First, Linda Moulton Howe has a phenomenal report about Roswell from a woman who directly held the materials in her hands at Wright Field in 1947.

Then Marla Frees is back and she has an extraordinary show for us this week. She’s talking to Monica Holy, who has ended up in the extraordinary situation of rescuing people AFTER their deaths.

How is this possible, and what in the world is it even about, you ask, and most reasonably. Listen as Dreamland’s expert psychic explores Monica’s unique life and work. What she does is not something you will have heard about before, but as the veil between the worlds of the living and the dead grows thinner, lives such as Monica Holy’s are going to become more common.
read more

In “Men Who Stare at Goats,” the character played by George Clooney was based on remote viewer Lyn Buchanan, and so Marla Frees has a question for him: which of this incidents in the film are true and which ones aren’t?

Lyn’s answers offer new insight into the early days of the Army’s technical remote viewing program. Much of what he talks about has never been revealed before, so don’t miss this fascinating interview.

Did a remote viewer really make a goat fall over dead? And if so, why was the US military so eager to learn how to kill at a distance using the mind?

Maybe somebody else was already ahead of them…

You really CAN learn remote viewing! Visit Lyn Buchanan’s website today. Click here.
read more

Sounds like they’re worried – Whales aren’t singing the way they used to. Their voices become deeper every year, and scientists are worried that this may be a sign that they’re in trouble. The same thing is happening to whales all over the world.

Whale researcher Mark McDonald first noticed this phenomenon 8 years ago. In Wired.com, Brandon Keim quotes him as saying, “We don’t have the answer. We just have a lot of recordings.”

Keim quotes researcher Hal Whitehead as saying, “The exciting possibility, I think, is that they’re all listening to each other. This is a worldwide cultural phenomenon, and that’s very cool.”
read more

New detailed seismic images of the “plumbing” that feeds the Yellowstone supervolcano shows a plume of hot and molten rock rising at an angle from the northwest at a depth of at least 410 miles. Does this mean it’s about to blow?

A study used gravity measurements to indicate the banana-shaped magma chamber of hot and molten rock a few miles beneath Yellowstone is 20% larger than previously believed, so a future cataclysmic eruption could be even larger than thought.
read more