"Conspiracy Times," Article
From the original "Conspiracy Times," article, archived:
https://web.archive.org/web/20071026055337/http://www.conspiracy-times.com/content/view/104/37/
"Could this couple have faked everything? Father Benedict Groeschel, a Catholic priest, knew Schucman both as a teacher and friend. He described her husband William Thetford as 'a mysterious character', and 'probably the most sinister person I ever met.' That is an interesting assessment."
Note: Bill Thetford was not Helen Schucman's husband. "the most sinister person I
ever met," is a vague, ad-hominen character assassination, without specification.
"Long time teacher of the Course, Hugh Prather, notes that the Course students often become, "far more separate and egocentric", with many ultimately, "[losing]
the ability to carry on a simple conversation". He admits that he and his wife Gayle, "had ended up less flexible, less forgiving, and less generous than we were
when we first started our path!"
"Early in 1981, a well-known syndicated columnist Jack Anderson said, "my associate and I revealed a Pentagon secret that raised eyebrows from coast-to-coast. To the sceptics who wrote in, no, we don't take hallucinogens. The
Pentagon and the Kremlin are, indeed dabbling in the black arts, they are seriously trying to develop weapons based upon extrasensory perception...".
The militarization of friendship is a difficult thing. To remote view one's friends, who *want* to communicate, is far easier, than to remote view one's enemies:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stargate_Project
A related project not mentioned, no doubt, of great interest, to advocates of this
ludicrous theory.
From the article:
"A Course in Miracles seems to have been a part of this psychic warfare... the question is: what was its intended purpose?"
"seems?"
lol.
So let me get this straight: some 'guy' in the CIA wrote the book?
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