En cours de chargement...
The best solution to end the constant radioactive seep from the disabled Nuclear Power Plant has been remote viewed and answered. The bad news is the sheer scale of such an undertaking is an enormous engineering challenge. The good news is that a solution exists so long as the will to do so also exists. Remember, building the pyramids of Giza was a huge project of its time as it would be today, but this never stopped it from going ahead to completion.
Japan was considering a proposal to build the gigantic Shimizu Mega-City Pyramid over Tokyo Bay when I published this book. The plan became public knowledge some three years after the Fukushima Daiichi meltdowns. It raises a number of questions in light of the ongoing catastrophe that is the radiation leak. While the economic welfare of a nation is critical, so too is the health of the Japanese population, not to forget those who live in other countries surrounding the Pacific Ocean. In 2012, I was a member of a remote viewing team blind tasked to find the best way to stop the radiation leak from the plant.
The teamwork isn't included in this book, however, the vast majority of our data lines up with what I gathered in my remote viewing sessions and shown in this book. I outline the necessary steps to take and offer my observations based on my analysis of the information. The book is illustrated with the original drawings from two remote viewing sessions I completed while part of the team. The final session resulted in a drawing akin to a blueprint.
It shows the three main steps needed. Also included are endnotes citing outside sources used in the background section and a resource list for those wanting more information about remote viewing. The author includes his contact details for those with questions or suggestions. Remote Viewing uses an ESP ability found in all of us to view a distant or unseen object utilizing a disciplined approach originally developed under the auspices of the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) and the Stanford Research Institute (SRI) in the 1970s.