Taskings & Responses
An Interview with Joe McMoneagle
by Jed Bendix
(continued from page 10)

JB: Since the fall of the Berlin Wall, what have you learned about the Soviets’ and other countries’ research in regard to things paranormal?

JM: I’ve made a couple of trips to Russia, and other countries previously behind the Iron Curtain, and met with my counterparts as well as key researchers in the paranormal. In some cases, dependent upon the subject matter, their research is comparable; in some cases, it isn’t. It strongly depends on the specific area of inquiry and whom you are talking to. Russia, for instance, has as many flakes in this area of investigation as we do within the United States; some have degrees and notable jobs, just like in our country.

Unfortunately, education, position, and notoriety doesn’t exclude them from being crazy, just like here. However, I have met with and spent time inside some very good labs. I have met the members of the Russian remote-viewing project, and their viewers appear to be at least as good as any remote viewer from the American special project. What I’ve learned is going to be formally presented in a two-book release that will soon be published in America as well as Russia. These publications are written by me and three of the major players from both sides during the Cold War.

JB: What do you see in the future as remote viewing’s greatest challenge?

JM: Currently, I see no future for remote viewing. It has been completely overwhelmed with disinformation and bogus beliefs. There are so many erroneous assumptions about it on the internet, I don’t know how someone wanting to know what’s real and what isn’t could find their way. Even honest attempts at reporting on it are rife with personality-driven comments designed to defame, slant, or defile the real facts to one degree or another. Egos run rampant within the field, and there are many speaking with authority that haven’t a clue what they are talking about. It’s been, and is being, assaulted by so-called credible scientists who have not bothered to read the research, and by some who have said they wouldn’t believe it even if it proved to be true. I’m afraid that anyone who is interested in the real nature of remote viewing is destined to return to the subject in 50 to a 100 years. Maybe then our understanding of reality will have progressed to a point that the subject won’t be so threatening.

JB: What do you see as the greatest potentials, in the future, for remote viewing?

JM: If it were used appropriately, I can see it as an adjunct to other forms of intelligence collection; I can see it being used to solve problems in science research and development; I can see it as a usable tool for improving our creativity and perhaps opening doors to new ways for doing things. Used properly, it could contribute greatly to our understanding of Nature and man, and how we directly affect the world around us.


Joe McMoneagle may be contacted about his services by writing to Intuitive Intelligence Applications, Inc., ATTN: Operations Officer, P.O. Box 100, Nellysford, VA 22958, or by sending an e-mail inquiry to Nancy McMoneagle at nmcmoneagle@nccwildblue.com.

 


PSI Chronicles - The Case of the Wounded Kitten by Sally Rhine Feather, Ph.D.

When we decided to devote this issue of RO Psi-News to psi and healing, I immediately thought of an unusual healing case that was sent to me by a young man from Pennsylvania. Although he had experienced a wide range of different psi experiences over the years, some of them unsettling, this was his first clearly positive use of his apparent psychic energy. It involved and was witnessed by one of his then-roommates whom we will call Karen. His story is as follows:

“Karen and I would spend a lot of time out in the garage in a little sitting area we had out there to just 'shoot the breeze' and such. She volunteered at the local animal shelter and brought home the occasional stray cat, dog and even a three legged iguana once. On this particular occasion there was a kitten which was several weeks old which she had brought home and was keeping in the garage. Our other roommate Donald had gotten home a few minutes before, parking his bicycle in the garage and coming into the house. After saying hello, Karen and I headed out to our little chat area. When I opened the door I noticed that Donald's bike had fallen and was blocking the door somewhat. I pushed open the door and while putting the bike upright, noticed the kitten lying there under the bike not moving. It was about ten to fifteen minutes after Donald had gotten home.

I picked the kitten up only to find that it was totally limp. I could not detect any breathing. Karen started going into a panic. I could feel her fear and concern in a very empathic way. I held the kitten in my hands and noticed its eyes. They were partially opened and fixed. No dilation of the pupils and they seemed glazed and sticky. I opened the lid for a better look and the kitten had no musculature response at all. But as I looked into the kittens' eyes I could see, or more accurately sense, a glimmer of life in them. Something I had known before as I watched the light of life fade from a dog's eyes after it had been hit by a car and was in the throes of death. But with this kitten I somehow 'knew' that something could be done. It wasn't a knowledge born of intellectual thought, but rather a simple 'knowing.’ Instinctive in a way. And as if by instinct I began to act, led by this inner sense of certainty.

I quickly went into this state of extreme focus. A sense of hyper-awareness accompanied it. I went over and sat on the cushioned chair and Karen sat on the couch, fretting. I placed my legs together as I sat, putting the kitten's limp body in the crease between my legs with its head facing me. I took my thumbs and over and over, traced them down each side of the kitten's spine in unison, applying what seemed like the precise amount of pressure needed.

I could sense Karen’s concern and while maintaining my focus on the task at hand spoke to her in a calm, determined voice that I needed her to let go of her worry and fear as it was distracting me greatly. She tried, and her emotions did diminish, but not totally. Then after a few minutes, the kitten twitched. I felt Karen's emotions spike. The kitten then took an obvious breath. Karen's excitement peaked and I felt my focus begin to waver. The kitten stopped breathing again. I immediately set to reestablish my focus and told Karen in a harsher tone that I needed her to stop being so emotional or to leave the garage and
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Volume 2, Issue 2, 2010