides of the brain. Guided meditation and a lot of talk about building up the space between the two sides of the brain. A lot of imaging places in your mind.
Can you expand, and do you have any proof?
Watch "ORIGINS OF SPIRITUALITY - Predictions from May 2020 follow-up ! ESP Engineering & Mechanics" on RUclips
ruclips.net/video/pE_CJrqDGGU/видео.html
Mental illness or demon possession
Wheres your explanation Kevin?
At China Lake they dropped liquid lsd through our eyeballs,attacked us with chimp's,murdered people and electrocuted us to sync our brains aka split them into alters with amnesia walls.We got weed brownies at Frankfurt for guided meditation.You guy's need to get your weight up.
Oh I thought you were going to present the facts instead of telling me it’s a failure
After watching this, I suddenly realized I saw it coming!
Idk i find it funny that the type of person who falls into the overly skeptical is almost never a “creative” type. They always seem to be a very “black n white numbers” type of person and can’t see anything past what’s blatantly on the surface right in front of them. 100 years ago If you tried to describe the “internet” or any other incredible technology we use today these people they would have laughed in your face because their simple brains wouldn’t be open to something that isn’t already created or easily explained. I’m not saying this stuff if real but making jokes as if your skepticism is some sign of intelligence is funny……
I honestly don't think they are being honest to us about what the real purpose of CERN is.
couldnt finish the video since you clearly werent even interested in making this one in the first place...way to go !
Simon, would be interesting to interview people that participated in the Stargate project to tell their point of view, and maybe discuss more on the released declassified documents regarding analysis and perception on the phenomenons.
Terrible idea. This guy doesn't have the intelligence to interview such people due to his beyond closed off and limited mind. Let him play with stones instead
@@Johnkeav the irony...
Isn't your group the ones playing with stones? 💀
@@Johnkeav
Well, he was right to not believe in it. Some researchers redid the experiment and got wildly different results. They then went on to explain why, here's a link to another video explaining all of it. ruclips.net/video/DVZ2P5pe0-Q/видео.html&pp=ygUcaGFsZiBhcyBpbnRlcmVzdGluZyBzdGFyZ2F0ZQ%3D%3D
They’re are some interviews like that
Things we know about... but i swear, there is a wormhole stargate somewhere. :D
Simon, the ESP in your car is the Electronic Stability Program. It is what helps your car maintain traction on slippery surfaces.
I love how the Blaze is show creeping into every channel you have...steady on
A friend of mine, now deceased, used to do remote viewing for RAF Intelligence, based at RAF Rudloe Manor, a location known to many UFO enthusiasts. After Project Stargate and Grill Flame were declassified he started giving courses in Remote Viewing, one of which I attended. One of the recommended reading books was 'Psychic Warrior' by David Morehouse, a fascinating and enjoyable read, even if you don't believe in the 'woo woo' aspect of the phenomenon. During the course I was not a star pupil, but got enough 'hits' to convince me there was something in it. The course was 16 days over 8 weekends, but the participants in Stargate were trained for up to 18 months full time at Fort Meade, Maryland.
Hiiii! i really wanna learn remote viewing, how do I learn it?
Ever been sitting with a friend and both of you were thinking about the same food? Ever had a random impulse to look up from whatever you're doing and instantly make eye contact with someone staring at you? Or conversely, been observing someone who just happens to look up and make eye contact with you?
So our brains operate on electrical pulses, which can be read through our scalps with electrodes, and computers can map those readings and you can control RC cars, or videogames, or prosthetic limbs. So we know that those signals ARE making it past our skulls/scalps. It's really not that hard to think that an organ as sensitive as a brain might detect the overwash from another's synaptic discharges that occur during thoughts. If something is looking at you intently, and it's eyes are sending that information through nerves to the brain, and that brain is then also focusing on what it's seeing and actively cogitating over the visual input, and that intensity is being projected out as overwash, and your subconscious picks up on it, and recognizes that the image is YOU, you feel the subconscious directive to observe your observer and determine if they are a threat or not.
There's a type of fungus that kills a specific species of ant by growing through its brain. After the ant dies, the fungus then hijacks the ant, through the connections it used to kill, and then moves the ant to a location more desirable for this fungi's reproduction. First, that a fungus, with no nervous system that we can perceive, much less a central logic center like a brain, is interpreting information in the ant's brain about gravity, temperature, and humidity, ontop of already understanding the ants body and how its nervous system operates. This is like an IMac that speaks Windows, except that it literally has no processor whatsoever. The implications of this one parasitic relationship is truly terrifying if you really break it down.
Try intently observing a bird or cat or dog that's unaware of you, see if it doesn't make eye contact or some other reaction like becoming spooked and flees.
I don't think this particular concept is paranormal. I think it is simply beyond our science currently. Kind of like a lot of stuff has been that was treated as fantasy but has become reality: lasers, cellular phones, maglev transportation, gene editing, etc. Maybe some minds are more apt or conditioned to be able to detect, filter, and/or focus on synaptic pulses overwash. Maybe it's an ability that's in its infancy for our species' evolutionary arc. Maybe we just don't know enough about it to effectively test it, much less harnessing it. Some people are persuasive in ways that seem unnatural. Maybe they've subconsciously tapped into this and aren't really aware of it.
I think the idea has its merits, but is analogous to a person born blind trying to figure out what sight is.
I remember riding my bike on the trails out on our land when I was a kid, then suddenly stopping and getting a feeling like something terrible had happened. I didn't know what, so I started pedaling frantically back to the other side of our property. I get to half way there (about 1/2 mile) and stop to see what's up. Then I heard my dad shouting for help in the distance. He drove over one of our little log bridges with the tractor and it collapsed got pinned beneath the tractor. Thankfully his head was above water.
dam bro must of been terrifying
Dude they correctly predicted things like exactly where skylab was going to land BEFORE it happened. Its not just extreme deductive reasoning they quite literally predicted the future and proved it
Its quite telling that this “skeptic” dismisses remote viewing as a possibilty for human perception. Must be pretty simple minded to not comprehend that everything you see, touch, feel, taste etc is all an internal projection of external matter… Literally we walk around the earth actually completely insulated from whats outside of us and our only connection with the material world is the brain’s conglomerated estimation of what we encounter with sensory processing… everything you experience is a projection… it almost proves that remote viewing is entirely possible and probable if you understand the very basic nature of how consciousness is collected, projected and perceived in the brain. Makes the video creator’s assertion of falseness seem really basic and juvenile. How could someone flatly dismiss something so logically similar to the way the brain percieves local viewing?
Do u think when I random think about a person often,that their thinking of me
Why would they waste time and money if there was nothing to it?
Ya know, it's really sad to me that many intellectuals dismiss the existence of (proven) theories about spiritually (like the Gateway Process/Experience which literally proves the existence of astral projection, manifestation, different dimensions, and the spiritual or astral realm) because of their inability and unwillingness to open their mind to the possibilities of The Absolute/the universe/inner self/higher consciousness. We can LITERALLY ascend/transcend, as the CIA itself proved, and yet, many skeptics still remain. As an intellectual myself, I understand the skepticism because I once held the same beliefs, but I really realized how much was holding me back because of my own ego of wanting to be right/along with science being right, and therefore creating a further earthly tether, and it wasn't until I fully opened my mind to the possibilities of human consciousness that I was PROFOUNDLY humbled about how much I was incorrect about and how much I had yet to see and learn. I hope skeptics get to experience the freedom of transcendence at some point, because I pity my former skeptic self for how blind I was to the truth of ascension and interconnectedness with the universe. It's backed by science y'all 🤷🏻♀️ ancient eastern civilizations have been practicing this for CENTURIES for good reason. They know what they're talking about.
I recently started my spiritual journey to ascension. My family looks at me like I’m crazy but the truth is literally in front of everyone’s eyes they just refuse to open! I understand as it was overwhelming for me, it still is but I try keeping my vibrations high! Hoping one day I’ll be able to connect with my spiritual guides for better guiding. I recently found the gateway intermediate workbook so hoping I can take some of those exercises to ascend! 😊
They're playing a role.....
This is fascinating
This is occult demonology being practiced by our leaders. The Bible warns us against witchcraft and pay no attention to the warnings so here we are with a corrupt “free world” run by secret society occultists. Things like 9/11 happen when witches take over…
@@AM-nq7yk wow! My brother you are SPOT ON! And it's also insane how most people believe that they cannot perform at the same levels of divine as Jesus himself. The whole point of Jesus' life was to show us that everything he is doing we can also do since we are ALL Children of the Most High.
I would actually like to talk to you my brother. Very few people understand; those who do I try to associate with, even if it's online lol.
Lmk if you have like an Instagram or WhatsApp where I could message you. Much luv, and God Bless 🙌 🙏
Double slit experiment leads to entanglement which combined with big bang shows we are all interconnected and entangled at a single point in time so remote viewing could be accessing a map of the entangled world inside our brains
Whether or not it's real, I'm always cautious regarding testing of psychic abilities, specifically when it works "occasionally".
It's comparable to shooting a bow. If the arrow only sometimes hit's the target, that doesn't mean the bow doesn't work. Have all the variables been taken into account? Wind direction and speed, distance to the target, skill of the archer?
A similar principle could be applied to remote viewing. Is the technique actually ineffective, or are there certain variables not being considered, which could affect the accuracy of the reading?
I think similarly. Also to me investigating/testing to see if remote viewing has any promise wouldn’t have them dedicating millions of funds and 18 years towards? If it was such bullshit a month at least would of shown the CIA that.
Time is one huge variable.
Good point 👍
Something of immense scientific value such as psi can't be hidden for long. We need all studies to be peer-reviewed and openly published in scientific journals, and those studies must be reproduced in other, unaffiliated laboratories. Not based on drug trip some cia spook was on.
This is why the Berkeley study was so important. It was run by skeptics that refused to publish anything that wasn't repeatable and founded. The methods they came up with and results were valuable and substantial enough for the CIA and FBI to take over the program and publish the methodology, as well as science behind it. It was redacted for many years, but the documents have recently been released on the CIA website.
Simon the ESP button in your car is to deactivate the Electronic Stability Program, which is always on by default to electronically stabilize the vehicle during loss of traction.
I was 11 years old I lived in Rogers Arkansas I went to Westside elementary and that is where they came to test me for project Stargate, they tested me with their little cards on a side of a partition I could not see them I got 45 out of 50 cards right they proceeded to call my mother she declined my involvement however I do not believe for a second that I have not always been involved. This is the first time that I'm actually getting to tell someone about it that knows.
Have you tested yourself since and have you been successful?
I agree Simon, it does sound like lunacy but on the other hand, prove to me you exist?
If this is the stuff we know about imagine the stuff we don’t know about 🧐
Yeah imagine all the other super secret projects that didn't work
@@cattibingo And you will never know the ones that did!
Pretty sure they're still doing work on it somewhere; the opportunity to standardize and weaponize something like remote viewing is not one I think they'd give up too easy. Unless all of it was just a front for some other project the money was REALLY funnelled to, it seems very odd to spend millions on something you 'know' isn't a thing. Even as a distraction for an enemy. And the number of times the project gets 'dropped' only to be immediately picked up, renamed, and started all over again, is kinda telling.
I believe millions of tax payer dollars has been alloted to studies of Cocaine. The effects the mating in birds pigeons, doves and other avian species I'm sure they were grateful. Maybe a study following up with the post copulation cigarette......
It took 20 years of dabbling to decide there wasn't anything to it?
Or If there is something to it, do you think they would turn it into a black project?
Which is more likely?
Definitely a front, not even a single instance of psi has yet to be confirmed even with a large body of evidence found within parapsychological related scientific journals.
@@BoltRM Looks like a front to me, the document itself is a synthesis of bad 80s science fiction and the theosophical ideas of madame blavatsky. Who knows where the money actually went.
@@TheGuiltsOfUs lol. And somewhere some CIA or FBI specialist reads that, steeples his fingers and says "Good... they actually believe the 'false front' idea. They'll keep looking elsewhere and we can just keep publicly telling them about this and they just won't care because they think it's fake!"
Followed by maniacal laughter and lightning effects from like, one of the support crew people.
Strange as it sounds 25 years is a long time to experiment on something that doesn't work and there a few points in my life where only experience would bring belief
Should do a late April fools video about the Airforce running the Stargate program under Cheyenne mountain to explore alien world, recount the entire development of the program in a mega projects style video!
Given the comment about how much it cost to turn on the lights, the entire program would be an ongoing mega project.
@@hokutoulrik7345 funded of course by the technology they "discovered" down there every week.
I think he would looovvee that
SG1
Welp the cat is out of the bag now
I think the only differences between Megaprojects and Business Blaze are 1) Simon is sitting vs. standing and 2) Simon is in a different room (or at least is positioned with a different background).
AND. I. LOVE. EVERY. SECOND. OF. IT.
NOT ONCE did you mention the work done by Dr's Venkman, Stantz and Spengler. They did some amazing work in the '80s
The first thing that came to mind is
The Men Who Stare at Goats
L M F A O 😂
But the thing is you're not wrong!😂😂😂
OMFG this is LITERALLY the project upon which that story was based. Are you really that dense?
Mine was more of MK Ultra
That's actually a good start point. The book, not the movie.
George Clooney says that the movie based on real life in the military
I think it's a genius way to retrieve some information in a sketchy way, like from double espionage or by violating some constitutional right, and then cover up the source of the information with "Psychic guy told me! No law broken here!"
I've seen a trend of superstition in the USSR, so making them scramble and spend money on "psychic security" would be a double-win!
No law is broken except in the Bible it says not to have anything to do with psychics. But oh yeah church and state are separate. Except when you testify in court you raise your hand to so help you God tell the truth. Our money has in God we trust on it.
i think if you're going to do a report like this, you should do a more unbiased report
why should he ?
@@johns9543 considering how much the government sunk into the project, yes, he should be more unbiased, obviously the government took it seriously, it was worthy of investment.
I tried it and it actually works. Most people don’t make it far so it’s dismissed due to a minority succeeding. I learned there’s always a dude with a British accent trying to debunk this unfortunately😂
Have you never seen Simon before?
I agree, a more objective approach would have worked alot better. The film, Third Eye Spies and supporting declassified documents add alot to the argument that remote viewing has been and is used by US intelligence agencies.
I hope that after a year and criticism, you've changed the way that you talk about subjects. I don't see a reason on making a video about a subject just to mention that its nonsense through out the whole video. Yes the idea is crazy but nothing can be disproved because we know so little about anything. This is the type of behavior that made our technology advance so much slower than it should've had.
There is a duck in his sock draw.
Yeah fr he is clearly pressed about it all
I think this guy is very shallow in his thinking, lack of research or knowledge of consciousness. Already the power of altering consciousness is proven in the area of meditation, yoga, psychic reader and healers.
Admitting to having any special abilities or gifts is a good way to ruin your life or get you locked up in a mental institution, especially if the government finds out thru social media.
I find it interesting he claims to have an open point of view but continues to describe the project from a very pessimistic point of view. While things like this long been the topic of pseudoscience it is 2022 now and we have a lot more than just the stargate project as reference which this guys has either not heard about or not put in this video to further his own opinion. Keep an open mind and do not let your mind be swayed by the use of undermining language. Keep searching for the answers you’re looking for ❤️
This video is what happens when an NPC who has never had a psychic experience tries to discuss very real investigations into the psychic reality.
@A2 Let me instead hold a mirror up to your own psychic experiences which, as a real human and not an NPC, I'm sure you've had. Yes?
i’m not quite sure how to take the skepticism when you know they would not waste such money if it didn’t not amount to something , trust if you apply the practice they cia used which anyone can do then you’d notice some very odd occurrences to say the least lol
Well, he was right to not believe in it. Some researchers redid the experiment and got wildly different results. They then went on to explain why, here's a link to another video explaining all of it. ruclips.net/video/DVZ2P5pe0-Q/видео.html&pp=ygUcaGFsZiBhcyBpbnRlcmVzdGluZyBzdGFyZ2F0ZQ%3D%3D
Wow - this is the first time Simon sounds clueless.🧐😅😂🤣
I am psychic. I predict this video concludes people are gullible.
🤣🤣
How DO you do that?
Im a bridge salesman. Can I set up a booth at your next psychic show?
Tried watching, but the host's flip, dismissive attitude of the paranormal was ignorant and off putting.
I will forever believe in The Men Who Stare at Goats
SOUNDS LIKE ONE OF THE WAYS THE GOVERNMENT OFFICILS LINED THEIR POCKETS.
It was 20 million dollars over 20 years that is actually incredibly tiny for military projects. We spent 1 TRILLION in the middle east in 9 years
There was this one guy back in the late 70s who said he saw a statue with the name Elon Musk on Mars in the future and the CIA kicked him out of the program.
Any evidence of this _anywhere?_ Or did some guy just _say_ that happened? Sounds mildly interesting. James Randi is a hero of mine though.
@@Digitalhunny Its true, I heard it from my cousin's dad's sister's niece's grandpa.
@@Digitalhunny It was a joke. Just making fun of how ridiculous that would have sounded 45 years ago.
Being close-minded residing in base consciousness with a slightly annoying air of superiority aren't your best features brother.
The South Park where Cartman was a psychic detective was a flawless episode .
I turned this video off halfway through because of the frustration with a sort of snarky cocky jokingly attitude that sort of got in the way of me learning about the topic
This falls squarely into the category of "disinformation programming".
Yeah ive never seen someone make such a long video where they completely ignore all the actual evidence for what they're trying to disprove. You dont accidently make a video on this topic and ignore all of the best evidence for why it exists. unless youre trying to make people think it doesn't exist when it actually does
I think the movie "Men Who stare at goats" is about this very topic!
you are correct
Indeed. The book as well.
I think I understand the CIA's impulse to at least try this. Here's what it reminds me of: one of my hobbies is metal detecting. I've done it quite a bit since starting 3 years ago, not found anything fantastic, a few silver coins and mysterious items that look very old, but mostly just trash that litterers tossed on the ground. The instrument gives you a reading that indicates a range of metals that the object COULD be, but obviously alloys are a problem, as is the fact that some of the most valuable metals are close in range to the least valuable, namely, gold and aluminum (as in, this target is almost certainly a beverage can ..... but it could be a gold ring, so the question is, do you bother digging it?).
But one thing that never gets old is the basic sense of having something like a magical power, something most people don't have. You look at an area of grass in front of you and it all looks the same, but I can assure you there are metal objects under the surface; I may not know what they are, but I can tell the exact 8-inch-or-so spot where each of them is. This has even proven a heroic power, as when it took me about 5 minutes to find a friend's eyeglasses that had fallen out of his pocket and into fallen leaves "somewhere" in his back yard.
So when I lose something, even something non-metal, I have this automatic impulse that there should be something I can grab and use it to locate the item quickly. Or even when I'm out metal detecting, when I begin to get sore from all the walking, squatting and digging, usually hot, sweaty and mosquito-bitten because I live on the Gulf Coast, I start to wish my detector could do more, like why can't I just wave it around me in the air, and have some kind of flags appear above all the targets in a 50 x 50 foot area or something?! LOL. Same goes for when I watch something about a missing person, why isn't there a device for that? If the police have access to a cadaver dog that's better than nothing, but it can't detect a body buried deep, or in some weird location.
So (FINALLY) going back to the CIA. Here they have spies, people who go into enemy territory to learn information, and they have equipment to gather some kinds of information from a distance, without endangering a citizen's life or trusting one that could be (or become) a traitor. But the instruments are unable to distinguish between important and unimportant information the way a person could. So I picture them CONSTANTLY having a desire to combine the strengths and eliminate the weaknesses of men and machines, to have people who can quickly and remotely just KNOW stuff, ha. It's a perfectly understandable desire, but just as silly as the ones I have from being a small time superhero.
Sorry. Didn't have time to read your autobiography there.
@@price41899 It never ceases to amaze me how people like you think it's a good burn to say you're not much of a reader. Slow clap for you Honey.
@@audreymuzingo933 thank you
@@price41899 Any time!
Here are some things to consider:
1) When people were trying to create the first airplane, newspapers around the world disparaged the inventors and said that it would be a million years till humans could fly (the New York Times said that) .
2) When Tesla made his birthday speech and said that one day images and voices will be sent through the air across the globe, his own friends openly said that he lost his mind. He was ridiculed (even though he had created alternating current, radio transmission, and a host of other things).
3) When acupuncture was becoming popular in the West, people laughed it off and mocked it. There were many, many jokes about putting needles in your arm. It was mocked as pseudo science. But now it is well established as useful in increasing circulation to damaged areas (we studied its ability to correct frostbite when I was in the military).
This video and his silly behavior will NOT age well. I guarantee it.
Perhaps the button in your car says ESC? (Electronic Stability Control) If it does say ESP, it may stand for Electronic Stability Program. They're both the same thing though; a system in the car that makes minor adjustments 100's of times a second during a skid to help maintain traction, and thus the ability for you to steer.
Well now I know! Thank you :). Yes, entirely possible I was mistaken on the letters, I'll have a look next time I'm in it :)
ah, as does my keyboard
This is, in fact, false. The button is for Extra Sensory Perception. Coincidently also used for slip and skid management ... so overall you are correct I guess.
Most Euro and asian automakers go with ESP: Daimler, Audi, Fiat, Ford, etc. BMW and Mazda use DSC. Some brands use a trademarked name: eg. Stabilitrak
@@miroslavhoudek7085 haha in fact you dont need to push it, it already knows when you're gonna need it.
Sorry but they didnt dabble at all.....they went in full and developed procedures for such things as remote viewing, after a period of studying several subjects.
It works but the info isnt always 100%....but there have been major hits showing that it works.
Or you could actually ask remote viewer, but anyone who's know anything about this stuff wouldnt be watching this video
Like myself
Well, from personal experience, I can say that ESP IS a real phenomenon. My father, who I lived with for 5 years of my adolescent life, was psychic......and not just a little bit!! He was always on point.......of course he spent a large portion of his life exercising this ability, which is something that I believe must be done vigorously if one hopes to achieve positive results. 🤯😱😂🤣
There was a time where me being able to view your content being many miles away from you was considered witchcraft or an outlandish fantasy. Nothing is impossible
Motor mouth genius is just scratching the surface.
Another debunking mockery vid whilst ptetending to be oh..so very reasonable
I consider myself a critical thinker. Yet there is a surprisingly fine line between "skepticism" and "blind faith", which in my opinion has been more detrimental than the other way around lately.
Yes - they have often been wrong. However, we're not talking about "will the eagle or the lord fall" here, are we? I mean, the odds aren't 50:50 or anything.
For example - there was a crash in the African jungle in 1979. The plane was "intensively" searched for - unsuccessfully. Subsequently they deployed a "sensitive individual" who used "remote viewing" to determine:
- the coordinates
- the name of the country
- and described the terrain
And they found the plane there.
I'm not saying this proves anything - but you certainly can't say that if you run a project and have them guess positions across the planet/continent, the result of "sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't" is proof that it's a fluke.
I obviously don't know the success/failure ratio. However, to explain finding a plane in Africa by pure chance, how many repetitions would you need? I'd say we're talking in the upper millions.
Understandably - I don't know what input the medium had and to what extent she could therefore refine her "guess". However, the custom is to tell the media less rather than the other way around in similar cases.
At the very least, I find this topic interesting enough that I wouldn't automatically break my stick over it. Too many previously "impossible" things have been happening lately that the best thing you can do is keep an open mind and focus on the data, not preconceptions.
I'm allergic to this "blind" skepticism lately. There was a recent study that documented the occurrence of UAP over Ukraine. According to the available data, there are objects moving 10 times faster than what we have available.
The US military has reached out to Avi Loeb (physicist) for comment. He looked at the data and his conclusion, "it's wrong because it doesn't make sense, so it must be wrong. You have to divide it by 10, then it will be right and I'll tell you it's artillery shells." (paraphrase).
This isn't "skepticism", this is an obtuseness that prevents us from progressing, not the other way around. Avi Loebe may be right (likely in the outcome), but this approach has nothing to do with science.
------- Sources to verify the above
1. The Lost Airplane:
Unlike other cases, here we have two credible sources that you can check.
The first is a published CIA document. Its number:
CIA-RDP96-00787R000200020022-6
It's available at cia.gov.
The second is a quote from President Jimmy Carter. It is available on the CNN website. It is the "News Briefs" of September 21, 1995. Verbatim:
ATLANTA, Georgia (CNN) -- Former President Jimmy Carter said the CIA, without his knowledge, once consulted a psychic to help locate a missing government plane in Africa. Carter told students at Emory University that the "special U.S. plane" crashed somewhere in Zaire while he was president.
According to Carter, U.S. spy satellites could find no trace of the aircraft, so the CIA consulted a psychic from California. Carter said the woman "went into a trance and gave some latitude and longitude figures. We focused our satellite cameras on that point and the plane was there."
Carter made the disclosure after two students asked if he was aware of any government evidence pointing to the existence of extraterrestrials. "I never knew of any instance where it was proven that any sort of vehicle had come from outer space to our country and either lived here or left," the former president said.
2. UFOs over Ukraine
Original study:
Unidentified aerial phenomena I. Observations of events. B.E. Zhilyaev, V.N. Petukhov, V.M. Reshetnyk. 2022.
Avi Loeb Reactions:
"DOWN TO EARTH" LIMITS ON UNIDENTIFIED AERIAL PHENOMENA
its the same as claiming there is no skill involved in hitting a home run just pure chance because most of the time homeruns aren't hit. Imagine being so much of a "skeptic" that you argue someone randomly hit a 1/1,000,000,000 chance multiple times rather than accepting that it wasn't just luck.
Novel ahead.
I'm not going to claim that this stuff is real or not. There are some interesting things that are hard to explain, not that they aren't explainable. I do find it fun to consider "what if". who am i hurting. What got me curious on the subject was from a personal experience that happened before i ever even heard of remote viewing or gave a thought to esp or whatever else. I don't practice this stuff at all or think about it much. too busy working and taking care of a family, but I did find myself down the rabbit hole for about half a year or so after I became interested in lucid dreaming years ago. I kept a dream journal and all that in college for a short while after i found a book called "hitchhikers guide to lucid dreaming". Fun read. Recommend
Now the experience. I had a dream that I recorded, which is something you do to aid in becoming consciously aware in your dreams, and it came accurately true to a surprising degree just a few months later that has me still thinking about it from time to time almost a decade later, and scratching my head. The dream was of me filling in a trench by shovel about 4 feet deep, 3 feet wide, and 50 feet or so long. I was accompanied by a tall skinny guy also with a shovel, white t shirt, jeans, blond hair to his shoulders. the trench was along side an ugly light blue house going from the sidewalk out front, to the back yard. No shi#, I found myself doing a working interview for a job in Oregon, I'm from CA (born and raised. save ur apologies, im not happy about it either), and it was a plumbing job that was something I never saw myself doing, nor had i considered living in orego at that time either. When I found myself filling in this trench on my first day in real life, in oregon, I experienced intense de ja vu as i looked across the trench at the other guy backfilling. It made me pause for a bit, then I remembered I had dreamed of this exact event months prior with striking similiarities. Like over 80% at least. And what still has me scratching my head over it is the question, "how many similarities or coincidences do there need to be before its not a coincidence". The dream was from the very same visual perspective as when I had the de ja vu. Idk. I've never experienced anything like it before or since. I'm a very average working family man. But that happened wether u believe it or not, or think it's just a coincidental thing that happened, but I've been confused about it whenever it pops in my head ever since. I guess I just have a hard time saying it was all coincidence. There is just too much for me to brush it off. The dream was just so dang spot on. The trench, the house, the guys appearance and outfit, the fact that I wasn't even looking for that type of work when I had the dream, the visual perspectives matching up. Idk. Do what u will with that story. Thanks for reading
Hmmm...this episode has inspired me to spin up my copy of The Men Who Stare at Goats...
The sneering and mocking are ever so trendy but not very scientific. It must be great to be so smart you can run a RUclips channel on smirking down your nose at all the silly stupid people. Whatever you’re hawking I lost interest in 3 minutes in. I can get my sneer overload from reddit if I feel deprived
Of course this person was the first video to pop up on the topic... He's an agent!
I think certain people are more intune with this kind of stuff than others.
Things like gut feeling, premonitions in dreams, dreaming of future events or interactions that lead to a certain outcome or being able to feel peoples emotions or intentions ect ect.
I knew a girl who was very, as I called her 'witchy' who was very tuned into this stuff, not reading minds and sci-fi stuff like that but just more intune with information we don't all pick up on.
My 2 cents
I picked up a few of those types of girls by doing cold reads! They can be such fun! Also explains events like Manson.
@@boriskortiak320 not another cringe ass pick up artist
True, I've often dreamed of places and buildings I've never seen before...only to visit them years later.
@@Clay3613 youre most likely experiencing confirmation bias and context effects. Youre probably going places in your mind all the time, when you then experience some of them for real, they become singled out and they form a stronger memory.
I think some people are just very attentive and constantly mull over things in their head. Sometimes people do this thing where they simulate every outcome of a scenario constantly, and therefore they seem in tune with everything
"It's no sign of health to be adjusted to a profoundly sick society. "Krishnamurti.
They didnt dabble they researched and developed it for 22 years. The archives of this effort have been published in 4 enormous volumes
where can it be accessed?
There’s no way I could be skeptical about the possibility when so many smart people and some much money didn’t have enough scientific evidence to carry out
Simon, you have to make the project that responds to this project: project alpha. Carried out by the great James Randi.
That should be the first episode in Simon’s sceptic’s channel!
Randi wasn't great. He did a social service by exposing frauds and swindlers. Good on him. On the other hand he also misled many people by denying the possibility of extra sensory perception. ESP is real. There is deep reason why it is difficult to prove to the masses. When the flower blooms the Bee comes unbidden.
Well, he *did* do a Biographics on James Randi. And that video was AMAZING.
@@stefanschleps8758 ESP is real.... if you don't look at it too closely.
@@stefanschleps8758 Also, Randi explicitly said in multiple occasions, that supernatural phenomena might exist, but it had never been demonstrated to him, and all practitioners he'd met were either deluded or deceptive.
Simon, you need to educate all those professional academics and statisticians that concluded that the chance that these are just lucky guesses across the years of research was on the order of 1 in 10,000,000,000 . (Nice subtle dismissal of Utts btw, I notice you did not cast the same light on her skeptic colleague who came to the exact same statistical conclusion. Those poor mistaken statisticians never considered that with so many experiments there would have been some accurate results by chance. Unfortunate sods. No there is no such thing as people who think they are healthy skeptics when they are more accurately described as closed minded deniers who are too lazy to look close enough at the protocols and data to arrive at a careful and objective conclusion. I'm really glad those kind of people don't exist.
you had way too much fun making this, didn't you?
You ever watch his business blaze channel? If he doesn't snort a ton of blow he's certainly acts like it LOL not a jab at him and even if he did I don't judge but I find it pretty funny. I think I would party with Simon if I had the chance
@@jonathanperry8331 hahahaha so true man he’s always SO hyped during those videos 😂
This was a fun one.
Simon, the more I watch your videos, the more I realize America isn't normal...
A person sitting continents away from me is telling me face to face that it is impossible to look inside the buildings thousands of miles away.
I mean, ... I give up.
Digital remoting is science.
This guy is the man on RUclips that I have to slow down to listen to the content
After a month my recommendation would ve filled up with Simon's channels only
He’s literally keeping RUclips in champagne! Keep up the good work Simon! 🤣🤣
excellent
Cartman: I'm a psychic and you are worse. I have super-awesome powers and you don't.
It's fine to be a skeptic but to dismiss something out of hand, and not only that but also by mocking it as ridiculous, before even looking into it, is disappointing. This channel is known for being relatively factual. There's enough factual material to talk about on this topic, without having to dip into the fantastic or ridiculous. But that's not the road taken. It's just a big joke.
Your sat watching RUclips. And have just spilt your coffee on the floor. You may be reading this and think how on earth did you know this.
Simon? Why are you staring at that goat?
After 1995 cell phones, GPS and surveillance cameras made the Stargate project unnecessary.
I feel Simon will be on the CIA watch list !!
The “ESP” button in your car stand for
(electronic skid protection). If you don’t know what that means do not press it, or you’re going to crash 🤣🤣🤣
My aunt was one of the psychics that was hired by the government. She told me all kinds of storys of them finding missing people and criminals. I have heard the most insain storys about her from my whole family.
Clearly, your family just has the most potent brains.
So, where is Jimmy Hoffa then? Have you ever asked her this?
I had a friend who worked with someone who was part of this project (on the CIA side) apparently it was and still is some crazy stuff
I understand why most people just dismiss this stuff out of hand, make a clever joke and whatnot, but this stuff is pretty fascinating when you dig into the facts, no matter what side you fall on the subject. There are, undeniably, plenty of con artists out there, but maybe we don't have all the answers yet, and maybe we should take a second before we pass a judgment, and close a door in our minds..maybe.
Also, opinions are like ani.
P.S. Great vid as always FactBoi
@@johnathonherring2583 They are all either Scam artists or mentally ill. I hate the first group and feel terrible for the latter.
Constantly mocking it, something is off. I call it Fear
I'm surprised Simon didn't suggest any of those cases solved by Psychics may very well have been committed by the psychics. Honestly though... One of the tricks to being a psychic or a medium is to..... Actually listen to someone... which is something law enforcement is really bad at doing.
Very good point!
Well, law enforcement isn't known for working too hard are they? Why work hard and be effective when you can have a massive ego complex and be a sexist, racist a hole who gets paid too much by the government to do too little and still find way to always complain.
@@joeblow9657 Around 10... 15 years ago? There was a girl who was CLEARLY kidnapped in my home state of Kentucky. Parents found her car sitting in the driveway, and her phone was lying on the drivers seat and had 9 and 1 dialed. Clearly she was trying to call 911. Parents reported it. Police REFUSED to put out a missing person report and kept telling the parts "She's done runned away. She'll come back in a day." She was still alive at this point. Her uncle had taken her and was assaulting her and killed her when she said she was gonna tell her dad about it. There are entire police departments that aren't there to do their job. Their goal is to make work go away. That's why on a LOT of people end up falsely accused. Police look at the first possible person and tunnel vision. I believe this is an episode of the modern Cold Case Files on Netflix.
@@Varizen87 muh'authority. Also, that's such a fucking sad but way too common story
@@Varizen87 Warren vs district of Columbia. Not saying its right (it fucking isn't,) but the Supreme Court told all us tax payers to go fuck ourselves back in 1981.