reSee.it Podcast Summary
McMoneagle asserts he has about 60 photographs of Martian things that are clearly alien and asks, Is it possible that there was a civilization on Mars thousands of years ago? He cites a square on Mars that is real and describes a 3 ft long object, plus pyramidal places that are like hibernation chambers to survive until someone saves them. He adds that he remote viewed a pyramid on Mars a million years ago and emphasizes the possibility of life on Mars and artifacts that challenge conventional narratives.
He introduces himself as remote viewer number one and recalls being part of the Stargate program, noting the Legion of Merit for over 200 instances that contributed to Military Intelligence. He explains that everybody is born with it and recounts training, testing, and early experiences in the Army, Vietnam, and intelligence work, including learning Morse code under pressure and rising to high ranking roles. He details how combat and high-stress environments sharpen situational awareness, and how he learned to separate ego from perception to receive information more clearly.
McMoneagle describes the DoD’s remote viewing program, its early experiments, and the transition from Pat Price and Ingo Swann to later methods. He recounts a session with Bob Monroe that produced six of seven targets described accurately, including Mars targets labeled Mars 1 Million BC. He explains his frustration with ground truth verification, then describes obtaining negatives from JPL to corroborate the Mars targets, including pyramids, an old fort, and a straight-edged cavern with wiring, concluding that the negatives show precisely what he described and that the measurements (e.g., shadow lengths) imply massive structures like a 3,000 ft high crater wall and a far larger pyramid. He notes the negative images are heavily worn but clearly non-natural, implying deliberate construction.
McMoneagle pivots to Mars science and public skepticism: methane detections, salty water, and the once-thought magnetosphere history that could have supported ancient life. He references Sedona and other Mars regions where researchers have claimed engineered-looking features, including square structures and giant pyramids, and contrasts official explanations with alternative interpretations. He discusses how a small fraction of Mars imagery may reveal artificial constructs, while conceding our data is incomplete since we have only mapped a tiny fraction of the surface. He mentions famous high-profile claims and counterclaims about life, and notes politicians, presidents, and scientists who have engaged with Mars questions.
The interview expands to extraterrestrial hypotheses, including Haim Eshed’s Galactic Federation claim, three alien bases (over-the-horizon radar sites), and views on whether aliens are human or non-human in origin. McMoneagle expresses views on whether aliens might stabilize humanity or reflect our own evolving intelligence, arguing that humans must improve and that space intelligence could reflect interstellar dynamics. He recounts widespread beliefs in ufology, including Roswell-era lore and the possibility that some UFO encounters are non-biological or robotic in nature. He emphasizes epistemological tensions: science, skepticism, and belief systems competing over unexplained phenomena.
The conversation repeatedly returns to broader lessons: the power and limits of remote viewing, the importance of rigorous process and protocol (dont rely on ego, down analyze rather than overanalyze), and the potential for intelligence work to be both offensive and defensive. McMoneagle relays dramatic examples—MX missile targeting, submarine reconnaissance, and near-death experiences that shaped his worldview—ending with reflections on the meaning of life, consciousness, and the possibility that Mars and humanity share a longer, intertwined history. He closes by describing the Mars images, the challenges of verification, and the enduring lure of unexplained mysteries that keep surfacing in science, policy, and imagination.