This project describes change between the years 2008 and 2013 across nine geographical locations with a global spread. The four (Main) locations I was fully involved in as a remote viewer – were:
- Vaitupu, Tuvalu
- Fort Jesus, Mombasa Kenya
- Sydney Opera House, Sydney, Australia
- Mount Kilimanjaro, Tanzania
This project entailed remote viewing blind target locations in both the present time (2008) and then a later date of (2013). For the 2008 targets I achieved an accuracy (clarity) scores of 3 (minimum/no errors) for all my RV sessions.
The analyst and project manager Courtney Brown says this about how he arrived at ‘clarity’ and ‘damage’ scores for the remote viewing in this project:
“Clarity scores evaluate the accuracy of the 2008 sessions with respect to the known and verifiable characteristics of the target. Clarity scores can range from 0 to 3, and they convey the following meaning:
3: The known and verifiable target aspects are described exceptionally well with few, minor, or no decoding errors.
2: The known and verifiable target aspects are described well. There may be some notable decoding errors.
1: The known and verifiable target aspects are described minimally. There may also be significant decoding errors.
0: The known and verifiable target aspects are described very poorly or not at all.
“Disaster scores” are given after the clarity scores, and are noted with a capital “D” followed by the disaster score. Disaster scores reflect the level of catastrophic content that is conveyed by the remote-viewing data. Disaster scores range from 0 to 3 and they convey the following meaning:
Disaster Data:
0=None,
1=Minimal,
2=Significant,
3=Complete”
Click on the locations (above) to find a summary of my (Daz Smith) Remote viewing data, the analyst score and my personal comments – we will also add the feedback here for each location during 2013.