0:00
And he said, this is the biggest submarine in the world by far.
0:03
It's one and a half times bigger than the next biggest sub.
0:06
The whole thing, he nailed it all.
0:10
Later in his life, when he was doing,
0:13
remote viewing, like for one example,
0:16
he got a call one night when he was in Las Vegas.
0:21
How much money did they dump into this program?
0:24
We don't know exactly.
0:26
Joe personally told me over a lunch, millions.
0:32
It's more than one, officially.
0:35
I don't know how many millions,
0:37
but it was very important for the United States
0:40
to be able to investigate whether or not
0:43
this had intelligence capabilities
0:45
and what level of benefit that could be
0:48
gleaned from investigating this type of,
0:51
because they started getting amazing
0:54
out of Joe right away, and it's like,
0:56
okay, well, how many amazing LeBron James of Consciousness
1:00
are there to say this person can sit in a room
1:05
and tell me what's going on at a location
1:07
and potential future events,
1:08
because some of the remote viewers that the CIA used
1:11
were able to produce the effects of nuclear tests
1:16
that had been secret until the remote viewers said
1:19
this is going to happen.
1:21
Be able to figure out whether it was going to be a success
1:23
or a failure, because some of them were failures,
1:26
and all the intelligence turned out to be correct,
1:28
and so they were super interested.
1:30
Joe McGonagall never missed the location
1:32
of a nuclear sub in his entire career,
1:35
because he explains that there's a high level of entropy
1:39
in a reactor for a sub,
1:42
and that just glows like a big bright light
1:46
and consciousness where those locations
1:48
and those types of entropy events are.
1:51
So if anyone ever needed to know like they lost track
1:54
of where a nuclear sub was for the Russians,
1:57
they'd go into Joe's office and go right here,
1:59
and they'd check their sensors and boom, it would be there.
2:02
Well, since we're talking about nuclear subs
2:07
what's, tell me the story.
2:11
Well, the one that made everyone sit up and take notice
2:15
and got a more funding for a large number of years
2:18
was when there was a building that was identified
2:23
by intelligence personnel that became the top priority
2:27
for the National Security Council.
2:29
It was the largest building under one roof in the world,
2:33
and it was high in the Russian tundra
2:35
near this large body of water,
2:38
so they thought it might be a manufacturing facility
2:40
for some type of military craft,
2:43
and they weren't sure what it was,
2:45
and everybody wanted to know what was going on
2:47
inside the building,
2:48
because they had triple death wire fencing
2:50
in between all those they had centuries with dogs,
2:54
24-hour site-to-site-century circle around the property,
2:59
trains coming in, dumping off raw materials 24-7,
3:03
food coming in, food service for the people
3:05
who were working inside the building,
3:07
and no one knew what was going on inside the building.
3:10
And so someone at the National Security Council meetings
3:13
knew that they had a new psychic program down at Mead,
3:16
and sent the Manila folder down to Fort Mead
3:21
and they handed it to Joe McGonagall.
3:23
The first thing they handed him was simply map coordinates,
3:27
and they said, show us what you see here.
3:30
And he came up with the building that they were concerned about,
3:35
and he described the building,
3:37
and they said, okay, you're on target,
3:39
and then they gave him a picture of that building,
3:41
and they said, tell us what's going on inside here.
3:44
Now, the guys at the National Security Council
3:46
and all the intelligence guys who were in the room
3:48
came to the consensus that it was going to be
3:52
some kind of troop carrier that they could probably
3:55
transport over to the ocean,
3:56
because it was four or five blocks away from the ocean,
3:59
but it was short enough to where they could transport
4:02
something on a medium size over to the ocean to get it
4:07
But that was their best guess.
4:10
Joe McGonagall was the only person who came up with the result.
4:14
He dropped into the building,
4:16
and he started viewing this thing,
4:18
and he viewed it over a number of days,
4:20
and came up with a drawing and an explanation
4:23
and technical specifications for a brand-new submarine.
4:28
And he said, this is the biggest submarine
4:31
in the world by far.
4:33
It's one and a half times bigger than the next biggest sub.
4:35
This is the brand-new classification of Russian sub.
4:40
And he came up with a number of very unique characteristics
4:47
And he said, it's not a cylinder.
4:50
It's a cylinder that looks like it's cut in half, spread out,
4:53
and then a flat part welded on the top and the bottom.
4:56
And the US engineers looked at that later after he sent it,
4:59
and he said, that's impossible.
5:01
It would be crushed at depth.
5:03
It's highly unlikely, et cetera.
5:05
So, this is the first strike weapon.
5:08
And it's, by the way,
5:10
if you've seen the movie Hunt for Red October,
5:13
that submarine that they used in that movie
5:15
was the sub that Joe McBonagall outed.
5:18
And he said, I don't want to say too much about it.
5:21
But it's also got canted launch tubes,
5:23
which means you can fire nuclear missiles on the run
5:26
without having to stop,
5:28
which could give us about 20 minutes warning
5:30
that we're going to lose 1200 cities.
5:32
So this is the first strike weapon.
5:34
He said it's almost two football fields long.
5:39
It's seven stories tall.
5:41
He drew, and he's got a video of this,
5:44
that he sent up to the National Security Council.
5:46
He drew a diagram of the sub with its specifications,
5:51
with its very interesting technical advancements
5:55
that the United States didn't have on their subs.
5:58
And he's got the original tape that he submitted
6:01
to the NSC, and this has been declassified,
6:03
so he can share it now.
6:04
So this is the tape that he reported up to the NSC
6:06
before the thing was launched and proved him correct.
6:10
But he'd sent all that up,
6:12
and Robert Gates was the guy who was collecting all the information
6:16
for the people disseminating the information
6:18
for the National Security Council,
6:20
didn't even let it through.
6:22
Yeah, because he's like, this came from a psychic,
6:24
and I'm like, yeah, and he's like, he looked at it,
6:26
and he's like, look at the report, and he's like,
6:28
okay, the sub, the engineer said the sub can't survive a depth.
6:35
He's the only guy who thinks it's a sub.
6:37
They're not going to be able to roll this off into the water.
6:40
There's no water there, and it's too big to transport
6:43
So he wrote total fantasy on top of the report
6:46
and sent it back to Joe at meet.
6:51
He's a little bit of an attitude,
6:53
and he's a really good operative
6:55
who's not just been put into this remote viewing thing.
6:58
Where he's had some success in, and he's like,
7:01
I know this is a sub.
7:03
And so he took that total fantasy remark,
7:06
and he wrote under it, he went back into a meditation,
7:09
and he looked at the sub again, he looked out far along,
7:11
and he made an estimation of how long it was going to take
7:14
to launch this thing, and he goes, yeah, well,
7:16
your total fantasy launches in 112 days.
7:18
The center back to Robert Gates at meet.
7:20
You're at the Pentagon.
7:24
Well, Robert Gates has a little bit of an ego.
7:28
The good news is someone at the National Reconnaissance Office
7:32
picked up this pissing match, and they were curious.
7:36
And so they tasked a satellite to do a fly
7:40
over at 114 days from that date,
7:43
that he said 112 days.
7:45
And they snapped pictures of the red October submarine,
7:50
seven stories high, 75 feet wide,
7:52
almost two football fields long,
7:54
candid launch tubes, special propulsion.
7:56
The whole thing, he nailed it all.
8:01
Two cylinders separated with flat pieces in between.
8:05
Right next to a brand new,
8:08
in a brand new canal that they built right next to the building
8:11
in from the sea, so they could roll it off into the water.
8:15
So they built a canal in the four months that he said
8:17
they were going to launch it in,
8:18
and just dumped it into the canal right next to the building.
8:21
So that was interesting.
8:25
And they were two days into,
8:27
they had all their hatches wide open
8:29
because they were loading reactor cores and missiles,
8:32
two days into the process of loading missiles.
8:34
So he nailed it to the day,
8:36
including all the specifications,
8:38
and no one believed him.
8:40
And it was one of the greatest information gathering operations
8:45
for any launch of any Russian equipment since and to this day.
8:51
I would imagine that sparked a lot of interest
8:54
in remote viewing and rubber gates.
9:01
when he was doing remote viewing,
9:03
like for one example,
9:05
he got a call one night when he was in Las Vegas
9:08
from the local sheriff who was looking for a missing child.
9:12
And the mom thought their child was,
9:15
with dad and the dad thought the child was with mom,
9:18
and it's getting dark when they figured out the child is missing.
9:21
And it's in Virginia wilderness
9:23
and in the county in which Joe lived.
9:26
And there's wild animals,
9:27
and it's getting cold at night,
9:29
and the kids may not make it.
9:32
He got a call in the middle of the night
9:34
by the sheriff who was like,
9:35
let's get the psyche on the phone.
9:38
And Joe immediately picked up the phone,
9:41
closed his eyes for like five seconds,
9:43
and then basically told the sheriff,
9:45
he goes send your deputy out this road
9:48
to this particular location.
9:51
Have him stop the car,
9:53
get out of the car, get his compass out,
9:55
and at 318 degrees on his compass,
9:58
I want you to walk 1209 steps,
10:01
stop, call the child's name out,
10:04
and he will respond.
10:06
And that was like within five, ten seconds again
10:09
in the call and asking, you know,
10:11
what the details were,
10:12
and then he gave a reading.
10:14
And so he goes back to bed thinking,
10:17
okay, hopefully they're going to find the kid.
10:20
If they follow his directions, they will.
10:23
Five minutes later, ten minutes later,
10:25
he get another call on his hotel room,
10:28
because it's ringing the phone in the middle of the night again.
10:30
So he gets up, grabs the phone.
10:34
Joe, we sent our officer out there
10:37
to the spot where he said,
10:39
and he pulled out his compass,
10:41
but this officer just said,
10:43
he got back from training last week,
10:45
regarding missing children,
10:47
and he said, the statistics are,
10:49
that kids, ten and under,
10:51
will not walk up a hill when they're lost.
10:53
But he's looking at his compass reading,
10:55
and it goes directly up a steep hill.
10:58
What do you want us to do?
11:00
And his answer was immediate.
11:01
It's like, do what I told you to do.
11:06
And so then another five, ten minutes goes by,
11:10
and he gets another call,
11:12
and he picks up the phone a little softer this time,
11:15
because I think he had a feeling that they found him.
11:17
He's like, did you find him?
11:18
And she goes, yes, Joe.
11:20
Thank you very much. Good night.
11:22
And so the officer,
11:24
against his training,
11:27
twelve and a nine steps,
11:28
followed the direction,
11:29
stopped where he was,
11:30
called out the child's name,
11:31
and the kid answered him,
11:33
because he had walked up the hill,
11:37
and he was sleeping on the back porch sofa of a cabin
11:40
that was deserted at the time,
11:42
but it had a light on.
11:44
And he was a five-year-old kid,
11:47
if I ever got lost,
11:48
walk to the closest light and stay there.
11:50
And so he went up the hill.
11:51
Hey everybody, I'm Sean Ryan.
11:53
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11:54
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11:56
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11:59
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12:01
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12:03
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12:06
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