Remote viewers believe humanity is moving toward a future where personal blockchains replace traditional identity systems.
They made their prediction using remote viewing, a method that requires extensive practice and knowledge. There is also a simpler alternative known as Associative Remote Viewing (ARV). If you want to try it yourself, the VEREVIO app (Android version) offers an ARV-like trainer called MatchCast, where users experiment with personal predictions while developing the skill.
The Origin of the Method
It takes its roots from the secret Cold War–era program of the 1980s called Stargate that studied the capabilities of the human mind, including the possibility of perceiving distant targets, influencing people, or finding objects remotely. Several successful experiments became public and sparked interest in remote viewing outside government circles.
Remote viewing itself isn’t a guess. Practitioners follow the special 6-level protocol. A viewer typically receives a random target code connected to a target. The viewer then defines first impressions, creates sketches, decodes meaning, and more. This is highly demanding and complex work that requires years of practice.
That is why many practitioners prefer the ARV method instead. According to it, the viewer attempts to perceive an image associated with the future outcome of the event.
For example, imagine you want to know whether identity certificates will be placed on the blockchain by 2030. In an ARV session, different outcomes are linked to hidden images — for instance, “yes” could correspond to an image of water, while “no” might be linked to an image of an animal or another life form.
During the session, your task is not to predict the answer directly, but to describe the hidden target image using your impressions. Based on the image you perceive, the system generates a prediction. Once the real outcome becomes known in the future, the correct image is revealed. If your session matches the correct target, it is considered a hit. If not, you continue practicing to refine your skill at predicting future events.
A Future Already Taking Shape?

If you think this sounds crazy, here are a few things that suggest their prediction may not be as far-fetched as it seems.
In recent years, most human activity becomes digitally recorded, tracked, and verified through decentralized technology. Daily life already feels very different compared to twenty years ago.
People rarely visit physical offices anymore. Banking happens through apps. Airline tickets exist digitally. Food delivery, hotel bookings, insurance claims, healthcare appointments, taxes, transportation, and communication all increasingly happen through phones. In many ways, younger generations interact with apps more often than with actual government institutions.
Remote viewers who discuss future systems believe this is not accidental. They argue society is gradually being trained to accept digital mediation for nearly everything. Instead of speaking with people directly, individuals interact with interfaces, rating systems, automated approvals, and algorithmic verification.
Some “viewers” describe a future where “consensus systems” replace older democratic structures. Rather than governments acting as primary authorities, large corporations, international organizations, and interconnected digital platforms could eventually manage much of social organization through technology itself.
The important part of these forecasts is not necessarily cryptocurrency. It is identity. Blockchain systems are borderless by design. A digital ledger does not care whether someone lives in Canada, Japan, Brazil, or Germany. Once identity, ownership, contracts, and reputation become machine-readable, the role of traditional nation-states could theoretically weaken over time.
They insist that many countries already experiment with digital ID systems, blockchain identity verification, digital health records, and online credential storage. Some governments have tested blockchain birth certificates and digital identity wallets.
Cash usage continues declining in many countries. Governments and corporations already collect massive amounts of behavioral data. Social systems increasingly operate through ratings, algorithms, and online verification.
Remote viewers who view future trends believe these developments eventually merge into a single global framework where identity itself becomes digital infrastructure.
In that world, the old model of nation-states acting as the central organizing force of society may slowly weaken. Large networks, platforms, and international systems could become more important than borders themselves.
Final Thoughts
A few decades ago, most people could not imagine something like COVID happening. Many also believed a full-scale war in Ukraine was impossible. The same skepticism once surrounded blockchain technology itself. Yet here we are.
Life has shown that even the wildest ideas should not be dismissed too quickly, because what seems unrealistic today can become reality tomorrow. The good news is that many of us already understand the potential benefits of blockchain, so a future like this may not feel as shocking as it once would have.

