The project was disbanded in 1985. The official report cited "insufficient evidence of repeatable psychic lethality." But Cassady had a different theory. “They got scared,” he whispered, glancing at his watch—which still said 12:00. “We succeeded too well. One of the guys, Private Drummond, learned to project a feeling of total despair. He made a potted fern commit suicide. That’s when the generals pulled the plug. They don’t mind killing the enemy. But they can’t stand a weapon that cries afterward.”
His instructor, Bill Django, was a legend. He claimed to have spent the 1980s dancing with Sufi mystics, hanging out with Scientologists, and developing a combat doctrine based on the "Jedi" philosophy. The goal was to create a warrior who could kill with a glance, or better yet, not kill at all, but simply subdue the enemy with the sheer vibrational power of love. The Men Who Stare At Goats
The soldiers, who had been trained in bio-feedback and meditation, would sit a few feet away. They would focus on their own heart rate, slow it down, and then project that stillness onto the goat. The goal was to create a "resonant frequency" that would cause the goat’s heart to fibrillate and stop. The project was disbanded in 1985
