It was 1983, and Major General Albert Stubblebine, III, was the
Commanding General of INSCOM, the US Army Intelligence and Security
Command.
At an intelligence school in Fort Huachuca, Arizona,
Stubblebine gave what would be remembered by those who were there as a
highly unorthodox pep talk. It started out in an un-extraordinary
manner, but after Stubblebine had finished summarizing the tremendous
advances that had been made in intelligence-gathering techniques and
technology in the preceding years, he took a turn that few, if any, had
seen coming.
Paul Smith, a retired Major in the US Army and former remote viewer, recalls the speech:
“As
impressive and amazing as are all the advances we are making through
technology,” he (Stubblebine) continued, reaching into the pockets of
his dress green uniform, “they cannot compare to the power that lies
within our own minds. We only have to learn to tap it.” He began tossing
small, glinting objects into the audience. “Now I want these back when
you’re through looking at them,” he added nonchalantly.
What those in attendance were holding were pieces of silverware that had been mutilated into unnatural shapes.
Since
the age of 11 Smith had spent his summers as hired help on farms and
ranches in the West. He’d worked with tools and heavy machinery, and
seen metal of all descriptions bent deliberately or by accident, both
mechanically and with heat—but none of it resembled the forms taken by
Stubblebine’s warped silverware. The latter featured spoons buckled and
twisted into tight spirals, and forks the tines and stems of which had
also been twisted and curled—some looking like pigs’ tails.
Stubblebine’s cutlery showed none of the normal evidence of having been heated to high temperatures to produce the effects....<<<Read More>>>....