The Men Who Stare At Goats Direct

But the system that funded them? That took a silly goat manual and turned it into a torture manual? That is the real horror.

Jon Ronson, who tracked down Channon, Stubblebine, and the surviving goat-staring veterans, concluded that the men themselves were not villains. Jim Channon was a sweet, deluded hippie in uniform. Stubblebine was a broken man, divorced and isolated, still trying to find the door in the wall. The Men Who Stare At Goats

As one former interrogator told Ronson: "We stopped trying to kill the goat. We started trying to convince the goat it was already dead." So, why does this story matter today? But the system that funded them

The most famous member of this group was a retired Vietnam War intelligence officer named Major General Albert Stubblebine. Stubblebine was the head of the U.S. Army Intelligence and Security Command (INSCOM). He was in charge of 14,000 spies and analysts. And he was convinced he had a problem: his physical body kept getting in the way. Jon Ronson, who tracked down Channon, Stubblebine, and

Stubblebine spent months trying to "astral project" his body across the Potomac River. Then he focused on a more tangible goal: walking through a wall. Day after day, he would stand three feet from the cinderblock wall in his office, close his eyes, and run into it. He broke his nose several times. He chipped a tooth.

Channon traveled to 150 "human potential" centers across America—Esalen, est, Werner Erhard, the Whole Earth Catalog crowd. He returned with a 130-page report titled The First Earth Battalion Operational Manual . It was part Sun Tzu, part Star Trek , and part Mother Earth News .

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