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The author, Miles Mathis, criticizes Greg Reese’s promotion of a remote viewing group called futureforecasting.com on Infowars. Mathis argues that futureforecasting.com is an obvious Intel front, pointing to their claims of being non-military while offering no background information. He finds their website suspicious, noting that a search for them links to scam-detector.com, which rates them as 100% trustworthy, a rating Mathis believes was created by the CIA to legitimize their agents. He highlights the group’s anonymous nature and their predictions of catastrophe, which he sees as aligning with manufactured fear narratives.
Mathis then focuses on one of the individuals, Dick Allgire, who claims to have trained with a retired US Army Special Forces Intelligence Team. Mathis deduces that Allgire is not truly non-military and likely had a former role within Special Forces before a civilian assignment as a TV producer in Honolulu, Hawaii, working at KITV, an ABC affiliate. Allgire’s past sale of “the God Particle” also links him to Mathis’s physics papers.
The author also criticizes Clif High, promoted by Greg Reese, who discusses DEW wars and the Khazarian mafia to obscure Phoenicians. High is accused of promoting misdirection about the maui blue roof incident and an impending alien invasion, with links to RedIce Radio and Coast to Coast serving as evidence of his alleged agent status. His product, C60 Purple Power, and his WebBot technology, which supposedly predicts the future by tracking internet keywords, are also questioned. Mathis points out the WebBot’s prior failed prediction of a 2012 cataclysm, suggesting it’s a tool for distraction and fearmongering, similar to its appearance in History Channel’s Decoding the Past (specifically “Doomsday 2012”) and The Nostradamus Effect. Mathis deems the History Channel a propaganda outlet for the CIA. He expresses dismay that Reese and Infowars are promoting such content in 2023, questioning their assumption that audiences have forgotten past deceptions or can be easily swayed by end-of-the-world narratives. He concludes by reiterating his suspicion that scam-detector.com’s endorsement is part of the same deception.