(01-16-2026, 09:46 AM)F2d5thCav Wrote:(01-16-2026, 09:29 AM)babushka Wrote: Is that Stubblebine in the photo? He has some nerve damage or was on hard drugs or abusing something.
A lot of posing is done for those official photos. The worst kind were the ones that went into personnel files and were used as part of the basis for determining promotion. The slightest defect, like a fleck on the EDGE of one's shoes, would detract from one's chances to be promoted. No kidding.
Yep, that's Stubblebine in the photo. That dude was off the charts nutty!
Remote viewing
Quote:Inside Project Sun Streak, The CIA Attempt To Create Psychic Spies
Over its 20-year operation Project Sun Streak had various names and was eventually labeled Project Stargate overall. It tapped into psychic and entertainment communities and even called upon Scientologists.
The CIA declassified documents relating to the project in 1995, and while the information they contain is certainly ludicrous, hilarious, and utterly astounding you can decide if their effort appear supernatural. Here are the insane particulars of CIA Project Sun Streak's crazy efforts to tap into the power of the paranormal.
For any truly weird idea to carry weight with professionals on the level of the CIA, there has to be one enthusiast championing the project. For Project Sun Streak, that man was Major General Albert Stubblebine.
At the time, Stubblebine got into hot water for his practice of sending his men to the Monroe Institute, an organization using the "hemi-sync" treatment to trigger out of body experiences.
![[Image: MEIcjhP9_o.jpg]](https://images2.imgbox.com/af/f0/MEIcjhP9_o.jpg)
PDF from the CIA Reading room (9 pages)
![[Image: oBw0oaes_o.jpg]](https://images2.imgbox.com/5a/5b/oBw0oaes_o.jpg)
"It is hard to imagine a more stupid or more dangerous way of making decisions than by putting those decisions in the hands of people who pay no price for being wrong." – Thomas Sowell
