How to end the radioactive seep from the Nuclear Power Plant has been remote viewed.
The sheer scale of the project is going to present a challenge to engineers.
Then again, scale never stopped them building the pyramids of Giza!
Japan is considering a gigantic Shimizu Mega-City Pyramid over Tokyo Bay, a proposal made just three years after the Fukushima Daiichi meltdowns. Stopping the Fukushima Daiichi radiation leak is surely an alternative project worthy of their best engineers and scientists. One that will earn Japan the gratitude of people all around the world.
In 2012, I was in a remote viewing team blind tasked to find the best solution to fix the radiation problem. While I don't include any work by the rest of the team, I can say the vast majority of our data lined up. In this book, I show you what I saw and step you through the solution with the help of illustrations taken directly from my remote viewing session. I outline the steps required and I offer my observations. Endnotes show all the sources used, and there's a resource list for those who want information about remote viewing. My contact details are in the back if you have questions or suggestions for me.
Kiwi Joe is a trained remote viewer. He was born in New Zealand and currently lives in Australia. Remote viewing is a learned skill that harnesses the psychic ability we are all born with. While the discipline arguably has its roots in more than one country, the present protocol was developed by the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) together with the Stanford Research Institute (SRI) of Stanford University.
The skill is real, and you can benefit from the deep insights it provides you into everything that exists, did exist, and will exist. In his books, Kiwi Joe shows you how remote viewing is used to solve real-world problems and mysteries.
His contact details are included in the back of both books if you have questions or suggestions. He can also be found on Facebook through the following link.
What's going on here? An author reviewing their own book? That's cheeky.
Yes, I want more people to see the remote viewing in the book and get them to think about why it is Fukushima radiation still leaks into the Pacific all these years after the triple reactor meltdown. Now why is that? Someone, somewhere, is in a position to stop the radiation leak, to save the Pacific Ocean and the lands surrounding it. To do so would set a startling example to the world of what can be done to better the condition of humanity, not to mention the health of the surface of our planet!
The remote viewing I include in the book is all my own but it also reflects the work by the remote viewing team I was a member of several years ago. I've just knocked the price of the book down to less than a dollar in the hope more eyes fall on this book. It's cheaper than a coffee and the remote viewing is twice as stimulating - when you think about it.