
What if I told you the U.S. government once had a classified program that tried to train psychic spies—people who could “see” enemy secrets without ever leaving the room?
Buried in a now-declassified document, the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) and other agencies agreed to keep exploring something they called “psychoenergetics.” That’s just a fancy term for psychic powers. This included remote viewing (the ability to see things far away or hidden) and psychokinesis (moving objects or affecting systems with the mind).
The document confirms that these weren’t just fun experiments—they were tied directly to national security and military intelligence. This was the continuation of an earlier top-secret project called GRILL FLAME, which ran for years and concluded that remote viewing was real and could be improved with training.
Here’s the wild part:
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The research wasn’t only about what we could do—they were also worried that Russia and China were far ahead in developing psychic warfare.
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They believed psychic spying could work even through walls, oceans, or space.
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There were discussions about sending remote viewers to look at submarines and satellites—no joke.
They even set up project teams, executive boards, and central management to run everything from training psychic spies to figuring out if foreign governments could be attacking us psychically. All of this was hidden behind layers of bureaucracy and jargon, but the core goal was clear: use the human mind as a weapon.
If this all sounds like science fiction, that’s because it was—until it wasn’t.
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