Remote Viewing UFOS and the VISITORS: Where do they come from? What are they? Who are they? Why are they here?
D**S
Possibly the most important UFO book ever written
In the interests of full disclosure, I must say at the outset that – through email and remote viewing discussion forums – I have known and greatly respected Tunde Atunrase, the author of this book, for many years. However, that fact that will not impact my review of this book in any way, which is exactly how the author would want it.This book is an excellent, far-reaching study into what can be known regarding the UFO phenomenon through the use of human psychic ability.While the use of one speculative subject to research another, different speculative subject would, on the face of it, seem a waste of time, it is not in this case. That is because the psychic ability being used is that of Joseph McMoneagle, probably the best scientifically-documented remote viewer on the planet. With an accuracy ranging – depending on the source – from 72%-88%, proven by multiple scientists in labs around the world, most all of what Joe reports can be taken as factual.That makes this a very important book. It is the earliest, most accurate, and insightful information regarding UFOs and aliens to ever reach human hands, at least in modern times.Wading through and weeding out the mis- and dis-information, the hallucinations, mis-identifications, delusions, fanciful fabrications and outright hoaxes that are rife throughout the UFO field is a chore for any serious researcher. But this author has done exactly that. This book has case study after case study upon which the searching light of McMoneagle’s remote viewing abilities are brought to bear. The result is intriguing, often surprising, and always fascinating.In this book you won’t read wild, imaginative tales of fanciful civilizations interacting with human beings in amazing ways, bringing messages of high spiritual metaphysical import. Instead, you will read cold, hard facts. You will learn the ground truth of alien interest in our planet. This book is a down-to-earth examination of that fact. It delves into UFO propulsion systems, home planets, why they are here, and what their interest in humanity entails. In this book, you will see a few balloons being burst, events which UFO researchers have long believed to be cornerstones of their case for the reality of UFOs and alien interaction. That makes the cases in which aliens actually are the basis for the events even more spectacular and intensely fascinating.The sober, intelligent presentation of these cases is a deeply refreshing approach to the UFO subject. From the first page, the author is in search of factual information and, after presenting and explaining the subject of remote viewing for the uninitiated, he goes on to explore over a half-dozen famous UFO events.I especially appreciated how the author explains and hammers home the importance of the double blind, scientific protocols under which the remote viewing occurs. (And, in this book, you will see what real remote viewing looks like). The fact that a remote viewer, having no idea what the target even is, goes on to describe alien vehicles, far-flung star systems, and the aliens themselves – when the target could just as easily have been any bridge, building, person or event here on earth – lends a special credence to the remote viewer’s information.Throughout the book and especially at the end of each case investigation, the author displays further research he has done into the details and nuances of each case. He does an excellent job of pulling apart the details of McMoneagle’s remote viewing data, discusses the additional information he has uncovered through good old fashioned research of existent literature, technological patents, etc., and then discusses the known facts, relating them to McMoneagle’s remote viewing, and considers how it all ties together and what the implications might mean. Along the way, he displays some excellent remote viewing ability of his own.As stated previously, I believe this to be a very important book. In future years, mankind will look back to this moment as the very first one in which the general public learned something about the alien races we will all then be cognizant of and familiar with. This book will represent the first inklings of what, eventually, all mankind will come to know.I cannot recommend this book highly enough. And I cannot commend my friend, Tunde Atunrase, as thoroughly as he deserves for the resources, hard work, energy and dedication that he has put into creating and completing this project. Through his curiosity, creativity and drive, he has accomplished something of a gift to the rest of us. When I learned Tunde was working on a book, I expected something good. What I got has blown me away.
4**R
Intriguing; Ranking Among the most Insightful on the Subject with Respect to Content
I literally couldn’t put this book down; I read it in one sitting. Having previously read numerous books about UFOs in addition to many works related to non-local cognition (including several by Joe McMoneagle), it was a pleasure to come across a work that ties these subjects together to add fresh and unique insights to several notable UFO cases.It sometimes can be difficult to isolate genuine UFO cases from the much larger number of misidentified sightings. Refreshingly, this book includes surprising examples of both. For those well versed with remote viewing, the explanations of cases presented in the book should be quite compelling, and provide additional data points to prioritize or exclude as irrelevant certain cases as one ponders the phenomenon.In terms of providing new content and shaping my overall take toward the UFO phenomenon, I would place this along many of my favorites on the subject, which include Jacques Vallee's Passport to Magonia and Confrontations, John Mack's Passport to the Cosmos, and Jung's Flying Saucers. While those books are much more academic and metaphysically oriented, I include this along with those as a favorite given its novel approach to the subject, attempt to providing useful (if unorthodox) insight into the source of specific cases, and overall readability. Anyone who has read and enjoyed Ingo Swann's Penetration will like this book as it also involves the interplay of remote viewing, UFOs and government intrigue, not to mention similarly far out concepts that will rattle the uninitiated.In short, the specificity provided with respect to individual cases vividly provides a window into the unknown that is typically only available in fiction or cinema. For anyone looking for a novel approach toward resolving the various sources of the UFO phenomenon, this book should be required reading.
J**E
A somewhat interesting book on remote viewing and UFOs.
One of the most enduring and stubborn mysteries of our time is the subject of UFOs (Unidentified Flying Objects). In spite of thousands of sightings of unusual objects in the sky, some of them even landing crashing, and even many claims of being abducted by Aliens we still lack enough real scientific evidence to determine the facts and truth surrounding this continuous phenomenon.When I saw this interesting and unique 320 page soft cover book (Remote Viewing UFOs and the visitors: Where do they come from? What they? Who are they? Why are they here by Tunnde Atunrase) on Amazon I decided to purchase it. As usual the delivery service was fantastic. This unusual book focuses on they use of remote viewing methods to find answers to the UFO issues.I found this book to be a little different than other UFO volumes because the focus was on the remote viewing experiments done by the military many years ago. They had various degrees of success in these extra-sensory studies; however, it still remains somewhat of a controversial topic for most traditional hard sciences. The evidence is still somewhat shaky; nevertheless, this book presents the material in a way to make you think more deeply on the subject.This book is organized into 16 chapters covering the following areas: The early years, top secret classified remote viewing military intelligence, what is remote viewing, Joseph W. McMoneagle, remote viewing examples, Fatima and the miracle of the sun, the Carlos Diaz UFO photos, various UFO case studies over the years, extraterrestrial humanoid reports around the world and many other interesting topics.If you are interested in the UFO mystery combined with extra-sensory studies and experiences you may want to check out this book. Personally, I found it to only be a fair read and I did not find the arguments for remote viewing and UFOs very compelling.Rating: 3 Stars. Joseph J. Truncale (Author: Never trust a politician: Critical views of politics and politicians).
T**R
Thoroughly Enjoyable!
I've been meaning to write this review for some time and thought I'd better get around to it.I've been Remote Viewing for 24 years or more and to this day, as I'm still stunned at the results it can produce.Over the years I have collected a reasonable library of remote viewing literature, all of which I've enjoyed. Unless you're really into the subject, a lot of this literature can seem a little dry and this is fine, it's a process backed up by scientific data and that data is often found in these books.Like many people, I found remote viewing via the UFO subject. For me this was around 1996 when RV became declassified. Although there is a huge connection between the two subjects, there is very little literature specifically about RV and the UFO's as it's considered woo woo (I really dislike that phrase) and can rarely be validated.Tunde has brought together an excellent collection of UFO related RV data on some of the best known UFO cases. This combined with Joe McMoneagle's thorough RV reports makes for fascinating reading.
A**M
Nice.
Very controversial topic. Nice.
M**K
This book was satisfying to me, as it put ...
This book was satisfying to me, as it put a final, confirming touch to my belief that the aliens have to be real.
M**L
A detailed book which has some excellent data presented from some of the best psychics working ...
A detailed book which has some excellent data presented from some of the best psychics working totally blind in the world. A must read for all interested in UFO's.
T**G
Lots of pages with nothing much in them
This book reminds me of a pasty from Greggs, there isn't much meat in it !!
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