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- From: press2@cbnewsd.cb.att.com (barry.o.olson)
- Newsgroups: alt.alien.visitors
- Subject: REPOST: The Controllers
- Keywords: Originally posted to alt.conspiracy by Brad Pierce
- Date: 4 Aug 93 03:20:56 GMT
- Distribution: usa
- Organization: AT&T
-
-
- Here it is!!! I got the following message when I attempted to
- post this the first time:
-
-
- Your message will probably be truncated when it
- passes through a notesfile site, since it is
- greater than 64000 characters.
-
- Do you still want to post it? y
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- I don't know what to make of this article, but here goes...
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
- >From att-mt!lanai.cs.ucla.edu!pierce Mon Aug 2 21:34:49 1993
- Path: cbnewsd!cbnewsc!att!linac!uwm.edu!math.ohio-state.edu!usc!elroy.jpl.nasa.gov!news.claremont.edu!ucivax!ucla-cs!lanai.cs.ucla.edu!pierce
- From: pierce@lanai.cs.ucla.edu (Brad Pierce)
- Newsgroups: alt.conspiracy,alt.revisionism,alt.mindcontrol
- Subject: The Controllers (LONG! 200K)
- Message-ID: <1993Aug3.013449.9233@cs.ucla.edu>
- Date: 3 Aug 93 01:34:49 GMT
- Sender: usenet@cs.ucla.edu (Mr Usenet)
- Organization: UCLA, Computer Science Department
- Lines: 3205
- Nntp-Posting-Host: lanai.cs.ucla.edu
-
- Below is a long and deeply paranoid paper by Martin Cannon. (The paper
- was first posted without permission to USENET by James P. Galasyn and
- was reposted without permission by Don Nellesen.) Among the 201
- footnotes are citations of Holocaust revisionist Victor Marchetti (9,
- 31, 104) and of anti-fascist investigative journalist Chip Berlet
- (164), citations of the supermarket tabloid "National Examiner" (144)
- and of scientific journals.
-
- DISCLAIMER: I recommend giving no greater credence to
- Cannon's theory than one does to reports of little gray
- persons cutting didoes with their interstellar hot rods and
- farm animals with their unearthly shivs. It might be a good
- concept for another boffo Oliver Stone movie, however.
-
- What caught my attention was a section alleging ties between UFO cults
- and Nazism. Cannon writes:
-
- "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 [...]
-
- "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 called 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 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."
-
- -------------------- REPRINTED WITHOUT PERMISSION --------------------
-
-
- >>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. 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 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. 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 roughly 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. 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