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Thread: Acid flashback: CIA’s mind-control experiment reverberates 40 years after hearings

  1. #1

    Acid flashback: CIA’s mind-control experiment reverberates 40 years after hearings

    http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/...ment-has-ling/

    By Dan Boylan - August 30, 2017



    CIA Director Allen Dulles created MK-Ultra in 1953 as America's Cold War anti-communism sentiment reached its zenith. (Associated Press/File)

    Forty years later, the story still seems hard to credit: In the summer of 1977, Capitol Hill was gripped by revelations of the CIA’s top-secret MK-Ultra mind control research program, targeting unsuspecting American citizens, in some cases by luring them to brothels to be fed LSD-laced cocktails.

    The blockbuster hearings that summer, chaired by Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, Massachusetts Democrat, and aided by a timely dump of intelligence documents, touched some of the country’s rawest nerves: the assassination of Kennedy’s brothers, the possibility of mind-controlled “Manchurian candidates” and the increasing prominence of LSD and other hallucinogenic drugs across Western culture.

    Although the CIA program officially ran from 1953 to 1964, its dark and fertile legacy stretches to today, living on in modern conspiracy theories about U.S. intelligence agencies’ ability and willingness to manipulate society through surveillance, disinformation, celebrity culture and strategic news leaks.

    Security advocates argue that domestic intelligence-gathering is vital for the sake of homeland security. Critics counter that revelations that the CIA and the National Security Agency can hack into phones, computers and even televisions connected to the internet show their powers are still too great and threaten essential personal liberties and constitutional protections.

    The 1977 MK-Ultra hearings first tilled similar suspicions and were considered a critical pivot in official and popular attitudes toward the nation’s intelligence community. Triggered in part by the shock of the Watergate scandal, they also revealed the U.S. government’s covert assassination programs and surveillance of American citizens brought to light by the Church Committee’s 1975 investigations of the FBI, CIA and NSA.

    The August 1977 MK-Ultra hearings specifically explored what seemed like an outlandish idea straight out of science fiction: the possibility of government mind control.

    Kennedy, whose reputation had been severely tainted by the Chappaquiddick scandal, also had a complex relationship with the CIA, given what the agency knew about the assassinations of his brothers Robert and John in the 1960s. To begin the inquiry, Kennedy told Stansfield Turner, President Carter’s pick to head the CIA in the wake of the Church Committee revelations, that he “hoped the hearings would close the book on this chapter of the CIA’s life.”

    Cold war, high stakes

    As America’s Cold War anti-communism sentiment reached its zenith, CIA Director Allen Dulles created MK-Ultra in 1953 to succeed interrogation-related projects code-named Artichoke and Bluebird.

    The stakes were incredibly high, given the Cold War hostility and global competition with Russia, the world’s other major nuclear power.

    American prisoners from the Korean War were returning home with horrific tales of brainwashing techniques used by their Soviet, Chinese and North Korean captors — techniques perfected in Stalin’s notorious gulag of prisons for political dissidents. Moscow had also recently ended Washington’s monopoly on nuclear weapons, and CIA counterintelligence head James Jesus Angleton was increasingly convinced that a mole had penetrated the highest level of the agency.

    To counterpunch, the CIA launched research into mind control methods that came to be known as MK-Ultra.

    First aimed at manipulating prisoners with the ultimate goal of influencing foreign leaders, MK-Ultra quickly ballooned into an umbrella project for approximately 150 subprojects. Researchers studied perception, behavioral analysis, religious cults, personality conditioning, microwaves, sensory deprivation and — most notoriously — hallucinogenic drugs.

    Initial experiments employed volunteers. But because of MK-Ultra’s rapid growth, coupled with its clandestine nature, researchers increasingly turned to unsuspecting foreign nationals and Americans to test their theories and data.

    Documents later declassified showed that covert CIA grants also funded research at some of the country’s leading universities and institutes. Many professors said they were stunned when they learned that they had been conducting mind control experiments to battle the Soviet threat.

    During one exchange with Kennedy in the 1977 hearings, the CIA’s Mr. Turner said the shroud of “extreme secrecy” was needed to keep MK-Ultra operationally viable, but he acknowledged that it stemmed from fears that the public would be outraged if the program was ever exposed.

    LSD and brothels

    One MK-Ultra project involved CIA-run brothels in San Francisco and New York City, established specifically to study LSD’s effects on unsuspecting adults. The theory was that LSD might have use as a truth serum to force enemy agents to talk.

    According to declassified documents and Senate testimony, Project Midnight Climax ran in San Francisco from 1955 to 1965 on Telegraph Hill, a short walk from North Beach’s rowdiest bars. There, CIA-employed prostitutes served acid-laced cocktails to men they lured.

    The L-shaped building boasted erotic wall art by French artist Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, sweeping waterfront views and recording devices disguised as electrical outlets. Bedrooms also featured two-way mirrors to allow observers, supervised by a Bureau of Narcotics agent who doubled as a CIA operative, to watch.

    Regardless of the experiments’ legality, CIA analysts initially greeted the work enthusiastically. Operatives reported that it helped refine sexual blackmail tactics, surveillance technology, LSD’s use in interrogations and how to better use empathy as an investigation tactic.

    But Project Midnight Climax soon grew beyond the control of its handlers, with brothel operatives later admitting that they had dosed unsuspecting subjects at nearby restaurants, bars and beaches. In one case, a U.S. marshal held up a San Francisco bar with his service revolver after an MK-Ultra agent slipped LSD into his bourbon and soda.

    Other experiments had even more tragic results.

    During a mid-1950s retreat in rural Maryland, CIA operative and biological warfare specialist Frank Olson had his Cointreau laced with LSD by his supervisor.

    Nine days later, Olson plunged to his death from the window of a New York City hotel room.

    By 1963, CIA Inspector General John Earman recommended closing down the program. Concurrently, CIA activity was shifting focus to Vietnam.

    By the time the agency stopped the work in 1965, thousands had unwittingly tripped on LSD.

    The politics of exposure

    As the 1960s came to an end, Washington lawmakers declared LSD illegal and the CIA quietly shut down the covert MK-Ultra program.

    In the early 1970s, CIA Director Richard Helms, who ran the agency from 1966 to 1973, along with one of MK-Ultra’s architects, Sidney Gottlieb, ordered all the relevant paperwork destroyed.

    Across Washington, as Watergate revelations shook the country, paranoia shifted from Moscow to the U.S. government.

    When James R. Schlesinger succeeded Helms as CIA director, he ordered agency employees to shed light on past illegal activities.

    Details of Project Midnight Climax, in addition to questions about Olson’s fatal plunge in New York, had begun circulating. In 1974, investigative journalist Seymour Hersh connected the dots in a major article that exposed MK-Ultra.

    When President Nixon resigned, Gerald Ford took over the White House and two of his lead staffers, Donald H. Rumsfeld and Dick Cheney, wanted to prosecute Mr. Hersh for revealing government secrets. Instead, Ford appointed a committee to investigate America’s intelligence community, which led to the Church Commission and to Kennedy’s MK-Ultra hearings.

    Gottlieb, MK-Ultra’s primary architect, declined to testify until the committee subpoenaed him. In exchange for immunity from prosecution, he said CIA agents experimented with LSD on themselves “extensively” before giving it to the public.

    Concluding the hearings, Kennedy said, “There are perhaps any number of Americans who are walking around today on the East Coast or West Coast who were given drugs, with all the kinds of physical and psychological damage that can be caused.”

    Cultural legacy

    CIA historians say MK-Ultra’s legacy ranks among the most double-edged of the country’s major government programs.

    Beyond the wide condemnation of secret experiments to drug thousands of unsuspecting American civilians and military personnel, there were fears that the experiments of the 1950s led to LSD’s quick escape from the laboratory environment into the mainstream to fuel much of the 1960s anti-government counterculture.

    Those who went through MK-Ultra programs were numerous. They included “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest” author Ken Kesey and Boston mobster James “Whitey” Bulger, who partook in LSD trials while serving time at Alcatraz. Decades later, Bulger manipulated the FBI as an informant and was brought to justice after decades on the run.

    The program became part of the larger American culture it once tried to shape. Scores of films and TV programs explored MK-Ultra and its offshoots, including “The Manchurian Candidate,” books by Stephen King and Robert Ludlum, whose “Jason Bourne” books became popular films starring Matt Damon. The massively popular video game “Call of Duty” also shows clear and direct influences from MK-Ultra.

    But the program’s lasting legacy is its contribution to popular conspiracy theories and cynicism about the government and other mainstream institutions, once again in vogue on both ends of the political spectrum as America’s partisan divides widen.

    The conspiracy fears have taken on fresh fuel with the rise of Silicon Valley, and suspicions that the intelligence services have established deep and covert ties with the companies that dominate the internet. It’s a direct line from MK-Ultra to charges of secret spying and behavior control through Google, Facebook and iPhones, controlling the minds of America, especially the youth. Exotic computer algorithms, these theories argue, make the population search not for what they seek, but for what the government wants us to find.

    And it’s not hard to find links, if that’s what you’re searching for.

    As Apple founder Steve Jobs once observed, “Taking LSD was a profound experience, one of the most important things in my life.”
    Last edited by timosman; 08-30-2017 at 11:08 PM.



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  3. #2
    But the program’s lasting legacy is its contribution to popular conspiracy theories and cynicism about the government and other mainstream institutions, once again in vogue on both ends of the political spectrum as America’s partisan divides widen.
    Always the People who are the conspiracy theorists, never the government capable of hiding their crimes. Always the People who are the cynics, never the historically double-dealing government.


  4. #3
    An excellent book about the experiments of the CIA to hypnotise people, mainly by hallucinatory drugs, including psychiatry is John Marks’ “The Search for the Manchurian Candidate: The CIA and Mind Control” (1979): http://www.wanttoknow.info/mk/search...-candidate.pdf

    The CIA injected “public enemies” with hallucinatory drugs to induce a psychosis, because after they have suffered from a psychotic episode nobody will take the seriously.
    One leftist professor in a Latin American university who had opposed the CIA says that he was working alone in his office one day in 1974 when a strange woman entered and jabbed his wrist with a pin stuck in a small round object. Almost immediately, he become irrational, broke glasses, and threw water in colleagues’ faces. He says his students spotted an ambulance waiting for him out front. They spirited him out the back door and took him home, where he tripped (or had psychotic episodes) for more than a week. He calls the experience a mix of “heaven and hell,” and he shudders at the thought that he might have spent the time in a hospital “with nurses and straitjackets.” Although he eventually returned to his post at the university, he states that it took him several years to recover the credibility he lost the day he “went crazy at the office.” If the CIA was involved, it had neutralized a foe.
    Do NOT ever read my posts. Google and Yahoo wouldn’t block them without a very good reason: Google-censors-the-world/page3

    The Order of the Garter rules the world: Order of the Garter and the Carolingian dynasty

  5. #4
    Quote Originally Posted by Raginfridus View Post
    Always the People who are the conspiracy theorists, never the government capable of hiding their crimes. Always the People who are the cynics, never the historically double-dealing government.
    Its their only defense, and quite an effective one too, I might add.

    In fact, I bet they fabricate their own conspiracies too - just to keep the stigma rolling, so as to discredit legitimate conspiracy. I would not put them past putting in the "actors" we see, to provoke conspiracy theories on even the most ridiculous sh!t.

    Gulag Chief:
    "Article 58-1a, twenty five years... What did you get it for?"
    Gulag Prisoner: "For nothing at all."
    Gulag Chief: "You're lying... The sentence for nothing at all is 10 years"



  6. #5
    Quote Originally Posted by brushfire View Post
    Its their only defense, and quite an effective one too, I might add.
    The safest and most destructive libel against the Fifth Estate, is the "conspiracy theorist" branding iron. Its the only ad hominem in docile America which transcends generations and race politics, bursting from it's seems with red herrings and mythology. Under the law, non-profits (e.g. Wikimedia Corp.) shilling for the Official Story© gatekeepers have carte blanche to libel and revise history. The Big 5 media conglomerates have wide lateral as well, thanks to cozy relations with government agencies and interlocking directorates with corporate sponsors, but its government-vetted NGOs which tell the worst lies.

    In fact, I bet they fabricate their own conspiracies too - just to keep the stigma rolling, so as to discredit legitimate conspiracy. I would not put them past putting in the "actors" we see, to provoke conspiracy theories on even the most ridiculous sh!t.
    Take Desert Storm (Gulf War 1), today mythologized as one of those "good wars," but we forget it hatched from an Official Conspiracy Theory. Both founders of the Human Rights Caucus, a Zionist named Lantos and his Neocon-artist goon, coaxed the public into war with tall tales of genocide (DC was nauseous with talk of the Holohoax again). Numerous NGOs disseminated Amer-Kuwaiti lies, of which the most parroted was the theft of baby incubators (pander to the female voter, and their husbands will follow). It wasn't until after the war, that the Times were allowed to expose the lies, which the CBC documented in To Sell A War.

  7. #6
    See the 28:29 documentary from CBC on how the Daughter of the Kuwait Ambassador (Nayirah) told a completely fake story on Iraqi soldiers murdering babies in incubators, including fake tears…
    She was coached by the giant Hill and Knowlton public relations firm.
    Do NOT ever read my posts. Google and Yahoo wouldn’t block them without a very good reason: Google-censors-the-world/page3

    The Order of the Garter rules the world: Order of the Garter and the Carolingian dynasty

  8. #7
    If I remember how I thought and felt doing LSD is that the same as having a flash back? Anytime I have a problem I remember how to think like I am on LDS. If I need to make a wall melt I think like I am on LSD.

  9. #8
    If I remember how I thought and felt doing LSD is that the same as having a flash back? Anytime I have a problem I remember how to think like I am on LDS. If I need to make a wall melt I think like I am on LSD.



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