mirror of
https://github.com/nhammer514/textfiles-politics.git
synced 2024-12-30 09:46:18 -05:00
127 lines
6.6 KiB
XML
127 lines
6.6 KiB
XML
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
|
|
<xml>
|
|
<div class="article">
|
|
<p>Subject: Conspiracy for the Day -- November 3, 1993
|
|
From: bfrg9732@uxa.cso.uiuc.edu (Brian F. Redman)
|
|
Date: 3 Nov 1993 00:02:07 GMT</p>
|
|
<p> Conspiracy for the Day -- November 3, 1993
|
|
=============================================
|
|
("Quid coniuratio est?")</p>
|
|
<p>The Search for the "Manchurian Candidate":
|
|
The CIA and Mind Control
|
|
by John Marks
|
|
[Excerpts]</p>
|
|
<p>By the 1950s, most "Americans knew something about the famous
|
|
trial of the Hungarian Josef Cardinal Mindszenty, at which the
|
|
Cardinal appeared zombielike, as though drugged or hypnotized.
|
|
Other defendants at Soviet 'show trials' had displayed similar
|
|
symptoms as they recited unbelievable confessions in dull,
|
|
cliche-ridden monotones. Americans were familiar with the idea
|
|
that the communists had ways to control hapless people, and [the
|
|
term 'brainwashing'] helped pull together the unsettling evidence
|
|
into one sharp fear."</p>
|
|
<p>Many Americans "saw the confessions as proof that the communists
|
|
now had techniques 'to put a man's mind in a fog so that he will
|
|
mistake what is true for what is untrue, what is right for what
|
|
is wrong, and come to believe what did not happen actually had
|
|
happened, until he ultimately becomes a robot.'"</p>
|
|
<p>"Given the incontrovertible evidence that the Russians and the
|
|
Chinese could, in a very short time and often under difficult
|
|
circumstances, alter the basic belief and behavior patterns of
|
|
both domestic and foreign captives, [it was argued that] there
|
|
must be a technique involved that would yield its secrets under
|
|
objective investigation."</p>
|
|
<p>Harold Wolff and Lawrence Hinkle "became the chief brainwashing
|
|
studiers for the U.S. government... Their secret report to [CIA
|
|
chief] Allen Dulles, later published in a declassified version,
|
|
was considered the definitive U.S. Government work on the
|
|
subject."</p>
|
|
<p>"The CIA built up its own elaborate brainwashing program
|
|
[which]... took its own special twist from our national
|
|
character. It was a tiny replica of the Manhattan Project,
|
|
grounded in the conviction that the keys to brainwashing lay in
|
|
technology. Agency officials hoped to use old-fashioned American
|
|
know-how to produce shortcuts and scientific breakthroughs... The
|
|
Agency's brainwashing experts gravitated to people more in the
|
|
mold of the brilliant -- and sometimes mad -- scientist."</p>
|
|
<p>CIA officials began to look for scientists and guinea pigs. "Some
|
|
of their experiments would wander so far across the ethical
|
|
borders of experimental psychiatry (which are hazy in their own
|
|
right) that Agency officials thought it prudent to have much of
|
|
the work done outside the United States."</p>
|
|
<p>Montreal hospital. One of Cameron's projects was an attempt to
|
|
"depattern" experimental subjects. "Cameron defined
|
|
'depatterning' as breaking up existing patterns of behavior... by
|
|
means of particularly intensive electroshocks, usually combined
|
|
with prolonged, drug-induced sleep... Cameron claimed he could
|
|
generate 'differential amnesia.' Creating such a state in which a
|
|
man who knew too much could be made to forget had long been a
|
|
prime objective [of CIA] programs."</p>
|
|
<p>Cameron's depatterning "normally started with 15 to 30 days of
|
|
'sleep therapy.' As the name implies, the patient slept almost
|
|
the whole day and night. According to a doctor at the hospital
|
|
who used to administer what he calls the 'sleep cocktail,' a
|
|
staff member woke up the patient three times a day for medication
|
|
that consisted of a combination of 100 mg. Thorazine, 100 mg.
|
|
Nembutal, 100 mg. Seconal, 150 mg. Veronal, and 10 mg. Phenergan.
|
|
Another staff doctor would also awaken the patient two or
|
|
sometimes three times daily for electroshock treatments... In
|
|
standard, professional electroshock, doctors gave the subject a
|
|
single dose of 110 volts, lasting a fraction of a second, once a
|
|
day or every other day. By contrast, Cameron used a form 20 to 40
|
|
times more intense, two or three times daily, with the power
|
|
turned up to 150 volts."</p>
|
|
<p>"The frequent screams of patients that echoed through the
|
|
hospital did not deter Cameron or most of his associates in their
|
|
attempts to 'depattern' their subjects completely. Other hospital
|
|
patients report being petrified by the 'sleep rooms,' where the
|
|
treatment took place, and they would usually creep down the
|
|
opposite side of the hall."</p>
|
|
<p>"The Agency sent the psychiatrist research money to take the
|
|
treatment *beyond this point*. Agency officials wanted to know
|
|
if, once Cameron had produced a blank mind, he could then program
|
|
in new patterns of behavior, as he claimed he could. As early as
|
|
1953 -- the year he headed the American Psychiatric Association
|
|
-- Cameron conceived a technique he called 'psychic driving,' by
|
|
which he would bombard the subject with repeated verbal
|
|
messages."</p>
|
|
<p>The CIA continued to fund Cameron's research. Then, in 1964, he
|
|
retired abruptly. "His successor, Dr. Robert Cleghorn, made a
|
|
virtually unprecedented move in the academic world of mutual
|
|
back-scratching and praise. He commissioned a psychiatrist and a
|
|
psychologist, unconnected to Cameron, to study his electroshock
|
|
work."</p>
|
|
<p>"The study-team members couched their report in densely academic
|
|
jargon, but one of them speaks more clearly now. He talks
|
|
bitterly of one of Cameron's former patients who needs to keep a
|
|
list of her simplest household chores to remember how to do
|
|
them... He continues, 'I probably shouldn't talk about this, but
|
|
Cameron -- for him to do what he did -- he was a very
|
|
schizophrenic guy, who totally detached himself from the human
|
|
implications of his work... God, we talk about concentration
|
|
camps. I don't want to make this comparison, but God, you talk
|
|
about ''we didn't know it was happening,'' and it was -- right in
|
|
our back yard.'"</p>
|
|
<p>"It cannot be said how many -- if any -- other Agency</p>
|
|
<p>Details are scarce, since many of the principal witnesses have
|
|
died, will not talk about what went on, or lie about it. In what
|
|
ways the CIA applied work like Cameron's is not known. What is
|
|
known, however, is that the intelligence community, including the
|
|
CIA, changed the face of the scientific community during the
|
|
1950s and early 1960s by its interest in such experiments."</p>
|
|
<p>-!---------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
Today's conspiracy brought to you by.......
|
|
Brian Francis Redman
|
|
.....................
|
|
: Aperi os tuum muto, :
|
|
: et causis omnium filiorum qui pertranseunt. :
|
|
: Aperi os tuum, decerne quod justum est, :
|
|
: et judica inopem et pauperem. :
|
|
: -- Liber Proverbiorum XXXI: 8-9 :
|
|
:...................:
|
|
(bfrg9732@uxa.cso.uiuc.edu) (72567.3145@compuserve.com)
|
|
</p>
|
|
</div>
|
|
</xml>
|