Shawn Ryan Show - #154 Skip Atwater - Bizarre Alien Encounter, Remote Viewing Mars and Psychic Operations
Episode Date: January 2, 2025Skip Atwater is a notable figure in remote viewing and psychic research. He served in counterintelligence during the Cold War and was instrumental in launching the U.S. Army's Stargate Project, where ...he recruited and trained intelligence officers to conduct remote viewing for the Department of Defense and other national intelligence agencies. After retiring from the Army, Atwater became the Research Director at The Monroe Institute, focusing on the expansion of human consciousness. He authored "Captain of My Ship, Master of My Soul" and has published a plethora of technical research. He currently serves as President of the International Remote Viewing Association (IRVA), has been featured on a wide variety of radio programs and documentaries about psychic phenomena, and speaks at seminars and conferences worldwide to share his expertise in remote viewing and consciousness exploration. Shawn Ryan Show Sponsors: https://patriotmobile.com/srs Skip Atwater Links: Website - https://www.irva.org Book - https://captain-of-my-ship.com Please leave us a review on Apple & Spotify Podcasts. Vigilance Elite/Shawn Ryan Links: Website | Patreon | TikTok | Instagram | Download Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Skip Atwater, welcome to the show.
Thank you very much.
I have heard a lot about you from several of the previous guests.
I've read about you.
I've seen documentaries about you,
you're a hard band to reach.
Been trying to make contact for quite a while
and Joe and Scooter finally,
they were the ones that made the connection.
So I just wanna say thank you to Joe and Scooter.
I'm glad to be here.
It's an honor to have you here.
But everybody gets an introduction here,
so we'll knock that out first.
Frederick Holmes, Skip Atwater.
You were a counter spy during the Cold War era
where you used your natural psychic aptitude
as a US Army counterintelligence special agent.
You played a key role in the remote viewing intelligence program now known to the world by the code name Stargate.
For 10 years you were
the operations and training officer of this secret remote viewing program.
You recruited and trained an elite cadre of professional intelligence officers to do remote viewing for the Department of Defense
and various members of the national intelligence community.
After retiring from the army,
you became president of the Monroe Institute in Virginia
in your book project 8200 UFO UAP Bases and Activities,
the original remote viewing transcripts.
You show us the results of Pat Price's famous exploration
of four mountains around the world
where Price believed UFO bases were located.
You're the author of Captain of My Ship,
Master of My Soul, Living with Guidance.
You have been featured in several film documentaries,
including Ghosts in the Afterlife,
A Scientific Investigation and Third Eye Spies.
Sure, I'm missing quite a bit there, but that's quite-
That's a big pile is what you're going to get.
That is, that is, that is.
But, you know, I'm just,
I have been fascinated with this subject for many years now.
And with every person that I interview,
I just get more intrigued.
And you have been involved in this almost
since the very beginning, from what I understand.
And so some of the things that I would just, I would like two main things I would like to do
in this interview is one to cover your life story
and how you kind of got involved in this.
And I would also like to go over, you know,
the history of the Stargate program
and kind of how it came on the map
for United States intelligence.
Yes.
Perfect.
I can talk about all that.
Perfect.
But before we get too in the weeds,
I have a Patreon account.
Patreon, it's a subscription account, there are top supporters.
A lot of these folks have been with us
since the very beginning,
and they're the reason I get to sit here
and you're here as well.
And so one of the things I do is I offer them
the opportunity to ask every guest a question.
And so this question is from Jay.
What neurological structures in the brain
are responsible for these altered states of consciousness?
Is it simply dreaming?
That is an interesting question
because we've been thinking about the brain for a long time
and the brain is this and the brain is that.
And it used to be thought of hundreds of years ago
of that's just to keep your head warm.
They don't know what the brain is
and what's going on up there.
But it's something that, you know,
over the past 50, 100 years has become
the answer to everything.
If it's this is, oh, it's in the brain.
You have to fix this part of the brain right here.
That's what's wrong with it.
And so him asking this question is a reasonable one,
given the education we have now.
I'm not so sure that 50 years from now,
that will be much of a question
because it seems that all these things that people do,
whether it's remote viewing or whatever they call it,
seems to have something to do with quantum non-locality
or the everywhere, every win of all information.
What was the, what did you call it first, the quantum?
Quantum non-locality is a technical term for it,
but they had to invent that 60 years ago
because they didn't know what was going on.
There's lots of science on saying that there's no space
and there's no time.
And these people, we'll just call them remote viewers
because it's a good thing to use as a name.
Not that I like them so much, but that's okay.
Everybody calls them remote viewing.
What do you call it?
I attempt to list out several different things.
Are you psychic?
Is that the word that one should use?
It's a word that people toss around a lot.
Are you clairvoyant?
Are those words that you toss and pass around?
But Ingo Swann kind of coined the word remote viewing
because when he went to work with Stanford Research
Institute, they didn't want to say, well, we're training psychics here. because when he went to work with Stanford Research Institute
they didn't want to say, well, we're training psychics here.
And there's no, let's just call it, you know
remote viewing that would probably be better
which I've gotten sidetracked in talking a lot here
but it's not really remote viewing
because there's nothing that's remote.
Everything is all one thing.
That's the quantum non-locality.
So these people that are doing the remote viewing
have the ability to perceive everywhere and every when.
And some of them decide to call it this
and call it that and call it that
and call it this, but it looks an awful lot,
at least for the next 50 years,
to be quantum non-locality.
And I limit that 50 year thing because each unit of time,
like there is no time, right?
Each unit of time we go through,
suddenly things are different.
I mean, wasn't the earth flat at one time
and wasn't everything orbiting around us?
No, it's us going around the sun.
Hmm, that's an interesting idea.
And those kinds of large breakthroughs in science
takes a while for us to figure them out.
And generations to figure them out.
So I can only think that maybe in the future generations,
it won't be what we think it is now.
Makes a lot of sense.
Makes a lot of sense.
So back to the original question.
So it's not a dream.
Well, then we've defined something called a dream.
And by using the word dream, we all tell ourselves,
oh, that wasn't really real.
That was just a dream.
Perhaps it's a different kind of knowing
and it's coded when you have a dream about this, this and this.
So, you know, what that really was is
how important things are to me when I think about this
and I had a dream about it
and it reminded me when this happened and that happened.
I don't think there's anybody who really knows
what a dream is, except that they go,
oh, it's just a dream, don't worry about it.
So do you, this is interesting.
Do you, and I know this is gonna tie into your childhood
too, I think, but do you think that every dream
needs to be
deciphered and dissected and decoded?
If you mean just tell my wife what my dream was,
yeah, I think that's a good thing to talk about.
No, I don't think that it's a thing to be
decoded and figured out and you should go see
your psychiatrist and say,
I need help understanding this dream.
I don't think that.
It's a matter of, obviously there are people
who have real problems with that
and they should see the proper help things.
But it's not, it's just, it's a passing thing.
When you talk, what was, I'm sorry,
what was the terminology again?
Quantum. Quantum non-locality. Quantum non-locality. It's a passing thing, you know. When you talk, what was, I'm sorry, what was the terminology again, quantum?
Quantum non-locality.
Quantum non-locality.
And then comes from quantum physics,
which is a brand new thing, only 60 years old,
and making it simpler.
There's no space, no time.
Everything is everywhere, every wind.
And I'm gonna go too far on this.
People turn the channel off.
That guy's all.
Oh no, they're not gonna turn the channel off.
Because the reason I'm asking is I don't understand.
I've tried to talk about this so many times
and it's just over my head.
And so when we say there's no space and no time
and everything's happening all at once in the now, correct?
Yes.
What does that mean?
So what was yesterday?
If there's no space, no time, there's no yesterday.
But it's past.
There's no past and no future
because it's all happening at once.
What, but how?
Because that's the way it is.
It's a very interesting thing to ask those questions
because many, many, many different people,
thousands, millions of people and different cultures
have come along and tried to answer all those questions. So I think what that means is that's the right question.
The fact that they can't answer it,
but in what I've been doing for a number of years
says that this information we get
can only have come to this person one way.
And that's the fact that they know this
because they didn't read it in a book.
They know this because they didn't get a phone call saying,
you ought to watch out for this.
They got a message from beyond space and time
and came up with some information that proved to be true.
So if everything's happening all at once, all the time,
and there is no time,
then that means every,
you could break it down into,
you could break a millisecond down into a what?
A nanosecond and break that down.
And it just continuously, it never ends.
You can just keep dissecting.
And so does that mean,
where is all this happening all at once?
That means everything's happening all at once.
So that means what I just said two seconds ago
is happening again, correct?
There's no again, if it's all at once.
Help me understand this.
I just thought of a joke in my head when you were talking.
It was like, you know, he's trying a second chance.
And I snipped the word second.
Yeah.
I'm glad to be of help, but I am as confused about it too,
except for things happen in my life and other people too,
that say, it's funny you brought that up
because I was just thinking about that too.
And do you think that means this and this?
And it's like, well, how could you have thought about it
yesterday morning and I think about it two days later
and it's the same thing.
Doesn't that mean there's a little hint
that we are all one together?
And I use a gesture that you might wanna cut out,
but I always say-
God.
I don't, yes, God is a religious word.
We're getting off track here, but it's in my head.
There is, I saw
interesting street scene done with Muslims
and the guy was driving up in a taxi or a car
and all the little kids came around and said,
give me, give me, give me, give me, give me, give me.
And the guy got out of the car and went like that
and they walked away from him.
Because everything that comes to you
comes from what we believe in.
Not by me giving you quarters or whatever out the window.
And it was an interesting, in the movie,
it was an interesting lesson he was teaching those kids.
They're used to trying to find something to eat
and run down the street and chase anybody
that looks like a foreigner or whoever
to give them some money and make their life better.
And this guy got out and he just went like that.
And all the kids are like.
Interesting.
So if no time, so I,
I'm trying to understand the concept
of no time, everything's happening at once,
but what is the space when you say there's no space?
What does that mean?
Well, we, if in my mind, if I back up hundreds of years
and watch the way people have organized
what they thought was
space like we talked about a minute ago in terms of the earth is the center of everything.
And everything else goes around the earth. And then you think, well, no, look at it.
We've measured out over the years and we found out that not everything is the center of the
earth.
As a matter of fact, if you look,
there's things out there, they're really strange.
And there's a bunch of things out there
and we're calling those planets.
Well, how do you know it's doing that?
Well, it took a long time for guys to figure it out
and watch it happen.
So, we are beginning to think now that this thing we call space is infinite.
There isn't a place where, well, when do we stop having planets and suns and stars?
And it's a good question because some of them say,
everything was supposed to collapse back in
billion years from now
and start all over again with a big bang.
And then time went by and the scientists looked him out
and said, all of those things aren't coming back.
They just keep going further and further and further away
until as time passes, like there really is time,
it will be so far away we can't see it anymore.
Well, then are we alone in the universe? What's space all about?
That's interesting. So, because the universe is expanding. So, we will hit up, and they
can see the beginning, they can see the Big Bang from what I understand is
supposedly correct. They happened however many, you know.
And so, and I will challenge that statement,
not that it's a big deal.
Yes, the Big Bang is the thing.
Well, how much longer, how, will that stick?
Will that always be, that's the way it is?
Or a hundred years from now, 200, 500 years from now,
they will say, you know that Big Bang thing
just doesn't work.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, Pluto's no longer a planet.
Lots of things change.
But I'm just always fascinated in the subject.
I'm trying to wrap my head around it.
And I don't, maybe I just don't have the IQ level to comprehend
it.
What?
No, I think you're the one that's supposed to ask those questions and share those answers
with the world around you.
That's who you are.
Thank you.
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Well, Skip, let's get into your story real quick before we do.
Everybody gets a gift here.
Oh, yeah?
Nothing crazy, just a little something for the ride home.
Those are Vigilance Elite gummy bears.
Oh, boy.
Yeah, I hope you like candy.
A real treat.
Yeah.
Made here in the USA, Michigan.
But. Oh But thank you.
I will bring that home to my family and I'll say, really?
Oh, those look really good.
Right on, right on.
Well, Skip, like I had mentioned at the beginning, you're a massive part,
played a massive role in the Stargate program and, and remote viewing and, and,
and in U.S. intelligence. And so I want to talk about your journey on, on how that all came about.
And so let's kind of start with, let's start in childhood. Where did you grow up?
You started childhood, where did you grow up? I grew up in Southern California and my dad was a dentist
and my mother's father was a dentist.
So the family business was dentistry for them.
And there were a couple of kind of childhood things
that were interesting to me because
they seemed normal to me
because they were happening in the family.
And then as I got older, I would say,
well, you know, I got kind of a weird family.
And it sounds like I didn't like them
because they were weird.
It was more of a casual comment about that.
My mom used to talk to animals that died,
a cat or a dog or whatever thing,
and they'd tell us kids and said, but they're fine.
I talked to them and they're gonna be okay and so forth.
And I was like, okay, mom, I'm going to school.
and they're going to be okay and so forth. And I was like, okay, mom, I'm going to school.
And I guess one of the stories
is an interesting bed-wetting story.
When I was 10 or a little bit younger than 10,
I was still wetting my bed, but I wasn't teased about it.
It was just a thing that I had to pull the sheets
off the bed and run them through the washer
and then make the bed again.
And it was, but it wasn't teasing or anything else.
Of course, I felt a little of that at school,
but people would talk about that.
And one night I woke up in bed and the bed was all wet
One night I woke up in bed and the bed was all wet.
And I was screaming and mad at what had happened because there was no reason for this.
It was an embarrassing thing for me
with two older sisters and school kids talking about it.
So my mother came in, are you all right?
Did you fall out of bed?
Did you get hurt? Why are you screaming?, are you all right? You fell out of bed, did you get hurt?
Why are you screaming?
What's it all about?
And I said, I went into the bathroom
and I sat on the toilet.
And when I began to pee, I woke up here in bed
and now my bed's all wet.
And, you know, very angry, very,
really outspoken about it.
There's a joke in the end, it really pissed me off. At any rate, my mom put her arm around me and she said,
oh, it's okay, it's okay, it'll be okay.
And I was like, why are you so cool about it?
I didn't say anything.
She says, you know, sometimes you're in your body
and sometimes you're not in your body.
So when you go into the bathroom,
you have to make really sure that you went to the bathroom
because it's obvious you didn't.
And we go back to the discussion of dreams.
Maybe you dreamed you went into the bathroom
and you didn't, and you peed your bed again.
Well, that left a idea in my head.
As the days rolled by and weeks rolled by,
it was like, what does she mean by you're not in your body?
And so I would kind of practice at night
and found that I could get up and look out the window
and then look back and I was in bed.
And I said, that's pretty weird.
And as time went on, I would jump out the window
and I'd, my out of body state would jump out the window
and I learned to trust that.
So when you say, let's rewind for just a second.
When you say you would get out of bed
and look out the window and then you would look back
and you would be in bed,
I mean, how old were you when this started happening?
Right around 10?
It would be over 10.
So maybe in the next year or two,
those things started to happen.
Do you remember the first time that happened?
Yes.
What were you thinking?
Made an impression.
Well, I wanted to go out and play with my friends.
I found the first thing that I ran into
when I'd go away from my sleeping self in bed,
that I was in some sort of school situation,
like night school or something.
I was in something called night school.
But then when I got a little bit older,
I started going to find my friends.
Where's Mikey down the road?
Well, hey, what if I go over here and find this?
And they were out of their bodies too,
although they didn't realize it like I did.
And so that became part of my life growing up.
So does that mean when you interact
with somebody in a dream,
you believe they are also out of body?
I can't answer that question.
I can only say what my experience was.
And the question is, are they out of body?
And I'm not so sure that we use the term out of body.
It happens in the hospitals and dying events
and everything else.
And so we've classified that as,
oh, you were out of your body.
And then I say, wait a minute, Skip, wait a minute.
You're everywhere, every when.
There's not a being in the body,
you're being out of the body.
So I had to just, well, I shouldn't talk so much
because I don't know what the heck's going on anyways.
The next thing that was kind of like that,
telling the story of the weird family I grew up with,
which contributes to my eventual career.
When I was older and was into high school
and cars and stuff like that,
I got a car from my dad's nurse.
She gave me a car and I crawled underneath
and started taking it apart
and everything.
My dad was really liberal.
It was okay if I took stuff apart and the garage got dirty
and he'd look under the car and say,
how you doing down there?
You making any progress?
And he would very much,
and let me find out for myself
and let me figure it out for myself.
And got that taken care of.
And then later I bought my uncle's car for $100,
54 Ford.
And immediately I went to the other uncle
who gave me a 292 engine,
which I had punched out 60,000s
with a racing cam in it and so forth and so on.
But there was something else going on.
I could look at the car, laying underneath it
and look at it and say, oh, I see what's wrong.
The exhaust pipe bracket is loose
and it wasn't something that I could see physically.
It was like I could see through it.
And later in life, I learned they had a name for that
called remote viewing.
And I was like, well, that's pretty weird.
I guess when you go to a mechanic to get your car fixed,
that's why our mechanics know what's wrong with your car
because they can do that.
Just like I was doing with my car.
Later I found out that isn't what they were doing.
Wow.
That's part of this development thing
that's happening in my weird family again, that does it.
And one more short story.
When I was going to elementary school,
my mom sometimes would pick me up from school.
We were, she drove a
OZMobile station wagon
that had the fake wood on the sides
and the little hood over the top of the windshield.
And she picked me up on this side of the street over here.
And then she'd look up and down
and then she'd throw a big U-E to turn around
and go up to where our house was.
Well, one day when she turned the U-E,
the door swung open
and I went floating out.
And she turned to me and looked at me
and I floated back in.
And then I reached over and got the door and closed it.
And she said, you're always gonna have to close that,
because it can open up anytime you want.
And we didn't talk about it later.
I didn't say, what was that floaty thing all about?
How did you do that?
And it was like, that wasn't up for discussion.
It just, things happened.
Wow.
So, that's the weird family I grew up in.
And when it came time to get drafted,
I'd gone to college and everything.
And then finally I got out of college and got jobs
and I wanted to just go make a career out of it
and so forth and so on until
that came, what's the expression that comes through?
And they said, greetings.
You are classified 1A and we have a draft
and so forth and so on.
And the minute that happened,
when I was going around to different department stores
looking for jobs, they said, and so what's your draft status?
Oh, they just got me in 1A here.
And he said, well, we can't hire you.
And I said, what do you mean you can't hire me?
He says, well, if you get a job here
and say you work up a little bit in management,
you become a cashier,
and then you become a section of the store manager,
and then you finally become the assistant store manager,
and you get drafted.
They have to keep that position open for you.
You have to be able to walk out of the army afterwards
and go into that same position,
even if you're in the army three years or whatever.
and go into that same position, even if you're in the army three years or whatever.
So we don't hire people that are 1A.
And I said, well, I know how to straighten that out.
And I walked down the street and found the recruiter.
And I said, I have to join the army
because I have to get rid of this thing hanging over my head.
I'm never going to get anywhere
if I don't get rid of this thing."
And he says, well, what do you want to do?
And I said, well, I don't know what's there to do.
And he said, well, look at those brochures over there
and spend some time looking at that.
See if you see something there that you'd really like to do.
And so I went over and looked at the brochures
and I saw this one, the blue one, a trifold blue one,
and it said, Army Intelligence.
And I said, what about this one?
This looks really interesting.
Oh, I'm sorry, but I can't interview you about that.
That's not what I do here in the recruiter's office.
And I said, but this looks really interesting to me.
I have some college behind me
and speak Spanish and so forth.
And I, what do you mean you can't talk to me?
She says, he said, if you really want to know about that,
I have to make an appointment for you down in Los Angeles
to see some agents down there,
because they're the ones that have to decide
whether they can accept you.
What was the brochure?
It was just a was the brochure?
It was just a trifold brochure that said,
military intelligence, and it was blue on the outside,
and I opened and read it,
and that sounded better than being a medic
or being a rifleman and getting shot or anything.
So I said, well, let me go talk to them.
What this is all about is,
in my book, it says living with guidance,
and we define guidance.
There seems to be something moving me through my life
that I'm not entirely aware of.
It's just like, oh, okay, that looks okay.
Now at my age, I say, oh, that's what that was.
Anyway, I got into military intelligence.
Well, what was it?
What was military intelligence?
No, what was the thing?
I'm sorry, I lost.
What was the thing guiding you through life?
Oh.
God.
If you use the word God, yeah.
What do you use personally?
You just use a hand's motion.
No, I only remember that, and my wife share it back and forth
because we know where it comes from.
It means we are all one,
we are all there already,
and we have souls there that help us
and souls that can split themselves
and go help other people and they can be here
and still helping you over there.
We are the oneness.
Okay.
So I went off to school
and my mom has always told me,
you're gonna be okay, but I don't wanna go to Vietnam
and you're all gonna be okay.
And so I go through the school,
learn how to interview people
and be a counterintelligence agent, so forth and so on.
And you like that?
I say so forth and so on, just to fill in the blank there.
And there's another one, this, that and the other thing.
So when it came down and the assignments in the classes
where they were graduating people in classes out of there,
trying to make a lot of counter-intelligence people,
every other class went to Vietnam
and then the next class went everywhere else, I was a very nice person. I was a very nice person. I was a very nice person. I was a very nice person.
I was a very nice person.
I was a very nice person.
I was a very nice person.
I was a very nice person.
I was a very nice person.
I was a very nice person.
I was a very nice person.
I was a very nice person.
I was a very nice person.
I was a very nice person.
I was a very nice person.
I was a very nice person.
I was a very nice person.
I was a very nice person.
I was a very nice person.
I was a very nice person.
I was a very nice person.
I was a very nice person.
I was a very nice person.
I was a very nice person. I was a very nice person. I was a very nice person. I was a very nice person. I was a very nice person. to another strange place called Alabama. So my first assignment was,
isn't this interesting?
And my mom used to say,
somebody's always gonna take care of you.
Yeah, mom, whatever you say.
And I went to Alabama and
I know six months later, Vietnam was over with.
And that began, what am I gonna do now?
Well, as a corporal or a sergeant by then,
I guess every now and then I got the duty of the teletype.
They didn't have other things besides teletypes
at that time.
And so they'd call me over to the headquarters building
and say, okay, this is your week on the teletype
and learn how to use it and everything.
Everybody here does that, so we all know how to use it.
But what that meant is I got invitations to,
how would you like to go to language school?
How would you like to go to technical school
and learn how to bug things? How would you like to go to technical school and learn how to bug things?
How would you like to do this?
And I would take the ribbon out of the teletype
and say, we have a volunteer for that right now.
And so that's how I created making all
of those particular things for me
and went to language school and so forth and so on.
Went down and spent some time in Panama.
But.
Let's rewind real quick.
Yes.
So it sounds like your mom had some type of ability as well.
Yes.
Did your father?
Yes, but it was much more subtle.
My dad was a quiet guy and he was subtle,
but he was tuned in to what was going on.
He was raised as,
in the religion where they don't believe
about going to doctors.
I don't remember what the name of that is right now,
but when he had a broken shoulder bone,
his mom tied a red ribbon around it
and that was supposed to heal it up.
And yet he became a dentist,
but they didn't call that a doctor.
I mean, that's a dentist for goodness sake,
that's not a doctor.
but they didn't call that a doctor. I mean, that's a dentist for goodness sake,
that's not a doctor.
So he was very gentle about things,
but he was aware, I was very sensitive with him.
And I think part of one of those things, as I said,
he always encouraged me to try things out
and he let me paint a car in the garage
and all I did was hang up sheets all around it.
And I painted the car and he said, how did it turn out?
And I said, oh, it's pretty good.
Painted uncle's car blue.
No, I had a 40 Chevy and I sprayed it.
Taxi yellow and wrote taxi on the side of it.
And they didn't like that driving around Glendale,
California.
And finally a cop came by and he said,
we want to talk to you about your car
and the word taxi on the side.
I said, yeah, what's wrong with that?
And he said, there is no law that says you can't do that.
There's no problem with it.
However, all the people that are in the taxi business
can't stand it because they think it downgrades
their feelings about their own car.
And I said, okay, I don't have a problem with that.
So took taxi off the side and I think I sold the car
for $75 to somebody or something.
Nice.
Did you have brothers and sisters?
Two older sisters, yes.
What about them?
They were girls.
They weren't as tuned in as I was to this whole thing,
but they certainly understood it.
And as we got older, we'd talk about these things.
They're both dead and we'd talk about these things
and them going through their deaths
and I was there with them and so forth and so on.
And they respected, is that an expression?
They respected me down.
They knew something was different about me.
It was four years to one sister
and then another four years to the other sister.
So I was the youngest of the family.
But as we all grew older as people,
there was a different arrangement of the kinds of things
Skip did and the kinds of things Sonny did
and the kind of things that Sue did and so forth and so on.
But yeah, they were different.
What was different?
What was different?
They liked chasing boys and ditching school
and getting in trouble for it.
Did you ever hear any conversations between your parents
about some of these abilities?
No.
There's a sidebar to that.
When I got out of OCS and was on my way
to go to the Pentagon,
because I told somebody I wanted to do stuff with remote viewing, because I thought it was a threat.
He said, well, we'll assign you to the Pentagon,
and you go find it.
As a lieutenant, you'll be somebody in the Pentagon
that's on the night security voice,
and you have the access to everything,
and make sure people lock doors, and don't leave class
away documents out, and so forth.
I never actually made it there because somebody intervened.
And, but the story about,
did your parents ever ask you about things?
When I told my parents, I was moving out to the East
and I would be in and around Washington
and so forth and so on and in the Pentagon and so forth.
And she said, oh, well, if you're moving out East,
you should look up Bob Monroe.
And first of all, I didn't know what a Bob Monroe was.
I had no idea.
And so my thinking in my head was,
do you know how many millions of people are on the East coast? So my thinking in my head was,
do you know how many millions of people are on the East Coast?
I don't know somebody named Bob Monroe.
And what is she talking about anyway?
And so I'm nodding to my mom,
you know, yeah, sounds like an interesting idea.
Who was this guy?
I didn't know.
So I drive out there and just before I left
Fort Wachuk Arizona, which is where I was teaching
at the time, got a call from up at Fort Meade
and Inskam had just moved half of their outfit to Fort Meade
and the assignments officer called me up and said,
we're changing your orders of going to the Pentagon.
And I'm like, man, this guy arranged for me
to go to the Pentagon so he could help me find out
about remote viewing.
And now these orders have been changed.
And well, I guess I'll just have to forget
about all that stuff called remote viewing
and what I wanted to do and help the intelligence community
and so forth and so on.
And so I got reassigned up to Fort Meade
and went behind the green door, as they say, is-
Real quick, before we get into Fort Meade,
how did you find out about remote viewing
through the Army, inside of Army intelligence?
Thank you.
I was teaching at Fort Wachuk, Arizona,
and a friend of mine, Rob Cowart,
and I found Puthoffoffs book, Mind Reach,
where they published all of their remote viewing studies,
as much as the CIA would let them publish that.
And I got a hold of that book and Rob and I would look at it,
look what they say in here about this.
Both of us were counterintelligence specialists, And I got ahold of that book and Rob and I would look at it. Look what they say in here about this.
Both of us were counterintelligence specialists
and doing inspections in different countries
and so forth and so on.
We don't check for this.
We don't see if anybody is remote viewing our army units.
Ding, something happened.
And so I went to the Colonel down there
just before I went to OCS.
And he said, well, you keep your nose clean,
you come on back here, Sergeant Atwater,
I'll see if I can get you any assignments you want.
You, when you come back here as a Lieutenant,
you be ready to tell me what you wanna do.
And so, meanwhile, months ago,
Rob Cowart and I were talking about this book from put off
and he said that, you know, we were like,
we're counterintelligence specialists
and we're not doing anything about this.
You know, we're not climbing in people's addicts or whatever we do.
So when I got back as a Lieutenant,
I went into Colonel's office and he said,
well Lieutenant, you're coming to me to tell me
where you wanna get assigned.
And I said, well, sir,
it's a little bit different than that.
And he said, well, what's that?
And I said, there's a book here
by some scientists called MindReach
out at Stanford Research Institute.
And they're studying something called remote viewing.
And he said, well, what's that?
And I said, that's why I'm bringing you this book, sir.
I think this is very dangerous
and a threat to the counterintelligence work we do."
And he said,
well, leave the book with me, Lieutenant
and come on back tomorrow and we'll talk about this.
Came back tomorrow and he said,
Lieutenant, I think you're right.
And that's when he reassigned me to the Pentagon,
which I never got to.
So that's the beginning of it,
of how I got into remote viewing.
Started back at Fort Huachuca with Rob Cowart,
deciding this isn't right.
There should be, we should be doing something.
This is our job to watch this.
And then things switched back and forth
from the idea
of not getting to the Pentagon.
That wasn't the place I should be,
arrangements were made.
And wound up at Fort Meade behind the green door.
And I was given a room behind the green door
after I passed all my security clarifications and everything
and dug through the safes in the room.
And I reached down into this one and picked it up.
Those are three classified documents on remote viewing.
Wait a minute.
I thought all this remote viewing stuff was done since I didn't go to the Pentagon like it was planned
that I was going to go do that.
What is this stuff anyway?
So I read through it.
And Major Keenan, my boss then was down the hallway
and I came out and said, what is it Lieutenant?
I wasn't the regular Lieutenant
because I'd been in the army 10 years as an enlisted man.
So they had a little more respect for me. And I said, well, it, Lieutenant? I wasn't the regular Lieutenant because I'd been in the army 10 years as an enlisted man.
So they had a little more respect for me.
And I took these in and I said, sir,
I found these three documents here
and they're all about remote viewing.
And he said, oh yeah, Lieutenant Colonel Skotsko was over there
and he was very interested in that.
General Thompson was the one that was looking after that.
What was that all about?
And General Thompson,
and this story becomes Major General Thompson later.
And there's a term in the military
called getting a grandfather,
meaning there's somebody who's going to take care of you
and make sure you do the right thing.
Turns out General Thompson was my grandfather
because Kenan, Major Kenan,
who I went to with these documents, knew General Thompson.
And he said, I've got a guy in here that knows about this,
what's his name, Atwater.
He said, you let Atwater do whatever he wants to do.
And I didn't know that was happening.
Interesting.
But I knew General Thompson, knew Kit Green and the CIA,
and they'd been working together, Thompson knew Kit Green and the CIA,
and they'd been working together and he knew all about this stuff that the CIA was doing.
So General Thompson had his finger on me
through Major Keenan and he said,
well, what should we do about this?
Well, we should recruit some people to do this.
And how are you gonna do that, Lieutenant? And I said, well, I think we do about this? Well, we should recruit some people to do this. And how are you going to do that, Lieutenant?
I said, well, I think we ought to interview some people
that have security clearances
so that they can do the kind of work we do
at looking at the counterintelligence problem.
That was the beginning, before it was called Stargate.
That was the beginning of doing this
and working through this situation
to get these people trained.
Wow, very interesting.
So how did you guys, where did you start?
I mean, a lot of people have security clearances.
There's a lot of people in the intelligence world.
It sounds out there.
It is what it is.
Yes.
First, what we decided to do,
my South,
Major Keenan got another officer in
and was gonna be my boss,
cause I was just a Lieutenant.
And we needed somebody that was a Lieutenant Colonel
to do this.
And someone who'd been around in SCOM
so that he could go talk to anybody he wanted
and had lots of clearances and stuff.
And so he was gonna be my boss
and I was gonna be the remote viewing expert,
which I had to invent, but that's okay.
And we decided that we should survey the people
around the greater Washington DC area
that were in Inscum.
And we thought, well, they have to be assignable.
There's a lot of people in the army that said,
I need to get, do this job now so I can get promoted then
and I need to do that job here
and we need to do that job there.
And they build up a career pattern of jobs that they have
to work out promotion.
We had to find somebody that didn't think that way.
So we looked at a pool of about 200 people
around the greater Washington, DC area
that were army people and civilians, male, female.
And we took newspaper clippings that talked about
people who had a near death experience
and people who had this happen to them,
newspaper type reporting of psychic stuff.
And we'd take it to him and say,
the boss has asked us to come around
and see whether or not people would
think some of these people could help us
in the army some way.
If they can do what they say,
maybe they could help us in the army some way.
And we would both ask questions,
my major and myself,
that time just a lieutenant. And we would, this one would ask
and then this one would ask
and we'd see if they would agree.
And then we would say,
well, let's talk to them a little bit further.
And then when we say, well, let's talk to them a little bit further. And then when we finished that process,
we told SRI what we're doing
and they made an arrangement to do a
exposure of these people.
And we were going to pick three people.
And I tried to use the word to train. He said, oh, no, no, no, no, no, no. We don pick three people. And I tried to use the word to train.
He said, oh, no, no, no, no, no, no.
We don't train people.
We evaluate people, but we don't train people.
Okay.
Don't use the word train
when you talk to Stanford Research Institute.
That's what I learned as a little Lieutenant.
And so I said, so for our orientation,
we want to do three people.
And meanwhile, we recruited these people
by the method I told you of showing them the newspapers
and some of them weren't the right people.
And when we told them we had six people selected
that,
no, it was like six or eight at that time
that we brought in, they didn't all stay.
They said, well, I thought I wanted to do this,
but my wife wants to move and I can't do it,
so forth and so on.
Put off and Targ heard about it and they said,
well, we want to interview them.
We don't want you to select which ones.
We want to do the interview with them
to see if they're suitable for our evaluation.
So they came to Fort Meade and we brought all these people in
and Putoff and Targ and talked to him about it
and liked the people and shook their hands and everything.
And then we went out to lunch, Pudah and Targ
and Scotty Watt and me went out to lunch
and they were whispering at each other
and whispering at each other.
And finally Pudah said,
well, I don't think we want to take three people.
He says, I want those six guys.
Well, how about the agreement we had
on how much money we had to pay you
to evaluate the three people?
He says, we'll do it for the same price.
Those people sound good to us and we'll deal with them.
So they eventually took the six people out there
and then later on found the best three of those
and had the three of them go back again.
For example, Joe McMonagle.
What are some of the evaluations
that you guys were conducting to find the best candidates?
Okay, there's SRI situation,
I'll continue with that and what they did.
What they did is they had people,
somebody would drive away from SRI
and then someone would sit back at SRI
and get interviewed and say,
describe to me where Dr. Pradhas gone.
And then later they would bring that back
and they would have, this is the true place he was.
And then there were six, one out of six.
And so they scored them another person,
a judge would look at what the remote viewer tried.
I can't make 10 into six, can I?
That doesn't work.
And he would score them.
No, it's not that one.
This wasn't the racetrack.
It might be that one.
That's kind of a museum like thing.
And so they would rate these things.
And they got 80% correct matches,
for example, on Joe McMonagall. they got 80% correct matches,
for example, on Joe McManigor, no, it was on the six altogether,
meaning that the judge who didn't know where they'd gone
or what was the actual thing about,
and that is how we scored and decided
who we were gonna choose
and chose the ones that had the best to, you know,
start out.
Were any of these people, were any of these,
were any of these six people surprised
that they were chosen?
Were they, I mean, how do I describe this?
Was anybody surprised at the program
and surprised in the reasons you're evaluating them for?
No, they already signed up for the program
when they came in and they, you know,
signed secret certificates of,
don't tell anybody about this.
Your boss doesn't know what you're doing,
but he knows that the boss tells him
he has to go to Fort Meade today to do something
and he's doing it for me.
So, they were on board with the program
and they heard about going out to SRI.
And we had those classified documents, for example, were on board with the program and they heard about going out to SRI.
And we had those classified documents, for example,
and they looked at those and they were interested
in going out there and doing that.
What was in the classified documents?
There were a couple of them on Project Scan A,
they were things that had been done before,
things that the Soviets were doing,
and was the first beginning published evidence that,
not the stuff that the CIA knew,
but it was the beginning of Department of Defense stuff
that was published that they had been looking at
lots of people around the world that are doing this thing.
And why aren't we doing this?
Do you know how we found out other intelligence agencies
and countries were doing this?
Spies.
Who was the first one to adopt us?
I don't know the answer to that.
I don't know the answer to that.
And I probably would have to say,
I can neither confirm nor deny if I knew.
What were they?
I'm the lieutenant that discovered this guy
up in the safe, went and talked to Dale Graff
and so forth and so on.
What were they?
Can you tell me what they were remote viewing
inside the US?
I don't know that.
Okay.
But it grew into something else.
I mean, Joe's gone over there and been with the Russians
and talked to them and played with them
and they played with him and so forth and so on.
Yeah, yeah.
Okay, so six guys, six people, you guys took in.
What happens then?
Well, after they finished this evaluation,
we had started working at Fort Meade
with doing little outbounder things and practicing
and so forth and so on of what was going on.
So, Scotty Watt would drive out in a car to some place and then I'd sit
over in the operations building and interview them about describe where
Scotty is now and they would sometimes get hits and sometimes not get hits.
Which was good for Scotty because when they'd get a hit he would say, I wasn't
so sure this stuff worked but I was the one that went
out there and they described the tower I was on and the such and so it was fun for him.
I'll bet that would be a very unique experience.
So I just want to tell you, we were working with the people
and some of them came and lived in our offices there
for me and others would come from some place
and we'd make an appointment for them to come.
One of those was Joe McPonigal.
He was working down in Washington area
and we'd say, can you come up on Tuesday and Friday? working down in Washington area and would,
we'd say, can you come up on Tuesday and Friday?
And so he would say, well, if you arrange for my boss
to tell me where I have to be.
And so he was part of that same thing,
testing it out for himself
and us testing how to run this thing.
and us testing how to run this thing.
And three others, SRI wanted them back. And they had some things that they wanted to try out.
Can you read with a remote viewing?
How about if this happens or how about if that happens?
What about if it's underwater?
Would underwater stop it?
And none of those things mattered.
Interesting.
And distance and everything.
And one of the interesting things that happened
as time passed,
there was a, that price was remote viewing for them at SRI.
And he had one target that he talked about, which was water, water tanks, and there's
tall tanks and there's two water pools down here and it's a sewage processing plant.
And so when they went down to look at the sewage processing
plant, hopefully so the remote viewer could learn
things he missed, well, how come you didn't talk
about the red building or whatever?
Turns out that it was a swimming pool.
And it was like, well, you did get the water
and but there was these big towers
of the sewage processing plant, so forth and so on.
No space, no time.
75 years later, long after Pat Price himself died,
the Menlo Park local government
published a book of all the things
that had been going on for years and years and years.
And Russell Targot got ahold of one and opened it up.
And he was like, 75 years ago,
that coordinate was not a swimming pool,
but a sewage processing plant.
And there was the pictures of the towers and everything.
And so they started thinking about this differently.
They first, they were like,
oh, that remote viewing was 20 blocks away.
That remote viewing was when you went on vacation,
that remote viewing was 3000 miles away.
And then this thing came up and it was,
remote viewing is outside of time.
Pat Price never knew, cause he died, 75,
that that was a sewage treatment plant.
Wow.
So it was an awakening to the scientists to say,
there's something more here that's going on
than what we think we're doing at SRI.
Very, very interesting.
I mean, what is time then?
What is it?
It's that word that just came out of your mouth. Then what is it? It's that word that just came out of your mouth. Then what is it?
It's a thing that we have invented
to organize our lives on earth.
You know, my cat doesn't know time
and the birds don't know time,
except when the weather changes
they're supposed to fly south and so forth and so on.
But they don't think of time.
And if I knew more about the history of cultures,
different societies over time
that have come up over the hundreds and thousands of years,
they probably have lots of differences.
I imagine weather and when you plant things
and when you harvest things is a much more crude kind
of interface with that.
And you're not so concerned about, let's see, it's about.
So that's a really good question.
What is time?
And my answer is, well, it depends.
Who is keeping track of something
and decides to say, you know, that's spaced out this way.
The seasons of the year,
except if you live at the North Pole and the South Pole,
they're pretty much always the same season, you know,
kind of thing.
But I, sounds like humans are the ones
that are more concerned about time.
Okay.
Let's talk about some of your career in remote viewing.
Right, remember that I am not a remote viewer.
I was the guy who taught other people
how to do this thing called remote viewing
and used my education in
psychology to understand how people behave and how to reward them and
encourage them and so forth. But I am not, by the definition of what a remote
viewer is, I'm not a remote viewer.
But you do have abilities. Yes.
But I don't generally,
and I wouldn't say those remote view,
my abilities are remote viewing.
And I generally try to stay away from that topic
because I want to present myself,
this is the way it was done,
this is the way it was monitored, This is the way it was monitored.
This is the way that it was validated,
given to the Pentagon, these answers,
and this much was right that they told us about.
I like playing that role.
Okay.
As opposed to, I do remote viewing too.
Interesting, understandable as well.
How was Joe when you met him?
Joe was kind of a complainer about,
I can never get this right
and they're not promoting me fast enough
and they should do this and they should do that. And that was bitching was his forte.
Had a marriage that was breaking up.
Boy, could he remove you.
So I loved Joe. I mean, I he remove you. You know, so I loved Joe.
I mean, I really loved that.
He made the day.
He would tell me things and I'd be sitting there.
How in the world did he know that?
I mean, all I did was from Major Watt across the way,
he said, okay, well, here's what we're gonna start on today.
So one of the things we did was, not always,
but one of the things we did is I wouldn't know
what the target was and it might be in an envelope
or it might be a coordinate or whatever.
And I would take it over to Joe.
So I don't know, most of the time, I don't know.
And Joe didn't know either.
And then I would take it back
after doing one short session.
Joe would say, well, this is a cold area
and there's, this is really cold.
There's snow on the ground and it's Northern somewhere.
But it's a industrial area.
There are smokestacks there
and there are many buildings and so forth and so on.
So I'd stop.
That would be the end of the session.
I'm at having sketched some stuff
and I'd go over to Scottie Watt and I'd say,
sir, this is what we got today.
And he'd open it up and he'd say,
schedule your second session.
Because he could tell me you're on track,
there's something going on here.
So it's an interesting situation.
I have to diverge a little bit.
People were talking about, oh, it's coordinates you use.
Oh, it's a picture you use.
Oh, well, let me say you can't use coordinates anymore.
You had to scramble the numbers and make up a number
and say, that's the number.
Still works.
And how about this?
And how about that?
What I really think right now,
maybe tomorrow will be something else,
but there was a trust between Joe and I.
When he and I were in that room,
I didn't fool around with him.
He knew that I knew the questions
that the Pentagon needed to know.
So I'd say, Joe, do you want to hold the envelope?
Joe, do you want to hear the coordinates?
No, because over the years there was a trust buildup.
I'm in that room with him to do one thing
and that's answer some questions from the Pentagon.
What kind of questions
was the Pentagon interested in?
Oh, lots of different things.
Can you tell us, we've watched in Europe
as the Soviets are moving their tanks forward,
like they're gonna go past the fold of gap
and so forth and so on.
Can you ask where this is right now?
And Joe would be able to say,
well, yes, I see them moving,
but they're all parked in garages.
And so they would fly another satellite over.
Yeah, they're all parked in garages.
I don't think we have anything to worry about.
I think there were many, many things
that the Pentagon wanted to know.
Somebody would have a particular problem
that they're trying to resolve.
And is it this, is it that?
I mean, you saw some of those things
in a third eye video about things that they were asked
and our satellites that would go over every now and then.
And then they said, we never knew that was there.
Laurie Moe Buehler told it was kind of a thing.
So that grew too.
There was because of Scotty Watts,
Scotty Watts knew a lot of people
and he could go to the Pentagon
and go out to lunch with a guy
and play golf with a guy and everything.
And got to know that, you know, you could tell Scotty
something that you needed to know
and he would bring home the envelope, hand it to me.
And I do sessions with people
and then we'd send it back to him.
So that built up for a while.
Let's take a quick break and when we come back we'll get into Project 8200.
Okay, that's great.
Perfect.
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Let's get back to the show.
All right, Skip, we're back from the break.
And right before we left, we're getting ready to get into Project 8200.
But you had mentioned an important point that you wanted to bring up about how the remote
viewer knows what to focus on, it sounded like, in the middle of their journey or experience.
What do you call it?
Yes.
Is it an experience?
I think it's the only words we can use for it
in our mind, in our vocabulary,
I think is probably an experience.
What do I don't think intellectually,
they think they're going anywhere.
They know they're sitting in the room with me.
So, but they're having an experience in some way.
Okay.
Now they sometimes may describe,
well, I'm gonna go over there now
and I'm gonna look at that,
but we shouldn't take that too strongly.
They're still sitting there next to you.
Okay.
but we shouldn't take that too strongly. They're still sitting there next to you.
Okay.
Did you see that video about three-eyed spies
or whatever that was, third-eyed spies?
I did not.
Okay.
So that's perfectly okay,
but it has to do with the way I would tell a story
because otherwise I would say these things
and you would say, oh yeah, but you're not gonna do that.
Okay, excellent.
So I was,
I discovered recently something
that I had not given a great
deal of thought about it.
And I've been in this business a long time.
And I was like, whoa, this means something regardless
of what happened, this means something.
So the background to this is that in the days of put off
and target Stanford Research Institute,
they obviously had a contract with CIA
and Kit Green was the guy in CIA who was kind of watching them
and was in charge of what they did.
And then he would take the results that they would get
in their evaluating and testing and studying
under protocol this idea of remote viewing. And he would take and show some of the results to his
people at the CIA. And they started to think, both Kit Green and other people at CIA was starting to think,
how do we know that they're sticking with protocol?
And how do we know that they don't have some other access
to the targets that their remote viewers are getting.
So he decided he was, him, Kit Green,
was gonna come up with something that would prove
to the other people that were questioning him.
You know, this stuff is garbage.
It doesn't work. It doesn't make any sense to us.
He keeps telling him about it and everything.
So he decided what he was gonna do
is he was gonna go to another friend of his in the CIA
and go to him and say,
I want you to give me a set of coordinates,
geographic coordinates,
that I have no knowledge of it.
I know nothing about it.
I don't know what it is.
And he said, okay.
And he gave him the coordinates and he said,
so I don't know what this is.
That means nothing to me.
I don't recognize it as being the Eiffel Tower or anything.
And he says, that's right. you won't know what this is.
So he passes that out to SRI.
And SRI comes back with this,
it's a very elaborate description of this place.
He says, it's very secret and guards and fences around it.
And I went inside and I looked through safes
and on the wall, this was written
and opened up the safes and read what the words
and names of the files were
and end of session.
And so when he gets that back from SRI,
he takes it over to his friend, whose name,
by the way, was Dave, in the CIA at that time.
And he started laughing.
He says, this nonsense that you're doing, kid,
is just nonsense, it's ridiculous.
And he said, what do you mean?
He said, I built a cabin last year and fixed it.
And I gave you the coordinates to the cabin.
And he went to his other friends and said,
this is what SRI told me. And he went to his other friends and said,
this is what SRI told me.
And they're all like, you gotta be kidding.
And he says, no, this is, yes.
And he says, that's a real place
and nobody knows about it.
So he got in his car and he drove physically
to the coordinates up in the mountains,
found this guy's cabin and said,
what is going on here?
This makes no sense at all.
And he turned around and went down a hundred yards
down the road.
And there was a well cut, well groomed road
and he turned up there and came over a ridge
and there was Sugar Grove.
It was in the late 60s and 70s,
the Navy's installation for monitoring Soviet satellites.
Interesting.
Which actually physically doesn't exist anymore.
Nevermind, that wasn't ever there,
but we have pictures of it
and you can look up Sugar Grove online.
So I need to try to add here.
When he went in, he said,
everything had to do with the names on things
and the files and so forth had to do with playing pool.
There was a cue ball, a nine ball, an eight ball,
and this and different kinds of shots and everything.
And when he showed that to his other CIA friends,
he said, all those are top secret classified,
limb dis names.
Those are real names of a real project of Sugar Grove.
Those are real names of a real project of Sugar Grove.
And it was like, how did that happen?
Well, because he had given, these were twists up a little bit,
but I'll get back to straight.
He had given that to SRI and it was expecting that
either Halle Hammett
or Ingo Swan would do the job
and they were gonna look at it with one person
and so forth and so on.
Turns out that Pat Price was hanging around.
He said, you guys got something going on here?
Here, I'll help.
And he was that kind of a guy, you know?
And it was Pat Price's work that wound up at Sugar Grove
and read those names that were top secret password names
for everything that that Navy installation did.
And they immediately showed up in Kit Green's office,
angry and mad.
And what did you do?
And we're going to have to investigate this.
There's a leak in your department here
and this and that and the other thing.
And he said, SRI did it out in California.
And then as sort of a joke and an enthusiasm
as sort of a joke and an enthusiasm
when Puthoff describes this thing going on.
He says, I'm trying to remember exactly what he says.
Every law enforcement person in California showed up at SRI. Cause they were really angry
about all this information leaking out.
Well, the point of this whole thing
is all that stuff happened.
It's very well documented.
And what is it that when here was the target assigned
by the coordinate and over here was the target assigned by the coordinate
and over here was Sugar Grove.
When he got sent here, supposedly, here's your coordinates, describe what's there
and put off and tard or trying to do their best
and get good protocols and everything.
And it's a boring, I'm going to make up some words
because I don't know what to say.
It's boring.
But they say, I wonder what the hell that is over there.
And so Pat Price goes over here and finds Sugar Grove.
So I started thinking about this situation in remote viewing
and everywhere, every when,
how do you know that that is a thing of interest?
What is it that attracts you to that
as opposed to following the rules?
I want you to describe that cabin in the forest.
That's what your job is.
Here are your coordinates.
And yet he goes to Sugar Grove.
It pretty much scares the bejesus about the CIA
and the Navy at that point in time.
So I started thinking about that
in terms of all the remote viewing I've done
and many others.
If the theory of quantum non-locality is true
that there is no time and there is no space,
what is that next?
I'm using this skull of mine, which makes no sense,
but it's a good graphic.
What is the next twist to that,
that gets the remote viewer to describe
that interesting thing?
And how many times has that happened
in the hundreds of thousands of remote viewings that
are going on in the world?
And somebody says, well, that doesn't make sense.
We asked you to do such and such and you did so and so.
Did they give any thought to why in the heck did he do so and so?
He usually does really good work.
Why did he describe that?
I'm still chewing on that.
This is less than a month in my head
about this particular interesting thing.
How does that happen?
How does that happen?
When you wanted to go over to Project 8200,
how did Pat Price go and look at those things? Nobody told him to go look at that.
He just was that kind of a guy that was attracted
to go look at those things.
He says, when you talk to him,
when he was a policeman down in Burbank,
he said, oh, you know, the detectives would come in
and they would say this, that and everything.
And he said, I'd kind of roll my head back
and say, well, you know,
you really ought to check out this.
You didn't tell me you guys checked on that.
He said, okay.
And he said he'd be unusually right about those
every now and then.
And so he kept headed in that direction.
This Project 8200 thing was something that I did
because Pat Price walked into SRI
and is normal working there in the early 70s,
having come up from originally down in Burbank.
He then lived in Northern California,
but he would come down to do sessions
because Pudoff and Targ checked him out.
And so he would go in and he would do things,
but they had to control him because he was
a gregarious wild cat.
Is that a good, he was just uncontrollable in terms of what he would do.
And he came in on Pudas' desk.
He said, you might be interested in this.
I've been interested in this for a while,
and I've found four UFO bases around the globe.
And so you really ought to look at it.
And it-
Four UFO bases.
Yes.
And this just came in just completely random one day,
this bag comes in and there it is.
Four UFO bases around the world.
Where were they?
Or where are they?
Yes, they're still there.
This all happened 50 years ago,
a little bit more than that now.
Mount Inyan, Gani, which is a country in Africa,
isolated country.
Mount Hayes is up in Australia.
Mount Perdido is on the border of Spain and France. And then there's one in Australia, which I can't quite remember the name of that up in
Australia.
Hayes is in Alaska, correct?
Hayes is in Alaska, yes.
Okay.
Zeal, I think, might be the one down in Australia. So this was an interesting problem for
put off to deal with.
He says, these, yeah, actually, you know,
we're watching Pat
in our program here and testing and evaluating
our program here at SRI.
These look interesting.
What is it about this that pulls me to it?
So it turns out that he calls up a friend of his
called Ken Kress and says, I'm sorry, Kit Green,
and calls Kit Green. And they're friends from a long time ago
when they were junior officers.
Now, he's, Kit Green is in the CIA.
He went that way and Putoff went into
being a research scientist, but they're really good friends.
So he calls up,
Kitten says,
could you do me a favor?
And what's that?
Well, I was wondering how things are going down
in Australia.
Do you know who the case officer is down in Australia?
The station chief or whatever you call him.
And he says, well, yeah.
He said, well, I'm just kind of interested
in what things are like in Australia now.
I'd like to maybe go down there someday.
And so he says, well, let me give him a call.
And so a couple of days later, he calls back and said,
yeah, I talked to the station chief down there.
And he said, they really like it.
They get along with the Australians just fine.
They share things and work together on things.
And I really like it here too.
I hope I don't get reassigned very often.
Well, there is that one thing.
It's all those UFOs up North.
And Puthoff is like,
oh, well, that's kind of an interesting thing,
but otherwise you really like it down there.
And you put on lines,
Puthoff wasn't going to say anything.
He says, you know, we ought to get together
next time you're back in the States here.
We'll go out and have a beer again.
Remember how a good time we had
when we were young officers together.
He said, yeah, let's do that.
Let's get together again.
And so then,
put off Ed had those on his desk and told Pat,
don't ever do this again.
Go get working, not to do things alone.
You have to follow protocol.
We're being paid by an outside agency
and we have to follow our protocol,
else we'll get fired.
So you need to not ever do this again.
Only do the things that Targ is working with you
in the interview room next door.
You do what things we're telling you to do
so that we're in control and we can tell the CIA
what we're doing.
You know, that's a very interesting demand
considering it's all done in your brain.
That's telling you, I mean, essentially the same thing
is telling you don't think about these things.
I'm your boss, I tell you what to think and how to think.
How did Pat respond to that?
Well, I don't think I know the answer to that question,
but he shrugged his shoulders and I'm sure
because of the maverick that he was,
he didn't much care about what he said.
Probably motivated him to do more.
Right, who knows?
My kind of guy.
So anyway, Pudoff keeps him in, keeps it in the drawer.
And then he waits because this is a big hullabaloo
and people whispering to other people in the office
and all of that, and so he waits and he waits and he waits.
Meanwhile, Puthoff and I are becoming good friends.
He, you know, I would go out there
and check on the training and check on this and everything.
And they'd always take me out to dinner
and do this and do this.
And finally I said, you don't have to do this.
I'm with you guys.
You know, I know I signed your checks now.
That's what I'm doing for a while.
Cause my boss left and now I'm the boss of you.
I forget what you call that when you're the
person, case control officer, I don't know.
Anyways, so we became more friends after a while
and could visit and talk about things
without him doing his job of taking care of the guy
that came from Washington and making sure
we take care of that guy, because he's the guy who obeys us.
He said, don't do that.
And time passed and he called me.
I have a different program that I run back at Fort Meade
which I think I've explained in some of the papers I sent
is if you're not doing something
because you're at war or having some thing you have to do,
you're practicing on that.
You're doing mock things that keep you in good training.
You don't just lay around on the ground,
you do PT and you do all the sorts of things.
So I had what I called a challenge program that I did
when I had remote viewers that weren't too busy
and they didn't have something immediately to do.
I would come up with challenge targets,
like send them to a very confusing museum
that went around the circle like that
and see if they could figure that out.
Because you'd be looking at this direction
and then you turn around and look at that direction.
And it would pass 50 years in time
because you're supposed to walk through the museum
and look at the things.
So those were challenge type targets that I did,
several different kinds.
So I took,
Several different kinds. So I took,
Putoff gave me all of Pat Price's transcripts on the things.
He said, do you think you could use this
in a challenge target training?
I didn't need the Pentagon to tell me to do it.
I was the operations and training officer
and that's what I did, operations and training.
On the training side, it was challenge targets.
So I worked up a set of
plans for taking the transcript and creating the names of the mountains
where these UFO bases were,
underground UFO bases were,
and then did a series of challenge targets.
Four of them with Joe who does a ERV thing,
he just lays down and talks.
The other people trained by Ingo Swann,
and they have this very complicated structure
to do their remote viewing.
And so I had six of those, I think maybe five.
And then we had a couple of people
who kind of did their own thing.
And this was 10 years after,
that's why I call it Project 8200,
because it was 1973 when Pat Price did this.
And then Putoff gave me the material here after,
in his opinion, things quieted down out there
and people weren't talking about this anymore.
So he handed me these and see if I would run
challenge targets on them.
And so the project 8200 is those challenge targets
of asking Stargate remote viewers, giving them coordinates to go to
and have them describe what's there.
What did he...
And so these bases,
were they part of the challenge targets?
I gave them the coordinates
that Price had said,
this is where I was looking. So I took those coordinates I gave them the coordinates that Price had said,
this is where I was looking.
So I took those coordinates and I told them
to go look at these different coordinates
and see what they found there.
The Stargate remote viewers.
So before we get into what they saw,
what did Pat see at these bases?
He described them as inside areas
where four different kinds of groups of people
who had different duties had inside places
that they were inside these mountains.
What do you mean four different types of people?
Races, genders, What are we talking here?
Just different projects that they're on?
Yeah, these four bases had different stories.
I can read them to you, what they were.
They had different jobs that they did
in four different bases.
And so he would talk about,
well, I'm gonna go over to Mount Inyangani now,
and I'm gonna look at Mount Hayes.
And so his, this is another thing
that we talked about before.
He just would go to this place as well.
This is very interesting over here on Mount Perdita,
but I think I'll go back up to Hayes.
And then his thing would change.
And we had to go through the transcript very carefully.
Where's he supposed to be talking about now?
And then going back to the discussion we had a minute ago,
how did he know which one to go to
and it might be more interesting and so forth.
And that's just in the back of my mind now, so to speak.
Silly the way I talk one way one time
and say then in the back of my mind,
which I know it's not in there.
Anyway, so the main thing that there was some interest in
when some people would read this and say, The main thing that there was some interest in
when some people would read this and say, oh my goodness, they're terrible.
They're invading us.
They can do this and they can monitor
what our radio things are and they're do this.
The single thing that seemed joking up with this is,
first he was worried about this whole thing
in terms of him being a military man
and wondering about what's all this going on here.
But by the time he got through
with going through all the targets, he says,
you know, they just don't want to be discovered.
They don't want people around the planet
to know that they're there.
They don't want people hiking up the mountain
and saying, hey, you guys, what are you doing here?
Who's they?
It depends on which thing you win.
And I don't believe all of it.
In other words, there's lots of things that they say.
Like one of them is their home base is Mars.
And I don't necessarily believe that,
but other people have said something about that.
So I'm looking specifically at the material I have
and not adding in things that other people have said.
So let's, so what is the material that you had
on these four different locations?
What were they?
So we're moving to the next phase.
And let me try to make sure I understand
the question you're asking is that
the only thing I had to start with was
Price's transcript that Putoff gave me, right?
And I changed them into questions.
So what was Pat's transcript specifically,
what was going's transcript specifically,
what was going on at these four different locations? The one in Australia, Alaska, Spain,
and the location in Africa.
Joe started out on his thing and he usually lays down
and then he gets up and comes to the desk
and draws for me and explains the drawing.
Meanwhile, I'm tape recording the whole thing.
So he says, this is for Mount Hayes in Alaska, he says,
okay, before I describe these pictures here,
I have to make a statement.
You have to bear with my descriptions and everything,
what they lack because I can't find a lot,
I find a lot,
I find a lot of difficulty in describing this
because I've never seen anything
that remotely resembles this part of the target.
Now, he doesn't know, he's looking at prices stuff,
sealed envelope and all that stuff.
I've never seen anything like it,
just have no familiarity with it.
I mean, I don't even recognize the screws and bolts of this thing.
It's just completely off the wall as far as the target.
So I have nothing to relate to, so I have to present it as I envisioned it.
And I ask him, what do you mean by off the wall?
It's brand new.
It's never existed before.
This is a prototype of something,
something completely new concept.
It's like asking an Aborigine
who has never seen an automobile
to crawl inside the automobile
and then describe in his terms.
What's an automobile?
When he has no terms for screws and bolts
and seat covers and windows and glass and metal,
even the most rudimentary parts of this thing
have no meaning whatsoever.
And so we kind of knew he was in trouble.
This is the kind of position I'm in trouble. Let me see here. This is the kind of position I'm in.
I've seen something.
I have not even a rudimentary term to explain
as far as other than a Gestalt concept.
And you're really asking me to draw this.
So how and why my drawings are not gonna be very good.
Skip a little bit.
Given that's true, here's page one.
I have a bunch of water, land, ice,
all these general things written here, my sketch.
This is generally a very desolate area.
And drew a mountain range, road mountains.
This whole range of mountains
extends for thousands of miles.
So I'll give you an idea of the scale of which I'm drawing
and sort of put an X here where I perceive the target to be.
So, you know, he goes on in his full transcript about
Mount Hayes,
an icy covered mountain and so forth and so on.
He has a lot of them. Now I want to read you,
you've heard about different types of remote viewing.
Joe just lays down and talks,
but then Ingo Swan tells this story about,
you have to put them right across this way
and then go down here and that,
go down here and write that.
It's Ingo's technique of trying to keep thoughts
and ideas organized, which makes me wonder
about this whole idea of you're everywhere,
every when, and Ingo, although didn't speak of it that way,
tries to get you to organize these different things
so that you'll stay focused on something
and not try to display everything.
Anyway, this coordinate remote viewing here,
there are the whole point of this exercise
other than challenge target is to say,
that thing that Price did in 93
and underground UFO bases and everything,
is that a bunch of garbage or is there any idea
that maybe some of the things that he said were really true?
And so the result of my thing is like,
that sounds pretty darn good 10 years later.
So this, I'm gonna read this as a summary
of one of those people that did the remote viewing
by Ingo Swann.
He didn't do it, but one of our trainees.
His name was Bill Ray.
Sight is a mountain.
It is bitter cold and windy.
Much snow, much wind and snow.
There may be partly or completely frozen
body of water nearby.
The mountain is hollow.
It is a large cave or crater.
This has huge rooms and walls, curved high ceilings.
There is an opening into the caves.
The cavern is clear, sterile.
There's equipment and different points there in the
corridor. Some of the equipment is for monitoring, other support may be for life support. There are
silver metallic ships that which are very quick. They are durable and are large and small.
They are used to transport people and equipment.
There are some people here, they are thin,
emotional, unemotional, and have programmed feelings.
and have programmed feelings.
They are strange and have a pre-designed mission.
They are freezing and cooling semi-isolated. They feel unearthly.
The site has a research feeling, the feeling like security.
The people are benign and serious
and are interrelated, site and.
So there are several of those.
I only brought one because of time.
And what I did in 8,200 to find out about what price did
in 1973, some people have said to me,
oh, that's perfectly, it matches perfectly. And I'm saying, I'm not ready to me, oh, that's perfectly,
it matches perfectly.
And I'm saying, I'm not ready to go that far,
but it sure sounds like, you know, you have two people
and they describe what it was like
when they went to the football game.
And this one describes what it was like
going to the football game.
They're not going to be exactly the same.
And I think that's what's playing into it here.
These are all different people trying to explain this strange thing that they're seeing while
remote viewing.
Programmed thoughts.
What is that?
Did he expound upon that at all? There is a different concept that these program thoughts people
can use telepathy to tell you to turn left
and instead of to turn right,
or you don't see anything here,
some sort of program telepathy.
When thing was an interesting thing,
I was asked, well, people have gone up there,
people that are UFO type people have gone up there and looked around,
but they can't find how to get into the mountain.
And my wife said,
what makes you think they have to get into the mountain?
I mean, they can, there's lots of things
on different things are being proven now
and they can walk right through them
or they can use this programmed thing and not let you see where the cave begins.
That was one of the things people were certainly worried
about and somebody said,
well,
wouldn't some investigators,
some intelligence people go up there
and find out if this is true
because there's all this going on?
And I said, I don't think, I don't know,
but I don't think they'd tell me if they did.
And...
Now, what about you had said,
you had just mentioned maybe they programmed,
they use the program thoughts to conceal the entrance.
What are you speaking of when you say
people can walk through things?
Well, first of all,
Well, first of all, what is the name of that place
that they're showing on TV now where they're studying that place in the mountains where they're watching?
I'm sorry, I just can't remember right now.
But they see lights coming down and going in here
and then going through the mountain
and popping out over here.
So we have these days physically watched that happen.
And the idea that, it was just my wife's comment,
it says, what makes them think they have to, they couldn't go through the mountain that it was just my wife's comment,
is what makes them think they have to,
they couldn't go through the mountain?
Or they, so a softer way of saying that
is they could be controlled so they can't see
where they go in the mountain.
But there also are real films now that show that happens.
How do you articulate that?
How do you, how do you, what's happening there?
How is that happening?
I watch it on TV like everybody else does,
and I see it come down, and it's been going on
for quite a while.
I think you must have seen the programs.
I just can't remember the name of them right now, but they,
how would I, what do I think about that and how they do it?
I don't have an answer.
I know that it's been videotaped,
that it's been documented by a lot of different people
and they bring in experts in to try to figure it out.
And what you see in the films that they make
is it goes through over here and it goes out over there.
And when I watch it, I'm saying, well, look at that.
I don't have the wherewithal other than
whatever they're doing,
something we don't know about
and that's what they're investigating.
Well, what about the, so this was Mount Hays, correct?
That we were just speaking of.
We're talking about Mount Hays in that situation.
What are Pat and Joe saying about the other three locations?
Were they identical?
Were there any variations?
Yes, I don't have that here in my notes.
I have it all written down at home.
Do you remember any of it?
It's well documented in my books too.
If we're talking about this particular set of beings
in the 8,200 beings,
I remember that they
would, reportedly would interfere with one of our aircraft
that would go over and could take satellite pictures
in that range and that satellite would have some problems
because they didn't want anything to be photographed.
They didn't want, it was very important for them
not to be discovered.
Interesting.
And again, they don't seem to be dangerous
or concerned with hurting us in any way,
just don't get discovered.
But they got discovered.
Well, in this particular case,
with the help of Pat Price and 10 years later,
with a follow on of these remote viewers looking at it.
Had anyone else other than Joe and Pat
remote view these locations?
Yes, they, I had seven, six, Joe and,
Joe did all four places, Pat did it.
But then I had these other coordinate remote viewers
or controlled remote viewers.
I had six of those.
And that's what I read you when I read you this.
Okay.
Okay.
So with everything that you know about this,
and I mean, you set up Project 8200,
I mean, what is your conclusion?
What are these?
We have to ask the question softer.
My job, I was an army officer at the time
I was an Army officer at the time, and my job to do these kinds of remote viewing things,
this wasn't tasked by anybody but me,
just for training purposes.
My results are these look very similar to what Pat Price did.
I think that there's a validity to the Pat Price work and the work that they did.
But when you take one step further is well what I think about them, what are they doing,
and how can they do that, and what this is. That wasn't my job, that wasn't something that I know about.
It's pretty weird stuff, but it was project-
It's pretty weird, weird all right.
Project 8200 was about checking out what Price said.
And my remote viewers said,
well, interestingly, it matches pretty interestingly.
So we're talking six to seven different remote viewers,
all remote viewed these locations
and said something very similar to say.
Yes.
And has there been any reported activity
from civilian population, news media,
anything from any of these locations? Apparently it is a common thing in those type of people that are UFO people or
running around, there's many many many people who have big opinions about UFOs and wanna talk about them all the time.
Those people seem to know about this too a little bit.
And I don't deal with talking to them.
What is your opinion on UFOs?
Are they real?
I don't know how to answer that question.
It isn't part of my job.
And I hear you trying to suck things out of me
in terms of, well, what do you think?
Well, what do you think?
And it's like, I think I did a pretty good job
organizing how to find out what Price did.
Mm-hmm.
Do you believe in UFOs?
You're really good in your questions.
I wanted to read you a little bit of this later, but.
If I try to sidestep you like I'm doing right now,
then you're gonna draw a conclusion.
Ah, I know what he's doing there.
He really believes in him, but he doesn't wanna tell me.
On the other hand, I can say,
it's an interesting subject,
or I can talk more about it,
or I can say, I can either confirm nor deny.
And so there's lots of different things.
Do you want me to tell you some stories?
Absolutely.
When I was a very small child living in California,
I was a kid, I was out in the front yard with my mom,
walking around the ivy that my dad had planted,
so instead of grass,
so he didn't have to cut the grass all the time,
just had the green ivy out there,
big, huge field, green ivy.
And I looked up there and said,
Mom, one of those five silver things up there,
what are those things?
And she just said, oh, they call those UFOs.
Don't worry about them, they're fine.
And another story from my weird family.
Ingo Swan had some encounters with a UFO on the ground
and he snuck over a mountain and watched him
and so forth and so on.
And I asked Pudoff, do you trust what Ingo says?
And he says, yes, absolutely.
Ingo will never lie.
He'll have mistakes and look at this and look at this.
But if he says he was there, he saw one.
When Joe and I both worked in Stargate together,
same office, I had an incident where I was on top
of a grassy knoll, which I now use to explain as,
again, forgetting the name.
I actually have a picture of it.
It's important to say this name.
There it is. Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory.
You know what that looks like?
I don't.
It's outside of San Francisco.
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory.
Anyway so.
Do you mind if I text this to myself so we can put it on the screen?
The story that I am not telling you
is about my actual encounters with UFOs.
So Joe and I are both working in Stargate.
And one night I have this very strong,
And one night I have this very strong,
I'm standing on a grassy, knoll area.
And I'm looking around and there's lots of people, just regular Joes and Janes.
Is that a good way to do that?
Regular people there and I'm looking around
and there's a sense of sort of being hypnotized
during this zone.
I wish I knew that name.
Do you know when the healers down in South America
go around and fix your ears
and fix your eyes and stuff, they're all kind of mesmerized.
In a trance. Mesmerized, right?
Well, these people that I was standing around with
on the grassy knoll area were all sort of mesmerized.
And they were like looking around
and there were aliens in between them,
like interviewing them or talking to them and so forth.
And I lost my composure
because I was doing training in remote viewing and out of body
stuff and all that.
And I spoke in my thing, I spoke up and said, well, I teach people how to get out of their
body.
And the aliens looked over at me and I said,
ah, shit, why didn't I keep my mouth shut?
And they came over to me and they brought over to me
a little, this is too big.
It was just a little tiny thing that was round like this and had a needle thing here.
And in here, there was a,
filled with fluid of some kind
that was the color of
kind of brownish color.
And it was much smaller like this.
And they came around to me and circled me
and I'm still probably a little mesmerized again
by that time, but I was like,
I realized I said something that I shouldn't have said.
And they stuck it in my leg and squeezed the brown part
and I floated up into the air.
And they said, kind of like that.
And I was like, the other people
and other aliens didn't care.
They looked up and say, hey, what is he doing floating?
No, they didn't.
It was, you know, they didn't,
because of their mesmerization, mesmer, they didn't. It was, you know, they didn't, because of their mesmerization, mesmer,
they didn't seem to care too much
that I was floating up in the air and so forth and so on.
Now this is a dream or this is real or?
Let's just say this is an experience that I had.
This is an out-of-body experience.
So you had an out-of- body experience in a grassy knoll.
That's...
Is that correct?
No, that's not jumped to conclusions
until I come to the end and then I'll say I give up.
So I had an experience and my experience was
I was on a grassy knoll and the next morning I wake up
and I go to work at Fort Meade and Joe's in the office
with everybody else and I walked by Joe, well, I'm sorry,
Joe was there amongst the other people, Joe was there and I saw him there.
So-
In the experience or-
Yes, I saw him in the experience.
So I, with all the other people and the little aliens.
So I went over to Joe and I said,
Joe, can I ask you something?
He said, sure, what do you want?
And I said, I was wondering if anything
happened to you last night.
He said, no, just all those aliens
that you and I were with.
I said, okay, thanks.
And I turned around and walked out of the office
and Joe and I to this day have never spoken of it again.
Why, why have you not spoken with him about that?
I don't know the answer to that, but we hadn't talked about it.
Now I did talk to Putoff about it, sidebar, Putoff really believes in UFOs.
Coming back to Putoff, I told him about my experience.
Didn't tell him about Joe, I don't think.
And he says, was it up at,
what was the name of that place again?
Mount Hays?
No, no, no, no, no, no, this.
Oh, I don't know.
Okay.
I don't know. Okay.
He said to me, was it at the Lawrence Livermore Laboratory?
And I said, really?
You think it was there?
Because I know where that place is.
And he said, well, there's a lot of incidents up there
that get reported.
And that's all he told me.
But he knew about the Lawrence Livermore thing.
So I started looking up pictures and I said,
that looks like a pretty darn good grassy knoll.
Very, very interesting.
So when you asked me about that,
I was reluctant to say anything about that.
And I have had a discrete out-of-body experience
and found myself in the,
it's hard to talk about dimensions,
but I was standing behind an alien in a spacecraft,
just a small one, which I understand
get bigger and smaller depending upon.
At any rate, he said, you shouldn't be here.
And I said, I know, I realize this is a strange place,
but before I go, could I ask you a question?
And this is really a very strong memory in my head.
Excuse me in my head.
You know, I don't remember what I had for dinner last night,
but this is in there.
I'm telling myself I'm silly again.
Dude, it's not in there.
At any rate.
And he said, okay.
And I said, how do you get from here to Alpha Centauri?
We can't do that. The only thing that we think about is
I have to go really fast for a really long time.
How is it that you can go to Alpha Centauri
without any problem?
And essentially he said, you wouldn't understand.
So I said, I agree that that's a problem.
However, I know that you have access to my mental thoughts.
And that's, you're not talking to me with your mouth.
You have access to my mental thoughts and I understand that.
Can you use what information I have in my head
and try to explain it to me?
And he said, well, do you know what a Rubik's Cube is?
And I said, oh yeah, my son can do them in two minutes.
He says, okay, so imagine a Rubik's Cube,
but not necessarily just the six sides. Just imagine the concept of a Rubik's Cube, but not necessarily just the six sides.
Just imagine the concept of a Rubik's Cube.
And I said, okay.
Now imagine on each one of the tiles on the Rubik's Cube
has a chart of the elements, an elemental chart.
And you say, oh yeah, I know what that is.
You know, I've had science in school and everything.
He says, now on each of the other five surfaces,
there's also elemental charts.
And I said, so, okay, but what's the deal?
And he said, well, you're thinking about going that way
very fast for a very long time.
What he didn't say to me, which I'm thinking right now,
there's no space and time.
I'm only thinking that right now.
That wasn't part of the explanation.
And he says, so what you do to get up to Alpha Centauri
is you just twist the cube.
And I said,
what do you mean?
He said, well, I told you you wouldn't understand.
And he said, when the periodic table occurs
in a different place, you're at that place.
And that's just a very crude explanation.
But you have to stop thinking about,
go that way for a long time, very fast.
It doesn't work.
And so, you know, the Rubik's cube and all that nonsense,
it's probably just trying to mess with my mind
and everything.
And,
because that doesn't make,
how many Rubik's Cubes do you have to have?
You know, it's a stupid question.
It's just an explanation for me to try to
get my thinking straight,
because he was very strong when he said-
So it has to be utilizing some type of a consciousness.
Correct?
I think that that's absolutely true.
It's a consciousness act.
And so you're talking about quantum,
what was it, quantum locale.
Correct?
Yeah.
And so there has to be some kind of a connection.
If you heard of
If you heard of
What is they call it man now I'm now I'm having problems
Quantum entanglement mm-hmm
It's a way to be something like that work. I mean we did the entire
Our entire conversation you've been talking about, everything is one, connect, how everything is connected. And so, even the Chinese have claimed to be able
to communicate with their satellites now via quantum entanglement, whether that's real or bullshit, I don't know.
But supposedly the premise is every atom is connected and, you know, we've talked about
this several times on the show, you split an atom in half and you vibrate this half
no matter where in space and time.
The other half is it will mimic the exact same vibrations
that's being manipulated on the other half.
And so that has to be, that has,
oh, I guess it doesn't have to,
but I would think that that would come into play.
Well, we're trying very hard
to think about it as humans in our little brains. But then there does seem to be help coming along like this.
Just to end this part of the story,
there's no end, there's no speech time.
Time passed and it occurred to me,
wait a minute, I don't have to twist the cube.
If I just turn the cube on the other surface
is a different world.
And this same guy spoke to me instantly in my brain saying,
I've been waiting for you to discover that.
And it's not like he didn't ever go anywhere
because you can't ever go anywhere.
So it was very interesting to me.
You know, I wonder, gee, why did you wait three years
to tell me that?
There's no such thing as wait three years to tell me that?
There's no such thing as the three years to think about. But it was like sat me up like this and said,
I didn't say anything in my head.
I was like, well, that was pretty interesting.
And so getting back to your question,
do I believe in UFOs?
I have had experiences.
So I guess it's just a matter
if you trust your own experiences or not.
Yes.
Do you trust your own experiences?
Oh, yeah.
But there are false things around all the time.
Green ice cream is no good for you.
You ought to eat vanilla.
So is that a belief system?
And I say, somebody told me one time
you shouldn't eat green ice cream.
So I'm where I am right now at 77 years old
and the experiences I've had,
I have no doubt that there is something going on
besides us on this planet.
There's something else there.
And maybe because the everywhere, every when,
and if they are all one,
there's no such thing as,
they're part of us, they're part of our family, they're part of our group.
Interesting concept that I've not heard before.
Do you have any other, how,
how far down the rabbit hole
did you guys go with this? Were there other projects other than 8,200?
Of that time, no.
I mean, I remember when I interviewed Joe,
he had mentioned remote viewing a pyramid on Mars.
And I believe the year was 2000 BC.
Do you have any recollection of that?
I sent Joe to Mars.
You're the one that sent him there.
Mm-hmm.
Can you just kind of relive that experience?
Actually, let me start with a preliminary question.
How did that pop up on anybody's radar?
Why did you even give Joe a specific grid coordinate on Mars with a date?
You know, I don't remember. I mean, I even have that on video and the whole thing on my computer, which I'll send
you and you can listen to it.
But I don't remember actually why I did that.
You don't remember why somebody gave you a coordinate to have Joe McMonagle remote view Mars?
I would rather say what I just said,
and that is I don't remember why I did that.
Okay.
What did you think when Joe discovered the pyramid
through his experience?
Well, I tended to believe him on a couple of things.
I had during the thing,
he's might've had something to do with put off
because I asked some questions about it of put-off.
Anyway, the planet is a different size than ours.
So you had to be careful about what he said.
One time he looked at the sun and he said,
what's wrong with the sun?
I said, Joe, we can't study that right now.
We have to look at this coordinate here
and the coordinates on Mars all go just in one direction,
east, west, north, south, but they, you know,
us we split this way in our east and west,
but on Mars it goes the whole way around.
I got goofed up for a while there.
And then I remembered coordinates don't matter anyway.
He's just doing what he's doing.
If I say it, you know, go check out the peanuts, you know.
Okay.
Wouldn't mean anything.
And then he came back down and I said, you know,
go over there and go over here.
And then he said,
Mars used to be a good, used to be a healthy planet,
but it got hit by something.
And I said, are you saying it was something exploded,
something was destroyed?
He says it was like an asteroid came and hit the planet
and that tore the atmosphere off of it.
And for millions of years now,
it's just been deteriorating
after it lost its atmosphere.
And then he said,
and there are some people in the pyramid thing.
I don't know if he just said building or a pyramid,
but he could have said pyramid.
And people hid in there,
knowing that the comet was coming.
They wanted to create an environment
where they could survive
and then come out after the destruction of the terribleness.
And I said, well, can you go...
And he was able to go back in time.
I told him to go back in time until before that hit.
And he described, you know, tall aliens
and so forth and so on.
And I said, well, how about now?
Can you go inside the pyramid?
And he said, oh no, it's been too long.
It's been a long, long time
and they're all dead now.
They didn't survive.
And then he said,
but some of them didn't go into that.
Some of them took off like they had a spaceship
of some kind and they took off.
And then he described something that looked an awful lot
like earth before the earth got torn apart
by a young earth
with volcanoes and stuff all around there.
Like out of the frying pan into the fire
was kind of the thing I was saying.
It's like, that's as far as they could get,
but it was, at least it was off Mars.
Now that I think back, it might be that
Huda had something to do with trying to get me
to do that work,
because I remember talking with him about it.
I'll send the movie to you and you can see it.
I would appreciate that.
Would it be okay if we put some of the clips
into this interview as we talk about it?
Sure, because then you would have the show.
Thank you.
How did Pat die?
Slowly this or not this.
There are many, many stories about Pat dying
There are many, many stories about Pat dying
and everybody has a different story.
Do you really want to, I mean, this is really, I can tell you and then you'll have the stories too.
There was a sense that 73, he was active and stuff,
75 he was dead.
CIA had bought him.
CMI, CIA got him away from SRI
because they saw what he did and CIA got him away from SRI because they saw what he did.
And CIA hired him, lived in the Virginia area.
Some of the reports say he was in Washington, DC. No, he was in the Virginia area.
That's how far apart Virginia and Washington, DC are.
Depends on where he'd go to the store or not.
At any rate,
there was a
rumor that came up that he was sick
and that he was gonna die.
And he collapsed in a restaurant
and they took him to the hospital.
And I'm gonna tell these stories differently
and you're gonna get them mixed up, okay?
Took him to the hospital and
he disappeared from the hospital
when two people came to take him
and said they're gonna take him to the funeral home.
And people say, well, who were these guys?
I don't know, but I think when, you know,
Bill was on night duty, but he's not here today.
And I don't really know who that was.
Why don't you check at the desk or something?
Nobody could identify who they were.
I say CIA would do that because he was their employee
and had lots of classified stuff and so they were taken.
And Russell Targ tells the story that then they were,
they took him and they cremated him
and buried him in an unmarked grave.
And he went looking for the grave and see,
there's the grave that says 155
and it doesn't say anything about it.
It's an unmarked grave,
which supposedly his ashes are in there.
The agency just decided they were gonna cremate him
and bury him in an unmarked grave.
I would suggest that it's something like that,
but having you say it was much better.
That's one story.
Okay, second story. Oh, and then I'm sorry, after he was buried,
they called his wife.
Okay, and that's the story that Russell got
when he went looking for what happened to them.
Russell Targ got that.
Now, story two.
I think there'll be three stories. Story two is Pat Price,
Russell,
Hal, Hal, How? How and Pat's wife
fly to, I think the place is Las Vegas area,
I'm not too sure, and go to the hospital
and they say, oh, well, he got taken to the hospital and they say,
oh, well, he got taken to the funeral home.
They go to the funeral and we don't know who that was.
And they go to the funeral home
and there's Pat Price's body in a casket.
And Hal tells me it looks like Rice,
his wife is there and they agree it looks like him,
but it's not so hard to do that to a body.
And the CIA is good at fixing stuff up
that needs to be fixed up.
So I don't know after that,
there's four stories, not three.
I don't know after that,
because your next question, well, did they bury that?
No, I don't know the story to that.
I only know what Hal told me it was up.
You know, he was missing in there
and he wound up there and there was a body.
The other story we know is like the body was burned
and so forth and so on.
It's like the body was burned and so forth and so on.
This is one, two.
Do you know the true story of what happened? Well, no, I don't,
but I know when I heard this story from Hal
and nobody knew what happened after that,
what do you think I would do?
I would probably, if I were you, I would go to the locations
that people said that he was buried and see what's there.
Did you do that?
No.
I put Pat Price's picture in an envelope
and gave that sealed envelope to Joe
and asked Joe to describe where the person in the picture was.
Interesting.
First thing out of Joe's mouth,
this guy does something like what I do.
And I said, Joe, my task is to tell me where he is.
Doesn't matter about, he does what you do.
Okay, okay, wait a minute.
He's in an underground office in Virginia somewhere.
Okay, Joe, let's start with that and I'll get back to you.
And then he was used to me saying that because I used to take the envelope into Major Watt,
now Colonel Watt and say to him,
what do you think, should I continue?
I didn't really do that, but Joe knew it was okay
for me to say, okay, well stop for now, Joe,
and I'll get back to you.
I never did get back to him.
But.
Why didn't you get back with him?
I didn't want to go too far. I was doing something outside my purview as being the guy in that office then.
And I just kept my mouth shut.
So,
you have reason to believe that Pat Price's death
was false and that he may still be alive doing work.
Oh, he'd be well over a hundred years old now.
Well, at the time.
So when I think about all the shenanigans
that went on before, it looked a lot like,
oh, I know what the fourth one is.
Somebody said, oh, he couldn't have been killed
by the CIA to get rid of him
because he went and got his son this thing
and got his wife this thing.
And you could tell he was da-da-da.
And I'm saying the CIA could made up all those stories
so everybody would go discover those stories.
So that's the fourth situation.
Interesting.
And that's my answer.
Interesting.
Yeah, very interesting.
Well, Skip, we are getting close to time here.
So I do want to ask,
why was the Stargate program dismantled?
It was told to be dismantled
and they created one gal who said,
no, this is going on.
And look at so many percentages of this happened,
this happened.
And the other guy said,
oh no, it's a bunch of nonsense.
So they assessed the other.
It was time for it to be gone.
Okay.
Do you think they are continuing the program
under a different name?
Why wouldn't they?
They already had five.
They already had five other programs.
What did I say then?
What are those programs?
I've long since not been a part of that.
26 years and 12 years retirement.
It's a long time ago and nobody would have told me anyways.
Fair enough.
Well, Skip, I really appreciate you making the trip out here
and it's just a fascinating subject and it's cool to be talking to somebody
that was a part of it all.
Thank you, Skev.
Okay, don't do it.
Have a good one. Hi, I'm Joe Salci. I hosted the Stacking Benjamins podcast.
Every week we talk to experts about saving, investing, personal finance trends, crypto.
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