Beyond All Repair - Endless Thread's "Madness," Part 3: Subproject 68
Episode Date: March 10, 2025As the fear of communism was rising in the U.S. after World War II, government officials set their sights on developing a weapon that sounds straight out of science fiction: mind control. This effort ...was led by the CIA in a program called MK-ULTRA, which was made up of 149 "subprojects" involving more than 80 academic institutions, prisons, and organizations. In this episode, we learn the dark history of MK-ULTRA and examine the origins of Subproject 68: Dr. Ewen Cameron's experimentation on patients at the Allan Memorial Institute in Montreal.
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Support for this podcast comes from Is Business Broken? a podcast from BU Questrom School of
Business. Stick around until the end of this podcast for a preview of a recent episode
about how to fairly compensate workers. Hey, listeners, it's Ben Brock Johnson,
Director of Digital Audio at WBUR. Amory and I have been bringing you our special series,
Madness, about alleged crimes at the Allen Memorial Hospital in
Montreal, and its connections to mind control experiments. Also,
the history of the psychiatry industry. Today, we're bringing
you the third installment in the series, which touches on some of
the larger events that impacted how the United States and Canada
approached their MKUlt Ultra program, the controversial
program designed to give North America an edge at the beginning of the Cold War.
We hope you've been enjoying this series, which you can hear right now for a limited
time in this feed, the Beyond All Repair feed.
If you want more from Amory and I on our other show, Endless Thread, friendly reminder that
you can always follow that show the same way you follow Beyond All Repair. That's all for now. Thanks for listening. Here's the show.
Produced by the iLab at WBUR, Boston.
This is part three of our special series, Madness.
If you haven't heard parts one and two yet, go listen to those first.
Also, a quick heads up that this episode contains brief references to suicide.
Previously on Endless Thread.
He just had this incredible, almost undifferentiated ambition.
Our next great adventure will be into that vastly promising world of ourselves.
My father always wanted the best and you and Cameron seemed to be the best.
You know, he did have the attitude that to make an omelet you have to crack a few eggs.
My father disappeared.
And what came home was a shadow, a shell of a man.
You and Cameron carried out what we can now guess,
in retrospect, were some of the most horrifically brutal
medical experiments ever connected to MKUltra. Your ability to put yourself in a mindset of constant existential dread has a lot to
do with your place in the world and the time you're living in.
In the years after World War II ended, a lot of people felt relief.
War was over. This is Operation Homecoming, the last official mission of the all-American 82nd Airborne
Division.
Their objective...
But at the same time, the end of the war saw the first atomic bombs detonated and the discovery
of mass murder and horrible human experimentation in the concentration camps of the Third Reich.
And while the Nazis had been defeated by the allied powers in the West, there was a new threat on the horizon to the East, the Soviet Union.
By the late 1940s, the U.S. government was focused on the next war, a war that could
include nuclear weapons. Americans were taught during that period that the Soviet Union was about to devastate us at any moment
and could, with the flick of a switch, not only destroy our country but wipe away any possibility
for meaningful human life on Earth forever.
That is author, former New York Times reporter and bureau chief Stephen Kinzer, who says
the weapons of the next big war, imagined by the U.S. government, weren't just massive
bombs.
People in the Central Intelligence Agency, newly formed in 1947, were worried about something
much more insidious.
The CIA had witnessed two events on the world stage directly after World War II that had
the spooks spooked.
The first was the testimony of a witness.
In 1949, the Roman Catholic Bishop of Hungary was hauled up on the stand in a show trial
run by communist powers there.
He was facing charges for crimes he did not commit.
Weirdly, he confessed anyway.
Weirder still to CIA operatives and others watching the trial was the Bishop's behavior
on the stand.
He spoke in a monotone, seemed a little bit glazed.
They looked at his face, they saw him confessing, and they thought, somebody else is controlling
this guy's mind.
Cardinal Menzenti became the victim of torturings and drugging that put him beyond the reach
or realm of human health.
No, the physical Cardinal Menzenti can no longer be saved.
The other strange occurrence was something that CIA officers supposedly witnessed among
prisoners of war coming back from Korea.
It wasn't made public at the time, but some soldiers who had traveled from North Korea
through China on their way home had reportedly developed what was dubbed a, quote, blank
state.
They also made surprising statements.
Some of them denounced the United States for what it had done in Korea.
Some said nice things about communism.
So what could have made these Americans behave this way?
The answer had to be, in the mind of the CIA, mind control.
So with this, the CIA was electrified.
Powerful people in the U.S. government were scared.
But so were a lot of other powerful people, who saw communism as the antithesis of democracy.
Just hew to the party line and all will be well.
Devote yourself and all will be forgiven.
One can see that the road here passes very quickly over to authoritarianism, with its
insistent urge to undermine the whole democratic system.
That is not a government agent.
At least, it's someone who may not have known he was a government agent.
That is Dr. Ewan Cameron.
Far away from the CIA's American headquarters, Cameron was conducting experiments with mindending drugs in Montreal on people who would come
to him for treatment.
The LSD made her feel like her bones were melting, like she was a squirrel trapped in
a cage, like she wanted to get out of her own skin and she couldn't get out of her
own skin.
And it made her feel crazy.
But Dr. Cameron wasn't just one bad apple using questionable techniques at a
prestigious Montreal University hospital.
Whether he knew it or not, he was doing the work of a secret government program
to experiment with psychedelic drugs and torture.
A program designed to win an arms race and find a way to control minds for
creating new
human weapons.
Weapons that would help the West fight the Cold War.
A war that powerful people felt the West had to win.
When the stakes are that high, people tend to put aside normal, ethical, and moral, and
legal considerations. I'm Ben Brack Johnson.
I'm Amory Sievertson and you're listening to Endless Thread coming to you from WBUR,
Boston's NPR.
And we're bringing you a special series.
Madness, the secret mission for mind control and the people who paid the price.
Anyone who has dabbled in the world of conspiracy theories, from aliens at Area 51 to the Illuminati
controlling geopolitics with the help of Jay-Z, Beyonce and their baby girl Blue Ivy, knows
about MKUltra.
But while some of those other ideas are pretty thin on credible evidence, sorry guys, the
U.S. government's mind control efforts? That's real. It's a well-documented piece of American
history.
Well-documented enough that it's constantly seeping into pop culture. It's part of our
collective psyche, like the brilliant, edgy, animated
American spycraft TV show on FX, Archer, which perfectly summarizes the origins and impact
of the CIA's mind control program in a conversation between a few of the show's main characters.
Wait, MKUltra, that was the CIA's mind control program, right?
Yeah, it's since been discredited.
Discredited for being bat shit crazy!
It wasn't!
And for being in direct violation of the Nuremberg Code, which was written because of medical
experiments by Nazi war criminals, many of whom, after World War II, spoiler alert, came
to work for the CIA God damn A!
Wait what?
Look, the Soviets were kicking our ass in the Cold War, our scientists had to think
outside the box.
Oh, is that the box where they kept informed consent? Because I'm pretty sure that all those mental patients, the CIA force fed LSD didn't give it.
Wait, what?
All that crazy-
Archer's doing 30 years of history in 30 seconds, but its writers know their stuff. And they're talking about a part of history that many of us don't have top of mind.
And they're talking about a part of history that many of us don't have top of mind, because the CIA did everything it could to sweep this under the rug. When Americans eventually
learned about MKUltra in the 1970s, it was a huge scandal. It's just there have been a lot of scandals
since. But our scandal at the CIA was part of how Dr. Ewan Cameron conducted his experiments at the
Allen Memorial Institute,
and why so few people know about his work today. So we need a more in-depth history lesson on
America's mind control mission. And for that, you want to hear from someone who has two thumbs
and a boatload of knowledge about America's Cold War efforts. Back to Stephen Kinzer.
I'm the author of Poisoner and Chief, Sid Sydney Gottlieb and the CIA Search for Mind Control.
Kinzer's book paints a pretty dark picture of the impact of the CIA's covert operations.
And that is saying something.
And I feel like I'm a pretty optimistic person, but reading your book, I feel kind of disillusioned
about the arc of American power.
So job well done, I guess.
Welcome to the club.
Yeah.
Kinzer connects the creation of the CIA itself to our government's struggles to put up a fight against Hitler and the Third Reich in World War II.
But by the time the CIA was founded in 1947, Kinzer says the U.S. government was already doing something that seems unthinkable.
So under an American program called Operation Paperclip, hundreds of Nazis came into the
United States, including some of the most notorious Nazi scientists.
Those that didn't enter the US came to work for the US abroad.
So the surgeon general of the Nazi army, General Walter Schreiber, came to work for the U.S. abroad. So the surgeon general of the Nazi army, General Walter Schreiber, came
to work for the CIA.
Even people who designed biological weapons and conducted abhorrent experiments in concentration
camps were getting recruited to new jobs and new lives in the U.S. The rocket scientists
went to Texas. The biological weapons scientists went to a place called Camp Dietrich, which is now
Fort Dietrich in Maryland.
Alan Dulles, who was the CIA director during the 1950s, concluded, I think quite correctly,
that any nation that could master the tools of mind control could control the whole world. And so not realizing or wanting to admit that that was an impossible goal, he set as a very
top priority at the CIA the search for ways to control a human mind and any intensity
of experiments was going to be permitted because the urgency of the project was so overwhelming.
The person who came to run that effort was a man named Sidney Gottlieb, a scientist who
had helped the U.S. develop biological weapons during World War II. But he quickly moved
over to the new directive. In 1953, that directive got a name, MKUltra.
When you are researching MKUltra, I can tell you very quickly, you're only just a few
clicks away from the wildest conspiracy theories, which seem, needless to say, a lot less wild
the deeper you get into the project.
MKUltra is now a favorite set of letters for conspiracy theorists in real life and on the
X-Files, where the conspiracy theorist is Agent Mulder.
The DOD and the CIA have been working on various incarnations
of mind control projects since the 50s.
Project Bluebird, MKUltra, MK Delta.
Well, those programs were supposedly
ended in the early 1980s.
Supposedly.
MKUltra gets associated all the time with stuff that goes beyond outlandish and
into straight-up fiction.
— But the letter scramble itself was chosen quite carefully.
MK denoted which part of the CIA controlled it, the Technical Services Division.
— And ultra was the code word for the most highly classified intelligence of World War
II.
A nod to the program's true origins,
extreme human experiments in concentration camps.
So there really was a direct line
between the Nazi camps and MK-Ultra experiments. ["Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Darker Than the Dark Gottlieb and others at the CIA had discovered that the best information about mind control
came from the Nazis, who had supposedly found success experimenting with a powerful psychedelic
compound called mescaline.
Another discovery in Switzerland in 1938 had shown similar promise in mind alteration,
lysergic acid dithiolamide, LSD. As a trained
biochemist, Gottlieb was very interested. He wanted to experiment with any
combination of drugs he could find. He even sent agents all over the world to
find bark, moss, gallbladders of crocodiles, fish tails, anything that was
highly toxic and he would refine this in his laboratory.
When LSD arrived at Gottlieb's lab, it seemed like a potential game changer for the mind control mission.
Not just to him, to the whole division.
He and other scientists really believed that LSD could be,
as one of his colleagues put it, the key that could unlock the universe.
colleagues put it, the key that could unlock the universe.
People at the CIA imagined all sorts of applications. Among the people in government who had been focused
on making germ warfare in World War II,
it was a potential peacemaker that could be delivered
via LSD bomb to an entire population,
rendering soldiers and civilians alike docile and malleable.
Then they thought the soldiers would begin to think their weapons are hydrangeas and
the people on the other side of the battle line were actually their blood relatives.
The war would stop.
But others thought LSD was a better tool used on individuals, controlling spies or turning
them into double agents.
So in 1953, Gottlieb persuaded the CIA to buy the entire world supply of LSD.
A decade later, LSD would be freeing mines in America.
But it came to America to control minds. And in the 1950s, long before LSD was on the tip of everyone's tongue, the CIA needed test
subjects.
So they started secretly funding research all over the place.
Like an Atlanta prison where notorious Boston mobster Whitey Bulger was reportedly given
50 doses of LSD, along with a handful of other prisoners. They were told they were helping find a cure for schizophrenia,
but they weren't told what they were even being injected with.
—Bolger wrote about the experience a year before he died.
He said, guys turning into skeletons in front of me. I saw a camera change to the head of a dog.
I felt like I was going insane.
Something similar happened at a prison in Lexington, Kentucky.
Seven African American inmates were selected from the population and put in a cell,
and then given triple doses of LSD every day for 77 days without being
told what it was or what to expect.
As MKUltra ramped up and up, it ballooned to 149 so-called sub-projects.
There was Subproject 3, aka Operation Midnight Climax, where prostitutes lured clients to CIA safehouses, dosed them
with drugs, and tried to blackmail them.
All of this was observed with hidden cameras, and the CIA studied the results.
Or Subproject 19, where the CIA hired a magician to teach officers how to incorporate aspects
of magician's craft into clandestine operations.
They were desperate.
Which brings us to Subproject 68, the experiments at the Allen.
Godley was always interested in keeping up to date with modern scientific developments.
And he sent officers to penetrate different medical associations, and he did send an officer to
that convention of the American Psychological Association in 1954.
The CIA officer observing the conference in 1954 perked up when he heard about a psychologist
named Donald Hebb, who was experimenting with sensory deprivation at McGill University in
Canada.
And it was through that that he came to understand that beyond Hebb, there was another doctor
who was conducting even more intense experiments that made him all the more interesting to the CIA.
That other doctor?
Ewan Cameron.
Coming up, Cameron, the CIA, and the investigative journalist who blew the doors open on MKUltra
two decades after the program began. and the investigative journalists who blew the doors open on MKUltra two
decades after the program began.
Support for this podcast comes from Is Business Broken? A podcast from BU Questrom School of Business, which asks in a recent episode, how do we
build trust in employee pay?
Employees really want to know is the process by which they are paid fair.
Follow Is Business Broken wherever you get your podcasts and stick around until the end
of this podcast for a preview of the episode.
MKUltra is almost too unbelievable to believe.
Stephen Kinzer again, who says that in the 1950s, the men running a program that would
become notorious for how out there it was felt like they'd
hit the jackpot with Dr. Ewan Cameron.
Ewan Cameron carried out what we can now guess in retrospect were some of the most horrifically
brutal medical experiments ever connected to MKUltra.
Nothing more or less than medical torture, and they had no scientific validity whatever.
In fact, you could practically use those same phrases for the entire MKUltra project.
It was Cameron who took it to its most grotesque extremes.
Again, the question is, why?
And the answer seems to be that these experiments were the CIA's best chance of unlocking what
they called the key to the universe, mind control.
How important was Cameron to the work that the CIA was doing?
Cameron was an integral part of Gottlieb's efforts to explore the outer limits of mind control.
Cameron didn't seem to have the slightest hesitation about destroying the lives of his subjects.
That was something that Gottlieb really enjoyed.
Of course, nobody was ever supposed to know any of this.
Even when Gottlieb was finally called to account in the 1970s and had to testify and appear in public,
nobody understood what MKUltra was.
He had been successful by destroying the records of MKUltra as he left the CIA
and only left some scraps for the rest of us.
only left some scraps for the rest of us.
After two decades, another journalist found the scraps of this secret CIA project. His reporting in the 1970s led to the release of the only surviving documents about MKUltra,
and exposed this infamous program for the first time. That journalist is John Marx.
So when that happened, I got a call from a publisher in New York right after that and
said, we'd like to give you an advance to write a book about this stuff.
John actually wrote two relevant books, The Search for the Manchurian Candidate and a
book he co-authored, The CIA and the Cult of Intelligence. John
Marx is a big deal. But in the 1970s, John Marx was just doing what
investigative journalists do best, submitting Freedom of Information Act
requests, which had only recently become possible thanks to the Freedom of
Information Act in 1967. He was trying to access documents related to CIA abuses, and he was getting
zilch because anytime he wanted previously classified documents, the CIA told him, you
have to be more specific.
And how could you be specific when the things you were asking about were secret?
John Marx wasn't alone. A lot of people were scrutinizing secret government operations around this time.
1975 saw several committees set up to investigate allegations of abuses of power.
It would later be called the Year of Intelligence.
The committee does not believe that the acts which it has examined represent the real American
character.
Marx was combing through a recent report from a commission on intelligence abuses and found
something intriguing. A paragraph which mentioned a program deep within the CIA that gave a
man LSD and that man, Frank Olson, had jumped out a window and died.
And before his CIA escort could prevent him, he ran right through a closed hotel window,
which had the shades drawn over it.
The window gave way and the employee fell ten stories to his death.
So Marks foiled the CIA, saying,
please give me all the documents you gave the commission on this program.
They wrote back to me, we didn't give any documents to the Rockefeller Commission
about that particular paragraph.
So I thought that was pretty interesting
and I told the Washington Post that
and they put it into a story.
And within a few days,
the CIA notified me that they had found,
I think, 13 boxes of documents
that were responsive to that request.
So...
Well, how convenient.
Yes, no, it was quite interesting.
Marx eventually realized he was looking at something much bigger than a few experiments
gone wrong.
He was dealing with scores of special projects, often secretly funded by the CIA through shell companies
and organizations, all connected to more than 80 academic institutions, prisons, organizations
all over the country and the world.
It was sweeping.
The CIA was trying to frame this as a LSD testing program, which had a sensational side
to it.
You know, the gang that couldn't spray straight.
And what it really was was a much more serious program to manipulate and control human behavior.
The LSD tests the CIA disclosed were treated as a limited experiment, but Marx thought
the full program was way bigger.
So he set out to find out everything he could about the people involved, starting with the
13 boxes of documents from the CIA.
Can you say just a little bit more about what was in the documents that you were able to
get? It was mostly the financial records, but in the financial records
there was always a justification of what the program was and
mostly they redacted that kind of thing. And so my job as an investigative reporter was to put back in the names and
because in those days it was before computers were doing the typing,
they had done the redaction with crayons. And sometimes they would leave a letter out
and you could measure how many letters were in there. We would know, for example, a particular
scientist involved, name started with B and ended in N and had
maybe seven letters in it.
So we then would go to the scientific journals and we would find somebody like Maitland Baldwin,
which happens to fit.
And because of the CIA's sloppy redaction, we were able to put a lot of the names back in.
Eventually, this led Marx to a lot more information,
including the name Dr. Ewan Cameron
and the name of the organization that the CIA had set up
to secretly funnel money into research like Cameron's,
the Society for the Investigation of Human Ecology.
The Society for the Investigation of Human Ecology. The Society for the Investigation of Human Ecology.
It sounds bogus now, but at the time,
it was overseen by a neurologist
at Cornell University Medical School.
It seemed legit.
Still, Marx had a hunch.
So he called up an anonymous source,
a former CIA psychologist he called Deep Trance. And I told him, what do you know about Dr. Cameron? And he said to me, I didn't think
he would ever ask me. Well, that's a thing. You're getting warm.
It turns out the director of the so-called Society for the Investigation of Human Ecology had approached Cameron to apply for funding for brainwashing experiments.
And in his grant application, Cameron detailed the exact components of his techniques, de-patterning
and psychic driving, right down to his plans to use the CIA's new favorite secret weapon,
LSD, to break down ongoing patterns of behavior in his subjects.
The CIA, via this shell organization, accepted Cameron's application and sent him what would
now be over a half a million Canadian dollars, a good chunk of his overall funding, over
a period of four years.
Once I knew that Dr. Cameron was getting this CIA money, I started looking at his research.
The best source of information on Dr. Cameron was the articles he wrote in the professional journals.
I mean, he used a lot of scientific gobbledygook, so nobody called him on, but everything he was doing was listed
in the journals.
The prolonged electroshock, putting people to sleep for 60 odd days, that sort of thing
was in the journals.
They just had a lot of names on it that didn't make much sense unless you were paying very
close attention.
So afterwards when I interviewed people from around the hospital who had been there, they said they were afraid of him
and they didn't want to question his methodology, but they tried to assure me
that they didn't agree with what he was doing. A lot of the medical personnel
were terrified by him. Why do you think MKUltra officials thought it was a good idea to conduct brainwashing
experiments outside of the US?
Well US laws didn't apply and there were real differences on what they would do to an American
and what they would do to a foreigner.
And that includes Canada and Canadians?
Let's just say it's a little safer.
As one of the CIA sources I interviewed said,
we couldn't do this kind of experimentation
on housewives in Northern Virginia.
This statement is probably particularly poignant
to the family of Velma Orlico, the housewife in Canada, whose husband
David Orlico, a member of Canada's Parliament, opened up the paper one day
and saw something that would change their family forever. A story based on
some of the investigative work John Marx had been doing.
My grandpa was reading the Sunday New York Times and there was an expose on CIA funding and
he recognized some of the fake foundation names as to do with the
hospital and called the reporter and then yeah that's how they discovered the
truth.
the truth. Sarah Ann Johnson is the granddaughter of Velma or Val and David Orlico.
When Val was in her thirties, in the early years after giving birth to Sarah's mom, she
was suffering from what would now be called the postpartum depression.
No one really knew what to do with her.
And one of the doctors she saw suggested she admit herself to the Allen because it was
very well-renowned at the time.
This was the beginning of a huge disruption in the Orlico family, based around Val's treatment
at the Allen Memorial Institute.
What started out as postpartum depression became a years-long quest for mental health.
She was involved with the hospital off and on for three years, and then she continued
to see Dr. Cameron in private practice for a couple years after that. She was an inpatient
for not even a year, but then it was too expensive. They actually couldn't afford it, thank goodness, because if she
had been an inpatient, then she would have been put into the sleep room and had that
sleep therapy. She didn't get that. Instead, she got an apartment near the hospital and
would come in for daily treatment. She'd spend her days there.
Sarah says her grandmother was asked to write detailed entries on her feelings and treatment
in personal journals.
She was writing them for him to read.
So they started off like, Dear Dr. C. And so sometimes she'd be talking to him and saying,
I'm so angry at you right now.
I'm trying so hard.
Nothing's good enough for you, etc. giving him a god-like status, putting him up on such
a pedestal, and it just kind of, it flips between the two.
The therapy was challenging, especially considering the treatments involved. Dr. Cameron was de-patterning
Val Orlaco, supposedly trying to erase the parts of her personality that led to her depression,
followed by efforts
to reprogram her, psychic driving.
And then the psychic driving was LSD injections and these recordings that you had to listen
to over and over again.
Val hated these treatments.
It's easy to see why.
One of the recordings that my grandmother had to listen to was Dr. Cameron saying to her,
you are a hostile person.
You are hostile to the doctors.
You're hostile to the nurses.
Why are you so hostile?
Is it because you hate your mother?
Is it because you hate your mother?
She had to listen to this recording
over and over and over again
and write down like this kind of stream
of conscious thoughts on it.
But in an era where women had much less agency when it came to medical care, Val Orlico's
feelings about her own care were effectively dismissed.
Why do you think your grandma was so determined to stick with the treatment if it was clearly
making her miserable?
Because everyone she knew was telling her that that's what she needed.
The doctors were telling her that's what she needed.
The nurses were telling her that's what she needed.
Her husband was telling her that's what she needed.
So when everyone in your world is telling you,
it can't be that bad.
Trust your doctor.
Your doctor knows best.
If you really cared about your family, you would do this.
So she stayed with it.
Val Orlico's treatment effectively destroyed the family's finances. But according to them,
it also destroyed the fabric of the family itself, starting with Val's behavior when she eventually
came home, and what David Orlico
would do with Val's daughter, Sarah's mom, to prevent disaster.
My grandpa would put my mother in front of the door so that my grandmother couldn't
leave the house when she was threatening to run away and kill herself.
Sarah was 13 when Val died.
She's an artist now, and she's made work inspired
by everything that happened to her grandmother.
It's allowed her to talk with her own mother
about what the family experienced.
But even Sarah has days when she doesn't want to talk
about any of this, especially on the record.
I mean, I don't know that you know this,
but I said no a couple times to doing this one,
because I was like, I don't want to do these anymore.
Like, they're just, they're hard.
They're hard and I hate doing them and I feel, you know, I'm like speaking for my whole family
and I don't know, just the whole weight of it is just difficult.
It's possible Sarah is still talking about this because she feels like justice hasn't
been done.
Justice was something her grandmother wanted too.
Why do you think it was so important for two-year-grandmother for the US government and the CIA and the Canadian
government to apologize officially?
Because she was a pacifist and she was disgusted and mortified that she'd been used as a guinea pig to create basically
human weapons of war, to create better soldiers.
This is why Val Orlico, the housewife of a Canadian politician who was the victim of
Dr. Ewan Cameron's CIA-funded human human experiments decided to fight.
I knew that my grandmother was going after the CIA. I didn't understand exactly what
the CIA was, but I knew that they were big and they were government and they were bad
and they were American. You know, I just, I was young. I couldn't understand what all
that meant. But I knew that my grandmother was doing something huge and I was very proud
of her for that.
Next time, Orla Cove versus United States.
Endless Thread is a production of WBUR, Boston's NPR station, in partnership with Reddit. Josh Schwartz is our producer.
Iris Adler is our executive producer.
Mix and sound design by Paul Vicus.
Michael Pope is our advisor at Reddit.
Editing help from our managing producer, Kat Brewer, extra production assistance from James Lindbergh,
our interns are Frank Hernandez and Kaia Williams,
shouts to former interns Magdi Alamata and Noah Boston.
And a special thank you to Andy Lancet at New York Public Radio for letting us play
excerpts of Dr. Cameron's 1955 speech at the New York Academy of Medicine.
On Reddit, we are endless underscore thread.
If you want to contribute art for an upcoming episode
or give us a story idea so we can tell it
like we did today, hit us up there.
You can also go to our official subreddit,
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My co-host and producer is Amory Sievertson.
My co-host and the senior producer is Ben Brock Johnson.
I'll let myself out.
Support for this podcast comes from Is Business Broken?
A podcast from BU Questrom School of Business.
A recent episode asks, how do employees feel about executive compensation?
And how can companies balance rewarding top leaders while keeping employees engaged and
valued? employees engaged and valued. I think if you see long term success of a company and very
attractive awards for executives and others aren't being brought
along on that journey, that to me is a real concern because I
think we should live in an economy where you can make as
much money as you want and work as hard as you want. But at the
same time,
there should be a path for others to also benefit.
And if I were gonna change the overall structure
of compensation in American companies,
I would look for a way to get more ownership
in the hands of all employees.
And right now, a lot of investors don't like the dilution
of giving too many shares to
employees and some of the accounting rules make that a little difficult from the profit
and loss statements.
But finding a way to make everyone in the company an owner, well, in addition to paying
them fairly, but use sort of the Lincoln electric model where they have a very strong profit sharing.
People can make a hundred thousand dollars a year on profit sharing, but you can do that also
through equity. You've seen what's happened to the stock market over the last decade.
Executives benefit, employees don't. Find the full episode by searching for
Is Business Broken? wherever you get your podcasts.
And learn more about the Merotra Institute
for Business, Markets and Society at ibms.bu.edu.
You.