April 11, 2002: Predictions - Sean David Morton
Mar 26, 2025•2 hr 55 min•Season 2002Ep. 855
Episode description
Art Bell welcomes self-described intuitive Sean David Morton for a wide-ranging discussion on geopolitical predictions and classified military operations. Morton claims contact with Pentagon officials involved in a program called Operation Foresight, which reportedly uses remote viewers and intuitives to track terrorist threats against the United States. He describes being given a coordinate to view and locating what he believes is Osama bin Laden in an underground facility near the town of Khost on the Afghan-Pakistan border.
Morton discusses a 1994 "soul transference" experience in which he claims to have visited approximately 100 years into the future, witnessing a restructured North American continent divided into 13 nation states. He connects that session's prediction of chemical attacks on Washington, D.C., using a "red mercury" device to current intelligence briefings about al-Qaeda acquiring radioactive isotopes. He also relays claims that six nuclear suitcase devices were smuggled into the United States, with only two recovered.
The conversation shifts to a New Scientist report on anomalies in Earth's magnetic field suggesting a possible pole reversal. Morton references Project Nanook findings from the 1960s and a Rand Corporation simulation predicting the magnetic poles could migrate to the equator, with potential consequences for satellite systems, animal migration, and human cognition.
Morton discusses a 1994 "soul transference" experience in which he claims to have visited approximately 100 years into the future, witnessing a restructured North American continent divided into 13 nation states. He connects that session's prediction of chemical attacks on Washington, D.C., using a "red mercury" device to current intelligence briefings about al-Qaeda acquiring radioactive isotopes. He also relays claims that six nuclear suitcase devices were smuggled into the United States, with only two recovered.
The conversation shifts to a New Scientist report on anomalies in Earth's magnetic field suggesting a possible pole reversal. Morton references Project Nanook findings from the 1960s and a Rand Corporation simulation predicting the magnetic poles could migrate to the equator, with potential consequences for satellite systems, animal migration, and human cognition.
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