2834 lines
184 KiB
Plaintext
2834 lines
184 KiB
Plaintext
THE CONTROLLERS:
|
||
A New Hypothesis of Alien Abduction
|
||
|
||
by
|
||
Martin Cannon
|
||
|
||
|
||
I. Introduction
|
||
|
||
One wag has dubbed the problem "Terra and the Pirates."
|
||
The pirates, ostensibly, are marauders from another solar system; their
|
||
victims include a growing number of troubled human beings who insist that
|
||
they've been shanghaied by these otherworldly visitors. An outlandish
|
||
scenario -- yet through the works of such authors as Budd Hopkins[1] and
|
||
Whitley Strieber[2], the "alien abduction" syndrome has seized the public
|
||
imagination. Indeed, tales of UFO contact threaten to lapse into fashion-
|
||
ability, even though, as I have elsewhere noted[3], they may still inflict a
|
||
formidable social price upon the claimant.
|
||
Some time ago, I began to research these claims, concentrating my studies
|
||
on the social and political environment surrounding these events. As I
|
||
studied, the project grew and its scope widened. Indeed, I began to feel as
|
||
though I'd gone digging through familiar terrain only to unearth Gomorrah.
|
||
These excavations may have disgorged a solution.
|
||
|
||
|
||
THE PROBLEM
|
||
|
||
Among ufologists, the term "abduction" has come to refer to an infinitely-
|
||
confounding experience, or matrix of experiences, shared by a dizzying number
|
||
of individuals, who claim that travellers from the stars have scooped them out
|
||
of their beds, or snatched them from their cars, and subjected them to
|
||
interrogations, quasi-medical examinations, and "instruction" periods.
|
||
Usually, these sessions are said to occur within alien spacecraft; frequently,
|
||
the stories include terrifying details reminiscent of the tortures inflicted
|
||
in Germany's death camps. The abductees often (though not always) lose all
|
||
memory of these events; they find themselves back in their cars or beds,
|
||
unable to account for hours of "missing time." Hypnosis, or some other
|
||
trigger, can bring back these haunted hours in an explosion of recollection --
|
||
and as the smoke clears, an abductee will often spot a trail of similar
|
||
experiences, stretching all the way back to childhood.
|
||
Perhaps the oddest fact of these odd tales: Many abductees, for all their
|
||
vividly-recollected agonies, claim to love their alien tormentors. That's
|
||
the word I've heard repeatedly: love.
|
||
Within the community of "scientific ufologists" -- those lonely, all-too
|
||
little-heard advocates of reasonable and open-minded debate on matters
|
||
saucerological -- these claims have elicited cautious interest and a commend-
|
||
able restraint from conclusion-hopping. Outside the higher realms of
|
||
scientific ufology, the situation is, alas, quite different. In the popular
|
||
press, in both the "straight" and sensationalist media, within that
|
||
journalistic realm where issues are defined and public opinion solidified
|
||
(despite a frequently superficial approach to matters of evidence and
|
||
investigation) abduction scenarios have elicited two basic reactions: that
|
||
of the Believer and the Skeptic.
|
||
The Believers -- and here we should note that "Believers" and "abductees"
|
||
are two groups whose memberships overlap but are in no way congruent --
|
||
accept such stories at face value. They accept, despite the seeming
|
||
absurdity of these tales, the internal contradictions, the askew logic of
|
||
narrative construction, the severe discontinuity of emotional response to the
|
||
actions described. The Believers believe, despite reports that their beloved
|
||
"space brothers" use vile and inhuman tactics of medical examination --
|
||
senseless procedures most of us (and certainly the vanguard of an advanced
|
||
race) would be ashamed to inflict on an animal. The Believers believe,
|
||
despite the difficulty of reconciling these unsettling tales with their own
|
||
deliriums of benevolent off-worlders.
|
||
Occasionally, the rough notes of a rationalization are offered: "The
|
||
aliens don't know what they are doing," we hear; or "Some aliens are bad."
|
||
Yet the Believers confound their own reasoning when they insist on ascribing
|
||
the wisdom of the ages and the beneficence of the angels to their beloved
|
||
visitors. The aliens allegedly know enough about our society to go about
|
||
their business undetected by the local authorities and the general public;
|
||
they communicate with the abductees in human tongue; they concern themselves
|
||
with details of the percipients' innermost lives -- yet they remain so
|
||
ignorant of our culture as to be unaware of the basic moral precepts concerning
|
||
the dignity of the individual and the right to self-determination. Such
|
||
dichotomies don't bother the Believers; they are the faithful, and faith is
|
||
assumed to have its mysteries. SANCTA SIMPLICITAS.
|
||
Conversely, the Skeptics dismiss these stories out of hand. They dismiss,
|
||
despite the intriguing confirmatory details: the multiple witness events,
|
||
the physical traces left by the ufonauts, the scars and implants left on the
|
||
abductees. The skeptics scoff, though the abductees tell stories similar in
|
||
detail -- even certain tiny details, not known to the general public.
|
||
Philip Klass is a debunker who, through his appearances on such television
|
||
programs as NOVA and NIGHTLINE, has been in a position to affect much of the
|
||
public debate on UFOs. In his interesting but poorly-documented work on
|
||
abductions[4], Klass claims that "abduction" is a psychological disease,
|
||
spread by those who write about it. This argument exactly resembles the
|
||
professional press-basher's frequent assertion that terrorism metastasizes
|
||
through media exposure. Yet for all the millions of words expectorated by
|
||
newsfolk on the subject of terrorism, terrorist actions remain quite rare,
|
||
as any statistician (though few politicians) will admit, and verifiable
|
||
linkage between crimes and their coverage remains to be found. For that
|
||
matter, there have been books -- bestsellers, even -- on unicorns and gnomes.
|
||
People who claim to see those creatures are few. Abductees are plentiful.
|
||
Both Believer and Skeptic, in my opinion, miss the real story. Both make
|
||
the same mistake: They connect the abduction phenomenon to the forty-year
|
||
history of UFO sightings, and they apply their prejudices about the latter
|
||
to the controversy about the former.
|
||
At first sight, the link seems natural. Shouldn't our thoughts about
|
||
UFOs color our thoughts about UFO abductions?
|
||
NO.
|
||
They may well be separate issues. Or, rather, they are connected only
|
||
in this: The myth of the UFO has provided an effective cover story for an
|
||
entirely different sort of mystery. Remove yourself from the Believer/Skeptic
|
||
dialectic, and you will see the third alternative.
|
||
As we examine this alternative, we will, of necessity, stray far from the
|
||
saucers. We must turn our face from the paranormal and concentrate on the
|
||
occult -- if, by "occult," we mean SECRET.
|
||
I posit that the abductees HAVE been abducted. Yet they are also spewing
|
||
fantasy -- or, more precisely, they have been given a set of lies to repeat
|
||
and believe. If my hypothesis proves true, then we must accept the following:
|
||
The kidnapping is real. The fear is real. The pain is real. The instruction
|
||
is real. But the little grey men from Zeti Reticuli are NOT real; they are
|
||
constructs, Halloween masks meant to disguise the real faces of the con-
|
||
trollers. The abductors may not be visitors from Beyond; rather, they may be
|
||
a symptom of the carcinoma which blackens our body politic.
|
||
The fault lies not in our stars, but in ourselves.
|
||
|
||
|
||
THE HYPOTHESIS
|
||
|
||
Substantial evidence exists linking members of this country's intelligence
|
||
community (including the Central Intelligence Agency, the Defense Advanvced
|
||
Research Projects Agency, and the Office of Naval Intelligence) with the
|
||
esoteric technology of MIND CONTROL. For decades, "spy-chiatrists" working
|
||
behind the scenes -- on college campuses, in CIA-sponsored institutes, and
|
||
(most heinously) in prisons -- have experimented with the erasure of memory,
|
||
hypnotic resistance to torture, truth serums, post-hypnotic suggestion, rapid
|
||
induction of hypnosis, electronic stimulation of the brain, non-ionizing
|
||
radiation, microwave induction of intracerebral "voices," and a host of even
|
||
more disturbing technologies. Some of the projects exploring these areas were
|
||
ARTICHOKE, BLUEBIRD, PANDORA, MKDELTA, MKSEARCH and the infamous MKULTRA.
|
||
I have read nearly every available book on these projects, as well as the
|
||
relevant congressional testimony[5]. I have also spent much time in university
|
||
libraries researching relevant articles, contacting other researchers (who have
|
||
graciously allowed me access to their files), and conducting interviews.
|
||
Moreover, I traveled to Washington, DC to review the files John Marks compiled
|
||
when he wrote THE SEARCH FOR "THE MANCHURIAN CANDIDATE"[6]. These files
|
||
include some 20,000 pages of CIA and Defense Department documents, interviews,
|
||
scientific articles, letters, etc. The views presented here are the result of
|
||
extensive and ongoing research.
|
||
As a result of this research, I have come to the following conclusions:
|
||
1. Although misleading (and occasionally perjured) testimony before
|
||
Congress indicated that the CIA's "brainwashing" efforts met with little
|
||
success[7], striking advances were, in fact, made in this field. As CIA
|
||
veteran Miles Copeland once admitted to a reporter, "The congressional
|
||
subcommittee which went into this sort of thing got only the barest glimpse."
|
||
[8]
|
||
2. Clandestine research into thought manipulation has NOT stopped, despite
|
||
CIA protestations that it no longer sponsors such studies. Victor Marchetti,
|
||
14-year veteran of the CIA and author of the renown expose, THE CIA AND THE
|
||
CULT OF INTELLIGENCE, confirmed in a 1977 interview that the mind control
|
||
research continues, and that CIA claims to the contrary are a "cover story."[9]
|
||
3. The Central Intelligence Agency was not the only government agency
|
||
involved in this research[10]. Indeed, many branches of our government took
|
||
part in these studies -- including NASA, the Atomic Energy Commission, as well
|
||
as all branches of the Defense Department.
|
||
To these conclusions I would append the following -- NOT as firmly-
|
||
established historical fact, but as a working hypothesis and grounds for
|
||
investigation:
|
||
4. The "UFO abduction" phenomenon MIGHT be a continuation of clandestine
|
||
mind control operations.
|
||
I recognize the difficulties this thesis might present to those readers
|
||
emotionally wedded to the extraterrestrial hypothesis, or to those whose
|
||
political WELTANSHAUUNG disallows any such suspicions. Still, the open-
|
||
minded student of abductions should consider the possibilities. Certainly,
|
||
we are not being narrow-minded if we ask researchers to exhaust ALL terrestrial
|
||
explanations before looking heavenward.
|
||
Granted, this particular explanation may, at first, seem as bizarre as the
|
||
phenomenon itself. But I invite the skeptical reader to examine the work of
|
||
George Estabrooks, a seminal theorist on the use of hypnosis in warfare, and
|
||
a veteran of Project MKULTRA. Estabrooks once amused himself during a party
|
||
by covertly hypnotizing two friends, who were led to believe that the Prime
|
||
Minister of England had just arrived; Estabrooks' victims spent an hour
|
||
conversing with, and even serving drinks to, the esteemed visitor[11]. For
|
||
ufologists, this incident raises an inescapable question: If the Mesmeric arts
|
||
can successfully evoke a non-existent Prime Minister, why can't a represent-
|
||
ative from the Pleiades be similarly induced?
|
||
But there is much more to the present day technology of mind control than
|
||
mere hypnosis -- and many good reasons to suspect that UFO abduction accounts
|
||
are an artifact of continuing brainwashing/behavior modification experiments.
|
||
Moreover, I intend to demonstrate that, by using UFO mythology as a cover
|
||
story, the experimenters may have solved the major problem with the work
|
||
conducted in the 1950s -- "the disposal problem," i.e., the question of
|
||
"What do we do with the victims?"
|
||
If, in these pages, I seem to stray from the subject of the saucers, I plead
|
||
for patience. Before I attempt to link UFO abductions with mind control
|
||
experiments, I must first show that this technology EXISTS. Much of the
|
||
forthcoming is an introduction to the topic of mind control -- what it is, and
|
||
how it works.
|
||
|
||
II. The Technology
|
||
|
||
A BRIEF OVERVIEW
|
||
|
||
In the early days of World War II, George Estabrooks, of Colgate University,
|
||
wrote to the Department of War, describing in breathless terms the possible
|
||
uses of hypnosis in warfare[12]. The Army was intrigued; Estabrooks had a
|
||
job. The true history of Estabrooks' wartime collaboration with the CID,
|
||
FBI[13] and other agencies may never be told: After the war, he burned his
|
||
diary pages covering the years 1940-45, and thereafter avoided discussing his
|
||
continuing government work with anyone, even close members of the family[14].
|
||
Occasionally, he strongly intimated that his work involved the creation of
|
||
hypno-programmed couriers and hypnotically-induced split personalities, but
|
||
whether he succeeded in these areas remains a controversial point. Neverthe-
|
||
less, the eccentric and flamboyant Estabrooks remains a pivotal figure in the
|
||
early history of clandestine behavioral research.
|
||
Which is not to say that he worked alone. World War II was the first
|
||
conflict in which the human brain became a field of battle, where invading
|
||
forces were led by the most notable names in psychology and pharmacology. On
|
||
both sides, the war spurred furious efforts to create a "truth drug" for use
|
||
in interrogating prisoners. General William "Wild Bill" Donovan, director of
|
||
the OSS, tasked his crack team -- including Dr. Winifred Overhulser, Dr.
|
||
Edward Strecker, Harry J. Anslinger and George White -- to modify human
|
||
perception and behavior through chemical means; their "medicine cabinet"
|
||
included scopolamine, peyote, barbiturates, mescaline, and marijuana. (This
|
||
research had its amusing side: Donovan's "psychic warriors" conducted many
|
||
extensive and expensive trials before deciding that the best method of
|
||
administering tetrahydrocannibinol, the active ingredient in marijuana, was
|
||
via the cigarette. Any jazz musician could have told them as much[15].)
|
||
Simultaneously, the notorious NAZI doctors at Dachau experimented with
|
||
mescaline as a means of eliminating the victim's will to resist. Jews, slavs,
|
||
gypsies, and other "Untermenschen" in the camp were surreptitiously slipped the
|
||
drug; later, mescaline was combined with hypnosis[16]. The results of these
|
||
tests were made available to the United States after the War. [cf. Operation
|
||
PAPERCLIP, which transferred thousands of German and Japanese intelligence
|
||
researchers directly into the U.S. intelligence community. "Our Germans are
|
||
BETTER than their Germans!" - DR. STRANGELOVE -jpg]
|
||
In 1947, the Navy conducted the first known post-war mind control program,
|
||
Project CHAPTER, which continued the drug experiments. Decades later,
|
||
journalists and investigators still haven't uncovered much information about
|
||
this project -- or, indeed, about any of the military's other excursions into
|
||
this field. We know that the Army eventually founded operations THIRD CHANCE
|
||
and DERBY HAT; other project names remain mysterious, though the existence of
|
||
these programs is unquestionable. [? -jpg]
|
||
The newly-formed CIA plunged into this cesspool in 1950, with Project
|
||
BLUEBIRD, rechristened ARTICHOKE in 1951. To establish a "cover story" for
|
||
this research, the CIA funded a propaganda effort designed to convince the
|
||
world that the Communist Bloc had devised insidious new methods of re-shaping
|
||
the human will; the CIA's own efforts could therefore, if exposed, be explained
|
||
as an attempt to "catch up" with Soviet and Chinese work. The primary promoter
|
||
of this "line" was one Edward Hunter, a CIA contract employee operating under-
|
||
cover as a journalist, and, later, a prominent member of the John Birch
|
||
society. (Hunter was an OSS veteran of the China theatre -- the same spawning
|
||
grounds which produced Richard Helms, Howard Hunt, Mitch WerBell, Fred
|
||
Chrisman, Paul Helliwell and a host of other noteworthies who came to
|
||
dominate that strange land where the worlds of intelligence and right-wing
|
||
extremism meet[17].) Hunter offered "brainwashing" as the explanation for the
|
||
numerous confessions signed by American prisoners of war during the Korean War
|
||
and (generally) UN-recanted upon the prisoners' repatriation. These confes-
|
||
sions alleged that the United States used germ warfare in the Korean conflict,
|
||
a claim which the American public of the time found impossible to accept.
|
||
[Lee Harvey Oswald, acting alone, murdered President Kennedy. -jpg] Many
|
||
years later, however, investigative reporters discovered that Japan's germ
|
||
warfare specialists (who had wreaked incalculable terror on the conquered
|
||
Chinese during WWII) had been mustered into the American national security
|
||
apparat -- and that the knowledge gleaned from Japan's horrifying germ
|
||
warfare experiments probably WAS used in Korea, just as the "brainwashed"
|
||
soldiers had indicated[18]. Thus, we now know that the entire brainwashing
|
||
scare of the 1950s constituted a CIA hoax perpetrated upon the American
|
||
public: CIA deputy director Richard Helms admitted as much when, in 1963,
|
||
he told the Warren Commission that Soviet mind control research consistently
|
||
lagged years behind American efforts[19].
|
||
When the CIA's mind control program was transferred from the Office of
|
||
Security to the Technical Services Staff (TSS) in 1953, the name changed
|
||
again -- to MKULTRA[20]. Many consider this wide-ranging "octopus" project --
|
||
whose tentacles twined through the corridors of numerous universities and
|
||
around the necks of an army of scientists -- the most ominous operation in
|
||
CIA's catalogue of atrocity. Through MKULTRA, the Agency created an umbrella
|
||
program of a positively Joycean scope, designed to ferret out all possible
|
||
means of invading what George Orwell once called "the space between our ears"
|
||
(Later still, in 1962, mind control research was transferred to the Office
|
||
of Research and Development; project cryptonyms remain unrevealed[21].)
|
||
What was studied? Everything -- including hypnosis, conditioning, sensory
|
||
deprivation, drugs, religious cults, microwaves, psychosurgery, brain implants,
|
||
and even ESP. When MKULTRA "leaked" to the public during the great CIA
|
||
investigations of the 1970s, public attention focused most heavily on drug
|
||
experimentation and the work with ESP[22]. Mystery still shrouds another area
|
||
of study, the area which seems to have most interested ORD: psychoelectronics.
|
||
This research may prove key to our understanding of the UFO abduction
|
||
phenomenon.
|
||
|
||
|
||
IMPLANTS
|
||
|
||
Perhaps the most interesting pieces of evidence surrounding the abduction
|
||
phenomenon are the intracerebral implants allegedly visible in the X-rays and
|
||
MRI scans of many abductees[23]. Indeed, abductees often describe operations
|
||
in which needles are inserted into the brain; more frequently still, they
|
||
report implantation of foreign objects through the sinus cavities. Many
|
||
abduction specialists assume that these intracranial incursions must be the
|
||
handiwork of scientists from the stars. Unfortunately, these researchers
|
||
have failed to familiarize themselves with certain little-heralded advances
|
||
in terrestrial technology.
|
||
The abductees' implants strongly suggest a technological lineage which can
|
||
be traced to a device known as a "stimoceiver," invented in the late '50s-
|
||
early '60s by a neuroscientist named Jose "Bob" Delgado. The stimoceiver is a
|
||
miniature depth electrode which can receive and transmit electronic signals
|
||
over FM radio waves. By stimulating a correctly-positioned stimoceiver, an
|
||
outside operator can wield a surprising degree of control over the subject's
|
||
responses.
|
||
The most famous example of the stimoceiver in action occurred in a Madrid
|
||
bull ring. Delgado "wired" the bull before stepping into the ring, entirely
|
||
unprotected. Furious for gore, the bull charged toward the doctor -- then
|
||
stopped, just before reaching him. The technician-turned-toreador had halted
|
||
the animal by simply pushing a button on a black BoX, held in the hand[24].
|
||
Delgado's PHYSICAL CONTROL OF THE MIND: TOWARD A PSYCHOCIVILISED SOCIETY[25]
|
||
remains the sole, full-length, popularly-written work on intracerebral implants
|
||
and electronic stimulation of the brain (ESB). (The book's ominous title and
|
||
unconvincing philosophical rationales for mass mind control prompted an
|
||
unfavorable public reaction -- which may have deterred other researchers from
|
||
publishing on this theme for a general audience.) While subsequent work has
|
||
long since superceded the techniques described in this book, Delgado's
|
||
achievements were seminal. His animal and human experiments clearly demon-
|
||
strate that the experimenter can electronically induce emotions and behavior:
|
||
Under certain conditions, the extremes of temperament -- rage, lust, fatigue,
|
||
etc. -- can be elicited by an outside operator as easily as an organist might
|
||
call forth a C-major chord.
|
||
Delgado writes: "Radio stimulation of different points in the amygdala and
|
||
hippocampus in the four patients produced a variety of effects, including
|
||
pleasant sensations, elation, deep, thoughtful concentration, odd feelings,
|
||
super relaxation, colored visions, and other responses."[26] The evocative
|
||
phrase "colored vision" clearly indicates remotely-induced hallucination; we
|
||
will detail later how these hallucinations may be "controlled" by an outside
|
||
operator.
|
||
Speaking in 1966 -- and reflecting research undertaken years previous --
|
||
Delgado asserted that his experiments "support the distasteful conclusion that
|
||
motion, emotion, and behavior can be directed by electrical forces and that
|
||
humans can be controlled like robots by push buttons."[27] He even prophesied
|
||
a day when brain control could be turned over to non-human operators, by
|
||
establishing two-way radio communication between the implanted brain and a
|
||
computer[28].
|
||
Of one experimental subject, Delgado notes that "the patient expressed the
|
||
successive sensations of fainting, fright and floating around. These
|
||
'floating' feelings were repeatedly evoked on different days by stimulation
|
||
of the same point..."[29] Ufologists may recognize the similarity of this
|
||
sequence of events to abductee reports of the opening minutes of their
|
||
experiences[30]. Under subsequent hypnosis, the abductee could be instructed
|
||
to misremember the cause of this floating sensation.
|
||
In a fascinating series of experiments, Delgado attached the stimoceiver
|
||
to the tympanic membrane, thereby transforming the ear into a sort of micro-
|
||
phone. An assistant would whisper "How are you?" into the ear of a suitably
|
||
"fixed" cat, and Delgado could hear the words over a loudspeaker in the next
|
||
room. The application of this technology to the spy trade should be readily
|
||
apparent. According to Victor Marchetti, The Agency once attempted a highly-
|
||
sophisticated extension of this basic idea, in which radio implants were
|
||
attached to a cat's cochlea, to facilitate the pinpointing of specific
|
||
conversations, freed from extraneous surrounding noises[31]. Such "advances"
|
||
exacerbate the already-imposing level of Twentieth-Century paranoia: Not only
|
||
can our phones be tapped and mail checked, but even TABBY may be spying on us!
|
||
Yet the ramifications of this technology may go even deeper than Marchetti
|
||
indicates. I presume that if a suitably-wired subject's inner ear can be made
|
||
into a microphone, it can also be made into a loudspeaker -- one possible
|
||
explanation for the "voices" heard by abductees[32]. Indeed, I have personally
|
||
viewed a strange, opalescent implant within the ear canal of an abductee. I
|
||
see no reason to ascribe this device to alien intrusion -- more than likely,
|
||
the "intruders" in this case were the technological inheritors of the Delgado
|
||
legacy. Indeed, not many years after Delgado's experiments with the cat,
|
||
Ralph Schwitzgebel devised a "bug-in-the-ear" via which the therapist -- odd
|
||
term, under the circumstances -- can communicate with his subject[33].
|
||
Other researchers have made notable contributions to this field.
|
||
Robert G. "Bob" Heath, of Tulane University, who has implanted as many as
|
||
125
|
||
electrodes in his subjects, achieved his greatest notoriety by attempting to
|
||
"cure" homosexuality through ESB. In his experiments, he discovered that he
|
||
could control his patients' memory, (a feat which, applied in the ufological
|
||
context, may account for the phenomenon of "missing time"); he could also
|
||
induce sexual arousal, fear, pleasure, and hallucinations[34].
|
||
Heath and another researcher, James Olds[35], have independently illustrated
|
||
that areas of the brain in and near the hypothalamus have, when electronically
|
||
stimulated, what has been described as "rewarding" and "aversive" effects.
|
||
Both animals and men, when given the means to induce their own ESB of the
|
||
brain's pleasure centers, will stimulate themselves at a tremendous rate,
|
||
ignoring such basic drives as hunger and thirst[36]. (Using fixed electrodes
|
||
of his own invention, John C. Lilly had accomplished similar effects in the
|
||
early 1950s[37].) Anyone who has studied the abduction phenomenon will find
|
||
himself on familiar territory here, for the abductee accounts are replete with
|
||
stories of bewildering and inappropriate sexual response countered by extremely
|
||
painful stimuli -- operant conditioning, at its most extreme, and most
|
||
insidious, for here we see a form of conditioning in which the manipulator
|
||
renders himself invisible. Indeed, B.F. Skinner-esque aversive therapy,
|
||
remotely appiled, was Heath's prescription for "healing" homosexuality[38].
|
||
Ralph Schwitzgebel and his brother Robert have produced a panoply of
|
||
devices for tracking individuals over long ranges; they may be considered
|
||
the creators of the "electronic house arrest" devices recently approved by
|
||
the courts[39]. Schwitzgebel devices could be used for tracking all the
|
||
physical and neurological signs of a "patient" within a quarter of a mile[40],
|
||
thereby lifting the distance limitations which restricted Delgado.
|
||
In Ralph Schwitzgebel's initial work, application of this technology to
|
||
ESB seems to have been limited to cumbersome brain implants with protruding
|
||
wires. But the technology was soon miniaturized, and a scheme was proposed
|
||
whereby radio receivers would be mounted on utility poles throughout a
|
||
given city, thereby providing 24-hour-a-day monitoring capability[41]. Like
|
||
Heath, Schwitzgebel was much exercised about homosexuality and the use of
|
||
intracranial devices to combat sexual deviation. But he has also spoken
|
||
ominously about applying his devices to "socially troublesome persons"...
|
||
which, of course, could mean anyone[42].
|
||
Bryan Robinson, of the Yerkes primate laboratory has conducted fascinating
|
||
simian research on the use of remote ESB in a social context. He could cause
|
||
mothers to ignore their offspring, despite the babies' cries. He could turn
|
||
submission into dominance, and vice-versa[43].
|
||
Perhaps the most disturbing wanderer into this mind-field is Joseph A.
|
||
Meyer, of the National Security Agency, the most formidable and secretive
|
||
component of America's national security complex. Meyer has proposed implant-
|
||
ing rougly half of all Americans arrested -- not necessarily convicted --
|
||
of any crime; the numbers of "subscribers" (his euphemism) would run into the
|
||
tens of millions. "Subscribers" could be monitored continually by computer
|
||
wherever they went. Meyer, who has carefully worked out the economics of his
|
||
mass-implantation system, asserts that taxpayer liability should be reduced
|
||
by forcing subscribers to "rent" the implant from the State. Implants are
|
||
cheaper and more efficient than police, Meyer suggests, since the call to crime
|
||
is relentless for the poor "urban dweller" -- who, this spook-scientist admits
|
||
in a surprisingly candid aside, is fundamentally unnecessary to a post-
|
||
industrial economy. "Urban dweller" may be another of Meyer's euphemisms: He
|
||
uses New York's Harlem as his model community in working out the details of his
|
||
mind-management system[44].
|
||
|
||
|
||
ABDUCTEE IMPLANTS
|
||
|
||
If we are to take seriously abductee accounts of brain implants, we must
|
||
consider the possibility that the implanters, properly perceived, DON'T look
|
||
much like the "greys" pictured on Strieber's dustjackets. Instead, the
|
||
visitors may resemble Dr. Meyer and his brethren. We would thus have an
|
||
explanation for both the reports of abductee brain implants and, as we shall
|
||
see, the "scoop marks" and other scars visible on other parts of the abductees'
|
||
bodies. We would also have an explanation for the reports of individuals
|
||
suffering personality change after contact with the UFO phenomenon.
|
||
Skeptics might counter that the time factor of UFO abductions disallows
|
||
this possibility. If estimates of "missing time" are correct, the abductions
|
||
rarely take longer than one-to-three hours. Wouldn't a brain surgeon,
|
||
operating under less-than-ideal conditions (perhaps in a mobile unit) need
|
||
more time?
|
||
NO -- not if we accept the claims of a Florida doctor named Daniel Man.
|
||
He recently proposed a draconian solution to the overblown "missing children
|
||
problem," by suggesting a program wherein America's youngsters would be
|
||
implanted with tiny transmitters in order to track the children continuously.
|
||
Man brags that the operation can be done right in the office -- and would take
|
||
less than 20 minutes[45].
|
||
Conceivably, it might take a tad longer in the field.
|
||
|
||
|
||
A QUESTION OF TIMING
|
||
|
||
The history of brain implantation, as gleaned from the open literature, is
|
||
certainly disquieting. Yet this history has almost certainly been censored,
|
||
and the dates manipulated in a nigh-Orwellian fashion. When dealing with
|
||
research funded by the engines of national security, one can never know the
|
||
true origin date of any individual scientific advance. However, if we listen
|
||
carefully to the scientists who have pioneered this research, we may hear
|
||
whispers, faint but unmistakable, hinting that remotely-applied ESB originated
|
||
earlier than published studies would indicate.
|
||
In his autobiography THE SCIENTIST, John C. Lilly (who would later achieve
|
||
a cultish reknown for his work with dolphins, drugs and sensory deprivation)
|
||
records a conversation he had with the director of the National Institute
|
||
of Mental Health -- in 1953. The director asked Lilly to brief the CIA, FBI,
|
||
NSA and the various military intelligence services on his work using electrodes
|
||
to stimulate directly the pleasure and pain centers of the brain. Lilly
|
||
refused, noting, in his reply:
|
||
|
||
Dr. Antoine Remond, using our techniques in Paris, has
|
||
demonstrated that this method of stimulation of the brain
|
||
can be applied to the human without the help of the neuro-
|
||
surgeon; he is doing it in his office in Paris without neuro-
|
||
surgical supervision. This means that anybody with the proper
|
||
apparatus can carry this out on a person covertly, with no
|
||
external signs that electrodes have been used on that person.
|
||
I feel that if this technique got into the hands of a secret
|
||
agency, they would have total control over a human being and
|
||
be able to change his beliefs extremely quickly, leaving
|
||
little evidence of what they had done[46].
|
||
|
||
Lilly's assertion of the moral high ground here is interesting. Despite
|
||
his avowed phobia against secrecy, a careful reading of THE SCIENTIST reveals
|
||
that he continued to do work useful to this country's national security appar-
|
||
atus. His sensory deprivation experiments expanded upon the work of ARTICHOKE's
|
||
Maitland Baldwin, and even his dolphin research has -- perhaps inadvertently
|
||
proved useful in naval warfare[47]. One should note that Lilly's work on
|
||
monkeys carried a "secret" classification, and that NIMH was a common CIA
|
||
funding conduit[48].
|
||
But the most important aspect of Lilly's statement is its date. 1953?
|
||
How far back does radio-controlled ESB go? Alas, I have not yet seen Remond's
|
||
work -- if it is available in the open literature. In the documents made
|
||
available to Marks, the earliest reference to remotely-applied ESB is a 1959
|
||
financial document pertaining to MKULTRA subproject 94. The general subproject
|
||
descriptions sent to the CIA's financial department rarely contain much
|
||
information, and rarely change from year to year, leaving us little idea as to
|
||
when this subproject began.
|
||
Unfortunately, even the Freedom of Information Act couldn't pry loose much
|
||
information on electronic mind control techniques, though we know a great deal
|
||
of study was done in these areas. We have, for example, only four pages on
|
||
subproject 94 -- by comparison, a veritable flood of documents were released on
|
||
the use of drugs in mind control. (Whenever an author tells us that MKULTRA
|
||
met with little success, the reference is to drug testing.) On this point, I
|
||
must criticize John Marks: His book never mentions that roughly 20-25 percent
|
||
of the subprojects are "dark" -- i.e., little or no information was ever made
|
||
available, despite lawyers and FOIA requests. Marks seems to feel that the
|
||
only information worth having is the information he received. We know,
|
||
however, that research into psychoelectronics was extensive indeed, statements
|
||
of project goals dating from ARTICHOKE and BLUEBIRD days clearly identify this
|
||
area as a high priority. Marks' anonymous informant, jocularly named "Deep
|
||
Trance," even told a previous interviewer that, beginning in 1963, CIA and the
|
||
military's mind control efforts strongly emphasized electronics[49]. I
|
||
therefore assume -- not rashly, I hope -- that the "dark" MKULTRA subprojects
|
||
concerned matters such as brain implants, microwaves, ESB, and related
|
||
technologies.
|
||
I make an issue of the timing and secrecy involved in this research to
|
||
underscore three points: 1. We can never know with certainty the true origin
|
||
dates of the various brainwashing methods -- often, we discover that techniques
|
||
which seem impossibly futuristic actually originated in the 19th century.
|
||
(Pioneering ESB research was conducted in 1898, by J.R. ("Bob" Dobbs) Ewald,
|
||
professor of physiology at Straussbourg[50].) 2. The open literature almost
|
||
certainly gives a bowdlerized view of the actual research. 3. Lavishly-funded
|
||
clandestine researchers -- unrestrained by peer review or the need for strict
|
||
controls -- can achieve far more rapid progress than scientists "on the
|
||
outside."
|
||
Potential critics should keep these points in mind should they attempt to
|
||
invalidate the "mind control" thesis of UFO abductions by citing an abduction
|
||
account which antedates Delgado.
|
||
|
||
|
||
THE QUANDARY
|
||
|
||
We have amply demonstrated, then, that as far back as the 1960s -- and
|
||
possibly earlier still -- scientists have had the capability to create implants
|
||
similar to those now purportedly visible in abductee MRI scans. Indeed, we
|
||
have no notion just how advanced this technology has become, since the popular
|
||
press stopped reporting on brain implantation in the 1970s. The research
|
||
has no doubt continued, albeit in a less public fashion. In fact, scientists
|
||
such as Delgado have cast their eye far beyond the implants; ESB effects can
|
||
now be elicited with microwaves and other forms of electromagnetic radiation,
|
||
used with and without electrodes.
|
||
So why -- if we take UFO abduction accounts at face value -- are the
|
||
"advanced aliens" using an old technology, an EARTH technology, a technology
|
||
which may soon be rendered obsolescent, if it hasn't been so rendered already?
|
||
I am reminded of the charming anachronisms in the old Flash Gordon serials,
|
||
where swords and spaceships clashed continually.
|
||
Do they also watch black-and-white television on Zeta Reticuli?
|
||
|
||
|
||
REMOTE HYPNOSIS
|
||
|
||
Hypnosis provides the (highly controversial) key which opens the door to
|
||
many abduction accounts[51]. And obviously, if my thesis is correct, hypnosis
|
||
plays a large part in the abduction itself. One thing we know with certainty:
|
||
Since the earliest days of project BLUEBIRD, the CIA's spy-chiatrists spent
|
||
enormous sums mastering Mesmer's art.
|
||
I cannot here give even a brief summary of hypnosis, nor even of the CIA's
|
||
studies in this area. (Fortunately, FOIA requests were rather more successful
|
||
in shaking loose information on this topic than in the area of psycho-
|
||
electronics.) Here, we will concentrate on a particularly intriguing
|
||
allegation -- one heard faintly, but persistently, for the past twenty years
|
||
by those who would investigate the shadow side of politics.
|
||
If this allegation proves true, hypnosis is NOT necessarily a person-to-
|
||
person affair.
|
||
The abductee -- or the mind control victim -- need not have physical
|
||
contact with a hypnotist for hypnotic suggestion to take effect; trance could
|
||
be induced, and suggestions made, via the intracerebral transmitters described
|
||
above. The concept sounds like something out of Huxley's or Orwell's most
|
||
masochistic fantasies. Yet remote hypnosis was first reported -- using
|
||
allegedly parapsychological means -- in the early 1930s, by L.L. Vasilev,
|
||
Professor of Physiology in the University of Leningrad[52]. Later, other
|
||
scientists attempted to accomplish the same goal, using less mystic means.
|
||
Over the years, certain journalists have asserted that the CIA has mastered
|
||
a technology call RHIC-EDOM. RHIC means "Radio Hypnotic Intracerebral
|
||
Control." EDOM stands for "Electronic Dissolution of Memory." Together, these
|
||
techniques can -- allegedly -- remotely induce hypnotic trance, deliver
|
||
suggestions to the subject, and erase all memory for both the instruction
|
||
period and the act which the subject is asked to perform.
|
||
RHIC uses the stimoceiver, or a microminiaturized offspring of that tech-
|
||
nology to induce a hypnotic state. Interestingly, this technique is also
|
||
reputed to involve the use of INTRAMUSCULAR implants, a detail strikingly
|
||
reminiscent of the "scars" mentioned in Budd Hopkins MISSING TIME. Apparently,
|
||
these implants are stimulated to induce a post-hypnotic suggestion.
|
||
EDOM is nothing more than missing time itself -- the erasure of memory from
|
||
consciousness through the blockage of synaptic transmission in certain areas of
|
||
the brain. By jamming the brain's synapses through a surfeit of acetocholine,
|
||
neural transmission along selected pathways can be effectively stilled.
|
||
According to the proponents of RHIC-EDOM, acetocholine production can be
|
||
affected by electromagnetic means. (Modern research in the psycho-physio-
|
||
logical effects of microwaves confirm this proposition.)
|
||
Does RHIC-EDOM exist? In our discussion of Delgado's work, I have already
|
||
cited a strange little book (published in 1969) titled WERE WE CONTROLLED?,
|
||
written by one Lincoln Lawrence, a former FBI agent turned journalist. (The
|
||
name is a pseudonym; I know his real identity.) This work deals at length with
|
||
RHIC-EDOM; a careful comparison of Lawrence's work with MKULTRA files declas-
|
||
sified ten years later indicates a strong possibility that the writer did
|
||
indeed have "inside" sources.
|
||
Here is how Lawrence describes RHIC in action:
|
||
|
||
It is the ultra-sophisticated application of post-hypnotic
|
||
suggestion TRIGGERED AT WILL [italics in original] by radio
|
||
transmission. It is a recurring hypnotic state, re-induced
|
||
automatically at intervals by the same radio control. An
|
||
individual is brought under hypnosis. This can be done either
|
||
with his knowledge -- or WITHOUT it by use of narco-hypnosis,
|
||
which can be brought into play under many guises. He is then
|
||
programmed to perform certain actions and maintain certain
|
||
attitudes upon radio signal[53].
|
||
|
||
Other authors have mentioned this technique -- specifically Walter Bowart
|
||
(in his book OPERATION MIND CONTROL) and journalist James Moore, who, in a
|
||
1975 issue of a periodical called MODERN PEOPLE, claimed to have secured a
|
||
350-page manual, prepared in 1963, on RHIC-EDOM[54]. He received the manual
|
||
from CIA sources, although -- interestingly -- the technique is said to have
|
||
originated in the military.
|
||
|
||
The following quote by Moore on RHIC should prove especially intriguing
|
||
to abduction researchers who have confronted odd "personality shifts" in
|
||
abductees:
|
||
|
||
Medically, these radio signals are directed to certain
|
||
parts of the brain. When a part of your brain receives a
|
||
tiny electrical impulse from outside sources, such as vision,
|
||
hearing, etc.,an emotion is produced -- anger at the sight of
|
||
a gang of boys beating an old woman, for example. The same
|
||
emotion of anger can be created by artificial radio signals
|
||
sent to your brain by a controller. You could instantly feel
|
||
the same white-hot anger without any apparent reason[55].
|
||
|
||
Lawrence's sources imparted an even more tantalizing -- and frightening --
|
||
revelation:
|
||
|
||
...there is already in use a small EDOM generator-transmitter
|
||
which can be concealed on the body of a person. Contact with
|
||
this person -- a casual handshake or even just a touch --
|
||
transmits a tiny electronic charge plus an ultra-sonic signal
|
||
tone which for a short while will disturb the time orientation
|
||
of the person affected[56].
|
||
|
||
If RHIC-EDOM exists, it goes a long way toward providing an earthbound
|
||
rationale for alien abductions -- or, at least, certain aspects of them. The
|
||
phenomenon of "missing time" is no longer mysterious. Abductee implants,
|
||
both intracerebral and otherwise, are explained. And note the reference to
|
||
"recurring hypnotic state, reinduced automatically by the same radio command."
|
||
This situation may account for "repeater" abductees who, after their initial
|
||
encounter, have regular sessions of "missing time" and abduction -- even while
|
||
a bed-mate sleeps undisturbed.
|
||
At present, I cannot claim conclusively that RHIC-EDOM is real. To my
|
||
knowledge, the only official questioning of a CIA representive concerning
|
||
these techniques occurred in 1977, during Senate hearings on CIA drug testing.
|
||
Senator Richard Schweicker had the following interchange with Dr. Sidney
|
||
Gottlieb, an important MKULTRA administrator:
|
||
|
||
SCHWEICKER: Some of the projects under MKULTRA involved
|
||
hypnosis, is that correct?
|
||
GOTTLIEB: Yes.
|
||
SCHWEICKER: Did any of these projects involve something
|
||
called radio hypnotic intracerebral control, which is a
|
||
combination, as I understand it, in layman's terms, of radio
|
||
transmissions and hypnosis.
|
||
GOTTLIEB: My answer is "No."
|
||
SCHWEICKER: None whatsoever?
|
||
GOTTLIEB: Well, I am trying to be responsive to the
|
||
terms you used. As I remember it, there was a current
|
||
interest, running interest, all the time in what effects
|
||
people's standing in the field of radio energy have, and
|
||
it could easily have been that somewhere in many projects,
|
||
someone was trying to see if you could hypnotize someone
|
||
easier if he was standing in a radio beam. That would
|
||
seem like a reasonable piece of research to do.
|
||
|
||
Schweicker went on to mention that he had heard testimony that radar (i.e.,
|
||
microwaves) had been used to wipe out memory in animals; Gottlieb responded,
|
||
"I can believe that, Senator."[57]
|
||
Gottlieb's blandishments do not comfort much. For one thing, the good
|
||
doctor did not always provide thoroughly candid testimony. (During the same
|
||
hearing he averred that 99 percent on the CIA's research had been openly
|
||
published; if so, why are so many MKULTRA subprojects still "dark," and why
|
||
does the Agency still go to great lengths to protect the identities of its
|
||
scientists?[58]) We should also recognize that the CIA's operations are
|
||
compartmentalized on a "need-to-know" basis; Gottlieb may not have had access
|
||
to the information requested by Schweicker. Note that the MKULTRA rubric
|
||
circumscribed Gottlieb's statement: RHIC-EDOM might have been the focus of
|
||
another program. (There were several others: MKNAOMI, MKACTION, MKSEARCH,
|
||
etc.) Also keep in mind the revelation by "Deep Trance" that the CIA
|
||
concentrated on psychoelectronics AFTER the termination of MKULTRA in 1963.
|
||
Most significantly: RHIC-EDOM is described by both Lawrence and Moore as a
|
||
product of MILITARY research; Gottlieb spoke only of matters pertaining to CIA.
|
||
He may thus have spoken truthfully -- at least in a strictly technical sense --
|
||
while still misleading the Congressional interlocutors.
|
||
Personally, I believe that the RHIC-EDOM story deserves a great deal of
|
||
further research. I find it significant that when Dr. Petter Lindstrom
|
||
examined X-rays of Robert Naesland, a Swedish victim of brain-implantation, the
|
||
doctor authoritatively cited WERE WE CONTROLLED? in his letter of response[59].
|
||
This is the same Dr. Lindstrom noted for his pioneering use of ultrasonics in
|
||
neurosurgery[60]. Lincoln Lawrence's book has received a strong endorsement
|
||
indeed.
|
||
Bowart's OPERATION MIND CONTROL contains a significant interview with an
|
||
intelligence agent knowledgeable in these areas. Granted, the reader has every
|
||
right to adopt a skeptical attitude toward information culled from anonymous
|
||
sources; still, one should note that this operative's statements confirm, in
|
||
pertinent part, Lawrence's thesis[61].
|
||
Most importantly: The open literature on brain-wave entrainment and the
|
||
behavioral effects of electromagnetic radiation substantiates much of the RHIC-
|
||
EDOM story -- as we shall see.
|
||
|
||
|
||
THAT'S ENTRAINMENT
|
||
|
||
Robert Anton Wilson, an author with a devoted cult following, recently has
|
||
taken to promoting a new generation of "mind machines" designed to promote
|
||
creativity, stimulate learning, and alter consciousness -- i.e., provide a
|
||
drug-less high. Interestingly, these machines can also induce "Out-of-Body-
|
||
Experiences," in which the percipient mentally "travels" to another location
|
||
while his body remains at rest[62]. This rapidly-developing technology has
|
||
spawned a technological equivalent to the drug culture; indeed, the aficionados
|
||
of the electronic buzz even have their own magazine, REALITY HACKERS. [Now
|
||
defunct. -jpg] I strongly suspect that we will hear much of these machines in
|
||
the future.
|
||
One such device is called the "hemi-synch." This headphone-like invention
|
||
produces slightly different frequences in each ear; the brain calculates the
|
||
difference between these frequencies, resulting in a rhythm known as the
|
||
"binaural beat." The brain "entrains" itself to this beat -- that is, the
|
||
subject's EEG slows down or speeds up to keep pace with its electronic
|
||
running partner[63].
|
||
The brain has a "beat" of its own.
|
||
This rhythm was first discovered in 1924 by the German psychiatrist Hans
|
||
Berger, who recorded cerebral voltages as part of a telepathy study[64]. He
|
||
noted two distinct frequencies: alpha (8-13 cycles per second), associated
|
||
with a relaxed, alert state, and beta (14-30 cycles per second), produced
|
||
during states of agitation and intense mental concentration. Later, other
|
||
rhythms were noted, which are particularly important for our present purposes:
|
||
theta (4-7 cycles per second), a hypnogogic state, and delta (.5 to 3.5 cycles
|
||
per second), generally found in sleeping subjects[65].
|
||
The hemi-synch -- and related mind-machines -- can produce alpha or theta
|
||
waves, on demand, according to the operator's wishes. A suitably-entrained
|
||
brain is much more responsive to suggestion, and is even likely to experience
|
||
vivid hallucinations.
|
||
I have spoken to several UFO abductees who describe a "stereophonic sound"
|
||
effect -- EXACTLY SIMILAR TO THAT PRODUCED BY THE HEMI-SYNCH -- preceding many
|
||
"encounters." Of course, one usually administers the hemi-synch via head-
|
||
phones, but I see no reason why the effect cannot be transmitted via the above-
|
||
described stimoceiver. Again, I remind the reader of the abductee with an
|
||
implant just inside her ear canal.
|
||
There's more than one way to entrain a brain. Michael Hutchison's excellent
|
||
book MEGA BRAIN details the author's personal experiences with many such
|
||
devices -- the Alpha-stim, TENS, the Synchro-energizer, Tranquilite, etc. He
|
||
recounts dazzling, Dali-esque hallucinations, as a result of using this mind-
|
||
expanding technology; moreover, he offers a seductive argument that these
|
||
devices may represent a true breakthrough in consciousness-control, thereby
|
||
fulfilling the dashed dream of the hallucinogenic '60s.
|
||
I wish to avoid a knee-jerk Luddite response to these fascinating wonder-
|
||
boxes. At the same time, I recognize the dangers involved. What about the
|
||
possibility of an outside operator literally "changing our minds" by altering
|
||
our brainwaves without our knowledge or permission? If these machines can
|
||
induce a hypnotic state, what's to stop a skilled hypnotist from making use
|
||
of this state?
|
||
Granted, most of these devices require some physical interaction with the
|
||
subject. But a tool called the Bio-Pacer can, according to its manufacturer,
|
||
produce a number of mood altering frequencies -- WITHOUT attachment to the
|
||
subject. Indeed, the Bio-Pacer III (a high-powered version) can affect an
|
||
entire room. This device costs $275, according to the most recent price
|
||
sheet available[66]. What sort of machine might $27,500 buy? Or $275,000?
|
||
What effects, what ranges might a million-dollar machine be capable of? The military certainly has that sort of money.
|
||
And they're certainly interested in this sort of technology, according to
|
||
Michael Hutchison. His interview with an informant named Joseph Light elicited
|
||
some particularly provocative revelations. According to Light:
|
||
|
||
There are important elements in the scientific community,
|
||
powerful people, who are very much interested in these areas...
|
||
but they have to keep most of their work secret. Because as
|
||
soon as they start to publish some of these sensitive things,
|
||
they have problems in their lives. You see, they work on
|
||
research grants, and if you follow the research being done,
|
||
you find that as soon as these scientists publish something
|
||
about this, their research funds are cut off. There are areas
|
||
in bioelectric research where very simple techniques and
|
||
devices can have mind-boggling effects. Conceivably, if you
|
||
have a crazed person with a bit of a technical background, he
|
||
can do a lot of damage[67].
|
||
|
||
This last statement is particularly evocative. In 1984, a violent neo-NAZI
|
||
group called The Order (responsible for the murder of talk-show host Alan Berg)
|
||
established contact with two government scientists engaged in clandestine
|
||
research to project chemical imbalances and render targeted individuals docile
|
||
via certain frequencies of electronic waves. For $100,000 the scientists were
|
||
willing to deliver this information[68].
|
||
Thus, at least one group of crazed individuals almost got the goods.
|
||
|
||
|
||
WAVE YOUR BRAIN GOODBYE
|
||
|
||
Every Senator and Congressional representative has a "wavie" file. So do
|
||
many state representatives. Wavies have even pled their case to private
|
||
institutions such as the Christic Institute[69].
|
||
And who are the wavies?
|
||
They claim to be victims of clandestine bombardment with non-ionizing
|
||
radiation -- or microwaves. They report sudden changes in psychological
|
||
states, alteration of sleep patterns, intracerebral voices and other sounds,
|
||
and physiological effects. Most people never realize how many wavies there are
|
||
in this country. I've spoken to a number of wavies myself.
|
||
Are these troubled individuals seeking an exterior rationale for their
|
||
mental problems? Maybe. Indeed, I'm sure that such is the case in many
|
||
instances. But the fact is that the literature on the behavioral effects of
|
||
microwaves, extra-low-frequencies (ELF) and ultra-sonics is such that we
|
||
cannot blithely dismiss ALL such claims.
|
||
For decades, American science and industry tried to convince the population
|
||
that microwaves could have no adverse effects on human beings at sub-thermal
|
||
levels -- in other words, the attitude was, "If it can't burn you, it can't
|
||
hurt you." This approach became increasingly difficult to defend as reports
|
||
mounted of microwave-induced physiological effects. Technicians described
|
||
"hearing" certain radar installations; users of radar telescopes began
|
||
developing cataracts at an appallingly high rate[70]. The Soviets had long
|
||
recognized the strange and sometimes subtle effects of these radio frequencies,
|
||
which is why their exposure standards have always been much stricter.
|
||
Soviet microwave bombardment of the U.S. Embassy in Moscow prompted the
|
||
Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency's Project PANDORA (later renamed),
|
||
whose ostensible goal was to determine whether these pulsations (reportedly
|
||
10 cycles per second, which puts them in the alpha range) could be used for the
|
||
purposes of mind control. I suspect that the "war on Tchaikowsky Street," as
|
||
I call it[71], was used, at least in part, as a cover story for DARPA mind
|
||
control research, and that the stories floated in the news (via, for example,
|
||
Jack Anderson's column) about Soviet remote brainwashing served the same
|
||
propaganda purposes as did the bleatings of Edward Hunter during the 1950s.[72]
|
||
What can low-level microwaves do to the mind?
|
||
According to a DIA report released under the Freedom of Information Act[73],
|
||
microwaves can induce metabolic changes, alter brain functions, and disrupt
|
||
behavior patterns. PANDORA discovered that pulsed microwaves can create leaks
|
||
in the blood/brain barrier, induce heart seizures, and create behavioral
|
||
disorganization[74]. In 1970, a RAND Corporation scientist reported that
|
||
microwaves could be used to promote insomnia, fatigue, irritability, memory
|
||
loss, and hallucinations[75].
|
||
Perhaps the most significant work in this area has been produced by Dr. W.
|
||
Ross Adey at the University of Southern California. He determined that
|
||
behavior and emotional states can be altered without electrodes -- simply by
|
||
placing the subject in an electromagnetic field. By directing a carrier
|
||
frequency to stimulate the brain and using amplitude modulation to "shape" the
|
||
wave into a mimicry of a desired EEG frequency, he was able to impose a 4.5
|
||
cps theta rhythm on his subjects -- a frequency which he previously measured
|
||
in the hippocampus during avoidance learning. Thus, he could externally
|
||
condition the mind towards an aversive reaction[76]. (Adey has also done
|
||
extensive work on the use of electrodes in animals[77].) According to another
|
||
prominent microwave scientist, Allen Frey, other frequencies could -- in
|
||
animal studies -- induce docility[78]. [cf USP #3,884,218 by Robert ("Bob")
|
||
Monroe, METHOD OF INDUCING AND MAINTAINING VARIOUS STAGES OF SLEEP IN THE
|
||
HUMAN BEING, granted 20 May 1975; ABSTRACT: A method of inducing sleep in the
|
||
human being wherein an audio signal is generated comprising a familiar pleasing
|
||
repetitive sound modulated by an EEG sleep pattern. -jpg]
|
||
The controversial researcher Andrijah Puharich asserts that "a weak (1 mW)
|
||
4 Hz magnetic sine wave will modify human brain waves in 6 to 10 seconds. The
|
||
psychological effects of a 4 Hz sine magnetic wave are negative -- causing
|
||
dizzyness, nausea, headache, and can lead to vomiting." Conversely, an 8 Hz
|
||
magnetic sine wave has beneficial effects[79]. Though some writers question
|
||
Puharich's integrity (perhaps correctly, considering his involvement in the
|
||
confused tale of Uri Geller), his claims here seem in line with the findings of
|
||
less-flamboyant experimenters.
|
||
As investigative journalist Anne Keeler writes:
|
||
|
||
Specific frequencies at low intensities can predictably
|
||
influence sensory processes...pleasantness-unpleasantness,
|
||
strain-relaxation, and excitement-quiescence can be created
|
||
with the fields. Negative feelings and avoidance are strong
|
||
biological phenomena and relate to survival. Feelings are
|
||
the true basis of much "decision-making" and often occur as
|
||
subthreshold [i.e. subliminal -jpg] impressions...Ideas
|
||
INCLUDING NAMES [my italics] [Cannon's italics -jpg] can be
|
||
synchronized with the feelings that the fields induce[80].
|
||
|
||
Adey and compatriots have compiled an entire library of frequencies and
|
||
pulsation rates which can affect the mind and nervous system. Some of these
|
||
effects can be extremely bizarre. For example, engineer Tom Jarski, in an
|
||
attempt to replicate the seminal work of F. Cazzamali, found that a particular
|
||
frequency caused a ringing sensation in the ears of his subjects -- who felt
|
||
strangely compelled to BITE the experimenters![81]. On the other hand, the
|
||
diet-conscious may be intrigued by the finding that rats exposed to ELF waves
|
||
failed to gain weight normally[82].
|
||
For our present purposes, the most significant electromagnetic research
|
||
findings concern microwave signals modulated by hypnoidal EEG frequencies.
|
||
Microwaves can act much like the "hemi-synch" device previously described --
|
||
that is, they can entrain the brain to theta rhythms[83]. I need not emphasize
|
||
the implications of remotely synchronizing the brain to resonate at a frequency
|
||
conducive to sleep, or to hypnosis.
|
||
Trance may be remotely induced -- but can it be directed? Yes. Recall the
|
||
intracerebral voices mentioned earlier in our discussion of Delgado. The same
|
||
effect can be produced by "the wave." Frey demonstrated in the early 1960s
|
||
that microwaves could produce booming, hissing, buzzing, and other intra-
|
||
cerebral static (this phenomenon is now called "the Frey effect"); in 1973,
|
||
Dr. Joseph Sharp, of the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research, expanded on
|
||
Frey's work in an experiment where the subject -- in this case, Sharp himself--
|
||
"heard" and understood spoken words delivered via a pulsed-microwave analog of
|
||
the speaker's sound vibrations[84].
|
||
Dr. Robert Becker comments that "Such a device has obvious applications in
|
||
covert operations designed to drive a target crazy with 'voices' or deliver
|
||
undetectable instructions to a programmed assassin."[85] In other words, we
|
||
now have, AT THE PUSH OF A BUTTON, the technology either to inflict an
|
||
electronic GASLIGHT -- or to create a true MANCHURIAN CANDIDATE. Indeed, the
|
||
former capability could effectively disguise the latter. Who will listen to
|
||
the victims, when electronically-induced hallucinations they recount exactly
|
||
parallel the classical signals of paranoid schizophrenia and/or temporal lobe
|
||
epilepsy?
|
||
Perhaps the most ominous revelations, however, concern the mysterious work
|
||
of J.F. "BoB" Schapitz, who in 1974 filed a plan to explore the interaction of
|
||
radio frequencies and hypnosis. He proposed the following:
|
||
|
||
In this investigation it will be shown that the spoken
|
||
word of the hypnotist may be conveyed by modulated electro-
|
||
magnetic energy DIRECTLY INTO THE SUBCONSCIOUS PARTS OF THE
|
||
HUMAN BRAIN [my italics] -- i.e., without employing any
|
||
technical devices for receiving or transcoding the messages
|
||
and without the person exposed to such influence having a
|
||
chance to control the information input consciously.
|
||
|
||
|
||
He outlined an experiment, innocent in its immediate effects yet chilling
|
||
in its implications, whereby subjects would be implanted with the subconscious
|
||
suggestion to leave the lab and buy a particular item; this action would be
|
||
triggered by a certain cue word or action. Schapitz felt certain that the
|
||
subjects would rationalize the behavior -- in other words, the subject would
|
||
seize upon any excuse, however thin, to chalk up his actions to the working of
|
||
free will[86]. His instincts on this latter point coalesce perfectly with
|
||
findings of professional hypnotists[87].
|
||
Schapitz's work was funded by the Department of Defense. Despite FOIA
|
||
requests, the results have never been publicly revealed[88].
|
||
|
||
|
||
FINAL THOUGHTS ON "THE WAVE"
|
||
|
||
I must again offer a caveat about possible disparities between the
|
||
"official" record of electromagnetism's psychological effects and the hidden
|
||
history. Once more, we face a question of timing. How long ago did this
|
||
research REALLY begin?
|
||
In the eary years of this century, Nikola Tesla seems to have stumbled
|
||
upon certain of the behavioral effects of electromagnetic exposure[89].
|
||
Cazamalli, mentioned earlier, conducted his studies in the 1930s. In 1934,
|
||
E.L. Chaffe and R.U. Light published a paper on "A Method for the Remote
|
||
Control of Electrical Stimulation of the Nervous System."[90] From the very
|
||
beginning of their work with microwaves, the Soviets explored the more subtle
|
||
physiological effects of electromagnetism -- and despite the bleatings of
|
||
certain right-wing alarmists[91] that an "electromagnetic gap" separates us
|
||
from Soviet advances, East European literature in this area has been closely
|
||
monitored for decades by the West. ARTICHOKE/BLUEBIRD project outlines,
|
||
dating from the early 1950s, prominently mention the need to explore all
|
||
possible uses of the electromagnetic spectrum.
|
||
Another point worth mentioning concerns the combination of EMR and miniature
|
||
brain electrodes. The father of the stimoceiver, Dr. J.M.R. "Bob" Delgado, has
|
||
recently conducted experiments in which monkeys are exposed to electromagnetic
|
||
fields, thereby eliciting a wide range of behavioral effects -- one monkey
|
||
might fly into a volcanic rage while, just a few feet away, his simian partner
|
||
begins to nod off. Fascinatingly, when monkeys with brain implants felt "the
|
||
wave," the effects were greatly intensified. Apparently, these tiny electrodes
|
||
can act as AMPLIFIERS of the electromagnetic effect[92].
|
||
This last point is important to our "alien abduction" thesis. Critics
|
||
might counter that any burst of microwave energy powerful enough to have truly
|
||
remote effects would probably also create a thermal reaction. That is, if a
|
||
clandestine operator propagated a "wave" from outside an abductee's bedroom
|
||
(say, from a low-flying helicopter, or from a truck travelling alongside the
|
||
subject's car), the power necessary to do the job might be such that the
|
||
microwave would cook the target before it got a chance to launder his thoughts.
|
||
Our abductee would end up like the victim of the microwave "hit" in the finale
|
||
of Jerzy Kozinsky's COCKPIT.
|
||
It's a fair criticism. But Delgado's work may give us our solution. Once
|
||
an abductee has been implanted -- and if we are to trust hypnotic regression
|
||
accounts of abductees at all, the first implanting session may occur in
|
||
childhood -- the chip-in-the-brain would act an an intensifier of the signal.
|
||
Such an individual could have any number of "UFO" experiences while his or her
|
||
bed partner dozes comfortably.
|
||
Furthermore, recent reports indicate that a "waver" can achieve pinpoint
|
||
accuracy without the use of Delgado-style implants. In 1985, volunteers at the
|
||
Midwest Research Institute in Kansas City, Missouri, were exposed to microwave
|
||
beams as part of an experiment sponsored by the Department of Energy and the
|
||
New York State Department of Health. As THE ARIZONA REPUBLIC[93] described the
|
||
experiment, "A matched control group sat IN THE SAME ROOM without being
|
||
bombarded by non-ionizing radiation." [My italics.] Apparently, one can focus
|
||
"the wave" quite narrowly -- a fact which has wide implications for abductees.
|
||
|
||
III. Applications
|
||
|
||
So we now have some idea of the tools available to the "spy-chiatrists."
|
||
How have these tools been used?
|
||
This question necessarily involves some detective work. The Central
|
||
Intelligence Agency, under duress, provided some, though not enough, documen-
|
||
tation of its efforts to commandeer "the space between our ears." We know that
|
||
these efforts were extensive, long-term, and at least partially successful. We
|
||
know also that these experiments used human subjects. But who? When?
|
||
One paradox of this line of inquiry is that, for many readers, the victims
|
||
elicit sympathy only insofar as they remain anonymous. Intellectually, we
|
||
realize that MKULTRA and its allied projects must have affected hundreds,
|
||
probably thousands, of individuals. Yet we react with deep suspicion
|
||
whenever one of these individuals steps forward and identifies himself, or
|
||
whenever an independent investigator argues that mind control has directed some
|
||
newsworthy person's otherwise inexplicable actions. Where, the skeptic may
|
||
rightfully ask, is the documentation supporting such accusations? Most of the
|
||
MKULTRA "paper trail" was (allegedly) burnt at Richard Helms' order; what's
|
||
left has been censored, leaving black ink smudges wherever the names originally
|
||
appeared. Claimed mind control victims can, for the most part, only give us
|
||
testimony -- and how reliable can such testimony be, especially in light of the
|
||
fact that one purpose of MKULTRA was to induce insanity? Anyone asserting that
|
||
he was victimized by the program might well be seeking an extrinsic excuse for
|
||
his own psychopathology. If you say that you are a manufactured madman, you
|
||
were probably mad to begin with: Catch 22.
|
||
When John Marks wrote THE SEARCH FOR "THE MANCHURIAN CANDIDATE" he received
|
||
numerous letters from people insisting that they had been drugged, "waved," or
|
||
otherwise abused by the CIA or the military. Most of these communications went
|
||
directly into his crank file. Perhaps many deserved that destination; I know
|
||
of at least one that did not[94].
|
||
Marks did, however, devote much attention to Val Orlikov, a former "patient"
|
||
of perhaps the most notorious figure in the annals of American medical crime:
|
||
Dr. Ewen ("BoB") Cameron, a CIA-funded scientist heading the Allan Memorial
|
||
Institute at McGill University, Montreal, Canada. Cameron, a highly-respected
|
||
mental health researcher[95], experimented with a technique he called "psychic
|
||
driving," a brainwashing program which involved inflicting upon a subject an
|
||
endless tape loop blaring selected messages, 16-to-24 hours a day, combined
|
||
with massive electroshock and LSD. The project's "guinea pigs" were patients
|
||
who had come to Allan Memorial with relatively minor psychological complaints.
|
||
Cameron's experiments failed and his theories were discredited, which may
|
||
explain why the CIA and its apologists now feel relatively comfortable
|
||
discussing the Frankensteinian efforts at Allan Memorial, as opposed to more
|
||
successful work elsewhere.
|
||
Orlikov's testimony has received much respectful attention from those
|
||
writers who have examined MKULTRA, and correctly so. When I studied the files
|
||
at the National Security Archives, I was particularly keen to read her original
|
||
letters to John Marks, for these pages had led to the unmasking of an
|
||
especially heinous CIA project. The letters, interestingly enough, proved just
|
||
as vague, disjointed, and bizarre as similar correspondence which researchers
|
||
routinely dismiss. Orlikov can't be blamed for the hazy nature of her
|
||
recollections; a certain amount of fog is to be expected, given the nature of
|
||
the crime perpetrated against her. The important point is that her story,
|
||
ultimately, was found to be true. All of which leads me to wonder: Why did
|
||
HER claims prompt investigation when those of others prompt only dismissal?
|
||
Perhaps the answer lies in the fact that Orlikov's husband became a Canadian
|
||
Member of Parliament. Any victims of CIA experimentation who wish to be taken
|
||
seriously ought, perhaps, first make sure to marry well.
|
||
Of course, we can easily forgive previous writers and readers whose
|
||
researches into MKULTRA have been biased in favor of complacency[96]. But we
|
||
can't let this natural prejudice cripple our present investigation. Let us
|
||
examine, then, a few of the "horror stories" from the mind control literature
|
||
and highlight possible correlations to abductee testimony.
|
||
|
||
|
||
PALLE HARDRUP'S "GUARDIAN ANGEL"
|
||
|
||
As mentioned previously, I have not delved much into the subject of hypnosis
|
||
in this paper -- primarily because of space and time limitations, but also
|
||
because discussions of the possibilities of hypnosis PER SE tend to cloud the
|
||
issue of its use in conjunction with the above-mentioned electronic techniques.
|
||
Obviously, however, hypnosis is a major weapon in the mind controller's
|
||
armament; in a forthcoming full-length work, I intend to deal with this subject
|
||
at much greater length.
|
||
Needless to say, one of the primary objectives of MKULTRA and related
|
||
projects was to determine whether one could hypnotically induce someone to
|
||
commit an anti-social act. This possibility remains one of the most hotly-
|
||
debated issues in hypnosis, for conventional wisdom asserts that no individual
|
||
can be hypnotized to commit an action which violates his interior moral code.
|
||
Martin Orne, editor of the presitigious INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLINICAL AND
|
||
EXPERIMENTAL HYPNOSIS agrees with this axiom[97], and he is in a position to
|
||
codify much of the established view on this topic. Orne, however, is a
|
||
veteran of MKULTRA, and furthermore seems to have lied -- at least in his
|
||
original communications -- to author John Marks about his witting involvement
|
||
in subproject 94[98]. While I respect much of Orne's ground-breaking work,
|
||
his pronouncements do not hold, for this layman, an Olympian unassailability.
|
||
To be sure, many other hypnosis experts, untainted by Company connections,
|
||
also discount the possibility that anti-social actions can be induced. But a
|
||
number of highly-experienced professionals -- including Milton Kline, William
|
||
Kroger, George Estabrooks, John Watkins, and Herbert Spiegel -- have argued
|
||
that such actions can, at least to some degree, be elicited by an outside
|
||
manipulator.
|
||
|
||
Occasionally, claims of hypnotically-induced anti-social behavior find
|
||
their way into the courtroom; one such case, which led to the incarceration of
|
||
the hypnotist, was the Palle Hardrup affair. This incident occurred in
|
||
Denmark in 1951[99]. Palle Hardrup robbed a bank, killing a guard in the
|
||
process, and later claimed that he had been instructed to do so by the
|
||
hypnotist Bjorn Nielsen. Nielsen eventually confessed to having engineered
|
||
the crime as a test of his hypnotic abilities.
|
||
The most significant aspect of this incident concerns the "pose" Nielsen
|
||
adopted to work his malicious designs. During the hypnosis sessions, Nielsen
|
||
hypnotically suggested that he was Hardrup's "guardian angel," represented
|
||
by the letter X. Hardrup testified that "There is another room next door
|
||
where Nielsen and I go and talk on our own. It is there that my guardian
|
||
spirit usually comes and talks to me. Nielsen says that X has a task for me."
|
||
One of these tasks was arranging for Hardrup's girlfriend to have sex with
|
||
the hypnotist. The other tasks, he mentioned, included robbery and murder.
|
||
Nielsen convinced his victim that "X" wanted the robbery funds to be used for
|
||
worthwhile political goals. The end, Hardrup was told, justified the means.
|
||
Compare this scenario to that encountered in the typical contactee case,
|
||
in which alien "guardians" convince their victims/subjects that the encounter
|
||
will eventually serve some unspecified "higher purpose." Indeed, in my
|
||
interviews with abductees who have established a "long-term" relationship with
|
||
their visitors, I have found that some of them originally believed themselves
|
||
in contact with Hardrup-like angelic guardians. Only in recent years was the
|
||
"angel" pose discarded and the true "alien" form revealed.
|
||
Thus we have one possible means of overcoming the proposition that hypnosis
|
||
cannot induce anti-social behavior. If a hypnotist lacks scruples, and has
|
||
access to a particularly susceptible subject, he can induce a MISPERCEIVED
|
||
REALITY. Actions which we would abhor in an everyday context become acceptable
|
||
in specialized circumstances: A citizen who could never commit murder on a
|
||
surburban street might, if drafted into an army, kill on the field of battle.
|
||
In hypnosis, the mind becomes that battlefield. In the words of Dr. John
|
||
Watkins,
|
||
|
||
We behave on the basis of our perceptions. If our perceptions
|
||
of a situation can be altered so as to cause us to misconstrue it,
|
||
or to develop a false belief, then our behavior in relation to it
|
||
will be drastically altered. It is precisely in the area of
|
||
changing perceptions that the hypnotic modality demonstrates its
|
||
most powerful effects. Hallucinations both under hypnosis, and
|
||
posthypnotic, can easily be induced in the suggestible subject.
|
||
He can be made to ignore painful stimuli, be apparently unable
|
||
to hear loud sounds, AND "SEE" INDIVIDUALS WHO ARE NOT PRESENT
|
||
[my italics]. Moreover, attitudes and beliefs can be initiated
|
||
in him which are quite abnormal and often contrary to those
|
||
which he previously held[100].
|
||
|
||
If traditional hypnosis, unaided, can achieve such changes in perception,
|
||
one can only imagine the possibilities inherent in the combination of hypnotic
|
||
techniques with the psychoelectronic research previously described.
|
||
Scientists such as Orne and Milton Erickson[101] have taken issue with
|
||
Watkins' assertions. But the Hardrup case would appear to bear Watkins out.
|
||
If someone can be convinced that he, like Jeanne D'Arc, acts under the
|
||
influence of a supernatural higher power, then previously unthinkable
|
||
capabilitites may be evinced and "impossible" actions carried forth. Indeed,
|
||
when we consider the extreme personality changes -- and occasionally, the
|
||
heinous actions, elicited by leaders of certain cults, and occult groups[102],
|
||
we understand the desirability of installing a hypnotic "cover story" within a
|
||
supernatural matrix. People will do for God -- or the Devil, or the Space
|
||
Brothers -- what they would not do otherwise.
|
||
The date of the Hardrup affair corresponds to the institution of BLUEBIRD/
|
||
ARTICHOKE; it doesn't require much imagination to see how this case could have
|
||
served as a model to the scientists researching those and subsequent projects.
|
||
|
||
|
||
SCREEN MEMORY
|
||
|
||
According to declassified documents in the Marks files, a major difficulty
|
||
faced by the MKULTRA researchers concerned the "disposal problem." What to do
|
||
with the victims of CIA-sponsored electroshock, hypnosis, and drug experiment-
|
||
ation? The Company resorted to distressing, but characteristic, tactics: They
|
||
disposed of their human guinea pigs by incarcerating them in insane asylums, by
|
||
performing icepick lobotomies, and by ordering "executive actions."[103]
|
||
A more sophisticated solution had to be found. One of the goals of the
|
||
CIA's mind control efforts was the erasure of memory via hypnosis (and drugs,
|
||
electronics, lobotomies, etc.); not only would this hide what occurred during
|
||
the experimental indoctrination/programming sessions, it would prove useful in
|
||
the field. "Amnesia was a big goal," confirms Victor Marchetti, who points out
|
||
its usefulness in dealing with contract agents: "After you've done it, the
|
||
agent doesn't even know what he's done...you send him in, he does the job.
|
||
When he comes out, you clean his head out."[104]
|
||
The big problem: Despite hypnotically-induced amnesia, there would be memory
|
||
leaks -- snippets of the repressed material would arise spontaneously, in
|
||
dreams, as flashbacks, etc. A proposed solution: Give the subject a "screen
|
||
memory," a false story; thus, even if he starts to recall the material, he will
|
||
recall it incorrectly.
|
||
Even the conservative Dr. Orne notes that:
|
||
|
||
A S [subject] who is able to develop good posthypnotic amnesia
|
||
will also respond to suggestions to remember events which did not
|
||
actually occur. On awakening, he will fail to recall the real
|
||
events of the trance and will instead recall the suggested events.
|
||
If anything, this phenomenon is easier to produce than total
|
||
amnesia, perhaps because it eliminates the subjective feeling of
|
||
an empty space in memory.[105]
|
||
|
||
Not only would the screen memories fill in the uncomfortable blanks in the
|
||
subjects' recollection, they would protect against revelation. One fear of
|
||
the MKULTRA scientists was that a hypno-programmed individual used as, say, a
|
||
courier, could be un-programmed by another hypnotist, perhaps working for the
|
||
enemy. Thus, the MKULTRA scientists decided to instill multiple personalities
|
||
-- multiple cover stories, if you will -- to confuse any "unauthorized"
|
||
hypnotist.[106]
|
||
One case using this technique centered on an assassin named Luis Castillo,
|
||
who, after his capture in the Philippines, was extensively de-briefed and
|
||
studied by experts in the employ of the National Bureau of Investigation, that
|
||
country's equivalent to our FBI. Castillo was discovered to have had at least
|
||
FOUR separate personalities hypnotically instilled; each personality could be
|
||
triggered by a specific cue. In one state, he claimed to be Sgt. Manuel Angel
|
||
Ramirez, of the Strategic Air Tactical Command in South Vietnam; supposedly,
|
||
"Ramirez" was the illegitimate son of a certain pipe-smoking, highly-placed CIA
|
||
official whose initials were A.D.[107] Another personality claimed to be one
|
||
of John F. Kennedy's assassins.
|
||
The main hypnotist involved with this case labelled these hypnotic alter-
|
||
egos "Zombie states." The report on the case stated that "The Zombie pheno-
|
||
menon referred to here is a somnambulistic behavior displayed by the subject
|
||
in a conditioned response to a series of words, phrases, and statements,
|
||
apparently unknown to the subject during his normal waking state."
|
||
Upon Castillo's repatriation to the United States, the FBI claimed that he
|
||
had fabricated the story. In his book OPERATION MIND CONTROL, Walter Bowart
|
||
makes a convincing case against the FBI's claims. Certainly, many aspects of
|
||
the Castillo affair argue for his sincerity -- including his hypnotically-
|
||
induced insensitivity to pain[108], his maintenance of the story (or stories)
|
||
even when severly inebriated, and his apparently programmed suicide attempts.
|
||
If Castillo told the truth, as I believe he did, then he manifested both
|
||
hypnotically-induced multiple personality and pseudomemory. The former remains
|
||
controversial; the latter has been repeatedly replicated in experimental
|
||
situations[109].
|
||
This point is vitally important for students of the abduction phenomenon.
|
||
We CANNOT assume the accuracy of abduction descriptions given during subsequent
|
||
hypnotic regression. Moreover, we cannot even assume the accuracy of spon-
|
||
taneously-arising recollections (i.e., abduction memories not elicited through
|
||
hypnotic regression). Indeed, responsible skeptics have argued that hypnotic
|
||
regression may prove inadvertently harmful, in that it may lock in place a
|
||
false remembrance. (Note, however, that other psychiatric professionals
|
||
consider hypnotic regression the best technique, however flawed, in unlocking
|
||
amnesia[110]. For my part, I maintain an ambivalent and cautious attitude
|
||
toward the use of hypnosis in abductee work.)
|
||
Granted, it is all too easy for the debunkers to cry "confabulation" to
|
||
dismiss hypnotic testimony which does not conform to our preconceptions about
|
||
the possible; I do not intend to make this same error. Whenever skeptics
|
||
offer the phenomenon of pseudomemory to rationalize abduction claims, they cite
|
||
experimental situations in which PSEUDOMEMORY WAS ORIGINALLY CREATED BY A
|
||
HYPNOTIST[111]. These experiments can not be cited as proof that an individual
|
||
abductee spontaneously conjured up a fantasy (which just happens to correspond
|
||
to the details of hundreds of similar "fantasies"). Rather, laboratory studies
|
||
of pseudomemory creation prove MY point: Pseudomemory can be induced BY
|
||
PREVIOUS HYPNOSIS[112].
|
||
In other words, an abductee may talk of aliens -- when the reality was
|
||
something else entirely.
|
||
In correspondence with me, a noted abduction researcher wrote of an instance
|
||
in which an abductee recounted seeing a helicopter during his experience; as
|
||
the abductee testimony progressed, the helicopter turned into a UFO. During one
|
||
of the (quite few) regression sessions I attended, I heard an exactly similar
|
||
narrative. Hopkins would argue that the helicopter was a "screen memory"
|
||
hiding the awful reality of the UFO encounter. But does Occam's razor really
|
||
cut that way? Shouldn't we also consider the possibility that the object in
|
||
question really WAS a helicopter -- which the abductee was instructed to recall
|
||
as a UFO?
|
||
|
||
THE SUPER SPY
|
||
|
||
Among the released BLUEBIRD/ARTICHOKE/MKULTRA papers was the following
|
||
handwritten memorandum, unsigned and undated:
|
||
|
||
I have developed a technic which is safe and secure (free
|
||
from international censorship). It has to do with the
|
||
conditioning of our own people. I can accomplish this as a
|
||
one-man job.
|
||
The method is the production of hypnosis by means of
|
||
simple oral medication. Then (with NO further medication)
|
||
the hypnosis is re-enforced daily during the following three
|
||
or four days.
|
||
Each individual is conditioned against revealing any
|
||
information to an enemy, even though subjected to hypnosis
|
||
or drugging. If preferable, he may be conditioned to give
|
||
FALSE information rather than NO information.
|
||
|
||
In the margin of this document, one of Marks' assistants wrote, "Is this
|
||
Wendt?" The reference here is to G. Richard ("BoB") Wendt, a professor
|
||
employed by project CHATTER who, in 1951, led both his Naval employers and the
|
||
CIA on a mind control merry-goose-chase, when an experiment similar to that
|
||
described above failed to produce results[113]. Even if the above memorandum
|
||
DOES describe an operational failure (and the tactics described in this memo
|
||
do not seem very feasible to me), we should not rest complacent. We now know
|
||
that, in at least ONE case, more sophisticated techniques made the above
|
||
scenario a reality.
|
||
I refer to the case of Candy Jones.
|
||
Her story has filled at least one book[114] and ought, one day, to give rise
|
||
to another. Obviously, I cannot here give all the details of this fascinating
|
||
and frightening narrative. But a precis is mandatory.
|
||
Ms. Jones (born Jessica Wilcox) achieved star status as a model during
|
||
World War II, and later established her own modelling agency. An FBI man
|
||
requested her to allow her place of business to be used as a "mail drop" for
|
||
the Bureau and "another government agency" (presumably, the CIA); Candy, deeply
|
||
patriotic, accepted the proposition gladly. Toiling on the fringes of the
|
||
clandestine world, Candy eventually came into contact with a "Dr. Gilbert
|
||
Jensen," who worked, in turn, with a "Dr. Marshall Burger." (Both names are
|
||
pseudonyms.) Unknown to her, these doctors had been employed as "spy-
|
||
chiatrists" by the CIA. Using a job interview as a cover, Jensen induced
|
||
hypnosis, found Candy to be a particularly responsive subject -- and proceeded
|
||
to use her as other scientists would use a rhesus monkey. She became a test
|
||
subject for the CIA's mind control program.
|
||
Her job -- insofar as it is known -- was to provide a clandestine courier
|
||
service[115]. Estabrooks had outlined the basic idea years earlier: Induce
|
||
hypnosis via a disguised technique, give the messenger information to
|
||
memorize, hypnotically "erase" the message from conscious memory, and install
|
||
a post-hypnotic suggestion that the message (now buried within the sub-
|
||
conscious) will be brought forth only upon a specific cue. If the hypnotist
|
||
can create such a courier, ultra-security can be guaranteed; even torture won't
|
||
cause the messenger to tell what he knows -- because he doesn't know that he
|
||
knows it[116]. According to the highly respected Dr. Milton Kline, "Evidence
|
||
really does exist that has not been published" proving that Estabrooks' perfect
|
||
secret agent could be successfully evoked[117].
|
||
Candy was one such success story. Success, in this context, means that she
|
||
could be -- and was -- brutally tortured and abused while running assignments
|
||
for the CIA. All the MKULTRA toys were brought into play: hypnosis, drugs,
|
||
conditioning -- and electronics. Using these devices, Jensen and Burger
|
||
managed to:
|
||
|
||
-- install a "duplicate personality,"
|
||
|
||
-- create amnesia of both the programming sessions and the field assignments,
|
||
|
||
-- turn Candy into a vicious, hate-mongering bigot, the better to isolate her
|
||
from the rest of humanity (previously, her associates considered her
|
||
noteworthy for her racial tolerance; her modelling agency was one of the
|
||
first to break the color barrier), and
|
||
|
||
-- program her to commit suicide at the end of her usefulness to the Agency.
|
||
|
||
The programming techniques used on her were flawed. She breached security
|
||
when she married famed New York radio personality John Nebel[118], who, using
|
||
hypnotic regression, elicited the long-repressed truth. Eventually, the
|
||
"Other Candy" was bade farewell, and the programming broken.
|
||
Skeptics might find Candy's story as incredible as the abduction accounts--
|
||
after all, an amateur had conducted her hypnotic regression, and the possi-
|
||
bility of confabulation always lurks. Nevertheless, I feel that the veracity
|
||
of her narrative has been established beyond reasonable doubt. In her hypnotic
|
||
regression sessions, she recalled being programmed at a government-connected
|
||
institute in northern California -- which, as John Marks' investigators later
|
||
proved, was indeed heavily involved with government-funded brainwashing
|
||
research[119]. Marks himself believes Candy's story -- not least, because the
|
||
details of the programming methods used on her were substantiated by documents
|
||
released AFTER her book was published[120]. Interviews with Milton Kline,
|
||
Dr. Frances Jakes, John Watkins and others provided the testimony that the
|
||
programming of Candy Jones was feasible -- and Deep Trance substantiated the
|
||
story[121].
|
||
Recently, the case has received important "indirect" confirmation:
|
||
Investigators interested in follow-up research have filed FOIA requests with
|
||
the CIA for all papers relating to Candy Jones. The agency admits that it has
|
||
a substantial file on her, but refuses to release any part of it. If her tale
|
||
is false, then why would the CIA be so reluctant to deliver the information?
|
||
Indeed, why would they have a file in the first place?[122]
|
||
The final confirmation of Candy's tale requires a revelation -- one which I
|
||
make with some trepidation, even though the individual named is dead.
|
||
"Marshall Burger" was really Dr. William Kroger[123].
|
||
Kroger, long associated with the espionage establishment, had written the
|
||
following in 1963:
|
||
|
||
...a good subject can be hypnotized to deliver secret
|
||
information. The memory of this message could be covered
|
||
by an artificially-induced amnesia. In the event that he
|
||
should be captured, he naturally could not remember that he
|
||
had ever been given the message...however, since he had
|
||
been given a post-hypnotic suggestion, the message would be
|
||
subject to recall through a specific cue.[124]
|
||
|
||
If Candy confabulated her story, why did she name this particualr scientist,
|
||
who, writing theoretically in 1963, predicted the subsequent events in her
|
||
life?[125]
|
||
After L'AFFAIR JONES, Kroger transferred his base of operations to UCLA --
|
||
specifically, to the Neuropsychiatric Institute run by Dr. Louis Jolyon West,
|
||
an MKULTRA veteran. There he wrote HYPNOSIS AND BEHAVIOR MODIFICATION[126],
|
||
with a preface by Martin Orne (another MKULTRA veteran) and H.J. Eysenck (still
|
||
another MKULTRA veteran). The finale of this opus contains chilling hints
|
||
of the possibilites inherent in combining hypnosis with ESB, implants, and
|
||
conditioning -- though Kroger is careful to point out that "we are not
|
||
concerned that man might be conditioned by rewards and punishments through
|
||
electronic brain stimulation to be controlled like robots."[127] HE may not
|
||
be concerned -- but perhaps WE ought to be.
|
||
The control of Candy Jones gives us much information useful to our "alien
|
||
abduction" hypothesis.
|
||
1. Her torture sessions -- inflicted during her programming by her CIA
|
||
masters, and on missions by as-yet mysterious persons -- seem strikingly like
|
||
the otherwise senselessly painful "examinations" allegedly conducted aboard
|
||
alien spacecraft.
|
||
2. Her personality shifts roughly parallel those experienced by certain UFO
|
||
abductees.
|
||
3. Despite her brutalization, she remained "loyal" to Drs. Jensen and
|
||
Burger. This bewildering behavior reminds me of my first abductee interviews,
|
||
during which I heard ghastly descriptions of UFO torture sessions -- followed
|
||
by protestations of limitless love for the alien pain-mongers.
|
||
4. Like many abductees, Candy had to attend regular "conditioning" sessions.
|
||
Repeated exposure to the programming is necessary to effect continuous control.
|
||
5. To maintain their hammerlock on her mind, Candy's handlers programmed her
|
||
to remain isolated. Specifically, they instilled a deep paranoia toward other
|
||
human beings; "outsiders" were probable enemies, out to use or abuse her. I
|
||
have seen this pattern consistently in my own work with abductees[128]. Skep-
|
||
tics would argue that unreasonable abductee fears probably indicate paranoid
|
||
schizophrenia--one symptom of which can, indeed, be hallucinatory experiences.
|
||
But most abductees are easily hypnotized, while paranoid schizophrenics are
|
||
extremely difficult to "put under," according to Dr. Edward Simpson-Kallas, a
|
||
psychiatrist with wide experience in the area of forensic hypnosis[129]. If,
|
||
however, those unreasonable fears had been hypnotically induced, the contra-
|
||
diction is resolved.
|
||
6. Candy was the product of an unhappy childhood, hence her propensity
|
||
toward multiple personality[130]. Many of the "repeater" abductees I have
|
||
interviewed had similarly depressing family histories[131].
|
||
7. The story of Candy Jones also has what we might call a "negative
|
||
relevance" to the abduction accounts. Because the Controllers did not
|
||
establish a hypnotic cover story, or pseudomemory, the true facts of the case
|
||
managed to percolate into her conscious mind. No matter how thorough the post-
|
||
hypnotic amnesia, leaks will occur -- hence the need for a false memory, to
|
||
fill the gap of recollection. The CIA learns from its mistakes. Candy's
|
||
hypno-programming broke down in early 1973 -- the year the "alien disguise"
|
||
became (if my hypothesis proves correct) standard operating procedure[132].
|
||
(Milton Kline accepted the Candy Jones story, but considered the job amateurish
|
||
and inconsistent with the best work done at that time[133]. Perhaps the major
|
||
fault was the lack of a pseudomemory cover story?)
|
||
|
||
|
||
BASES OF SUSPICION
|
||
|
||
"Underground base" rumors are as hot as jalapenos in the UFO field right
|
||
now, and several of these stories involve abductions.
|
||
For example, a sideshow of the famous Bentwaters UFO case involves the
|
||
abduction of an airman named Larry Warren to an underground cavity beneath the
|
||
military base. There, while in what he later described as "a bit of a drugged
|
||
state," he saw aliens and human beings -- military figures -- working side-by-
|
||
side[134].
|
||
I have spoken to another abductee, Nancy Wright, who was allegedly taken to
|
||
an underground chamber ten miles north of Edwards AFB, California. As this
|
||
was a multiple-witness event, and Ms. Wright has not attempted to capitalize on
|
||
the story for financial gain, I tend to credit her story[135]. According to
|
||
abduction researcher Miranda Parks, an elderly couple living in the vicinity
|
||
was also abducted in an exactly similar fashion[136].
|
||
In 1979, Paul Bennewitz and Leo Sprinkle researched a particularly
|
||
controversial abduction involving a young woman (name unrevealed) who was
|
||
apparently taken to a facility where aliens processed fluids and body parts
|
||
from a cattle mutilation. This investigation seems to have led to the
|
||
government harassment of Bennewitz, in which some form of mind control (or, as
|
||
I have previously referred to it, "electronic GASLIGHT") may have played a
|
||
part[137].
|
||
How do we account for these tales of alleged alien skullduggery carried out
|
||
in conjunction with the military? I, for one, cannot credit the generally-
|
||
unsubstantiated tales of "cosmic conspiracy" now promulgated by ex-intelligence
|
||
agents such as John Lear and William Cooper. While I cannot assert insincerity
|
||
on the part of these men, I often wonder if they have been used as conduits --
|
||
witting or unwitting -- in a sophisticated disinformation scheme.
|
||
A simpler, though no less chilling, explanation for the "base" abductions
|
||
may be found in the story of Dr. Louis Jolyon ("boB") West, now notorious for
|
||
his participation in MKULTRA experiments with LSD[138]. Inspired by VIOLENCE
|
||
AND THE BRAIN (a book by Drs. Frank ("Bob") Ervin and Vernon H. ("BoB") Mark
|
||
which ascribed inner city turmoil to a "genetic defect" within rebellious
|
||
blacks), West proposed, in 1973, a Center for the Study and Reduction of
|
||
Violence, where potentially violent individuals could be dealt with
|
||
prophylactically. ["I was cured, all right." - A CLOCKWORK ORANGE -jpg]
|
||
And who were these individuals? According to West's proposal, the note-
|
||
worthy factors indicating a violent predisposition were "sex (male), age
|
||
(youthful), ethnicity (black) and urbanicity." How to deal with them? "...by
|
||
implanting tiny electrodes deep within the brain, electrical activity can be
|
||
followed in areas that cannot be measured from the surface of the scalp...it is
|
||
even possible to record bioelectrical changes in the brains of freely-moving
|
||
subjects, through the use of remote monitoring techniques..." By monitoring
|
||
the subjects' EEGs remotely, potentially violent episodes could be identified.
|
||
For our purposes, the most significant aspect of this proposal had to do
|
||
with location. In a secret communication to Dr. J.M. ("BoB") Stubblebine,
|
||
director of the California State Department of Health (fortunately, this
|
||
missive was "leaked" to the public), West disclosed that he intended to house
|
||
his Center in an abandoned Nike missile base, whose location was accessible
|
||
yet relatively remote. "The site is securely fenced," West wrote. "Compara-
|
||
tive studies could be carried out there, in an isolated but convenient
|
||
location, of experimental model programs, for the alteration of undesirable
|
||
behavior."[139]
|
||
Public outcry stopped these plans. But was this scheme truly eliminated?
|
||
Or was it merely modified, stripped (temporarily) of its overtly racial
|
||
overtones and relocated to some less-accessible spot?
|
||
One thing is certain: A CIA "spy-chiatrist" favored secret behavior control
|
||
experimentation in a remote military installation. Perhaps someone within the
|
||
espionage establishment's mind-modification divisions still thinks highly of
|
||
the idea. If so, the disposal problem would once again rear its ugly head,
|
||
should "visitors" to these installations ever reappear in outside society.
|
||
Again, a hypno-programmed cover story -- the less believable, the better --
|
||
would prove invaluable.
|
||
|
||
|
||
THE SCANDINAVIAN CONNECTION
|
||
|
||
Many books have been written about abductees, yet few exist about the
|
||
victims of mind control. I cannot understand this situation; the reality of
|
||
UFOs is still controversial, yet the existence of mind control was verified
|
||
in two (heavily compromised) congressional investigations and in thousands of
|
||
FOIA documents. Nevertheless, the abductees find many a sympathetic ear, while
|
||
those few who dare to proclaim themselves the victims of known government
|
||
programs rarely find anyone to hear them out. Our prejudices on this score are
|
||
regrettable, for if we listened to the "controllees" we would hear many details
|
||
strikingly similar to those mentioned by UFO abductees.
|
||
Two cases in point: Martti Koski and Robert Naeslund.
|
||
Koski, a Finnish citizen, claims to have been a victim of mind control
|
||
experimentation while visiting Canada. Shortly after his experience began, he
|
||
attempted to broadcast his situation to the world and draw attention to his
|
||
plight. Few listened. Many of his details were bizarre, and not being a
|
||
native speaker of English, he could not express himself convincingly to those
|
||
he approached for help. Yet many aspects of his story correspond closely to
|
||
known details of MKULTRA and related programs.
|
||
Naeslund, a Swedish citizen, tells a similar story. Moreover, his claims
|
||
were backed by special evidence: X-rays revealed an implant in his brain.
|
||
Naeslund actually went to the extreme of having his implant tested by
|
||
electronic technicians employed by Hewlett-Packard. A Greek surgeon performed
|
||
the necessary trepanation to remove the device.
|
||
Many aspects of the Koski and Naeslund stories correspond to my hypothesis.
|
||
Koski, for example, was at one point told that the doctors afflicting him were
|
||
actually "aliens from Sirius." At another point, he was led to believe that
|
||
he was under direction of "the Lord." (As I previously indicated, manipulation
|
||
of religious imagery could help induce anti-social behavior; the subject's
|
||
super-ego can be nullified if he believes that he follows commands from on
|
||
high. Such manipulation may explain the more bizarre aspects of Betty
|
||
Andreasson Luca's abduction[140].)
|
||
Naeslund's implant was originally placed through his nasal cavity. He first
|
||
realized that something terrible had happened to him after an experience of
|
||
missing time, followed by an INEXPLICABLE NOSEBLEED.
|
||
This detail will be instantly familiar to anyone who has studied abductions;
|
||
I have encountered it in my own conversations with abductees. For an excellent
|
||
example in the UFO literature, I refer the reader to the case of Susan Ransted,
|
||
as detailed in Kevin D. Randle's THE UFO CASEBOOK[141]; the background of
|
||
alleged contactee Diane Tessman is also noteworthy in this regard[142].
|
||
Intriguingly, I have located a reference in the open literature to the use, in
|
||
animal study, of nasally-implanted electrodes for the measurement of electro-
|
||
magnetic radiation effects[143].
|
||
There are other claimed mind control victims bearing evidence of implants;
|
||
note, especially, the fascinating case of James Petit, a CIA-connected pilot
|
||
and alleged brainwashing alumnus; X-rays of his cranium have revealed abductee-
|
||
style implants -- fitting, perhaps, since his body bears abductee-style scars.
|
||
[144] Conversely, certain abductees will, if allowed a thorough and sympa-
|
||
thetic hearing, deliver testimony strongly agreeing with Koski's narrative.
|
||
|
||
HELICOPTERS AND DISKS
|
||
|
||
The bizarre story of Rex Niles and his sister (not named in news accounts)
|
||
may shed interesting light on a variety of abductee cases, particularly that
|
||
of Betty and Barney Hill[145]. Niles, the high-rolling owner of a Woodland
|
||
Hills defense subcontracting firm (Rex Rep) was fingered by authorities
|
||
investigating defense industry kickbacks. He became an extraordinarily
|
||
cooperative witness in the investigation -- until he was targeted by his
|
||
enemies, who allegedly used psychoelectronics as harassment.
|
||
The following excerpt from the LOS ANGELES TIMES article on Niles is
|
||
particularly compelling:
|
||
|
||
He [Niles] produced testimony from his sister, a Simi
|
||
Valley woman who swears that helicopters have repeatedly
|
||
circled her home. An engineer measured 250 watts of
|
||
microwaves in the atmosphere outside Niles' house and
|
||
found a RADIOACTIVE DISK UNDERNEATH THE DASH OF HIS CAR
|
||
[my italics].
|
||
A former high school friend, Lyn Silverman, claimed
|
||
that her home computer went haywire when Niles stepped
|
||
close to it.
|
||
|
||
No aliens in this story -- yet how similar it is to tales of alien
|
||
abduction! The low-flying helicopters, of course, are frequently reported
|
||
by abduction victims -- the Betty Andreasson Luca case provides the best-
|
||
known example[146]. The haywire electronics equipment is also frequently
|
||
encountered in putative abduction cases; I have spoken (independently) to
|
||
three women who claimed to have been able to disturb or shut off televisions
|
||
and stereos simply by walking past the devices; one woman even claimed she
|
||
had switched off her TV simply by pointing at it.
|
||
But the radioactive disc is especially intriguing. As former FBI agent
|
||
Ted Gunderson recently explained to my associate Alexander Constantine,
|
||
magnetic radioactive discs have long been used by the clandestine services as
|
||
cancer-inducing "silent killers" -- i.e., as tools of assassination. Not only
|
||
that. The disc calls to mind one little-remembered detail of the Hill case --
|
||
the dozen-or-so circular "shiny spots," each the size of a silver dollar, found
|
||
on the trunk of her car directly after the abduction. A compass needle reacted
|
||
wildly when placed near these spots. Could they have marked the location where
|
||
an electromagnetic or radioactive device, similar to that found by Niles, was
|
||
placed on the car? (Such a device might have been held to the spot magnetic-
|
||
ally, hence the circular impressions.) If so, then the disorienting EMR could
|
||
have helped induce the Hills' "UFO sighting."
|
||
|
||
|
||
THE MILITARY AND MIND CONTROL
|
||
|
||
Some time ago, I attended hypnotic regression sessions in which the
|
||
subject -- a claimed UFO abductee -- recalled undergoing a mysterious "brain
|
||
operation" at a veteran's hospital in California. The operation was performed
|
||
by human beings, not aliens. Interestingly, this same hospital was mentioned
|
||
in two other cases I encountered. These other claims were not made by
|
||
abductees, but by people alleged to have been victims of mind control experi-
|
||
mentation.
|
||
One of these claimants, a former Navy SEAL who undertook numerous dangerous
|
||
missions in Vietnam, favorably impressed me with the wealth of detail in his
|
||
story[147]. This individual -- I've taken to calling him "the trained SEAL"--
|
||
had received specialized combat training at a military base in California; he
|
||
claims that at one point during this training he was drugged, hypnotized,
|
||
possibly placed under some form of electronic control, and subjected to the
|
||
extremes of pain/pleasure operant conditioning. One peculiar detail of his
|
||
story concerns the "reward" aspect of the conditioning: When properly
|
||
acquiescent, he was given unlimited sexual access to a woman who, the SEAL
|
||
avers, was herself the victim of brainwashing.
|
||
Unbelievable as this last claim may seem, I found it oddly resonant when I
|
||
later interviewed a prominent abductee in the Southern California area, who
|
||
bravely offered me details on a puzzling, albeit quite delicate, incident in
|
||
her past. Still an attractive woman, she recalled for me -- indeed, seemed
|
||
strangely compelled to describe -- an early love affair with a young soldier
|
||
training at a military base near her home. She cannot recall the soldier's
|
||
name. All she remembers is that one day he started LIVING AT HER FAMILY'S
|
||
HOUSE; she has no memory of how the arrangement began, and her parents have
|
||
never felt comfortable discussing the matter. Although unattracted to this
|
||
soldier, she felt compelled to become intimate with him, adopting a pliant,
|
||
obeisant attitude that was quite out of character for her. Later, the soldier
|
||
went on to covert missions in Vietnam.
|
||
Of course, a young person's psycho-sexual development is never smooth, and
|
||
the incident related above may merely have represented one peculiarly upsetting
|
||
bump in that notoriously rough road. Still, some of the details of this story
|
||
-- particularly the parents' attitude, the woman's personality shift, and her
|
||
subsequent memory lapses -- are striking, and I treat with respect the abduc-
|
||
tee's intuition that this minor enigma in her personal history could, if
|
||
properly understood, shed light on her later "missing time" experiences.
|
||
Could the "trained SEAL" have been right? Was there, IS there, a coterie
|
||
of hypno-programmed soldiers conducting particularly hazardous missions? And
|
||
do the programmers have at their disposal a "ladies' auxiliary," so to speak,
|
||
of hypnotized camp followers?
|
||
If the SEAL's story stood alone, skeptics could easily dismiss it
|
||
(provided they did not sit, as I did, face-to-face with the story's teller,
|
||
listening to all the grisly and unsettling details). But other veterans have
|
||
added their voices to this grim tale. Daniel Sheehan, of the Christic
|
||
Institute, claims that his organization has spoken to half-a-dozen individuals
|
||
with narratives similar to my SEAL informant. All had received "processing,"
|
||
so to speak, within the context of standard military training; after pro-
|
||
gramming and specialized combat instruction by mercenaries, the recruits were
|
||
placed "on hold," to be used as situations arose -- and some of those
|
||
situations occurred within the United States[148].
|
||
Walter Bowart began his own researches into mind control by placing an ad in
|
||
SOLDIER-OF-FORTUNE-style publications, asking for correspondence from veterans
|
||
who experienced inexplicable lapses in memory or strange behavior modification
|
||
techniques while serving in Vietnam; he received over 100 replies. Bowart
|
||
devoted an entire chapter to one of these respondents -- an Air Force veteran
|
||
named David, who ended his four-year tour of duty recalling only that he had
|
||
spent the time "having fun, skin diving, laying on the beach, collecting
|
||
shells...It never dawned on me until later that I must have DONE something
|
||
while I was in the service." (An obvious example of screen memory.) He was
|
||
also "assigned" a girlfriend whose name he cannot now recall, despite the
|
||
length and deep intimacy of the affair[149]. The parallels to the SEAL's story
|
||
and the abductee's account should be obvious.
|
||
We even have a confession, of sorts, from a scientist who specialized in one
|
||
aspect of this sort of training. Lt. Commander Thomas ("Bob") Narut, of the
|
||
U.S. Naval Hospital at the NATO headquarters in Naples, Florida, admitted
|
||
during a lecture in Oslo that recruits in Naples underwent CLOCKWORK-ORANGE-
|
||
style behavior modification sessions. Trainees would be strapped into chairs
|
||
with their eyelids clamped open while watching films of industrial accidents
|
||
and African circumcision ceremonies -- films frequently used by psychologists
|
||
as a means of inducing stress in experimental situations. Unlike the
|
||
protagonist in A CLOCKWORK ORANGE, who learned revulsion at the sight of
|
||
violence, Narut's soldiers were taught to accept and enjoy bloodshed, to view
|
||
it with equanimity. Similar techniques were used to dehumanize potential
|
||
enemies. Graduates of this program became, in Narut's words, "hit men and
|
||
assassins," to be placed in American embassies throughout the world.
|
||
When questioned by reporters about these claims, the American government
|
||
denied the story; Narut -- after a long incommunicado period and apparent
|
||
coercion -- later explained to journalists that he had merely spoken
|
||
theoretically. If so, why did he originally describe the behavior modification
|
||
procedure as an ongoing program?[150]
|
||
And while it may seem frivolous to return to the subject of abductions after
|
||
examining such grim data, I should remind the reader of the many abduction
|
||
accounts in which abductees recall being forced to watch certain stress-
|
||
inducing motion pictures. The aliens, it seems, have learned a few lessons
|
||
from Dr. Narut.
|
||
Narut, of course, concentrated on selective programming of individual
|
||
American soldiers; on the other side of the mind control spectrum, Defense
|
||
Department specialists have also concentrated on methods to render entire
|
||
enemy battalions "combat ineffective." Electromagnetic weaponry, intended to
|
||
wipe out the aggression of the enemy, is the province of DARPA, under the
|
||
direction of Dr. Jack ("Bob" Dobbs) Verona. These projects remain fairly
|
||
mysterious; we do know, however, that one operation, SLEEPING BEAUTY, employed
|
||
the services of Dr. Michael ("BoB") Persinger, a scientist who has expressed
|
||
interesting views regarding UFOs.
|
||
Persinger discovered a method of using ELF waves to induce the brain's MAST
|
||
cells to release histamine; should a battlefield commander wish to subject his
|
||
enemy to mass bouts of vomiting, Persinger's trick could do the job even
|
||
faster than a Tobe Hooper movie. The method works on animals. "The question,"
|
||
writes mind control researcher Larry Collins, "is how to get from point A to
|
||
point B without violating one of the most rigorous commandments of Government
|
||
ethics -- thou shalt not conduct experiments like that on human beings."[151]
|
||
If Collins had studied the record a little more carefully, he might realize
|
||
that the government hasn't always regarded this commandment as something
|
||
graven in stone. As Milton Kline put it:
|
||
|
||
Ethical factors involved in most research would preclude
|
||
having positive results. Those ethical factors don't always
|
||
hold with government research. THE RESEARCH WHICH HAS GIVEN
|
||
REALLY POSITIVE RESULTS HAS NOT BEEN LIMITED BY ETHICAL
|
||
CONSTRAINTS[152]. [my italics]THE ULTIMATE MOTIVE FOR MIND CONTROL
|
||
|
||
Hypnosis hard-liners of the Orne school would almost certainly dismiss the
|
||
foregoing veterans' accounts of the use of hypnosis, drugs and behavioral
|
||
conditioning on American fighting men. Why, the skeptics would ask, would
|
||
anyone attempt to create a "Manchurian Candidate" when the military services,
|
||
using entirely conventional means, can create a "Rambo"? There have always
|
||
been recruits for even the most hazardous duties; what need of hypnosis?
|
||
The need, in fact, is absolute.
|
||
The modern battlefield has little place for the traditional soldier.
|
||
Advanced weaponry requires an increasing level of technical sophistication,
|
||
which in turn requires a cool-headed operator. But the all-too-human
|
||
combatant -- though capable of extraordinary acts of courage under the most
|
||
stressful conditions imaginable -- does not possess inexhaustible reserves of
|
||
SANG-FROID. Eventually, breakdowns will occur. Per-capita psychiatric
|
||
casualties have increased dramatically in each successive American conflict.
|
||
As Richard Gabriel, the excellent historian of the role of psychiatry in
|
||
warfare, writes:
|
||
|
||
Modern warfare has become so lethal and so intense that
|
||
only the already insane can endure it...Modern war requiring
|
||
continuous combat will increase the degree of fatigue on the
|
||
soldier to heretofore unknown levels. Physical fatigue --
|
||
especially the lack of sleep -- will increase the rate of
|
||
psychiatric casualties enormously. Other factors -- high
|
||
rates of indirect fire, night fighting, lack of food, constant
|
||
stress, large numbers of casualties -- will ensure that the
|
||
number of psychiatric casualties will reach disastrous pro-
|
||
portions. And the number of casualties will overburden the
|
||
medical structure to the point of collapse.
|
||
The ability to treat psychiatric casualties will all but
|
||
disappear. There will be no safe forward areas in which to
|
||
treat soldiers debilitated by mental collapse. The technology
|
||
of modern war has made such locations functionally obsolete...[153]
|
||
|
||
According to Gabriel, the military intends to meet this challenge by
|
||
creating "the chemical soldier," a designer-drugged zombie in fighting man's
|
||
uniform:
|
||
|
||
On the battlefields of the future we will witness a true
|
||
clash of ignorant armies, armies ignorant of their own
|
||
emotions and even of the reasons for which they fight.
|
||
Soldiers on all sides will be reduced to fearless chemical
|
||
automatons who fight simply because they can do nothing
|
||
else...Once the chemical genie is out of the bottle, the
|
||
full range of human mental and physical actions become
|
||
targets for chemical control...Today it is already possible
|
||
by chemical or electrical stimulation to increase the
|
||
aggression levels of the human being by stimulating the
|
||
amygdala, a section of the brain known to control aggression
|
||
and rage. Such "human potential engineering" is already a
|
||
partial reality and the necessary technical knowledge
|
||
increases every day[154].
|
||
|
||
While this passage speaks of drugs and electronics, we can safely assume
|
||
that the planners of battle would not refrain from using any other promising
|
||
technique.
|
||
Gabriel writes primarily of large-scale battle scenarios, but based on
|
||
his information, we can fairly deduce that the mind-controlled soldier will
|
||
also play a role in the surgical strike, the covert operation, the infiltration
|
||
behind enemy lines by units of the Special Forces. On such missions, United
|
||
States personnel have increasingly relied on torture as a means of interro-
|
||
gation and intimidation[155], and as such barbarism becomes standard procedure
|
||
the American fighting man of the future will need to find within himself
|
||
unprecedented reserves of brutality. Will the average recruit, culled from the
|
||
nation's suburbs and reared on traditional ideals, possess such reserves?
|
||
Vietnam proved that the soldier, despite a barrage of propaganda intended to
|
||
cloud his discernment, will sense the difference between fighting for legit-
|
||
imate defense interests and fighting to protect political hegemony. To
|
||
forestall this realization, or to render it irrelevant, military planners must
|
||
withdraw the human combatant and replace him with a new species of warrior.
|
||
The soldier of the future will not discern; he will merely do. He will not be
|
||
a butcher; he will be the butcher's KNIFE -- a tool among tools, thoughtless
|
||
and effective.
|
||
And it is my contention that to create this soldier of the future, the
|
||
controllers will need a continuing program, one designed to test each new
|
||
method and combination of methods for conquering the human mind.
|
||
One primary goal of this program must include expanding the human capacity
|
||
for stress and violence. Subjects enrolled in such experimental procedures
|
||
will experience pain, and will learn to accept the pain. Eventually, they will
|
||
learn to inflict it, without remorse or even remembrance. The nation who first
|
||
creates this new soldier will possess a decisive advantage on the "conven-
|
||
tional" battlefield -- as will the nation which first develops a means of using
|
||
mass mind control techniques to disable entire enemy platoons. [And to placate
|
||
whole civilian populations, both those of the enemy and those at home. -jpg]
|
||
This paramount military necessity is the reason why I will never believe any
|
||
unconvincing reassurances that our nation's clandestine scientists have fore-
|
||
gone or will forego research into behavior modification. This research will
|
||
never be mere history. What's past is present, and today's covert experiment-
|
||
ation will become tomorrow's basic training.
|
||
A prototype of the future warrior may already be with us. The Navy SEAL
|
||
I interviewed spoke in horrifying detail of dismemberment without emotion, of
|
||
rape as routine, of killing without affect. And then FORGETTING THAT HE HAD
|
||
KILLED. Even years later, he could not recall the stories behind many of the
|
||
wounds on his own body. He claims that whenever he would need the services of
|
||
the veteran's hospital, doctors would re-hypnotize him shortly after his
|
||
admission, while a physician specifically cleared for such work would examine
|
||
his medical history, which was highly classified and kept under lock and key.
|
||
According to the SEAL's testimony, his memory block cracked little by
|
||
little, as a result of events too complex to recount here. Finally, years
|
||
after Vietnam, he was able to remember what he did.
|
||
Amnesia was a blessing.
|
||
|
||
IV. Abductions
|
||
|
||
Press and public now regard abductees as tony curiosities, yet science, for
|
||
the most part, still banishes their tales to the domain of the damned, as
|
||
Charles Fort defined damnation. So too with claimed victims of mind control.
|
||
The Voice of Authority tells us that MKULTRA belongs to history; like Hasdrubal
|
||
and Hitler, it threatened once, but no more. Anyone insisting otherwise must
|
||
be silenced by glib rationalization and selective inattention.
|
||
Yet these two topics -- UFO abductions and mind control -- have more in
|
||
common than their mutual ostracization. The data overlap. If we could chart
|
||
these phenomena on a Venn diagram, we would see a surprisingly large inter-
|
||
section between the two circles of information. It is this overlap I seek to
|
||
address.
|
||
Note, however, that I can NOT address all the other interesting and
|
||
important issues raised by the UFO abduction experience. For exmaple, I have
|
||
written, admittedly rather vaguely, of nasal implants reported by abductees --
|
||
the sort of detail which might place an account in the "high strangeness"
|
||
category, and of course, a detail central to my thesis. But what percentage
|
||
of the percipients speak of such implants? A truly scientific analysis would
|
||
provide a figure. Unfortunately, I haven't the resources to compile a
|
||
sufficiently large abductee sample from which one could draw statistics. Nor
|
||
can I make an over-arching qualitative analysis, measuring the value of "high
|
||
strangeness" reports against other abductee claims. All I can do is note the
|
||
available literature, and leave the reader to wonder, as I do, whether the
|
||
compilers of that literature concentrated on exceptional cases or were biased
|
||
in favor of the less fantastic abductee accounts. I have supplemented readings
|
||
of the abduction literature with my own interviews with percipients -- which,
|
||
since abductees tend to know other abductees, can give a surprisingly wide view
|
||
of the phenomenon. This view has been broadened still further by my talks and
|
||
correspondence with other members of the UFO community.
|
||
Of course, we must recognize the difference between testimony and proof. No
|
||
one can state definitively that abduction reports have a basis in objective
|
||
reality (however misperceived). Ultimately, all we have are stories. Some of
|
||
these stories may be of questionable veracity; others may be contaminated by
|
||
investigator bias; many are insufficiently detailed. No one research paper can
|
||
resolve all abduction controversies, and many necessary battles must be fought
|
||
on other fields.
|
||
Still, the testimony won't go away -- and we certainly have enough to allow
|
||
for comparisons. I maintain that an unprejudiced overview of abduction reports
|
||
in the popular press and the less-familiar material on mind control will
|
||
demonstrate a striking correlation. Once other abduction researchers have been
|
||
educated in the ways of MKULTRA (and this paper is intended as an introductory
|
||
text) they may note a similar pattern. If so, we can then begin to write a
|
||
revisionist history of the phenomenon.
|
||
The abduction enigma contains within it sub-mysteries that slide into the
|
||
mind control scenario with surprising ease, even elegance -- mysteries which
|
||
fit the E.T. hypothesis as uncomfortably as a size 10 foot fits into a size 8
|
||
shoe. As we have seen, the MKULTRA thesis explains the reports of abductee
|
||
intracerebral implants (particularly reports involving nosebleeds), unusual
|
||
scars, "telepathic" communication (i.e., externally induced intracerebral
|
||
voices) concurrent with or following the abduction encounter, allegations that
|
||
some abductees hear unusual sound effects (similar to those created by the
|
||
hemi-synch and cognate devices), haywire electronic devices in abductee homes,
|
||
personality shifts, "training films," manipulation of religious imagery, and
|
||
missing time. Needless to say, the thesis of clandestine government experi-
|
||
mentation readily accounts for abductee claims of human beings "working" with
|
||
the aliens, and for the government harassment that plays so prominent a role in
|
||
certain abductee reports.
|
||
Let's look at some more correlations.
|
||
|
||
According to Hopkins, "The aliens said 'Fine. Very good.' They took the
|
||
gun from him; the man [presumably, the captive] got up, walked away, dis-
|
||
appeared, and they went on to the next thing." Obviously, this little drama
|
||
had been staged -- a test of some sort.
|
||
I submit that this surreal incident is incomprehensible as either an
|
||
example of alien incursion or of "Klass-ical" confabulation. The scenario
|
||
described here EXACTLY parallels numerous experiments in the hypnotic induction
|
||
of anti-social action as revealed both in the standard hypnosis literature and
|
||
in declassified ARTICHOKE/MKULTRA documents. For example, compare Hopkins'
|
||
account to the following, in which Ludwig Mayer, a prominent German hypnosis
|
||
researcher, describes a classic experiment in the hypnotic induction of
|
||
criminal action:
|
||
|
||
I gave a revolver to an elderly and readily suggestible
|
||
man whom I had just hypnotized. The revolver had just been
|
||
loaded by Mr. H. with a percussion cap. I explained to
|
||
[the subject], while pointing to Mr. H., that Mr. H. was a
|
||
very wicked man whom he should shoot to kill. With great
|
||
determination he took the revolver and fired a shot directly
|
||
at Mr. H. Mr. H. fell down pretending to be wounded. I
|
||
then explained to my subject that the fellow was not yet
|
||
quite dead, and that he should give him another bullet,
|
||
which he did without further ado[167].
|
||
|
||
Of course, if a conservative hypnosis specialist were asked to comment on
|
||
the above account, he would quickly point out that hypnotic suggestions which
|
||
work in an experimental situation would not easily succeed outside the lab-
|
||
oratory; on some level, the subject will probably sense whether or not he's
|
||
playing the game for real[168]. Similarly, a conservative abduction researcher
|
||
would, in reviewing Hopkins' material, emphasize the problems inherent in using
|
||
testimony derived during regression, where the threat of confabulation lurks.
|
||
I'll concede both arguments -- for the moment -- only to insist that they are
|
||
beside the point. The matter of primary importance, the sticking point which
|
||
neither Klass nor Hopkins can comfortably confront, is the convergence of
|
||
detail between Mayer's hypnosis experiment and the testing event related by
|
||
Hopkins' abductee. WHY ARE THESE TWO STORIES SO SIMILAR? Did the good Dr.
|
||
Mayer take pupils from Sirius?[169].
|
||
Hopkins says he knows of other instances in which abductees found themselves
|
||
in similar crucibles. So do I.
|
||
One person I spoke to can remember (SANS hypnosis) being handed a gun inside
|
||
a ziplock baggy and receiving instructions that she will have to use this
|
||
weapon "on a job." Early in my interviews with her (and with no prompting from
|
||
me) she recited an apparent cue drilled into her consciousness by the "enti-
|
||
ties" (as she calls them): "When you see the light, do it tonight," followed by
|
||
the command, "Execute." (One can only speculate as to how such commands would
|
||
be used in the field; we will discuss later the use of photovoltaic hypnotic
|
||
induction.) Though her personal feelings toward firearms are decidedly
|
||
negative, she vivdly describes periods in her "everyday" life when she feels an
|
||
uncharacteristic, yet overpowering urge to be near a gun -- a quasi-sexual
|
||
desire to pick one up and touch the metal[170].
|
||
She is not alone. Another has been so affected by gun fever that he became
|
||
a security guard, just to be near the things[171]. The abductees I have spoken
|
||
to connect this sudden surge of Ramboism to the UFO experience. But I suggest
|
||
that the UFO experience may be merely a cover story for another type of
|
||
training entirely.
|
||
One of the primary goals of BLUEBIRD, ARTICHOKE, and MKULTRA was to
|
||
determine whether mind control could be used to faciliate "executive action"--
|
||
i.e., assassination[172].
|
||
It isn't difficult to imagine the media's reaction if a public figure were
|
||
murdered by someone acting at the behest of the "space brothers." Who would
|
||
dare to speak of conspiracy under such circumstances? The hidden controllers
|
||
could choose a myth structure that conform's to the abductee's personality,
|
||
then pose as higher beings, who would whisper violence into the ear of the
|
||
percipient. Using this ruse, the trick that scientists such as Ludwig Mayer
|
||
could perform in the lab might now be accomplished in the field. As
|
||
Estabrooks' associate Jack Tracktir (professor of hypnotherapy at Baylor
|
||
University) explained to John Marks, anti-social acts can be induced with
|
||
"no conscience involved" once the proper pretext has been created[173].
|
||
|
||
|
||
"THEY WILL THINK IT'S FLYING SAUCERS"
|
||
|
||
Jenny Randles contributes an anecdote from Great Britain which dovetails
|
||
nicely with this hypothesis.
|
||
In 1965, "Margary" (a pseudonym) lived in Birmingham with her husband, who
|
||
one night told her to prepare for a "shock and a test." As Randles describes
|
||
what she calls a "rogue case":
|
||
|
||
They got into his car and drove off, although her memory
|
||
of the trip became hazy and confused and she does not know
|
||
where they went. Then she was in a room that was dimly lit
|
||
and there were people standing around a long table or flat
|
||
bed. She was out on it and seemed "drugged" and unable to
|
||
resist. The most memorable of the men was tall and thin with
|
||
a long nose and white beard. He had thick eyebrows and
|
||
supposedly said to Margary, "Remember the eyebrows, honey."
|
||
A strange medical examination, using odd equipment, was
|
||
performed on her.
|
||
|
||
Both the husband and the scientists, using (apparently) hypnotic techniques,
|
||
flooded her mind with images that, she was told, would be understood only in
|
||
the future. According to Randles, "At one point one of the 'examiners' in the
|
||
room said to Margary in a tone that made it seem as if he were amused, "THEY
|
||
WILL THINK IT'S FLYING SAUCERS." The husband also revealed that he had a
|
||
second identity. After the abduction, this husband (am I going too far to
|
||
assume his employment with MI6 or some cognate agency?) left, never to be seen
|
||
again[174]. Margary did not recall the abduction until 1978.
|
||
This affair can only baffle a researcher who insists on fitting all
|
||
abduction accounts into the ET hypothesis; once we free ourselves from that
|
||
set of assumptions, explanations come easily. I interpret this incident as a
|
||
case in which the controllers applied the flying saucer cover story sloppily,
|
||
or to an insufficiently receptive subject. If my thesis is correct, the UFO
|
||
"hypnotic hoax" technique would still have been fairly new in 1965, particular-
|
||
ly outside the United States; perhaps the manipulators hadn't yet got the hang
|
||
of it. The odd comment about the scientist's eyebrows may refer to an item of
|
||
disguise donned for the occasion. The unscrupulous hypnotist, unsure about his
|
||
ability to induce an impenetrable amnesia -- and mindful of the price paid by
|
||
his forerunners in mesmeric criminality[175] -- would understandably want to
|
||
hedge his bets; by indulging in the British penchant for theatrics, he could
|
||
further protect his anonymity.
|
||
A similar incident was brought to my attention by researcher Robert Durant.
|
||
The relevant excerpt of his letter follows:
|
||
|
||
Now I want to turn to a case that I have been investigating
|
||
for several months. The subject is an abductee. Standard
|
||
abduction scenario. Twice regressed under hypnosis, the first
|
||
time by a well-known abduction researcher, the second time by
|
||
a psychologist with parapsychology connections.
|
||
In the course of many hours of listening to the subject, I
|
||
discovered that she has had close personal contact over a long
|
||
period of time with several individuals who have federal
|
||
intelligence connections. She was hypnotized many years ago
|
||
as part of a TV program devoted to hypnosis. Her abductions
|
||
began shortly after she attended several long sessions at a
|
||
laboratory where, ostensibly, she was being tested for ESP
|
||
abilities. Two other people who were "tested" at this same
|
||
laboratory have also had abductions. All three were told by
|
||
the lab to join a local UFO group. During her abductions, the
|
||
principal alien spoke to the subject in the English language
|
||
in a normal manner, not via telepathy. She recognized the
|
||
voice, which was at one time that of her very close friend of
|
||
yesteryear who was then and is now employed by the CIA. The
|
||
other voice was that of an individual who works in Washington,
|
||
has what I will call very strong federal connections as well
|
||
as a finger in every ufological pie, and who just happened to
|
||
bump into her at the aforementioned laboratory. He also
|
||
anticipated, in the course of telephone conversations, her
|
||
abductions. When the subject confronted him about this and
|
||
the voice, he claimed to be psychic. (!)[176]
|
||
|
||
The "ESP" connection is suggestive; the MKULTRA documents betray an
|
||
astonishing interest on the part of the intelligence agencies in matters
|
||
parapsychological.
|
||
Some researchers would object that examples such as this are rare; most
|
||
abductions contain no such overt indications of intelligence involvement.
|
||
But have investigators looked for them? As mentioned in the introduction,
|
||
a false dichotomy limits much ufological thought; as long as the abduction
|
||
argument swings between the ET hypothesis and purely psychological theories,
|
||
researchers will not recognize the relevance of certain key items of back-
|
||
ground data.
|
||
|
||
GLIMPSES OF THE CONTROLLERS
|
||
|
||
In an interview with me, a northern-California abducteee -- call him "Peter"
|
||
-- reported an experience which was conducted NOT by a small grey alien, but by
|
||
a human being. The percipient called this man a "doctor." He gave a descrip-
|
||
tion of this individual, and even provided a drawing.
|
||
Some time after I gathered this information, a southern-California abductee
|
||
told me her story -- which included a description of this very same "doctor."
|
||
The physical details were so strikingly similar as to erase coincidence. This
|
||
woman is a leading member of a Los Angeles-based UFO group; three other women
|
||
in this group report abduction encounters with the same individual[177].
|
||
Perhaps those three women were fantasists, attaching themselves to another's
|
||
narrative. But my northern informant never met these people. Why did he
|
||
describe the same "doctor"?
|
||
One of the abductees I have dealt with insisted, under hypnosis, that her
|
||
abduction experience brought her to a certain house in the Los Angeles area.
|
||
She was able to provide directions to the house, even though she had no
|
||
conscious memory of ever being there. I later learned that this house is
|
||
indeed occupied by a scientist who formerly (and perhaps currently) conducted
|
||
clandestine research on mind control technology.
|
||
This same abductee described a clandestine brain operation of some sort she
|
||
underwent in childhood. The neurosurgeon was a human being, not an alien.
|
||
She even recalled the name. (Note: This is not the same individual referred to
|
||
above.) When I heard the name, it meant nothing to me -- but later I learned
|
||
that there really was a scientist of that name who specialzed in electrode
|
||
implant research.
|
||
Licia Davidson is a thoughtful and articulate abductee, whose fascinating
|
||
story closely parallels many found in the abductee literature -- except for one
|
||
unusual detail. In an interview with me, described an unsettling recollection
|
||
of a human being, dressed normally, holding a black BoX with a protruding
|
||
antenna. This odd snippet of memory did NOT coincide with the general thrust
|
||
of her abduction narrative. Could this remembrance represent an all-too-brief
|
||
segment of accurately-perceived reality interrupting her hypnotically-induced
|
||
"screen memory"? Peter clearly recalls seeing a similar BoX during his
|
||
abduction.
|
||
Interestingly, Licia resides in the Los Angeles suburb of Tujunga Canyon, a
|
||
prominent spot on the abduction map; Many of the abductees I have spoken to
|
||
first had unusual experiences while living in this area. Near Tujunga Canyon,
|
||
in Mt. Pacifico, is a hidden former Nike missile base; more than one abductee
|
||
has described odd, seemingly inexplicable military activity around this
|
||
location[178]. The reader will recall the connection of Nike missile bases to
|
||
the disturbing story of Dr. L. Jolyon ("BoB") West, a veteran of MKULTRA.
|
||
|
||
|
||
CULTS
|
||
|
||
Some abductees I have spoken to have been directed to join certain
|
||
religious/philosophical sects. These cults often bear close examination.
|
||
The leaders of these groups tend to be "ex"-CIA operatives, or Special
|
||
Forces veterans. They are often linked through personal relations, even
|
||
though they espouse widely varying traditions. I have heard unsettling
|
||
reports that the leaders of some of these groups have used hypnosis, drugs,
|
||
or "mind machines" on their charges. Members of these cults have reported
|
||
periods of missing time during ceremonies or "study periods."
|
||
I strongly urge abduction researchers to examine closely any small "occult"
|
||
groups an abductee might join. For example, one familiar leader of the UFO
|
||
fringe -- a man well-known for his espousal of the doctrine of "love and light"
|
||
-- is Virgil Armstrong, a close personal friend of General John Singlaub, the
|
||
notorious Iran-Contra player, who recently headed the neo-fascist World Anti-
|
||
Communist League. Armstrong, who also happens to be an ex-Green Beret and
|
||
former CIA operative, figured into my inquiry in an interesting fashion: An
|
||
abductee of my acquaintance was told -- by her "entities," naturally -- to seek
|
||
out this UFO spokesman and join his "sky-watch" activities, which, my source
|
||
alleges, included a mass channelling session intended to send debilitating
|
||
"negative" vibrations to Constantine Chernenko, then the leader of the Soviet
|
||
Union. Of course, intracerebral voices may have a purely psychological origin,
|
||
so Armstrong can hardly be held to task for the abductee's original "direct-
|
||
ive."[179] Still, his past associations with military intelligence inevitably
|
||
bring disturbing possibilities to mind.
|
||
Even more ominous than possible ties between UFO cults and the intelligence
|
||
community are the cults' links with the shadowy I AM group, founded by Guy
|
||
Ballard in the 1930s[180]. According to researcher David Stupple, "If you look
|
||
at the contactee groups today, you'll see that most of the stable, larger ones
|
||
are actually neo-I AM groups, with some sort of tie to Ballard's organization."
|
||
[181] This cult, therefore, bears investigation.
|
||
Guy Ballard's "Mighty I AM Religious Activity," grew, in large part, out of
|
||
William Dudley Pelly's Silver Shirts, an American NAZI organization[182].
|
||
Although Ballard himself never openly proclaimed NAZI affiliation, his movement
|
||
was tinged with an extremely right-wing political philosophy, and in secret
|
||
meetings he "decreed" the death of President Franklin Roosevelt[183]. The I AM
|
||
philosophy derived from Theosophy, and in this author's estimation bears a
|
||
more-than-cursory resemblance to the Theosophically-based teachings that
|
||
informed the proto-NAZI German occult lodges[184].
|
||
After the war, Pelley (who had been imprisoned for sedition during the
|
||
hostilities) headed an occult-oriented organization call Soulcraft, based in
|
||
Noblesville, Indiana. Another Soulcraft employee was the controversial
|
||
contactee George Hunt Williamson (real name: Michel d'Obrenovic), who co-
|
||
authored UFOs CONFIDENTIAL with John McCoy, a proponent of the theory that a
|
||
Jewish banking conspiracy was preventing disclosure of the solution to the UFO
|
||
mystery[185]. Later, Williamson founded the I AM-oriented Brotherhood of the
|
||
Seven Rays in Peru[186]. Another famed contactee, George Van Tassel, was
|
||
associated with Pelley and with the notoriously anti-Semitic Reverend Wesley
|
||
Swift (founder of the group which metamorphosed into the Aryan nations).[187]
|
||
The most visible offspring of I AM is Elizabeth Clare Prophet's Church
|
||
Universal and Triumphant, a group best-known for its massive arms caches in
|
||
underground bunkers. CUT was recently exposed in COVERT ACTION INFORMATION
|
||
BULLETIN as a conduit of CIA funds[188], and according to researcher John
|
||
Judge, has ties to organizations allied to the World Anti-Communist League[189]
|
||
Prophet is becoming involved in abduction research and has sponsored present-
|
||
ations by Budd Hopkins and other prominent investigators. In his book THE
|
||
ARMSTRONG REPORT: ETs AND UFOs: THEY NEED US, WE DON'T NEED THEM[sic][190],
|
||
Virgil Armstrong directs troubled abductees toward Prophet's group. (Perhaps
|
||
not insignificantly, he also suggests that abductees plagued by implants
|
||
alleviate their problem by turning to "the I AM force" within.[191])
|
||
Another UFO channeller, Frederick Von Mierers, has promulgated both a cult
|
||
with a strong I AM orientation[192] and an apparent con-game involving over-
|
||
appraised gemstones. Mierers is an anti-Semite who contends that the Holocaust
|
||
never happened and that the Jews control the world's wealth.
|
||
UFORUM is a flying saucer organization popular with Los Angeles-area
|
||
abductees; its founder is Penny Harper, a member of a radical Scientology
|
||
breakaway group which connects the teachings of L. Ron ("Bob") Hubbard with
|
||
pronouncements against "The Illuminati" (a mythical secret society) and other
|
||
BETES NOIR familiar from right-wing conspiracy literature. Harper directs
|
||
members of her group to read THE SPOTLIGHT, an extremist tabloid (published by
|
||
Willis Carto's Liberty Lobby) which denies the reality of the Holocaust and
|
||
posits a "Zionist" scheme to control the world[193].
|
||
More than one unwary abductee has fallen in with groups such as those listed
|
||
above. It isn't difficult to imagine how some of these questionable groups
|
||
might mold an abductee's recollection of his experience -- and perhaps help
|
||
direct his future actions.
|
||
Some modern abductees, with otherwise-strong claims, claim encounters with
|
||
blond, "Nordic" aliens reminiscent of the early contactee era. Surely, the
|
||
"Nordic" appearance of these aliens sprang from the dubious spiritual tradition
|
||
of Van Tassell, Ballard, Pelley, McCoy, etc. Why, then, are some modern
|
||
abductees seeing these very same other-worldly UEBERMENSCHEN?
|
||
One abductee of my acquaintance claims to have had beneficial experiences
|
||
with these "blond" aliens -- who, he believes, came originally from the
|
||
Pleiades. Interestingly, in the late 1960s, the psychopathically anti-Semitic
|
||
Rev. Wesley Swift predicted this odd twist in the abduction tale. In a
|
||
broadcast "sermon," he spoke at length about UFOs, claiming that there were
|
||
"good" aliens and "bad" aliens. The good ones, he insisted, were tall, blond
|
||
Aryans -- WHO HAILED FROM THE PLEIADES. He made this pronouncement long before
|
||
the current trends in abduction lore.
|
||
Could some of the abductions be conducted by an extreme right-wing element
|
||
within the national security establishment? Disagreeable as the possibility
|
||
seems, we should note that the "lunatic right" is represented in all other
|
||
walks of life; certainly hard-rightists have taken positions within the
|
||
military-intelligence complex as well.
|
||
|
||
GROUNDS FOR FURTHER RESEARCH
|
||
|
||
John Keel's ground-breaking OPERATION TROJAN HORSE, written in an era when
|
||
abductees still came under the category of "contactees," includes the following
|
||
intriguing data, gleaned from Keel'a extensive field work:
|
||
|
||
Contactees often find themselves suddenly miles from home
|
||
without knowing how they got there. They either have induced
|
||
amnesia, wiping out all memory of the trip, or they were taken
|
||
over by some means and made the trip in a blacked-out state.
|
||
Should they encounter a friend on the way, the friend would
|
||
probably note that their eyes seemed glassy and their behavior
|
||
seemed peculiar. But if the friend spoke to them, he might
|
||
receive a curt reply.
|
||
In the language of the contactees this process is called
|
||
being used...I have known silent contactees to disappear from
|
||
their homes for long periods, and when they returned, they
|
||
had little or no recollection of where they had been. One
|
||
girl sent me a postcard from the Bahama Islands -- which
|
||
surprised me because I knew she was very poor. When she
|
||
returned, she told me that she had only one memory of the
|
||
trip. She said she remembered getting off a jet at an air-
|
||
port -- she souldn't recall getting on the jet or making the
|
||
trip -- and there "Indians" met her and took her baggage...
|
||
The next thing she knew she was back home again[194].
|
||
|
||
Puzzling indeed -- unless one has read THE CONTROL OF CANDY JONES, which
|
||
speaks of Candy's "blacked out" periods, during which she travelled to Taiwan
|
||
as a CIA courier, adopting her second personality. The mind control explana-
|
||
tion perfectly solves all the mysteries in the above excerpt -- save, perhaps,
|
||
the odd remark about "Indians."
|
||
Hickson and Mendez' UFO CONTACT AT PASCAGOULA contains the interesting
|
||
information that Charles Hickson awakes at night feeling that he is on the
|
||
verge of re-awakening some terribly important memory connected with his
|
||
encounter -- yet ostensibly he can account for every moment of his adventure.
|
||
Hickson also received a letter from an apparent abductee who claims that
|
||
the grey aliens are actually automatons of some sort -- perhaps an unconscious
|
||
recognition of the unreality of the hypnotically-induced "cover story."[195]
|
||
In this light, the film version of COMMUNION -- whose screenplay was written
|
||
by Whitley Strieber -- takes on a new interest: The abduction sequences contain
|
||
inexplicable images indicating that the "greys" are really props, or masks.
|
||
COMMUNION and TRANSFORMATION contain passages detailing what seems to be a
|
||
hazily-recalled Candy-Jones-style espionage adventure, in which Strieber was
|
||
shanghaied by a "coach" and a "nurse" (both human beings) who apparently
|
||
drugged him[196]. Recall the example of Keel's informants. Moreover,
|
||
TRANSFORMATION contains lengthy descriptions of alien beings working in
|
||
apparent collusion with human beings.
|
||
Abductee Christa Tilton also recalls both human beings and aliens playing
|
||
a part in her experience. Ever since her abduction, she claims, she has been
|
||
"shadowed" by a mysterious federal agent she calls John Wallis[197]. Christa's
|
||
husband, Tom Adams, has confirmed Wallis' existence[198].
|
||
In his REPORT ON COMMUNION, Ed Conroy -- who seems to have become a
|
||
participant in, and not merely an observer of, the phenomenon -- describes
|
||
harassment by helicopters, which as we have already noted, seems to be quite
|
||
a common occurrence in abductee situations[199]. Researchers blithely assume
|
||
that these incidents represent governmental attempts to spy on UFO percipients.
|
||
But this assertion is ridiculous. Helicopters are extremely expensive to
|
||
operate, and the engines of espionage have perfected numerous alternative
|
||
methods to gather information. After all, we now have a fairly extensive
|
||
bibliography of FBI, CIA, and military efforts to spy on numerous movements
|
||
favoring domestic social change. Why have no veterans of CHAOS or COINTELPRO
|
||
(either victim or victimizer) spoken of helicopters? Obviously the choppers
|
||
serve some other purpose beyond mere surveillance. One possibility might be
|
||
the propagation of electromagnetic waves which might affect the perceptions/
|
||
behaviors of an implanted individual. (Indeed, I have heard rumors of heli-
|
||
copters being used in electronic "crowd control" operations in Vietnam and
|
||
elsewhere; alas, the information is far from hard.)
|
||
Contactee Eldon Kerfoot has written of his suspicions that human mani-
|
||
pulators, not aliens, may be the ultimate puppeteers engineering his
|
||
experiences. He describes a sudden compulsion to kill a fellow veteran of
|
||
the Korean conflict -- a man Kerfoot had no logical reason to distrust or
|
||
dislike, yet whom he "sensed" to have been a traitor to his country. For-
|
||
tunately, the assassination never materialized[200]. But the situation exactly
|
||
parallels incidents described in released ARTICHOKE documents concerning the
|
||
remote hypnotic induction of anti-social behavior.
|
||
One last speculation:
|
||
Renato Vesco's INTERCEPT BUT DON'T SHOOT[201] outlines a fascinating
|
||
scenario for the "secret weapon" hypothesis of UFOs. Vesco points out that
|
||
if these devices are one day to be used in a superpower conflict [or in
|
||
suppression of civilian revolution, against, say, S&L taxation -jpg], the
|
||
attacking power would be well-served by the myth of the UFO as an extra-
|
||
terrestrial craft, for the besieged nation would not know the true nature of
|
||
its opponent. Perhaps, then, one purpose of the UFO abductions is to engender
|
||
and maintain the legend of the little grey aliens. For the hidden manipula-
|
||
tors, the abductions could be, in and of themselves, a propaganda coup.
|
||
|
||
|
||
FINAL THOUGHTS
|
||
|
||
I do not insist dogmatically on the scenario that I have outlined. I do not
|
||
wish to dissuade abduction researchers from exploring other avenues -- indeed,
|
||
I strongly encourage such work to continue. Nor can I easily account for some
|
||
aspects of the abduction narratives -- for example, any suggestions I could
|
||
offer concerning the reports of genetic experimentation would be extremely
|
||
speculative.
|
||
But I DO insist on a fair hearing of this hypothesis. Criticism is
|
||
encouraged; that which does not destroy my thesis will make it stronger. I ask
|
||
only that my critics refrain from intellectual laziness; mere differences in
|
||
world-view do not constitute a valid attack. God is found in the details.
|
||
I recognize the dangers inherent in making this thesis public. New and
|
||
distressing abductee confabulations may result. I would prefer that the
|
||
audience for this paper be restricted to abduction RESEARCHERS, not victims,
|
||
who might be unduly influenced. However, in a society that prides itself on
|
||
ostensibly free press, such restrictions are unthinkable. Therefore, I can
|
||
only beg any abduction victims who might read this paper to attempt a super-
|
||
human objectivity. The thesis I have outlined is promising, and (should
|
||
trepanation ever provide us with an example of an actual abductee implant)
|
||
susceptible of proof. But mine is not the only hypothesis. The abductee's
|
||
unrewarding task is to report what he or she has experienced as truthfully as
|
||
possible, untainted by outside speculation.
|
||
Whether or not future investigation proves UFO abductions to be a product
|
||
of mind control experimentation, I feel that this paper has, at least,
|
||
provided evidence of a serious danger facing those who hold fast to the ideals
|
||
of individual freedom. We cannot long ignore this menace.
|
||
A spectre haunts the democratic nations -- the spectre of TECHNOFASCISM.
|
||
All the powers of the espionage empire and the scientific establishment have
|
||
entered into an unholy alliance to evoke this spectre: Psychiatrist and spy,
|
||
Dulles and Delgado, microwave specialists and clandestine operators.
|
||
A mind is a terrible thing to waste -- and a worse thing to commandeer.
|
||
|
||
NOTES
|
||
|
||
1. Budd Hopkins, MISSING TIME (New York: Richard Marek Publishers, 1981)
|
||
and INTRUDERS (New York: Random House, 1987).
|
||
2. Whitley Strieber, COMMUNION (New York: Beech Tree Books, 1987).
|
||
3. Cannon, "Psychiatric Abuse of UFO Witness," UFO magazine, vol. 3,
|
||
no. 5 (December, 1988)
|
||
4. Philip Klass, UFO ABDUCTIONS: A DANGEROUS GAME (Buffalo: Prometheus
|
||
Books, 1988). Klass makes some sharp observations, which are undercut by his
|
||
refusal to interview abductees directly. The work has no footnotes and
|
||
depends heavily on the work of Dr. Martin "Bob" Orne -- of whom more anon.
|
||
5. See bibliography.
|
||
6. New York: Bantam Books, 1979.
|
||
7. See generally PROJECT MKULTRA, THE CIA'S PROGRAM OF RESEARCH IN
|
||
BEHAVIOR MODIFICATION, joint hearing before the Select Committee on Health and
|
||
Scientific Research of the Committee on Human Resources, Unites States Senate
|
||
(Washington: Government Printing Office, 1977).
|
||
8. Robert Eringer, "Secret Agent Man," ROLLING STONE, 1985.
|
||
9. John Marks interview with Victor Marchetti (Marks files, available at
|
||
the National Security Archives, Washington, D.C.).
|
||
10. In an interview with John Marks, hypnosis expert Milton Kline, a
|
||
veteran of clandestine experimentation in this field, averred that his work
|
||
for the government continued. Since the interview took place in 1977, years
|
||
after the CIA allegedly halted mind control research, we must conclude either
|
||
that the CIA lied, or that another agency continued the work. In another
|
||
interview with Marks, former Air Force-CIA liaison L. Fletcher Prouty con-
|
||
firmed that the Department of Defense ran studies either in conjunction with
|
||
or parallel to those operated by the CIA. (Marks files.)
|
||
11. Estabrooks, HYPNOSIS (New York: E.P. Dutton & Co., Inc., 1957
|
||
[revised edition]), 13-14.
|
||
12. A copy of this letter can be found in the Marks files.
|
||
13. Estabrooks attracted an eclectic group of friends, including J.
|
||
Edgar Hoover and Alan Watts.
|
||
14. Interview with daughter Doreen Estabrooks, Marks files, Washington,
|
||
D.C.
|
||
15. Martin A. Lee and Bruce Shlain, ACID DREAMS (New York: Grove Press,
|
||
1985) 3-4; Marks, THE SEARCH FOR "THE MANCHURIAN CANDIDATE", 6-8
|
||
16. Marks, ibid. 4-6.
|
||
17. Edward Hunter, BRAINWASHING IN RED CHINA (New York: Vanguard Press,
|
||
1951.). Hunter invented the term "brainwashing" in a September 24, 1950 Miami
|
||
NEWS article.
|
||
18. "Japan's Germ Warfare Experiments," THE GLOBE AND MAIL (Toronto),
|
||
May 19, 1982.
|
||
19. Walter Bowart, OPERATION MIND CONTROL (New York: Dell, 1978), 191-2,
|
||
quoting Warren Commission documents. We cannot fairly derive from this state-
|
||
ment a sanguine attitude about PRESENT Soviet capabilities; in this field,
|
||
even outdated technology suffices for mischief.
|
||
20. Marks, THE SEARCH FOR "THE MANCHURIAN CANDIDATE", 60-61. A folk
|
||
entymology has it that the "MK" of MKULTRA stands for "Mind Kontrol." Accord-
|
||
ing to Marks, TSS prefixed the cryptonyms of all its projects with these
|
||
initials. Note, though, that MKULTRA was preceded by a still-mysterious TSS
|
||
program called QKHILLTOP.
|
||
21. Marks, THE SEARCH FOR "THE MANCHURIAN CANDIDATE", 224-229. Seven
|
||
MKULTRA subprojects were continued, under TSS supervision, as MKSEARCH. This
|
||
project ended in 1972. CIA apologists often proclaim that "brainwashing"
|
||
research ceased in either 1962 or 1972; these blandishments refer to the TSS
|
||
projects, not to the ORD work, which remains TERRA INCOGNITA for independent
|
||
researchers. Marks discovered that the ORD research was so voluminous that
|
||
retrieving documents via FOIA would have proven unthinkably expensive.
|
||
22. For a description of the research into parapsychology, see Ronald
|
||
M. McRae's MIND WARS (New York: St. Martin's Press, 1984). The best book
|
||
available on a subject which awaits a truly authoritative text.
|
||
23. Abduction researcher and hypnotherapist Miranda Park, of Lancaster,
|
||
California, reports that she has viewed such anomalies in abductee MRI scans.
|
||
See also Whitley Strieber, TRANSFORMATION (New York: Beech Tree Books, 1988)
|
||
246-247. At this writing, both Strieber and Hopkins report initially promising
|
||
results in their efforts to document the presence of these "extras" in
|
||
abductees.
|
||
24. Allegedly, the experiment took place in 1964. However, in WERE WE
|
||
CONTROLLED? (New Hyde Park, NY: University Books, 1967), the pseudonymous
|
||
"Lincoln Lawrence" makes an interesting argument (on page 36) that the
|
||
demonstration took place some years earlier.
|
||
25. New York: Harper and Row, 1969. Much of Delgado's work was funded
|
||
by the Office of Naval Intelligence, a common conduit for CIA funds during the
|
||
1950s and '60s. (Gordon Thomas' JOURNEY INTO MADNESS (New York: Bantam, 1989)
|
||
misleadingly implies that CIA interest in Delgado's work began in 1972.)
|
||
26. J.M.R. "Bob" Delgado. "Intracerebral Radio Stimulation and Recording
|
||
in Completely Free Patients," PSYCHOTECHNOLOGY (Robert L. Schwitzgebel and
|
||
Ralph K. Schwitzgebel, editors; New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1973):
|
||
195.
|
||
27. David Krech, "Controlling the Mind Controllers," THINK 32 (July-
|
||
August), 1966.
|
||
28. Delgado, PHYSICAL CONTROL OF THE MIND
|
||
29. Delgado, "Intracerebral Radio Stimulation and Recording in Completely
|
||
free patients," 195.
|
||
30. Note, for example, Charles Hickson's account of the Pascagoula
|
||
Incident. Charles Hickson and William Mendez, UFO CONTACT AT PASCOGOULA
|
||
(Tuscon: Wendelle C. Stevens, 1983).
|
||
31. John Ranleigh, THE AGENCY (New York: Simon and Shuster, 1986): 208.
|
||
Marchetti casts this story in the form of an amusing anecdote: After much time
|
||
and expense, a cat was suitably trained and prepared -- only, on its first
|
||
assignment, to be run over by a taxi. Marchetti neglects to point out that
|
||
nothing stopped the Agency from getting another cat. Or from using a human
|
||
being.
|
||
32. Of course, this suggestion raises the knotty question of whether the
|
||
abductees suffer from a form of schizophrenia, which may also be characterized
|
||
by "voices." I refer the reader to the work of Hopkins, Strieber, Thomas
|
||
Bullard, and others who have described the difficulties of ascribing all
|
||
abductions to psychotic states.
|
||
33. Alan W. Scheflin and Edward M. Opton, Jr., THE MIND MANIPULATORS
|
||
(London: Paddington Press, 1978), 347.
|
||
34. Thomas, JOURNAY INTO MADNESS, 276.
|
||
35. James Olds, "Hypothalamic Substrates of Reward," PHYSIOLOGICAL
|
||
REVIEWS, 1962, 42:554; "Emotional Centers in the Brain," SCIENCE JOURNAL,
|
||
1967, 3 (5).
|
||
36. Vernon Mark and Frank Ervin, VIOLENCE AND THE BRAIN (New York:
|
||
Harper and Row, 1970), chapter 12, excerpted in INDIVIDUAL RIGHTS AND THE
|
||
FEDERAL ROLE IN BEHAVIOR MODIFICATION, prepared by the Staff of the Subcom-
|
||
mittee on Constitutional Rights of the Committee of the Judiciary, United
|
||
States Senate (Washington: Government Printing Office, 1974).
|
||
37. John Lilly, THE SCIENTIST (Berkeley, Ronin Publishing, 1988 [revised
|
||
edition]), 90. Monkeys allowed to stimulate themselves continually via ESB
|
||
brought themselves to orgasm once every three minutes, sixteen hours a day.
|
||
Scientific gatherings throughout the world saw motion pictures of these
|
||
experiments, which surely made spectacular cinema.
|
||
38. Scheflin and Opton, THE MIND MANIPULATORS, 336-337. Heath even
|
||
monitored his patient's brain responses during the subject's first heterosexual
|
||
encounter. Such is the nature of the brave new world before us.
|
||
39. Robert L. Schwitzgebel and Richard M. Bird, "Sociotechnical Design
|
||
Factors in Remote Instrumentation with Humans in Natural Environments,"
|
||
BEHAVIOR RESEARCH METHODS AND INSTRUMENTATION, 1970, 2, 99-105.
|
||
40. Thomas, JOURNEY INTO MADNESS, 277. In the BEHAVIOR RESEARCH METHODS
|
||
AND INSTRUMENTATION article referenced above, Schwitzgebel details how the
|
||
radio signals may be fed into a telephone via a modem and thus analyzed by a
|
||
computer anywhere in the world.
|
||
41. Scheflin and Opton, THE MIND MANIPULATORS, 347-349.
|
||
42. Louis Tackwood and the Citizen's Research and Investigation Commit-
|
||
tee, THE GLASS HOUSE TAPES (New York: Avon, 1973), 226.
|
||
43. Perry London, BEHAVIOR CONTROL (New York: Harper and Row, 1969), 145
|
||
44. Scheflin and Opton, THE MIND MANIPULATORS, 351-353; Tackwood, THE
|
||
GLASS HOUSE TAPES, 228.
|
||
45. "Beepers in kids' heads could stop abductors," Las Vegas SUN, Oct.
|
||
27, 1987.
|
||
46. Lilly, THE SCIENTIST, 91.
|
||
47. Marks, THE SEARCH FOR "THE MANCHURIAN CANDIDATE", 151-154.
|
||
48. Interestingly, Lilly has come out of the closet as a sort of proto-
|
||
Strieber; THE SCIENTIST recounts his close interaction with alien (though not
|
||
necessarily extraterrestrial) forces which he labels "solid state entities."
|
||
49. The story of Deep Trance, an MKULTRA "insider" who provided
|
||
invaluable information, is somewhat involved. I do not know who Trance is/was
|
||
and Marks may not know either. He contacted Trance via the writer of an
|
||
article published shortly before research on THE SEARCH FOR "THE MANCHURIAN
|
||
CANDIDATE" began, addressing his informant "Dear Source whose anonymity I
|
||
respect." I respect it too -- hence my reticence to name the aforementioned
|
||
article, which may mark a trail to Trance. The fact that I have not followed
|
||
this trail would not prevent others from doing so. [And if Trance were a
|
||
CIA disinformation source a la William Cooper, this is precisely the behavior
|
||
they would count on. -jpg]
|
||
50. London, BEHAVIOR CONTROL, 139.
|
||
51. See generally, UFO magazine, Vol. 4, No. 2; especially the
|
||
interesting contribution by Whitley Strieber.
|
||
52. Lawrence, WERE WE CONTROLLED?, 36-37; Anita Gregory, "Introduction
|
||
to Leonid L. Vasilev's EXPERIMENTS IN DISTANT INFLUENCE," PSYCHIC WARFARE:
|
||
FACT OR FICTION (editor: John White) (Nottinghamshire: Aquarian, 1988) 34-57.
|
||
53. Lawrence, WERE WE CONTROLLED?, 38.
|
||
54. Bowart, OPERATION MIND CONTROL, 261-264.
|
||
55. Ibid. 263.
|
||
56. Lawrence, WERE WE CONTROLLED?, 52.
|
||
57. HUMAN DRUG TESTING BY THE CIA, 202.
|
||
58. Note especially the Supreme Court's decision in CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE
|
||
AGENCY ET Al. V. SIMS, ET AL. (No. 83-1075; decided April 16, 1986). The
|
||
egregious and dangerous majority opinion in this case held that disclosure of
|
||
the names of scientists and institutions involved in MKULTRA posed an
|
||
"unacceptable risk of revealing 'intelligence sources.' The decisions of the
|
||
[CIA] Director, who must of course be familiar with 'the whole picture,' as
|
||
judges are not, are worthy of great deference...it is conceivable that the
|
||
mere explanation of why information must be withheld can convey valuable
|
||
information to a foreign intelligence agency." How do we square this continu-
|
||
ing need for secrecy with the CIA's protestations that MKULTRA achieved little
|
||
success, that the studies were conducted within the Nueremberg statues govern-
|
||
ing medical experiments, and that the research was made available in the open
|
||
literature?
|
||
59. Letter, P.A. Lindstrom to Robert Naeslund, July 27, 1983; copy
|
||
available from Martti Koski, Kiilinpellontie 2, 21290 Rusko, Finland. Lind-
|
||
strom writes that he fully agrees with Lincoln Lawrence, author of WERE WE
|
||
CONTROLLED?
|
||
60. Bowart, OPERATION MIND CONTROL, 265. I have attempted without
|
||
success to contact Dr. Lindstrom.
|
||
61. Bowart, OPERATION MIND CONTROL, 233-249. This interview was
|
||
repinted without attribution in a bizarre compendium of UFO rumors called
|
||
THE MATRIX, compiled by "Valdamar Valerian" (actually John Grace, allegedly
|
||
a captain working for Air Force intelligence).
|
||
62. Robert Anton Wilson, "Adventures with Head Hardware," MAGICAL BLEND,
|
||
23 [of course], July 1989.
|
||
63. Michael Hutchison, MEGA BRAIN (New York: Ballantine, 1986); Gerald
|
||
Oster, "Auditory Beats in the Brain," SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN, September, 1973.
|
||
64. Marilyn Ferguson, THE BRAIN REVOLUTION (New York: Taplinger, 1973),
|
||
90.
|
||
65. Ibid., 91-92. The presence of delta in a waking subject can
|
||
indicate pathology.
|
||
66. Bio-Pacer promotional and price sheet, available from Lindemann
|
||
Laboratories, 3463 State Street, #264, Santa Barbara, CA 93105.
|
||
67. Hutchison, MEGA BRAIN, 117-118. Compare Light's observations about
|
||
"the grant game" to Sid Gottlieb's protestations that nearly all "mind con-
|
||
trol" research was openly published.
|
||
68. Thomas Martinez and John Gunther, THE BROTHERHOOD OF MURDER (New
|
||
York: McGraw-Hill, 1988), 230.
|
||
69. Interview, Sandy Monroe of the Los Angeles office of the Christic
|
||
Institute.
|
||
70. See generally Paul Brodeur, THE ZAPPING OF AMERICA (Toronto, George
|
||
J. MacLeod, 1977).
|
||
71. Until recently, the American Embassy was on a street named after the
|
||
composer.
|
||
72. It was finally determined that the microwaves were used to receive
|
||
transmissions from bugs planted within the embassy. DARPA director George H.
|
||
Heimeier went on record stating that PANDORA was never designed to study
|
||
"microwaves as a surveillance tool." See Anne Keeler, "Remote Mind Control
|
||
Technology," FULL DISCLOSURE #15. I would note that the Soviet embassy was
|
||
"bugged and waved" in Canada during the 1950s, and according to the Los
|
||
Angeles TIMES (June 5, 1989), the Soviet embassy in Britain had been similarly
|
||
affected.
|
||
73. Ronald I. Adams R.A. Williams, BIOLOGICAL EFFECTS OF ELECTROMAGNETIC
|
||
RADIATION (RADIOWAVES AND MICROWAVES) EURASIAN COMMUNIST COUNTRIES, (Defense
|
||
Intelligence Agency, March 1976.) Brodeur notes that much of the work ascribed
|
||
to the Soviets in this report was actually first accomplished by scientists in
|
||
the United States. Keeler argues that this report constitutes an example of
|
||
"mirror imaging" -- i.e., parading domestic advances as a foreign threat, the
|
||
better to pry funding from a suitably-fearful Congress.
|
||
74. Keeler, "Remote Mind Control Technology."
|
||
75. R.J. MacGregor, "A Brief Survey of Literature Relating to Influence
|
||
of Low Intensity Microwaves on Nervous Function" (Santa Monica: RAND Corpor-
|
||
ation, 1970).
|
||
76. Keeler, "Remote Mind Control Technology."
|
||
77. Larry Collins, "Mind Control," PLAYBOY, January 1990.
|
||
78. Allan H. Frey, "Behavioral Effects of Electromagnetic Energy,"
|
||
SYMPOSIUM ON BIOLOGICAL EFFECTS AND MEASUREMENTS OF RADIO FREQUENCIES/MICRO-
|
||
WAVES, DeWitt G. Hazzard, editor (U.S. Department of Health, Education and
|
||
Welfare, 1977).
|
||
79. quoted in THE APPLICATION OF TESLA'S TECHNOLOGY IN TODAY'S WORLD
|
||
(Montreal: Lafferty, Hardwood & Partners, Ltd., 1978).
|
||
80. Keeler, "Remote Mind Control Technology."
|
||
81. L. George Lawrence, "Electronics and Brain Control," POPULAR
|
||
ELECTRONICS, July 1973.
|
||
82. Susan Schiefelbein, "The Invisible Threat," SATURDAY REVIEW,
|
||
September 15, 1979.
|
||
83. E. Preston, "Studies on the Nervous System, Cardiovascular Function
|
||
and Thermoregulation," BIOLOGICAL EFFECTS OF RADIO FREQUENCY AND MICROWAVE
|
||
RADIATION, edited by H.M. Assenheim (Ottawa, Canada: National Research Council
|
||
of Canada, 1979), 138-141.
|
||
84. Robert O. Becker, THE BODY ELECTRIC (New York: William Morrow, 1985)
|
||
318-319.
|
||
85. Ibid.
|
||
86. Ibid., 321.
|
||
87. See Bowart's OPERATION MIND CONTROL, page 218, for an interesting
|
||
example of this "rationalization" process at work in the case of Sirhan
|
||
Sirhan, who was convicted for the assassination of Robert F. Kennedy. In
|
||
prison, Sirhan was hypnotized by Dr. Bernard Diamond, who instructed Sirhan
|
||
to climb the bars of his cage like a monkey. He did so. After the trance
|
||
was removed, Sirhan was shown tapes of his actions; he insisted that he "acted
|
||
like a monkey" of his own free will -- he claimed he wanted the exercise.
|
||
88. Keeler suggests that the proposal was revealed only because
|
||
Schapitz' sensationalistic implications may have worked to his discredit --
|
||
and therefore hide -- the REAL research. Personally, I don't accept this
|
||
argument, but I respect Keeler's instincts enough to repeat her caveat here.
|
||
89. Margaret Cheney's TESLA: A MAN OUT OF TIME (New York: Dell, 1981),
|
||
the most reliable book in the sea of wild speculation surrounding this
|
||
extraordinary scientist, confirms Tesla's early work with the psychological
|
||
effects of electromagnetic radiation. See especially pages 101-104; note also
|
||
the afterword, in which we learn that certain government agencies have kept
|
||
important research by Tesla hidden from the general public.
|
||
90. Noted in Lawrence, WERE WE CONTROLLED?, 29.
|
||
91. Particularly one Thomas Bearden of Huntsville, Alabama; I have in my
|
||
possession a document written by Bearden associate Andrew Michrowski which
|
||
identifies Bearden as an intelligence agent for an undisclosed agency.
|
||
92. Kathleen McAuliffe, "The Mind Fields," OMNI magazine, February 1985.
|
||
93. May 5, 1985.
|
||
94. I refer to an individual who later wrote a very clear-headed and
|
||
thoughtful letter to Dr. Paul Lowinger, who has graciously made his files
|
||
available to me. For now, I feel compelled to withold this person's name.
|
||
95. Cameron became president of the American Psychiatric Association,
|
||
the Canadian Psychiatric Association, and the World Association of Psychia-
|
||
trists, He previously sat on the Nueremberg panel, helping to draw up the
|
||
statutes governing ethical medical behavior!
|
||
96. In particular, Opton and Scheflin's overview, though excellent in
|
||
scope and detail, continually seeks reassurring interpretations of evidence
|
||
which points toward more distressing conclusions.
|
||
97. Martin T. Orne, "Can a hypnotized subject be compelled to carry out
|
||
otherwise unacceptable behavior?" INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLINICAL AND EXPERI-
|
||
MENTAL HYPNOSIS, 1972, Vol. 20, 101-117.
|
||
98. Marks mentions, in a letter to Orne, the latter's claim to have been
|
||
an unwitting participant in subproject 84. Yet the papers released concerning
|
||
subproject 84 clearly establish the Agency's willingness to put Orne in the
|
||
know; Orne later admitted to Marks that he was made aware of his CIA sponsor-
|
||
ship (Marks, THE SEARCH FOR "THE MANCHURIAN CANDIDATE", 172-173). In an
|
||
interview with Marks, Orne discounted the story of Candy Jones (which we shall
|
||
recount later) by insisting that if such an experiment had occurred "someone
|
||
in some agency would have come to me." Why would they come to him about a
|
||
super-secret project, unless Orne had a high security clearance and worked
|
||
extensively with intelligence agencies? Note also that Orne conducted exten-
|
||
sive studies for the Office of Naval Research from June 1, 1968 to May 31,
|
||
1971. He has also been funded by DARPA. Moreover, I consider noteworthy the
|
||
fact that Orne somehow became president of the Society for Clinical and
|
||
Experimental Hypnosis despite the fact that the organization had decided not
|
||
to have a president. (This fact was related to Marks by a prominent hypnosis
|
||
specialist in an off-the-record interview that I probably wasn't supposed to
|
||
see.)
|
||
99. The story has been told many times. See Turner and Christian's THE
|
||
KILLING OF ROBERT F. KENNEDY, 207-208; also Peter J. Reiter, ANTISOCIAL OR
|
||
CRIMINAL ACTS AND HYPNOSIS (Springfield, Illinois: Charles C. Thomas, 1958).
|
||
100. John G. Watkins, "Antisocial behavior under hypnosis: Possible or
|
||
impossible?" INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL FOR CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL HYPNOSIS,
|
||
1972, Vol. 20, 95-100.
|
||
101. Milton H. Erickson, "An experimental investigation of the possible
|
||
anti-social use of hypnosis," PSYCHIATRY, 1939, vol. 2. Erickson argues that
|
||
if a hypnotist has convinced his subject to misperceive reality, then result-
|
||
ing actions cannot be considered "anti-social," for the actions would be
|
||
acceptable within the subject's internal reality construct. This argument
|
||
strikes me as semantic quibbling. [not me -jpg]
|
||
102. See generally Flo Conway and Jim Seigelman, SNAPPING (New York:
|
||
Lippincott, 1978).
|
||
103. Lee and Schlain, ACID DREAMS, 8-9.
|
||
104. John Marks interview with Victor Marchetti, December 19, 1977
|
||
(Marks files).
|
||
105. Martin T. Orne, "On the Mechanisms of Posthypnotic Amnesia," THE
|
||
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL HYPNOSIS, 1966, vol. 14,
|
||
121-134. Orne's work with post-hypnotic amnesia was funded by NIMH, the Air
|
||
Force Office of Scientific Research, and the Office of Naval Research. I
|
||
should like to hear what innocent explanation, if any, the Air Force has to
|
||
offer to explain their interest in post-hypnotic amnesia. ["We must not allow
|
||
a post-hypnotic-amnesia gap!" of course. -jpg]
|
||
106. Bowart, OPERATION MIND CONTROL, 242-243.
|
||
107. Obviously Allan Dulles. This may have been a hypnotically-induced
|
||
delusion; on the other hand, Dulles' legendary sexual rapacity makes this claim
|
||
rather less unlikely than one might first assume. [WRONG! Obviously, this
|
||
reference is to J.R. "Bob" Dobbs, chief MC of the Church of SubGenius; the
|
||
initials A.D. refer to one of his pseudonyms, Adman Destructor. "Bob"'s
|
||
sexual rapacity is the stuff of SubLegend. -jpg]
|
||
108. Always the best indicator of whether or not hypnosis is genuine;
|
||
I can't understand why Orne didn't use this test in the Blanchi case.
|
||
109. Herbert Spiegel, "Hypnosis and evidence: Help or hindrance," ANN.
|
||
N.Y. ACAD. SCI.; 1980, 347, 73-85.
|
||
110. See, for example, Kroger, HYPNOSIS AND BEHAVIOR MODIFICATION, 21-22
|
||
111. See especially Klass, UFO ABDUCTIONS: A DANGEROUS GAME, 60-61.
|
||
Orne, interviewed here, makes reference to the work summarized in his article
|
||
"The use and misuse of hypnosis in court" (INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLINICAL
|
||
HYPNOSIS, 1979, vol. 27, 311-341.)
|
||
112. Klass argues that ufologists, in conducting hypnotic regression
|
||
sessions, inadvertently cue their subjects. A close reading of his text
|
||
reveals that he never proves or claims that such "cues" have taken place in
|
||
any individual instance; he simply believes that cueing MIGHT have occurred.
|
||
Had Klass been more willing to deal with abductees directly, he might have
|
||
found evidence of cause and effect; as it stands, his argument really amounts
|
||
to no more than a suggestion. For all that, I find his ideas regarding the
|
||
running of "clean" hypnotic regression sessions potentially valuable. 113. Marks, THE SEARCH FOR "THE MANCHURIAN CANDIDATE", 34-37.
|
||
114. Donald Bain, THE CONTROL OF CANDY JONES (Chicago, Playboy Press,
|
||
1976).
|
||
115. The use of hypnotized couriers in warfare goes back to the 19th
|
||
century.
|
||
116. Estabrooks, HYPNOTISM, 193-214.
|
||
117. John Marks interview with Milton Kline, December 22, 1977 (Marks
|
||
files). In another interview, Professor Clare Young (a colleague of Esta-
|
||
brooks' at Colgate University) confirmed that Estabrooks' hypnosis work for
|
||
the government has never been published.
|
||
118. Or could her marriage have been part of the program? "Long John,"
|
||
as he was popularly known, was famous in UFO circles, and had provided a forum
|
||
for such early-day contactees as Howard Menger. He also knew Jackie Gleason,
|
||
a prominent (if unlikely) name in the "crashed disc" rumor vaults. Could
|
||
Candy have been assigned to discover what Nebel knew?
|
||
119. Marks files. John Marks did excellent work on the Candy Jones story;
|
||
he erred -- almost unforgivably -- on the side of conservatism when he refused
|
||
to include information about this incident in his book. I know the name of
|
||
the institute involved; however, since Candy saw fit to keep this aspect of
|
||
her story secret (probably for sound legal reasons), I shall follow her lead.
|
||
120. Scheflin and Opton, THE MIND MANIPULATORS, 446-447.
|
||
121. Interviews, Marks files. One of Marks' informants offered the
|
||
interesting speculation that Candy's torture sessions were not conducted in
|
||
the field, but in the lab -- her entire mission might have been a hypno-
|
||
programmed fantasy.
|
||
122. The information about Candy's CIA files stems from a telephone
|
||
interview with Candy Jones. A problem looms here: CIA cover stories unravel
|
||
like the skin of an onion; once you remove the outer layer, the next lie is
|
||
revealed. [For this reason, I don't think this paper "reveals" the whole
|
||
truth; that, I suspect, is far worse. -jpg] In the case of Candy Jones, the
|
||
substrata of buncombe involves allegations that she WILLINGLY complied with
|
||
the CIA, and used Jensen's hypnosis experiments as a rationalization for her
|
||
compliance. Such is the explanation offered by certain of Marks' informants;
|
||
alas, Opton and Scheflin seem to have bought this line. Anyone familiar with
|
||
the vile acts of self-degradation to which Candy's programmers subjected her
|
||
will laugh this story out of court. No one, short of a severely psychotic
|
||
masochist, would willingly undergo what she went through.
|
||
123. Marks files.
|
||
124. William Kroger, CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL HYPNOSIS (Philadelphia:
|
||
Lippincott, 1963), 299.
|
||
125. Recently, ufologist Jim Moseley, an acquaintance of Candy's, has
|
||
claimed that an unidentified source on Nebel's "inner circle" once, off-the-
|
||
record, pronounced Candy's story "a crock." This assertion deserves careful
|
||
and respectful consideration. Still, Moseley won't identify his source, and
|
||
we have no way of telling if this insider spoke from instinct or certain
|
||
knowledge, or indeed, what he really meant. Did he feel Candy was fantasizing
|
||
or fibbing? If the former, why did her hallucinations match details of
|
||
MKULTRA released only after publication of her book? If the latter, how are
|
||
we to explain the many hypnotic regression tapes, at least some of which were
|
||
made available to outside investigators? (Fairly elaborate, for a hoax.) In
|
||
any case, how could Candy have known the fact (confirmed by Marks' associates)
|
||
that Kroger taught "Jensen" at a certain West-coast institute? Why, if the
|
||
story was "a crock," would Candy risk libel suits by naming -- to associates
|
||
and investigators, if not to the general public -- real-life hypnotherapists?
|
||
All in all, I would suggest that Moseley's "insider" was speaking glibly, and
|
||
did not know the true facts. [Or was speaking disinformationally. -jpg]
|
||
126. Philadelphia, Lippincott, 1976.
|
||
127. Ibid., 415.
|
||
128. Similar paranoid outbreaks led to the dissolution of Dr. Richard
|
||
Neal's UFO abductee group in Los Angeles, according to a phone interview I had
|
||
with Dr. Neal.
|
||
129. Affidavit of Dr. Simpson-Kallas in the case of Sirhan-Sirhan, 1973;
|
||
see Bowart, OPERATION MIND CONTROL, 225.
|
||
130. All true MPs have experienced some form of abuse or trauma, psycho-
|
||
logical or physical, during childhood.
|
||
131. One was ritually abused in an occult setting. If I were a "spy-
|
||
chiatrist" scouting potential fodder for mind control experiments, I would
|
||
seek out abused children from military families. (A military background
|
||
would ensure that the "right" doctor gets access to the child.) Abduction
|
||
researchers should look for such a pattern.
|
||
132. I refer here to the vast upsurge in alien abductions which took
|
||
place that year; see generally Kevin Randle, THE OCTOBER SCENARIO (Middle
|
||
Coast, 1988). Of course, abductions (or, according to my hypothesis, dis-
|
||
guised mind control operations) occurred previous to this year.
|
||
133. John Marks interview with Milton Kline, December 22, 1977 (Marks
|
||
files).
|
||
134. Brenda Butler ET AL., SKY CRASH, expanded edition (London: Grafton
|
||
Books, 1986), 305-321, 354-355.
|
||
135. Telephone interview with Nancy Wright.
|
||
136. Telephone interview with Miranda Parks.
|
||
137. William Moore, "UFOs and the U.S. Government," FOCUS, vol. 4,
|
||
June 30, 1989. Moore's role in the affair strikes me as highly questionable,
|
||
even scandalous -- although at least here we have one instance of direct and
|
||
irrefutable "insider" testimony of government harassment.
|
||
138. Some have also raised questions about his psychiatric treatment
|
||
of Oswald assassin Jack Ruby. I find it odd that a CIA mind control veteran
|
||
-- who did NOT reside or practice in Dallas -- should have been assigned to the
|
||
Ruby case.
|
||
139. Samiel Chavkin, THE MIND STEALERS (New York: Houghton Mifflin,
|
||
1978), 96-107.
|
||
140. Raymond Fowler, THE ANDREASSON AFFAIR (New York: Prentice Hall,
|
||
1979).
|
||
141. New York: Warner Books, 1989; 198-202.
|
||
142. Ruth Montgomery, ALIENS AMONG US (Ballantine, 1985), 49. My article
|
||
"Psychiatric Abuse of UFO Witness," referred to earlier, also documents this
|
||
phenomenon.
|
||
143. Chung-Kwang Chou and Arthur W. Guy, "Quantization of Microwave
|
||
Biological Effects," SYMPOSIUM OF BIOLOGICAL EFFECTS AND MEASUREMENT OF RADIO
|
||
FREQUENCY/MICROWAVES, edited by Dewitt G. Hazzard (U.S. Department of Health,
|
||
Education and Welfare, 1977).
|
||
144. MIAMI HERALD, May 28, 1984 and June 6, 1984; NATIONAL EXAMINER,
|
||
vol. 22, no. 18, April 30, 1985. Although the EXAMINER is a supermarket
|
||
tabloid, and therefore a questionable source, this periodical has rendered
|
||
researchers the service of printing the X-ray of Petit's brain, showing the
|
||
implant. [Ever heard of airbrushing? -jpg]
|
||
145. Los Angeles TIMES, March 28, 1988.
|
||
146. Raymond Fowler, THE ANDREASSON AFFAIR, PHASE TWO (Reward, 1982).
|
||
This book includes rare photographs of the unmarked helicopters which have
|
||
plagued this abduction victim and her family.
|
||
147. A mutual friend described for me an incident in which the former
|
||
SEAL, mistakenly perceiving a threat, almost instantly felled, and nearly
|
||
killed, a man twice his size. Whatever the truth of my informant's other
|
||
statements, he certainly has received advanced combat training.
|
||
148. Fenton Bresler, WHO KILLED JOHN LENNON? (New York: St. Martin's
|
||
Press, 1989), 45-46.
|
||
149. Bowart, OPERATION MIND CONTROL, 27-42.
|
||
150. Denise Winn, THE MANIPULATED MIND (London, Octagon Press, 1983),
|
||
72-73; Bresler, WHO KILLED JOHN LENNON?, 41; see generally: Peter Watson,
|
||
WAR ON THE MIND (London: Hutchison, 1978) (Watson broke the story on Narut
|
||
for the London TIMES).
|
||
151. Larry Collins, "Mind Control," PLAYBOY, January 1990.
|
||
152. John Marks interview with Milton Kline, December 22, 1977 (Marks
|
||
files).
|
||
153. Richard A. Gabriel, NO MORE HEROES (New York: Hill and Wang, 1987),
|
||
124.
|
||
154. Ibid., 150-151.
|
||
155. See generally: Mark Lane, CONVERSATIONS WITH AMERICANS (Simon and
|
||
Shuster, 1970); A.J. Langguth, HIDDEN TERRORS (New York: Pantheon, 1978).
|
||
156. John G. Fuller, THE INTERRUPTED JOURNEY (New York: Dell, 1966).
|
||
157. This detail plays a part in other abductions -- for example, it
|
||
crops up in the Betty Andreasson Luca case. See Raymond Fowler, THE ANDREAS-
|
||
SON AFFAIR (New York: Bantam, 1980), 50-51.
|
||
158. Stanton Friedman, for example; the reader is referred to his 1988
|
||
Whole Life Expo lecture, "UFOs: A Cosmic Watergate."
|
||
159. THE BODY ELECTRIC, 196-202.
|
||
160. The Fish map has received wide discussion; for a representative
|
||
sampling, the reader is directed to the aforementioned Friedman lecture (note
|
||
158); Terence Dickenson, "The Zeti Reticuli Incident," ASTRONOMY, December,
|
||
1974; Klass, UFO ABDUCTIONS: A DANGEROUS GAME, 20-23; and John Rimmer, THE
|
||
EVIDENCE FOR ALIEN ABDUCTIONS (Weillingborough: Aquarian, 1984), 88-92.
|
||
Incidentally, Klass has proposed to Friedman a test regarding the ability to
|
||
recall such material accurately under hypnotic regression; Friedman, for
|
||
reasons best known to himself, declined the offer to participate.
|
||
|
||
OPERATION MIND CONTROL, by Walter Bowart (Dell, 1978). The best single volume
|
||
on the subject. Difficult to find; indeed, this book's rapid disappear-
|
||
ance from bookstores and libraries has aroused the suspicions of some
|
||
researchers. (Tom David Books, POB 1107, Aptos, CA 95001, carries this
|
||
work.)
|
||
|
||
PHYSICAL CONTROL OF THE MIND, by Jose Delgado (Harper and Row, 1969). Outdated
|
||
but still essential.
|
||
|
||
PROJECT MKULTRA, joint hearing before the Select Committee on Health and
|
||
Scientific Research of the Committee on Human Resources, United States
|
||
Senate (Government Printing Office, 1977).
|
||
|
||
PSYCHIC WARFARE: FACT OR FICTION? edited by John White (Aquarian, 1988). See
|
||
especially Michael Rossman's contribution.
|
||
|
||
PSYCHOTECHNOLOGY, Robert L. Schwitzgebel and Ralph K. Schwitzgebel (Holt,
|
||
Rhinehart and Winston, 1973).
|
||
|
||
THE SCIENTIST, by John Lilly (expanded edition: Ronin, 1988). Bizarre --
|
||
Lilly is an ex-"brainwashing" specialist who claims to be in contact
|
||
with aliens. Is he controlled or controlling?
|
||
|
||
THE SEARCH FOR "THE MANCHURIAN CANDIDATE", by John Marks (Bantam, 1978). An
|
||
invaluable book. However, many people have made the mistake of assuming
|
||
it tells the full story. It does not.
|
||
|
||
WERE WE CONTROLLED? by Lincoln Lawrence (University Books, 1967). Explores
|
||
possible connections to the JFK assassination. Dr. Petter Lindstrom's
|
||
endorsement of this work makes it mandatory reading.
|
||
|
||
WHO KILLED JOHN LENNON? by Fenton Bresler (St. Martin's Press, 1989).
|
||
Interesting thesis concerning the possible use of mind control on Mark
|
||
David Chapman. Better in its analysis of Chapman than in its history
|
||
of mind control. In my own work, I have encountered data which may
|
||
help confirm Bresler's theory.
|
||
|
||
THE ZAPPING OF AMERICA, by Paul Brodeur (MacLeod [Canadian edition], 1976).
|
||
Contains a good chapter on microwave mind control technology.
|
||
|
||
The important stories of Martti Koski and Robert Naeslund can be obtained by
|
||
sending three dollars to Martti Koski, Kiilinpellontie 2, 21290 Rusko,
|
||
FINLAND. Koski's description of his "programming" sessions should not be
|
||
taken at face value; we cannot always trust the perception of someone whose
|
||
perception has been altered. His research into the technology of mind control
|
||
is solid.
|
||
|
||
But none of that could ever happen in THIS country, oh never. We're protected
|
||
by the Philip Morris Constitution(tm) and the National Security Act of 1947.
|
||
|
||
AND I FEEL SECURE. DON'T YOU?
|
||
|
||
Television certainly couldn't be INTENTIONALLY CONTRIVED to induce hypnagogic f
|
||
trance states in its viewers through which the Con delivers ONENESS FANTASY
|
||
INDUCTION, Oral Gratification Stimulation and **DEATH ANXIETY** SIGNALS.
|
||
<girlfriend and I are one> WHY DO YOU THINK IT'S CALLED "PROGRAMMING"!?!? n
|
||
We have American brand McFreedom: we're free to consume ourselves into
|
||
indentured-servitude/wage-slave debt, free to get the BEST MIND CONTROL
|
||
ADVERTISING that CREDIT CAN BUY. Never mind McGovernment prying into our o
|
||
bladders for evidence of Thoughtcrime...those evil drug users aren't consuming
|
||
the RIGHT, government-SUBSIDIZED drugs and therefore are traitors to the
|
||
Fatherland! <feed me> The Drug Czar really WASN'T ADDICTED TO NICOTINE; he r
|
||
chewed Nicorettes TO SET A SHINING EXAMPLE FOR THE CHILDREN and make them GOOD
|
||
CONSUMERS OF PHILIP MORRIS tobacco products. <buy or die> Hail Helms! Viva
|
||
Zapata Oil! NSA KNOWS BEST! d
|
||
|
||
MEIN FUEHRER! I CAN WALK!
|
||
|
||
|
||
"If you want a picture of the future, "One of the more interesting
|
||
imagine a boot stamping on a human concepts of propaganda -- at least
|
||
face -- forever." propaganda in Western societies --
|
||
- O'Brien is that it's a propaganda of
|
||
integration, that it's not an overt
|
||
"Simply knowing you're an object of practice, that it is something that
|
||
propaganda is not enough, in itself, has to take place over a long
|
||
to armor one against the appeals of period of time; it has to be fairly
|
||
propaganda. That's really the common; it has to be integrated
|
||
message of 1984...everybody's aware into everyday life."
|
||
that the propaganda is ongoing -- - Richard Bolton,
|
||
that's what doublethink is, that's Prof. of Visual Arts,
|
||
what the concept of doublethink MIT
|
||
means: with one part of your mind
|
||
you can see that it's just a crock, No. 2: Why did you resign?
|
||
and you don't fall for it, but with No. 6: Too many people know too
|
||
the other part of that same mind, much.
|
||
you adhere blindly to it." No. 2: Never!
|
||
- Mark Miller,
|
||
Johns Hopkins University
|
||
|
||
|
||
"Outside man there is nothing."
|
||
"But the whole universe is outside us. Look at the stars! Some of them are
|
||
a million light-years away. They are out of our reach forever."
|
||
"What are stars?" said O'Brien indifferently. "They are bits of fire a few
|
||
kilometers away. We could reach them if we wanted to. Or we could blot them
|
||
out. The earth is the center of the universe. The sun and the stars go round
|
||
it...For certain purposes, of course, that is not true. When we navigate the
|
||
ocean, or when we predict an eclipse, we often find it convenient to assume
|
||
that the earth goes round the sun and that the stars are millions upon millions
|
||
of kilometers away. But what of it? Do you suppose it is beyond us to produce
|
||
a dual system of astronomy? The stars can be near or distant, according as we
|
||
need them. Do you suppose our mathematicians are unequal to that? Have you
|
||
forgotten doublethink?"
|
||
|
||
Bad thinking is punishable.
|
||
No. 2: (shouts) Why POP! Good thinking will be as
|
||
No. 6: Pop, pop, pop. quickly rewarded. You will
|
||
find it an effective
|
||
combination.
|
||
- The Keeper
|
||
|
||
As time is short, and you may lie, I'm The fact that the Conspiracy is
|
||
going to have to torture you. But I unaware of itself as a Conspiracy
|
||
want you to know it isn't personal. gives it such power over our minds
|
||
- Agent Rogerz that the very thought becomes
|
||
REPO MAN unthinkable.
|
||
- Arise!
|
||
SubGprop indoctrination tape #23
|
||
|
||
You don't have many suspects who are
|
||
innocent of a crime. That's contradictory.
|
||
If a person is innocent of a crime, then
|
||
he is not a suspect.
|
||
- Edwin Meese III
|
||
ex-U.S. Attorney General |