^
Quoted for truth.
Another figure on the American military/espionage landscape who was seriously assessing Uri
Geller ’s warfare potential in the early 1970s was John B. Alexander, a special forces colonel
engaged, as Eldon Byrd was for the Navy, in exploring on the US Army’s behalf the paranormal’s
potential as a non-lethal military weapon. Alexander – who is widely (but incorrectly) regarded as the
character played by George Clooney in The Men Who Stare At Goats had commanded undercover
military teams in Vietnam and Thailand, and later moved into military science, working as Director
of the Advanced Systems Concepts Office, US Army Laboratory Command, then Chief of Advanced
Human Research with INSCOM, the intelligence and security command.
On retirement in 1988, Alexander joined Los Alamos National Laboratory with a brief to develop
the concept of non-lethal defence. With his rare PhD in thanatology – the scientific study of death – he
has strongly believed for a long while that inducing recoverable disease in an enemy’s troops is
preferable to blowing their bodies apart. He has written in this respect in several defence publications,
including Harvard International Review and Jane’s International Defence Review, and been written
about in publications from The Wall Street Journal to Scientific American.
John Alexander now runs a privately funded science consultancy in Nevada, and he is a powerful
advocate both of psychokinesis (PK) as a genuine phenomenon and of Geller as the possessor of PK
abilities.
‘I originally thought it could be a trick, but I dismissed that later,’ Alexander says today. ‘We even
had magicians involved in looking at Geller. The idea of him relying on sleight of hand is nonsense.
He is, of course, extremely gregarious and an extreme extrovert, and that worked against him,
although had he not been an extrovert, the chances are that nobody would have heard of him.
‘From the military perspective,’ he continues, ‘Macro PK [like spoon bending] was of interest to
some of us. The smart-ass question from the sceptics would usually be, “What are you going to do,
bend tank barrels?” I always felt that showed their limited ability to think about topics that exceeded
their realm of knowledge. My response was, “No! I think what we’re going to go after are
computers.” If we believed that PK was real, and some of us did, then the threat was to moving small
numbers of electrons, not large objects. That was the most energy efficient concept.’
There was no need, Alexander explained, to take every computer down. ‘All you have to do is
make them unreliable, because everything we have is based on computer models and applications. So
if you get to when you don’t trust those computers and, basically, everything we run now on digital
information, that would be really significant. We couldn’t explain the process by which PK might
influence computers. But we did theorize that unlike hit-to-kill mechanisms, PK had an additional
advantage. That is, it didn’t have to work every time. Making weapons and sensor systems unreliable
would be sufficient to have a devastating effect on the battlefield. Some took us seriously, others did
not. At any rate, a few experiments were actually conducted after those of us involved either retired or
moved to other assignments.’
We should never forget Galileo being put before the Inquisition.
It would be even worse if we allowed scientific orthodoxy to become the Inquisition.
Richard Smith, Editor in Chief of the British Medical Journal 1991-2004,
in a published letter to Nature