“Norm” - Stargate Watcher
1995 Stargate Psychic Spies (NightLine)
This video is from a 1995 ABC Night line with Ted Koppel interview.
Imagine my surprise when I saw an Agent, known to me, being on TV.
This is a transcript of this conversion, created by the CIA
Introduction
Stargate Project and Remote Viewing
https://www.dailymotion.com/video/x67ziy5
Remote viewing (RV) is the practice of seeking impressions about a distant or unseen target, purportedly "sensing" with the mind. Remote viewing experiments have historically been criticized for lack of proper controls and repeatability. There is no scientific evidence that remote viewing exists, and the topic of remote viewing is generally regarded as pseudoscience.
Typically, a remote viewer is expected to give information about an object, event, person or location that is hidden from physical view and separated at some distance.
Physicists Russell Targ and Harold Puthoff, parapsychology researchers at Stanford Research Institute (SRI), are generally credited with coining the term "remote viewing" to distinguish it from the closely related concept of clairvoyance, although according to Targ, the term was first suggested by Ingo Swann in December 1971 during an experiment at the American Society for Psychical Research in New York City.
Remote viewing was popularized in the 1990s upon the declassification of certain documents related to the Stargate Project, a $20 million research program that had started in 1975 and was sponsored by the U.S. government, in an attempt to determine any potential military application of psychic phenomena. The program was terminated in 1995 after it failed to produce any actionable intelligence information.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Remote_viewing
Stargate Project was a secret U.S. Army unit established in 1978 at Fort Meade, Maryland, by the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) and SRI International (a California contractor) to investigate the potential for psychic phenomena in military and domestic intelligence applications. The Project, and its precursors and sister projects, originally went by various code names—GONDOLA WISH, STARGATE, GRILL FLAME, CENTER LANE, PROJECT CF, SUN STREAK, SCANATE—until 1991 when they were consolidated and rechristened as "Stargate Project".
Stargate Project work primarily involved remote viewing, the purported ability to psychically "see" events, sites, or information from a great distance. The project was overseen until 1987 by Lt. Frederick Holmes "Skip" Atwater, an aide and "psychic headhunter" to Maj. Gen. Albert Stubblebine, and later president of the Monroe Institute. The unit was small-scale, comprising about 15 to 20 individuals, and was run out of "an old, leaky wooden barracks".
The Stargate Project was terminated and declassified in 1995 after a CIA report concluded that it was never useful in any intelligence operation. Information provided by the program was vague and included irrelevant and erroneous data, and there was reason to suspect that its project managers had changed the reports, so they would fit background cues. The program was featured in the 2004 book and 2009 film, both titled The Men Who Stare at Goats, although neither mentions it by name.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stargate_Project
Note: Fort Meade, Maryland, is the HQ of the NSA, National Security Agency, that is in charge of all electronic spying.
“Norm” was a CIA technical advisor with remote viewing research connected by the DIA (Defense Intelligence Agency) and CIA.
“Norm” and his wife were friends of my parents, and when we were in the same town or region, we would visit, share a meal, and chat.
“Norm” had a beautiful red-headed daughter that was my age, and I looked forward to hanging out with her.
“Norm” and his wife would come visit my mother in Texas for many years and have dinner with her.
Summary
A CIA presentation document about Stargate Project
To do more research, look here:
https://archive.org/details/stargatefiles
Other Links