The U.S. government’s extremely serious $20 million psychic espionage program that spent two decades trying to weaponize remote viewing, astral projection, and spoon-bending before quietly admitting it was mostly expensive witchcraft.
The U.S. government’s extremely serious $20 million psychic espionage program that spent two decades trying to weaponize remote viewing, astral projection, and spoon-bending before quietly admitting it was mostly expensive witchcraft.
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The declassified embarrassment that showed the U.S. government once spent serious money trying to read minds while pretending it wasn’t completely insane.
The program where highly trained remote viewers spent years describing secret Soviet bases… that sometimes turned out to be grocery stores or parking lots.
The legendary black project that tried to turn “I see dead people” into actionable military intelligence and somehow lasted longer than most successful weapons programs.
The taxpayer-funded experiment in government-funded clairvoyance that ultimately discovered the only thing psychics could reliably see was the next budget increase.
The classified program that proved even the U.S. military can fall for New Age nonsense when they’re desperate enough to win the arms race.
The ultimate flex in bureaucratic absurdity: when your intelligence agency decides the best way to beat the KGB is to hire people who talk to spirits.
The Cold War-era initiative where the CIA and Pentagon hired psychics to spy on the Soviets, because apparently conventional intelligence was too boring and reliable.