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RemoteViewing

Ingo Swann

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On the one hand, the particular set of circumstances referred to just above involved, of course, the Soviet Union and what might be called "the threat of an outbreak of applied superpowers of the bio-mind." (I'll review the historical basis for that set of Soviet circumstances in chapter 2, and to various details of it later on in the narrative.) On the other hand, the larger circumstances of an invisible picture became visible -- the very existence in our species of superpowers of bio-mind. In this combined sense, then, the big picture consisted of three sets of circumstances, and these need to be identified here at the start, and remembered throughout this book: (1) the existence of superpowers of bio-mind within our species; (2) what the Soviet researchers were doing with them; and (3) what the disbelieving and astonished American intelligence community should do because of what the Soviets were doing. If at this point you haven't broken into at least a smile regarding this interesting mix of circumstances, then you should to try to loosen up a little. And, as will become gradually more clear when one is further long in the narrative, these three sets of circumstances comprised both the Saga and the Soap Opera of remote viewing. Aside from some of its noted foibles, the American intelligence community is by far the greatest power in the world, and to my knowledge DOES take its duties on behalf of the nation quite seriously.
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