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Soviet's long distance hypnosis

Maxell

New Blood
Joined
Aug 19, 2003
Messages
9
What you think these russians experiments, where people was hypnotised at long distance?

Is it just feeling little a un-natural? Or is it just another hoax stories?


http://www.rvscience.com/crystal/amplifier.htm


The technique of remote influencing was developed from 'Sleep-Wake hypnosis' which was discovered by the Russians in the 1930s; it being the ability to hypnotise people from a distance. 'Sleep-Wake Hypnosis' allowed a hypnotist to transfer hypnotic commands telepathically to a subject, whether they were a few feet, or even a thousand mile away. Remote influencing is the basis of hypnosis. A Ukrainian, Albert Ignatenko demonstrated (on the Paranormal World of Paul McKenna, ITV UK) that he could raise or lower the pulse rate of people who were remote from him. This was a dramatic demonstration of remote influencing. This technique was developed from the methodology where Russian remote influencers were trained to stop the hearts of test animals. The ability to hypnotise people at a distance and plant suggestions in their brains enabled the Russians to remotely influence their enemies. Years of research along these lines led to the development of the remote killing ability, the power to make your enemy drop dead by telepathic means. Vladimir Zironosvky, taunted the West by stating on BBC television, that Russia had psychics who could remotely kill anyone up to a thousand kilometres away. Russian boasts that they could remotely kill anyone may indeed be based on fact!
 
Technical Remote Viewing, Technical Remote Influencing, Spiritual Remote Viewing, Spiritual Remote Influencing (I havent heard of this one. . . yet) are to my knowledge empty claims. They remind me of Scientology, hooey built on hooey again and again.
 
Apparently at one time the US Military took Soviet and Eastern Bloc research in this area quite seriously (cold war era).

The Defense Intelligence Agency has two declassified reports on its FOIA site.

One is on Warsaw Pact Countries Paraphysics Research prepared by the
U.S. Air Force/Air Force Systems Command/ Foreign Technology Division and the other on Soviet and Czech Parapsych Research prepared by the Army Medical Intelligence Branch.

I came across these because on this same site are two important publications on the venomous snakes of the Middle East and of Europe which I deal with in my other life.

You can find these documents including a terrible copy of a two part UFO report on the DIA's FOIA website as pdfs as well:



http://www.dia.mil/Public/Foia/


The refs are:
Paraphysics R&D - Warsaw Pact. (PDF file size: 3.8 MB) U.S. Air Force

Soviet and Czechoslovakian Parapsychology Research. (PDF file size: 4.2 MB) Army Medical Intelligence Branch
 
SteveGrenard said:
Apparently at one time the US Military took Soviet and Eastern Bloc research in this area quite seriously (cold war era).

And....why did they take it "seriously"? Cold war thinking: "If the rooskies are looking into it, we'd better, too."

The key question is: What was found?

The key answer is: Nothing.
 
Okay, I give in. Why all this bumping of old posts with Steve Grenard in?
 
From checking his profile he's come back after a two year break, CFLarsen still has a number of unanswered questions and T'ai Chi sems to be trying to stir up trouble

I just want to update everyone on 2003, because it is so important!!
 
And....why did they take it "seriously"? Cold war thinking: "If the rooskies are looking into it, we'd better, too."

The key question is: What was found?

The key answer is: Nothing.


And *why* did the Soviets leak information about these programs? Because they weren't really doing them, and every penny NATO spent chasing down ridiculous rumours was money diverted from real programs.

There's always somebody in a position of influence who should know better, but prefers to leave no stone unturned: psychic assassins, remote viewers, remote hypnotists... better safe than sorry.

Doesn't Geller claim he worked for the CIA as a telepath, deleting hard-drive contents from afar?
 

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