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Transcript
that is uh classified as a non-physical
reality. What happens is that that slit
opens up opens up more and more and
more. So you see more and more of that
reality and we assume that we see
different realities. They're not very
different realities but rather a very
extended broad view of one very large
reality.
Can we speed that up by doing?
Yeah. Well, you use techniques which
push the nervous system a lot faster
than most techniques are available.
Shortly after making that claim, he was
gone. In 1979,
Bentov was on his way to Japan to meet
with leading scientists and share that
he had cracked the code of reality. But
his first flight from Chicago to Los
Angeles never made it. The plane
crashed. Strange. The man who had spent
years mapping the hidden architecture of
consciousness died on his way to reveal
it. Later, parts of his work surfaced in
CIA files, quietly folded into their own
projects. Modern physics now flirts with
this idea through quantum field theory.
But Bentov wasn't a physicist chasing
equations. He was describing the cosmos
like a giant interconnected hologram
where every fragment contains the whole
picture. Think about that for a second.
If your mind is tuning into a universal
signal, then death might not be the end.
It could be just changing the channel.
The soul is the repository of
information that we gather during
lifetime.
Well, I'll tell you, maybe we should
draw another diagram. Mhm.
Physical bodies are here and another
physical body. Another physical body and
this is Joe and this is Jim and this is
Sarah etc.
Now clearly on the phys this is the
physical level. Yeah. Now on this
physical level we all separate. You sit
there and I sit here and we're all
separate.
Now let's draw another level. This level
is is slightly higher. And let's call
this the level of the soul. Yeah. Well
there will be some mingling here.
Let's let's draw this person as
extending
to practically infinity this way. Now
look what happens at the physical level
we are separate. We're separate
and there's this much distance between
us. Let's say that on the soul level
this person extends this much and the
other person gets slightly mixed in with
him. That is the souls are in a way in
touch with each other. Okay, they
overlap these two lines. Now let's go
now to a higher level and let's call
this uh say the level of the higher self
which is kind of the boss of the soul.
Uh there what we find is that
this fellow's
higher self extends this much and the
other fellows
extends this much.
There is more overlap between them.
Right?
On the very highest level which is the
high spiritual level we are basically
over overlapping completely.
Everybody is overlapping everybody else.
In other words, everything and everyone
is everywhere. In other words, we've
become omnipresent. This is a state of
highly spiritual perfected beings or
gods you may call.
Okay.
Okay. And so that we exist on all of
those simultaneously.
On all of those simultaneously, but
we're not aware of them
in in in your view. than if when when we
see each other as separate entities
that's only seen on one plane of
reality, could I?
And that was just his starting point
because Bentov didn't stop at the mind.
He mapped out how your heart and brain
physically interact with the cosmos. The
results were shocking and the evidence
measurable. But that's where his story
takes an even stranger turn.
Well, let's take a simple example. the
family sitting at dinner table and say
there's a kid maybe 15 years old 16
years old and he looks up and suddenly
he says to his mother hey ma look at
there's there's our dead grandmother is
standing in the corner
mother looks around says no then
psychiatrist says oh young fella you're
in troubles and then he writes out a
little prescription for little sorazine
or electroshock or whatever and pretty
soon in matter of two weeks Kid is back
in shape. Very normal.
No longer sees anything.
No longer sees anything.
Yeah.
So the process has been reversed. This
is called a psychotic episode
or acute schizophrenic
break or whatever it is.
And what you would say is that there's a
good chance that that kid is seen.
Very good.
The kid has a spontaneous opening of his
senses. That is
classified as a non-physical reality.
The nervous system is that thing that
gives us the picture of our realities.
That is our realities. That reality
which you see all all around you, the
flowers and the chairs and the
microphones and the teacup is given to
us by our senses.
We don't see light which is beyond UV
and beyond infrared.
Uh we hear only a limited uh scale of
vibrations. Like for instance, we hear
anywhere from 52 to 20,000 maximum.
Mhm. In other words, all our senses are
limited. So what happens is that that
slit opens up opens up more and more and
more. So you see more and more of that
reality and we assume that we see
different realities. They're not very
different realities, but rather a very
extended broad view of one very large
reality. Through years of experiments
and self-observation, he discovered that
the heartbeat sends a rhythmic wave up
the spine into the brain. This
microscopic mechanical motion measured
in fractions of a millimeter generates
oscillations that synchronize with the
body's electromagnetic field. Here's the
twist. Those oscillations match
frequencies found throughout nature.
From the vibration of atoms to the
rotation of planets. To him, this wasn't
a coincidence. It was evidence of a
built-in cosmic feedback loop.
It's Bento, he wrote Stalking the Wild
Pendulum, is uh probably one of the
greatest
works he created so that people could
understand what a holographic matrix
field is or a holographic universe so
you could understand entrainment, so you
could understand uh the electrostatic
field surrounding the earth. Yeah. Uh he
coined these simple crazy little
phrases, these explanations for people
that said, you know, we're just all
raisins in the jelly, in the jello, and
if one raisin is vibrating at a higher
frequency, stronger amplitude, and at a
higher frequency, soon all of the other
raisins in the in the jello will begin
to resonate in that way. And the only
way they can't is if they can overpower
that the amplitude and that frequency.
And if they can do that and they can
have a constructive or a destructive
wave interference, they can overpower
the other wave. He illustrated the heart
as a low-frequency oscillator producing
standing waves that extend beyond the
body. In theory, these waves could
interact with the universal field
described earlier. Decades later,
research from the HeartMath Institute
confirmed that the heart's
electromagnetic field extends several
feet outside the body and can influence
brain activity. A concept he proposed
long before modern instruments could
detect it. To him, meditation wasn't
just about calming the mind. It was a
precise method of tuning the heartbrain
system so it could resonate with the
deeper architecture of the universe.
When tuned correctly, the body could
become a gateway to expanded perception,
a state where boundaries dissolve and
reality is experienced as a seamless
hole. This was presented not as
mysticism, but as a reproducible
process. If true, it means the human
body is a finely tuned instrument, one
that most people never learn to play.
But this map of the body was just the
beginning. In 2003, a CIA document
quietly appeared in the public domain. A
29page analysis labeled Gateway Process.
These CIA documents that came out that
have been unclassified or declassified
for years. People can go online and
check it out. But basically what these
documents show is the power of doing
mind and heart coherence meditations
focused on specific intentions and how
that can expand your consciousness even
affect reality in a very powerful way.
It's something that revealed more about
what reality might be and it's something
that also really expanded uh their sense
of the way reality works and how we can
influence it. On the surface, it was a
military report on altered states of
consciousness. But buried in the
technical jargon was something eerie.
Page after page describing concepts
nearly identical to what Bentov had
mapped decades earlier. It spoke of the
brain and body as oscillating systems,
of consciousness extending beyond space
and time, and of accessing non-ordinary
realities through controlled resonance.
Why would the CIA care? According to the
report, mastering these techniques could
allow for remote viewing, the ability to
perceive events and locations without
being physically present. In other
words, spying without ever leaving the
room. It even describes the possibility
of projecting one's consciousness across
the universe or into the past and
future. This was not sci-fi speculation.
It was treated as a strategic asset. The
gateway document wasn't theoretical. It
was part of a larger intelligence
program. One that blended physics,
neuroscience, and the very same
universal field ideas that Bentov
explored. And just like his work, it was
measured, charted, and taken very
seriously, which raises a disturbing
question. If this knowledge could truly
bend perception, who controls it
controls reality. And the CIA wasn't
about to let that power go unnoticed.
But the Gateway file is just one piece
of the puzzle because once you start
looking, you find a trail of other
classified projects, each stranger than
the last. Another file describes
biological signal entrainment where test
subjects were exposed to faint rhythmic
pulses too subtle to consciously notice
that altered brain waves and decision-m.
The idea was simple. If you could
synchronize someone's neural rhythms
with a desired state, you can make them
more suggestible without saying a word.
These were not science fiction concepts.
Internal memos describe field trials
where operatives passed coded messages
across crowded rooms using nothing but
pre-arranged micro gestures and sound
frequencies masked in background noise.
This is the key. Perception control
isn't just about advanced tech. It's
about knowing the blind spots built into
every human brain, then designing an
environment to exploit them. And then
there's the strangest controlled
dissociation.
Select operatives were trained to detach
their awareness from normal sensory
flow, entering an observer state where
time felt distorted and memory recall
was near perfect. It was the same
principle Bentov mapped, tuning the
body's oscillations and stepping outside
ordinary processing of reality. But here
it was engineered not for enlightenment,
but for control. To truly weaponize
perception, you don't just change what
someone sees. You rewrite the story
their mind tells about it. And that's
where a former US Navy interrogator
takes the concept to another level
entirely. Essentially what Elron Hubard
does is have people read out of this
book uh of Alice in Wonderland. The the
verbiage is very confusing and Elron
Hubard openly wrote about this in in his
work and then the CIA without even
attributing anything to him copied it
almost word for word in an interrogation
manual.
Really?
Oh yeah. So being able to speak
confusing phrases helps you to be more
persuasive. They discovered this in the
50s and 60s that if I can confuse your
brain, your brain acts as though someone
who is it's somebody that's falling. So
if you imagine when you're falling, your
limbs are flailing all over the place
and the first solid object that they
come into contact with, it's going to
like grab around it no matter what. Even
if it's a thorn bush or something.
Okay?
Right?
So any anything that's solid in that
moment of confusion is going to get
grabbed onto. So the correlary the brain
correlary to this is if a person's
confused the first logical piece of
information they hear after being
confused will be automatically accepted
or more automatically accepted without
being screened or scrutinized by the
brain.
Hughes spent decades training military
and intelligence operatives in advanced
influence techniques. His claim is
blunt. Confusion is not an accident.
It's engineered. He calls it controlled
perception. The idea is to subtly
dismantle someone's mental map of
reality and replace it with a version
that serves your objective without them
ever realizing the swap happened. Here's
how it works. First, overload the target
with contradictions. Give them two or
three truths that can't coexist. The
brain will scramble to resolve the
conflict. And in that state, it's wide
open to suggestion. Next, layer sensory
cues, symbols, color patterns, even
specific rhythms in speech that bypass
conscious filtering. Over time, the
targets internal narrative shifts, but
they believe it was their own conclusion
all along. Hughes warns that at scale,
this doesn't just change opinions. It
can create entire parallel realities
within a population. Two people can live
in the same physical world yet inhabit
completely different mental ones, each
certain they're right. And here's where
Bentov's influence theory meets modern
trade craft. If human perception is a
tunable system, then controlled
perception is the operating manual.
Instead of guiding someone to
enlightenment, it guides them into a
constructed version of reality, one you
control. Unlike cold war experiments
that required labs and specialists,
these methods can be deployed through
ordinary media, culture, even casual
conversation. And once the perception
shift takes hold, undoing it is nearly
impossible. But in the digital age,
these principles didn't vanish, they
evolved. What once required trained
operatives and controlled environments
is now woven into the very platforms
billions of people use every day. The
tools have changed, but the objective
remains. Shape the lens through which
reality is seen. Google was incubated
and funded by CIA and NSA and DARPA and
how the page rank algorithm and um all
of the propri uh propri proprietary uh
IP that's used in Google was developed
first in DARPA and then there was these
two people that are listed in that
article from the CIA and NSA who were
visiting Sergey Bran many times when he
was developing it and testing it and
they were funding it.
And this is proven.
Yeah. This is his article right here.
How the CIA made Google inside the
secret network.
Good god.
Fascinating. Fascinating deep dive this
guy did.
The infrastructure they built doesn't
just answer questions or connect people.
It quietly maps behavior, preferences,
and thought patterns on a global scale.
In practice, this means the digital
environment can be shaped with
extraordinary precision. Each search,
scroll, and click contributes to a
constantly evolving model of how the
user interacts with the world. The
deeper the model, the easier it becomes
to anticipate and design for specific
responses. If you use blue light
specifically, it actually destroys the
dopamine reward tracks in your brain.
Just so you know, Meta and Google today
own those patents. Cruz's observation
adds another layer. The influence isn't
limited to what appears on the screen,
but to the screen itself. The spectral
quality of artificial light, especially
in prolonged exposure, affects the
brain's chemistry. Lower dopamine shifts
the mind into a state of reduced drive
and heightened receptivity, subtly
altering how information is processed.
Taken together, these elements form an
ecosystem that doesn't just communicate,
it conditions. not in the overt
heavy-handed sense of past propaganda,
but through gradual adaptive feedback.
The result is a mental environment where
certain narratives find easier passage
and others fade into the background. But
for the agencies that pioneered these
methods, influence was never just about
controlling the present moment. In their
most unconventional experiments, they
went further, testing whether perception
could reach into events that hadn't even
happened yet.
People's patterns of interaction and
speech are extremely predictive of
things like engagement and compliance,
the pattern of mobility you have during
the day, the pattern of how you
communicate people, even from
accelerometers, how you move. As you
see, people are exhibiting behavior that
could be best described as foraging
behavior. Very ancient biological uh
behavior whereby people have routines
and then they break loose in these sort
of exploratory vignettes and then they
go back to their routines.
This is where influence becomes
something more than persuasion. In the
past, you could only react to what
people were doing. Now, predictive
models mean you can act before they've
even made the choice. Pentland's
research shows that with enough
behavioral data, algorithms can forecast
shifts in opinion, consumption, even
social unrest, and design interventions
to steer them. And these interventions
don't need to be heavy-handed. Change
the timing of a notification, subtly
adjust the framing of a headline,
reorder a list of search results, and
you've shifted the odds toward a
preferred outcome. It feels organic, but
it's engineered.
Your brain does not react to the world.
Using past experience, your brain
predicts and constructs your experience
of the world. The way that we see
emotions in others are deeply rooted in
predictions, right? So to us, it feels
like we just look at someone's face and
we just read the emotion that's there in
their facial expressions the way that we
would read words on a page. But actually
under the hood, your brain is
predicting. It's using past experience
based on similar situations to try to
make meaning.
This is the real loop. Data feeds
predictions. Predictions shape context
and context alters what your mind
believes is real at scale. It means the
same infrastructure that serves you news
or entertainment can also run quiet
experiments, shifting collective
perception in ways that feel natural,
inevitable, even self-generated. Over
time, the loop tightens. Every click,
pause, or scroll teaches the system more
about you, refining the predictions,
making the nudges smaller, more precise,
and harder to detect. The better the
model knows you, the less it needs to
push. A perfectly tuned environment
doesn't force compliance. It makes you
walk willingly toward the path it's
already drawn. And because it operates
on probabilities, it doesn't need to be
right about everyone. just enough people
enough of the time to shift the
trajectory of an entire society. But if
reality itself can be bent through a
predictive feedback loop, then the
question isn't just who's controlling
the present, it's who's already written
your next move before you even knew
there was a choice to make.
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