The program’s true failure wasn’t the goats—it was the men. Several of the officers suffered severe psychological breakdowns. One, a lieutenant colonel, became convinced he could pass through walls and died while trying to demonstrate it in front of his family, running headfirst into a concrete barrier. The unit was quietly disbanded in the early 1980s, its records scattered.
Channon’s vision was a “warrior monk” who could dissolve enemy weapons with a thought, walk through walls, project light from his eyes, and, yes, stop a goat’s heart by staring at it. The manual was filled with earnest, hand-drawn diagrams of “mind-body bridging” and “energy pulse detection.” It sounds like a parody, but the Army took it seriously enough to fund an entire unit: the U.S. Army’s , later nicknamed the “Jedi Knights” by insiders. The Men Who Stare At Goats
It began in the 1970s at Fort Bragg’s 1st Special Forces Command. A handful of officers, frustrated by the brutality of conventional warfare, sought a purer way to fight. They were influenced by a fringe figure named Major General Albert Stubblebine, a man who claimed to have successfully walked through his own office wall (he ran into it, gave up, and later admitted it didn’t work). Stubblebine was a devotee of a former disc jockey and mystic named Jim Channon, who wrote a utopian—and deeply strange—handbook called The First Earth Battalion Operations Manual . The program’s true failure wasn’t the goats—it was
The program’s true failure wasn’t the goats—it was the men. Several of the officers suffered severe psychological breakdowns. One, a lieutenant colonel, became convinced he could pass through walls and died while trying to demonstrate it in front of his family, running headfirst into a concrete barrier. The unit was quietly disbanded in the early 1980s, its records scattered.
Channon’s vision was a “warrior monk” who could dissolve enemy weapons with a thought, walk through walls, project light from his eyes, and, yes, stop a goat’s heart by staring at it. The manual was filled with earnest, hand-drawn diagrams of “mind-body bridging” and “energy pulse detection.” It sounds like a parody, but the Army took it seriously enough to fund an entire unit: the U.S. Army’s , later nicknamed the “Jedi Knights” by insiders.
It began in the 1970s at Fort Bragg’s 1st Special Forces Command. A handful of officers, frustrated by the brutality of conventional warfare, sought a purer way to fight. They were influenced by a fringe figure named Major General Albert Stubblebine, a man who claimed to have successfully walked through his own office wall (he ran into it, gave up, and later admitted it didn’t work). Stubblebine was a devotee of a former disc jockey and mystic named Jim Channon, who wrote a utopian—and deeply strange—handbook called The First Earth Battalion Operations Manual .