284 lines
16 KiB
Plaintext
284 lines
16 KiB
Plaintext
|
|
THE CIA, LSD AND THE 60S REBELLION by Beatrice Devereaux The Fessenden
|
|
Review
|
|
|
|
---------- A review of the book "Acid Dreams" by Martin A. Lee and Bruce
|
|
Shlain, publisher, Grove Press. ----------
|
|
|
|
"I fear I owe you an apology, I have been reading a
|
|
succession of pieces about the CIA involvement in
|
|
the dope trade in Southeast Asia and I remember
|
|
when you first suggested I look into this I thought
|
|
you were full of beans. Indeed you were right."
|
|
-- C.L. Sulzberger, editor The New York Times, in a
|
|
letter to Allen Ginsberg.
|
|
|
|
It is more or less common knowledge that the Central Intelligence Agency and
|
|
the Army experimented with lysergic acid diethylamide starting in the late
|
|
40s, and continued to toy with it for more than two decades. However no one
|
|
has documented those experiments to the extent that Martin Lee and Bruce
|
|
Shlain have in their book "Acid Dreams."
|
|
|
|
One of the characters in the book is Dr. Paul Hoch. Hoch, who later become New
|
|
York State Commissioner for Mental Hygiene ... gave LSD to psychiatric
|
|
patients and then lobotomized them in order to compare the effects of acid
|
|
before and after psychosurgery.
|
|
|
|
"It is possible that certain amount of brain damage is of therapeutic value,"
|
|
Hoch once commented. In one experiment a hallucinogen was administered along
|
|
with a local anesthetic and the subject was told to describe his visual
|
|
experiences as surgeons removed chunks of his cerebral cortex.
|
|
|
|
YEEOOWW! Get me out of here I wanna go back to Dr. Mengele.
|
|
|
|
To our knowledge, a more thorough history of the dispersal of LSD (and other
|
|
psychedelic drugs) into our society has not been published. Much of "Acid
|
|
Dreams" is based on information acquired from the government through the
|
|
Freedom of Information Act and so, we assume, is of some truth. If half of
|
|
what's in this book is true, it makes one nostalgic for the gentle compassion
|
|
of Idi Amin and Pol Pot.
|
|
|
|
Despite a few flaws, not the least of which is Lee and Shlain's anti-
|
|
establishment bias, this is a remarkable book -- if for no other reason than
|
|
the sheer magnitude of research it must have taken to compile it. The two
|
|
authors have done their homework and the narrative is well structured and
|
|
impressively assembled. Like any cultural history documenting an explosive
|
|
period there are a wealth of colorful characters. In the later chapters the
|
|
now familiar, perhaps too familiar, gang of yahoos appear: Allen Ginsberg, Dr.
|
|
Timothy Leary, Dr. Richard Alpert (aka Ram Dass), Dr. Ralph Metzner, Ken
|
|
Kesey, Augustus Owsley Stanley III -- the list goes one.
|
|
|
|
But in the early chapters -- Holy Guacamole! Meet Richard "this stuff is
|
|
dynamite" Helms (CIA director from 1967 to 1973) and Major General William
|
|
"war without death" Creasy, chief officer of the US Army's Chemical Corps in
|
|
the 1950s who, during Congressional testimony, called for the testing of
|
|
hallucinogenic gases on subways in American cities and Captain Alfred M.
|
|
Hubbard, the spy who become the Johnny Appleseed of LSD. "If you don't think
|
|
this stuff is amazing," said Hubbard, "just go ahead and try it." And, the
|
|
man who started it all, the kindly Swiss doctor, Albert Hoffman.
|
|
|
|
A favorite plan, during Helms' administration at the CIA, involved slipping
|
|
"P-1" (the code name for LSD when used operationally) to socialist or left-
|
|
leaning politicians in foreign countries so that they would babble
|
|
incoherently and discredit themselves in public.
|
|
|
|
General Creasy, "Acid Dreams" tells us, promoted the psychochemical cause with
|
|
eccentric and visionary zeal. The General was opposed to artillery though he
|
|
knew that dislodging enemy soldiers was a potentiality that had to be
|
|
anticipated. "Suppose ... you found a way to spike the city's water supply or
|
|
to release a hallucinogen in aerosol form. For twelve to twenty -four hours
|
|
all the people in the vicinity would be hopelessly giddy, vertiginous...
|
|
Victory would be a foregone conclusion, as smooth and effortless as the French
|
|
army in 'The King of Hearts' strolling into a town inhabited solely by asylum
|
|
inmates."
|
|
|
|
In a 1959 interview with "This Week" magazine General Creasy said, "I do not
|
|
contend that driving people crazy -- even for a few hours -- is a pleasant
|
|
prospect, but warfare is never pleasant. And to those who feel that any kind
|
|
of chemical weapon is more horrible than conventional weapons, I put this
|
|
question:
|
|
|
|
Would you rather be temporarily deranged, blinded, or paralyzed by a chemical
|
|
agent, or burned alive by a conventional fire bomb?"
|
|
|
|
Let's see now, may we hear the choices once more General? You won't object if
|
|
we consult our physician, Dr. Hoch, before making a decision?
|
|
|
|
Compared to these last two, Captain Hubbard is a breath of fresh air. A spy
|
|
by profession, he lived a life of intrigue and adventure befitting his chosen
|
|
career. Born dirt poor in Kentucky, he served with the OSS (precursor to the
|
|
CIA) during the Second World War and went on to make a fortune as a uranium
|
|
entrepreneur.
|
|
|
|
The blustery rum-drinking Hubbard is widely credited with being the first
|
|
person to emphasize LSD's potential as a visionary or transcendental drug.
|
|
"Most people are walking in their sleep," he said. "Turn them around, start
|
|
them in the opposite direction and they wouldn't even know the difference."
|
|
|
|
As a high-level OSS officer, the Captain directed an extremely sensitive
|
|
covert operation that involved smuggling weapons and war material to Great
|
|
Britain prior to the attack on Pearl Harbor. In pitch darkness he sailed
|
|
ships without lights up the coast to Vancouver, where they were refitted and
|
|
used as destroyers by the British Navy. All of this, of course, was highly
|
|
illegal, and President Truman later issued a special pardon with kudos to the
|
|
Captain and his men.
|
|
|
|
During his first acid trip in 1951, he claimed to have witnessed his own
|
|
conception. "It was the deepest mystical thing I've ever seen," the Captain
|
|
recounted. "I saw myself as a tiny mite in a big swamp with a spark of
|
|
intelligence. I saw my mother and father having intercourse. It was all
|
|
clear."
|
|
|
|
The coarse, uneducated Captain lacked elegance and restraint -- "I'm just a
|
|
poor son of a bitch!" he'd bellow. Nonetheless he teamed up with a tall,
|
|
slender novelist who epitomized the genteel qualities of the British
|
|
intellectuals by the name of Aldous Huxley. In 1955 Huxley wrote to a mutual
|
|
friend "Your nice Captain tried a new experiment -- group mescalinization."
|
|
Captain Hubbard had provided Huxley with mescaline, a semi-synthetic extract
|
|
of the peyote cactus.
|
|
|
|
Though Huxley waxes poetic about his experiences with mescaline, his poetry
|
|
is tempered by the authors' introduction of the subject in "Acid Dreams." The
|
|
drug, they tell us, was used "in mind control experiments carried out by Nazi
|
|
doctors at the Dachau concentration camp during World War II... the Nazis
|
|
concluded that it was 'impossible to impose one's will on another person as in
|
|
hypnosis even when the strongest does of mescaline had been given...
|
|
|
|
"The mescaline experiments at Dachau were described in a lengthy report by the
|
|
U.S. Naval Technical Mission, which swept across Europe in search of every
|
|
scrap of industrial material and scientific data that could be garnered from
|
|
the fallen Reich.
|
|
|
|
"It was without question the most extraordinary and significant experience
|
|
this side of the Beatific Vision. ...it opens up a host of philosophical
|
|
problems, throws intense light and raises all manner of questions in the field
|
|
of aesthetics, religion, theory of knowledge," Huxley said of his mescaline
|
|
experience in a letter to a friend. Going on to praise Hubbard he wrote "What
|
|
Babes in the Woods we literary gents and professional men are! The great World
|
|
occasionally requires your services, is mildly amused by mine; but its full
|
|
attention and deference are paid to Uranium and Big Business. So what
|
|
extraordinary luck that this representative of both these High Powers should
|
|
(a) have become so passionately interested in mescaline and (b) be such a nice
|
|
man."
|
|
|
|
Said Hubbard of his proselytizing escapades, "Cost me a couple of hundred
|
|
thousand dollars. ...I had six thousand bottles to begin with."
|
|
|
|
Hubbard promoted his cause with indefatigable zeal, crisscrossing North
|
|
America and Europe, giving LSD to anyone who would stand still. "People heard
|
|
about it, and they wanted to try it," he explained. During the 1950s and
|
|
early 1960s he turned on thousands of people from all walks of life --
|
|
policemen, statesmen, captains of industry, church figures, scientists. "They
|
|
all thought it was the most marvelous thing" he stated
|
|
"And I never saw a psychosis in any one of these cases."
|
|
|
|
Hubbard had such remarkable credentials that he received special permission
|
|
from Rome to administer LSD within the context of the Catholic faith. "He had
|
|
kind of an incredible way getting that sort of thing," said a close associate
|
|
who claimed to have seen papers from the Vatican.
|
|
|
|
Even though Hubbard took a lot of acid and was a maverick among his peers, he
|
|
remained a staunch law-and-order man throughout his life. The crew-cut
|
|
Captain was the quintessdential turned on patriot, a seasoned spy veteran who
|
|
admired the likes of J. Edgar Hoover. Above all Hubbard didn't like weirdos -
|
|
- especially longhaired radical weirdos who abused his beloved LSD. Thus he
|
|
was eager to apply his espionage talents to a secret study of the student
|
|
movement and acid subculture... And so on though a psychedelic topological
|
|
maze alternating cloak- and-dagger with enlightenment.
|
|
|
|
The self-effacing, bicycle-riding Dr. Hoffman who, by virtue of inventing the
|
|
stuff, is to blame for much of this nonsense, firs synthesized LSD in 1938
|
|
while investigating the chemical and pharmacological properties of ergot, a
|
|
rye fungus rich in medicinal alkaloids, for Sandoz Laboratories in Basel,
|
|
Switzerland. The good doctor was searching for an analeptic compound (a
|
|
circulatory stimulant) by concocting various ergot derivatives and apparently
|
|
took a wrong turn. However, preliminary studies on laboratory animals did not
|
|
prove significant
|
|
|
|
For the next five years the vial of LSD gathered dust on the shelf, until the
|
|
afternoon of April 16, 1943. "I had a strange feeling that it would be
|
|
worthwhile to carry out more profound studies with this compound," Hoffman
|
|
later recalled. In the course of preparing a fresh batch of LSD he
|
|
accidentally absorbed a small dose through his fingertips, and soon he was
|
|
overcome by
|
|
|
|
"a remarkable but not unpleasant state of intoxication... characterized by
|
|
an intense stimulation of the imagination and an altered state of awareness of
|
|
the world. As I lay in a dazed condition with eyes closed there surged up
|
|
from mea succession of fantastic, rapidly changing imagery of a striking
|
|
reality and depth, alternating with a vivid, kaleidoscopic play of
|
|
colors..."
|
|
|
|
Dr. Hoffman's experience as typical judging from the accounts of those who
|
|
became familiar with his compound two decades later.
|
|
|
|
"Acid Dreams" is an odd history, to say the least, and one must conclude an
|
|
unfortunate one. The societal whirl of the 1960s spurred the government into
|
|
a clamp-down on psychedelic drugs that has made it all but impossible to use
|
|
those substances in legitimate medical research. What research has been done
|
|
has shown that drugs such a lysergic acid diethylamide and mescaline to be of
|
|
value alleviating and treating the psychic burdens (as well as some of the
|
|
physical pain in terminal cancer patients, those suffering severe neurosis and
|
|
psychosis, and even habitual criminals.
|
|
|
|
The "sixties rebellion," as it is referred to in "Acid Dreams," with its
|
|
embrace and massive consumption of psychedelic drugs, sensationalized the
|
|
substances to the degree that their mere mention invites controversy. What
|
|
advantages the drugs offer to those suffering from mental and physical ills
|
|
may never be determined. Whether or not the drugs put one in touch with some
|
|
higher order, provide a religious experience will, likewise be left to
|
|
conjecture.
|
|
|
|
The authors of "Acid Dreams" have done a reasonable job cataloging a
|
|
tempestuous and turbulent period and yet, at the same time, have cashed in on
|
|
its sensational associations.
|
|
|
|
From "Acid Dreams" we learn that psychedelic drugs have been used and misused
|
|
by groups and individuals of every stripe. And that the Central Intelligence
|
|
Agency fooled around with psychochemicals without really knowing what they
|
|
were doing -- just like a good portion of the general population during the
|
|
1960s; give some of the other hijinx the CIA had indulged in -- the Bay of
|
|
Pigs, the overthrow of the Allende government -- dabbling in mind control and
|
|
metaphysics almost seem like small potatoes.
|
|
|
|
Lee and Shlain finally conclude, after nearly 300 pages of implying otherwise,
|
|
that "The CIA is not an omniscient, monolithic organization, and there's no
|
|
hard evidence that it engineered a great LSD conspiracy. (As in most
|
|
conspiracy theories, such a scenario vastly overestimates the sophistication
|
|
of the alleged perpetrator.)"
|
|
|
|
What we can deduce from "Acid Dreams" is that everyone seems to agree, no
|
|
matter who they may line up behind, that psychedelic drugs pack a considerable
|
|
wallop and, for dramatic splendor, cannot be matched.
|
|
|
|
Here, for example, is an account that came across our desk recently of young
|
|
man's experience during the 1960s with a semi- synthetic version of the so-
|
|
called "magic mushroom."
|
|
|
|
"On a beach one night, under a nearly full moon on a double dose of psilocybin
|
|
I walked across the pebbles near the water's edge and as I looked at them,
|
|
they turned into smooth round rubies and emeralds and the water was molten
|
|
gold. I looked back to where my friends were and my footprints were filled
|
|
with lapis-lazuli blue eyes, blinking at me. I looked at th sandstone cliff
|
|
behind me and the entire cliff was made up of a full-maned lions and when they
|
|
roared -- that was the wind..."
|
|
|
|
Extracting anything like the truth from the storm of controversy surrounding
|
|
psychochemicals is rather unlikely, but the above account, in its profound,
|
|
dreamlike beauty, causes one to wonder if these substances may possess more
|
|
value than the medical and academic community have been willing to credit
|
|
them.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Governments may come and governments may go, as will public opinion, religious
|
|
bias, legislation, but it would be naive to think that the lions of the mind
|
|
will stop roaring.
|
|
|
|
***********
|
|
|
|
The Fessenden Review is published by The Reginald A. Fessenden Educational
|
|
Fund, 1259 El Camino Real, Suite 108, Menlo Park, CA. 94025. Two year
|
|
subscriptions are $22.00
|
|
|
|
------
|
|
|
|
This article is from NewsBase, an excellent BBS in the Bay Area that includes
|
|
a great number of up-to-date articles on current events (415) 824-8767.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
X-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-X
|
|
Another file downloaded from: The NIRVANAnet(tm) Seven
|
|
|
|
& the Temple of the Screaming Electron Taipan Enigma 510/935-5845
|
|
Burn This Flag Zardoz 408/363-9766
|
|
realitycheck Poindexter Fortran 510/527-1662
|
|
Lies Unlimited Mick Freen 801/278-2699
|
|
The New Dork Sublime Biffnix 415/864-DORK
|
|
The Shrine Rif Raf 206/794-6674
|
|
Planet Mirth Simon Jester 510/786-6560
|
|
|
|
"Raw Data for Raw Nerves"
|
|
X-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-X
|