The remote viewing thing is interesting. If that's the case, none of us are safe.
I looked into Faraday cages just a little. I found this on the wikipedia page about them:
Real-world Faraday cages
Faraday cages are often put to a dual purpose: to block static electric fields, as explained above, and to block electromagnetic radiation. The latter application is known as electromagnetic shielding or RF shielding.
* Airplanes act as Faraday cages, protecting passengers from lightning strikes.
* Cars (except convertibles or cars made of fiberglass) are also Faraday cages and provide protection against lightning strikes. Passengers should not touch metal objects connected to the outside in the event of a lightning strike. [1]
* Mobile phones and radios have no reception inside elevators or similar structures. Some traditional architectural materials act as Faraday shields in practice. These include plaster with metal lath, and rebar reinforced concrete. These affect the use of cordless phones and wireless networks inside buildings and houses.
* The cooking chamber of the microwave oven itself is a Faraday cage enclosure which prevents the microwaves from escaping into the environment.
* RFID passport and credit card shielding sleeves are small, portable Faraday cages.
* Some United States national security buildings are contained in Faraday cages, intended to act as a TEMPEST shield, and possibly also as a mitigation against electromagnetic pulse.
* A teacher in the U.K. has come up with the idea to curb the cheating epidemic in the county building by lining every exam room with a Faraday-like cage.[2]
Some of which may be useful if they're tracking via something technological. But if what I've read is correct, then remote viewing (RV) is not inhibited by a Faraday cage. From
http://www.raven1.net/rifatrv.htm#DELTARV
One can also use remote viewing to enter facilities protected by metal Faraday like cages (a metal cage or box which is earthed and shields the user from electromagnetic radiation.) As an experiment, the author built a Faraday cage room from which to carry out RV experiments. It was found to have no negative effect, in fact it seemed to boost RV by blocking out extraneous signals. Russian remote viewers regularly visited US facilities surrounded by steel walls, such as those in Dulce (a miles deep secret base associated with aliens and their technology) and Cheyenne Mountain, home of Strategic Air Command, which were supposed to block out remote viewing. All of these phenomena INDICATE SOMETHING BEYOND THE SIMPLE MENTAL RADIO CONCEPT, WHERE EM IS USED AS THE RADIO WAVE, IS THE CARRIER FOR REMOTE VIEWING. For this to be the case non [conventional] EM fields must be the source of RV.
and from
http://www.espresearch.com/espgeneral/WhatWeKnow.shtml
Electrical shielding:
Faraday-cage screen rooms and underwater shielding have no negative effects on remote viewing. In fact, some viewers very much like to work in an electrically-shielded environment. The well-known psychic Eileen Garrett showed me such a room that she had built for her own use, in her offices at the Parapsychology Foundation, on 57th Street in New York City. Pat Price did his fine description of the Rinconada Park Swimming Pool Complex and several other sites from inside SRI's shielded room. In fact, recent findings from Physicist James Spottiswoode** show that electromagnetic radiation from our milky way galaxy and the electromagnetic effects of solar flares both degrade psychic functioning. Electrical shielding seems to help performance, and so does carrying out experiments when the galactic radiation is at a minimum at your location. When the milky way is below your position of the earth, rather than above your head, you have a two hour window of opportunity. This occurs at 1300 hours sidereal time, but it is still possible to be abundantly psychic any time of the day or night.
In 1978, Hella Hammid and Ingo Swann successfully received messages sent from Palo Alto, while they were inside of a submarine submerged in 500 feet of sea water, 500 miles away.[3] Hella and Ingo each had five file cards to look at later, with a target location description written on one side, and a submarine type of instruction on the other, as a sort of code device. For example, the five targets were a large oak tree, an indoor shopping plaza, etc.; and the messages were the kind of thing you might communicate to a submerged sub that was out of radio contact because of the salt water, such as, "Remain submerged, Return to port, Fire at priority targets," etc. In each case my colleague and I would hide ourselves in Palo Alto at a specified time, and the viewers in the sub would have to describe the location where we were. They would then look at each of the five cards to see which one best matched their remote viewing experience, and the message to be sent was found on the back of the card. Both trials in this experiment were successful. (The statistical significance would be found by multiplying together the two 1-in-5 events, to give a probability of p = 0.04, or less than four times in a hundred occurring by chance, which many would consider a significant result.)
[/quote]