The Money Protocol - The CIA Method For Financial Manifestation

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Summary

This video explores the CIA's remote viewing practices, specifically Associative Remote Viewing (ARV), and its application to financial markets. It details how ARV was used to predict silver futures market outcomes with remarkable accuracy in 1982, generating significant profits. The video covers the history of the CIA's remote viewing program, the development of ARV, its protocols, and its documented financial and other applications, while also discussing reasons for its lack of mainstream adoption and how individuals can learn and apply these principles.

Highlights

Introduction to Remote Viewing and Financial Manifestation
00:00:00

The video opens by showcasing a successful application of 'associative remote viewing' (ARV) in 1982, where two independent teams generated substantial documented returns from the silver futures market. This highlights ARV as a working method for generating real money in real markets under controlled conditions, and introduces the concept of the CIA's method for financial manifestation. The setting is described as a small office in Menlo Park, California, where Keith Herreri, under the observation of Russell Targ (a former senior research physicist at Stanford Research Institute who conducted classified experiments for various intelligence agencies), prepares for a remote viewing session. Targ's previous work at SRRI involved documenting hundreds of successful remote viewing sessions, with trained operators locating downed Soviet bombers and describing classified facilities. These results were verified and replicated, but kept classified. Deli Associates, a new firm founded by Targ and Herreri, aimed to apply these methods to the silver futures market, a target previously forbidden to the CIA. They had already conducted eight successful sessions, predicting market direction 5 days in advance, resulting in $120,000 in profit (equivalent to $400,000 today). Herreri's ninth session involved describing an object associated with the silver futures market closing higher or lower, 5 days in advance. He accurately described a small green ceramic frog, which matched the pre-assigned object for the market's outcome, confirming the ninth successful prediction.

History and Validation of Remote Viewing (Stargate Program)
00:07:59

The broader context of remote viewing is introduced, detailing the U.S. intelligence community's program that ran from 1972 to 1995. Initially at SRRI under CIA contract, it later moved to Science Applications International Corporation and then to Fort Meade, operating as Stargate. Over 23 years, the program documented thousands of remote viewing sessions by trained operators like Ingo Swan, Joe McMoneagle, and Pat Price. Much of this documentation was declassified in 1995-1996 and is available through the CIA's reading room. The program demonstrated that trained remote viewers could produce information about distant, hidden, or future targets with statistically significant accuracy, exceeding chance. This was confirmed by multiple independent reviews, including one by Professor Jessica Utts, who found 'overwhelming' evidence for remote viewing as a genuine phenomenon. Key operational successes include Pat Price describing a Soviet nuclear test facility in Kazakhstan in 1973, Joe McMoneagle locating a downed Soviet Tu-22 bomber in 1979, and Ingo Swan accurately describing Jupiter's ring system in 1981, prior to Voyager's confirmation. These successes established the capacity of remote viewing to address specific practical problems and deliver information inaccessible through conventional means.

Associative Remote Viewing (ARV) and its Protocols
00:13:35

The breakthrough for financial applications was Associative Remote Viewing (ARV), developed in the late 1970s by Steven Schwarz. Schwarz's archaeological work, locating submerged ancient sites in Alexandria, Egypt, proved remote viewing's ability to produce verifiable physical results for past events. He then extended this to future events by developing ARV, which circumvented the issue of viewers contaminating future perceptions with conscious expectations. Instead of directly viewing a future event, viewers described a pre-assigned physical object associated with each possible outcome of the event. After the event, the viewer was shown the object corresponding to the actual outcome as feedback. Tar and Herreri (silver trades) and Hal Puthoff (predicting daily silver futures, netting $250,000) successfully applied this in 1982. The ARV protocol involves six steps: 1) selecting a future event with discrete, verifiable outcomes; 2) selecting vivid, distinct feedback objects for each outcome; 3) the viewing session where the viewer describes the future feedback object; 4) judging, where independent judges match the description to one of the objects; 5) action, based on the prediction; and 6) feedback, where the viewer is shown the actual object, closing the loop. Clean execution and strict discipline are crucial for success, with contamination at any step compromising the prediction. The video specifies that a time gap of up to 5 days is optimal for reliable ARV, and the viewer must be in a relaxed, low-arousal state, separated from financial outcomes to avoid emotional interference.

Advanced Techniques, Modern Applications, and Limitations
00:23:33

Schwarz further refined ARV with the Mobius Consensus Protocol (MCP), addressing the variability of single-viewer sessions. MCP uses multiple independent viewers, with high confidence predictions made when descriptions converge towards the same pre-assigned object. Low confidence predictions are not acted upon. This transformed ARV into a more reliable multi-viewer instrument. The Applied Precognition Project (APP), founded after Stargate's termination, continues this work, applying ARV to financial markets, sports, and general future predictions. Greg Kolodziejzyk, an APP member, conducted over 5,600 trials over 13 years, demonstrating statistically significant above-chance accuracy. Beyond silver futures, remote viewing has been applied to locating physical objects of value (treasure, sunken ships), predicting sports outcomes (often binary and monetizable), and broad market movements (stock indices, commodities). Lottery predictions are less successful due to the high number of possible outcomes. Remote viewing is also used for locating hidden criminal assets and missing persons, though public documentation is limited. While the methodology works with discipline, it has not scaled due to several factors: the need for trained operators (training takes years), degradation of accuracy with too many sessions on the same target, institutional resistance from financial, academic, and media sectors, researchers prioritizing consciousness implications over financial gain, and a deliberate choice by practitioners to keep their work small to avoid regulatory and intelligence agency attention.

Developing Personal Capacity and Broader Implications
00:35:00

The video outlines three paths for individuals to engage with this information: 1) Developing personal capacity through training programs offered by veterans of the Stargate program and their students. Consistent practice (2-4 years) can lead to reliable above-chance performance. 2) Applying the underlying principles to 'manifestation work.' The same non-local information access that enables remote viewing also underpins successful manifestation, where intention is projected to pull desired outcomes into reality. This deepens manifestation discipline, leading to clearer visualizations, stronger intentions, and more frequent synchronicities. 3) Recognizing the deeper implication that consciousness operates non-locally, accessing information about distant locations, hidden objects, and future events. This understanding challenges the materialist worldview and transforms one's relationship with reality. The capacity deployed in the 1982 silver trades is the same underlying truth that spiritual traditions have pointed to for millennia: access to this broader awareness is inherent. The methodology provides a disciplined path to make this access reliable. The process involves quiet contemplation, focusing attention on a target, allowing impressions without analysis, and recording observations for verification. Consistent practice improves accuracy. The silver trades of 1982, with their verified predictions and profits, demonstrate the reality of this methodology, which remains accessible. The video invites viewers to begin their own practice, emphasizing that consistent discipline is key to developing this capacity.

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