Chapter 221: God-Making Project (4)

PS: This is the most controversial and covert plan in the history of the United States

On April 13, 1953, the head of the CIA, Alan Brown, was the head of the CIA. Dulles approved the brain-control program, codenamed MK-Ultra, the most controversial and covert program in U.S. history, in which many good people were used to develop drugs to control the human brain, just like the Guinean pigs. Pen ~ fun ~ pavilion www.biquge.info

2. The U.S. Brain Control Program

It was one of the most controversial and covert programs in the history of the United States

On April 13, 1953, the head of the CIA, Alan Brown, was the head of the CIA. Dulles approved the brain-control program, codenamed MK-Ultra, the most controversial and covert program in U.S. history, in which many good people were used to develop drugs to control the human brain, just like the Guinean pigs.

In the "007" series of movies, the British spy James . Bond has a "Dr. Q" who designs all sorts of small and deadly spy tools specifically for him; Although this is a fictional movie story, in the CIA during the Cold War, there was indeed a real "Dr. Q": Sidney. Dr. Gottlieb, a Caltech graduate, not only developed invisible ink, poison darts, poison handkerchiefs and other objects for the CIA, but also initiated the CIA's top-secret "brain control" experiment, the MKULTRA program, which lasted for more than 20 years.

More than 10 years ago, it was just as the psychologist Timothy . Hyleary championed the benefits of central nervous hallucinogens (LSDs). The CIA's technology researchers began the highly classified MK-Ultra program, which aims to study the effects of psychedelics on the human brain, and unwitting Americans and Canadians are used as experiments like rats in the lab.

When it was learned that American POWs in the Korean War were susceptible to brainwashing by foreign brain-control techniques. Dulles decided to close the gap on their brainwashing techniques. In order to avoid brainwashing its spies and prisoners of war after being caught, the CIA tried to study a real drug. The C.I.A. also hopes to develop amnesia-like pills so that American spies can be immune to enemy brainwashing efforts.

In addition to drug development, the MK-Ultra program includes hundreds of sub-programs involving radiation transplantation, hypnosis, electroshock therapy, and isolation techniques, and more than 30 universities and colleges are involved in CIA-led research.

Under the guise of research, the central nervous hallucinogens were discovered by Swiss chemists in 1943. and applied to CIA personnel, U.S. soldiers, the mentally ill, and the general public.

A federal drug agency who had worked as a "consultant" for the C.I.A. code-named MidnightClimax program had even hired prostitutes to use drugs on unsuspecting clients, and there have even been reports. The agent also used the drug on regular customers in bars and hotels.

The CIA eventually concluded that central nervous hallucinogens were unpredictable even when used in reliable research, but for Frank . Olsen said it was all too late.

Olson, 43, is a researcher in germ warfare at the U.S. side, and he is also a CIA employee. Also a victim of central nervous hallucinations. At a meeting in 1953, Olson and four other scientists met with Sidney Brown, director of the MK-Ultra program. Under the watchful eyes of Lieb and other CIA employees, he drank a bottle of Cointreau, unaware that it had been secretly infused with a central nervous hallucinant. Twenty minutes later, the CIA told Olsen and other scientists the truth, and Olson was very anxious and left, and he was later threatened to leave his job.

The C.I.A. said Mr. Olson suffered from extreme delusional depression and sent him to a New York psychologist for treatment. Eventually, he jumped to his death from a hotel in New York. The C.I.A. agent who accompanied Mr. Olson to New York said he woke up at 1:30 a.m. to see Mr. Olson violently jumping out of a closed window.

The CIA's MK-Ultra program finally came to light two decades later. Olson's family learned through a congressional investigation that Olson had been injected with LSD for a period before his death, but the CIA has always insisted that Olson died by suicide. At the urging of President Geraldford, Olson's family was compensated with $750,000.

In the nineties, Olson's son exhumed his father's body for an autopsy. It was found that Olson's death may have been due to strong external trauma to his head, and that this trauma occurred before he jumped off the building.

Olsen wasn't the only victim. A tennis player who went to a psychiatric center in New York for depression treatment due to divorce also fell into a coma and died after taking a merscarin derivative (psychedelic).

From the 50s to the end of the 70s, many Americans became experimental subjects of the CIA's MKultra program, including two girls as young as seven years old! This was exclusively disclosed by the American writer Schwartz in the book "Top Secret Weapons".

According to the book "Top Secret Weapons", in the seventies of the last century, two little girls who were only seven years old turned out to be innocent victims of the MKultra program, the two little girls are a pair of sisters, and their father is a grumpy beauty who often abuses his children. Because the CIA's "brain control" experiment has penetrated into various fields of the US Army, Navy and Air Force, the American ** man voluntarily sent his two daughters to the CIA as "experimenters".

The book "Top Secret Weapons" revealed that one of the two girls was named Cheryl. Hersha, another one called Rien. Hersha, since the age of seven, they participated in a series of top-secret training programs of the CIA, they are proficient in martial arts, guns and assassination techniques, in order to train them to be "the most effective killers", the CIA also conducted "brain control" experiments on them.

Three months after the book's publication, a woman who identified herself as Cheryl. Hersha's woman was interviewed by Ohio Fifth News Channel TV in the United States, saying that she was one of the sisters in the book. The woman, Cheryl, told American television that while other kids were playing games on the playground, she and her sister Ryan had to start learning how to play killing games. Cheryl, who is now in her 40s, said that in the early 70s, her father forced the seven-year-old sisters to join the CIA's "MKultra" program, which was at the height of the Cold War between the United States and the Soviet Union.

The victim's family may have requested documents for the MK-Ultra program, but the CIA's chief manager, Chad Brown, may have requested records of the MK-Ultra program. Already in 1973 RichardHelms ordered the destruction of all MK-Ultra program documents.

The investigation into the MK-Ultra program has largely stopped for now, but this is not the end of the government's secret program. On the day that Dulles unveiled the MK-Ultra program in its entirety, Ian Anderson. Fleming's (ing) first James . Bond (d) The movie "Casino Royale" came out, is it a coincidence, maybe. (To be continued)

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