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April 24, 1998: Remote Viewing - Ed Dames | Mars Images - Richard C. Hoagland
Published 2 years ago
Description
Art Bell opens with the arrival of the third set of Cydonia photographs from the Mars Global Surveyor. Richard C. Hoagland reports that enhanced images of the main pyramid reveal extraordinary rectilinear geometry resembling room-sized cells viewed from above, consistent with his long-standing hypothesis that the structures are massive arcologies built by an ancient Martian civilization. Though the camera missed the fort, the strip captured stunning detail across the city complex and pyramids.
Remote viewer Major Ed Dames then joins the program with updates on several predictions. He announces that the plant pathogen he previously warned about has been identified as a new genus of fungus now dispersing over Africa, with trade winds expected to carry spores toward Latin America. He also discusses the increasingly dire situation in North Korea, where reports of cannibalism and aggressive military rhetoric align with his prediction about the next use of a nuclear weapon on the Korean Peninsula.
Dames describes his prediction about the jet stream dropping to ground level as now confirmed by meteorological research, and he reveals that remote viewing of the Cydonia region consistently draws viewers to a tetrahedral structure that appears to contain an electromechanical device connected to time travel.
Remote viewer Major Ed Dames then joins the program with updates on several predictions. He announces that the plant pathogen he previously warned about has been identified as a new genus of fungus now dispersing over Africa, with trade winds expected to carry spores toward Latin America. He also discusses the increasingly dire situation in North Korea, where reports of cannibalism and aggressive military rhetoric align with his prediction about the next use of a nuclear weapon on the Korean Peninsula.
Dames describes his prediction about the jet stream dropping to ground level as now confirmed by meteorological research, and he reveals that remote viewing of the Cydonia region consistently draws viewers to a tetrahedral structure that appears to contain an electromechanical device connected to time travel.