The concept of Looking Glass technology — viewing future events — is addressed in the Cosmic Agency material, though not primarily through the lens of the alleged human black project. Instead, the Taygetans describe their own capability that matches this description and explain both its potential and its current limitations.
The Taygetans Have Looking Glass Capability
Yazhi Swaruu confirms directly that the Taygetans do have looking glass capability — the ability to see forward in time. However, she adds an important qualifier: the results are chaotic at the present time because the timelines are fragmented. Additionally, the system tends to view their own timeline rather than providing a universal view of "the" future (148, Yazhi Swaruu).
This capability is tied to their AHCS (Advanced Holographic Computer Systems) — the sentient, self-aware AI computers that form the technological backbone of Taygetan civilisation. These are not conventional computers but crystalline-diamond systems using nano-particle accelerators, capable of accessing the ether — the informational field that underlies all reality — to pull data and answers from it (148, Aneeka of Temmer).
How It Works — and Its Limitations
The mechanism operates on frequency compatibility. Everything exists in the ether, but having access to the ether does not automatically mean you can retrieve any answer. You need to be compatible with the answer you seek, and that compatibility requires data — an "address" to search for. Yazhi compares this directly to how a brain works: thoughts held at a particular frequency attract compatible information from the ether. If you are not getting an answer, it means you are not yet compatible with what you seek (148, Yazhi Swaruu).
Even Yazhi herself does not have all answers all the time. When she is feeling off, worried, or tired, she blocks her connection — she needs to be in the flow to access her information source. A computer, no matter how powerful, is only as good as the data it is fed with (148, Yazhi Swaruu).
The AHCS computers, despite their extraordinary power, still learn and evolve. If they do not have the relevant data, they cannot simply conjure information from the ether without something to work with. Yazhi describes it colourfully: the computer needs at least "a garment to sniff" before it can go look for something (148, Yazhi Swaruu).
Looking Glass as Portal Technology
In a later discussion, Mari Swaruu provides additional technical context. She describes looking glass machines as a form of optical portal technology — essentially portals, but instead of people and objects passing through them, it is information in the form of light and sound waves that passes, requiring much less energy to achieve and therefore being a lot easier to build and operate than a larger, fully operational portal (S-091, Mari Swaruu with Nai'Shara).
This framing is important because it positions looking glass technology on a spectrum with full portal technology — the difference being one of scale and energy, not of fundamental principle. It also suggests that a civilisation that has rudimentary portal technology could develop a looking glass before achieving full teleportation capability, which would be consistent with claims about human black-project versions.
The Human Version
When Gosia asked whether this technology was similar to the Looking Glass Technology described by Corey Goode, Aneeka responded that she had no idea what Corey was talking about and could only describe the systems she knew — the AHCS systems (148, Aneeka of Temmer).
The Taygetans do acknowledge that some human secret programmes have access to advanced technology — much of it reverse-engineered from crashed extraterrestrial ships or obtained through treaties. The 1950s Eisenhower treaty and earlier Nazi agreements resulted in technology exchanges. It is therefore plausible within the Taygetan framework that a human-level programme like Project Looking Glass could exist using recovered or derivative technology, but the Taygetans do not confirm or describe the specific human programme.
The Timeline Fragmentation Problem
The most significant insight for understanding the current limitations of looking-glass technology — whether Taygetan or human — is the timeline fragmentation issue. Yazhi explains that the results of forward-looking are currently chaotic because timelines are fragmented. This connects to the broader Taygetan understanding that time is not a single fixed line but moves in every conceivable direction, with multiple pasts feeding into the present and infinite possible futures spreading out from it (148, Yazhi Swaruu).
What this means practically is that any viewing of future events will tend to show the viewer's own probable future — not a fixed universal future. Multiple viewers would see different futures because each consciousness occupies a different frequency and therefore a different timeline. The idea of a single definitive "view of the future" is fundamentally incompatible with the Taygetan understanding of how time works.
Sources: Transcripts 148 (Aneeka of Temmer, Yazhi Swaruu), S-091 (Mari Swaruu with Nai'Shara)

