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Lyn Buchanan Takes
Remote Viewing Down Under
Oz 'Penthouse' Feature Article On Remote Viewing

By Cassandra "Sandy" Frost
9-20-6

Lyn Buchanan went down under to teach classes and ended up between the 'sheets' with Penthouse Pets Bethany (Nice girl, but corruptible) and masterpiece Brooke (a work of art); both drop-dead Aussie sex kittens, like Elle 'the Body' McPherson.
 
"The Man with the X-Ray Eyes" is, however, a consummate southern gentleman who has been happily married to his brilliant and beautiful wife, Linda, the past 36 years. The sheets are, of course, sheets of paper; five glossy, full color magazine pages with edgy graphics and photographs that describe Lyn's work as a member of government's Project Stargate remote viewing unit in the July, 2006 Australian Penthouse.
 
"How the CIA Thwarted Saddam's Secret Apocalypse" teases the cover's headline. The story, by Tim Dedopulos, begins "He prevented Saddam from initiating World War III and foresaw the Chernobyl disaster a week before meltdown. His name is Lyn Buchanan and until 1995, he was a key member of the CIA's shadowy $27 million foray into psychic spying. The truth is out there"
 
When Lyn was contacted by the editor to do the story, he was, at first, not too excited about it. "I didn't want it to be a dog and pony show," he lightly growled. "Look, I told them, I want to show people they can do it; that they can remote view."
 
And he did.
 
"It's the 1970's," Dedopulos begins. "The American military create a team to retrieve tactical information using highly unorthodox methods; the members of Project STARGATE are tasked with finding a way to provide information about locations all over the world, using the power of their mindsIncredibly, STARGATE is a total success. The project team perfect and deploy a rigorously scientific technique called 'remote viewing' that allows trained 'viewers' to perceive distant places, as if they are there."
 
How did Lyn come to join the program?
 
"A young Texan sergeant got into a fierce argument in his bases computer lab" Dedopulos continues. "I've had the ability to move objects with my mind ever since I was a child," Buchanan explains. "Well, the talent came out during the argument, and, uh, sort of resulted in the destruction of a room full of computers."
 
"To my surprise," he explains, "one of the officers that was in the computer room had been trained to spot strange things and report them. A few months later, our general visited the base. He dragged me into his office, scowled into my face and said 'Did you destroy my computers with your mind, soldier?' I figured I could lie about it, or tell the truth and have my great-grand children still paying the army back for those computers, but I said 'Yes, sir, I did.' The scowl vanished and turned into a grin, and forgive the language ¬ he said 'Far fucking out! Have I got a job for you!'"
 
"Lyn was transferred to Washington DC to become the nucleus of a team that, it was hoped, might be able to destroy enemy computers from a distance," the article continues. "To most people, 'remote viewing' is just the new-age term for psychic perception. The genuine article, controlled remote viewing (CRV) which is what we were taught in STARGATE, is a science that was developed in the laboratory using non-psychics. That was the goal, because the military didn't want to have to deal with psychics. All they wanted to do was grab a soldier off the battlefield, teach him to do this and then send him back to the unit so he can tell his commander what's over the hill. And it worked. Remote viewing is a science that allows a non-psychic to use their subconscious mind to scout the area for troops, explore the layout or purpose of a base, searching for friendly personnel such as downed pilots, surveying weapons or identifying the location of a specific individual."
 
So what about Chernobyl?
 
"We were doing a demo for an incoming high-ranking official and were tasked with what was going to be in the newspaper headlines over the coming weekend," Lyn remembered. "I found that there was going to be a nuclear power plant meltdown. That weekend, the Chernobyl disaster happened."
 
And Saddam?
 
"It seemed that Saddam Hussein had acquired a black-market American missile and had it aimed at the Holy Mosque at Mecca," Lyn explained. "His plan was to feign illness during the main Ramadan ceremony, and use the American missile to wipe out all the other Muslim leaders. As the last Muslim leader, he would be able to take over and unite the Muslim world in a holy war, first against the evil Americans."
 
"My results were passed up the chain of command," Lyn went on. "And all along the way, each person refused to believe that any Muslim would do such a thing ¬ myself included. Well, the missile was found, and sure enough, it had been brought on the black market, and was aimed in the Direction of Mecca. If it hadn't been for that session, we would be in a world war right now. At one time or another, almost every remote viewer in the unit turned in some information that changed history."
 
Today, Lyn travels the world as he trains others to remote view. In fact, he worked with the author of the Penthouse article, Dedopulos, to set up a demonstration. Another Penthouse editor, Tim, was found. He had no experience in such things and agreed to the experiment. He works as an editor for Penthouse in London.
 
So, from his hotel room in Perth, Lyn coached Tim over the phone on how to do a session. Dedopulos taped the phone session and the results were included as a side bar to show that, indeed, remote viewing can be trained and that it does work.
 
"I took a piece of paper and Buchanan gave me a reference number," Tim begins. "I wrote down the number and a small squiggle called the 'ideogram.' I first had to work out if I could feel any breaks or changes in the ideogram. To my amazement, it seemed as if I could detect three distinct sections as my pen moved over the squiggle."
 
Tim describes the same process used by the STARGATE vets as he, for the first time, remote views Lyn's target. "I'd had several mental images of the target site during the session," Tim writes. "Buchanan encouraged me to discard them. The subconscious doesn't feed accurate pictures, but offers the symbols required to provoke you into writing the right word. So if an impression is probing a tree trunk, your mind may give you the words 'brown' and 'scratchy' by showing you an image of an old brown wool blanket. Correct procedure is to write down 'blanket' to throw out the word "blanket". In remote viewing, any noun is thrown out as dangerous static. Part of the art of remote viewing is learning to turn off those expectations."
 
Did he nail it?
 
"I was sure I'd come up with nothing useful, so I was amazed to learn that I'd been targeting the 1931 World's Fair ¬ specifically a stand on which the inventor of air conditioning was displaying his device. It had black laminate flooring (the second 'land' gestalt I'd described) heaped with mounds of real snow (my first 'land' gestalt). My only regret was not pursuing the sensation of clothing. The stand was populated by dancing girls in skimpy little costumes."
 
The article goes on to describe how Lyn, as part of his training process, meticulously assesses and classifies each student's strengths and weaknesses. "So if we get a customer who wants something to do with, say, the shape of some micro-component, we look at the database, see who is best and use them," he reveals. "We can say to a customer, 'This person here has a dependability rating of 87 per cent in shapes; and we can prove it ¬ and help our student earn some money."
 
The article begins to wind up as remote viewing and the future are combined to reveal both "good news and bad."
 
"The next 10 to 20 years is going to see a phenomenally large war," Lyn described. "It will not be a war that ends all wars, but it's going to destroy a horrendous number of people. Not just war, either. Famine, disease, the whole four horsemen bit. There's going to be radical depopulation globally. No where is going to escape, but from what I've seen, I think Australia will be spared most of it. The country has always seen far less bloodshed than most others and spiritually, Australia is very unpolluted, really fresh and innocent."
 
And if the unthinkable does happen?
 
"When I was training in the military," Lyn said, "I was told to access people as they went through the process of death. I had 64 targets. I found that some seemed to reincarnate and some seemed to go into areas that looked like heaven, or oblivion, or hell, at least for a while. The group that seemed to reincarnate didn't necessarily go to the future. For some, it was like the next lesson they had to learn on their spiritual journey was back in medieval times, or here and now again ¬ while others would be jumped forward to future times."
 
So what else has Lyn been doing aside from being featured in the winner of Australia's Adult Industry Award for best magazine each year since '01?
 
His artwork is sought after and can be found hanging on the walls of the IMAX Theater, at the New Mexico Museum of Space History. "I do Space and Future art," he explained. "A few years ago, I decided to make computerized art. I create an image on the computer then I use oils and go 'ape!' I use two programs; "Bryce" and "Daz." Bryce is good for creating buildings and non-people type stuff and I use Daz to create people."
 
Besides showing his innovative artwork, Lyn has just self-published a new book through Lulu.com; "'Gravity Can Be Your Friend' is science-fiction," he said," but I actually wrote it 15 years ago."
 
So, with all this going on and training too, where does Buchanan find his greatest joys? "In class," he shared. "People who are open minded come in, do a session and see that they can remote view. It's such a natural thing and once they see there is nothing to fear, they can move forward to incorporate some of the things I've engineered for Computer Assisted Viewing or CAV."
 
Buchanan is really quite geeky and blends his people skills with his knowledge of RV to create "session assistance" software. "These programs encourage the viewers' to push the limits as they type through their sessions as fast as they think. For example, I created some macros at Stage 4 to set the tabs to help record the columnized data quicker. At Stage 5, the tabs reset back." Buchanan is also encouraging students to use computer graphics and drawing programs to sketch target information in 3-D. "I've wanted to do this a long time ago," he revealed. "To create a virtual reality; a RV village, so to speak."
 
The CAV software also has a virtual monitor so the student never views "alone." "They hear my voice ask all the correct phrases and guide them through each session," Lyn explained. "This way when they go home, they start up the program, get their pen and paper, type the coordinates in and hit the mouse button so they can begin to view any of the 50 Stage 1 targets and 100 higher-level targets that are part of the CD support we provide after training."
 
Some of his students are having dramatic upturns in their businesses after attending his CRV training. "My realtor students," he said, "used to show ten houses and hope for a sale. Now, they are showing 3 and selling almost every time and are making money hand over fist, probably because they started paying attention to the client and focusing on their needs."
 
"My most profound lessons do come from my students," Lyn said. "There is a moment where they realize that their life has changed forever. It's a profound thing for me to realize that we can make all this old crap fall away as we learn the new paradigm. The most surprising thing that has happened to me was when a student came up to me after they realized that our signatures are our ideograms and that they can be read as such. So, when someone gets your signature, there are no more secrets."
 
Which is, of course, the way things need to be. So it is through his art, his advances in computer assisted viewing and his passion for training that Lyn Buchanan is doing what he can to make a difference in his world, one student at a time.
 
 
Visit Sandy Frost at http://sandyfrost.newsvine.com/ http://thecassandrafrostcollection.blogspot.com/


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