Secret Pentagon study reveals reincarnation is real after ‘immortal’ discovery


A study conducted by the US Army Intelligence has shown that a person is reborn somewhere else because the conscience ‘does not die.’

Titled ‘Analysis and Assessment of The Gateway Process,’ the 29-page report was written by US Army Lieutenant Colonel Wayne M McDonnell in 1983 and declassified by the CIA in 2003.

The research has since resurfaced on social media, with Chicago artist Sara Holcomb summarizing the findings, saying: ‘We are convinced that reincarnation is real.’

‘Intelligence is a force and exists outside of our understanding of reality,’ Holocomb said, citing page 19 of McDonnell’s Army Intel report. ‘And power… never dies.’

A twisted old man Pentagon an investigation was commissioned to better understand what their Army intel colleagues were doing to send personnel to a small school Charlottesville, Virginia which applies to the ‘Gateway Experience.’

The secret ‘Gateway’ project at the time, based on McDonnell’s analysis, was ‘a teaching method designed to bring increased capacity, focus and coordination … to transform knowledge.’

From there, Gateway’s goal was to move the doctor’s consciousness ‘outside the body to finally escape even the restrictions of time and space.’

According to McDonnell, the Monroe Institute’s findings that fueled the reincarnation case were profound.

‘When consciousness returns to the Absolute (Monroe’s jargon for the world outside space) it brings with it the memory of all that has happened in real life,’ when he interrupted the Institute to find that memories pass from life to life through reincarnation.

A surprising study conducted by the US Army Intelligence and announced by the CIA shocked social media and found that intelligence transcends space and time. Titled 'Analysis and Assessment of The Gateway Process,' the 29-page report was written in 1983.

A surprising study conducted by the US Army Intelligence and announced by the CIA shocked social media and found that intelligence transcends space and time. Titled ‘Analysis and Assessment of The Gateway Process,’ the 29-page report was written in 1983.

A recent report by the US Army Intelligence provides a vague description of how information is processed through the brain as the brain works in the body - and turns into what Lieutenant Colonel Wayne McDonnell likens to a hologram (above).

A recent report by the US Army Intelligence provides a vague description of how information is processed through the brain as the brain works in the body – and turns into what Lieutenant Colonel Wayne McDonnell likens to a hologram (above).

Or, as Holocomb clearly stated in one of the most videos are by TikTok users interest in US Army research: ‘Are you sure reincarnation is a legal thing? Eh.’

Funny, who writes like @mad_hatter_news on TikTok, it also cited several studies conducted by the nearby University of Virginia Medical School Part of Perceptual Education which has created a database of over 2,500 cases of alleged reincarnation.

Most of the cases involved children under the age of five who were said to remember ‘memories of past lives they claimed to have lived.’

‘Why children? Holocomb continued his work. ‘They seem to be the ones who remember their past life easily.’

But the Gateway research explored more than the topical questions of reincarnation, the nature of consciousness and the afterlife.

Ltc McDonnell’s report as a member of the US Army Intelligence and Security Command (INSCOM) was concerned with occult espionage on the astral plane. Psychic spycraft involves the use of well-known spy skills.

In 1983, INSCOM was headed by Major General Albert Stubblebine III, one of the US military’s most influential proponents of counterintelligence warfare.

Joe McMoneagle – who served as Remote Viewer No1. in one of Major General Stubblebine’s espionage programs – he has stated that his mission was to use remote sensing to spy on Russian military equipment and gather intelligence.

He spent more than 20 years as a so-called ‘remote observer’ working at Fort Meade in Maryland, which is also home to the National Security Agency (NSA).

“My success rate was about 28 percent,” McMoneagle said. ‘This may not sound right, but we were brought in to deal with hopeless cases.’

‘Our information was checked against any other intelligence to create a complete picture. We became very useful “spies”.

Joe McMoneagle (pictured) was a Vietnamese medical doctor and American 'magical spy'. His mission was to use 'remote viewing' to spy on Russian bases and gather intelligence. He now serves on the Board of Advisors at the Monroe Institute - whose 'Gateway' approach was studied in a 1983 report.

Joe McMoneagle (pictured) was a Vietnamese medical doctor and American ‘magical spy’. His mission was to use ‘remote viewing’ to spy on Russian bases and gather intelligence. He now serves on the Board of Advisors at the Monroe Institute – whose ‘Gateway’ approach was studied in a 1983 report.

In 1983, INSCOM was led by Major General Albert Stubblebine III (pictured above), one of the US military's greatest advocates of psychic warfare.

In 1983, INSCOM was led by Major General Albert Stubblebine III (pictured above), one of the US military’s greatest advocates of psychic warfare.

Today in retirement, McMoneagle serves on the Board of Advisors and as a teacher of Monroe Institutethe same organization that the ‘Gateway’ method was studied by the US Army INSCOM in their 1983 report.

Finally Ltc McDonnell’s ‘Gateway Experience’ Reportit was an effort to ensure that the agency was qualified as a security contractor to be used by the military’s INSCOM to carry out intelligence operations.

In his summary, McDonnell concluded: ‘There is a clear and reasonable basis in terms of physical science parameters for considering Gateway to be valid for its essential purposes.’

‘Intuitive perception not only of the personal but of the natural and artistic can be seen to be within reasonable expectations,’ he continued, essentially justifying INSCOM’s method of ‘psychic spying’.

But there was a catch, he said: These scenarios were difficult to control or control consistently, which Ltc McDonnell said would require long and careful training.

‘(A) slow way to enter the Gateway Experience in a fast way would appear to be necessary (…) from the point of view of establishing the use of the power of the Gateway,’ he wrote.

In other words, when the commander of the military discovered that the Gateway was real and possible, further research was necessary to go to the place where US intelligence could use it.

Ltc McDonnell then suggested how INSCOM could conduct additional Gateway training, although it is unclear if more training has been initiated.

Strangely, one page of Ltc McDonnell’s report is missing, number 25, in the middle of the section where he was explaining the steps that could be taken to protect the Gateway.

Abandonment caught the attention of some readers who started it a Change.org petition calling on the CIA to release him.

The CIA, however, says it didn’t have the original page – fueling the idea that it was deliberately omitted because of the powerful tactics that page 25 describes.



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