A Soldier in the Sensoid Wars: Observations from 25 Years on Both Sides of the Battlefield

A Soldier in the Sensoid Wars: Observations from 25 Years on Both Sides of the Battlefield

When the space community wants to develop a new program, or the international high energy physics field seeks grants to build a new accelerator, or the AIDS medical world wants funding for a new research vector, those scientists, I can assure you, consciously factor in the media as part of their strategy to obtain the money they need. Consider this remarkably candid comment, by climatologist Dr. Stephen Schneider, an advisor to Vice President Gore, about how it is done by those concerned with global warming: “To get some broader based support, to capture the public’s imagination…that, of course, entails getting loads of media coverage. So we have to offer up scary scenarios, make simplified dramatic statements, and make little mention of doubts we may have…” Please be clear. I am not saying this is good science; I am saying this is the realpolitik of science for the foreseeable future. Anyone who doubts this has not been watching television or reading the papers.
However, using the media, as opposed to being used by the media takes a strategic vision, strong team cohesiveness, and a clear sense of appropriate tactics. Few individuals, unsophisticated in these battles, have been able to muster these tools to their advantage.

A Different Kind of Woman

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Where did it start? The pill is probably as good a place to begin as any. Suddenly, pregnancy was an option. Every act of intercourse was not a dice roll with fate. For a woman under 50, it is hard to imagine the fearful count that began after a night of young love before the first signs of your period or the fateful conversations with girlfriends, “I’m a week late,” began. The middle-aged women of today knew to a level of precision their daughters will never understand exactly when their period was supposed to start. The rise and fall of the menstrual cycle pulsed through the culture of the young like a secret beat that parents could not hear.
As the tension built to two weeks, everything else in a girl’s life faded into a gray mist. The hours. The minutes tolled, until someone had to be told. And then, if there was mercy, the release: “It started in gym class.”
And for some it didn’t, and then there were the furtive conversations “to find someone.” The trip in a car, sometimes with the boyfriend, but often not. The brown sandwich bag on the seat of the car in which $200 in crumpled bills, donated by friends, or achieved by selling the “adda-pearls” your grandmother had given you at birth and added to each year at your birthday, like steps through childhood.

Publication History: Explore: The Journal of Science and Healing
May 2006 (Vol. 2, Issue 3, Pages 198-199)

A Soldier in the Sensoid Wars

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In February 2005, my good friend, English biologist Rupert Sheldrake, was asked to take part in a National Geographic Channel show on psychic animals. The show would begin airing in August that year as, Is It Real? Psychic Animals. Sheldrake’s participation from the beginning had been contingent on one condition: Because the subject of psychic animals was vulnerable to excess and hyperbole either for or against beyond what the research actually showed, he agreed to participate on the understanding that the program would be fair, unbiased, and must not be structured in the standard debunking “Gotcha” format. This is one of the most powerful trends developing in media today, and you have probably seen it a hundred times on television.
In this format, a scientist speaking on the basis of his research presents his data, and some critic, often with no expertise in the area of science involved, makes denigrating comments about the first scientist, who is given no opportunity to respond. It is currently particularly in vogue on channels that support the antiglobal warming position. Sheldrake was assured that the show would not follow that format and would be fair and unbiased.

Publication History: Explore: The Journal of Science and Healing
September 2006 (Vol. 2, Issue 5, Pages 394-398)

Water . . . Water . . . Part One: Hot and Salty

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Most of us know very little about water. It comes in two types, salt and fresh. It has two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom and is written H2O. In the Dead Sea and the Great Salt Lake, you can float. A random collection of facts—like knowing a dozen Latin tags—is usual, even for many in science or medicine. For most Americans, access to water is a given. Like the right to vote, it seems a birthright. And when you turn on a tap, do you ask whether you can drink the water that comes out? Probably not.
I want to suggest you consider expanding your world view. And that you follow the rapidly evolving water story, because whether you do so or not, water is about to change your life and will profoundly affect the lives of your children and grandchildren in ways both great and small. Water matters to our lives at every level, from the personal to the geopolitical. Its role in global warming, as well as its atomic structure and how it interacts with consciousness, all matter. Water has always driven destiny and is driving ours now. This is my first column on water. There will be others. I believe water will be a far bigger factor in our future than petroleum.

Publication History: Explore: The Journal of Science and Healing January 2007 (Vol. 3, Issue 1, Pages 11-12)

The Governator and The New States’ Rights

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The argument over the power of the federal government in relation to the power of the individual states is as old as the Republic itself and traces directly back to the Constitutional Convention of 1787. For most of American history, the crux of the argument has been a cover for issues involving race, and there are still a substantial number of people in the South who conceive of the Civil War not as a struggle over slavery but as a struggle over states’ rights. This contention falls apart upon closer examination, since the right of the states called into question was slave ownership. But, one might ask, who cares? Isn’t it all ancient history with little relevance to the present day? The answer to that is: welcome to the new era of states’ rights, and you better become current on this because it is going to shape your life—from healthcare, to energy, to global warming, to tire treads.

Publication History: Explore: The Journal of Science and Healing
July 2007 (Vol. 3, Issue 4, Pages 362-364)

The Neuron Strategy

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A number of years ago in a Cairo taxi, the legendary scientist and inventor Harold Edgerton of MIT, in answer to my question as to how he had been so successful and had accomplished so much said, “Look for the leverage points; everything else is just friction.” His words in the close hot space of that dusty summer afternoon changed my point of view. I saw in them a statement of social acupuncture, expressed with an engineer’s clarity. A guide to an economy of intention, like a martial arts movement or a ballerina’s gesture. When we think about how poverty might really be ameliorated, independent of ideology, political affiliation, or bias, where are such leverage points to be found? There are so many options. Any day’s mail brings several. How does one select something that will make one’s intention a reality?
One clearly successful leverage point is the microloan—the development of personal loan programs, such as the Grameen Bank—for sums that, in America, are often no more than a golf round or a family’s weekly church donation. Larry Dossey, MD, in the “Explorations” section of this issue, eloquently describes the bank, whose founder, Professor Muhammad Yunus, has just won the Nobel Peace Prize for his microlending effort. But his is only one such program.

Publication History: Explore: The Journal of Science and Healing
September 2007 (Vol. 3, Issue 5, Pages 453-455)

By the Numbers

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He was a small black boy. About nine years of age. I was the same age give or take a year, and we had both been brought to the train station. I can no longer remember where, but somewhere in the Deep South. It could have been Florida, or maybe Georgia. Nor do I know, if I ever knew, what part of the year it was, although it was very hot, and the caged metal fans that stood sweeping the room moved air so hot it hurt to have it blow on my skin. I was with the black woman who took care of me, a doctor’s son. Her name is lost to me now, and no one living can tell it to me. He was with his grandmother. I watched him walk across the tiles of the station as I sat in one of the worn wooden pews that lined the vaulted waiting room.
There were two drinking fountains jutting from the wall. One sign read “Whites Only.” I was a compulsive reader of signs, proud of my ability to do so. Like many signs, though, I am not sure I understood what it meant.

Publication History: Explore: The Journal of Science and Healing
November 2007 (Vol. 3, Issue 6, Pages 558-560)

The Beingness Doctrine

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Naomi Klein has written a book, Shock Doctrine, whose premise is that a formal strategy for forcing social change began evolving on the right as long ago as the 1950s, based on an extremist view of conservative free market capitalism.

As Eric Klinenberg wrote in his Book Forum review, “Why do so many nations have economic policies more laissezfaire and social programs less generous than their citizens prefer? Naomi Klein argues that the answer lies in a simple two-step strategy, honed over three decades by an international cabal of freemarket fundamentalists: First, exploit crises—whether due to economics, politics, or natural disasters—to advance an agenda that would never survive the democratic process during ordinary times. Next, create a ‘corporatocracy,’ in which multinationals and political leaders align to promote their interests at the public’s expense.”1

In her extraordinarily well-documented work, Naomi Klein describes how the tactics of this strategy have now reached a level of sophistication such that in settings as disparate as Iraq and Katrina, it has forced change that would otherwise have been unacceptable through normal democratic processes. A change wrought under the guise of responding to some kind of social catastrophe, whether natural, like a hurricane, or man-made such as the early policies under Paul Bremmer in the first days of the occupation of Iraq. Klein points out that often this occurs with disastrous consequences, as anyone familiar with Katrina’s aftermath, or today’s headline on Iraq can see. If you have not read this book, I urge you to do so. It will give you a perspective through which much that seems chaotic and disconnected will be revealed as not only connected, but deliberate. The book is so disturbing that it forced me to consider if an alternative life-affirming strategy existed that had proven it could work. A kind of counter–Shock Doctrine.

Explore: The Journal of Science and Healing
January 2008 (Vol. 4, Issue 1, Pages 15-17)

Opening to the Infinite

Opening to the Infinite (PDF)

In this edited excerpt from his book, renowned researcher and author Stephan Schwartz discusses the subtle and transformative impacts of “remote viewing” and accessing nonlocal mind.

Three of the most mysterious things a person can experience are spiritual ecstasy, the ah–ha! moment of creative genius, and a verifiable “nonlocal awareness” event—what is often called a psychic event. Let me propose what I think a growing body of interdisciplinary research and a millennia of ethnohistory both suggest: These three enigmatic occurrences are, in fact, different manifestations of the same process, sometimes seen as spiritual, sometimes as brilliance, and sometimes as merely strange. Each is
modulated by the intent of the practitioner and the context in which the experience is placed.

A transcendentalist, for example, seeks spiritual experience and has one appropriate to their personal
psychology. A scientist seeks, and sometimes discovers, a fundamental insight into how the world works. A person practicing a psychic discipline such as remote viewing seeks to describe a person, place, or event from which they are separated by reason of time or space. They get sense impressions and have a sense of knowingness just as if they were physically present. Sometimes these experiences come unbidden—and you yourself have probably had one at some point in your life.

Publication: MARCH–MAY 2006 • # 10 • SHIFT: AT THE FRONTIERS OF CONSCIOUSNESS

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Death on the Wing

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Excerpt:

I was 45 years old before I really grasped the Spanish flu. My entire family is medical, and medicine has been a family profession for generations. I mention this because one would expect that, in such a family, the occurrence of major medical events and trends would be discussed. Yet I have no memory from when I was a child of hearing anyone speak of the pandemic of 1918. They talked about the medical impact of the First World War, the Depression, the Second War, and Korea, often in what nonmedical friends called “clinical detail.” They talked about polio and smallpox and measles. As I grew older, the conversations around me shifted to “Civil Rights,” the “60s,” “the War”—Viet Nam—the pill, women’s rights, gay rights, and abortion.
But nowhere in this mix, across what for me is now four generations, was there much about an event that killed an estimated 675,000 Americans, and as many as 30-50 million people worldwide, all in the course of a single year, 1918 and 1919.1, 2 Nor, as far as I can tell, have there been many such conversations on this subject in the lives of my friends and their families. I had to learn about the Spanish flu in a book bought at a jumble sale early one Sunday morning.

Explore: The Journal of Science and Healing
November 2005 (Vol. 1, Issue 6, Pages 433-436)

Stephan is currently writing the book which will go into great detail about what the Remote Viewers say is coming in the future. If you would like to be notified when the book is published, please just leave your name and email here, and we will notify you when the book is available.

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