Time-viewing device: Difference between revisions
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Latest revision as of 16:36, 23 December 2024
A chronovisor (also called looking-glass technology)[citation needed] is a purported time-viewing device that allegedly shows images or holograms, and in some tellings also sound, of past or future events, produced through speculative physics principles such as residual electromagnetic waves or quantum access. Numerous claims have been made as to the nature of the images seen through the device, e.g., whether the “future” and “past" seen in the device are changeable, are one of multiple parallel timelines with different assigned probabilities, or represent one or more such alternative timeline realities, or some kind of weighted average.
Construction[edit | edit source]
The devices are often described as containing rotating magnetic fields, crystals, plasmas, and a display surface where the image is shown, sometimes described as holographic. Modern human-used versions of chronovisors have been described as having a computer screen and/or probability readout.
Uses[edit | edit source]
An early human version of this technology was allegedly built by two Vatican priests/engineers in the 1930s–40s, according to François Brune in The Vatican's New Mystery.[1]
A similar technology was allegedly used by members of Project Pegasus to view events from the past, according to Andrew Basiago, Bernard Mendez, and others.[2]
The “Yellow Cube", a gift from one of the alleged ET delegations to the Eisenhower Administration, allegedly functioned as a sophisticated chronovisor.[3] Bill Cooper, possibly referring to the same device, claimed to have learned circa 1969–72, as an officer in the briefing team of the commander of U.S. Navy Pacific Fleet, that “the aliens” in the early 1950s showed a "hologram" of the Crucifixion of Jesus to government representatives and that “the government filmed the hologram” and has the tape in its possession.[4] Andrew Basiago claimed to have watched a 30-minute black-and-white video of the crucifixion in a private showing with a small group.[5]
Allegedly, multiple Yellow Cube-like devices were in circulation among certain connected or elite individuals in the 1990s, including Saddam Hussein.[6] Dan Burisch said that the device was connected to a monitor or computer with a probability readout and that, when in operation, it reacted to the emotional input of the people controlling it. During an alleged meeting with officials/elites where the device was present, he caused it to show that a certain proposed course of action would result in a future where they would be “standing on the bones of their” dead family members after a global catastrophe, and swayed their decision to go against this course.[7]
Time-viewing technology was also allegedly used in the Montauk Project for various purposes.[8] Tony Rodrigues claimed that nonhuman ETs and humans (or humanlike ETs) used a chronovisor-like device connected to his mind near the end of his alleged “20 and Back” experience to discern the probability of him remembering it after it was over (and thus whether they would need to partly lobotomize him before sending him back). He claimed that the ETs standing near the examining platform he was on telepathically taunted him that he wouldn’t remember anything, and the person watching the computer screen connected to the chronovisor-like device told them to cut it out, presumably because the probability of him remembering was increasing.[9]
Laura Eisenhower said that looking-glass technology was used by the “deep state” to strategically target the best time in her life for her to meet the deep-state agent allegedly sent to start a romantic relationship with her and recruit her to live in the Mars breakaway civilization.[10]
Related technology[edit | edit source]
Chronovisors and looking-glass technology are distinct from other alleged time and/or non-linear space travel devices such as the Montauk Chair, “jump rooms", time travel portals, Tesla teleportation, and Stargates.
References[edit | edit source]
- ↑ François Brune, *The Vatican's New Mystery*, 1972.
- ↑ Quotations or links to interviews with Basiago and Mendez.
- ↑ Bill Wood, Project Camelot interview; Dan Burisch, Bill Hamilton interviews.
- ↑ Bill Cooper, Beyond a Pale Horse, 1990.
- ↑ Video interviews with Andrew Basiago.
- ↑ Project Camelot video interviews with Dan Burisch.
- ↑ Project Camelot interviews with Dan Burisch.
- ↑ Interviews of Stuart Swerdlow.
- ↑ Tony Rodrigues, interviews and book.
- ↑ Interviews with Laura Eisenhower, Elena Danaan, and Alfred L. Webre.