Modern Wisdom - #963 - John Lisle - Investigating The True History Of MKUltra & CIA Mind Control
Episode Date: July 5, 2025John Lisle is a historian and an author. The government’s history of secret experiments feels stranger than fiction. Covert projects, UFOs, mind reading, even studies of the occult. But no operatio...n is more infamous than MKUltra. What really happened inside the CIA’s most notorious mind control experiment, and how much of its legacy still shapes our world today? Expect to learn where the CIA got their interest in mind control from, what the origins of MKUltra were and how it got it’s name, the double lives of the head scientists behind the project, how LSD and other drugs we’re used in secret mind control experiments by the government and if any of their findings had any objective value, the most unethical experiments MKUltra did and what ended up leading to it's downfall and much more… Sponsors: See discounts for all the products I use and recommend: https://chriswillx.com/deals Get 10% off Echo’s Hydrogen Flask at https://echowater.com/modernwisdom Get 4 extra months of Surfshark VPN at https://surfshark.com/modernwisdom Sign up for a one-dollar-per-month trial period from Shopify at https://shopify.com/modernwisdom Timestamps: (00:00) Researching MKUltra, The CIA, & Mind Control (15:14) MKUltra's Origin & LSD Experiments (26:41) The Main Scientists Behind MKUltra (30:41) CIA Funding & Celebrity Involvement (41:30) Experiments On Mental Health (47:27) The Worst & Unethical Brain Experiments (52:27) Did MKUltra Create Anything Useful? (1:01:14) The Downfall Of MKUltra (1:09:30) The "Project Monarch" Conspiracy Theory (1:14:44) Find Out More About John Extra Stuff: Get my free reading list of 100 books to read before you die: https://chriswillx.com/books Try my productivity energy drink Neutonic: https://neutonic.com/modernwisdom Episodes You Might Enjoy: #577 - David Goggins - This Is How To Master Your Life: https://tinyurl.com/43hv6y59 #712 - Dr Jordan Peterson - How To Destroy Your Negative Beliefs: https://tinyurl.com/2rtz7avf #700 - Dr Andrew Huberman - The Secret Tools To Hack Your Brain: https://tinyurl.com/3ccn5vkp - Get In Touch: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/chriswillx Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/chriswillx YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/modernwisdompodcast Email: https://chriswillx.com/contact - Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
How did you find all of this out?
Like where did you do all of the research for this stuff?
This is, I didn't think that you could top the insanity of the last book that you wrote,
but you've managed to do it. Congratulations.
Thank you. Thank you.
This book was really exciting because I found a lot of new documents about MKUltra,
specifically some depositions,
about maybe over a dozen depositions that were taken in the 1980s as part of a lawsuit
against the perpetrators of MKUltra, against the CIA. And as part of these depositions,
I have the perpetrators, Sidney Gottlieb, the head of MKUltra, his right-hand man, Robert Lashbrook,
the head of the CIA, Richard Helms. They are questioned by these attorneys and I have the
verbatim transcript of them talking about what they were doing in the CIA as part
Of MKUltra why why they wanted to do to do this how they got away with it. So I have some great transcripts
So that's that's really the basis of the book are these verbatim dialogues
Which is so exciting for a historian because usually in history you never get dialogue because nobody's there to write it down
You know, I'm not gonna quote something if I don't have the verbatim quote
That's usually a thing you can do in fiction to get inside the heads of the readers or
into the heads of the characters.
But for me, I now have this dialogue, so I get to play with it and work with it.
And, oh, it's just been so fun getting into their heads and seeing what they say.
How I'm interested in why the CIA was keen to look at mind control in any case.
What happens during the forties and the fifties for them to consider?
Yeah, this would be a good idea.
This, this, this seems like an appropriate direction to go in.
There are a few triggering events that lead them to want to perform
experiments in mind control.
And it's not just from the forts or 50s, even further back,
if you go back to the 1890s,
you have Russian physiologist Ivan Pavlov,
who's doing his famous behavioral conditioning experiments.
You know, if you ring a bell,
can you get a dog to salivate?
And the thinking within the CIA was,
well, if this Russian is doing that back in the 1890s,
surely they've since extended that work
in order to include human subjects now.
And if they could get a dog to salivate at a bell, what might they be able to get
a human to do with drugs or something else? So it's that kind of slippery slope thinking
that leads into this. Another event that precipitated MKUltra was the Moscow show trials. This is
when Stalin was purging kind of his enemies from political power and he put them on trial
for false charges
that they didn't do and yet they admitted to doing them.
So there are these false charges and then they on their hands and knees are begging
to be found guilty.
Why would they do this?
One explanation that develops within the CIA is maybe they've been mind controlled.
Maybe there's drugs or hypnotism or something they've been manipulated with.
And if that's the case, we need to know what they are
doing so we can prevent it and so maybe we can do it ourselves. But then the most important event
that precipitated MKUltra was the downing of several American POWs during the Korean War.
These pilots are downed in their planes, they're taken prisoner. And while they're prisoners in
Korea, these American pilots admit to doing things like dropping germ bombs on the Koreans, dropping
typhus and cholera and bubonic plague trying to spread these diseases throughout the Korean population.
Now we know now from Russian archives
especially that there are some Korean officials who flew to China and who got
samples of bubonic plague and took it back and infected their own Korean soldiers in order to
make it seem as if the Americans had done this. But the question within the CIA, they didn't know
that at the time, the question was, why would these Americans admit to this? Why would they say this?
The same with the Moscow show trials. Are they being drugged? Are they being hypnotized?
And so that spurs interest in answering these questions, which is eventually what leads to
the development of this program, MKUltra.
Okay.
Sidney Gottlieb, this mastermind, how does he get selected for this?
What makes him an attractive candidate?
What's his sort of comeuppance?
Yeah.
He is a chemist within the CIA.
His background is in bioorganic chemistry.
He has a PhD in it from Caltech. During World War
II, so a few years before this, in 1943, he gets his PhD and he desperately wants to volunteer for
the army. He wants to join the army because his parents were immigrants from Hungary and he felt
that he owed this country a debt for allowing his immigrant parents to come over and for allowing
him to live a life here. So he wanted to join the army, but he was refused service because he had a limp.
He was born with club feet.
He also talked with a stutter and that had a really psychological effect on him.
The fact that he had always seen himself from a young age as an outsider, kids would always
make fun of him for his limp and stutter.
And this seemed to reinforce that fact that he's an outsider.
I was denied service in the army and he was looking for a way that he could repay the debt that he felt that he owed his
country.
And so it just so happened that the CIA in particular was looking for some brilliant
scientists like himself to join.
Because right after World War Two, science has now seen as integral to national security.
We just had this war that ended with these atomic bombs.
That was physicists doing this.
We need scientists within the intelligence community now
to determine whether not only are the Soviets
doing some kind of project themselves
that we might figure out,
but also how can we do those projects ourselves?
So the fact that he was a brilliant scientist,
that's what led him into this role.
And it didn't hurt also that Alan Dulles,
the head of the CIA at the time,
he was also born with a club foot.
And so he kind of took a liking to Sydney.
Oh, God, we bonded over our physical deformity.
How would you describe Gottlieb's personal philosophy, his nature,
sort of the way that he presented his personality, that kind of stuff?
He was maybe a new age sense of spirituality.
His parents were Jewish and he was culturally Jewish, but he wasn't very religious.
But he did have kind of this new age spirituality where he would meditate and dance to folk
music and go on retreats.
I'm sure we'll talk about LSD, but he took LSD a lot. So that's a
little bit about his psychology. It's a little ironic maybe that he becomes the head of MK Ultra
because he is an outsider. He doesn't really fit in with the typical CIA personnel that you might
think of. Kind of the saying at the time was pale male in Yale and so he didn't really come from that
exact background. But yeah so he has this a little
bit different background from other people who are within the CIA that led him to really stand
out and get noticed if nothing else. Okay, so Sidney Gottlieb, chemist, presumably with
a interest in forward thinking quasi spiritual come
early psychedelic bro type things,
concern from the United States.
Why is it that some of our prisoners of war have been saying these weird things?
What's going on with happening in Russia?
What's happening across the rest of the world?
People are saying, is this some sort of mind control?
Can we get in on the action?
Can we do a little bit of this?
What's the beginning of the blending of Sydney and then sort of mind control? Can we get in on the action? Can we do a little bit of this? What's the beginning of the blending of Sydney and then sort of this desire? How does this all
start? In 1953, Alan Dulles, the head of the CIA, he gives a speech at an alumni conference
in Princeton University, just two alumni there, which to me is crazy that he would give this
speech. It was called brain warfare. And at this speech, he talks about the potential that the Soviets might be using these techniques that we don't know
about and we're falling behind in this mind control arms race. And we need to be ahead
with the Soviets in every single arms race. So we need to start this program. It was three
days after that speech that he signed the papers initiating this MK ultra program to
research mind control to see if it's possible. So that's what initiated the MKUltra program in 1953. Sidney Gottlieb is placed as its head. And originally, he
doesn't really know what to do because he's placed in this position, but he doesn't have
a background in mind control or in psychedelic drugs or anything like that. So what he actually
does is he goes to the OSS archives, these
old archives from World War II. The OSS was a precursor to the CIA. And he starts looking
around the papers and he finds the work of Stanley Lovell, who my first book was about.
And Stanley Lovell during World War II had done drug experiments. He had done, especially
with THC trying to determine whether it's a truth drug. And so, Sidney Gottlieb's career within the CIA very neatly
parallels Stanley Lovell's career within the OSS. Both were involved in these drug experiments.
Both were involved in creating weapons, gadgets in disguises for their intelligence organization.
Both were involved in assassination attempts. The list goes on, but their stories eerily parallel
one another.
So this is one of the inspirations for Godly is the fact that he has this historical example
that he can turn to for especially the drug experiments.
But that's kind of the origins and start of MKUltra and how he comes to want to experiment
in the ways that he actually does.
But he does predecessors to MKUltra, right?
MKUltra isn't sort of the first iteration of stepping into trying to do this stuff.
Yes, that's exactly right.
There were before within the CIA, there was a program called Bluebird and the
main focus of Bluebird was to create a truth drug.
The saying about why its name was Bluebird was because they wanted to
make prisoners sing like a bird.
And so they had some drugs, not LSD at that time that they were using.
And there are some documents from the CIA that have been declassified that indicate that,
you know, in some instances it may seem to work, you know, the inhibitions are lowered when we give
them these drugs and these captured spies. They actually do seem to be saying stuff that we
otherwise didn't think that they would have. So maybe there's something to this that only spurs
interest in wanting to repeat these experiments. Shortly after Bluebird,
there's another program called Artichoke. It kind of morphs into Artichoke.
And that's when the CIA and a couple of the military departments,
they kind of coalesce a few programs that are pretty similar like Bluebird into one called Artichoke.
That way they don't duplicate each other's research and you know, it saves expenditures.
Artichoke was mostly focused on drugs as a means
to develop truth drugs and some kind of mind control. They're also interested in hypnotism.
One of the heads of Bluebird was a guy named Morse Allen, and he hired a stage magician to
teach him how to manipulate people. So this magician teaches Morse Allen how to
hypnotize people. And Morse Allen says that the magician would tell him stories of how the
magician would go around town and hypnotize women into having sex with him and doing all kinds of
stuff. So Morse Allen starts hypnotizing his secretaries in the office to try to really
determine, is what he's saying true? Can you really manipulate someone? So early in the book,
I talk about some of these experiments on these secretaries. He claims to have convinced one of
them that she had regressed several weeks and was on a surfboard in the Gulf of Mexico on a vacation
that she had previously taken. And she's really sitting in a chair and she falls off her surfboard,
which is her chair. And she gulps down this imaginary seawater and she starts coughing and everything.
But Morris Allen had a real problem and that was,
could he really trust these secretaries
to be legitimately exhibiting
these kind of mind control patterns?
Or is it the case that they're just humoring him?
That's what he starts to realize after a while.
He thinks that, well, they're just humoring me,
they're just going along with it because I'm their boss
and they don't wanna make me upset. And this seems to have been the case
in a lot of kind of hypnotism studies. There's one study I talk about. This is in France.
In this guy, he hypnotizes a woman in front of a large crowd and he tells her, okay, now
you're going to kill these people. And so she picks up a rubber dagger and starts stabbing
them and she puts poison into their drinks, allegedly not really knowing what she's doing.
But as soon as one of his assistants kind of shout out, now take your
clothes off.
She snaps out of it and all of a sudden she wakes back up and I'm not hypnotized anymore.
So it's a matter of how much were they really going along with it as opposed to under the
influence.
Yeah.
Okay.
So how does that morph into MKUltra?
What sort of triggers the launch of that?
It's really those Korean war pilots who get down.
So those are before 1953.
And then during the Korean War, those pilots get shot down,
captured, and talk about how they were allegedly
dosing Koreans with germs.
And so that instigates.
Now we need a broader program.
That's not just hypnotism.
We need something that's a little more encompassing.
And that's where MKUltra eventually becomes a thing. And so MKUltra largely is focused on
drugs. If anyone listening to this knows about MKUltra, you're probably associating it with
LSD. But that's not all MKUltra was. In fact, there was a lot of psychological experiments
with it, such as electric shocks, sensory deprivation, what's called psychic driving,
like repeating messages in someone's headphones
for hours and hours, weeks and weeks on end.
So, you know, we can talk about all that,
but it's more than just drugs.
Sometimes people get the impression that's it.
It's a lot of other crazy stuff too.
In fact, one of the sub projects,
maybe one of the most crazy ones,
is implanting electrodes into the brains of animals to try to get them to move
in predetermined directions. So basically to steer them like a remote control. The crazy thing about
this subproject, MKUltra is composed of 149 subprojects, this was one of them, is it worked.
It's actually worked. In the late 1950s, they implanted electrodes into the brains of rats,
cats, dogs. And especially with
the dogs, you could actually get them to move on a predetermined path on a field. And the way that
they did this is by stimulating pleasure centers of the brain through positive reinforcement.
So if the dog moved in a correct direction, they would reinforce that stimulus. And so they would
feel this pleasure and they would continue moving. If they moved in an undesired direction,
then you would stop stimulated this part of the brain and they would look around and search for it and try to find it again.
And through this you could actually get them to move in pre-desired directions.
You could steer them like a remote control. And there are a couple of quotes from some of the documents that I found
about why are they doing this?
Why do you want to be able to steer animals or potentially people?
And within these documents, it says, the CIA planned to attach payloads of interest to
these guidance systems to use in direct executive action type operations.
And the payloads of interest was biological and chemical weapons.
The guidance system was the animals and direct executive action is an euphemism for assassination. So we want to create
these animal assassination drones that can be remotely controlled carrying these biological
materials. And within one of these documents, the CIA is speculating what's the best animals
we could use for this. And apparently they say it's yaks and bears because they, and I'm quoting,
are capable of carrying heavy payloads over
great distances under adverse climactic conditions.
We need to strap them with a lot of biological materials and we
can control these yaks to potentially go kill some.
Holy shit, they created like the B22 flying fortress of the animal world,
then put a remote control on them and
got gangrene or bubonic plague and attached that to them as well.
Yeah, that's the idea. Now, I have no reason to think that this ever went into the field,
but at least this is what they were experimenting with.
Okay. Where does the name MKUltra come from? What's that?
Yeah, the CIA for different departments, it has what's called a digraph like MKMH. That
just indicates the department that it's under.
So at that time, MK indicated that it fell under the technical services staff, which
was, you know, it was involved in technical services.
So doing experiments and creating weapons and gadgets and that kind of thing.
And so Ultra, as far as I can tell, is kind of an homage to the cryptographic intelligence
units during World War II that were decrypting the German Enigma machine. That was called the Ultra Project. So I think it was a combination of that.
MKUltra. Okay. Where does the interest in LSD come from? That seems to be a specific
direction that they're focused on. Definitely. And it might be important to mention that there were
drug experiments and truth drug experiments
long before MKUltra.
I mentioned that in my first book in the OSS.
I have a whole chapter on truth drug experiments, but even you go back thousands of years and
people talk about how wine and alcohol can lower your inhibitions and make you spill
your secrets.
So the search for a truth drug or something like it isn't new.
What's new with LSD is that, well, it's a new drug and it's extremely potent
it's only first discovered in 1938 in Switzerland by Albert Hoffman a chemist at the Sandoz Corporation and
But he shelves it for five years. He doesn't even realize that it has much potential and so in 1943
he kind of resynthesizes LSD and
Accidentally some contacts his skin and he starts having these weird feelings. Hallucination, the room starts spinning, so he leaves work, he rides his
bicycle home, he collapses on the couch and he realizes there's something to
this, especially because it was such a minute dose. So it's so potent that
this especially interested people like Gottlieb within the CIA because it
means that it would be extremely effective in covert
operations.
It would be very easy to sneak this into someone's drink or whatever, because such a minute dose
could have such a profound effect.
Hmm.
So how do they first find out about LSD?
How does that first get over from Hoffman to the US to the understanding of the CIA?
Yeah, it's not as if the CIA is the first American entity to learn about this.
Sandoz corporation had brought LSD over in the late forties, 48, 49, to try to
trial it and to try to figure out if they could use it as a drug to treat something
because they want to make money off of it.
So people knew about LSD at the time, not unless you're like a
psychopharmacologist or something, but it's not as if it's an entire secret.
And then there's another important event that happens right around this time period that
gets the CIA interested in hallucinogens in general, and just LSD happens to be one of
the most potent of those, and that's in France.
There's this drugging through bread.
There's this ergot fungus that grows on a bread at a particular bakery and several people eat this bread. I talk about
this in the book, but the town kind of goes crazy. Multiple people die
because they start ripping off their clothes and the mayor's
ripping off his clothes and journalists go to the town to try to figure out what's happening.
And so, yeah, and so, you know, this is an indication to the CIA.
If an ergot fungus in a bakery can cause this much havoc, what would be the case if say
the Soviet Union got a hold of a really potent hallucinogen like LSD and put it into the
water supply of an American city?
Well that's not good news.
So we got to figure out how we can prevent that
from happening, or we have to figure out
what are the effects, how is somebody going to react
if they take this drug without wittingly knowing they have
so we can counteract it in case the Soviets do that to us.
So that's the kind of motivation.
I should mention though, that the CIA contracted someone
to answer this question, like how potent would CIA be if it were
released into a city's water supply? And he basically came to the conclusion, I think it
was that there was too much chlorine in the water and it would counteract the LSD and it would dissolve
it or something and it would have no effect. So it wouldn't, as far as I know what he said,
it wouldn't really have an effect. But they decided we're going to test this anyway and see what happens.
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Did they take it themselves?
Wasn't there a thing about the guys running the program thinking,
Hey, if we're going to, if we're going to be researching this thing, we might
as well have a crack at it ourselves.
Definitely. They were the first people to take it within the CIA. Not only are they dosing themselves,
Gottlieb doses himself multiple times and his colleagues too, so they can understand what the reaction to it is,
so that they can better understand how we might be able to use this in a covert operation.
So we need to know how someone might react so that we can kind of plan for that. But also they're doing it as basically pranks around the office.
You know, they're putting it in the office coffee pot to see,
how is Jim going to react when we dose him with LSD?
Turns out not good.
You know, one guy is dosed with this LSD in the office coffee pot at the CIA,
and he ends up running outside over to a bridge and almost gets hit by traffic,
and they have to wrangle him back.
So that kind of thing is going on. In fact, the CIA Office of Security has to
issue a warning basically saying if anyone spikes the holiday punch bowl, there are going to be
severe repercussions because this was like such a- No more LSD in the coffee pot. No more LSD.
This is an internal memo going to all staff. Stop putting LSD in the coffee pot. No more LSD. This is an internal memo going to all staff. Stop putting
LSD in the coffee pot. Exactly. And then the most famous incident of this happening where they're
kind of dosing themselves is at a retreat called Deep Creek where several MKUltra scientists like
Sydney Gottlieb, Robert Lashbrook, they meet with several scientists from Fort Diedrich,
which is the biological warfare installation for the US and in Maryland. These
scientists would occasionally meet at this retreat in order to exchange their research results and
talk about the experiments that they're performing. And it was at one of these retreats that Gottlieb
and Robert Lashbrook dosed the liquor with LSD and they start passing out shots to everyone. And it
turns out one of the people who was there is this guy named Frank Olson. He was within the Special
Operations Division at Fort Diedrich and he really had kind of a psychotic break after this. And if anyone has
heard really about the MKUltra program, you might've heard of Frank Olson. He jumps out the hotel window
in New York after Gottlieb and Lashbrook take him there and he dies on the 7th Avenue sidewalk. And
so it had, you know, lethal repercussions. Just what Gottlieb,
I think, saw as kind of a prank really had this lethal repercussion.
This isn't even part of an experiment for a meal trip. This is just a prank.
Exactly. Exactly. It's guys, in my sense, it's these guys trying to have some fun,
trying to lighten up the mood. They're pulling these pranks. They've been dosing themselves
and other people, and they don't really grasp how immoral and crazy this is
until this Frank Olson incident. And it really makes them think, whoa, like, hang on, what just
happened? What did we do? So there are some repercussions for that. Gottlieb gets an informal
reprimand from Alan Dulles, the head of the CIA, but that's it. And in fact, after the Frank Olson incident,
it's not as if MKUltra shuts down. You just killed this guy.
Instead, it expands even further into what's known as Operation Midnight
Climax, this new sub project where Gottlieb is getting this narcotics
officer, George White, to dose people unwittingly with LSD.
And eventually he hires prostitutes to dose their unwitting clients with LSD.
While White is sitting behind a one-way mirror sitting on a
portable toilet drinking liquor that he bought with CIA funds.
You need to dig into this. Tell me more about this plan that they've got going on.
Yeah, George White, this narcotics officer, he terms this his own sub-project, Operation Midnight Climax.
The idea is that we're gonna dose these unwitting people with drugs, LSD being the main one, inject it through the cork on a wine bottle
and then pour drinks. And we're going to see how people react when they unwittingly take this
because we want to be prepared for if someone does that to us. And is it possible to make them
behave in certain ways? Can we make them seem insane? That could be useful if we want to, say,
dose a foreign political leader with some
LSD before a big political rally and maybe they'll look like they lose their mind and the population
is going to start thinking maybe we shouldn't trust this guy. So they want to understand how
someone reacts to unwittingly ingesting LSD. That's the purpose of Operation Midnight Climax.
George White, like I mentioned, he's this narcotics officer. So by day, he's locking up
junkies for illegal possession. And by night, he's doling out drugs to these people to see how they
react to them. So it's a sad irony. He himself is a character to say the least. He was an addict in
basically every sense of the word. He's alcoholic. He takes every drug that Gottlieb gives to him.
Before he gives to anyone else, he just takes for himself just to see what happens. He's alcoholic. He takes every drug that Gottlieb gives to him before he gives
to anyone else. He just takes for himself just to see what happens. He's addicted to sex too.
There are stories that I recount in the book about how he doses his own friends with LSD
unwittingly to try to get them to engage in orgies with him. He does this to one woman while
she's there. She has her one-year-old daughter with her.
He doses her with LSD.
Yeah, it's terrible.
And she ends up having a kind of psychotic break,
a reactive psychosis very similar to what seems to have happened to Frank Olsen.
And her husband is away on a business trip,
but when he comes back,
she's cowering in the corner of her parents' room
and she says that somebody's out to get her.
She's very paranoid.
She doesn't want to take phone calls because she thinks the police
are going to come to arrest her.
She eventually is committed to like a mental asylum for years, for decades
and dies in this mental asylum.
Um, so some awful repercussions of-
I feel really callous about laughing at the fucking sex party.
I didn't realize it went as deep as this.
Yeah.
Well, it's, it's, it's hard to know how to react to some of this stuff.
I've experienced that too, where on the surface it is like, it is humorous in a
way because of how absurd it actually is.
Like it's hard not to take it in a little bit of jest because it's hard to
believe that someone would actually do this.
But yeah, when you drill down into the details, it is absolutely tragic.
That's why the subtitle of this book is The Tragedy of MKUltra.
Where is Gottlieb getting the LSD from?
Are they synthesizing it in the CIA somewhere?
No, the CIA has a deal with Sandoz to supply them with a certain amount of LSD.
And in addition to that, they get the Eli Lilly Company, which is an American company,
to also synthesize LSD to provide for them just because it's an American company so that if something happens to this foreign company,
we'll have a domestic supplier.
So they're getting it from companies who are independently synthesizing it for them.
Well, wasn't the Nazi scientists, I know that they were brought over for other stuff, right?
But were any of the Nazis involved in the MK Ultra mind control stuff?
Not really.
Some people like to make this connection because it seems like the sort of thing that should
be connected.
I mean, right?
During the, in the concentration camps in Nazi Germany, weren't they experimenting with
drugs and trying to find out some similar stuff as MK Ultra?
That is the case, but that it's kind of missing the fact that correlation isn't causation.
There were a lot of countries that were experimenting with truth drugs. The US was during World War II
independently of the Nazis, you know, in the OSS they were doing truth drug experiments, and that's been going on for a long time.
These kinds of experiments.
So just because these two different entities were doing similar experiments, one didn't cause the other as far as I can see.
I've never seen a direct connection between the Operation
Paperclip bringing these Nazi scientists over after World War II and MKUltra. People make that
connection, but I don't see a connection there. I think it's more of confusing correlation and
causation. So, George White, pretty intense guy, probably quite fun at the party, but very unscrupulous
and seems to be living privately and publicly the same thing, apart from
there's this veneer of being drug officer thing, but he, he has this sort
of, um, this paradox of professional life with personal and then second professional
life kind of being the same sort of a thing.
What about, uh, Sidney Gottlieb because it feels like he has a degree of double life going
on as well, the way that he behaves personally, the way that he shows up in his personal life
and his philosophies there and then the things that he's doing by day.
Yeah, it does.
It is hard to reconcile in a way, especially with Gottlieb, not so much George White, because
I do feel like that was his true character.
Out of everyone in the book, I feel like he's the most unethical.
It doesn't seem like he has any remorse.
In later life, when Gottlieb is doing these depositions that I found, he seems very remorseful.
Now he might just be doing that for the court or whatever.
There are people who were volunteering with him in later life and they said that they
always felt like he was trying to atone for some past sins. And after MKUltra is over during these depositions, he does say
he regretted a lot of what he did and he does seem to have some kind of remorse. It didn't really
come to much MKUltra. It's not like we found a drug or a psychiatric technique that allowed us
to control a person like a marionette. So I think Sidney Gottlieb was doing this because he actually
believed in the ends justify the means. This is for national security and we have to do this.
I think George White was doing this because he was having fun. In fact, there's one story in the book
speaking of George White and parties. Again, this is one of the more sad stories.
There was a man named Wayne Ritchie and he lived in San Francisco. He was a US marshal.
He had worked as a guard at Alcatraz for a while. One night, he goes to a Christmas party at a
federal building, the post office, and he takes some drinks there. He's hanging out with his
colleagues. All of a sudden, the wall starts spinning. He starts hallucinating, seeing colors.
He doesn't know what's going on.
He has this break as well.
He runs home not knowing what to do.
His girlfriend is there and she's upset because she wants to move to New York, so they get
into this spat.
He eventually goes back to the post office building where his locker is and he decides,
you know what?
To set everything straight, to make my life better, I'm going to get my service revolvers, go down to a bar downtown and
steal all the money and then I'm gonna give it to my girlfriend. She can move to New York and then
she'll love me because I did this for her. So that's exactly what he does. He takes these guns,
he goes to a bar, he barges in and says, give me all the money in the till. And then someone
who's just drinking a beer hits him over the head with one of the beers and he's knocked out.
The police come, they arrest him, obviously.
He goes to jail and at night he kind of sobers up from whatever the fog that he was undergoing
and he realizes that wasn't me.
I felt so weird what was going on.
In fact, he asked the police officer, please give me a gun and one bullet so I can save
the state some money.
And he lived with this for the rest of his life.
For decades after this,
he didn't know kind of what happened to him that night. He lost his job, he lost his friends,
he obviously lost that girlfriend as well. And so it was about 30 years later when MK
Ultra is made public, he's reading a newspaper and he sees a story that mentions George White
and LSD and it kinds of dawns on him, oh my gosh, I knew George White
in San Francisco. And it turns out George White's diary has been donated now at Stanford
University. In George White's diary, which I show in this book, you can flip to the exact
day that Wayne Ritchie went insane at that party and what does George White's diary say?
Christmas party federal building. That's where he was.
And so Wayne Ritchie sued the CIA, but it was dismissed for, the judge basically said
you couldn't prove that this actually happened to you.
But yeah, another victim of George White.
Dude.
Okay.
So getting into the meat and potatoes of the experiments, what does that look like?
They've now got their chemist, they've been fucking about with it internally
and partly externally, they're doing this thing in the brothels.
But you know, when we think about, when I think about MK Ultra, I think about
the eyelid thing being kept open, looking like this and LSD and hypnosis and
repeating stuff and watching
the same TV thing over and over in a room and sleep deprivation.
Yes.
What, what do this sort of hardcore experiments look like and where are they?
Who does it?
That's a, that's a good point because not everything that's part of MKUltra,
these 149 sub projects is done by the CIA.
There are very few sub projects that the CIA itself does. It's funding George
White to do some of these experiments, but that's most of what the CIA itself is actively doing.
Really how MKUltra is set up, it's based through a funding mechanism.
So Sidney Gottlieb would identify researchers at universities, prisons, hospitals, who were already
doing experiments that he was interested.
Many of them were already doing LSD experiments without knowing what the CIA is up to.
Many of them were doing experiments in amnesia to see if amnesia is possible.
And so Sidney Gottlieb decides we're going to start funding these people to continue
doing what they're doing.
So again, it's not as if the CIA is itself committing all of these acts.
Instead, it's aiding and abetting the people who are already doing these experiments one of these people
When well, there are a lot of them to talk about I guess but some of these are at prisons
So Harris is Bell Carl Pfeiffer
They're in Lexington and Atlanta and at these prisons
They're dosing the prisoners with different drugs that Sydney Gottlieb is sending them
And I should mention also these people who are being funded by MKUltra, many of them don't know they're being funded by MKUltra. They're
given grants through like cut out organizations to say, hey, we're the Society for the Investigation
of Human Ecology. The CIA just made this up. And they say, yeah, we're going to fund you whatever.
And so they're like, great, I'll take free money. Why not?
Be skeptical of free money. Is that the lesson?
Yeah, there's no such thing as a free lunch. Yeah. So they're like, great, I'll take free money, why not? Be skeptical of free money, is that the lesson? Yeah, there's no such thing as a free lunch.
Yeah, so they're getting this money through these grants,
that's great.
So a lot of them didn't even know the CIA
is behind these grants.
So they would use these cutout organizations.
Some of them did though.
And so a few of these people at these prisons,
Harris Isbell, Carl Pfeiffer, they're taking drugs
that Gottlieb is giving to them, not just LSD,
but all kinds of stuff, peyote eventually and just whatever.
And they're giving it to these prisoners to see how they react.
And in one experiment, Isbell talks about dosing a prisoner with quadruple doses of
LSD for days on end to try to build up their tolerance to see how they would react.
And he says, well, we really built up their tolerance.
And here's one of the crazy things too. At Harris Isbell's experiments in Lexington, Kentucky, it's at a prison,
but the prison is also like a rehabilitation facility. And so the idea is that we're trying
to get these people off of drugs. And as payment for volunteering to join these experiments,
what would Isbell give them? Well, he would give them an option. They could either take like a good parole letter for their parole board, you know,
or they could take, they could go to the drug bank window, stick out their arm and get a needle full
of heroin injected right into it.
So that's their payment for being involved.
In the rehab place.
In the rehab place.
Phenomenal.
Yeah.
So those are some of the drug experiments.
But you mentioned like sensory deprivation.
Hang on.
What about, because you mentioned jails there, doctors, universities, these were also being co-opted as well.
Yes. Yes. Yeah. And I should mention also that it's not as if every LSD experiment at a university or somewhere or psychiatric
experiment that sounds like an MKUltra thing is part of MKUltra. Again, these
scientists in the CIA are funding the things that are already going on for the most part.
So just because something sounds like an MKUltra experiment, oh yeah, I know this guy at this
university, he was dosing his students with LSD. That could have been an MKUltra experiment,
a subproject, but most likely it wasn't because there are more people who are doing this on their
own than who were doing it as part of MKUltra.
But yes, at universities this was happening.
In fact, one of the people who was doing this at a university was Harris Isbell.
He would do this with his students.
Isbell, or I'm sorry, I mentioned him earlier, was Harold Abramson.
He was a doctor who was dosing his students.
They would join these experiments.
But Abramson is the person who Sidney Gottlieb and Robert Lashbrook sent Frank Olson to after
Frank Olson had that kind of psychotic break. So he already kind of knew that the CIA was interested
in LSD and he eventually got paid basically to dose some of these students and to see how they
reacted. So it was going on at a lot of places. A quick aside, using the internet without a VPN
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How much truth is there in the famous people involved in MK ultra, the cult
leaders, the bombers of many stripes?
Uh, this, you have to have looked into this. So how much truth is in that? Yeah. The bombers of many stripes.
You have to have looked into this.
So how much truth is in that?
Yeah.
And people for some reason are kind of disappointed when I say I don't think there's much truth
to it.
Ah, John, come on.
Like the Unabomber, this is a big one.
It's not as if he wasn't in an experiment at a university.
He was in the experiment of this guy named Henry Murray,
who had been involved in the OSS, who was doing some psychological stuff for the OSS. He was
creating psychological portraits of different German leaders. So Henry Murray did have ties
to the intelligence community, but there's no reason to think that he was actually funded by
the CIA through MKUltra. At least I haven't found anything that indicates that. Again,
that's not to say that Ted Kisinti
wasn't involved in these experiments
and that that didn't affect him in some way,
but I just haven't seen any tie to MKUltra.
And a point to make too is there are a lot of people
who were involved in these experiments
and none of them became the Unabomber but him.
And so I think there's probably a lot other stuff going on
than the fact that he happened to be one of the people
who was involved in that experiment.
But another popular one to link to MKUltra, especially recently, is Charles Manson.
If anyone's read Chaos by Tom O'Neill, it's a really good book.
And he tries to make this link between Jolly West, who was another researcher, a psychiatrist
who is doing MKUltra experiments on some people.
And he was in LA at the time that
Manson was there. Tom O'Neill tries to make this connection, but he himself admits in the book
and in the Netflix documentary based on it, Chaos, and in several interviews that he's never really
found the connection. He can kind of put them in the same place, but sure, a lot of people could
be put in the same place. The ironic thing to me is it's not that Jolly West was doing some kind of experiments on Manson or that Manson was in these
experiments and learned how to control people through that. It's the opposite.
It's that Jolly West could have learned a lot from Charles Manson because Manson actually knew how to manipulate people.
It's through the classic cult techniques. It's not through, you know, some
esoteric hypnosis that the CIA is interested in.
There are cult techniques that have been used for hundreds of years before MK Ultra
that have been successfully manipulated people.
MK Ultra could have learned from him if they actually wanted to figure this out.
They should have got Mark Manson.
They should have got Charles Manson in to have Mark Manson
who would have just taught them how to not give a fuck.
I had, do you know Danny Trejo?
Do you know him?
The actor?
Yes.
Yeah.
He was on the show a couple of years ago.
He was in jail with Charles Manson.
Really?
Wow.
Charlie, little Charlie, they called him and he had a,
he had a rope for a belt.
He was a small guy and, um, he was getting bullied apparently around the prison yard. So Danny and his guys, you know, big, scary fucking dudes, they took him
under their wing and they heard that this guy could put you into this weird trance,
which I'm going to guess would have been some form of hypnotism and he could get
you loaded on heroin without the drug, but he was able to induce
heroin without the drug.
And Danny, you know, not a scientist, shock
horror, Danny Trejo's not a scientist, but he
did this wonderful control within an experiment.
The three guys that were in Danny's cell, Mark,
I, fuck off Mark Manson, Charles Manson.
Jesus Christ.
Charles Manson did the hypnotism thing and they felt it, come on, all the rest of it.
Apparently, never taken heroin.
Apparently when you take heroin, sometimes you throw up or a lot of the time, maybe you
throw up and Danny and his cellmate
both threw up, but the third guy didn't.
And the third guy had never taken heroin before.
So the expectation effect of Danny and Danny's
cellmate who had meant that when they were under
and the other guy was, I'm feeling it.
I'm feeling something.
I'm feeling the whatever, but there's this
question here,
which is you didn't know what to expect. So you didn't behave in the manner that you expected to.
I just thought that was such a cool little vignette.
That is. And you know, that actually ties in with an MKUltra sub project because actually one of the
more successful ones, it wasn't giving people drugs and using hypnotism. It was making them think that they had done that.
And so this was done by a psychologist Martin Orrin. And he said if you really want to interrogate
someone and you want them to tell the truth, you can instead of giving them a truth drug,
which doesn't actually work, maybe it'll lower their inhibitions, but you can't guarantee what
they say will be the truth. What you should do is make them think that they've taken a truth drug,
especially if they don't know if truth drugs are real or not, make them think they've taken it. And once they
think they've taken it and that it's effective, you just give them a placebo like a sugar pill
and say, oh, this is going to make you talk now. And if they actually think that truth drugs could
be possible, then internally, they're going to kind of think to themselves, well, I've taken this
truth drug, then I'm kind of a helpless victim here. I don't have any choice but to talk because it's going to make me anyway. I guess I should.
It's the same thing with hypnotism. He said, you can try to hypnotize someone and maybe it's not
going to work on them, but you can still make them think that they've been hypnotized even if they
aren't feeling it. So for example, you pretend to hypnotize them and even if they don't go under,
you can start suggesting things to them like your your hands are gonna be getting really warm or something.
And it turns out under the desk,
you secretly put a heater down there
and you've turned the heater on
and their hands actually are getting warmer.
And so they think, well, I didn't think I was hypnotized,
but now maybe there's something to this.
And so if they think they've been hypnotized,
they might be more likely to talk
because who could control it?
I mean, it's not my fault he hypnotized me.
So I guess I better say whatever I'm gonna say. So it's a psychological technique inducing the
hypnotic situation instead of hypnosis itself.
The hypnosis placebo effect. Okay, we mentioned about the psychic driving thing, there's
repetition over and over. What was that?
Yes, psychic driving. This was by a psychiatrist named Ewan Cameron in Montreal.
He was working at the Allen Memorial Institute.
He had dreams of becoming the next Sigmund Freud.
He was going to win a Nobel Prize in medicine, at least he thought he was.
He was going to cure all mental illness.
He just didn't know how.
He knew he was destined for greatness, but he didn't know how.
He was a behaviorist.
And so he thought all behavior stems from patterns that you've learned from your environment.
So everything is nurture, nothing is nature. And so in his conception, what
mental illness is, is a person who has learned bad behaviors from their
environment. And if you want to correct mental illness, what you should do is
reduce them back to a blank slate where they forget all their behaviors and then
put them in a better environment where they learn better behaviors.
That's his conception at least. The question is then,
how do you reduce someone to a blank slate and make them forget these bad patterns of behavior that he thinks leads to mental illness?
In his conception, you have to induce enough stress in them.
If you induce enough stress, then that will reduce them to the blank slate and like God we can build them back up in our image.
So how do we induce enough stress? Well, he tried multiple ways, you know, electric shocks, sensory deprivation, and then psychic driving, as you mentioned. This was
playing auditory messages in their ears thousands and thousands of times a day just on endless
repeat. The reason why he came to this is because he was recording a session that he was having with a young woman, just like a therapy session. And she said something that he wanted her to listen to
again. She said something about how, my mom used to tell me, I don't remember exactly what it was,
but it was something negative. And so he said, here, I want you to listen to that again and kind
of react to it. So he plays it back for her and she has a very negative reaction to hearing her
saying her mom's negative words. And so he starts doing it again and again and again. She has an increasingly heightened
negative reaction each time. And he thinks to himself, this is how I induce stress. So
he started having people record these negative messages. And in some instances, he would
have their families come to the Allen Memorial Institute and record negative messages that
he could then play to the patients. And then he would make them listen to them, these messages over and over. Sometimes he would put them in chemical comas and then beneath
their pillow he would put a speaker where it would just play these messages. So maybe in their dreams,
like it's manipulating them into going down to become a blank slate again. But that's
psychic driving. That's what he was trying to do. Who were the patients? These were patients who
were legitimate psychiatric patients. Many of them had schizophrenia or depression who had committed themselves under his care
because he was one of the most renowned psychiatrists in the world, really.
At one point, he was the head of the American Psychiatric Association, the Canadian Psychiatric
Association, and the World Psychiatric Association.
So if you're going to commit yourself to anyone, well, this guy certainly shouldn't he know
what to do. So they thought they were getting tried-and-true treatments that would help them.
Instead, he was using them as guinea pigs in his experiments that eventually would be funded by MKUltra.
And it's especially ironic because Ewan Cameron was one of the psychiatrists who
evaluated the Nazi German prisoners at the end of World War II to determine whether they're fit to stand trial.
These are the same Nuremberg trials that produce the Nuremberg codes about ethical experiments,
you know, about like the first point of which is you need consent to the subject, you know.
So he's involved in those Nuremberg trials and yet he's completely going
against the Nuremberg code here. So a lot of ironies sadly in this book.
Was it effective at all? The psychic driving
thing? Was there anything useful that came out of that? It was effective at breaking people down.
I don't know about building them back up. In fact, in his notes, he has several notes of,
for instance, there's one nursing student and he says, this 18-year-old nursing student was reduced
to basically a vegetable who would pee her own bed and couldn't go to the bathroom on her own.
It's like he really could break these people down. There was one woman, she was an
identical twin. So this is kind of a good case study. The identical twin was committed to the
Allen Memorial, the other wasn't. She has the psychic driving done to her, electroshock treatment
as well. And afterwards, she can't go to the bathroom on her own. She can't dress herself,
put on her makeup, do anything. She moves in with her identical twin, but the, you know, she's so
psychologically damaged from this that it causes her severe depression
because she looks at her twin and what could have been, and she's not that.
So she ends up scavenging food out of like dumpsters and
living on her own for a while.
It's a really sad story, but yeah.
So, I mean, you definitely could affect the psychology of someone.
You really could kind of break them down and even induce amnesia if you can give them enough electric voltage during these therapies. But it's not
like you could build them back up on your image and make them all of a sudden cure of mental illness
like he was hoping for. Did they try and do any twin stuff, remote messaging between twins, any of
that? Not as part of MKUltra. There were some remote viewing stuff that the CIA was interested in, but that wasn't
part of MKUltra.
Annie Jacobson has a book on this called Phenomena, that's good.
But as far as I can tell, there wasn't any MKUltra things involved with that.
And I don't remember any specific twin studies that MKUltra was involved in either.
All right.
What about de-patterning?
Was that similar to the psychic driving thing? De-patterning was involved in either. All right. What about de-patterning? Was that similar to the, the psychic driving thing?
A kind of de-patterning was the electric shocks.
So you would get stimulated with these electric shocks multiple times.
And yeah, a lot of people had severe damage after this.
And one of the patients was named Janine Huard and she was pregnant at the time
that she was getting all this stuff done to her.
Eventually she was allowed out. She had her baby, but her baby was kind of unhealthy. There was some kind
of digestion problem the baby had. So, Jeanine Huard went into this severe depression. She was
worried and anxious. She gets recommitted to the Allen Memorial Institute because of this. And then,
you know, she talks about in her depositions, which I quote, everything she experienced. There's a lot
of really sad stories with these patients, but yeah, they went through a lot. And that in her depositions, which I quote, all, everything she experienced is, there's a lot of really sad stories with these patients, but yeah, they went through a lot.
And that, that was just one sub project at the Allen Memorial under Cameron, all that,
that stuff.
That was one sub project.
What in your opinion was the, uh, or were the wildest experiments?
What were the ones that sort of really, I mean, those seem to push the limit, turning
somebody functional into a vegetable and then making them live with their twin.
That's pretty rough.
But yeah, what were the worst ones?
The most unethical, I mean, I already mentioned it, but it's probably George White and dosing
these people unwittingly.
I will say for some of the prison experiments, these prisoners would sign consent forms in
a way. So they would say we're going to be testing hallucinogenic drugs.
Although it's a question about informed consent.
But you know, I mentioned you and Cameron, I think his are probably the most destructive
of the MKUltra experiments.
And one example of that is a woman named Mary Moro, who it's ironic because she had been
a neurologist at the Allen Memorial Institute under Ewan Cameron.
So she had been a resident in training, but she had severe anorexia and depression and she failed her neurological exams to become a doctor.
So she went into this deep depression and she eventually got committed to a hospital.
While she's there, Ewan Cameron goes to consult with her and he asks her,
do you want to come back to the Allen not as a resident but as a patient?
She reluctantly does and then she's on the other side of it now. So she
she was doing this kinds of stuff to people and now she's on the other side
of it experiencing it. The same thing happens to her where she basically gets
to a point where she can't put on her clothes by herself and she has phone
calls with her mother after each one of these de-patterning sessions, this
electric shock, and her mother is very concerned because she's not making any sense.
So her mother tells her sister,
you need to go over there and see what's happening.
So her sister barges in and says,
if you don't let me see my sister right now,
I'm calling the police.
So they eventually let her into the room
and in the corner is sitting Mary Morrow
with these hollow eyes.
She says later that she felt like she was sunk
in a deep hole and couldn't get out,
but she basically couldn't do anything for herself. So her family busted her out of there. And she's one of the
success, not a success story, but one of the, at least she got out. You know, she talks about in
her depositions after going through all this, there were people who had been there for years.
I was there for a few months and I experienced this stuff, but years people were doing this. So
I think, yeah, you and Cameron's experiments are among the most unethical. I should
also mention somewhat in connection with that is a guy named Baldwin, Maitland Baldwin. He was also
funded by the CIA to do some experiments, and he was around that area too in Montreal. He had been
a student of Donald Hebb, who had been an associate of Ewan Cameron. But Maitland Baldwin, one of the
experiments he at least proposed, not that he actually carried out, was to confine someone to a wooden box, like
in sensory deprivation, so they couldn't move, you know, they'd be confined. And he called
this a terminal type experiment to see how long they could stay in there and, you know,
before they died. There were several people who actually spoke out against this and said,
there's no way we're doing that. So he didn't, but he did end up doing experiments on monkeys where he would decapitate them and try to put different heads on different monkeys.
He would beam microwaves into their brains.
So he was doing a lot of stuff like that too.
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Wasn't there something to do with the toilets being wired with microphones so
that people's post-trip confessions were captured?
Didn't that happen somewhere?
I don't recall that.
I don't remember that.
Um, maybe it did.
I didn't, I didn't come across that.
I don't know.
Yeah. It's an interesting one thinking about, uh, I guess you can do, you can have this
effect on people, but unless they're under your care for the entire time, they're
going to go away and then it's difficult.
You got to follow this person to see how they behave.
Now with George White, he's got this group of, I guess, for the period of time
that they're with the prostitutes, he can sit on his toilet and drink his liquor and
look through the one way mirror.
So you can actually do some observation.
But the problem is, unless you're able to hold somebody in a location, which is why
being in a psychiatric facility is probably so useful that you can just have them under
observation to see what happens to them at all times.
If you do this to someone, they're just out in the world causing mischief. You have no idea what they're actually doing.
Yeah. Yeah. And that's one of the concerns that Gottlieb eventually has about this. In his
depositions, he talks about, he's asked, what did you learn from MKUltra? What came out of this?
And for the most part, he tries to put a positive spin on the negative results. And he says, well,
we learned a lot of things you couldn't do. You couldn't control someone like a marionette. But he does say you could make someone
appear crazy. And this did have some operational value in the sense that, like I mentioned,
you might be able to... One idea was to put LSD into a cigar and give it to Fidel Castro.
And before he made some kind of speech, he would smoke the cigar and he would appear crazy.
And his people would start to lose faith in him. But Sidney Gottlieb was even reluctant to take it to that kind of an operation
because he said, just as you were mentioning, it's not like you can control
what Castro is going to say or whoever's going to say once they're out of your
purview, once they've taken this, you don't know what they're going to do.
He might start saying, we need to start nuking the United States or something.
So, you know, he, he was kind of against that.
Hmm. Okay. So were there actually any operations used outside of experiments? Did MKUltra produce
anything operationally useful?
Yeah, it did in a couple instances. There were interrogations done with some of these methods.
And in some instances, it seems like the interrogations were successful and some maybe not. But there are reports, you know, that I talk about in the book about some of these methods. And in some instances, it seems like the interrogations were successful, and some maybe not. But there are reports that I talk about in the book about some of these
interrogations and what was done. But also the one operation that really comes out of this is,
ironically, exactly what I was just talking about that actually went forward, except it wasn't Fidel
Castro. It was the president of the Philippines. He was running for reelection. He seemed to be
maybe sympathetic to the communists. So how can we get him to lose his election? It turns out that the CIA sent some LSD to
Manila. They had someone at least try to slip some of it into his water before a political
rally to make him appear insane. There were several other operations that went into the
field, although most of them were unsuccessful, Sydney Gottlieb
was involved in multiple assassination attempts. One of those was on Patrice Lumumba, who was the
prime minister of the Congo. Eisenhower wanted Lumumba eliminated, so word went from Eisenhower
to Alan Dulles, the head of the CIA, down to Richard Bissell, who was the head of the department
Gottlieb was in, down to Sydney Gottliebb and they basically said, how can we covertly assassinate Patrice Lumumba without anyone realizing that it
was us? Because it's easy to kill someone, you know, you just drop a bomb on them
and they're dead. But it's hard to kill someone without implicating yourself and
that's what the CIA was trying to do. So what Gottlieb did was procure some
anthrax from Fort Diedrich, that biological warfare installation.
He personally took it to the Congo and he gave it to a CIA agent, a station chief who
was there and said basically, you know, we want you to slip this to Lumumba some way.
The idea was that we would put it in some toothpaste and then he would brush his teeth
with it.
You know, the toothpaste would make its way to his bathroom.
Lumumba would brush his teeth.
He would be infected with anthrax, which occurs naturally.
And so he would die from it.
That ended up not happening.
Not least because Lumumba's own friends said that he often didn't brush his teeth
because he feared no breath and he did bad breath.
So, wow.
Okay.
So were they, at no point did they get close to creating a
programmed killer of some kind?
No, no.
The closest I think is that the animal experimentation that I mentioned before where they actually
got animals to walk on predetermined paths, they could steer them and they were talking
about putting biological or chemical materials on them.
In these documents, they do say this might have application in human terms, but no actual psychotic killer that could be controlled
like a puppet was actually created. In fact, the irony I mentioned earlier about how Charles
Manson could have taught the CIA something instead of the opposite is that you actually,
I mean, in a way, mind control is possible, not through the MKUltra methods of drugs and
esoteric hypnotism or whatever they're doing, but really through
the classic methods of cult manipulation. And one model that I think is useful for thinking about
this is called the BITE model by Stephen Hassan. B-I-T-E, it stands for behavior, information,
thought, and emotion. So these are four methods of manipulation that typical cult leaders use in
order to get their followers to do and believe certain things. So behavior control, you know, the bee and bite, would be something like controlling what clothes
someone wears, where they can go, who they can talk to, what they can eat, when they can sleep.
Information control, the eye and bite, is like feeding them cult propaganda and teaching them
to distrust non-cult sources of information. So it's not that you completely prevent them from observing things from the outside world. That's not really
realistic, but you can teach them to not trust it when they do encounter it. So that's information
control. The T in bite is thought control. So saying prayers, singing hymns, repeating mantras,
I mean that kind of thing. And then the E in bite is emotion control.
So making them feel certain emotions like making them beholden to the cult through guilt,
shame, anger, fear, that kind of thing.
Those are methods of coercion that have been around for that.
Way more effective than-
But way more effective.
Now, it is the case that it might not necessarily
work on any individual person.
So the goal of a Manchurian candidate is we can hypnotize
or drug this person, anyone,
and make them do anything we want.
That's not necessarily possible with a biome model,
but with a large enough kind of cohort,
there are people within that who might be very susceptible
and suggestible, and then it might work on them in particular,
even though it might not work on everyone.
Did any of the research that they went through influence torture techniques or
enhanced interrogation-y stuff for the future?
This is another kind of ironic thing because people have known for a long
time that torture doesn't really work to get the truth.
It'll make someone talk. You know, I mean, a quote that I use in the book is if you have a blowtorch up someone's butt,
this is from an intelligence officer, they're going to talk. I mean, you can guarantee they'll
say something. You just can't guarantee it's the truth. I talk about the European witch craze in
the 17th century briefly talking about how you could put these witches on the rack and they would
talk. They would say that anyone's a witch
There were these two Jesuit scholars
Who said that you know torture is really effective and so someone took them down to see these witches on the rack
And he said another turn of the rack. Do you think these are warlocks? And she said yes
I've seen them birth devil babies and all kinds of stuff. And so they were kind of convinced
Okay, maybe torture just gets people to talk but not say the truth
So it's long been known that torture can be used to get people to say something but you don't
know what they're going to say or they'll basically say anything. For MKUltra, the idea
was that we wanted to move beyond that. We wanted to find methods of manipulation that
could be used to guarantee the truth without having to resort to a method that would make
someone say anything. The irony is that when MKUltra failed,
it's not that the CIA learned its lesson
and then moved on to something else,
it reverted back to torture.
It reverted back to torture.
That's the thing that we were trying to move away from
and now you go back to it.
This fucking medieval solution.
Well, we tried the LSD, it didn't work.
Where's the rack?
Have we still got the rack around?
Can we grab the, roll the rack out?
Yeah, and I mentioned kind of the euphemisms of the CIA within this book.
Torture isn't torture, of course. It's enhanced interrogation. And assassination isn't assassination.
It's executive action or it's targeted killing. Within the CIA, the group that was responsible
for plotting these assassinations was known as the Health Alteration Committee. A lot of these euphemisms throughout. In fact, I end the
book by saying the irony, I mean the last chapter of this book is history loves
irony. Listeners may be noting that I'm using the word irony a lot because this
book is so full of it and history really does
love irony. But one of the great ironies of MKUltra is that it was basically
unsuccessful at developing methods of mind control and yet within conspiracy
circles it has become the very definition of mind control. Anytime
someone talks about brainwashing or whatever it's always this must be an MK
Ultra plant or Britney Spears is being controlled by the CIA through MKUltra methods. It's like you haven't read much about MKUltra if you think it
was that successful. It really wasn't. Right. Well, or maybe that's a double fake.
It could be. Yeah, of course. Well, see, in the last chapter of the book, I talk about conspiracy
theories that come off of MKUltra. And one of the techniques these
conspiracy theorists use, there are two things that lead MKUltra to become a very popular
conspiracy theory. One is that in the 1970s, when Sidney Gottlieb was retiring from the CIA,
and also Richard Helms, the head of the CIA, they retired at the same time, they destroyed many of
the MKUltra files. They incinerated them because they didn't want anyone to know what they had been up to. Because they did this, it's not as if we don't
have files on it, we still have a lot, but because they did this, it opens the door for anyone to
paint MKUltra as anything they want to. Well, we don't know what was in those files, therefore,
MKUltra, I mean, these are actually conspiracies. MKUltra hosted human hunting expeditions for
government officials where they would hunt people or, you know, pop stars or MKUltra hosted human hunting expeditions for government officials where they would hunt people or, you know,
pop stars or MKUltra mind-controlled and there's child sex slaves and all kinds of stuff.
But because the files many of them were destroyed, who knows maybe that's in there.
So this is the technique of the conspiracy theorists. Can they prove any of that?
No, they don't offer any documentary evidence, nothing, so they can't prove it. But also they say well, you can't disprove me because
tell me that I'm, show me that I'm wrong. Like it's not proven, but it can't prove it. But also they say, well, you can't disprove me because tell me that I'm
showing me that I'm wrong.
Like it's not proven, but it can't be disproven.
It's non-falsifiable.
It's kind of like, what's the point?
What's the point?
Yeah.
Okay.
So when did things start falling apart internally?
Yeah.
In the, so MKUltra ends in 1963 about in several of the sub projects continue
into the late sixts through a program called
MK search, which was kind of like a continuation of MK ultra into the late 60s.
But by that point, Sydney Gottlieb had moved on.
He had become the head of the technical services division, kind of the, the, what came after
the TSS, the TSD, and he was in charge of creating those gadgets and disguises and documents
and stuff for the CIA for a while.
So MKUltra kind of floundered after that.
And in fact, in 1963, there was an internal CIA Inspector General report on MKUltra.
And the Inspector General, John Ehrman, he says in the report that, in his words,
this is illegal and unethical.
Okay, so it didn't last too much longer after that. Then in the 1970s,
got in Richard Helms retired and they were kind of the main champions of it within the CIA.
Right. How does this all become litigious? When do the courts get involved?
Yeah, the courts get involved really in the late 70s. But the reason why that happens is because
in the late 1974 and into 75, there are several
executive and congressional committees that are set up to investigate past abuses of the
intelligence community. So the Rockefeller Commission, the Church Committee, the Pike
Committee, there are some leaks out of the CIA. And on the front page of the New York Times,
they start publishing in late 1974 reports about how the CIA has spied on anti-war protesters
during the Vietnam War. And so these congressional committees were set up to investigate past abuses
of the CIA. And one of those is MKUltra. So during these investigations, it comes out that the CIA
had been involved in these unwitting drug experiments that prompts several congressional
hearings to launch investigations. So Sidney Gottlieb is
subpoenaed. He's in India at that point after he's retired. His wife had grown up in India,
had grown up there. And they were volunteering at a leper colony and he gets subpoenaed,
he comes back to the United States. And in exchange for testifying, his lawyer works out a deal
whereby he is granted immunity for anything that he says in exchange for his testimony. So
he's never held accountable for what he does. He has immunity for it. But that's when this
starts coming out. And once that starts coming out, many of the victims of these MKUltra sub-projects
realize that, wait a second, I was involved in that project. I didn't know that it was funded
by the CIA. And so they start suing the CIA. There are
multiple lawsuits. One is from a group of prisoners from the Atlanta Federal Penitentiary
where Carl Pfeiffer was dosing them with LSD especially. And so they sue the CIA, but eventually
it's dismissed because the statute of limitations, the judge says, has run out. So they don't
get anything. And then the other more successful lawsuit is that Orlacow lawsuit. The victims
of Ewan Cameron, his experiments in Montreal, about eight or nine of them eventually sue the CIA. They're represented
by the famous civil rights attorney Joseph Rao and his law partner, James Turner. And as part of this
lawsuit, Rao and Turner take the depositions of many of these people, not only the victims,
but the perpetrators as well. And that's how I got them, except this lawsuit was settled out of court for
$750,000 to be split among the plaintiffs.
And the depositions were never submitted at trial.
And so they were in Rao's papers where I found them.
Oh, wow.
So is that a $750,000, is that the largest payout that comes off the back of all of
this, is that the lion's share of the-
It's tied for it because Frank Olson's family, remember he was dosed with LSD
at that Deep Creek retreat and he died.
His family after, in the 1970s, they realized during these congressional
investigations that, wait a second, they're talking about an army employee
who jumped out of this window and he died?
That sounds a lot like our, you know, husband or our father. And so they eventually
threaten a lawsuit against the government, but in order to prevent that from happening, the Gerald Ford administration invites them to the White House.
Gerald Ford, the president, personally meets with them and basically
apologizes on behalf of the government and they work out a deal whereby the family got
$750,000 in exchange for an agreement not to sue the government and they work out a deal whereby the family got $750,000
in exchange for an agreement not to sue the government. So they got $750,000 as well.
Wow. What made the secrecy of all this so self-sustaining
when it came to the way that this was all operated?
Yeah, there are several factors within the CIA that allowed this to continue. I think there was very little internal oversight.
So one of those is that the CIA was very highly compartmentalized.
So very few people actually knew what was going on with MKUltra.
We think of the CIA as this entity and there's all these people and surely they're working
behind the scenes.
And that is the case for the most part, but it's not as if they all know what each other
is doing.
So for MKUltra, there might have been a dozen people who even knew about this project within
the CIA. So when you have that much compartmentalization, it means that there's less accountability
because there's less people to put you in check. So that's one problem that allowed
this to happen is just the highly compartmentalized nature, which in a sense is a necessary kind
of evil to a degree because the CIA does have
to keep secrets. I mean, it has to have some secrets. It's just the amount of how much
should be kept secret and how many people should know about any particular thing. Of
course, that's on a spectrum, but it's got to keep some. But that secrecy allows it to
avoid accountability in many instances. So that's one factor. Another factor would be
the lack of a record be the lack of a
record, the lack of a paper trail, mostly because Gottlieb and Helms destroyed many of these files,
even though a lot still exist, and they were never punished for it. They were never punished for it,
so there was no accountability for that. So Gottlieb got immunity, but what about the
other guy? Richard Helms, nothing happened to him because of this. He eventually got in trouble for
perjury in front of Congress for something unrelated. He said that we weren't doing something
meddling in this foreign country. I forget exactly what it was, but it turns out he just
lied to Congress and he got convicted of perjury for that. But yeah, so those are a few factors within the CIA that enabled this to
continue going without anyone putting a stop to it. And the reason why I think it continued for
so long, especially in there wasn't much accountability, is what I call kind of the vicious cycle of
secrecy. There was very little congressional oversight of the CIA during the Cold War. In fact,
many Congress people specifically said they didn't want to know what was going on in the CIA during the Cold War. In fact, many Congress
people specifically said they didn't want to know what was going on in the CIA. I think
this was a holdover from a World War II mentality where Congress didn't really know much about
the Manhattan Project. They kind of just approved the funds for the army to do kind of whatever.
And so after the war, it seemed like that was a good idea. It was good that we didn't
know this was going on.
We had so much success. We just finished the war with it. Exactly. Yeah. It's great we didn't know because we might've shut it down. It's great that we
let these scientists do this thing because it can end the war for us. That mentality carried over.
The idea was that, well, within the CIA or the army, maybe it's in our best interest not really
to peek into those nooks and crannies and the dark corners and see what they're doing,
because maybe they're working on something that we don't know whether we should put a stop to something or
not. We're just going to let them do what they do. And so there was very little congressional
oversight during the Cold War. I think that allowed this lack of accountability, this secrecy to
encompass the CIA and allow them to do these unethical things. And kind of the vicious cycle
of secrecy I mentioned is the idea that when you
have an organization like the CIA that has secrecy, that inevitably leads to plausible
deniability. Because no one can really know what you're up to. Therefore, I mean, you can always
say you didn't do something you did. Who's going to find out? It's secret. Plausible deniability,
in turn, it leads to reckless behavior. Again, because you're not going to be held accountable
for what you do. Reckless behavior in many instances, like with MKUltra, it leads to reckless behavior. Again, because you're not going to be held accountable for what you do. Reckless behavior in many instances, like with MKUltra, it leads to embarrassment because
eventually something leaks out, someone finds out, they put it in the New York Times and we're
embarrassed for what happened because they found out we were actually doing these unethical things.
Then embarrassment leads to secrecy because we've got to make sure no one does this again. We can't
have this leak out. We need more secrecy.
So that's kind of the vicious cycle that plays out, I think.
What does this sort of grow into?
Are you aware of any more similar programs that occur after MK?
Obviously MK Ultra sort of tries to limp forward in a variety of other forms.
After that, is it all just secrecy and nothing's got out?
I don't think anything like MKUltra itself was happening really after the late 1960s.
The conspiracy theorists listening to this will say,
no, it's still going on MKUltra.
One conspiracy theory is called Project Monarch.
They say this is a kind of a sub-project of MKUltra, that it's still going on and they're
recruiting these children from certain families to have, they call them multi-generational incest
abused children. They want to give them multiple personalities to make them disassociate from
what's happening to them so they're easier victims of these sex pedophiles or whatever it is. But the first mention that I can find of this Project
Monarch, which didn't exist, is in a journal called Phoenix. It's this conspiracy journal.
And the journal itself claims to have been written by a nine-foot tall alien from the
Pleiades star system. So I don't really put much stock in that.
But it seems to be kind of where this idea originated. One of the most prominent
MKUltra conspiracy theorists who champions this kind of Project Monarch thing,
she, right after that came out a couple months later, she published an article in that journal
saying, oh, I've been one of these, I've been one of the victims of Project Monarch. But I don't
think that's true at all. Now, ironically, I think she is Monarch, but I don't think that's true at all.
Ironically, I think she is a victim though. I don't think she's a victim of MKUltra.
She wrote a book about her supposed experience and in that book, it's co-authored by her husband.
Her husband was a member of what's called the International Society for the Study of Dissociation. It was like the pseudo-udoscientific conspiracy theory society that was championing satanic panic theories during the 1980s. During that satanic panic, there were
this kind of false memory syndrome that was going around the idea that if we hypnotize someone,
it might induce their, they might recall these repressed memories. In fact, it was like inducing
false memories in people. And he says in this book that he did this hypnotism on her and he was able to recover these memories. But I don't
think he recovered the memories. I think those memories were basically implanted by her trying
to think of something that happened to her that didn't actually happen.
Well, the crazy thing is if you want to give someone multiple personality disorder, you
don't need to deliver them drugs or a CIA program. You just need to let them download
TikTok. Just give them TikTok and watch your ton of influencers, whatever it's called,
the others or the multiples or whatever it, what you know.
Oh, I don't know.
There's been a ton of TikTok induced ticks.
Ticks is in.
Uh, and, and one of the, just a berserk fucking psychological
malady that appears to have been hallucinated.
Although, I mean, if you feel like you've got it, is it hallucination? It's, you know, it's there
for you, right? Even if it's not in the classical sense. But yeah, multiple personality disorder,
the newest trend, the newest psychological malady trend that appears to be swimming around on TikTok.
Yeah. And you know, you raise an interesting point because I don't think she's, I mean,
I think she's sincere in the sense that I think this thing actually happened to her. So I don't
think she's insincere, like she's trying to do people. I think she falsely thinks this
thing actually happened to her. And she will say something like, well, I know these memories
must be true because they're so vivid to me. Like, you know, I can recall them so vividly.
They're so traumatic. How could you forget something as traumatic as what I went through
when with these, you know, MKUltra experiments done on me and I was prostituted to all these presidents
and government officials and first ladies and whoever?
But I mean, there was an experiment even before this that showed that even vivid and traumatic
memories are just as likely to be false as any other memories are likely to be false.
This was when the Challenger space shuttle exploded. I don't know if, you know, that
was a while ago. But when that exploded at
Emory University, there were a couple of psychologists who decided the day after that happened, they had
their students write down everything they remembered about how they heard about the explosion. So where
they were, who they were with, etc. And then a couple years later, they got 40 something of these
students to take the same exact questionnaire. When the challenger exploded, where were you, who were you with, et cetera.
A majority of the students got a majority of the significant
details completely wrong.
And when they were confronted with their original responses, many of them said,
you know what, I think my present memory is actually the correct one.
You know, that's a kind of like a version of the Mandela effect.
Right.
Uh, yeah.
Is that, uh, can you remind me what is that exactly?
It's a series of memories that people seem to have that upon closer
inspection aren't true if you do the investigation.
Like the Bernstein bears and the Bernstein bears, that kind of thing.
The fruit of the loom logo.
Yes.
The cornucopia, it has the basket or not. Yeah, yeah, yeah. If you want to, if you want to fuck yourself up, search, uh, Mandela
effect examples, uh, just do it with a couple of people and it will incite
a Thanksgiving sized argument.
It will, it will incite a Elon versus Trump size argument, uh, around the dinner table.
Dr.
John Lyle, ladies and gentlemen, John, you're so fucking good,
man. This is awesome. Original research, deep in the archives, dusty old shit to come and
mansplain like this interesting stuff to me. It's so cool. Where should people go? They're
going to want to read the book, get all of your stuff. Yeah. The book is Project Mind Control.
If you want to keep up with me, I do have an X or Twitter, you know, it's just my name, John Lyle, J-O-H-N, L-I-S-L-E. I don't post often,
but if I have an update about an upcoming project or something, that's where it would be. So that's
the place. What are you working on next? I asked you this last time, I got excited for this book.
Can you, what do we know? I think the next one is going to be fairly different. I'm a historian of
science at heart. This involves science and
scientists, but I think I'm done with the intelligence community maybe for now. I'm
ready to move on to something closer to my original, I mean what I'm trained in, the
history of science more so. And so I'm really interested in a few expeditions. I like adventure
stories. I've been reading like Hampton Sides, Into the Kingdom of Ice is such a good book about this polar expedition. So I thought I want to do the equivalent before
like a scientific expedition that is involved dangers and shootouts with bandits and snake
attacks and man-eating dog attacks and falling over a cliff. So I think I found the story that
has all that kind of stuff, but allows me to tie in some history of science, the history of evolution
in an interesting expedition.
So all that stuff, I think will be packaged in a fun way.
So I think that's the next project.
Hurry up and write it so I can talk to you about it again.
Dude, I appreciate you, man.
Until next time.
You too.
Okay.
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