Monday, September 16, 2024

Remote Viewing and UFOs

 Remote viewing is a phenomenon in which a person, without physical access to the location, attempts to obtain information about distant locations or events through thought alone. While remote viewing remains a controversial topic, especially in the scientific world, its practitioners have long claimed to have discovered extraordinary things, including UFO bases in places like Antarctica.

One of the most high-profile cases linking remote viewing to UFOs involves Ingo Swann, who claimed to have used his ability to discover structures on the Moon and Antarctica that he believed were connected to aliens. Swann was a key figure in the Stargate project, a secret US military program that investigated the use of paranormal phenomena for military purposes. Works like his have often been criticized by the scientific community due to their lack of repeatable results and scientific verification. While his claims of UFO bases in hard-to-reach places like Antarctica were popular with conspiracy theorists, scientists remain skeptical. As the most inaccessible continent, Antarctica has long been a subject of fascination for both researchers and conspiracy theorists. Expeditions such as Operation Highjump in 1946 increased interest in the region, and some theories claim that mysterious structures have been discovered beneath the ice. Claims of UFO bases in Antarctica are often based on satellite images that supposedly show anomalies in the ice, which some interpret as alien structures. However, such images are usually the result of natural geological processes, such as melting ice, and do not provide any evidence of extraterrestrial technology. The scientific community is very wary of such claims. Remote viewing, although studied extensively, especially in the 1970s and 1980s, has not produced results that could be considered credible evidence of such abilities. Eventually, projects such as Stargate were shut down, and their results were heavily criticized for their lack of repeatability and conclusiveness. For scientists, claims of remote viewers discovering UFO bases are still pseudoscience, unsupported by hard evidence. UFO enthusiasts, however, continue to view remote viewing as a tool for uncovering hidden truths. They argue that the official closure of projects like Stargate does not mean an end to research into the phenomenon, but rather a cover-up of its findings. Antarctica, with its mysterious, little-explored areas, remains a focus of these theories, linking them to visions of UFO bases waiting to be discovered.

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