Perhaps people have to be a bit careful about what they say lest other people perceive their toes unacceptably trodden on and start closing people down, one way or another.
That investigation into 9/11 - Dick found a structure with a Faraday cage of some kind so fine that he couldn't get in. I wondered at the implications of this but there was no further mention of it, which I also wondered at.
@littletre - scientific remote viewing as it is taught here does seem a little daunting, requiring a tasker, a pool of targets from which one is randomly selected and a very detailed method, which is fair enough considering the 'scientific' bit but not much use if one wants to have a look at something specific for oneself.
A while back I watched a programme about the Inuit. A bunch of them wanted to hunt caribou so they went to the shaman and asked where they were. The old feller went into his tent, came out a short while later and said something like "4 hours in that direction". Off they went with snowmobiles and rifles and came back with caribou.
I have a slender book called " Shamanic Journeying, a Beginner's Guide" by Sandra Ingerman. It explains on one of its 85 pages how to do this and provides a CD of 3 drumming tracks to help. The rest of the book is given to explanations and anecdotes. It's quite simple and easy but does need practice. I'm a bit lazy with it but have had a couple of corroborated journeys so know it works.
The book cost 15 dollars' equivalent, the 3 tracks are 12, 20 and 30 minutes long and the whole thing is in the same league as meditation, yoga etc. Life-changing without having to change one's life. It's a natural human skill like music - innate but does have to be learned and some people are naturally better at it than others. Very few are completely tone deaf.