User:Omegareport

The Omega Report is the official newsletter of the Phoenix Foundation, a non-profit research institute founded in 1981 by Jim Moore. It was also the name of a weekly, hour-long television documentary that was cablecast to 3.5 million homes in Tennessee, Kentucky and Pennsylvania for nine years until it went off the air in 1999.

The Omega Report is now a part of the TennTimes online news site at TennTimes the News.

The Tennessee-based Phoenix Foundation was first chartered as a non-profit research institute in 1981 by Jim Moore, an experienced and respected print and television journalist who has won awards from the Tennessee Press Association (TPA) for investigative journalism.

This Phoenix Foundation is engaged in what might be called "social survival research", according to its founder. This involves areas of science, politics, environment, behavioral modification aka mind control, weather modification, psychology, crime, agriculture, religion and virtually every aspect of society that impacts humankind's survival.

One cannot truly understand the foundation without understanding the history of its founder and director. Jim Moore believes the world's current problems largely have a "spiritual basis" and under his direction, the Foundation has approached those problems with a combined scientific-spiritual set of solutions.

One of its flagship projects is the development of "energy healing" which involves the use of extremely low frequency (ELF) application, as well as sound, light and other harmonic frequencies. This work has been pioneered by others such as Robert O. Becker, M.D. in his book "The Body Electric."

Jim Moore, born in 1945, he attracted the attention of the U.S. military complex in 1961 at the age of 16 when he designed a unique spy satellite called Project OBSAT (OBservation SATellite) that used extremely low frequency (ELF) energy techniques to detect Soviet nuclear tests - underwater, underground, atmospheric and in space. He was a 1963 International Science Fair finalist and his project was sponsored in part by Boeing Aircraft and Western Electric. He won honors from the Air Force, Army, Navy, NASA and National Science Foundation. Their interest was sparked after high-atmospheric nuclear tests by the U.S. in the early 1960s wiped out most of the U.S. spy satellite network, leaving the U.S. blind to Soviet activities.

He began his journalistic career at the age of 18 working for the award-winning Pratt (KS) Daily Tribune. He worked as a nationally syndicated columnist for National Features Syndicate in Chicago.

He also served as Illinois State Chairman for the presidential campaign of Sen. Eugene McCarthy, but the state government, controlled by the notorious political machine of Chicago Mayor Richard J. Daley, refused to allow McCarthy on the ticket, leading Moore to file a federal lawsuit that ended up in the U.S. Supreme Court Moore vs. Ogilvie, where he won a major "one man - one vote" decision that has impacted campaigns since that time.

He later launched his own weekly newspaper chain in Fairview, Brentwood and Hickman County, TN. In 1974 he was arrested by Fairview police under a now-illegal "blue law" for publishing his newspaper on Sunday. The case attracted widespread attention in the local print and TV media as well as Editor & Publisher magazine. He served three months in jail and his publishing business collapsed.

On his release he worked for Modern People magazine, which he founded in 1969 in Chicago, and published a number of stories - taken from his "A Skeleton Key to the Gemstone Files" (1975) - related to the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, working with the late Rep. Henry Gonzalez (D-TX), who created and chaired The House Select Committee on Assassinations. Gonzalez asked Moore to look into the alleged links between the assassination and the Watergate burglary team headed by E. Howard Hunt. Gonzalez, in private correspondence released after his death, called Moore's work "very important."

Some of those articles have since been reprinted in several languages, especially one dealing with RHIC-EDOM (Radio Hypnotic Cerebral Control - Electronic Dissolution of Memory), a mind-control technique said to be used in a number of assassinations. Moore's work was featured in Walter H. Bowart's classic book, Operation Mind Control (1978-Dell Pub. Co.), and was later featured in several other books.

"The claims of James L. Moore would sound fantastic were it not for the abundance of information to support their validity," Bowart wrote.

The Phoenix Foundation's work has reportedly been the inspiration for a number of other books, TV shows such as MacGyver and even movies (Conspiracy Theory with Mel Gibson, The Rock with Sean Connery, and the James Bond classic, Diamonds Are Forever.

Three years before it occurred, the foundation's newsletter, The Omega Report, forecast the fall of the Berlin Wall and the Soviet Union, based upon a proprietary "events analysis" technique. Years later, the Phoenix Foundation used the same technique to predict the Oklahoma City bombing on its weekly hour-long television show - two weeks before it happened.

"The Omega Report" TV show was cablecast to 3.5 million homes in three states - Tennessee, Kentucky and Pennsylvania (the latter through Drexel University) and explored several controversial subjects such as mind control, weather control, the New World Order, militias, human-extraterrestrial contact and government cover-ups in general.

Today, the Phoenix Foundation has a well-established Internet presence and offers audio-video news on its site TennTimes.org as well as how-to information (software, ebooks, audiobooks and CDs/DVDs for small businesses and do-it-yourself web designers on its sister sites My-Webshop and The Phoenix Archives.

The source of this information are the websites of the Phoenix Foundation, as well as extensive interviews - public and private - with Jim Moore, and information provided in a number of published sources. Photos and specific documentation will be added soon.