Somewhere in the Skies - Annie Jacobsen: Phenomena
Episode Date: May 8, 2017On episode 04 of SOMEWHERE IN THE SKIES, Ryan speaks with Annie Jacobsen, author of Phenomena: The Secret History of the U.S. Government's Investigations Into Extrasensory Perception and Psychokines...is. Annie goes into great detail on how the U.S. obtained extremely bizarre nazi documents after WWII that had to do with studying psychic phenomena. These studies would then be manipulated and reformed to be researched by the U.S. Government under the direction of the C.I.A. This culminated into several decades of working with psychics and remote viewers who would spy on the Soviets during the Cold War. Annie brings us up to date on many of these covert projects and how they have evolved into a whole new cyber and mind war in today's military industrial complex. And yes... we touch on ufology. So don't fret! Guest Bio: Annie Jacobsen is a journalist, bestselling author, and 2016 Pulitzer Prize finalist. Her books, Area 51, Operation Paperclip, and The Pentagon's Brain were New York Times bestsellers and have been collectively published in many languages. OPERATION PAPERCLIP was chosen as one of the best non-fiction books of 2014 by The Boston Globe, Apple iBooks, and Publishers Weekly. THE PENTAGON’S BRAIN was a 2016 Pulitzer Prize Finalist in history and was chosen as one of the best books of the year by The Washington Post, The Boston Globe, and Amazon. Each of her books is in television development (Valhalla/AMC, Plan B/RatPac, Warner Brothers/J.J. Abrams/Bad Robot, Spielberg’s Amblin/Blumhouse). For more information, visit: www.anniejacobsen.com If you have a story to share, or guest and topic suggestions, please email: Sprague@somewhereintheskies.com Follow on Twitter: @SomewhereSkies Join our active Facebook Page: HERE Order Ryan's Book: HERE Intro Voiceover by Jamie Lamchick. Visit her at: www.jaimelamchick.com Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/somewhere-in-the-skies. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
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This is somewhere in the skies with Ryan Sprague.
For a number of years, CIA had been tracking Soviet work in the so-called ESP area.
And they're really concerned because the Soviets, including the KGB,
were spending millions of dollars every year on this kind of phenomenon.
They're very concerned about what could be being done to us.
They were specifically interested in whether individuals could extract information
or get information from remote sites or from hidden material.
And so it was critical to them to find out, you know, just what abilities do people have.
A batch of declassified CIA documents that revealed the agencies dealing with the paranormal is now official.
According to the secret files, the Central Intelligence Agency used a team of military-trained
telepathic individuals during the Iran embassy siege nearly 40 years ago.
The program named Grill Flame was established in 9,000.
1975 began as research into paranormal abilities, but its star turn came in 1979, when the telepaths were used to provide information on where the hostages were being held inside the embassy and the state of their health.
It really comes of no surprise that our intelligence agencies would attempt to obtain information by any means necessary.
But as we heard from former director of projects, Dr. Harold Putoff, the CIA went to such great lengths during the Cold War as to bring in psychics who they believed could remote view Soviet and KGB targets and spy on them.
As we also heard, this was later used in Project Grill Flame during the Iran Embassy siege.
The overall project was officially terminated in 1995, having reached no solid conclusions on the accuracy of remote viewing.
and psychic abilities. But the CIA's involvement goes far deeper than this. And as we'll hear
from today's guest, the wars waged with the mind in a military intelligence sense may still
be far from over. Annie Jacobson is a journalist, bestselling author, and 2016 Pulitzer Prize
finalist. Her books, Area 51, Operation Paperclip, and the Pentagon's brain were New York Times bestsellers
and have been collectively published in many languages.
Today, we'll be talking about her newest book, Phenomena,
the secret history of the U.S. government's investigations
into extrasensory perception and psychokinesis.
We'll hear how the idea of psychic warfare all began in the U.S.
who was involved, and even how this all can be connected to the UFO topic as a whole.
So, without further ado, let's get to the interview with Annie.
Jacobson. Annie, thank you so much for joining me today. Well, thank you for having me. It's an absolute
pleasure. I've been following your work for a while now. And if there's anything I've learned
from reading all your books, there is definitely a running theme of digging deep into the
intelligence agency apparatus. And this new book does just that as well. But with a very
interesting topic, and that's psychokinesis and ESP, and you found a pretty interesting link.
that ties all your books together, something that they all seem to always come back to.
Would you mind touching on that briefly with us?
Yes, and thank you for noticing that, that all roads lead to the Nazis.
At least when you're a national security reporter covering war, weapons, U.S. national security and secrets.
And phenomena is no different.
I began the story, the kind of launch point, is this discovery by U.S. intelligence.
agents at the end of the war. They were called Operation Alsace. And they discover a weird
trove of Heinrich Himmler's science department documents. The department was called Das Ananarbe.
And this unit within it explored extrasensory perceptions, psychokinesis, map dowsing. And then also very
extreme forms of the occult, which Himmler was pursuing and pushing among his SS men. And we discovered
this weird cache of documents. And Samuel Goodsmith, who was the lead physicist at the time
hunting down atomic secrets and, you know, biological weapons secrets and all these other things
I write in my other book, Operation Paperclip, kind of cast aside this weirdo, what he thought was
sort of weirdo, supernatural research.
But it comes back into play a few years later,
because what we find out that the Soviets got the other half of the Dasana Narrabay documents
that dealt with the supernatural, if you will.
And that's really, I think, the launching point for this extraordinary battle
between science and the supernatural.
Is it fact?
Is it fantasy?
You know, and this question drives the narrative.
And boy, was it intensely interesting to research and report on this because it's such a mystery.
Oh, I can only imagine.
And I mean, and within your research, you do mention that toward the end of World War II, in mixing that magic and the supernatural, that these files were split amongst us and the Russians, which is extremely enticing.
in terms of ESP and psychokinesis.
For our listeners who may not really know the difference between ESP and psychokinesis,
could you briefly give us the clip notes on that?
Of course.
I mean, extrasensory perception is what ESP stands for.
And it almost says it says it itself.
It's gaining knowledge from the means other than the five known senses.
And so the sixth sense has...
in the modern era kind of been
conflagrated with the idea of seeing
ghosts, I think largely because of the
movie by that same title. But
the sixth sense
over a broader
period of decades has really
been used to mean
that the kind of, let's say
divinatory
power, an idea of precognition,
an idea that you could see the future,
that you could know the
unknown, that you could also
have knowledge about
information that could be used as what the CIA would call intelligence collection.
Psychokinesis, on the other hand, is, in short summary, using the mind to affect matter.
So scientific skeptics would tell you that's pseudoscience, and that's not possible.
People who are in the work and study this say, oh, yes, it is.
and there's a whole host of psychokinetic abilities that range from, say, you know, bending a spoon
with a tip of the tongue and a, I mean, a tip of the of the fingertip and the command bend, as Erie Geller does,
or even meditation or like monks who are able to sit in freezing cold water and actually adjust their body temperature so that they don't suffer from,
hypothermia. That's the gamut of psychokinetic abilities. Right, right. And we've heard, you know,
similar accounts of like this is what we could consider a mutant as it were, if you were looking at it
from a comic book standpoint. But on a more serious level, Annie, in the early days of what we now
know as MK Ultra, the CIA, if I'm correct, they used magicians, hypnotists, and even a witch.
really caught my attention in your book. Could you tell us a little about Sybil Leake and her work
with the U.S. intelligence agency? What's interesting about her is she's been completely, you know,
buried, if you will, her work, as I found with a number of others really interesting people
who pop up here in my book, because there is so much stigma attached to it. Sybilique was a
famous witch in Britain. She was a white witch, meaning she only used her powers for good. But she
allegedly left England in 1944 because witches were still being persecuted, according to her.
And I interviewed her son, who's in charge of all of her papers. He lives here in the United States,
and is interestingly a NASA photographer. But she allegedly moved here because she was being
persecuted, but in truth, she became a CIA asset. And
She was used along with a number of other people, more famously in the 50s, like magicians,
very separate subject, which is using stage magicians who are actually using tricks and deception to fool someone into believing in psychokinesis.
whereas those who have psychokinetic powers are working from the premise that they actually have a yet scientifically unknown ability to affect matter with their mind.
Interesting.
And now you did mention the name Eerie Geller a moment ago.
And could you briefly run us through who this guy was and his connection with the CIA?
URI was a CIA asset, and we know that now from these declassified documents that I report on in the book.
And, you know, people know Uri Geller as the spoonbender.
So you might, and, you know, there's a million different reasons why people might have a preconception in their mind that he's a fraud or a magician.
And there's a million reasons why people might swear by his talents.
all preconceptions. What I aim to do in the book in my hours and hours of interviews with
Geller was to try and neutrally present the facts of Geller's story and let the reader decide
what they think because I found Geller remarkable. I mean, I interviewed him at his home in London
and I also interviewed him. I spent several days with him in Israel interviewing him. Just a
remarkable part of phenomena, I think. But his entree into intelligence collection with the CIA
began in the 70s when he became this famous figure, sort of a pop culture figure, doing the talk show
circuits, bending, you know, spoons with his mind and also reading, having telepathy, like putting
an often trick they would do with Geller as someone would draw out a sketch.
and then put it in a sealed envelope,
Geller would be sitting in this talk show,
you know,
with a talk show host,
and then he would be given the sealed envelope
and he would be asked to draw it.
And, you know, time and again,
he would do a remarkable assimilation of the drawing.
And people just went crazy for him.
Plus he was handsome.
Plus he had this lovely accent, Israeli accent.
Plus he was charming.
And he just really, you know, took on the scene.
You may say, well, what did the CIA have care of,
about any of that. What they cared about was his alleged psychokinetic abilities, the fact that he could,
you know, bend a spoon with his finger and the command bend. And specifically what was worrisome to them,
and again, these are declassified Defense Department reports that show that state, you know,
if Geller could do this to a spoon, what might he be able to do to the delicate electronic system on an
ICBM carrying a nuclear warhead.
That's what they cared about.
And they brought Geller to the United States to test him in a lab under CIA handlers and scientists, physicists,
who were commissioned by the CIA to work on this research program with remarkable results.
I mean remarkable results.
CIA drawing the inescapable conclusion that his powers existed.
as a real phenomenon. They couldn't explain why.
That's absolutely fascinating that the CIA would ultimately admit that, yes, ESP psychokinesis
are real. Now, the debate, I guess, would be someone like Eri Geller, this seemed to have come
at birth. This came natural. But you also did some heavy research into the debate within
the intelligence agencies on if people could be trained to become psychic. Now,
Is that true? What was this debate?
And that's the battleground that most interested me because it was, it's a debate I could really wrap my head around as a journalist.
I mean, it's hard to just have two sides shouting at one another.
You know, ESP is real.
And then that would be the people in the work.
And then the skeptic saying, ESP is nonsense.
And they're all charlatans, fraudsters, and snake oil salesmen.
I mean, there's very little room for journalism in that debate because the two sides are so entrenched.
And in essence, what they do is just, you know, they kind of surround themselves with a lot of individuals who support only their ideas and that they're kind of existing in an echo chamber.
Again, that's my opinion.
What I wanted to do was look at the debates within the debates to try to, you know, uncover the essence of what might mean something for the future.
Because we'll get to this later, but my goodness, the research is still going on today.
that surprised even a number of the scientists who have worked on these programs for decades.
So the debate began at the CIA with a very legendary CIA doctor named Dr. Christopher Green.
He goes by Kit Green.
And he was the original physiologist assigned to look at the biology, the physiology, the human interior, if you will, of Geller, of another super.
psychic named Ingo Swam, another super psychic named Pat Price, all of who were the leading
psychics for CIA during the 70s. And Green's job was to examine them in every possible, you know,
neurological, biological, physiological tests that existed in the 70s, which compared to what we
have today was not a lot. I mean, the MRI was just coming online. That was exciting in 1973. And Green
would look at these individuals and then they were being tested by physicists and scientists to look at
their performance and their conclusion as a whole was and I'm paraphrasing here but we don't know why
they have the talent that they have but we know that it's individualistic and the analogy that
both green and put off and Jacques valet who was also involved in this told me is that they
said the best analogy is the Mozart analogy. So Annie can't sing in the shower and you think of what
Mozart was capable in terms of music. And you just immediately get the idea of aha. So they would say
Mozart was a super normal. I just have normal bad singing voice. Mozart is a super normal,
not a paranormal, but a super normal. And they chose in that kind of
CIA way of, hey, let's live in the gray area. Because remember, CIA always has a job to do,
which is intelligence collection. So they wanted to exploit the talents that the Gellers,
the Pat Prices, and the Ingo Swans had and use that for their purposes. And they were less
concerned with trying to nail down. Is it real? Is it fact? Is it fantasy? They were just saying,
okay, it works in limited extraordinarily strange and bizarre cases. And yes, it's not repeat.
but never mind about that.
I mean, it's not consistently repeatable.
And they focused on the individuals.
And they felt this is a Mozart-like talent, this sixth sense.
Right.
And I would assume, you know, it's not so much of if it's real or not,
but how it can benefit the intelligence agencies
and, you know, your past work showing how it can benefit
the military industrial complex, I would assume.
And I found these marvelous, you know,
once formerly classified documents that say almost exactly that, which is never mind, you know, the debate, what can we, the CIA do to exploit this?
And that I found very interesting and it gave a lot of room for, you know, and of course these are highly classified programs.
So no one had to know. I mean, they didn't have to worry about, you know, such and such senator finding out about it.
and having a cow over this what would be interpreted as wasteful money.
Although that debate I really found useless because the amount of money that was spent on these programs is so small
compared to the budgets that I looked at from my previous book, The Pentagon's Brain, about DARPA.
But in any event, the CIA was able to kind of play fast and loose with the ideas of this area of research that are stigmatized.
traditionally because they could rise above the fray, take their work really seriously, and
figure out the best way to exploit this talent. But then the CIA ran into trouble in the 70s
with its MK Ultra programs being exposed. It's, you know, LSD programs being exposed. And suddenly
the CIA found itself in a whole heap of trouble during the church committee hearings. And the
program needed to go because it was too incendiary.
were anyone to find out about it.
And so before up to that point, DOD had been a client of CIA, so, you know, meaning NSA, also FBI,
Secret Service, you name it.
If the Joint Chiefs of Staff wanted some information from psychics, they would go to the CIA,
give them a request, and then the CIA would task the psychics on it.
Well, after the Church Commission hearings, that all changed, and the program was inherited by DOD.
And the things really shifted there.
And there was a movement away from this idea that it's individualistic, that it's the Mozart analogy.
And it moved toward the idea of, hey, ESP is something that we can train soldiers to be able to do.
And grave problems arose.
Absolutely, yeah.
You know, when the question of ethics comes into mind, you really have to wonder, like, how deep are they willing to go and at whose expense?
We know many scientists have been exploited in terms of these types of things and their theories.
And you spoke to one scientist who worked on something called the quantum entanglement theory.
I found this deeply fascinating.
Could you give us a brief summation, Annie, of just exactly what this theory entails?
So what I really enjoyed in the narrative and what I love about writing narrative nonfiction is I find
these elderly statesmen, if you will. So the sort of scientists who were the leads in these
programs in the 70s when they were young and then interview them and look at how they evolved
as scientists, as human beings in their vision over time and where they are today. And Dale Graff
was the scientist who really began the program at DOD. So he learned about,
the CIA program from put-off, from what was being, he took that as a model, brought it to the
Pentagon and became the progenitor of all these other programs that were, that existed for the next
20 years, basically from the late 1970s, all the way until the downfall of the program in the mid-90s.
Graff was in charge.
Graff was in essence second in command to a scientist's name.
Dr. Jack Verona at the Defense Intelligence Agency.
So what is Graf doing now?
Well, he took me to a call.
He's still in the work.
And his story is particularly interesting because you have that idea that we talked
about either.
Is it biological?
Okay.
Let me back up for a moment to give you a little groundwork here.
So the biological element of it is super interesting because it's saying this is a talent
from within.
but within those in the work
there is another group that believes this is also
the within is attached to the without okay
now if you want to take a scientific approach to that you can say
oh that's the eureka moment that a number of scientists or Nobel laureates
talk about where they are suddenly given kind of an inspiration of something
almost a divine inspiration if you will
so there are individuals who pursue this idea that
it's not just a biological from within, it's from without. There is some kind of a something.
That's where we get really tricky when you're talking in terms of a federal government,
because this touches upon the issues that you are interested in, which have to do with
euphology, which have to do with an intelligence, you know, outside of our universe, if you will.
And many of the scientists adhere to that concept. And I did not write about that.
in phenomena, I hint at it, I talk a little bit about it, but I felt that it was a, it's
its own subject, and I wanted to focus specifically on the battle, the battleground of
extrasensory perception and psychokinesis. But it's understood that those, that that exists
there. And separate from that, you have a very few amount of scientists, Dale Graff among them,
who accept that ESP is a real,
phenomena that psychokinesis is a real phenomenon who have dedicated decades their entire life to this
work but they do not believe it is from without at all they are the antithesis of a supernaturalist
if you will they believe that it has to do with biology and it has to do with quantum physics
and that's where graph sits on the spectrum which i found very interesting he rejects
any kind of you know uh though without any kind of intelligence higher intelligence
intelligence, if you will. And he says this is basic quantum physics. It's something that Einstein
referred to, quantum entanglement is something that Einstein referred to as spooky action at a
distance. And in the simplest terms, the way different physicists explained it to me, is that
if you have two electrons near one another, they jiggle one another, let's say. That's the metaphor, okay? And if you
separate them even by as much as a galaxy as mischukaku said that's where the fireworks begin
because they will also vibrate meaning they will they are connected they are inherently
wiggling with one another aware of one another even if you separate them as far away as a galaxy
this was an idea spooky action at a distance posited by Einstein you know
but never able to be proved in the laboratory.
Well, now in 2017, you have scientists around the world
conducting these experiments where they're able to demonstrate
that electrons have, you know, essentially are communicating one another around the world.
That would have to involve faster than light travel,
and that's where you get complicated.
And that's where you have a guy like Graf says,
his idea for this, and this is theoretical physics,
physics now, that this could account for extrasensory perception,
for faster-than-night information gathering,
for knowing what's happening across the world in this moment.
And that concept is called retrocausation.
And I write about in the book attending a conference at UC San Diego
with the world's leading physicists in this area
who pursue this line of thought
as science of the future.
And I think one of the things I enjoy most
about writing about these very esoteric concepts
is getting the world's experts
to explain it to me in layman's terms
because the people who are the smartest in these subjects,
they're really able to, as Einstein said,
you should be able to explain it to a child.
That's how easy it is.
Right, yeah. You know, you're right, the, the brightest of individuals should be able to, you know, quote unquote, dumb it down as simplest of terms as they can. That's an absolutely fascinating theory. And I know others have looked into things such as quantum mechanics. Edgar Mitchell comes to mind, who's done a lot of work within the noetic sciences and consciousness. But you have a very,
interesting story in your book about Edgar Mitchell, who we know is the sixth man to walk on the
moon. And this has to do with the moon. Would you mind telling us this story? It's absolutely fascinating.
I loved interviewing Edgar Mitchell. And, you know, he was such a sort of hero to me in many
regards, and I'll tell you why. I get the ideas for my books, usually when I'm finishing up the
previous book. So I was, the Pentagon's brain, the book about DARPA is really about hard
science and involved a lot of, you know, space science, if you will, because that's why DARPA was
founded. And I came across in the Apollo Image Library, a photograph of a man on the moon,
but if you look, an astronaut on the moon, but if you look closely in his gloved hand, you realize
he's reading a document. I mean, he's reading a piece of paper on the moon. And I thought,
like, my God, this is like such an incredible image. You have the most advanced science, you know,
space travel, and then you have like pre-science, I mean, proto-science, that's what writing is.
I mean, without writing, without, you know, the original writing, which we now believe is
Cuneiform from sort of 2,800 BC. Without writing, we wouldn't have science. And so here's this,
here was this image which contained these two concepts in a single image, and I just found it
remarkable, but more specifically, I had to know what that astronaut was reading.
Why would he be reading on the moon? And I went, I tracked him down. It was Edgar Mitchell,
Apollo 14, and what he told me is that he was reading a map. My God, he was reading.
Here was a photograph of a man on the moon, reading a map of the moon, on the moon. Why? Because
they were lost. And I found this again so human. You could travel 240,000 miles. Mitchell was the
pilot on the Antares landing craft. He set down the spacecraft within 87 feet of the target.
And then they got lost locally. I mean, what a brilliant, I mean, you know, the quest for
phenomena, the quest is in fact, is it fantasy, science versus the story.
supernatural. This is hogwash. This is going to lead us to new discoveries. That debate,
so much inherent in all of that is about getting lost. I mean, you have to be able to get lost
to find your way. I believe every single one of my four books, it was amazing to write for me
because I had elderly statesmen, the scientist, talking to me not just about their incredible
success stories, but about their failures, about when they felt lost, you know, because that
That is how you can really, I think, grow as a society and, you know, as a human.
And here was Mitchell saying, I got lost on the moon.
And it was devastating to him because, as he said, they got lost.
They could not find their target, which was cone crater.
They were supposed to grab some rocks from inside of cone crater, which was a meteorite crater.
Geologists back on Earth believed if they could only bring these rocks home, they might be able to solve the
ageless mystery of how the moon was actually formed from the earth. I mean, talk about a tall order.
They got lost. They couldn't reach the target and they had to come home. And Mitchell said he was
devastated. But it was on that flight home that he had, what I write about a lot in the book,
is what's called a conversion moment. Looking out one of the windows of the spacecraft,
looking out into space, looking out into the universe. Mitchell told me that he became,
came absolutely convinced that man was not just what we thought, that man's ability, the reaches
of knowledge.
We were thinking small.
They were so much bigger than that.
And he believed the answer lay in consciousness.
And so he came back from the moon.
He quit NASA, divorced his wife, made all new friends, dedicated the rest of his life toward
research into ESP, psychokinesis.
and he became a front for the CIA.
And that's where I knew I had to tell this story.
I mean, it was thanks to that interview with Edgar Mitchell that really inspired me to write phenomena.
Wow.
What a interesting journey he had.
And I can understand how that could be such a catalyst for this work that you've done.
Now, Annie, like you mentioned earlier, this is primarily a UFO show.
So my listeners would probably be remiss if I didn't ask.
There is so much skepticism for very good reasons when it comes to the UFO topic, especially within the scientific community.
And this goes for the paranormal and supernatural as well.
Why do you think that there is such a hardline debunking or even a hostility, as I've heard you say, towards these types of subjects?
I'm fascinated by it.
I mean, I have a couple ideas, but of course, every one of my books touches upon these issues.
And I have interviewed, you know, literally hundreds of scientists who work in the Defense Department and the CIA and have advised the presidents and have advised the Joint Chiefs of Staff and have won Nobel Prizes.
And they are absolutely divided, right?
There are those a majority who, you know, loathe the idea of uphology.
But there are those a minority who are in the work, as I say.
And, you know, these are brilliant minds.
And so I would be extremely short-sighted to be anything other than open-minded.
that's my that I just take the long the long view right I mean so why does the debate exist well
okay so hold what I also find interesting is that as I said the majority um of scientists in the
defense department and the intelligence community are what Gertrude Schmeidler called
goats they they are scientific skeptics and the other term Gertrude Schmeidler was a Harvard
experimental psychologists who created the goats and the sheep paradigm to talk about how people
approach UFO or how people approach any of this subject matter, ESP, psychokinesis, any of the,
you could call it paranormal, you could call it anomalous cognition.
Sheep are the people on the other side who are open to the idea or the possibility that this
could be real.
What I'm fascinated by is that Gallup polls show that 76% of Americans are sheep, and only 24% are goats.
So the scientific community is swung the other way, but the general public is open to this idea.
And I find that general public interesting, because that's where I think people are working from,
their experiences as opposed to their, what they think they should think. And I do have to say that I
interviewed a lot of skeptics for a phenomena because that's part of the job of being a journalist.
Want to tell the neutral story. Tell the other side. But I did, I did find an incredible
sort of snootiness on the part that I found really, I find limiting and I find unhelpful,
that people would kind of insult, you know, people would kind of suggest,
that you were intellectually inferior, you know, for even wanting to investigate these areas. That I find
fascinating, and I find it quite fun, to be honest with you, to then say, well, that's your opinion.
Call me intellectually inferior if you like. Oh, well, I'm going to do this research and this reporting
because, boy, is it interesting. And boy, are these individuals interesting. I mean, Kit Green told me
the best story. I write about him at length in the book, one of my absolutely most interesting
interviews, I think, were with Green because of what he's also doing today with Uphology.
But, and again, he was Geller, you know, he looked at the physiology of Geller and others in the
70s. He ended his long career with CIA, retired, and is now working again with Defense
Department. He never stopped working. He's on some of the most prestigious science boards
in the nation. I mean, six months ago, he was on General Clapper, head of the DNI, like a nine or ten-man
scientist board to advise the director of national intelligence for the president. I mean,
that's a huge job. And yet what Green told me is when he lectures at the Pentagon about
anomalous situations, you know, that we're talking about, which touch upon not just anomalous mental
cognition but also anomalous visual sightings of things like orbs and he talks about this and sort of the
the scientists all sit there you know aghast how dare you talk about this but up at the coffee break
everyone comes up and ask some questions but no one wants to talk about it on the record boy do
I think that's interesting that is uh I could not mirror that anymore I mean there are been times
I've gone to these UFO conventions, which are an absolute treat.
I would love to see your thoughts on going to one of those someday.
But you do.
You see these very, I guess you could say, intellectually snooty individuals
who get up there and talk about the very objective and skeptical side of UFOs.
And then you get one beer in them, and they start telling individual by individual the real story,
the stuff they actually have an honest opinion about.
It's fascinating.
It is.
And it also, you know, there's lots of different rabbit holes to go down.
And I think that there, you just have to, you have to pick your people in essence.
I mean, I know with Edgar Mitchell, I, what I found, because he became very entrenched in, in euphology and in alien visitations.
And in my opinion, and again, this is just my opinion, I leave it out of the book.
book. But my opinion is that he got used by a number of groups because of his high-profile
nature. And they pulled him into an arena where he was even more ridiculed, if you will. But
in essence, his ideas about consciousness, about the exploration of the far reaches of what man
can know were extraordinary, you know, to think about. And he dedicated. And he dedicated
his life to it. I mean, he was a PhD from MIT. And when you read the transcript of that,
you know, Apollo 14 mission, or you can read the chapters in my book on Ed Mitchell because
I condense them for you. I mean, the remarkable, the remarkable circumstances in which they
function were, talk about extraordinary human functioning. I mean, that's what the Chinese call
their paranormal programs, if you will, their ESP programs, extraordinary human body function.
That's what Mitchell had. That's what he was capable of. And yet to be ridiculed because of his
far-reaching speculative ideas, again, I think that's unhelpful. But there are degrees to which people
take anything. And I also write about some of those individuals in my book where you can pursue
a subject to the gates of hell.
And I, you know, there's a, we haven't spoken about, and people can certainly read phenomena
and get this, what I think is this amazing story of Andrea Pujarak, who is one of the early,
early M.K. Ultra doctors.
And I interviewed his son and I found lost archives.
I don't know if they were ever lost.
Maybe they just were never found in the library of Congress, of letters that he was writing to
different of his benefactors, the Forbes and the Aster's and the Astors.
the DuPonts, they were financing his work, the CIA was financing his work, the defense department
was. I mean, he was at the forefront in the late 40s and 50s and 60s of all this research,
but then he became, you know, a little too entrenched. He took a few too many magic mushrooms,
and I mean that literally, by his own admittance in his journals, and kind of pursued this
to what some would say was the Gates of Hell. So you have different cautionary tales throughout,
phenomena about how far, how far will this go?
Absolutely.
You know, and it is.
It is endless.
And it really depends on the individual, like, which route they take.
And I do want to touch on the fact that within your book, you mentioned that most of these
programs, they were either, like you mentioned, moved to a different department, or
they were closed down.
They were terminated.
You know, there wasn't anything to, uh, to, um,
the public, at least, to be officially gleaned from these studies. Do you believe, Annie, and I know
that you write about this, that they could still be going on? Well, they absolutely are going on.
There is no question. I mean, I'll give you an example. The Office of Naval Research
explores what they call premonition and intuition in sailors and Marines. I mean, that is, you know,
they call it anomalous mental cognition.
that is a different name for ESP.
They, another doctor there calls it the spidey sense.
They, you know, there's another program they call sense making, okay?
This is the actual definition.
Sense making, think about that.
That's very broad and vague.
What they defined it as the motivated, continuous effort to understand connections
among people, places, and events in order to anticipate their trajectories and act effectively.
I mean, that's premonition right there.
And that program, the Office of Naval Research says in interviews, was born of a situation in Iraq
whereby a soldier with the sixth sense said to his men, we're not going down that street.
there's an IED buried there.
They send the robot out.
There's an IED.
Wow.
Now that soldier becomes interesting
to the Defense Department,
but in the present day, in 2017,
instead of going into the laboratory
and, you know, in the Faraday cage
and conducting experiments right off,
they're now looking at that soldier's physiology,
looking at his neurobiology.
And as it was said to me,
trying to map that physiology in the brain
and then model it and then accelerate it.
And because you're talking about the Defense Department,
the word accelerate means to weaponize it.
Exactly, right.
So it's basically, you know,
rewrapping the Christmas present, as it were, with a new wrapping.
Brilliant analogy.
And again, you notice no mention of the supernatural,
no mention of the without,
never mind where the soldier gets his spidey sense.
Right.
And here's where I think it gets very interesting.
And this is a question.
Because in the 70s and 80s, you would, okay, fine, the CIA can ignore the question.
Where is it coming from, right?
But now it seems like what the Defense Department is leaning into is using computer technology to legitimize the research.
In the same way that the CIA drew the inescapable conclusion that the phenomena
exist if defense department today can point to a brain scan and say look this is what's going on
they can then finance it and so then the question which i think is marvelous is my goodness will the
modern era this incredible advance of technology that we have now with computers with nanotechnology
with nanobiotechnology um will this advance of science and technology allow us to solve this ancient
mystery, is it fact, is it fantasy, is it science, is it the supernatural, right? Is it hogwash? Is it real?
Or will the debate continue? And that is really interesting and exciting to be at that moment in time, I think.
Absolutely. And I think your book and the subsequent projects that I'm sure will stem from this book is
is the inception of that question, of, you know, whether it's real or not, how is it being,
used and why isn't the public being made aware of that, like you said, it is to weaponize.
We all know there's no money and peace.
So while these abilities, whether from within or from without, could benefit mankind,
the idea of this that you've touched on in most of your books is that it will always be
used as a weapon, as a defense.
sad in many respects, but understandable in terms of a military mindset.
It's fascinating.
I look forward to seeing where your research on this goes.
Are you continuing your research into this after the book has been released?
What's super interesting to me, my heart and soul is in journalism, is being a reporter.
But my books wind up in the world of fiction, in the world of television.
and that's a long development process.
But phenomena has been, is in development now with Stephen Spielberg's Amblin and Jason Blum's Blumhouse.
So you have the company that brought you, you know, ET and Close Encounters of the Third Kind and decades of movies since,
merging powers, if you will, with the company that brought you paranormal activity.
Okay.
and I'm involved in this creatively in terms of storytelling.
And so some of the more exciting, let's say far out there,
un-fact-checkable stories, which I learned from the scientists,
from the psychics while I was writing this project,
that I couldn't put in phenomena, the narrative non-fiction book,
because they were single-sourced and they couldn't be fact-checked.
They couldn't be buttressed with, you know, declassified documents.
Those incredible stories, which had me at the edge of my seat, can find their home in this fictional world.
And I think that is super exciting.
So when you say, will the work continue?
Absolutely, it will continue.
See, that's very exciting.
And we all know, you know, Spielberg has been known to put truths into its fiction, close encounters, like you said, comes to mind.
Jacques Valet was featured in that film.
Many case reports from supposed alien encounters were included in that as well.
That's very interesting.
And we see that a lot lately with the blending of fiction and these small truths being almost disclosed to the public.
So I definitely look forward to that.
Do you have any other upcoming projects coming?
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Well, I'm always writing another book, so that, as I said,
That's really where my heart and soul lies.
But, you know, back to that idea of science fiction and science fact,
what you just touched upon where these ideas, the fiction writers plant their,
plant truths in fiction.
The reverse is also true.
And maybe this is a great little vignette to end upon because I found one of my most interesting interviews was for the DARPA book,
where I interviewed Charles Towns, who won the Nobel Prize in 1964 for inventing the laser.
Okay.
And the laser is one of arguably the most important dual-use technology advances of the modern world.
I mean, you have laser weapons.
That's leading Pentagon technology now, all classified.
And then you have laser printers, laser eye surgery, laser, you know, knee surgery, okay?
and Charles Towns was two points that he told me that just really made me think bigger and broader than I'd thought before.
One was that his idea for inventing the laser came to him originally.
The original seed was planted when he was a little boy reading science fiction, Yuri Gagarin's The Death Ray.
That's what it was called.
So the fiction writer had kind of conceived the laser, you know, decades before.
And that inspired Towns.
But then he told me a really interesting story.
Now, remember, this is a man of science who won the Nobel Prize.
So we talked earlier about the within or the without.
Charles Towns confirmed a story with me that had been reported elsewhere,
that when he was a grown man, he was sitting.
on a park bench when the idea of how to create the laser came to him.
And he believed that the idea came to him from without.
It was a eureka moment for him, but it came to him from some kind of a supernatural being.
In his case, because he was a man of faith, he defined that as God.
Wow.
I found this fascinating.
And it's the story I would always use.
It was kind of my Charles Towns' trump card, when the scientific skeptics who I would be interviewing would, you know, kind of doubt my intelligence and say, you know, no scientist worth his salt ever even believes in any such a thing as inspiration from a supernatural being.
And I could say, well, that's not what Charles Towns told me.
And so, you know, I loved that interview with him.
I loved having and I love having that idea of, and by the way, he said he went back.
to the Princeton Institute for Advanced Study and had the debate with Einstein and John von Neumann.
So it just has this marvelous, it's a marvelous metaphor for really what I think phenomena is about is
what are the reaches of what man can know. And who gets to decide what is inspiration.
Who gets to decide what is getting lost? And who gets to decide what is science.
fiction and what is science fact.
Absolutely. And I think
your book shows that
that debate goes on,
that conversation continues,
and more people are opened up to
that possibility and become
that higher
percentage, you know,
amongst the skeptics and the debunkers.
So I can only imagine
the inspiration this book is going to have on many
in the scientific fields, the
hard and soft sciences,
and to the believers and skeptics,
to like Annie. It's an absolutely fascinating book. I can't wait for people to hear this today. And
where can we find out more about what you're up to? Annie Jacobson.com.
Perfect.
Author website. Awesome. And all your work can be found there. Annie, thank you so much for joining us
today. Thanks for having me. It was a pleasure. Once again, I want to thank Annie Jacobson
for coming on the show today. Her Area 51 book has definitely drawn some controversy
in the UFO field. So it was very refreshing to talk about something completely different with her.
Again, you could find all her books and her upcoming speaking engagements at Annie Jacobson.com.
Also, if you happen to live in the Rochester, New York area, I'll be giving my presentation
called UFO's First Uphology, The Convergence of Experience and Study.
I'll be giving that presentation at the erronecoit public library on May 10th at 5.30 p.m.
I've been invited to speak by the Rochester UFO Meetup Group,
so if you'd like to attend, please email Cookie Stringfellow at Cookie Stringfellow at TWC.com to reserve your spot.
Unfortunately, walk-ins are not accepted as space is very limited, so definitely email her ASAP to learn more.
Again, that's Cookie Stringfellow at TWC.com.
I'll be doing a meet and greet in selling books prior to the presentations.
So if you find yourself in the Rochester, New York area, please come and join us.
I'd absolutely love to meet you.
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That's it for this week's episode.
Join me next Monday as we travel south of the border
to talk UFOs over Mexico with a very special guest.
And remember, keep your feet on the ground,
but never stop searching somewhere in the skies.
This has been a third-kind production.
To learn more, visit third-kind productions.com.
