Tell Me What You See: Remote Viewing Cases from the World's Premier Psychic Spy
Decorated army officer Major Ed Dames tells the shocking true story of his time as operations and training officer for the Defense Intelligence Agency's top-secret Psychic Intelligence Unit. Together with his Psi Spy team, Dames used the practice of remote viewing to uncover accurate and verifiable military intelligence by going where no intel operatives on the ground could go -- into the very mind of the enemy. After retiring from the military, he turned his paranormal detective skills to finding missing persons such as millionaire pilot Steve Fossett, whose plane vanished in Nevada, and a young Colorado girl named Christina White, who disappeared seemingly without a trace. He has even located one of the most legendary missing objects in history, the Ark of the Covenant. In Tell Me What You See, cosmic Columbo Major Ed Dames takes you behind the scenes of some of his most mind-bending cases.
- Reveals true stories and fascinating secrets uncovered by the military's remote viewing teams--from intelligence on Soviet missile sites to the whereabouts of missing POWs in Vietnam to the location of the Ark of the Covenant
- Maj. Dames is the most popular guest on George Noory's exceedingly popular radio show Coast to Coast AM
For anyone fascinated by the intersection of the military and the mysterious,
Tell Me What You See is an amazing and completely absorbing must-read.
Q&A with Author Ed Dames What got you interested in Remote Viewing? Actually, I stumbled onto it by accident. As we detail in the book, once I had risen through the ranks of military intelligence, I was privy to the deepest darkest top-secret programs our government had to offer. When I learned there was this tested and proven capability out there to gather information about targets without actually sending operatives into the field, I jumped at it, I needed additional intelligence to crack critical problems at the time, and this breakthrough psychic technique was just what the doctor ordered. On a more personal level, I was always interested in the paranormal -- even as a boy, and remote viewing was the key to help unlock mysteries I€ve been curious about for a very long time. RV presented a world without secrets on so many levels, and in the spy biz especially -- that€s a really good world.
What was your greatest RV success? There have been so many it€s hard to put my finger on just one. From finding missing and exploited children, to uncovering lost treasure like the Ark of the Covenant, to locating POWs and breaking the Soviet biological weapons program, the success rate in my career has been incredible. I suppose just keeping the military Psi Spy program alive as long as we did with so many enemies trying to shut us down could be considered a success. But I think taking the culmination of more than 25 years of developing this tool from the rigid confines of the military into the public arena has been most satisfying to me. To teach RV the way I do to eager and curious audiences around the world has been and continues to be an incredible experience. It makes it all worthwhile.
Why is RV important? In
Tell Me What You See we demonstrate in no uncertain terms the powerful abilities the mind has locked away inside -- abilities most of us have only dreamed of. The human mind is unlike anything else there is, and we have only half- realized our potential. Now through the correct use of remote viewing, we can realize the other half. We show how anyone can learn RV to know anything, to gather direct knowledge of any event, person, or object across time and space.
What are you currently working on? I have recently completed work on an RV technique I call Geofix, where we can pinpoint the location of anything geographically with no margin of error whatsoever. This is a very exciting development and we are using Geofix to continue the work we€ve always done such as hunting down child killers, locating treasure and searching for extraterrestrial and extradimensional life across the universe. As always we also continue to make use of RV to see what€s coming in the future, to look for indicators of warning that affect all of us. In
Tell Me What You See we attempt not so much to send a wake up call to people, as much as we want people to simply wake up. Here€s a world too many know nothing about. We hope to change that.