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The video discusses 50 disturbing facts about the CIA, including mind control experiments, assassination plots, and collaboration with former Nazis. One of the most talked-about cases is the mysterious death of Frank Olson, a scientist involved in secret mind control experiments. Olson fell from a window after being drugged with LSD, and there are suspicions that he may have been murdered to prevent him from revealing classified information. The video also highlights the CIA's involvement in unethical experiments, such as testing drugs on unsuspecting individuals and using prisoners as subjects. These revelations raise questions about the CIA's actions and their impact on individuals and society. (148 words)

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This video explores the CIA's involvement in mind control experiments during the Cold War. The agency funded research on drugs like LSD and conducted experiments on unwitting individuals, including prostitutes and drug addicts. They also funded experiments at McGill University in Montreal, where severe brainwashing techniques were used. The CIA developed a personality assessment system to predict human behavior and explored methods of remote control. While the video suggests that mind control was not fully achieved, it raises ethical concerns about the CIA's actions and the impact on individuals involved.

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In the 1950s and 1960s, the US Army conducted secret experiments involving the release of bacteria in public places across America, including New York City. These experiments were kept hidden from the public for many years. Some of the experiments had fatal consequences, with people developing infections and even dying. The government also covered up the deaths of individuals who were unknowingly tested with mind-altering drugs. It took decades for the truth to come out, and families had to fight in court for justice. The Army and Navy have a history of conducting secret risk assessments to test the vulnerability of American cities to biological attacks. These experiments need to be stopped, and there should be accountability for the harm caused.

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In the 1950s and 1960s, the CIA conducted a secret program called MK Ultra to study mind control. They recruited German scientists through Operation Paperclip to work on America's behalf, focusing on developing biological and chemical weapons. MK Ultra involved experiments on thousands of US subjects, including sex workers, prisoners, and terminally ill patients, using drugs like LSD. The program ended in 1973, and although most records were destroyed, some information remained. MK Ultra was revealed to the public in the 1970s, and investigations showed unethical practices, including the death of scientist Frank Olson. The experiments inspired pop culture and influenced artists and authors. MK Ultra remains a secret government experiment with far-reaching effects.

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The CIA and Defense Department have been using people as guinea pigs for mind control experiments. They used drugs, pain, and electric shock to make agents forget classified information. They also tested chemicals to see if they could make people commit crimes. The overall project, MK Ultra, had 149 subprojects, including open air testing, experimentation on prisoners, soldiers, and college students. Most people were not aware they were being experimented on, except for voluntary army soldiers who were told they would be testing new weapons. However, they were actually given drugs and chemicals without knowing what they were. One chemical called BZ, 100 times stronger than LSD, caused people to lose their minds for up to 2 or 3 weeks. The army initially denied the testing but later admitted to it.

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- Speaker 0 and Speaker 1 discuss the possibility that a friend was murdered and suggest that both victims died suddenly from fast-moving cancer, a method they say the agency uses overseas to eliminate people. Speaker 1 admits he cannot prove this but notes the sudden deaths. - The conversation asserts that the US government has technology to infect people with fast-moving cancer and to perform cognitive and directed-energy warfare. Speaker 0 states the government has the technology to infect with fast-moving cancer and to do so absolutely. - In 1997, Speaker 1 describes a hearing on asymmetric threats where he chaired the research committee and focused on four threats: drones, cyberattacks, electromagnetic pulse (EMP), and cognitive warfare. He asserts that cognitive warfare is now being labeled by some as Havana syndrome and that directed-energy weapons are the underlying technology. - Speaker 2 recounts a recent homeland security hearing about foreign adversaries using direct weapons against US citizens, enabling incapacitation. He emphasizes the chilling nature of the briefing and criticizes current domestic leadership as foolish, corrupt, incompetent, and wicked. - Speaker 3 notes that up to 40% of the Air Force equipment budget in the 1990s was classified, making much of it “black.” He emphasizes that military and security research often precedes civilian medical science, and that servicemen were used in experiments without fully informed consent, referencing NK Ultra-era disclosures of thousands of service members used as subjects. - Speaker 4 discusses MKUltra, describing a Canadian experiment involving psychic driving with massive LSD doses, eye-tracking, and memory loss, funded by MKUltra and affecting civilians. He mentions Project Midnight Climax, where Johns were observed in brothels while subjected to LSD, and notes similar experiments by the British Royal Air Force and Army. The results of Midnight Climax are unknown, with no published after-action reports. - Speaker 3 adds that Secretary of Energy O’Leary stated under Clinton that over a half a million Americans had been used in human experiments over four decades without informed consent, including mind control, with no accountability. He argues that mind-control technology has advanced, and questions who should govern its use, given the lack of legal frameworks. - The discussion covers mind-effects research and the lack of treaties governing such technologies. They reference a European Parliament security and disarmament resolution (1999) addressing mind-effects and mind-control technology, and Russian Duma resolutions (2002) seeking similar safeguards. Zabigniew Brzezinski’s Between Two Ages is cited regarding electronically stroking the ionosphere to influence behavior over geographic areas, connecting it to HARP and other electromagnetic carriers capable of mass or individual influence. - Speaker 6 explains historical demonstrations of electronic mind control, starting with Jose Delgado’s remote manipulation of a charging bull using radio energy and electrodes, and notes later work showing noninvasive techniques to influence behavior using low-power magnetic fields. Speaker 7 reiterates Delgado’s animal studies and the potential for noninvasive methods to affect emotions and memory, with broader implications for humans. - Speaker 3 discusses the progression of research funded by DARPA and others toward higher-resolution control of brain activity, enabling controlled effects that override senses and create synthetic memories, raising questions about future justice and evidence. They describe European Parliament and NATO/US military interest in mind-control technologies and the absence of robust legal protections. - Speaker 9 presents advances in AI-enabled brain-reading and memory-altering devices, including mind-reading and emotion decoding, while Speaker 10 and Speaker 12 discuss privacy concerns, brain-data privacy laws (Colorado’s law adding brain data to privacy protections), and the availability of consumer devices that decode brainwaves. They warn that brain data can be misused by insurers, law enforcement, advertisers, and governments, with private companies often sharing data without clear disclosure. - The segment concludes with a note that devices can infer attention and thoughts, and that DARPA’s N3D program aims for noninvasive neuromodulation with implantable electrodes read/write capabilities. It references 1980s–1990s discussions of RF energy as a potential nonlethal mind-control technology, and a 1993 Johns Hopkins conference listing low-frequency weapons as attractive options.

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My father sexually abused me from a young age, causing me to develop dissociative identity disorder. This disorder allowed me to compartmentalize the abuse and function normally. The government recognized this as an opportunity to hide secrets and began grooming me. My father's abuse escalated to child pornography, which was discovered and confiscated. A local politician offered my father immunity if he sold me into the CIA's MK Ultra Project Monarch. This project used psychology, neuroscience, trauma, and occult rituals to create alter personas in victims. I was subjected to a horrific blood ritual called the "right to remain silent," which allowed them to manipulate my mind through hypnotic language and neuro linguistic programming. They replaced the triggering mechanism with hypnotic codes, keys, triggers, hand signals, and phone tones.

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MK Ultra focused on destroying the human mind and potentially the soul or body. The extent of the victims' deaths is unknown. Gottlieb, the main researcher, sought existing research on the subject. He wanted to know how quickly certain chemicals could kill, how to incapacitate someone, and how to induce amnesia. He suspected that the Nazi doctors had conducted similar grotesque experiments.

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They discuss how fear and trauma are used to manipulate populations, mentioning CIA programs like MK Ultra. They touch on the origins of the CIA from OSS after WWII, incorporating Nazi techniques. The CIA's initial purpose was espionage, not domestic operations. Operation Paperclip brought Nazi scientists to the US for missile and biological weapons programs. The CIA's actions were against its original charter.

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I was a subject in radiation, mind control, and drug experiments performed by Doctor Green from 1966 to 1976. He used trauma, drugs, and post-hypnotic suggestion to gain control of my mind and train me as a spy assassin. The experiments involved radiation on various parts of my body and mind control techniques. I was also taught how to pick locks, use my photographic memory, and withhold information. Doctor Green wanted me to kill dolls that looked like real children, but I resisted. I found files with reports and memos addressed to the CIA and military personnel, which I have submitted as evidence. These experiments have profoundly affected my life, and I ask for an investigation to prevent them from continuing.

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The CIA and the Defense Department have been using people as guinea pigs for mind control and other things. The CIA experimented on its own men using drugs, pain, hypnosis, and electric shock to erase classified information from agents who were quitting. They also experimented with chemicals to induce people to commit crimes. A project called MK Ultra, previously named Artichoke, included 149 sub-projects. These sub-projects ranged from the aforementioned experiments to open-air testing in the United States, and experimentation on prisoners, soldiers, and college students. These people did not know they were being experimented on, nor did they give their approval.

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MK Ultra involves controlling the body through electricity, leading to a loss of personal control. This concept, known as galvanic coupling, has existed since the 1800s and allows for remote manipulation of muscles. The implications of this technology are concerning, as it can physically affect individuals without their consent. Additionally, there are claims about misinformation regarding creation that contribute to confusion and manipulation.

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The video discusses a secret CIA research project called MK Ultra, which involved experiments on mental patients in Montreal. The CIA was interested in mind control and used various methods such as drugs, hypnosis, and electroshock to manipulate behavior. Doctor Ewan Cameron, the director of the Allan Memorial Institute, conducted these experiments, including depatterning, which involved massive doses of electroshock and sleep therapy. Patients experienced severe side effects, including memory loss and psychological trauma. The unethical nature of these experiments is highlighted, as patients were not given informed consent. The long-lasting effects on the victims are still felt today.

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This video investigates the mysterious death of CIA scientist Dr. Frank Olson, who may have been murdered because he wanted to leave the CIA. Olson was involved in the US government's biological weapons program during World War 2 and the Cold War. The video explores the CIA's experiments with LSD and their use of brainwashing techniques. There are suspicions that Olson knew about the use of biological weapons in the Korean War and was planning to reveal this information. The investigation reveals evidence of a cover-up and raises questions about the involvement of high-ranking officials, including Donald Rumsfeld and Richard Cheney.

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A psychiatrist named Dr. Ewen Cameron was approached by the CIA in 1957 to help them create assassins with amnesia and programmed behavior. Cameron used intense electroshock therapy and a technique called psychic driving to erase past behavior and implant new behavior. Patients were subjected to repeated electroshocks and forced to listen to repetitive messages for weeks. They were then put to sleep for several weeks with drugs to erase their memories. This unethical brainwashing experiment violated the principle of doing no harm. The CIA funded Cameron's work for four years in the hopes of creating a Manchurian candidate.

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The speaker discusses the existence of a secret team that operates outside of government structures and carries out covert operations. They mention their personal experiences working closely with influential figures like Winston Churchill and the Dulles brothers, who took instructions from unknown individuals. The speaker also talks about the use of hypnosis and mind control techniques in intelligence operations, including conditioning assassins. They suggest that the police may be manipulated and trained to carry out certain actions without knowing the full extent of their involvement. The speaker mentions the coordination of intelligence files between countries and the possibility of fabricating identities for covert operations. They also mention the work of Ewan Cameron in Montreal, funded by the CIA, which focused on mind control and psychological warfare.

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The discussion centers on long-simmering claims about CIA programs from the mid-20th century and how those programs may have evolved into present-day operations, with a focus on secrecy, biowarfare, mind-control concepts, and weather- or environment-related tech. The participants reference recently republished unclassified CIA documents on Project Artichoke, described as a Cold War-era mind-control operation that involved injecting and using various drugs to control individuals. They connect Artichoke and MKUltra to a broader history of behavioral science programs, suggesting that the CIA has pursued mind-control and related technologies since its inception in 1947-1948, often under plausible deniability and without public accountability. The conversation broadens to contemporary concerns, notably CIA-linked biolabs in Ukraine. The speakers note that, during the Ukraine conflict, there were “CIA collaborative bioweapons labs scattered across Ukraine,” and that Victoria Nuland testified before Congress about such labs, implying that their existence is not new but ongoing. They recount an NBC News on-camera moment in Kyiv that was later understood to involve burning documents at a lab, rather than a Russian attack, as evidence of covert activity. The implication is that clandestine programs persist and have become more sophisticated than the original Artichoke/MKUltra programs. Dr. Merrill Nass describes the historical development of these programs, linking them to the post-World War II Paperclip era and the involvement of German scientists who worked on chemical warfare and mind control. He references attempts to create Manchurian candidates, multiple personality experimental concepts, and drug testing in various settings, including “safe houses” for blackmail and testing under extreme conditions. Nass also discusses Project SHAD (shipboard exposure of naval personnel to biological and chemical agents) and Operation White Coat (the Vietnam-era program using Seventh-day Adventists as human guinea pigs for chemical and biological testing). He notes the ethical and legal questions surrounding these programs, including cases where vaccines or illnesses were used in non-soldier populations and the long-term health effects. Kevin Ship, a CIA whistleblower who spent 17 years at the agency, emphasizes that the CIA has not changed its core goals or organizational behavior. He argues the CIA remains a “global juggernaut” with “billions of dollars” in off-the-books programs, continuing mind-control and behavioral science efforts, now employing more advanced technologies such as directed energy weapons and potentially telecommunication-like mechanisms (including insinuations about nanotech-based or electromagnetic methods). He maintains that the agency’s secrecy is so profound that it can operate independently of Congressional oversight or presidential intercession, with “upper level compartments” or an supra group within the CIA that conducts programs unknown to the President or Congress. The speakers discuss the possibility of modern-day applications, including “graphene oxide” or nanotech-based methods that could enable clandestine communication or “telepathy” for intelligence purposes, and weather-modification or geoengineering as a tool of strategic influence. They reference public figures such as John Brennan discussing strategic aerosol injection and geoengineering, which they present as evidence of the CIA’s ongoing interest in manipulating the environment for national security and warfare aims. The broader theme is that clandestine, off-the-books programs persist, adapt, and may operate under layers of compartmentalization that obscure their existence from public scrutiny. Towards the end, Nass highlights broader existential concerns beyond bioweapons, such as ecological disruptions, pollinator declines, insect and bird losses, and potential impacts on food security. He connects these concerns to possible geoengineering and electromagnetic field applications, suggesting that the combination of environmental manipulation and surveillance technologies could have far-reaching, harmful consequences for society. The conversation closes with references to the authors’ and speakers’ work: Nass’s Substack, Doortofreedom.org, and sofaf.org; Ship’s Twilight of the Shadow Government and his X (formerly Twitter) presence for ongoing updates.

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The CIA and Defense Department conducted mind control experiments on individuals without their consent, using drugs, hypnosis, and electric shock. Project MK Ultra involved 149 subprojects, including testing on prisoners, soldiers, and college students. Volunteer soldiers were misled about the nature of the experiments, leading to long-lasting effects from drugs like BZ, which is stronger than LSD and causes severe disorientation. Army initially denied any lasting effects from BZ testing. Translation: The CIA and Defense Department conducted secret experiments on people without their permission, using drugs and other methods. Project MK Ultra had 149 subprojects, including testing on prisoners, soldiers, and college students. Volunteer soldiers were deceived about the experiments, leading to long-term effects from drugs like BZ, which is more potent than LSD and causes severe confusion. Initially, the Army denied any lasting effects from BZ testing.

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The CIA and Defense Department have a history of using people as guinea pigs for mind control experiments. Initially, the CIA experimented on its own agents using drugs, pain, hypnosis, and electric shock to erase classified information. They also tested chemicals to induce criminal behavior. Project MKUltra, formerly known as Artichoke, encompassed 149 sub-projects, including open-air testing and experimentation on prisoners, soldiers, and college students without their knowledge or consent, except for some army soldiers. In a volunteer army program that started in 1959, soldiers were told they would be testing new weapons, but were instead subjected to drugs and chemicals. One chemical, BZ, is 100 times stronger than LSD and can cause a person to lose their mind for up to weeks, with lasting effects. The Army initially denied testing.

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This video explores the use of cybernetics and unethical experiments to control human behavior during the Cold War. It discusses Subproject 119 of MK Ultra, led by Doctor Saul B. Sells, which aimed to control individuals through research on psychophysiological signals from the human brain. Doctor Jose Delgado's work on implanting electrodes in animals and humans to control behavior is also mentioned. The Boston Violence Project, led by doctors Mark, Irvin, and Sweet, sought to understand the causes of violence and develop treatments using brain stimulation. Leonard Kyle, a patient in their study, underwent brain surgery but experienced negative effects such as hallucinations and violence. The project faced opposition and was eventually shut down.

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Operation Paperclip was a real program where the US brought top Nazi scientists to work for the CIA. MK Ultra was one of the programs that came out of Operation Paperclip, focusing on mind control through human experiments and manipulation. The CIA used psychotropic drugs like LSD and conducted experiments on unwitting Americans. The program was never terminated, and there is evidence of the CIA's involvement in Hollywood, desensitizing the population through movies and media. The occult and satanic practices were also introduced to society during this time. The CIA also used honeypots and blackmail to control and manipulate influential individuals.

American Alchemy

How the CIA Creates Mind Controlled Assassins
reSee.it Podcast Summary
The episode delves into allegations about government mind-control programs, tracing a historical arc from earlier experiments and documented programs to modern theories and media portrayals. The conversation centers on how researchers and intelligence agencies allegedly tested methods to induce dissociative states, create covert identities, and deploy subjects as couriers or assassins, drawing on published MK Ultra materials and interviews with experts. The hosts discuss famous cases and figures—some presented as possible outcomes of such programs—while acknowledging that the material blends documented history with speculative connections. Alongside the archival recounting, the discussion touches on the ethics of psychiatric research, the role of front organizations, and the use of hypnosis, drugs, deprivation, and sensory manipulation as modalities once employed in attempts to engineer controlled behavior. The dialogue then expands to a broader critique of governance, media, and the culture of secrecy, weaving in parallel threads about the Kennedy assassinations, the dynamics around Manson and McVeigh, and the possibility that some public narratives may obscure deeper networks of influence. Interwoven are personal anecdotes from authors and researchers who describe their own forays into controversial topics, the difficulties of obtaining verifiable sources, and the temptation of drawing sweeping conclusions from partial evidence. A substantial portion of the conversation also explores themes beyond traditional psychiatry: the interface of energy, electromagnetism, and perception; claims of extracorporeal signals and ocular “eyebeams”; and speculation about how electromagnetic fields could be measured or harnessed for healing, monitoring, or even security applications. The speakers acknowledge the discomfort and risk that accompany investigations into high-stakes conspiracy theories, while insisting that some of these ideas merit rigorous testing and open discussion rather than suppression. The dialogue thus oscillates between forensic scrutiny of historical documents and expansive, sometimes provocative, hypotheses about how power, science, and belief interact in shaping public life and individual perception.

Breaking Points

New MK ULTRA Docs EXPOSE Govt's Deepest CIA Secrets
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John Lyall, a history professor, discusses his new book on MK Ultra, the CIA's project aimed at exploring mind control through drugs like LSD. Initiated in 1953, MK Ultra arose from concerns about American POWs confessing to false charges during the Korean War, prompting fears of communist mind control techniques. The program involved unethical human experiments, including dosing unwitting subjects, leading to tragic outcomes like Frank Olsen's death. Lyall's book is based on newly discovered depositions from a 1980s lawsuit against the CIA, providing insight into the program's operations and its cultural legacy, which fuels conspiracy theories today.

The Joe Rogan Experience

Joe Roan Experience #2419 - John Lisle
Guests: John Lisle
reSee.it Podcast Summary
In this wide‑ranging Joe Rogan episode, John Lisle discusses his forthcoming book Project Mind Control, Sidney Gottlieb, and the tragic, sprawling history of MK Ultra while drawing out its broader impact on science, governance, and public trust. Lisle explains how MK Ultra was an umbrella for 149 sub‑projects run by researchers across universities, prisons, and hospitals, often funded through CIA cutouts that concealed the agency’s fingerprints. He guides listeners through the arc from World War II truth‑drug experiments by the OSS to the CIA’s postwar expansion of mind‑control ideas, from LSD to hypnosis, from chemical comas to psychic driving. A central thread is the tension between curiosity and cruelty: investigators like Ewen Cameron sought to erase a person’s identity to rebuild it, a methodology that yielded terrifyingly little benefit and devastating consequences for patients such as Mary Morrow. Lisle’s accounts of drug tests at Lexington’s Narcotic Farm, Harris Isbell’s projects, and the infamous Operation Midnight Climax—where Johns were dosed behind one‑way mirrors—paint a portrait of moral hazard within the most secretive corners of government. Interwoven are vivid anecdotes—Castro’s rumored discrediting schemes; plans to poison or hypnotize leaders; and harrowing stories of deindividuated subjects, sometimes lured into horror through deception, coercion, and manipulation. The conversation shifts to accountability, oversight, and the “vicious cycle” of secrecy: secrecy begets plausible deniability, which invites reckless experiments that eventually require public exposure and reform. Lisle highlights the Frank Olson case, the destruction of records by Gottlieb and Helms, and the eventual Rockefeller and Church Committee inquiries that pried open the doors on covert activity. Beyond MK Ultra, the talk explores how conspiratorial thinking intersects with legitimate inquiry, the evolving role of the press, and the way modern information ecosystems—podcasts, archives, and social media—shape our understanding of truth. Lisle and Rogan also reflect on the process of historical research itself—sourcing, verifying, and tracing depositions—reminding listeners that robust history depends on patient, painstaking archival work. The episode concludes with shared hopes for oversight reform, accountability, and the potential for cinematic adaptation to illuminate a hidden past that continues to haunt public life only because it remains unread in the archives. topics booksMentioned

Philion

The History of MKUltra
reSee.it Podcast Summary
On April 13, 1953, CIA Director Alan Dulles gave a speech about the dangers of Communism and the war of the mind. MK Ultra was preceded by Project Bluebird and Project Artichoke, two projects originating in the 1940s. MK Ultra, the final evolution of its 1940s predecessors, employed a variety of techniques to influence the minds and brains of its subjects, including the covert administration of high doses of psychoactive substances, in most cases LSD. One of the main scientists responsible for the horrific practices of MK Ultra was Dr. Donald Ewen Cameron. First, Cameron utilized a technique known as psychic driving. Then, the subject met the wrath of Cameron's second technique, depatterning.
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