The Annihilation of the Dinosaurs
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Just about everyone knows that dinosaurs roamed the Earth circa 200 million years ago. At their peak, current estimates suggest that there were about 1,000 dinosaur species on the surface of the Earth, and more if you include the flying bird-like dinosaurs. Earth was essentially a world of reptiles back in the day. They evolved here. Then, about 66 million years ago, nearly all of the dinosaurs were wiped out by what appears to be an event involving the impact of a large meteor or asteroid. That is what we assumed going into this project, a project where we wanted to look at the cause of the extinction of the dinosaurs. Well, we got a lot more than just that.
Using remote viewing, a group of five highly trained remote viewers with long and public track records looked closely at that ancient world, and the event that destroyed it. Now we believe that we understand what happened long ago. Moreover, what happened is beginning to paint a very clear picture of our own world today, and why we are in the mess we are in. The history of our planet is much more complicated that contemporary mainstream science understands.
Mainstream scientists got much of the dinosaur story correct. The dinosaurs evolved on this planet, and they indeed were largely wiped out by an impact event. But what mainstream scientists don’t understand is that the impact event was not the result of a random asteroid that crashed into the Earth, creating the equivalent of a worldwide firestorm and subsequent nuclear winter, all just a consequence of bad luck. Rather, that asteroid that did indeed crash into the Earth was part of a coordinated attack on this planet, an attack that was purposefully designed to eradicate most reptilian life, including highly intelligent reptilian life. The story of what happened is really complicated. But it all makes sense if you carefully look at all the data for yourselves with an open mind. What you are about to see may very well change how you look at the surrounding universe in profound ways.
The Remote-Viewing Data
Blind Conditions for All Remote-Viewing Data: All remote viewing for this project (as with all projects conducted at The Farsight Institute) was conducted under totally blind conditions. The viewers were told nothing about the project or specific targets while they were conducting their remote-viewing sessions. They were only instructed that there is a target, and that they should remote view it.
Targets for this Project
Target 1: The surface environment and wildlife of Earth ten years prior to the initiating event that led to the extinction of the dinosaurs
Target 2: The primary initiating event that caused the extinction of the dinosaurs on Earth
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