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Title: Psychic Warrior : The True Story of America's Foremost Psychic Spy and the Cover-Up of the CIA's Top-Secret Stargate Program by David Morehouse ISBN: 0-312-96413-7 Publisher: St. Martin's Press Pub. Date: 15 January, 1998 Format: Mass Market Paperback Volumes: 1 List Price(USD): $6.99 |
Average Customer Rating: 4.33 (93 reviews)
Rating: 5
Summary: Compelling, disturbing, authentic....Fantastic Read!
Comment: After viewing segment about David Morehouse on TV's "Unsolved Mysteries," I immediately checked out this book on amazon.com and read the reviews listed below with great interest. If you want to learn more about psychic work and the spiritual side of our being and the incredible "sixth sense" powers developed by certain people, this book will absolutely knock you out! In a subject category populated by more than a few authors of "questionable" background and zero scientific expertise of the subject matter, this writer's credentials are exemplary...son of career military father, strong religious background in Morman church, graduate of BYU, highly-decorated U.S. Army officer and later elite Airborne Ranger Company Commander, Morehouse is obviously a person of great patriotism, loyalty, courage, conviction, integrity and intelligence. A tremendous book about the real-life inside background of the government's top-secret Stargate Program. Excellent read! It'll send you off "into the ether" and make you rethink many commonly-held notions about psychic abilities and individuals capable of using their paranormal gifts to transcend time and space. The book cover's notation is true -- "Psychic Warrior" really does portray a real-life "X-Files." Great book!
Rating: 4
Summary: WHAT YOUR GOVERNMENT DOESN¿T WANT YOU TO KNOW
Comment: This book pulled me in as I read of David Morehouse's experiences as a Remote Viewer and his subsequent disallusionment with the program and finally his clash with the government over his desire to "tell all." I've read several of Joe McMoneagle's books (I loved "The Ultimate Time Machine") and know that a number of other Viewers who worked for government programs have gone public as well. Morehouse has an amazing story of developing psychic (or perhaps psychotic) abilities after a bullet fired at him lodged in his helmet but did not penetrate his head.
Morehouse paints himself as a victim, confused about the visions he was seeing and desperately wanting a solution. But in the Army, it would not do to announce that you see distant events and talk to "angels" so Morehouse is left to suffer. Until an Army psychologist refers him to the Remote Viewing project. Morehouse describes himself as a fast learner as he absorbs the method of traveling in time and space. His descriptions of exactly how this was done and how it felt are the best I've read anywhere. He takes incredible journeys in his spirit body -- seeing the Ark of the Covenant and walking on the surface of Mars!
But Morehouse is bothered by the use of these abilities -- the government keeps knowledge of Remote Viewing from the public and uses psychics for military purposes rather than harnessing the power for good. I was shocked to read that Morehouse "saw" canisters of chemical gas in the burning oil fields of Iraq during Desert Storm. The implication is clear -- the government knew American soldiers were exposed to chemicals that would ultimately make them sick, yet it went ahead and ended the war and said nothing to Veterans about the danger to which they'd been exposed. I also wondered why the government didn't use Remote Viewers in 2003 to find those missing weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, or to discover that none existed! Yes, I know the Remote Viewing program is supposed to be disbanded, but Morehouse implies that it must be continuing and once again the public is in the dark.
Moreshouse takes loads of credit for "going public" with Remote Viewing, and there is no doubt that he was treated shabbily by the government he had served as an Army officer. But how true are the events described in this book? How could Morehouse remember all the dialog that is on these pages? The story reads like a novel, with his relationship with his wife and kids a dizzying swing between on and off as he deals with his persistent visions and physical symptoms. His wife wants to help him, but also wants to preserve some kind of normal life for her children. She thinks medical treatment, not doing Remote Viewing, is what David needs. But I do believe that there really was no help for a condition like this. It's easy for the medical profession to simply label someone like Morehouse a nut and pump him full of drugs (as was eventually done). Because Morehouse had talent as a Viewer, the government could exploit his ability without caring about his personal emotional trauma.
Morehouse does not really explain the mechanism behind his fearsome visions, like imagining himself killing his whole family, or seeing monsters attack him and finding himself all bloody. Of course, in some ways that's the point -- he didn't understand what was happening. But the problem is, neither do we. I can only take this story as Morehouse's memory of what happened to him during his years in the Army. It provides a frightening picture of the power of the government over people who reveal information the government wants kept secret. But it also reveals a complex and comforting view of reality where we are all connected and we are immortal. Morehouse's picture of the spirit world is very consistent with other pictures from other sources that claim such knowledge. I'd have to say that overall the story rings true. And if true, it has many far-reaching implications.
Rating: 5
Summary: The universe is not a morally neutral realm- even for spies.
Comment: There was once a U.S. government program that trained carefully selected personnel to transcend time and space; to view persons, places, or things remote in time and space; and to gather usable intelligence on the same. The name of this program was Stargate.
This account is written by a highly decorated regular army officer(Airborne Ranger Company Commander) who was a recruited to play a direct role as a remote viewer. He was seemingly an unusual candidate for this, having grown up in a career army family and the Mormon church. However, having experienced a head wound, and a resulting near death experience, he began to perceive the world around him in a way that shook his previous misconceptions about the nature of the universe. He even began to doubt his own sanity. Fortunately, in those days there were still a few brilliant and open minds connected with the government that recognised the existance and value of those with "special gifts."
This book will give you an overview of the precedure used in the remote viewing process. It also gives a good survey of the types of missions that were attempted. There are several books that can do this acceptably. Morehouse gives insight into the moral and ethical element of the process. You see, he always knew of the higher struggle of Good and Evil in the world and never once lost sight of it (the world would have no purpose without choice between the two.) He shows that this is no doubt what ultimately lead to the demise of the program and the following smear campaign. You see, the CIA tried to take control of the program at the end and nothing "spooked" the "spooks" more than the idea that there might be angels looking over their shoulders. Indeed, the highest ranking intelligence officer in the the army is quoted, before witnesses, as saying that the CIA does nothing that doesn't primarily serve the Agency's own interests- and that they are the biggest assembly of liars and thieves in the country- and an "abomination." These were the words of the army's deputy chief of staff for intelligence.
Whether or not you believe any of this is up to you. All I can say is that I have some small experience in these matters and this is the best written, most intelligent, account that I've read. It was a strong ring of truth to it and that is a hard thing to convincingly counterfeit.
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Title: Remote Viewing Secrets: A Handbook by Joseph McMoneagle ISBN: 1571741593 Publisher: Hampton Roads Pub Co Pub. Date: May, 2000 List Price(USD): $14.95 |
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Title: The Seventh Sense: The Secrets of Remote Viewing as Told by a "Psychic Spy" for the U.S. Military by Lyn Buchanan ISBN: 0743462688 Publisher: Pocket Books Pub. Date: 01 February, 2003 List Price(USD): $14.00 |
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Title: The Ultimate Time Machine: A Remote Viewer's Perception of Time, and Predictions for the New Millennium by Joseph McMoneagle, Charles T. Tart ISBN: 157174102X Publisher: Hampton Roads Pub Co Pub. Date: November, 1998 List Price(USD): $12.95 |
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Title: The Stargate Chronicles: Memoirs of a Psychic Spy by Joseph McMoneagle ISBN: 1571742255 Publisher: Hampton Roads Pub Co Pub. Date: September, 2002 List Price(USD): $24.95 |
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Title: Mind Trek: Exploring Consciousness, Time, and Space Through Remote Viewing by Joe McMoneagle, Joseph McMoneagle, Charles T. Tart ISBN: 1878901729 Publisher: Hampton Roads Pub Co Pub. Date: July, 1997 List Price(USD): $12.95 |
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