THE
CONTROLLERS:
A New Hypothesis of
Alien Abduction, Part 1
by Martin Cannon
I. Introduction
One wag has dubbed the problem
"Terra and the Pirates."
The pirates, ostensibly, are
marauders from another solar system; their victims include a growing number of
troubled human beings who insist that they've been shanghaied by these
otherworldly visitors. An outlandish scenario -- yet through the works of such
authors as Budd Hopkins[1] and Whitley Strieber[2], the "alien
abduction" syndrome has seized the public imagination. Indeed, tales of UFO
contact threaten to lapse into fashionability, even though, as I have elsewhere
noted[3], they may still inflict a formidable social price upon the claimant.
Some time ago, I began to research
these claims, concentrating my studies on the social and political environment
surrounding these events. As I studied, the project grew and its scope widened.
Indeed, I began to feel as though I'd gone digging through familiar terrain only
to unearth Gomorrah.
These excavations may have disgorged
a solution.
THE PROBLEM
Among ufologists, the term
"abduction" has come to refer to an infinitely-confounding experience,
or matrix of experiences, shared by a dizzying number of individuals, who claim
that travellers from the stars have scooped them out of their beds, or snatched
them from their cars, and subjected them to interrogations, quasi-medical
examinations, and "instruction" periods. Usually, these sessions are
said to occur within alien spacecraft; frequently, the stories include
terrifying details reminiscent of the tortures inflicted in Germany's death
camps. The abductees often (though not always) lose all memory of these events;
they find themselves back in their cars or beds, unable to account for hours of
"missing time." Hypnosis, or some other trigger, can bring back these
haunted hours in an explosion of recollection -- and as the smoke clears, an
abductee will often spot a trail of similar experiences, stretching all the way
back to childhood.
Perhaps the oddest fact of these odd
tales: Many abductees, for all their vividly-recollected agonies, claim to love
their alien tormentors. That's the word I've heard repeatedly: love.
Within the community of
"scientific ufologists" -- those lonely, all too little heard
advocates of reasonable and open-minded debate on matters saucerological --
these claims have elicited cautious interest and a commendable restraint from
conclusion-hopping. Outside the higher realms of scientific ufology, the
situation is, alas, quite different. In the popular press, in both the
"straight" and sensationalist media, within that journalistic realm
where issues are defined and public opinion solidified (despite a frequently
superficial approach to matters of evidence and investigation) abduction
scenarios have elicited two basic reactions: that of the Believer and the
Skeptic.
The Believers -- and here we should
note that "Believers" and "abductees" are two groups whose
memberships overlap but are in no way congruent -- accept such stories at face
value. They accept, despite the seeming absurdity of these tales, the internal
contradictions, the askew logic of narrative construction, the severe
discontinuity of emotional response to the actions described. The Believers
believe, despite reports that their beloved "space brothers" use vile
and inhuman tactics of medical examination -- senseless procedures most of us
(and certainly the vanguard of an advanced race) would be ashamed to inflict on
an animal. The Believers believe, despite the difficulty of reconciling these
unsettling tales with their own deliriums of benevolent off-worlders.
Occasionally, the rough notes of a
rationalization are offered: "The aliens don't know what they are
doing," we hear; or "Some aliens are bad." Yet the Believers
confound their own reasoning when they insist on ascribing the wisdom of the
ages and the beneficence of the angels to their beloved visitors. The aliens
allegedly know enough about our society to go about their business undetected by
the local authorities and the general public; they communicate with the
abductees in human tongue; they concern themselves with details of the
percipients' innermost lives -- yet they remain so ignorant of our culture as to
be unaware of the basic moral precepts concerning the dignity of the individual
and the right to self-determination. Such dichotomies don't bother the
Believers; they are the faithful, and faith is assumed to have its mysteries.
SANCTA SIMPLICITAS.
Conversely, the Skeptics dismiss
these stories out of hand. They dismiss, despite the intriguing confirmatory
details: the multiple witness events, the physical traces left by the ufonauts,
the scars and implants left on the abductees. The skeptics scoff, though the
abductees tell stories similar in detail -- even certain tiny details, not known
to the general public.
Philip Klass is a debunker who,
through his appearances on such television programs as NOVA and NIGHTLINE, has
been in a position to affect much of the public debate on UFOs. In his
interesting but poorly-documented work on abductions[4], Klass claims that
"abduction" is a psychological disease, spread by those who write
about it. This argument exactly resembles the professional press-basher's
frequent assertion that terrorism metastasizes through media exposure. Yet for
all the millions of words expectorated by newsfolk on the subject of terrorism,
terrorist actions remain quite rare, as any statistician (though few
politicians) will admit, and verifiable linkage between crimes and their
coverage remains to be found. For that matter, there have been books --
bestsellers, even -- on unicorns and gnomes. People who claim to see those
creatures are few. Abductees are plentiful.
Both Believer and Skeptic, in my
opinion, miss the real story. Both make the same mistake: They connect the
abduction phenomenon to the forty-year history of UFO sightings, and they apply
their prejudices about the latter to the controversy about the former.
At first sight, the link seems
natural. Shouldn't our thoughts about UFOs color our thoughts about UFO
abductions?
NO.
They may well be separate issues. Or,
rather, they are connected only in this: The myth of the UFO has provided an
effective cover story for an entirely different sort of mystery. Remove yourself
from the Believer/Skeptic dialectic, and you will see the third alternative.
As we examine this alternative, we
will, of necessity, stray far from the saucers. We must turn our face from the
paranormal and concentrate on the occult -- if, by "occult," we mean
SECRET.
I posit that the abductees HAVE been
abducted. Yet they are also spewing fantasy -- or, more precisely, they have
been given a set of lies to repeat and believe. If my hypothesis proves true,
then we must accept the following: The kidnapping is real. The fear is real. The
pain is real. The instruction is real. But the little grey men from Zeti
Reticuli are NOT real; they are constructs, Halloween masks meant to disguise
the real faces of the controllers. The abductors may not be visitors from
Beyond; rather, they may be a symptom of the carcinoma which blackens our body
politic.
The fault lies not in our stars, but
in ourselves.
THE HYPOTHESIS
Substantial evidence exists linking
members of this country's intelligence community (including the Central
Intelligence Agency, the Defense Advanvced Research Projects Agency, and the
Office of Naval Intelligence) with the esoteric technology of MIND CONTROL. For
decades, "spy-chiatrists" working behind the scenes -- on college
campuses, in CIA-sponsored institutes, and (most heinously) in prisons -- have
experimented with the erasure of memory, hypnotic resistance to torture, truth
serums, post-hypnotic suggestion, rapid induction of hypnosis, electronic
stimulation of the brain, non-ionizing radiation, microwave induction of
intracerebral "voices," and a host of even more disturbing
technologies. Some of the projects exploring these areas were ARTICHOKE,
BLUEBIRD, PANDORA, MKDELTA, MKSEARCH and the infamous MKULTRA.
I have read nearly every available
book on these projects, as well as the relevant congressional testimony[5]. I
have also spent much time in university libraries researching relevant articles,
contacting other researchers (who have graciously allowed me access to their
files), and conducting interviews. Moreover, I traveled to Washington, DC to
review the files John Marks compiled when he wrote THE SEARCH FOR "THE
MANCHURIAN CANDIDATE"[6]. These files include some 20,000 pages of CIA and
Defense Department documents, interviews, scientific articles, letters, etc. The
views presented here are the result of extensive and ongoing research.
As a result of this research, I have
come to the following conclusions:
- Although misleading (and
occasionally perjured) testimony before Congress indicated that the CIA's
"brainwashing" efforts met with little success[7], striking
advances were, in fact, made in this field. As CIA veteran Miles Copeland
once admitted to a reporter, "The congressional subcommittee which went
into this sort of thing got only the barest glimpse." [8]
- Clandestine research into thought
manipulation has NOT stopped, despite CIA protestations that it no longer
sponsors such studies. Victor Marchetti, 14-year veteran of the CIA and
author of the renown expose, THE CIA AND THE CULT OF INTELLIGENCE, confirmed
in a 1977 interview that the mind control research continues, and that CIA
claims to the contrary are a "cover story."[9]
- The Central Intelligence Agency
was not the only government agency involved in this research[10]. Indeed,
many branches of our government took part in these studies -- including
NASA, the Atomic Energy Commission, as well as all branches of the Defense
Department. To these conclusions I would append the following -- NOT as
firmly-established historical fact, but as a working hypothesis and grounds
for investigation:
- The "UFO abduction"
phenomenon MIGHT be a continuation of clandestine mind control operations.
I recognize the difficulties this
thesis might present to those readers emotionally wedded to the extraterrestrial
hypothesis, or to those whose political WELTANSHAUUNG disallows any such
suspicions. Still, the open-minded student of abductions should consider the
possibilities. Certainly, we are not being narrow-minded if we ask researchers
to exhaust ALL terrestrial explanations before looking heavenward.
Granted, this particular explanation
may, at first, seem as bizarre as the phenomenon itself. But I invite the
skeptical reader to examine the work of George Estabrooks, a seminal theorist on
the use of hypnosis in warfare, and a veteran of Project MKULTRA. Estabrooks
once amused himself during a party by covertly hypnotizing two friends, who were
led to believe that the Prime Minister of England had just arrived; Estabrooks'
victims spent an hour conversing with, and even serving drinks to, the esteemed
visitor[11]. For ufologists, this incident raises an inescapable question: If
the Mesmeric arts can successfully evoke a non-existent Prime Minister, why
can't a representative from the Pleiades be similarly induced?
But there is much more to the present
day technology of mind control than mere hypnosis -- and many good reasons to
suspect that UFO abduction accounts are an artifact of continuing
brainwashing/behavior modification experiments. Moreover, I intend to
demonstrate that, by using UFO mythology as a cover story, the experimenters may
have solved the major problem with the work conducted in the 1950s -- "the
disposal problem," i.e., the question of "What do we do with the
victims?"
If, in these pages, I seem to stray
from the subject of the saucers, I plead for patience. Before I attempt to link
UFO abductions with mind control experiments, I must first show that this
technology EXISTS. Much of the forthcoming is an introduction to the topic of
mind control -- what it is, and how it works.
II. The Technology
A BRIEF OVERVIEW
In the early days of World War II,
George Estabrooks, of Colgate University, wrote to the Department of War,
describing in breathless terms the possible uses of hypnosis in warfare[12]. The
Army was intrigued; Estabrooks had a job. The true history of Estabrooks'
wartime collaboration with the CID, FBI[13] and other agencies may never be
told: After the war, he burned his diary pages covering the years 1940-45, and
thereafter avoided discussing his continuing government work with anyone, even
close members of the family[14]. Occasionally, he strongly intimated that his
work involved the creation of hypno-programmed couriers and hypnotically-induced
split personalities, but whether he succeeded in these areas remains a
controversial point. Nevertheless, the eccentric and flamboyant Estabrooks
remains a pivotal figure in the early history of clandestine behavioral
research.
Which is not to say that he worked
alone. World War II was the first conflict in which the human brain became a
field of battle, where invading forces were led by the most notable names in
psychology and pharmacology. On both sides, the war spurred furious efforts to
create a "truth drug" for use in interrogating prisoners. General
William "Wild Bill" Donovan, director of the OSS, tasked his crack
team -- including Dr. Winifred Overhulser, Dr. Edward Strecker, Harry J.
Anslinger and George White -- to modify human perception and behavior through
chemical means; their "medicine cabinet" included scopolamine, peyote,
barbiturates, mescaline, and marijuana. (This research had its amusing side:
Donovan's "psychic warriors" conducted many extensive and expensive
trials before deciding that the best method of administering
tetrahydrocannibinol, the active ingredient in marijuana, was via the cigarette.
Any jazz musician could have told them as much[15].)
Simultaneously, the notorious NAZI
doctors at Dachau experimented with mescaline as a means of eliminating the
victim's will to resist. Jews, slavs, gypsies, and other "Untermenschen"
in the camp were surreptitiously slipped the drug; later, mescaline was combined
with hypnosis[16]. The results of these tests were made available to the United
States after the War.
In 1947, the Navy conducted the first
known post-war mind control program, Project CHAPTER, which continued the drug
experiments. Decades later, journalists and investigators still haven't
uncovered much information about this project -- or, indeed, about any of the
military's other excursions into this field. We know that the Army eventually
founded operations THIRD CHANCE and DERBY HAT; other project names remain
mysterious, though the existence of these programs is unquestionable.
The newly-formed CIA plunged into
this cesspool in 1950, with Project BLUEBIRD, rechristened ARTICHOKE in 1951. To
establish a "cover story" for this research, the CIA funded a
propaganda effort designed to convince the world that the Communist Bloc had
devised insidious new methods of re-shaping the human will; the CIA's own
efforts could therefore, if exposed, be explained as an attempt to "catch
up" with Soviet and Chinese work. The primary promoter of this
"line" was one Edward Hunter, a CIA contract employee operating
undercover as a journalist, and, later, a prominent member of the John Birch
society. (Hunter was an OSS veteran of the China theatre -- the same spawning
grounds which produced Richard Helms, Howard Hunt, Mitch WerBell, Fred Chrisman,
Paul Helliwell and a host of other noteworthies who came to dominate that
strange land where the worlds of intelligence and right-wing extremism
meet[17].) Hunter offered "brainwashing" as the explanation for the
numerous confessions signed by American prisoners of war during the Korean War
and (generally) UN-recanted upon the prisoners' repatriation. These confessions
alleged that the United States used germ warfare in the Korean conflict, a claim
which the American public of the time found impossible to accept. Many years
later, however, investigative reporters discovered that Japan's germ warfare
specialists (who had wreaked incalculable terror on the conquered Chinese during
WWII) had been mustered into the American national security apparat -- and that
the knowledge gleaned from Japan's horrifying germ warfare experiments probably
WAS used in Korea, just as the "brainwashed" soldiers had
indicated[18]. Thus, we now know that the entire brainwashing scare of the 1950s
constituted a CIA hoax perpetrated upon the American public: CIA deputy director
Richard Helms admitted as much when, in 1963, he told the Warren Commission that
Soviet mind control research consistently lagged years behind American
efforts[19].
When the CIA's mind control program
was transferred from the Office of Security to the Technical Services Staff (TSS)
in 1953, the name changed again -- to MKULTRA[20]. Many consider this
wide-ranging "octopus" project -- whose tentacles twined through the
corridors of numerous universities and around the necks of an army of scientists
-- the most ominous operation in CIA's catalogue of atrocity. Through MKULTRA,
the Agency created an umbrella program of a positively Joycean scope, designed
to ferret out all possible means of invading what George Orwell once called
"the space between our ears" (Later still, in 1962, mind control
research was transferred to the Office of Research and Development; project
cryptonyms remain unrevealed[21].)
What was studied? Everything --
including hypnosis, conditioning, sensory deprivation, drugs, religious cults,
microwaves, psychosurgery, brain implants, and even ESP. When MKULTRA
"leaked" to the public during the great CIA investigations of the
1970s, public attention focused most heavily on drug experimentation and the
work with ESP[22]. Mystery still shrouds another area of study, the area which
seems to have most interested ORD: psychoelectronics. This research may prove
key to our understanding of the UFO abduction phenomenon.
IMPLANTS
Perhaps the most interesting pieces
of evidence surrounding the abduction phenomenon are the intracerebral implants
allegedly visible in the X-rays and MRI scans of many abductees[23]. Indeed,
abductees often describe operations in which needles are inserted into the
brain; more frequently still, they report implantation of foreign objects
through the sinus cavities. Many abduction specialists assume that these
intracranial incursions must be the handiwork of scientists from the stars.
Unfortunately, these researchers have failed to familiarize themselves with
certain little-heralded advances in terrestrial technology.
The abductees' implants strongly
suggest a technological lineage which can be traced to a device known as a
"stimoceiver," invented in the late '50s-early '60s by a
neuroscientist named Jose Delgado. The stimoceiver is a miniature depth
electrode which can receive and transmit electronic signals over FM radio waves.
By stimulating a correctly-positioned stimoceiver, an outside operator can wield
a surprising degree of control over the subject's responses.
The most famous example of the
stimoceiver in action occurred in a Madrid bull ring. Delgado "wired"
the bull before stepping into the ring, entirely unprotected. Furious for gore,
the bull charged toward the doctor -- then stopped, just before reaching him.
The technician-turned-toreador had halted the animal by simply pushing a button
on a black BoX, held in the hand[24].
Delgado's PHYSICAL CONTROL OF THE
MIND: TOWARD A PSYCHOCIVILISED SOCIETY[25] remains the sole, full-length,
popularly-written work on intracerebral implants and electronic stimulation of
the brain (ESB). (The book's ominous title and unconvincing philosophical
rationales for mass mind control prompted an unfavorable public reaction --
which may have deterred other researchers from publishing on this theme for a
general audience.) While subsequent work has long since superceded the
techniques described in this book, Delgado's achievements were seminal. His
animal and human experiments clearly demonstrate that the experimenter can
electronically induce emotions and behavior: Under certain conditions, the
extremes of temperament -- rage, lust, fatigue, etc. -- can be elicited by an
outside operator as easily as an organist might call forth a C-major chord.
Delgado writes: "Radio
stimulation of different points in the amygdala and hippocampus in the four
patients produced a variety of effects, including pleasant sensations, elation,
deep, thoughtful concentration, odd feelings, super relaxation, colored visions,
and other responses."[26] The evocative phrase "colored vision"
clearly indicates remotely-induced hallucination; we will detail later how these
hallucinations may be "controlled" by an outside operator.
Speaking in 1966 -- and reflecting
research undertaken years previous -- Delgado asserted that his experiments
"support the distasteful conclusion that motion, emotion, and behavior can
be directed by electrical forces and that humans can be controlled like robots
by push buttons."[27] He even prophesied a day when brain control could be
turned over to non-human operators, by establishing two-way radio communication
between the implanted brain and a computer[28].
Of one experimental subject, Delgado
notes that "the patient expressed the successive sensations of fainting,
fright and floating around. These 'floating' feelings were repeatedly evoked on
different days by stimulation of the same point..."[29] Ufologists may
recognize the similarity of this sequence of events to abductee reports of the
opening minutes of their experiences[30]. Under subsequent hypnosis, the
abductee could be instructed to misremember the cause of this floating
sensation.
In a fascinating series of
experiments, Delgado attached the stimoceiver to the tympanic membrane, thereby
transforming the ear into a sort of microphone. An assistant would whisper
"How are you?" into the ear of a suitably "fixed" cat, and
Delgado could hear the words over a loudspeaker in the next room. The
application of this technology to the spy trade should be readily apparent.
According to Victor Marchetti, The Agency once attempted a highly- sophisticated
extension of this basic idea, in which radio implants were attached to a cat's
cochlea, to facilitate the pinpointing of specific conversations, freed from
extraneous surrounding noises[31]. Such "advances" exacerbate the
already-imposing level of Twentieth-Century paranoia: Not only can our phones be
tapped and mail checked, but even TABBY may be spying on us!
Yet the ramifications of this
technology may go even deeper than Marchetti indicates. I presume that if a
suitably-wired subject's inner ear can be made into a microphone, it can also be
made into a loudspeaker -- one possible explanation for the "voices"
heard by abductees[32]. Indeed, I have personally viewed a strange, opalescent
implant within the ear canal of an abductee. I see no reason to ascribe this
device to alien intrusion -- more than likely, the "intruders" in this
case were the technological inheritors of the Delgado legacy. Indeed, not many
years after Delgado's experiments with the cat, Ralph Schwitzgebel devised a
"bug-in-the-ear" via which the therapist -- odd term, under the
circumstances -- can communicate with his subject[33].
Other researchers have made notable
contributions to this field.
Robert G. Heath, of Tulane
University, who has implanted as many as 125 electrodes in his subjects,
achieved his greatest notoriety by attempting to "cure" homosexuality
through ESB. In his experiments, he discovered that he could control his
patients' memory, (a feat which, applied in the ufological context, may account
for the phenomenon of "missing time"); he could also induce sexual
arousal, fear, pleasure, and hallucinations[34].
Heath and another researcher, James
Olds[35], have independently illustrated that areas of the brain in and near the
hypothalamus have, when electronically stimulated, what has been described as
"rewarding" and "aversive" effects. Both animals and men,
when given the means to induce their own ESB of the brain's pleasure centers,
will stimulate themselves at a tremendous rate, ignoring such basic drives as
hunger and thirst[36]. (Using fixed electrodes of his own invention, John C.
Lilly had accomplished similar effects in the early 1950s[37].) Anyone who has
studied the abduction phenomenon will find himself on familiar territory here,
for the abductee accounts are replete with stories of bewildering and
inappropriate sexual response countered by extremely painful stimuli -- operant
conditioning, at its most extreme, and most insidious, for here we see a form of
conditioning in which the manipulator renders himself invisible. Indeed, B.F.
Skinneresque aversive therapy, remotely appiled, was Heath's prescription for
"healing" homosexuality[38].
Ralph Schwitzgebel and his brother
Robert have produced a panoply of devices for tracking individuals over long
ranges; they may be considered the creators of the "electronic house
arrest" devices recently approved by the courts[39]. Schwitzgebel devices
could be used for tracking all the physical and neurological signs of a
"patient" within a quarter of a mile[40], thereby lifting the distance
limitations which restricted Delgado.
In Ralph Schwitzgebel's initial work,
application of this technology to ESB seems to have been limited to cumbersome
brain implants with protruding wires. But the technology was soon miniaturized,
and a scheme was proposed whereby radio receivers would be mounted on utility
poles throughout a given city, thereby providing 24-hour-a-day monitoring
capability[41]. Like Heath, Schwitzgebel was much exercised about homosexuality
and the use of intracranial devices to combat sexual deviation. But he has also
spoken ominously about applying his devices to "socially troublesome
persons"... which, of course, could mean anyone[42].
Bryan Robinson, of the Yerkes primate
laboratory has conducted fascinating simian research on the use of remote ESB in
a social context. He could cause mothers to ignore their offspring, despite the
babies' cries. He could turn submission into dominance, and vice-versa[43].
Perhaps the most disturbing wanderer
into this mind-field is Joseph A. Meyer, of the National Security Agency, the
most formidable and secretive component of America's national security complex.
Meyer has proposed implanting rougly half of all Americans arrested -- not
necessarily convicted -- of any crime; the numbers of "subscribers"
(his euphemism) would run into the tens of millions. "Subscribers"
could be monitored continually by computer wherever they went. Meyer, who has
carefully worked out the economics of his mass-implantation system, asserts that
taxpayer liability should be reduced by forcing subscribers to "rent"
the implant from the State. Implants are cheaper and more efficient than police,
Meyer suggests, since the call to crime is relentless for the poor "urban
dweller" -- who, this spook-scientist admits in a surprisingly candid
aside, is fundamentally unnecessary to a post-industrial economy. "Urban
dweller" may be another of Meyer's euphemisms: He uses New York's Harlem as
his model community in working out the details of his mind-management
system[44].
ABDUCTEE IMPLANTS
If we are to take seriously abductee
accounts of brain implants, we must consider the possibility that the
implanters, properly perceived, DON'T look much like the "greys"
pictured on Strieber's dustjackets. Instead, the visitors may resemble Dr. Meyer
and his brethren. We would thus have an explanation for both the reports of
abductee brain implants and, as we shall see, the "scoop marks" and
other scars visible on other parts of the abductees' bodies. We would also have
an explanation for the reports of individuals suffering personality change after
contact with the UFO phenomenon.
Skeptics might counter that the time
factor of UFO abductions disallows this possibility. If estimates of
"missing time" are correct, the abductions rarely take longer than
one-to-three hours. Wouldn't a brain surgeon, operating under less-than-ideal
conditions (perhaps in a mobile unit) need more time?
NO -- not if we accept the claims of
a Florida doctor named Daniel Man. He recently proposed a draconian solution to
the overblown "missing children problem," by suggesting a program
wherein America's youngsters would be implanted with tiny transmitters in order
to track the children continuously. Man brags that the operation can be done
right in the office -- and would take less than 20 minutes[45].
Conceivably, it might take a tad
longer in the field.
A QUESTION OF TIMING
The history of brain implantation, as
gleaned from the open literature, is certainly disquieting. Yet this history has
almost certainly been censored, and the dates manipulated in a nigh-Orwellian
fashion. When dealing with research funded by the engines of national security,
one can never know the true origin date of any individual scientific advance.
However, if we listen carefully to the scientists who have pioneered this
research, we may hear whispers, faint but unmistakable, hinting that
remotely-applied ESB originated earlier than published studies would indicate.
In his autobiography THE SCIENTIST,
John C. Lilly (who would later achieve a cultish reknown for his work with
dolphins, drugs and sensory deprivation) records a conversation he had with the
director of the National Institute of Mental Health -- in 1953. The director
asked Lilly to brief the CIA, FBI, NSA and the various military intelligence
services on his work using electrodes to stimulate directly the pleasure and
pain centers of the brain. Lilly refused, noting, in his reply:
Dr. Antoine Remond, using our
techniques in Paris, has demonstrated that this method of stimulation of the
brain can be applied to the human without the help of the neurosurgeon; he is
doing it in his office in Paris without neurosurgical supervision. This means
that anybody with the proper apparatus can carry this out on a person
covertly, with no external signs that electrodes have been used on that
person. I feel that if this technique got into the hands of a secret agency,
they would have total control over a human being and be able to change his
beliefs extremely quickly, leaving little evidence of what they had done[46].
Lilly's assertion of the moral high
ground here is interesting. Despite his avowed phobia against secrecy, a careful
reading of THE SCIENTIST reveals that he continued to do work useful to this
country's national security apparatus. His sensory deprivation experiments
expanded upon the work of ARTICHOKE's Maitland Baldwin, and even his dolphin
research has -- perhaps inadvertently proved useful in naval warfare[47]. One
should note that Lilly's work on monkeys carried a "secret"
classification, and that NIMH was a common CIA funding conduit[48].
But the most important aspect of
Lilly's statement is its date. 1953? How far back does radio-controlled ESB go?
Alas, I have not yet seen Remond's work -- if it is available in the open
literature. In the documents made available to Marks, the earliest reference to
remotely-applied ESB is a 1959 financial document pertaining to MKULTRA
subproject 94. The general subproject descriptions sent to the CIA's financial
department rarely contain much information, and rarely change from year to year,
leaving us little idea as to when this subproject began.
Unfortunately, even the Freedom of
Information Act couldn't pry loose much information on electronic mind control
techniques, though we know a great deal of study was done in these areas. We
have, for example, only four pages on subproject 94 -- by comparison, a
veritable flood of documents were released on the use of drugs in mind control.
(Whenever an author tells us that MKULTRA met with little success, the reference
is to drug testing.) On this point, I must criticize John Marks: His book never
mentions that roughly 20-25 percent of the subprojects are "dark" --
i.e., little or no information was ever made available, despite lawyers and FOIA
requests. Marks seems to feel that the only information worth having is the
information he received. We know, however, that research into psychoelectronics
was extensive indeed, statements of project goals dating from ARTICHOKE and
BLUEBIRD days clearly identify this area as a high priority. Marks' anonymous
informant, jocularly named "Deep Trance," even told a previous
interviewer that, beginning in 1963, CIA and the military's mind control efforts
strongly emphasized electronics[49]. I therefore assume -- not rashly, I hope --
that the "dark" MKULTRA subprojects concerned matters such as brain
implants, microwaves, ESB, and related technologies.
I make an issue of the timing and
secrecy involved in this research to underscore three points: 1. We can never
know with certainty the true origin dates of the various brainwashing methods --
often, we discover that techniques which seem impossibly futuristic actually
originated in the 19th century. (Pioneering ESB research was conducted in 1898,
by Ewald, professor of physiology at Straussbourg[50].) 2. The open literature
almost certainly gives a bowdlerized view of the actual research. 3.
Lavishly-funded clandestine researchers -- unrestrained by peer review or the
need for strict controls -- can achieve far more rapid progress than scientists
"on the outside."
Potential critics should keep these
points in mind should they attempt to invalidate the "mind control"
thesis of UFO abductions by citing an abduction account which antedates Delgado.
THE QUANDARY
We have amply demonstrated, then,
that as far back as the 1960s -- and possibly earlier still -- scientists have
had the capability to create implants similar to those now purportedly visible
in abductee MRI scans. Indeed, we have no notion just how advanced this
technology has become, since the popular press stopped reporting on brain
implantation in the 1970s. The research has no doubt continued, albeit in a less
public fashion. In fact, scientists such as Delgado have cast their eye far
beyond the implants; ESB effects can now be elicited with microwaves and other
forms of electromagnetic radiation, used with and without electrodes.
So why -- if we take UFO abduction
accounts at face value -- are the "advanced aliens" using an old
technology, an EARTH technology, a technology which may soon be rendered
obsolescent, if it hasn't been so rendered already? I am reminded of the
charming anachronisms in the old Flash Gordon serials, where swords and
spaceships clashed continually.
Do they also watch black-and-white
television on Zeta Reticuli?
REMOTE HYPNOSIS
Hypnosis provides the (highly
controversial) key which opens the door to many abduction accounts[51]. And
obviously, if my thesis is correct, hypnosis plays a large part in the abduction
itself. One thing we know with certainty: Since the earliest days of project
BLUEBIRD, the CIA's spy-chiatrists spent enormous sums mastering Mesmer's art.
I cannot here give even a brief
summary of hypnosis, nor even of the CIA's studies in this area. (Fortunately,
FOIA requests were rather more successful in shaking loose information on this
topic than in the area of psycho-electronics.) Here, we will concentrate on a
particularly intriguing allegation -- one heard faintly, but persistently, for
the past twenty years by those who would investigate the shadow side of
politics.
If this allegation proves true,
hypnosis is NOT necessarily a person-to- person affair.
The abductee -- or the mind control
victim -- need not have physical contact with a hypnotist for hypnotic
suggestion to take effect; trance could be induced, and suggestions made, via
the intracerebral transmitters described above. The concept sounds like
something out of Huxley's or Orwell's most masochistic fantasies. Yet remote
hypnosis was first reported -- using allegedly parapsychological means -- in the
early 1930s, by L.L. Vasilev, Professor of Physiology in the University of
Leningrad[52]. Later, other scientists attempted to accomplish the same goal,
using less mystic means.
Over the years, certain journalists
have asserted that the CIA has mastered a technology call RHIC-EDOM. RHIC means
"Radio Hypnotic Intracerebral Control." EDOM stands for
"Electronic Dissolution of Memory." Together, these techniques can --
allegedly -- remotely induce hypnotic trance, deliver suggestions to the
subject, and erase all memory for both the instruction period and the act which
the subject is asked to perform.
RHIC uses the stimoceiver, or a
microminiaturized offspring of that technology to induce a hypnotic state.
Interestingly, this technique is also reputed to involve the use of
INTRAMUSCULAR implants, a detail strikingly reminiscent of the "scars"
mentioned in Budd Hopkins MISSING TIME. Apparently, these implants are
stimulated to induce a post-hypnotic suggestion.
EDOM is nothing more than missing
time itself -- the erasure of memory from consciousness through the blockage of
synaptic transmission in certain areas of the brain. By jamming the brain's
synapses through a surfeit of acetocholine, neural transmission along selected
pathways can be effectively stilled. According to the proponents of RHIC-EDOM,
acetocholine production can be affected by electromagnetic means. (Modern
research in the psycho-physiological effects of microwaves confirm this
proposition.)
Does RHIC-EDOM exist? In our
discussion of Delgado's work, I have already cited a strange little book
(published in 1969) titled WERE WE CONTROLLED?, written by one Lincoln Lawrence,
a former FBI agent turned journalist. (The name is a pseudonym; I know his real
identity.) This work deals at length with RHIC-EDOM; a careful comparison of
Lawrence's work with MKULTRA files declassified ten years later indicates a
strong possibility that the writer did indeed have "inside" sources.
Here is how Lawrence describes RHIC
in action:
It is the ultra-sophisticated
application of post-hypnotic suggestion TRIGGERED AT WILL [italics in
original] by radio transmission. It is a recurring hypnotic state, re-induced
automatically at intervals by the same radio control. An individual is brought
under hypnosis. This can be done either with his knowledge -- or WITHOUT it by
use of narco-hypnosis, which can be brought into play under many guises. He is
then programmed to perform certain actions and maintain certain attitudes upon
radio signal[53].
Other authors have mentioned this
technique -- specifically Walter Bowart (in his book OPERATION MIND CONTROL) and
journalist James Moore, who, in a 1975 issue of a periodical called MODERN
PEOPLE, claimed to have secured a 350-page manual, prepared in 1963, on
RHIC-EDOM[54]. He received the manual from CIA sources, although --
interestingly -- the technique is said to have originated in the military.
The following quote by Moore on RHIC
should prove especially intriguing to abduction researchers who have confronted
odd "personality shifts" in abductees:
Medically, these radio signals are
directed to certain parts of the brain. When a part of your brain receives a
tiny electrical impulse from outside sources, such as vision, hearing, etc.,an
emotion is produced -- anger at the sight of a gang of boys beating an old
woman, for example. The same emotion of anger can be created by artificial
radio signals sent to your brain by a controller. You could instantly feel the
same white-hot anger without any apparent reason[55].
Lawrence's sources imparted an even
more tantalizing -- and frightening -- revelation:
...there is already in use a small
EDOM generator-transmitter which can be concealed on the body of a person.
Contact with this person -- a casual handshake or even just a touch --
transmits a tiny electronic charge plus an ultra-sonic signal tone which for a
short while will disturb the time orientation of the person affected[56].
If RHIC-EDOM exists, it goes a long
way toward providing an earthbound rationale for alien abductions -- or, at
least, certain aspects of them. The phenomenon of "missing time" is no
longer mysterious. Abductee implants, both intracerebral and otherwise, are
explained. And note the reference to "recurring hypnotic state, reinduced
automatically by the same radio command." This situation may account for
"repeater" abductees who, after their initial encounter, have regular
sessions of "missing time" and abduction -- even while a bed-mate
sleeps undisturbed.
At present, I cannot claim
conclusively that RHIC-EDOM is real. To my knowledge, the only official
questioning of a CIA representive concerning these techniques occurred in 1977,
during Senate hearings on CIA drug testing. Senator Richard Schweicker had the
following interchange with Dr. Sidney Gottlieb, an important MKULTRA
administrator:
SCHWEICKER: Some of the projects
under MKULTRA involved hypnosis, is that correct?
GOTTLIEB: Yes.
SCHWEICKER: Did any of these
projects involve something called radio hypnotic intracerebral control, which
is a combination, as I understand it, in layman's terms, of radio
transmissions and hypnosis.
GOTTLIEB: My answer is
"No."
SCHWEICKER: None whatsoever?
GOTTLIEB: Well, I am trying to be
responsive to the terms you used. As I remember it, there was a current
interest, running interest, all the time in what effects people's standing in
the field of radio energy have, and it could easily have been that somewhere
in many projects, someone was trying to see if you could hypnotize someone
easier if he was standing in a radio beam. That would seem like a reasonable
piece of research to do.
Schweicker went on to mention that he
had heard testimony that radar (i.e., microwaves) had been used to wipe out
memory in animals; Gottlieb responded, "I can believe that,
Senator."[57]
Gottlieb's blandishments do not
comfort much. For one thing, the good doctor did not always provide thoroughly
candid testimony. (During the same hearing he averred that 99 percent on the
CIA's research had been openly published; if so, why are so many MKULTRA
subprojects still "dark," and why does the Agency still go to great
lengths to protect the identities of its scientists?[58]) We should also
recognize that the CIA's operations are compartmentalized on a
"need-to-know" basis; Gottlieb may not have had access to the
information requested by Schweicker. Note that the MKULTRA rubric circumscribed
Gottlieb's statement: RHIC-EDOM might have been the focus of another program.
(There were several others: MKNAOMI, MKACTION, MKSEARCH, etc.) Also keep in mind
the revelation by "Deep Trance" that the CIA concentrated on
psychoelectronics AFTER the termination of MKULTRA in 1963. Most significantly:
RHIC-EDOM is described by both Lawrence and Moore as a product of MILITARY
research; Gottlieb spoke only of matters pertaining to CIA. He may thus have
spoken truthfully -- at least in a strictly technical sense -- while still
misleading the Congressional interlocutors.
Personally, I believe that the RHIC-EDOM
story deserves a great deal of further research. I find it significant that when
Dr. Petter Lindstrom examined X-rays of Robert Naesland, a Swedish victim of
brain-implantation, the doctor authoritatively cited WERE WE CONTROLLED? in his
letter of response[59]. This is the same Dr. Lindstrom noted for his pioneering
use of ultrasonics in neurosurgery[60]. Lincoln Lawrence's book has received a
strong endorsement indeed.
Bowart's OPERATION MIND CONTROL
contains a significant interview with an intelligence agent knowledgeable in
these areas. Granted, the reader has every right to adopt a skeptical attitude
toward information culled from anonymous sources; still, one should note that
this operative's statements confirm, in pertinent part, Lawrence's thesis[61].
Most importantly: The open literature
on brain-wave entrainment and the behavioral effects of electromagnetic
radiation substantiates much of the RHIC- EDOM story -- as we shall see.
THAT'S ENTRAINMENT
Robert Anton Wilson, an author with a
devoted cult following, recently has taken to promoting a new generation of
"mind machines" designed to promote creativity, stimulate learning,
and alter consciousness -- i.e., provide a drug-less high. Interestingly, these
machines can also induce "Out-of-Body- Experiences," in which the
percipient mentally "travels" to another location while his body
remains at rest[62]. This rapidly-developing technology has spawned a
technological equivalent to the drug culture; indeed, the aficionados of the
electronic buzz even have their own magazine, REALITY HACKERS. [Now defunct. --
jpg] I strongly suspect that we will hear much of these machines in the future.
One such device is called the
"hemi-synch." This headphone-like invention produces slightly
different frequences in each ear; the brain calculates the difference between
these frequencies, resulting in a rhythm known as the "binaural beat."
The brain "entrains" itself to this beat -- that is, the subject's EEG
slows down or speeds up to keep pace with its electronic running partner[63].
The brain has a "beat" of
its own.
This rhythm was first discovered in
1924 by the German psychiatrist Hans Berger, who recorded cerebral voltages as
part of a telepathy study[64]. He noted two distinct frequencies: alpha (8-13
cycles per second), associated with a relaxed, alert state, and beta (14-30
cycles per second), produced during states of agitation and intense mental
concentration. Later, other rhythms were noted, which are particularly important
for our present purposes: theta (4-7 cycles per second), a hypnogogic state, and
delta (.5 to 3.5 cycles per second), generally found in sleeping subjects[65].
The hemi-synch -- and related
mind-machines -- can produce alpha or theta waves, on demand, according to the
operator's wishes. A suitably-entrained brain is much more responsive to
suggestion, and is even likely to experience vivid hallucinations.
I have spoken to several UFO
abductees who describe a "stereophonic sound" effect -- EXACTLY
SIMILAR TO THAT PRODUCED BY THE HEMI-SYNCH -- preceding many
"encounters." Of course, one usually administers the hemi-synch via
headphones, but I see no reason why the effect cannot be transmitted via the
above-described stimoceiver. Again, I remind the reader of the abductee with an
implant just inside her ear canal.
There's more than one way to entrain
a brain. Michael Hutchison's excellent book MEGA BRAIN details the author's
personal experiences with many such devices -- the Alpha-stim, TENS, the Synchro-energizer,
Tranquilite, etc. He recounts dazzling, Dali-esque hallucinations, as a result
of using this mind- expanding technology; moreover, he offers a seductive
argument that these devices may represent a true breakthrough in
consciousness-control, thereby fulfilling the dashed dream of the hallucinogenic
'60s.
I wish to avoid a knee-jerk Luddite
response to these fascinating wonderboxes. At the same time, I recognize the
dangers involved. What about the possibility of an outside operator literally
"changing our minds" by altering our brainwaves without our knowledge
or permission? If these machines can induce a hypnotic state, what's to stop a
skilled hypnotist from making use of this state?
Granted, most of these devices
require some physical interaction with the subject. But a tool called the
Bio-Pacer can, according to its manufacturer, produce a number of mood altering
frequencies -- WITHOUT attachment to the subject. Indeed, the Bio-Pacer III (a
high-powered version) can affect an entire room. This device costs $275,
according to the most recent price sheet available[66]. What sort of machine
might $27,500 buy? Or $275,000? What effects, what ranges might a million-dollar
machine be capable of?
The military certainly has that sort
of money.
And they're certainly interested in
this sort of technology, according to Michael Hutchison. His interview with an
informant named Joseph Light elicited some particularly provocative revelations.
According to Light:
There are important elements in the
scientific community, powerful people, who are very much interested in these
areas... but they have to keep most of their work secret. Because as soon as
they start to publish some of these sensitive things, they have problems in
their lives. You see, they work on research grants, and if you follow the
research being done, you find that as soon as these scientists publish
something about this, their research funds are cut off. There are areas in
bioelectric research where very simple techniques and devices can have
mind-boggling effects. Conceivably, if you have a crazed person with a bit of
a technical background, he can do a lot of damage[67].
This last statement is particularly
evocative. In 1984, a violent neo-NAZI group called The Order (responsible for
the murder of talk-show host Alan Berg) established contact with two government
scientists engaged in clandestine research to project chemical imbalances and
render targeted individuals docile via certain frequencies of electronic waves.
For $100,000 the scientists were willing to deliver this information[68].
Thus, at least one group of crazed
individuals almost got the goods.
WAVE YOUR BRAIN GOODBYE
Every Senator and Congressional
representative has a "wavie" file. So do many state representatives.
Wavies have even pled their case to private institutions such as the Christic
Institute[69].
And who are the wavies?
They claim to be victims of
clandestine bombardment with non-ionizing radiation -- or microwaves. They
report sudden changes in psychological states, alteration of sleep patterns,
intracerebral voices and other sounds, and physiological effects. Most people
never realize how many wavies there are in this country. I've spoken to a number
of wavies myself.
Are these troubled individuals
seeking an exterior rationale for their mental problems? Maybe. Indeed, I'm sure
that such is the case in many instances. But the fact is that the literature on
the behavioral effects of microwaves, extra-low-frequencies (ELF) and ultra-sonics
is such that we cannot blithely dismiss ALL such claims.
For decades, American science and
industry tried to convince the population that microwaves could have no adverse
effects on human beings at sub-thermal levels -- in other words, the attitude
was, "If it can't burn you, it can't hurt you." This approach became
increasingly difficult to defend as reports mounted of microwave-induced
physiological effects. Technicians described "hearing" certain radar
installations; users of radar telescopes began developing cataracts at an
appallingly high rate[70]. The Soviets had long recognized the strange and
sometimes subtle effects of these radio frequencies, which is why their exposure
standards have always been much stricter.
Soviet microwave bombardment of the
U.S. Embassy in Moscow prompted the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency's
Project PANDORA (later renamed), whose ostensible goal was to determine whether
these pulsations (reportedly 10 cycles per second, which puts them in the alpha
range) could be used for the purposes of mind control. I suspect that the
"war on Tchaikowsky Street," as I call it[71], was used, at least in
part, as a cover story for DARPA mind control research, and that the stories
floated in the news (via, for example, Jack Anderson's column) about Soviet
remote brainwashing served the same propaganda purposes as did the bleatings of
Edward Hunter during the 1950s.[72]
What can low-level microwaves do to
the mind?
According to a DIA report released
under the Freedom of Information Act[73], microwaves can induce metabolic
changes, alter brain functions, and disrupt behavior patterns. PANDORA
discovered that pulsed microwaves can create leaks in the blood/brain barrier,
induce heart seizures, and create behavioral disorganization[74]. In 1970, a
RAND Corporation scientist reported that microwaves could be used to promote
insomnia, fatigue, irritability, memory loss, and hallucinations[75].
Perhaps the most significant work in
this area has been produced by Dr. W. Ross Adey at the University of Southern
California. He determined that behavior and emotional states can be altered
without electrodes -- simply by placing the subject in an electromagnetic field.
By directing a carrier frequency to stimulate the brain and using amplitude
modulation to "shape" the wave into a mimicry of a desired EEG
frequency, he was able to impose a 4.5 cps theta rhythm on his subjects -- a
frequency which he previously measured in the hippocampus during avoidance
learning. Thus, he could externally condition the mind towards an aversive
reaction[76]. (Adey has also done extensive work on the use of electrodes in
animals[77].) According to another prominent microwave scientist, Allen Frey,
other frequencies could -- in animal studies -- induce docility[78]. [cf USP
#3,884,218 by Robert Monroe, METHOD OF INDUCING AND MAINTAINING VARIOUS STAGES
OF SLEEP IN THE HUMAN BEING, granted 20 May 1975; ABSTRACT: A method of inducing
sleep in the human being wherein an audio signal is generated comprising a
familiar pleasing repetitive sound modulated by an EEG sleep pattern.
The controversial researcher Andrijah
Puharich asserts that "a weak (1 mW) 4 Hz magnetic sine wave will modify
human brain waves in 6 to 10 seconds. The psychological effects of a 4 Hz sine
magnetic wave are negative -- causing dizzyness, nausea, headache, and can lead
to vomiting." Conversely, an 8 Hz magnetic sine wave has beneficial
effects[79]. Though some writers question Puharich's integrity (perhaps
correctly, considering his involvement in the confused tale of Uri Geller), his
claims here seem in line with the findings of less-flamboyant experimenters.
As investigative journalist Anne
Keeler writes:
Specific frequencies at low
intensities can predictably influence sensory
processes...pleasantness-unpleasantness, strain-relaxation, and
excitement-quiescence can be created with the fields. Negative feelings and
avoidance are strong biological phenomena and relate to survival. Feelings are
the true basis of much "decision-making" and often occur as
subthreshold [i.e. subliminal -jpg] impressions...Ideas INCLUDING NAMES [my
italics] [Cannon's italics -jpg] can be synchronized with the feelings that
the fields induce[80].
Adey and compatriots have compiled an
entire library of frequencies and pulsation rates which can affect the mind and
nervous system. Some of these effects can be extremely bizarre. For example,
engineer Tom Jarski, in an attempt to replicate the seminal work of F. Cazzamali,
found that a particular frequency caused a ringing sensation in the ears of his
subjects -- who felt strangely compelled to BITE the experimenters![81]. On the
other hand, the diet-conscious may be intrigued by the finding that rats exposed
to ELF waves failed to gain weight normally[82].
For our present purposes, the most
significant electromagnetic research findings concern microwave signals
modulated by hypnoidal EEG frequencies. Microwaves can act much like the
"hemi-synch" device previously described -- that is, they can entrain
the brain to theta rhythms[83]. I need not emphasize the implications of
remotely synchronizing the brain to resonate at a frequency conducive to sleep,
or to hypnosis.
Trance may be remotely induced -- but
can it be directed? Yes. Recall the intracerebral voices mentioned earlier in
our discussion of Delgado. The same effect can be produced by "the
wave." Frey demonstrated in the early 1960s that microwaves could produce
booming, hissing, buzzing, and other intra- cerebral static (this phenomenon is
now called "the Frey effect"); in 1973, Dr. Joseph Sharp, of the
Walter Reed Army Institute of Research, expanded on Frey's work in an experiment
where the subject -- in this case, Sharp himself-- "heard" and
understood spoken words delivered via a pulsed-microwave analog of the speaker's
sound vibrations[84].
Dr. Robert Becker comments that
"Such a device has obvious applications in covert operations designed to
drive a target crazy with 'voices' or deliver undetectable instructions to a
programmed assassin."[85] In other words, we now have, AT THE PUSH OF A
BUTTON, the technology either to inflict an electronic GASLIGHT -- or to create
a true MANCHURIAN CANDIDATE. Indeed, the former capability could effectively
disguise the latter. Who will listen to the victims, when electronically-induced
hallucinations they recount exactly parallel the classical signals of paranoid
schizophrenia and/or temporal lobe epilepsy?
Perhaps the most ominous revelations,
however, concern the mysterious work of J.F. Schapitz, who in 1974 filed a plan
to explore the interaction of radio frequencies and hypnosis. He proposed the
following:
In this investigation it will be
shown that the spoken word of the hypnotist may be conveyed by modulated
electro-magnetic energy DIRECTLY INTO THE SUBCONSCIOUS PARTS OF THE HUMAN
BRAIN [my italics] -- i.e., without employing any technical devices for
receiving or transcoding the messages and without the person exposed to such
influence having a chance to control the information input consciously.
He outlined an experiment, innocent
in its immediate effects yet chilling in its implications, whereby subjects
would be implanted with the subconscious suggestion to leave the lab and buy a
particular item; this action would be triggered by a certain cue word or action.
Schapitz felt certain that the subjects would rationalize the behavior -- in
other words, the subject would seize upon any excuse, however thin, to chalk up
his actions to the working of free will[86]. His instincts on this latter point
coalesce perfectly with findings of professional hypnotists[87].
Schapitz's work was funded by the
Department of Defense. Despite FOIA requests, the results have never been
publicly revealed[88].
FINAL THOUGHTS ON "THE
WAVE"
I must again offer a caveat about
possible disparities between the "official" record of
electromagnetism's psychological effects and the hidden history. Once more, we
face a question of timing. How long ago did this research REALLY begin?
In the eary years of this century,
Nikola Tesla seems to have stumbled upon certain of the behavioral effects of
electromagnetic exposure[89]. Cazamalli, mentioned earlier, conducted his
studies in the 1930s. In 1934, E.L. Chaffe and R.U. Light published a paper on
"A Method for the Remote Control of Electrical Stimulation of the Nervous
System."[90] From the very beginning of their work with microwaves, the
Soviets explored the more subtle physiological effects of electromagnetism --
and despite the bleatings of certain right-wing alarmists[91] that an
"electromagnetic gap" separates us from Soviet advances, East European
literature in this area has been closely monitored for decades by the West.
ARTICHOKE/BLUEBIRD project outlines, dating from the early 1950s, prominently
mention the need to explore all possible uses of the electromagnetic spectrum.
Another point worth mentioning
concerns the combination of EMR and miniature brain electrodes. The father of
the stimoceiver, Dr. J.M.R. Delgado, has recently conducted experiments in which
monkeys are exposed to electromagnetic fields, thereby eliciting a wide range of
behavioral effects -- one monkey might fly into a volcanic rage while, just a
few feet away, his simian partner begins to nod off. Fascinatingly, when monkeys
with brain implants felt "the wave," the effects were greatly
intensified. Apparently, these tiny electrodes can act as AMPLIFIERS of the
electromagnetic effect[92].
This last point is important to our
"alien abduction" thesis. Critics might counter that any burst of
microwave energy powerful enough to have truly remote effects would probably
also create a thermal reaction. That is, if a clandestine operator propagated a
"wave" from outside an abductee's bedroom (say, from a low-flying
helicopter, or from a truck travelling alongside the subject's car), the power
necessary to do the job might be such that the microwave would cook the target
before it got a chance to launder his thoughts. Our abductee would end up like
the victim of the microwave "hit" in the finale of Jerzy Kozinsky's
COCKPIT.
It's a fair criticism. But Delgado's
work may give us our solution. Once an abductee has been implanted -- and if we
are to trust hypnotic regression accounts of abductees at all, the first
implanting session may occur in childhood -- the chip-in-the-brain would act an
an intensifier of the signal. Such an individual could have any number of
"UFO" experiences while his or her bed partner dozes comfortably.
Furthermore, recent reports indicate
that a "waver" can achieve pinpoint accuracy without the use of
Delgado-style implants. In 1985, volunteers at the Midwest Research Institute in
Kansas City, Missouri, were exposed to microwave beams as part of an experiment
sponsored by the Department of Energy and the New York State Department of
Health. As THE ARIZONA REPUBLIC[93] described the experiment, "A matched
control group sat IN THE SAME ROOM without being bombarded by non-ionizing
radiation." [My italics.] Apparently, one can focus "the wave"
quite narrowly -- a fact which has wide implications for abductees.
III. Applications
So we now have some idea of the tools
available to the "spy-chiatrists." How have these tools been used?
This question necessarily involves
some detective work. The Central Intelligence Agency, under duress, provided
some, though not enough, documentation of its efforts to commandeer "the
space between our ears." We know that these efforts were extensive,
long-term, and at least partially successful. We know also that these
experiments used human subjects. But who? When?
One paradox of this line of inquiry
is that, for many readers, the victims elicit sympathy only insofar as they
remain anonymous. Intellectually, we realize that MKULTRA and its allied
projects must have affected hundreds, probably thousands, of individuals. Yet we
react with deep suspicion whenever one of these individuals steps forward and
identifies himself, or whenever an independent investigator argues that mind
control has directed some newsworthy person's otherwise inexplicable actions.
Where, the skeptic may rightfully ask, is the documentation supporting such
accusations? Most of the MKULTRA "paper trail" was (allegedly) burnt
at Richard Helms' order; what's left has been censored, leaving black ink
smudges wherever the names originally appeared. Claimed mind control victims
can, for the most part, only give us testimony -- and how reliable can such
testimony be, especially in light of the fact that one purpose of MKULTRA was to
induce insanity? Anyone asserting that he was victimized by the program might
well be seeking an extrinsic excuse for his own psychopathology. If you say that
you are a manufactured madman, you were probably mad to begin with: Catch 22.
When John Marks wrote THE SEARCH FOR
"THE MANCHURIAN CANDIDATE" he received numerous letters from people
insisting that they had been drugged, "waved," or otherwise abused by
the CIA or the military. Most of these communications went directly into his
crank file. Perhaps many deserved that destination; I know of at least one that
did not[94].
Marks did, however, devote much
attention to Val Orlikov, a former "patient" of perhaps the most
notorious figure in the annals of American medical crime: Dr. Ewen Cameron, a
CIA-funded scientist heading the Allan Memorial Institute at McGill University,
Montreal, Canada. Cameron, a highly-respected mental health researcher[95],
experimented with a technique he called "psychic driving," a
brainwashing program which involved inflicting upon a subject an endless tape
loop blaring selected messages, 16-to-24 hours a day, combined with massive
electroshock and LSD. The project's "guinea pigs" were patients who
had come to Allan Memorial with relatively minor psychological complaints.
Cameron's experiments failed and his theories were discredited, which may
explain why the CIA and its apologists now feel relatively comfortable
discussing the Frankensteinian efforts at Allan Memorial, as opposed to more
successful work elsewhere.
Orlikov's testimony has received much
respectful attention from those writers who have examined MKULTRA, and correctly
so. When I studied the files at the National Security Archives, I was
particularly keen to read her original letters to John Marks, for these pages
had led to the unmasking of an especially heinous CIA project. The letters,
interestingly enough, proved just as vague, disjointed, and bizarre as similar
correspondence which researchers routinely dismiss. Orlikov can't be blamed for
the hazy nature of her recollections; a certain amount of fog is to be expected,
given the nature of the crime perpetrated against her. The important point is
that her story, ultimately, was found to be true. All of which leads me to
wonder: Why did HER claims prompt investigation when those of others prompt only
dismissal? Perhaps the answer lies in the fact that Orlikov's husband became a
Canadian Member of Parliament. Any victims of CIA experimentation who wish to be
taken seriously ought, perhaps, first make sure to marry well.
Of course, we can easily forgive
previous writers and readers whose researches into MKULTRA have been biased in
favor of complacency[96]. But we can't let this natural prejudice cripple our
present investigation. Let us examine, then, a few of the "horror
stories" from the mind control literature and highlight possible
correlations to abductee testimony.
PALLE HARDRUP'S
"GUARDIAN ANGEL"
As mentioned previously, I have not
delved much into the subject of hypnosis in this paper -- primarily because of
space and time limitations, but also because discussions of the possibilities of
hypnosis PER SE tend to cloud the issue of its use in conjunction with the
above-mentioned electronic techniques. Obviously, however, hypnosis is a major
weapon in the mind controller's armament; in a forthcoming full-length work, I
intend to deal with this subject at much greater length.
Needless to say, one of the primary
objectives of MKULTRA and related projects was to determine whether one could
hypnotically induce someone to commit an anti-social act. This possibility
remains one of the most hotly-debated issues in hypnosis, for conventional
wisdom asserts that no individual can be hypnotized to commit an action which
violates his interior moral code. Martin Orne, editor of the presitigious
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL HYPNOSIS agrees with this
axiom[97], and he is in a position to codify much of the established view on
this topic. Orne, however, is a veteran of MKULTRA, and furthermore seems to
have lied -- at least in his original communications -- to author John Marks
about his witting involvement in subproject 94[98]. While I respect much of
Orne's ground-breaking work, his pronouncements do not hold, for this layman, an
Olympian unassailability.
To be sure, many other hypnosis
experts, untainted by Company connections, also discount the possibility that
anti-social actions can be induced. But a number of highly-experienced
professionals -- including Milton Kline, William Kroger, George Estabrooks, John
Watkins, and Herbert Spiegel -- have argued that such actions can, at least to
some degree, be elicited by an outside manipulator.
Occasionally, claims of
hypnotically-induced anti-social behavior find their way into the courtroom; one
such case, which led to the incarceration of the hypnotist, was the Palle
Hardrup affair. This incident occurred in Denmark in 1951[99]. Palle Hardrup
robbed a bank, killing a guard in the process, and later claimed that he had
been instructed to do so by the hypnotist Bjorn Nielsen. Nielsen eventually
confessed to having engineered the crime as a test of his hypnotic abilities.
The most significant aspect of this
incident concerns the "pose" Nielsen adopted to work his malicious
designs. During the hypnosis sessions, Nielsen hypnotically suggested that he
was Hardrup's "guardian angel," represented by the letter X. Hardrup
testified that "There is another room next door where Nielsen and I go and
talk on our own. It is there that my guardian spirit usually comes and talks to
me. Nielsen says that X has a task for me."
One of these tasks was arranging for
Hardrup's girlfriend to have sex with the hypnotist. The other tasks, he
mentioned, included robbery and murder. Nielsen convinced his victim that
"X" wanted the robbery funds to be used for worthwhile political
goals. The end, Hardrup was told, justified the means.
Compare this scenario to that
encountered in the typical contactee case, in which alien "guardians"
convince their victims/subjects that the encounter will eventually serve some
unspecified "higher purpose." Indeed, in my interviews with abductees
who have established a "long-term" relationship with their visitors, I
have found that some of them originally believed themselves in contact with
Hardrup-like angelic guardians. Only in recent years was the "angel"
pose discarded and the true "alien" form revealed.
Thus we have one possible means of
overcoming the proposition that hypnosis cannot induce anti-social behavior. If
a hypnotist lacks scruples, and has access to a particularly susceptible
subject, he can induce a MISPERCEIVED REALITY. Actions which we would abhor in
an everyday context become acceptable in specialized circumstances: A citizen
who could never commit murder on a surburban street might, if drafted into an
army, kill on the field of battle. In hypnosis, the mind becomes that
battlefield. In the words of Dr. John Watkins,
We behave on the basis of our
perceptions. If our perceptions of a situation can be altered so as to cause
us to misconstrue it, or to develop a false belief, then our behavior in
relation to it will be drastically altered. It is precisely in the area of
changing perceptions that the hypnotic modality demonstrates its most powerful
effects. Hallucinations both under hypnosis, and posthypnotic, can easily be
induced in the suggestible subject. He can be made to ignore painful stimuli,
be apparently unable to hear loud sounds, AND "SEE" INDIVIDUALS WHO
ARE NOT PRESENT [my italics]. Moreover, attitudes and beliefs can be initiated
in him which are quite abnormal and often contrary to those which he
previously held[100].
If traditional hypnosis, unaided, can
achieve such changes in perception, one can only imagine the possibilities
inherent in the combination of hypnotic techniques with the psychoelectronic
research previously described.
Scientists such as Orne and Milton
Erickson[101] have taken issue with Watkins' assertions. But the Hardrup case
would appear to bear Watkins out. If someone can be convinced that he, like
Jeanne D'Arc, acts under the influence of a supernatural higher power, then
previously unthinkable capabilitites may be evinced and "impossible"
actions carried forth. Indeed, when we consider the extreme personality changes
-- and occasionally, the heinous actions, elicited by leaders of certain cults,
and occult groups[102], we understand the desirability of installing a hypnotic
"cover story" within a supernatural matrix. People will do for God --
or the Devil, or the Space Brothers -- what they would not do otherwise.
The date of the Hardrup affair
corresponds to the institution of BLUEBIRD/ ARTICHOKE; it doesn't require much
imagination to see how this case could have served as a model to the scientists
researching those and subsequent projects.
SCREEN MEMORY
According to declassified documents
in the Marks files, a major difficulty faced by the MKULTRA researchers
concerned the "disposal problem." What to do with the victims of
CIA-sponsored electroshock, hypnosis, and drug experimentation? The Company
resorted to distressing, but characteristic, tactics: They disposed of their
human guinea pigs by incarcerating them in insane asylums, by performing icepick
lobotomies, and by ordering "executive actions."[103]
A more sophisticated solution had to
be found. One of the goals of the CIA's mind control efforts was the erasure of
memory via hypnosis (and drugs, electronics, lobotomies, etc.); not only would
this hide what occurred during the experimental indoctrination/programming
sessions, it would prove useful in the field. "Amnesia was a big
goal," confirms Victor Marchetti, who points out its usefulness in dealing
with contract agents: "After you've done it, the agent doesn't even know
what he's done...you send him in, he does the job. When he comes out, you clean
his head out."[104]
The big problem: Despite
hypnotically-induced amnesia, there would be memory leaks -- snippets of the
repressed material would arise spontaneously, in dreams, as flashbacks, etc. A
proposed solution: Give the subject a "screen memory," a false story;
thus, even if he starts to recall the material, he will recall it incorrectly.
Even the conservative Dr. Orne notes
that:
A S [subject] who is able to
develop good posthypnotic amnesia will also respond to suggestions to remember
events which did not actually occur. On awakening, he will fail to recall the
real events of the trance and will instead recall the suggested events. If
anything, this phenomenon is easier to produce than total amnesia, perhaps
because it eliminates the subjective feeling of an empty space in memory.[105]
Not only would the screen memories
fill in the uncomfortable blanks in the subjects' recollection, they would
protect against revelation. One fear of the MKULTRA scientists was that a hypno-programmed
individual used as, say, a courier, could be un-programmed by another hypnotist,
perhaps working for the enemy. Thus, the MKULTRA scientists decided to instill
multiple personalities -- multiple cover stories, if you will -- to confuse any
"unauthorized" hypnotist.[106]
One case using this technique
centered on an assassin named Luis Castillo, who, after his capture in the
Philippines, was extensively de-briefed and studied by experts in the employ of
the National Bureau of Investigation, that country's equivalent to our FBI.
Castillo was discovered to have had at least FOUR separate personalities
hypnotically instilled; each personality could be triggered by a specific cue.
In one state, he claimed to be Sgt. Manuel Angel Ramirez, of the Strategic Air
Tactical Command in South Vietnam; supposedly, "Ramirez" was the
illegitimate son of a certain pipe-smoking, highly-placed CIA official whose
initials were A.D.[107] Another personality claimed to be one of John F.
Kennedy's assassins.
The main hypnotist involved with this
case labelled these hypnotic alter- egos "Zombie states." The report
on the case stated that "The Zombie phenomenon referred to here is a
somnambulistic behavior displayed by the subject in a conditioned response to a
series of words, phrases, and statements, apparently unknown to the subject
during his normal waking state."
Upon Castillo's repatriation to the
United States, the FBI claimed that he had fabricated the story. In his book
OPERATION MIND CONTROL, Walter Bowart makes a convincing case against the FBI's
claims. Certainly, many aspects of the Castillo affair argue for his sincerity
-- including his hypnotically-induced insensitivity to pain[108], his
maintenance of the story (or stories) even when severly inebriated, and his
apparently programmed suicide attempts.
If Castillo told the truth, as I
believe he did, then he manifested both hypnotically-induced multiple
personality and pseudomemory. The former remains controversial; the latter has
been repeatedly replicated in experimental situations[109].
This point is vitally important for
students of the abduction phenomenon. We CANNOT assume the accuracy of abduction
descriptions given during subsequent hypnotic regression. Moreover, we cannot
even assume the accuracy of spontaneously-arising recollections (i.e., abduction
memories not elicited through hypnotic regression). Indeed, responsible skeptics
have argued that hypnotic regression may prove inadvertently harmful, in that it
may lock in place a false remembrance. (Note, however, that other psychiatric
professionals consider hypnotic regression the best technique, however flawed,
in unlocking amnesia[110]. For my part, I maintain an ambivalent and cautious
attitude toward the use of hypnosis in abductee work.)
Granted, it is all too easy for the
debunkers to cry "confabulation" to dismiss hypnotic testimony which
does not conform to our preconceptions about the possible; I do not intend to
make this same error. Whenever skeptics offer the phenomenon of pseudomemory to
rationalize abduction claims, they cite experimental situations in which
PSEUDOMEMORY WAS ORIGINALLY CREATED BY A HYPNOTIST[111]. These experiments can
not be cited as proof that an individual abductee spontaneously conjured up a
fantasy (which just happens to correspond to the details of hundreds of similar
"fantasies"). Rather, laboratory studies of pseudomemory creation
prove MY point: Pseudomemory can be induced BY PREVIOUS HYPNOSIS[112].
In other words, an abductee may talk
of aliens -- when the reality was something else entirely.
In correspondence with me, a noted
abduction researcher wrote of an instance in which an abductee recounted seeing
a helicopter during his experience; as the abductee testimony progressed, the
helicopter turned into a UFO. During one of the (quite few) regression sessions
I attended, I heard an exactly similar narrative. Hopkins would argue that the
helicopter was a "screen memory" hiding the awful reality of the UFO
encounter. But does Occam's razor really cut that way? Shouldn't we also
consider the possibility that the object in question really WAS a helicopter --
which the abductee was instructed to recall as a UFO?
THE SUPER SPY
Among the released
BLUEBIRD/ARTICHOKE/MKULTRA papers was the following handwritten memorandum,
unsigned and undated:
I have developed a technic which is
safe and secure (free from international censorship). It has to do with the
conditioning of our own people. I can accomplish this as a one-man job. The
method is the production of hypnosis by means of simple oral medication. Then
(with NO further medication) the hypnosis is re-enforced daily during the
following three or four days. Each individual is conditioned against revealing
any information to an enemy, even though subjected to hypnosis or drugging. If
preferable, he may be conditioned to give FALSE information rather than NO
information.
In the margin of this document, one
of Marks' assistants wrote, "Is this Wendt?" The reference here is to
G. Richard Wendt, a professor employed by project CHATTER who, in 1951, led both
his Naval employers and the CIA on a mind control merry-goose-chase, when an
experiment similar to that described above failed to produce results[113]. Even
if the above memorandum DOES describe an operational failure (and the tactics
described in this memo do not seem very feasible to me), we should not rest
complacent. We now know that, in at least ONE case, more sophisticated
techniques made the above scenario a reality.
I refer to the case of Candy Jones.
Her story has filled at least one
book[114] and ought, one day, to give rise to another. Obviously, I cannot here
give all the details of this fascinating and frightening narrative. But a precis
is mandatory.
Ms. Jones (born Jessica Wilcox)
achieved star status as a model during World War II, and later established her
own modelling agency. An FBI man requested her to allow her place of business to
be used as a "mail drop" for the Bureau and "another government
agency" (presumably, the CIA); Candy, deeply patriotic, accepted the
proposition gladly. Toiling on the fringes of the clandestine world, Candy
eventually came into contact with a "Dr. Gilbert Jensen," who worked,
in turn, with a "Dr. Marshall Burger." (Both names are pseudonyms.)
Unknown to her, these doctors had been employed as "spy-chiatrists" by
the CIA. Using a job interview as a cover, Jensen induced hypnosis, found Candy
to be a particularly responsive subject -- and proceeded to use her as other
scientists would use a rhesus monkey. She became a test subject for the CIA's
mind control program.
Her job -- insofar as it is known --
was to provide a clandestine courier service[115]. Estabrooks had outlined the
basic idea years earlier: Induce hypnosis via a disguised technique, give the
messenger information to memorize, hypnotically "erase" the message
from conscious memory, and install a post-hypnotic suggestion that the message
(now buried within the sub-conscious) will be brought forth only upon a specific
cue. If the hypnotist can create such a courier, ultra-security can be
guaranteed; even torture won't cause the messenger to tell what he knows --
because he doesn't know that he knows it[116]. According to the highly respected
Dr. Milton Kline, "Evidence really does exist that has not been
published" proving that Estabrooks' perfect secret agent could be
successfully evoked[117].
Candy was one such success story.
Success, in this context, means that she could be -- and was -- brutally
tortured and abused while running assignments for the CIA. All the MKULTRA toys
were brought into play: hypnosis, drugs, conditioning -- and electronics. Using
these devices, Jensen and Burger managed to:
- install a "duplicate
personality,"
- create amnesia of both the
programming sessions and the field assignments,
- turn Candy into a vicious,
hate-mongering bigot, the better to isolate her from the rest of humanity
(previously, her associates considered her noteworthy for her racial
tolerance; her modelling agency was one of the first to break the color
barrier), and
- program her to commit suicide at
the end of her usefulness to the Agency.
The programming techniques used on
her were flawed. She breached security when she married famed New York radio
personality John Nebel[118], who, using hypnotic regression, elicited the
long-repressed truth. Eventually, the "Other Candy" was bade farewell,
and the programming broken.
Skeptics might find Candy's story as
incredible as the abduction accounts-- after all, an amateur had conducted her
hypnotic regression, and the possibility of confabulation always lurks.
Nevertheless, I feel that the veracity of her narrative has been established
beyond reasonable doubt. In her hypnotic regression sessions, she recalled being
programmed at a government-connected institute in northern California -- which,
as John Marks' investigators later proved, was indeed heavily involved with
government-funded brainwashing research[119]. Marks himself believes Candy's
story -- not least, because the details of the programming methods used on her
were substantiated by documents released AFTER her book was published[120].
Interviews with Milton Kline, Dr. Frances Jakes, John Watkins and others
provided the testimony that the programming of Candy Jones was feasible -- and
Deep Trance substantiated the story[121].
Recently, the case has received
important "indirect" confirmation: Investigators interested in
follow-up research have filed FOIA requests with the CIA for all papers relating
to Candy Jones. The agency admits that it has a substantial file on her, but
refuses to release any part of it. If her tale is false, then why would the CIA
be so reluctant to deliver the information? Indeed, why would they have a file
in the first place?[122]
The final confirmation of Candy's
tale requires a revelation -- one which I make with some trepidation, even
though the individual named is dead. "Marshall Burger" was really Dr.
William Kroger[123].
Kroger, long associated with the
espionage establishment, had written the following in 1963:
...a good subject can be hypnotized
to deliver secret information. The memory of this message could be covered by
an artificially-induced amnesia. In the event that he should be captured, he
naturally could not remember that he had ever been given the
message...however, since he had been given a post-hypnotic suggestion, the
message would be subject to recall through a specific cue.[124]
If Candy confabulated her story, why
did she name this particualr scientist, who, writing theoretically in 1963,
predicted the subsequent events in her life?[125]
After L'AFFAIR JONES, Kroger
transferred his base of operations to UCLA -- specifically, to the
Neuropsychiatric Institute run by Dr. Louis Jolyon West, an MKULTRA veteran.
There he wrote HYPNOSIS AND BEHAVIOR MODIFICATION[126], with a preface by Martin
Orne (another MKULTRA veteran) and H.J. Eysenck (still another MKULTRA veteran).
The finale of this opus contains chilling hints of the possibilites inherent in
combining hypnosis with ESB, implants, and conditioning -- though Kroger is
careful to point out that "we are not concerned that man might be
conditioned by rewards and punishments through electronic brain stimulation to
be controlled like robots."[127] HE may not be concerned -- but perhaps WE
ought to be.
The control of Candy Jones gives us
much information useful to our "alien abduction" hypothesis.
- Her torture sessions -- inflicted
during her programming by her CIA masters, and on missions by as-yet
mysterious persons -- seem strikingly like the otherwise senselessly painful
"examinations" allegedly conducted aboard alien spacecraft.
- Her personality shifts roughly
parallel those experienced by certain UFO abductees.
- Despite her brutalization, she
remained "loyal" to Drs. Jensen and Burger. This bewildering
behavior reminds me of my first abductee interviews, during which I heard
ghastly descriptions of UFO torture sessions -- followed by protestations of
limitless love for the alien pain-mongers.
- Like many abductees, Candy had to
attend regular "conditioning" sessions. Repeated exposure to the
programming is necessary to effect continuous control.
- To maintain their hammerlock on
her mind, Candy's handlers programmed her to remain isolated. Specifically,
they instilled a deep paranoia toward other human beings;
"outsiders" were probable enemies, out to use or abuse her. I have
seen this pattern consistently in my own work with abductees[128]. Skeptics
would argue that unreasonable abductee fears probably indicate paranoid
schizophrenia -- one symptom of which can, indeed, be hallucinatory
experiences. But most abductees are easily hypnotized, while paranoid
schizophrenics are extremely difficult to "put under," according
to Dr. Edward Simpson-Kallas, a psychiatrist with wide experience in the
area of forensic hypnosis[129]. If, however, those unreasonable fears had
been hypnotically induced, the contradiction is resolved.
- Candy was the product of an
unhappy childhood, hence her propensity toward multiple personality[130].
Many of the "repeater" abductees I have interviewed had similarly
depressing family histories[131].
- The story of Candy Jones also has
what we might call a "negative relevance" to the abduction
accounts. Because the Controllers did not establish a hypnotic cover story,
or pseudomemory, the true facts of the case managed to percolate into her
conscious mind. No matter how thorough the post- hypnotic amnesia, leaks
will occur -- hence the need for a false memory, to fill the gap of
recollection. The CIA learns from its mistakes. Candy's hypno-programming
broke down in early 1973 -- the year the "alien disguise" became
(if my hypothesis proves correct) standard operating procedure[132]. (Milton
Kline accepted the Candy Jones story, but considered the job amateurish and
inconsistent with the best work done at that time[133]. Perhaps the major
fault was the lack of a pseudo-memory cover story?)
BASES OF SUSPICION
"Underground base" rumors
are as hot as jalapenos in the UFO field right now, and several of these stories
involve abductions. For example, a sideshow of the famous Bentwaters UFO case
involves the abduction of an airman named Larry Warren to an underground cavity
beneath the military base. There, while in what he later described as "a
bit of a drugged state," he saw aliens and human beings -- military figures
-- working side-by- side[134].
I have spoken to another abductee,
Nancy Wright, who was allegedly taken to an underground chamber ten miles north
of Edwards AFB, California. As this was a multiple-witness event, and Ms. Wright
has not attempted to capitalize on the story for financial gain, I tend to
credit her story[135]. According to abduction researcher Miranda Parks, an
elderly couple living in the vicinity was also abducted in an exactly similar
fashion[136].
In 1979, Paul Bennewitz and Leo
Sprinkle researched a particularly controversial abduction involving a young
woman (name unrevealed) who was apparently taken to a facility where aliens
processed fluids and body parts from a cattle mutilation. This investigation
seems to have led to the government harassment of Bennewitz, in which some form
of mind control (or, as I have previously referred to it, "electronic
GASLIGHT") may have played a part[137].
How do we account for these tales of
alleged alien skullduggery carried out in conjunction with the military? I, for
one, cannot credit the generally- unsubstantiated tales of "cosmic
conspiracy" now promulgated by ex-intelligence agents such as John Lear and
William Cooper. While I cannot assert insincerity on the part of these men, I
often wonder if they have been used as conduits -- witting or unwitting -- in a
sophisticated disinformation scheme.
A simpler, though no less chilling,
explanation for the "base" abductions may be found in the story of Dr.
Louis Jolyon West, now notorious for his participation in MKULTRA experiments
with LSD[138]. Inspired by VIOLENCE AND THE BRAIN (a book by Drs. Frank Ervin
and Vernon H. Mark which ascribed inner city turmoil to a "genetic
defect" within rebellious blacks), West proposed, in 1973, a Center for the
Study and Reduction of Violence, where potentially violent individuals could be
dealt with prophylactically.
And who were these individuals?
According to West's proposal, the noteworthy factors indicating a violent
predisposition were "sex (male), age (youthful), ethnicity (black) and
urbanicity." How to deal with them? "...by implanting tiny electrodes
deep within the brain, electrical activity can be followed in areas that cannot
be measured from the surface of the scalp...it is even possible to record
bioelectrical changes in the brains of freely-moving subjects, through the use
of remote monitoring techniques..." By monitoring the subjects' EEGs
remotely, potentially violent episodes could be identified.
For our purposes, the most
significant aspect of this proposal had to do with location. In a secret
communication to Dr. J.M. Stubblebine, director of the California State
Department of Health (fortunately, this missive was "leaked" to the
public), West disclosed that he intended to house his Center in an abandoned
Nike missile base, whose location was accessible yet relatively remote.
"The site is securely fenced," West wrote. "Comparative studies
could be carried out there, in an isolated but convenient location, of
experimental model programs, for the alteration of undesirable
behavior."[139]
Public outcry stopped these plans.
But was this scheme truly eliminated? Or was it merely modified, stripped
(temporarily) of its overtly racial overtones and relocated to some
less-accessible spot?
One thing is certain: A CIA
"spy-chiatrist" favored secret behavior control experimentation in a
remote military installation. Perhaps someone within the espionage
establishment's mind-modification divisions still thinks highly of the idea. If
so, the disposal problem would once again rear its ugly head, should
"visitors" to these installations ever reappear in outside society.
Again, a hypno-programmed cover story -- the less believable, the better --
would prove invaluable.
THE CONTROLLERS:
A New Hypothesis of Alien Abduction
- part 2
by Martin Cannon
THE SCANDINAVIAN CONNECTION
Many books have been written about
abductees, yet few exist about the victims of mind control. I cannot understand
this situation; the reality of UFOs is still controversial, yet the existence of
mind control was verified in two (heavily compromised) congressional
investigations and in thousands of FOIA documents. Nevertheless, the abductees
find many a sympathetic ear, while those few who dare to proclaim themselves the
victims of known government programs rarely find anyone to hear them out. Our
prejudices on this score are regrettable, for if we listened to the "controllees"
we would hear many details strikingly similar to those mentioned by UFO
abductees. Two cases in point: Martti Koski and Robert Naeslund.
Koski, a Finnish citizen, claims to
have been a victim of mind control experimentation while visiting Canada.
Shortly after his experience began, he attempted to broadcast his situation to
the world and draw attention to his plight. Few listened. Many of his details
were bizarre, and not being a native speaker of English, he could not express
himself convincingly to those he approached for help. Yet many aspects of his
story correspond closely to known details of MKULTRA and related programs.
Naeslund, a Swedish citizen, tells a
similar story. Moreover, his claims were backed by special evidence: X-rays
revealed an implant in his brain. Naeslund actually went to the extreme of
having his implant tested by electronic technicians employed by Hewlett-Packard.
A Greek surgeon performed the necessary trepanation to remove the device.
Many aspects of the Koski and
Naeslund stories correspond to my hypothesis. Koski, for example, was at one
point told that the doctors afflicting him were actually "aliens from
Sirius." At another point, he was led to believe that he was under
direction of "the Lord." (As I previously indicated, manipulation of
religious imagery could help induce anti-social behavior; the subject's
super-ego can be nullified if he believes that he follows commands from on high.
Such manipulation may explain the more bizarre aspects of Betty Andreasson
Luca's abduction[140].)
Naeslund's implant was originally
placed through his nasal cavity. He first realized that something terrible had
happened to him after an experience of missing time, followed by an INEXPLICABLE
NOSEBLEED.
This detail will be instantly
familiar to anyone who has studied abductions; I have encountered it in my own
conversations with abductees. For an excellent example in the UFO literature, I
refer the reader to the case of Susan Ransted, as detailed in Kevin D. Randle's
THE UFO CASEBOOK[141]; the background of alleged contactee Diane Tessman is also
noteworthy in this regard[142]. Intriguingly, I have located a reference in the
open literature to the use, in animal study, of nasally-implanted electrodes for
the measurement of electro- magnetic radiation effects[143].
There are other claimed mind control
victims bearing evidence of implants; note, especially, the fascinating case of
James Petit, a CIA-connected pilot and alleged brainwashing alumnus; X-rays of
his cranium have revealed abductee-style implants -- fitting, perhaps, since his
body bears abductee-style scars. [144] Conversely, certain abductees will, if
allowed a thorough and sympathetic hearing, deliver testimony strongly agreeing
with Koski's narrative.
HELICOPTERS AND DISKS
The bizarre story of Rex Niles and
his sister (not named in news accounts) may shed interesting light on a variety
of abductee cases, particularly that of Betty and Barney Hill[145]. Niles, the
high-rolling owner of a Woodland Hills defense subcontracting firm (Rex Rep) was
fingered by authorities investigating defense industry kickbacks. He became an
extraordinarily cooperative witness in the investigation -- until he was
targeted by his enemies, who allegedly used psychoelectronics as harassment.
The following excerpt from the LOS
ANGELES TIMES article on Niles is particularly compelling:
He [Niles] produced testimony from
his sister, a Simi Valley woman who swears that helicopters have repeatedly
circled her home. An engineer measured 250 watts of microwaves in the
atmosphere outside Niles' house and found a RADIOACTIVE DISK UNDERNEATH THE
DASH OF HIS CAR [my italics]. A former high school friend, Lyn Silverman,
claimed that her home computer went haywire when Niles stepped close to it.
No aliens in this story -- yet how
similar it is to tales of alien abduction! The low-flying helicopters, of
course, are frequently reported by abduction victims -- the Betty Andreasson
Luca case provides the best-known example[146]. The haywire electronics
equipment is also frequently encountered in putative abduction cases; I have
spoken (independently) to three women who claimed to have been able to disturb
or shut off televisions and stereos simply by walking past the devices; one
woman even claimed she had switched off her TV simply by pointing at it.
But the radioactive disc is
especially intriguing. As former FBI agent Ted Gunderson recently explained to
my associate Alexander Constantine, magnetic radioactive discs have long been
used by the clandestine services as cancer-inducing "silent killers"
-- i.e., as tools of assassination. Not only that. The disc calls to mind one
little-remembered detail of the Hill case -- the dozen-or-so circular
"shiny spots," each the size of a silver dollar, found on the trunk of
her car directly after the abduction. A compass needle reacted wildly when
placed near these spots. Could they have marked the location where an
electromagnetic or radioactive device, similar to that found by Niles, was
placed on the car? (Such a device might have been held to the spot magnetically,
hence the circular impressions.) If so, then the disorienting EMR could have
helped induce the Hills' "UFO sighting."
THE MILITARY AND MIND CONTROL
Some time ago, I attended hypnotic
regression sessions in which the subject -- a claimed UFO abductee -- recalled
undergoing a mysterious "brain operation" at a veteran's hospital in
California. The operation was performed by human beings, not aliens.
Interestingly, this same hospital was mentioned in two other cases I
encountered. These other claims were not made by abductees, but by people
alleged to have been victims of mind control experimentation.
One of these claimants, a former Navy
SEAL who undertook numerous dangerous missions in Vietnam, favorably impressed
me with the wealth of detail in his story[147]. This individual -- I've taken to
calling him "the trained SEAL"-- had received specialized combat
training at a military base in California; he claims that at one point during
this training he was drugged, hypnotized, possibly placed under some form of
electronic control, and subjected to the extremes of pain/pleasure operant
conditioning. One peculiar detail of his story concerns the "reward"
aspect of the conditioning: When properly acquiescent, he was given unlimited
sexual access to a woman who, the SEAL avers, was herself the victim of
brainwashing.
Unbelievable as this last claim may
seem, I found it oddly resonant when I later interviewed a prominent abductee in
the Southern California area, who bravely offered me details on a puzzling,
albeit quite delicate, incident in her past. Still an attractive woman, she
recalled for me -- indeed, seemed strangely compelled to describe -- an early
love affair with a young soldier training at a military base near her home. She
cannot recall the soldier's name. All she remembers is that one day he started
LIVING AT HER FAMILY'S HOUSE; she has no memory of how the arrangement began,
and her parents have never felt comfortable discussing the matter. Although
unattracted to this soldier, she felt compelled to become intimate with him,
adopting a pliant, obeisant attitude that was quite out of character for her.
Later, the soldier went on to covert missions in Vietnam.
Of course, a young person's
psycho-sexual development is never smooth, and the incident related above may
merely have represented one peculiarly upsetting bump in that notoriously rough
road. Still, some of the details of this story -- particularly the parents'
attitude, the woman's personality shift, and her subsequent memory lapses -- are
striking, and I treat with respect the abductee's intuition that this minor
enigma in her personal history could, if properly understood, shed light on her
later "missing time" experiences.
Could the "trained SEAL"
have been right? Was there, IS there, a coterie of hypno-programmed soldiers
conducting particularly hazardous missions? And do the programmers have at their
disposal a "ladies' auxiliary," so to speak, of hypnotized camp
followers?
If the SEAL's story stood alone,
skeptics could easily dismiss it (provided they did not sit, as I did,
face-to-face with the story's teller, listening to all the grisly and unsettling
details). But other veterans have added their voices to this grim tale. Daniel
Sheehan, of the Christic Institute, claims that his organization has spoken to
half-a-dozen individuals with narratives similar to my SEAL informant. All had
received "processing," so to speak, within the context of standard
military training; after programming and specialized combat instruction by
mercenaries, the recruits were placed "on hold," to be used as
situations arose -- and some of those situations occurred within the United
States[148].
Walter Bowart began his own
researches into mind control by placing an ad in SOLDIER-OF-FORTUNE-style
publications, asking for correspondence from veterans who experienced
inexplicable lapses in memory or strange behavior modification techniques while
serving in Vietnam; he received over 100 replies. Bowart devoted an entire
chapter to one of these respondents -- an Air Force veteran named David, who
ended his four-year tour of duty recalling only that he had spent the time
"having fun, skin diving, laying on the beach, collecting shells...It never
dawned on me until later that I must have DONE something while I was in the
service." (An obvious example of screen memory.) He was also
"assigned" a girlfriend whose name he cannot now recall, despite the
length and deep intimacy of the affair[149]. The parallels to the SEAL's story
and the abductee's account should be obvious.
We even have a confession, of sorts,
from a scientist who specialized in one aspect of this sort of training. Lt.
Commander Thomas Narut, of the U.S. Naval Hospital at the NATO headquarters in
Naples, Florida, admitted during a lecture in Oslo that recruits in Naples
underwent CLOCKWORK-ORANGE-style behavior modification sessions. Trainees would
be strapped into chairs with their eyelids clamped open while watching films of
industrial accidents and African circumcision ceremonies -- films frequently
used by psychologists as a means of inducing stress in experimental situations.
Unlike the protagonist in A CLOCKWORK ORANGE, who learned revulsion at the sight
of violence, Narut's soldiers were taught to accept and enjoy bloodshed, to view
it with equanimity. Similar techniques were used to dehumanize potential
enemies. Graduates of this program became, in Narut's words, "hit men and
assassins," to be placed in American embassies throughout the world.
When questioned by reporters about
these claims, the American government denied the story; Narut -- after a long
incommunicado period and apparent coercion -- later explained to journalists
that he had merely spoken theoretically. If so, why did he originally describe
the behavior modification procedure as an ongoing program?[150]
And while it may seem frivolous to
return to the subject of abductions after examining such grim data, I should
remind the reader of the many abduction accounts in which abductees recall being
forced to watch certain stress-inducing motion pictures. The aliens, it seems,
have learned a few lessons from Dr. Narut.
Narut, of course, concentrated on
selective programming of individual American soldiers; on the other side of the
mind control spectrum, Defense Department specialists have also concentrated on
methods to render entire enemy battalions "combat ineffective."
Electromagnetic weaponry, intended to wipe out the aggression of the enemy, is
the province of DARPA, under the direction of Dr. Jack Verona. These projects
remain fairly mysterious; we do know, however, that one operation, SLEEPING
BEAUTY, employed the services of Dr. Michael Persinger, a scientist who has
expressed interesting views regarding UFOs.
Persinger discovered a method of
using ELF waves to induce the brain's MAST cells to release histamine; should a
battlefield commander wish to subject his enemy to mass bouts of vomiting,
Persinger's trick could do the job even faster than a Tobe Hooper movie. The
method works on animals. "The question," writes mind control
researcher Larry Collins, "is how to get from point A to point B without
violating one of the most rigorous commandments of Government ethics -- thou
shalt not conduct experiments like that on human beings."[151]
If Collins had studied the record a
little more carefully, he might realize that the government hasn't always
regarded this commandment as something graven in stone. As Milton Kline put it:
Ethical factors involved in most
research would preclude having positive results. Those ethical factors don't
always hold with government research. THE RESEARCH WHICH HAS GIVEN REALLY
POSITIVE RESULTS HAS NOT BEEN LIMITED BY ETHICAL CONSTRAINTS[152]. [my italics]
THE ULTIMATE MOTIVE FOR MIND
CONTROL
Hypnosis hard-liners of the Orne
school would almost certainly dismiss the foregoing veterans' accounts of the
use of hypnosis, drugs and behavioral conditioning on American fighting men.
Why, the skeptics would ask, would anyone attempt to create a "Manchurian
Candidate" when the military services, using entirely conventional means,
can create a "Rambo"? There have always been recruits for even the
most hazardous duties; what need of hypnosis?
The need, in fact, is absolute.
The modern battlefield has little
place for the traditional soldier. Advanced weaponry requires an increasing
level of technical sophistication, which in turn requires a cool-headed
operator. But the all-too-human combatant -- though capable of extraordinary
acts of courage under the most stressful conditions imaginable -- does not
possess inexhaustible reserves of SANG-FROID. Eventually, breakdowns will occur.
Per-capita psychiatric casualties have increased dramatically in each successive
American conflict. As Richard Gabriel, the excellent historian of the role of
psychiatry in warfare, writes:
Modern warfare has become so lethal
and so intense that only the already insane can endure it...Modern war
requiring continuous combat will increase the degree of fatigue on the soldier
to heretofore unknown levels. Physical fatigue -- especially the lack of sleep
-- will increase the rate of psychiatric casualties enormously. Other factors
-- high rates of indirect fire, night fighting, lack of food, constant stress,
large numbers of casualties -- will ensure that the number of psychiatric
casualties will reach disastrous proportions. And the number of casualties
will overburden the medical structure to the point of collapse. The ability to
treat psychiatric casualties will all but disappear. There will be no safe
forward areas in which to treat soldiers debilitated by mental collapse. The
technology of modern war has made such locations functionally obsolete...[153]
According to Gabriel, the military
intends to meet this challenge by creating "the chemical soldier," a
designer-drugged zombie in fighting man's uniform:
On the battlefields of the future
we will witness a true clash of ignorant armies, armies ignorant of their own
emotions and even of the reasons for which they fight. Soldiers on all sides
will be reduced to fearless chemical automatons who fight simply because they
can do nothing else...Once the chemical genie is out of the bottle, the full
range of human mental and physical actions become targets for chemical
control...Today it is already possible by chemical or electrical stimulation
to increase the aggression levels of the human being by stimulating the
amygdala, a section of the brain known to control aggression and rage. Such
"human potential engineering" is already a partial reality and the
necessary technical knowledge increases every day[154].
While this passage speaks of drugs
and electronics, we can safely assume that the planners of battle would not
refrain from using any other promising technique.
Gabriel writes primarily of
large-scale battle scenarios, but based on his information, we can fairly deduce
that the mind-controlled soldier will also play a role in the surgical strike,
the covert operation, the infiltration behind enemy lines by units of the
Special Forces. On such missions, United States personnel have increasingly
relied on torture as a means of interrogation and intimidation[155], and as such
barbarism becomes standard procedure the American fighting man of the future
will need to find within himself unprecedented reserves of brutality. Will the
average recruit, culled from the nation's suburbs and reared on traditional
ideals, possess such reserves?
Vietnam proved that the soldier,
despite a barrage of propaganda intended to cloud his discernment, will sense
the difference between fighting for legitimate defense interests and fighting to
protect political hegemony. To forestall this realization, or to render it
irrelevant, military planners must withdraw the human combatant and replace him
with a new species of warrior. The soldier of the future will not discern; he
will merely do. He will not be a butcher; he will be the butcher's KNIFE -- a
tool among tools, thoughtless and effective.
And it is my contention that to
create this soldier of the future, the controllers will need a continuing
program, one designed to test each new method and combination of methods for
conquering the human mind.
One primary goal of this program must
include expanding the human capacity for stress and violence. Subjects enrolled
in such experimental procedures will experience pain, and will learn to accept
the pain. Eventually, they will learn to inflict it, without remorse or even
remembrance. The nation who first creates this new soldier will possess a
decisive advantage on the "conventional" battlefield -- as will the
nation which first develops a means of using mass mind control techniques to
disable entire enemy platoons. This paramount military necessity is the reason
why I will never believe any unconvincing reassurances that our nation's
clandestine scientists have foregone or will forego research into behavior
modification. This research will never be mere history. What's past is present,
and today's covert experimentation will become tomorrow's basic training.
A prototype of the future warrior may
already be with us. The Navy SEAL I interviewed spoke in horrifying detail of
dismemberment without emotion, of rape as routine, of killing without affect.
And then FORGETTING THAT HE HAD KILLED. Even years later, he could not recall
the stories behind many of the wounds on his own body. He claims that whenever
he would need the services of the veteran's hospital, doctors would re-hypnotize
him shortly after his admission, while a physician specifically cleared for such
work would examine his medical history, which was highly classified and kept
under lock and key.
According to the SEAL's testimony,
his memory block cracked little by little, as a result of events too complex to
recount here. Finally, years after Vietnam, he was able to remember what he did.
Amnesia was a blessing.
IV. Abductions
Press and public now regard abductees
as tony curiosities, yet science, for the most part, still banishes their tales
to the domain of the damned, as Charles Fort defined damnation. So too with
claimed victims of mind control. The Voice of Authority tells us that MKULTRA
belongs to history; like Hasdrubal and Hitler, it threatened once, but no more.
Anyone insisting otherwise must be silenced by glib rationalization and
selective inattention.
Yet these two topics -- UFO
abductions and mind control -- have more in common than their mutual
ostracization. The data overlap. If we could chart these phenomena on a Venn
diagram, we would see a surprisingly large intersection between the two circles
of information. It is this overlap I seek to address.
Note, however, that I can NOT address
all the other interesting and important issues raised by the UFO abduction
experience. For exmaple, I have written, admittedly rather vaguely, of nasal
implants reported by abductees -- the sort of detail which might place an
account in the "high strangeness" category, and of course, a detail
central to my thesis. But what percentage of the percipients speak of such
implants? A truly scientific analysis would provide a figure. Unfortunately, I
haven't the resources to compile a sufficiently large abductee sample from which
one could draw statistics. Nor can I make an over-arching qualitative analysis,
measuring the value of "high strangeness" reports against other
abductee claims. All I can do is note the available literature, and leave the
reader to wonder, as I do, whether the compilers of that literature concentrated
on exceptional cases or were biased in favor of the less fantastic abductee
accounts. I have supplemented readings of the abduction literature with my own
interviews with percipients -- which, since abductees tend to know other
abductees, can give a surprisingly wide view of the phenomenon. This view has
been broadened still further by my talks and correspondence with other members
of the UFO community.
Of course, we must recognize the
difference between testimony and proof. No one can state definitively that
abduction reports have a basis in objective reality (however misperceived).
Ultimately, all we have are stories. Some of these stories may be of
questionable veracity; others may be contaminated by investigator bias; many are
insufficiently detailed. No one research paper can resolve all abduction
controversies, and many necessary battles must be fought on other fields.
Still, the testimony won't go away --
and we certainly have enough to allow for comparisons. I maintain that an
unprejudiced overview of abduction reports in the popular press and the
less-familiar material on mind control will demonstrate a striking correlation.
Once other abduction researchers have been educated in the ways of MKULTRA (and
this paper is intended as an introductory text) they may note a similar pattern.
If so, we can then begin to write a revisionist history of the phenomenon.
The abduction enigma contains within
it sub-mysteries that slide into the mind control scenario with surprising ease,
even elegance -- mysteries which fit the E.T. hypothesis as uncomfortably as a
size 10 foot fits into a size 8 shoe. As we have seen, the MKULTRA thesis
explains the reports of abductee intracerebral implants (particularly reports
involving nosebleeds), unusual scars, "telepathic" communication
(i.e., externally induced intracerebral voices) concurrent with or following the
abduction encounter, allegations that some abductees hear unusual sound effects
(similar to those created by the hemi-synch and cognate devices), haywire
electronic devices in abductee homes, personality shifts, "training
films," manipulation of religious imagery, and missing time. Needless to
say, the thesis of clandestine government experimentation readily accounts for
abductee claims of human beings "working" with the aliens, and for the
government harassment that plays so prominent a role in certain abductee
reports.
Let's look at some more correlations.
THE HILL CASE AND THE
"ADVANCED" ALIENS
Earlier, I asked, "Do the aliens
also watch black-and-white television?" in reference to their alleged use
of old-fashioned, Terra-style brain implantation devices. Abduction accounts
abound in other examples of alien "retro-technology." The most
striking example can be found in the Betty and Barney Hill incident, the details
of which are too well-known to recount here[156]. As we have already glimpsed
during our discussion of the Rex Niles affair, the Hills' "interrupted
journey" abounds in data which, taken together, permits the construction of
an alternative explanation.
At one point during the alleged UFO
abduction, the "examiners" inserted a needle in Betty Hill's navel,
telling her that this practice constituted a test for pregnancy[157]. Some
ufologists[158] rashly assume that Betty Hill's "pregnancy test" is
evidence of advanced extraterrestrial technology, since her 1961 account
pre-dates the official announcement of amniocentesis, which does indeed make use
of a needle inserted into the navel. But we now have much less invasive means of
testing for pregnancy than amniocentesis. True, amniocentesis is still sometimes
used to gather information about the fetus, but the wielders of a highly evolved
technology would certainly use other methods of determining the existence of
pregnancy in the first place.
Betty Hill's testimony reminds us of
certain other abduction accounts, which contain descriptions of
"healings" surprisingly similar to the procedures associated with
still-experimental electromagnetic therapy techniques, such as those described
in Robert O. Becker's THE BODY ELECTRIC. For example, abductee Deanna Dube
described for me an abduction-related "regeneration" of her
long-damaged heart; had she been familiar with Becker's work[159], she might
have been a bit less rapid to ascribe her healing to otherworldly influences.
Medical breakthroughs often undergo
years of testing before their official "discovery." For some of these
tests, finding volunteers present a major obstacle. If we accept the proposition
that the Hill incident originated in an external and objective stimulus, we must
then ask ourselves which scenario is more likely: Did Betty Hill encounter human
beings using a technique ten years ahead of its time? Or did she encounter
aliens (reputedly a "billion years ahead of us") using science from
eons before THEIR time?
One must also ask why Betty Hill's
aliens seemed to have no grasp of basic human concepts (such as how we measure
time) -- yet they knew enough about us to speak English fluently and had even
mastered our slang. Were these real aliens, or humans engaging in theatricals
(and occasionally muffing their lines)? For that matter, why did Betty Hill
originally recall her abductors as humanoid, only later describing them as
aliens?
The Hill case provided a particularly
controversial piece of evidence -- the celebrated "star map" recalled
by Betty Hill under hypnosis. In later years, an Ohio schoolteacher named
Marjorie Fish made an ingenious and laudable attempt to discover a match for
this map by constructing an elaborate three- dimensional model of nearby star
systems; whether she succeeded remains a matter for keen debate[160]. For now, I
prefer to avoid taking sides in this dispute and will confine myself to
insisting that pro-ET ufologists answer (WITHOUT resorting to glib ripostes) a
point first raised by Jacques Vallee: THE MAP MAKES NO SENSE AS A NAVIGATIONAL
AID. Vallee notes that, even if we grant the Fish interpretation, the stars are
not drawn to scale -- and at any rate, alien spaceships would surely be
navigated the same way we guide our own spacecraft: via computers and
telemetry[161]. The validity of the Fish interpretation is irrelevent; the point
is that ANY such chart would have NO value to an interstellar starfarer.
Fish's work raises other
controversies: Allegedly, the map points to Zeta Reticuli as the aliens' home
system and pictures Zeta Reticuli as a single star, a view consistent with
scientific opinion of the 1960s. Yet in later years scientists discovered that
Zeta Reticuli is binary[162]. Moreover, how did our abductee manage to remember
so accurately a complex chart glimpsed in passing? Even allowing for the
possibility of increased accuracy of recollection under hypnotic regression, the
memory feat here seems remarkable. Consider the circumstances of the abduction:
Kafka on hallucinogens couldn't have conceived of the nightmare vision
confronting Betty Hill that night -- yet for some reason this particular
arrangement of stars emerged as her most intensely-detailed recollection of the
experience.
This memory (if not confabulated
during regression, a possibility we should always weigh) is comprehensible only
as an example of ARTIFICIALLY-INDUCED HYPERMNESIA. In other words, Betty Hill
was DIRECTED to store that chart within her subconscious. The celebrated star
map ought to be recognized for what it was: a prop, a seemingly-confirmatory
circumstantial detail meant to convince her -- and perhaps US -- of the reality
of her abduction.
The question of motive arises. Why --
if my thesis is correct -- were these two fairly innocuous individuals chosen
for this new variation on the old MKULTRA tricks?
The selection might, of course, have
been arbitrary. Or perhaps circumstances now irretrievably lost to history
rendered the couple a convenient target. Interestingly, Barney Hill had become
acquainted (through church functions) with the head of Air Force intelligence at
Pease Air Force Base; perhaps this relationship first brought the Hills to the
attention of members of the intelligence community. Arguably, the Hills could
have been fingered for a wide variety of reasons; as a general rule, the
clandestine services prefer to satisy a number of itches with one scratch.
In fact, the espionage establishment
had one particularly compelling reason to focus on the Hills. Barney Hill (a
black man) and his wife held important positions in several civil rights
organizations, including the NAACP[163]. The abduction took place during the
1960s, when the NAACP and allied groups fell victim to an increasingly paranoid
series of attacks from the FBI and other governmental agencies (under operations
COINTELPRO, CHAOS, GARDEN PLOT, etc.)[164]. At that time, infiltration of civil
rights groups proved a difficult chore; while most left-leaning groups provided
easy targets for FBI stooges, the average undercover operative would have had an
exceptionally difficult time posing as a black activist. (In 1961, the only
black people on the FBI's payroll were the servants in J. Edgar Hoover's home.)
In light of these facts, we should
recall Victor Marchetti's anecdote about the cat that the CIA had "wired
for sound." Perhaps an ambitious covert scientist proposed a similar
experiment, in which a human being would play the role that had once been
assigned to the unfortunate feline? As Estabrooks noted, the ultimate espionage
agent would be the spy who doesn't KNOW he is a spy. Barney Hill, a
well-regarded figure with a near-genius-level IQ, was a safe bet to obtain a
leadership role in any group he joined; he would have been remarkably
well-positioned, had any outsiders wished to use his ears to overhear prominent
black organizers in confidential discussion.
Of course, many intelligence
professionals would counter this suggestion by reminding us that eavesdroppers
on the civil rights movement had plenty of less-flamboyant methods: Bugging,
"black bag" jobs, paying for information, etc. The point is valid. But
if the technology to create a "human bug" was developed circa 1961 --
and there is documentation suggesting that such is indeed the case[165] -- the
intelligence agencies would surely have wanted to test the possibilities in the
field. And considering the expense of such a test, why not conduct the
experiment in such a way as to reap the maximum benefits? Why NOT choose a
Barney Hill?
ARMS AND THE ABDUCTEE
Budd Hopkins told the follwing story
during his lecture at the Los Angeles "Whole Life Expo."[166] He
considers the case "very good...lots of corroborating witnesses for parts
of it." Though not, presumably, for THIS part:
Hopkins' informant, after the by-now
familiar UFO abduction, was given a gun by the aliens. Not a Buck Rogers laser
weapon -- this was something Dirty Harry might have packed.
The abductee was also given someone
to shoot. Not a little grey alien -- another human being, tied to a chair. The
"visitors" told their armed abductee that this captive had done
"evil on earth, and he's a bad person. You have to kill him." If the
abductee didn't do as asked, he would never leave the ship.
The captive proclaimed his innocence,
and pleaded for his life. The abductee, caught in the middle of all this, became
quite upset. (Worth noting: he seems to have at least CONSIDERED the aliens'
request to shoot someone he had never met.) Ultimately, the abductee turned the
gun on the aliens and said, "Nobody's going to get shot here."
According to Hopkins, "The
aliens said 'Fine. Very good.' They took the gun from him; the man [presumably,
the captive] got up, walked away, disappeared, and they went on to the next
thing." Obviously, this little drama had been staged -- a test of some
sort.
I submit that this surreal incident
is incomprehensible as either an example of alien incursion or of "Klass-ical"
confabulation. The scenario described here EXACTLY parallels numerous
experiments in the hypnotic induction of anti-social action as revealed both in
the standard hypnosis literature and in declassified ARTICHOKE/MKULTRA
documents. For example, compare Hopkins' account to the following, in which
Ludwig Mayer, a prominent German hypnosis researcher, describes a classic
experiment in the hypnotic induction of criminal action:
I gave a revolver to an elderly and
readily suggestible man whom I had just hypnotized. The revolver had just been
loaded by Mr. H. with a percussion cap. I explained to [the subject], while
pointing to Mr. H., that Mr. H. was a very wicked man whom he should shoot to
kill. With great determination he took the revolver and fired a shot directly at
Mr. H. Mr. H. fell down pretending to be wounded. I then explained to my subject
that the fellow was not yet quite dead, and that he should give him another
bullet, which he did without further ado[167].
Of course, if a conservative hypnosis
specialist were asked to comment on the above account, he would quickly point
out that hypnotic suggestions which work in an experimental situation would not
easily succeed outside the laboratory; on some level, the subject will probably
sense whether or not he's playing the game for real[168]. Similarly, a
conservative abduction researcher would, in reviewing Hopkins' material,
emphasize the problems inherent in using testimony derived during regression,
where the threat of confabulation lurks. I'll concede both arguments -- for the
moment -- only to insist that they are beside the point. The matter of primary
importance, the sticking point which neither Klass nor Hopkins can comfortably
confront, is the convergence of detail between Mayer's hypnosis experiment and
the testing event related by Hopkins' abductee. WHY ARE THESE TWO STORIES SO
SIMILAR? Did the good Dr. Mayer take pupils from Sirius?[169].
Hopkins says he knows of other
instances in which abductees found themselves in similar crucibles. So do I.
One person I spoke to can remember
(SANS hypnosis) being handed a gun inside a ziplock baggy and receiving
instructions that she will have to use this weapon "on a job." Early
in my interviews with her (and with no prompting from me) she recited an
apparent cue drilled into her consciousness by the "entities" (as she
calls them): "When you see the light, do it tonight," followed by the
command, "Execute." (One can only speculate as to how such commands
would be used in the field; we will discuss later the use of photovoltaic
hypnotic induction.) Though her personal feelings toward firearms are decidedly
negative, she vivdly describes periods in her "everyday" life when she
feels an uncharacteristic, yet overpowering urge to be near a gun -- a
quasi-sexual desire to pick one up and touch the metal[170].
She is not alone. Another has been so
affected by gun fever that he became a security guard, just to be near the
things[171]. The abductees I have spoken to connect this sudden surge of
Ramboism to the UFO experience. But I suggest that the UFO experience may be
merely a cover story for another type of training entirely.
One of the primary goals of BLUEBIRD,
ARTICHOKE, and MKULTRA was to determine whether mind control could be used to
faciliate "executive action"-- i.e., assassination[172].
It isn't difficult to imagine the
media's reaction if a public figure were murdered by someone acting at the
behest of the "space brothers." Who would dare to speak of conspiracy
under such circumstances? The hidden controllers could choose a myth structure
that conform's to the abductee's personality, then pose as higher beings, who
would whisper violence into the ear of the percipient. Using this ruse, the
trick that scientists such as Ludwig Mayer could perform in the lab might now be
accomplished in the field. As Estabrooks' associate Jack Tracktir (professor of
hypnotherapy at Baylor University) explained to John Marks, anti-social acts can
be induced with "no conscience involved" once the proper pretext has
been created[173].
"THEY WILL THINK IT'S
FLYING SAUCERS"
Jenny Randles contributes an anecdote
from Great Britain which dovetails nicely with this hypothesis.
In 1965, "Margary" (a
pseudonym) lived in Birmingham with her husband, who one night told her to
prepare for a "shock and a test." As Randles describes what she calls
a "rogue case":
They got into his car and drove off,
although her memory of the trip became hazy and confused and she does not know
where they went. Then she was in a room that was dimly lit and there were people
standing around a long table or flat bed. She was out on it and seemed
"drugged" and unable to resist. The most memorable of the men was tall
and thin with a long nose and white beard. He had thick eyebrows and supposedly
said to Margary, "Remember the eyebrows, honey." A strange medical
examination, using odd equipment, was performed on her.
Both the husband and the scientists,
using (apparently) hypnotic techniques, flooded her mind with images that, she
was told, would be understood only in the future. According to Randles, "At
one point one of the 'examiners' in the room said to Margary in a tone that made
it seem as if he were amused, "THEY WILL THINK IT'S FLYING SAUCERS."
The husband also revealed that he had a second identity. After the abduction,
this husband (am I going too far to assume his employment with MI6 or some
cognate agency?) left, never to be seen again[174]. Margary did not recall the
abduction until 1978.
This affair can only baffle a
researcher who insists on fitting all abduction accounts into the ET hypothesis;
once we free ourselves from that set of assumptions, explanations come easily. I
interpret this incident as a case in which the controllers applied the flying
saucer cover story sloppily, or to an insufficiently receptive subject. If my
thesis is correct, the UFO "hypnotic hoax" technique would still have
been fairly new in 1965, particularly outside the United States; perhaps the
manipulators hadn't yet got the hang of it. The odd comment about the
scientist's eyebrows may refer to an item of disguise donned for the occasion.
The unscrupulous hypnotist, unsure about hisability to induce an impenetrable
amnesia -- and mindful of the price paid by his forerunners in mesmeric
criminality[175] -- would understandably want to hedge his bets; by indulging in
the British penchant for theatrics, he could further protect his anonymity.
A similar incident was brought to my
attention by researcher Robert Durant. The relevant excerpt of his letter
follows:
Now I want to turn to a case that I
have been investigating for several months. The subject is an abductee. Standard
abduction scenario. Twice regressed under hypnosis, the first time by a
well-known abduction researcher, the second time by a psychologist with
parapsychology connections.
In the course of many hours of
listening to the subject, I discovered that she has had close personal contact
over a long period of time with several individuals who have federal
intelligence connections. She was hypnotized many years ago as part of a TV
program devoted to hypnosis. Her abductions began shortly after she attended
several long sessions at a laboratory where, ostensibly, she was being tested
for ESP abilities. Two other people who were "tested" at this same
laboratory have also had abductions. All three were told by the lab to join a
local UFO group. During her abductions, the principal alien spoke to the subject
in the English language in a normal manner, not via telepathy. She recognized
the voice, which was at one time that of her very close friend of yesteryear who
was then and is now employed by the CIA. The other voice was that of an
individual who works in Washington, has what I will call very strong federal
connections as well as a finger in every ufological pie, and who just happened
to bump into her at the aforementioned laboratory. He also anticipated, in the
course of telephone conversations, her abductions. When the subject confronted
him about this and the voice, he claimed to be psychic. (!)[176]
The "ESP" connection is
suggestive; the MKULTRA documents betray an astonishing interest on the part of
the intelligence agencies in matters parapsychological.
Some researchers would object that
examples such as this are rare; most abductions contain no such overt
indications of intelligence involvement. But have investigators looked for them?
As mentioned in the introduction, a false dichotomy limits much ufological
thought; as long as the abduction argument swings between the ET hypothesis and
purely psychological theories, researchers will not recognize the relevance of
certain key items of background data.
GLIMPSES OF THE CONTROLLERS
In an interview with me, a
northern-California abducteee -- call him "Peter" -- reported an
experience which was conducted NOT by a small grey alien, but by a human being.
The percipient called this man a "doctor." He gave a description of
this individual, and even provided a drawing.
Some time after I gathered this
information, a southern-California abductee told me her story -- which included
a description of this very same "doctor." The physical details were so
strikingly similar as to erase coincidence. This woman is a leading member of a
Los Angeles-based UFO group; three other women in this group report abduction
encounters with the same individual[177].
Perhaps those three women were
fantasists, attaching themselves to another's narrative. But my northern
informant never met these people. Why did he describe the same
"doctor"?
One of the abductees I have dealt
with insisted, under hypnosis, that her abduction experience brought her to a
certain house in the Los Angeles area. She was able to provide directions to the
house, even though she had no conscious memory of ever being there. I later
learned that this house is indeed occupied by a scientist who formerly (and
perhaps currently) conducted clandestine research on mind control technology.
This same abductee described a
clandestine brain operation of some sort she underwent in childhood. The
neurosurgeon was a human being, not an alien. She even recalled the name. (Note:
This is not the same individual referred to above.) When I heard the name, it
meant nothing to me -- but later I learned that there really was a scientist of
that name who specialzed in electrode implant research.
Licia Davidson is a thoughtful and
articulate abductee, whose fascinating story closely parallels many found in the
abductee literature -- except for one unusual detail. In an interview with me,
described an unsettling recollection of a human being, dressed normally, holding
a black BoX with a protruding antenna. This odd snippet of memory did NOT
coincide with the general thrust of her abduction narrative. Could this
remembrance represent an all-too-brief segment of accurately-perceived reality
interrupting her hypnotically-induced "screen memory"? Peter clearly
recalls seeing a similar BoX during his abduction.
Interestingly, Licia resides in the
Los Angeles suburb of Tujunga Canyon, a prominent spot on the abduction map;
Many of the abductees I have spoken to first had unusual experiences while
living in this area. Near Tujunga Canyon, in Mt. Pacifico, is a hidden former
Nike missile base; more than one abductee has described odd, seemingly
inexplicable military activity around this location[178]. The reader will recall
the connection of Nike missile bases to the disturbing story of Dr. L. Jolyon
West, a veteran of MKULTRA.
CULTS
Some abductees I have spoken to have
been directed to join certain religious/philosophical sects. These cults often
bear close examination.
The leaders of these groups tend to
be "ex"-CIA operatives, or Special Forces veterans. They are often
linked through personal relations, even though they espouse widely varying
traditions. I have heard unsettling reports that the leaders of some of these
groups have used hypnosis, drugs, or "mind machines" on their charges.
Members of these cults have reported periods of missing time during ceremonies
or "study periods."
I strongly urge abduction researchers
to examine closely any small "occult" groups an abductee might join.
For example, one familiar leader of the UFO fringe -- a man well-known for his
espousal of the doctrine of "love and light" -- is Virgil Armstrong, a
close personal friend of General John Singlaub, the notorious Iran-Contra
player, who recently headed the neo-fascist World Anti-Communist League.
Armstrong, who also happens to be an ex-Green Beret and former CIA operative,
figured into my inquiry in an interesting fashion: An abductee of my
acquaintance was told -- by her "entities," naturally -- to seek out
this UFO spokesman and join his "sky-watch" activities, which, my
source alleges, included a mass channelling session intended to send
debilitating "negative" vibrations to Constantine Chernenko, then the
leader of the Soviet Union. Of course, intracerebral voices may have a purely
psychological origin, so Armstrong can hardly be held to task for the abductee's
original "directive."[179] Still, his past associations with military
intelligence inevitably bring disturbing possibilities to mind.
Even more ominous than possible ties
between UFO cults and the intelligence community are the cults' links with the
shadowy I AM group, founded by Guy Ballard in the 1930s[180]. According to
researcher David Stupple, "If you look at the contactee groups today,
you'll see that most of the stable, larger ones are actually neo-I AM groups,
with some sort of tie to Ballard's organization." [181] This cult,
therefore, bears investigation.
Guy Ballard's "Mighty I AM
Religious Activity," grew, in large part, out of William Dudley Pelly's
Silver Shirts, an American NAZI organization[182]. Although Ballard himself
never openly proclaimed NAZI affiliation, his movement was tinged with an
extremely right-wing political philosophy, and in secret meetings he
"decreed" the death of President Franklin Roosevelt[183]. The I AM
philosophy derived from Theosophy, and in this author's estimation bears a
more-than-cursory resemblance to the Theosophically-based teachings that
informed the proto-NAZI German occult lodges[184].
After the war, Pelley (who had been
imprisoned for sedition during the hostilities) headed an occult-oriented
organization call Soulcraft, based in Noblesville, Indiana. Another Soulcraft
employee was the controversial contactee George Hunt Williamson (real name:
Michel d'Obrenovic), who co-authored UFOs CONFIDENTIAL with John McCoy, a
proponent of the theory that a Jewish banking conspiracy was preventing
disclosure of the solution to the UFO mystery[185]. Later, Williamson founded
the I AM-oriented Brotherhood of the Seven Rays in Peru[186]. Another famed
contactee, George Van Tassel, was associated with Pelley and with the
notoriously anti-Semitic Reverend Wesley Swift (founder of the group which
metamorphosed into the Aryan nations).[187]
The most visible offspring of I AM is
Elizabeth Clare Prophet's Church Universal and Triumphant, a group best-known
for its massive arms caches in underground bunkers. CUT was recently exposed in
COVERT ACTION INFORMATION BULLETIN as a conduit of CIA funds[188], and according
to researcher John Judge, has ties to organizations allied to the World
Anti-Communist League[189] Prophet is becoming involved in abduction research
and has sponsored presentations by Budd Hopkins and other prominent
investigators. In his book THE ARMSTRONG REPORT: ETs AND UFOs: THEY NEED US, WE
DON'T NEED THEM[sic][190], Virgil Armstrong directs troubled abductees toward
Prophet's group. (Perhaps not insignificantly, he also suggests that abductees
plagued by implants alleviate their problem by turning to "the I AM
force" within.[191])
Another UFO channeller, Frederick Von
Mierers, has promulgated both a cult with a strong I AM orientation[192] and an
apparent con-game involving over- appraised gemstones. Mierers is an anti-Semite
who contends that the Holocaust never happened and that the Jews control the
world's wealth.
UFORUM is a flying saucer
organization popular with Los Angeles-area abductees; its founder is Penny
Harper, a member of a radical Scientology breakaway group which connects the
teachings of L. Ron Hubbard with pronouncements against "The
Illuminati" (a mythical secret society) and other BETES NOIR familiar from
right-wing conspiracy literature. Harper directs members of her group to read
THE SPOTLIGHT, an extremist tabloid (published by Willis Carto's Liberty Lobby)
which denies the reality of the Holocaust and posits a "Zionist"
scheme to control the world[193].
More than one unwary abductee has
fallen in with groups such as those listed above. It isn't difficult to imagine
how some of these questionable groups might mold an abductee's recollection of
his experience -- and perhaps help direct his future actions.
Some modern abductees, with
otherwise-strong claims, claim encounters with blond, "Nordic" aliens
reminiscent of the early contactee era. Surely, the "Nordic"
appearance of these aliens sprang from the dubious spiritual tradition of Van
Tassell, Ballard, Pelley, McCoy, etc. Why, then, are some modern abductees
seeing these very same other-worldly UEBERMENSCHEN?
One abductee of my acquaintance
claims to have had beneficial experiences with these "blond" aliens --
who, he believes, came originally from the Pleiades. Interestingly, in the late
1960s, the psychopathically anti-Semitic Rev. Wesley Swift predicted this odd
twist in the abduction tale. In a broadcast "sermon," he spoke at
length about UFOs, claiming that there were "good" aliens and
"bad" aliens. The good ones, he insisted, were tall, blond Aryans --
WHO HAILED FROM THE PLEIADES. He made this pronouncement long before the current
trends in abduction lore.
Could some of the abductions be
conducted by an extreme right-wing element within the national security
establishment? Disagreeable as the possibility seems, we should note that the
"lunatic right" is represented in all other walks of life; certainly
hard-rightists have taken positions within the military-intelligence complex as
well.
GROUNDS FOR FURTHER RESEARCH
John Keel's ground-breaking OPERATION
TROJAN HORSE, written in an era when abductees still came under the category of
"contactees," includes the following intriguing data, gleaned from
Keel'a extensive field work:
Contactees often find themselves
suddenly miles from home without knowing how they got there. They either have
induced amnesia, wiping out all memory of the trip, or they were taken over by
some means and made the trip in a blacked-out state. Should they encounter a
friend on the way, the friend would probably note that their eyes seemed glassy
and their behavior seemed peculiar. But if the friend spoke to them, he might
receive a curt reply.
In the language of the contactees
this process is called being used...I have known silent contactees to disappear
from their homes for long periods, and when they returned, they had little or no
recollection of where they had been. One girl sent me a postcard from the Bahama
Islands -- which surprised me because I knew she was very poor. When she
returned, she told me that she had only one memory of the trip. She said she
remembered getting off a jet at an airport -- she shouldn't recall getting on the
jet or making the trip -- and there "Indians" met her and took her
baggage... The next thing she knew she was back home again[194].
Puzzling indeed -- unless one has
read THE CONTROL OF CANDY JONES, which speaks of Candy's "blacked out"
periods, during which she travelled to Taiwan as a CIA courier, adopting her
second personality. The mind control explanation perfectly solves all the
mysteries in the above excerpt -- save, perhaps, the odd remark about
"Indians."
Hickson and Mendez' UFO CONTACT AT
PASCAGOULA contains the interesting information that Charles Hickson awakes at
night feeling that he is on the verge of re-awakening some terribly important
memory connected with his encounter -- yet ostensibly he can account for every
moment of his adventure.
Hickson also received a letter from
an apparent abductee who claims that the grey aliens are actually automatons of
some sort -- perhaps an unconscious recognition of the unreality of the
hypnotically-induced "cover story."[195] In this light, the film
version of COMMUNION -- whose screenplay was written by Whitley Strieber --
takes on a new interest: The abduction sequences contain inexplicable images
indicating that the "greys" are really props, or masks.
COMMUNION and TRANSFORMATION contain
passages detailing what seems to be a hazily-recalled Candy-Jones-style
espionage adventure, in which Strieber was shanghaied by a "coach" and
a "nurse" (both human beings) who apparently drugged him[196]. Recall
the example of Keel's informants. Moreover, TRANSFORMATION contains lengthy
descriptions of alien beings working in apparent collusion with human beings.
Abductee Christa Tilton also recalls
both human beings and aliens playing a part in her experience. Ever since her
abduction, she claims, she has been "shadowed" by a mysterious federal
agent she calls John Wallis[197]. Christa's husband, Tom Adams, has confirmed
Wallis' existence[198].
In his REPORT ON COMMUNION, Ed Conroy
-- who seems to have become a participant in, and not merely an observer of, the
phenomenon -- describes harassment by helicopters, which as we have already
noted, seems to be quite a common occurrence in abductee situations[199].
Researchers blithely assume that these incidents represent governmental attempts
to spy on UFO percipients. But this assertion is ridiculous. Helicopters are
extremely expensive to operate, and the engines of espionage have perfected
numerous alternative methods to gather information. After all, we now have a
fairly extensive bibliography of FBI, CIA, and military efforts to spy on
numerous movements favoring domestic social change. Why have no veterans of
CHAOS or COINTELPRO (either victim or victimizer) spoken of helicopters?
Obviously the choppers serve some other purpose beyond mere surveillance. One
possibility might be the propagation of electromagnetic waves which might affect
the perceptions/ behaviors of an implanted individual. (Indeed, I have heard
rumors of helicopters being used in electronic "crowd control"
operations in Vietnam and elsewhere; alas, the information is far from hard.)
Contactee Eldon Kerfoot has written
of his suspicions that human manipulators, not aliens, may be the ultimate
puppeteers engineering his experiences. He describes a sudden compulsion to kill
a fellow veteran of the Korean conflict -- a man Kerfoot had no logical reason
to distrust or dislike, yet whom he "sensed" to have been a traitor to
his country. Fortunately, the assassination never materialized[200]. But the
situation exactly parallels incidents described in released ARTICHOKE documents
concerning the remote hypnotic induction of anti-social behavior.
One last speculation:
Renato Vesco's INTERCEPT BUT DON'T
SHOOT[201] outlines a fascinating scenario for the "secret weapon"
hypothesis of UFOs. Vesco points out that if these devices are one day to be
used in a superpower conflict the attacking power would be well-served by the
myth of the UFO as an extra-terrestrial craft, for the besieged nation would not
know the true nature of its opponent. Perhaps, then, one purpose of the UFO
abductions is to engender and maintain the legend of the little grey aliens. For
the hidden manipulators, the abductions could be, in and of themselves, a
propaganda coup.
FINAL THOUGHTS
I do not insist dogmatically on the
scenario that I have outlined. I do not wish to dissuade abduction researchers
from exploring other avenues -- indeed, I strongly encourage such work to
continue. Nor can I easily account for some aspects of the abduction narratives
-- for example, any suggestions I could offer concerning the reports of genetic
experimentation would be extremely speculative.
But I DO insist on a fair hearing of
this hypothesis. Criticism is encouraged; that which does not destroy my thesis
will make it stronger. I ask only that my critics refrain from intellectual
laziness; mere differences in world-view do not constitute a valid attack. God
is found in the details.
I recognize the dangers inherent in
making this thesis public. New and distressing abductee confabulations may
result. I would prefer that the audience for this paper be restricted to
abduction RESEARCHERS, not victims, who might be unduly influenced. However, in
a society that prides itself on ostensibly free press, such restrictions are
unthinkable. Therefore, I can only beg any abduction victims who might read this
paper to attempt a superhuman objectivity. The thesis I have outlined is
promising, and (should trepanation ever provide us with an example of an actual
abductee implant) susceptible of proof. But mine is not the only hypothesis. The
abductee's unrewarding task is to report what he or she has experienced as
truthfully as possible, untainted by outside speculation.
Whether or not future investigation
proves UFO abductions to be a product of mind control experimentation, I feel
that this paper has, at least, provided evidence of a serious danger facing
those who hold fast to the ideals of individual freedom. We cannot long ignore
this menace.
A spectre haunts the democratic
nations -- the spectre of TECHNOFASCISM. All the powers of the espionage empire
and the scientific establishment have entered into an unholy alliance to evoke
this spectre: Psychiatrist and spy, Dulles and Delgado, microwave specialists
and clandestine operators.
A mind is a terrible thing to waste
-- and a worse thing to commandeer.
NOTES
- Budd Hopkins, MISSING TIME (New
York: Richard Marek Publishers, 1981) and INTRUDERS (New York: Random House,
1987).
- Whitley Strieber, COMMUNION (New
York: Beech Tree Books, 1987).
- Cannon, "Psychiatric Abuse of
UFO Witness," UFO magazine, vol. 3, no. 5 (December, 1988)
- Philip Klass, UFO ABDUCTIONS: A
DANGEROUS GAME (Buffalo: Prometheus Books, 1988). Klass makes some sharp
observations, which are undercut by his refusal to interview abductees
directly. The work has no footnotes and depends heavily on the work of Dr.
Martin Orne -- of whom more anon.
- See bibliography.
- New York: Bantam Books, 1979.
- See generally PROJECT MKULTRA, THE
CIA'S PROGRAM OF RESEARCH IN BEHAVIOR MODIFICATION, joint hearing before the
Select Committee on Health and Scientific Research of the Committee on Human
Resources, Unites States Senate (Washington: Government Printing Office,
1977).
- Robert Eringer, "Secret Agent
Man," ROLLING STONE, 1985.
- John Marks interview with Victor
Marchetti (Marks files, available at the National Security Archives,
Washington, D.C.).
- In an interview with John Marks,
hypnosis expert Milton Kline, a veteran of clandestine experimentation in
this field, averred that his work for the government continued. Since the
interview took place in 1977, years after the CIA allegedly halted mind
control research, we must conclude either that the CIA lied, or that another
agency continued the work. In another interview with Marks, former Air
Force-CIA liaison L. Fletcher Prouty confirmed that the Department of
Defense ran studies either in conjunction with or parallel to those operated
by the CIA. (Marks files.)
- Estabrooks, HYPNOSIS (New York:
E.P. Dutton & Co., Inc., 1957 [revised edition]), 13-14.
- A copy of this letter can be found
in the Marks files.
- Estabrooks attracted an eclectic
group of friends, including J. Edgar Hoover and Alan Watts.
- Interview with daughter Doreen
Estabrooks, Marks files, Washington, D.C.
- Martin A. Lee and Bruce Shlain,
ACID DREAMS (New York: Grove Press, 1985) 3-4; Marks, THE SEARCH FOR
"THE MANCHURIAN CANDIDATE", 6-8
- Marks, ibid. 4-6.
- Edward Hunter, BRAINWASHING IN RED
CHINA (New York: Vanguard Press, 1951.). Hunter invented the term
"brainwashing" in a September 24, 1950 Miami NEWS article.
- "Japan's Germ Warfare
Experiments," THE GLOBE AND MAIL (Toronto), May 19, 1982.
- Walter Bowart, OPERATION MIND
CONTROL (New York: Dell, 1978), 191-2, quoting Warren Commission documents.
We cannot fairly derive from this statement a sanguine attitude about
PRESENT Soviet capabilities; in this field, even outdated technology
suffices for mischief.
- Marks, THE SEARCH FOR "THE
MANCHURIAN CANDIDATE", 60-61. A folk entymology has it that the
"MK" of MKULTRA stands for "Mind Kontrol." According to
Marks, TSS prefixed the cryptonyms of all its projects with these initials.
Note, though, that MKULTRA was preceded by a still-mysterious TSS program
called QKHILLTOP.
- Marks, THE SEARCH FOR "THE
MANCHURIAN CANDIDATE", 224-229. Seven MKULTRA subprojects were
continued, under TSS supervision, as MKSEARCH. This project ended in 1972.
CIA apologists often proclaim that "brainwashing" research ceased
in either 1962 or 1972; these blandishments refer to the TSS projects, not
to the ORD work, which remains TERRA INCOGNITA for independent researchers.
Marks discovered that the ORD research was so voluminous that retrieving
documents via FOIA would have proven unthinkably expensive.
- For a description of the research
into parapsychology, see Ronald M. McRae's MIND WARS (New York: St. Martin's
Press, 1984). The best book available on a subject which awaits a truly
authoritative text.
- Abduction researcher and
hypnotherapist Miranda Park, of Lancaster, California, reports that she has
viewed such anomalies in abductee MRI scans. See also Whitley Strieber,
TRANSFORMATION (New York: Beech Tree Books, 1988) 246-247. At this writing,
both Strieber and Hopkins report initially promising results in their
efforts to document the presence of these "extras" in abductees.
- Allegedly, the experiment took
place in 1964. However, in WERE WE CONTROLLED? (New Hyde Park, NY:
University Books, 1967), the pseudonymous "Lincoln Lawrence" makes
an interesting argument (on page 36) that the demonstration took place some
years earlier.
- New York: Harper and Row, 1969.
Much of Delgado's work was funded by the Office of Naval Intelligence, a
common conduit for CIA funds during the 1950s and '60s. (Gordon Thomas'
JOURNEY INTO MADNESS (New York: Bantam, 1989) misleadingly implies that CIA
interest in Delgado's work began in 1972.)
- J.M.R. Delgado. "Intracerebral
Radio Stimulation and Recording in Completely Free Patients,"
PSYCHOTECHNOLOGY (Robert L. Schwitzgebel and Ralph K. Schwitzgebel, editors;
New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1973): 195.
- David Krech, "Controlling the
Mind Controllers," THINK 32 (July- August), 1966.
- Delgado, PHYSICAL CONTROL OF THE
MIND
- Delgado, "Intracerebral Radio
Stimulation and Recording in Completely free patients," 195.
- Note, for example, Charles
Hickson's account of the Pascagoula Incident. Charles Hickson and William
Mendez, UFO CONTACT AT PASCOGOULA (Tuscon: Wendelle C. Stevens, 1983).
- John Ranleigh, THE AGENCY (New
York: Simon and Shuster, 1986): 208. Marchetti casts this story in the form
of an amusing anecdote: After much time and expense, a cat was suitably
trained and prepared -- only, on its first assignment, to be run over by a
taxi. Marchetti neglects to point out that nothing stopped the Agency from
getting another cat. Or from using a human being.
- Of course, this suggestion raises
the knotty question of whether the abductees suffer from a form of
schizophrenia, which may also be characterized by "voices." I
refer the reader to the work of Hopkins, Strieber, Thomas Bullard, and
others who have described the difficulties of ascribing all abductions to
psychotic states.
- Alan W. Scheflin and Edward M.
Opton, Jr., THE MIND MANIPULATORS (London: Paddington Press, 1978), 347.
- Thomas, JOURNAY INTO MADNESS, 276.
- James Olds, "Hypothalamic
Substrates of Reward," PHYSIOLOGICAL REVIEWS, 1962, 42:554;
"Emotional Centers in the Brain," SCIENCE JOURNAL, 1967, 3 (5).
- Vernon Mark and Frank Ervin,
VIOLENCE AND THE BRAIN (New York: Harper and Row, 1970), chapter 12,
excerpted in INDIVIDUAL RIGHTS AND THE FEDERAL ROLE IN BEHAVIOR
MODIFICATION, prepared by the Staff of the Subcommittee on Constitutional
Rights of the Committee of the Judiciary, United States Senate (Washington:
Government Printing Office, 1974).
- John Lilly, THE SCIENTIST
(Berkeley, Ronin Publishing, 1988 [revised edition]), 90. Monkeys allowed to
stimulate themselves continually via ESB brought themselves to orgasm once
every three minutes, sixteen hours a day. Scientific gatherings throughout
the world saw motion pictures of these experiments, which surely made
spectacular cinema.
- Scheflin and Opton, THE MIND
MANIPULATORS, 336-337. Heath even monitored his patient's brain responses
during the subject's first heterosexual encounter. Such is the nature of the
brave new world before us.
- Robert L. Schwitzgebel and Richard
M. Bird, "Sociotechnical Design Factors in Remote Instrumentation with
Humans in Natural Environments," BEHAVIOR RESEARCH METHODS AND
INSTRUMENTATION, 1970, 2, 99-105.
- Thomas, JOURNEY INTO MADNESS, 277.
In the BEHAVIOR RESEARCH METHODS AND INSTRUMENTATION article referenced
above, Schwitzgebel details how the radio signals may be fed into a
telephone via a modem and thus analyzed by a computer anywhere in the world.
- Scheflin and Opton, THE MIND
MANIPULATORS, 347-349.
- Louis Tackwood and the Citizen's
Research and Investigation Committee, THE GLASS HOUSE TAPES (New York: Avon,
1973), 226.
- Perry London, BEHAVIOR CONTROL
(New York: Harper and Row, 1969), 145
- Scheflin and Opton, THE MIND
MANIPULATORS, 351-353; Tackwood, THE GLASS HOUSE TAPES, 228.
- "Beepers in kids' heads could
stop abductors," Las Vegas SUN, Oct. 27, 1987.
- Lilly, THE SCIENTIST, 91.
- Marks, THE SEARCH FOR "THE
MANCHURIAN CANDIDATE", 151-154.
- Interestingly, Lilly has come out
of the closet as a sort of proto- Strieber; THE SCIENTIST recounts his close
interaction with alien (though not necessarily extraterrestrial) forces
which he labels "solid state entities."
- The story of Deep Trance, an
MKULTRA "insider" who provided invaluable information, is somewhat
involved. I do not know who Trance is/was and Marks may not know either. He
contacted Trance via the writer of an article published shortly before
research on THE SEARCH FOR "THE MANCHURIAN CANDIDATE" began,
addressing his informant "Dear Source whose anonymity I respect."
I respect it too -- hence my reticence to name the aforementioned article,
which may mark a trail to Trance. The fact that I have not followed this
trail would not prevent others from doing so.
- London, BEHAVIOR CONTROL, 139.
- See generally, UFO magazine, Vol.
4, No. 2; especially the interesting contribution by Whitley Strieber.
- Lawrence, WERE WE CONTROLLED?,
36-37; Anita Gregory, "Introduction to Leonid L. Vasilev's EXPERIMENTS
IN DISTANT INFLUENCE," PSYCHIC WARFARE: FACT OR FICTION (editor: John
White) (Nottinghamshire: Aquarian, 1988) 34-57.
- Lawrence, WERE WE CONTROLLED?, 38.
- Bowart, OPERATION MIND CONTROL,
261-264.
- Ibid. 263.
- Lawrence, WERE WE CONTROLLED?, 52.
- HUMAN DRUG TESTING BY THE CIA,
202.
- Note especially the Supreme
Court's decision in CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY ET Al. V. SIMS, ET AL. (No.
83-1075; decided April 16, 1986). The egregious and dangerous majority
opinion in this case held that disclosure of the names of scientists and
institutions involved in MKULTRA posed an "unacceptable risk of
revealing 'intelligence sources.' The decisions of the [CIA] Director, who
must of course be familiar with 'the whole picture,' as judges are not, are
worthy of great deference...it is conceivable that the mere explanation of
why information must be withheld can convey valuable information to a
foreign intelligence agency." How do we square this continuing need for
secrecy with the CIA's protestations that MKULTRA achieved little success,
that the studies were conducted within the Nueremberg statues governing
medical experiments, and that the research was made available in the open
literature?
- Letter, P.A. Lindstrom to Robert
Naeslund, July 27, 1983; copy available from Martti Koski, Kiilinpellontie
2, 21290 Rusko, Finland. Lindstrom writes that he fully agrees with Lincoln
Lawrence, author of WERE WE CONTROLLED?
- Bowart, OPERATION MIND CONTROL,
265. I have attempted without success to contact Dr. Lindstrom.
- Bowart, OPERATION MIND CONTROL,
233-249. This interview was repinted without attribution in a bizarre
compendium of UFO rumors called THE MATRIX, compiled by "Valdamar
Valerian" (actually John Grace, allegedly a captain working for Air
Force intelligence).
- Robert Anton Wilson,
"Adventures with Head Hardware," MAGICAL BLEND, 23 [of course],
July 1989.
- Michael Hutchison, MEGA BRAIN (New
York: Ballantine, 1986); Gerald Oster, "Auditory Beats in the
Brain," SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN, September, 1973.
- Marilyn Ferguson, THE BRAIN
REVOLUTION (New York: Taplinger, 1973), 90.
- Ibid., 91-92. The presence of
delta in a waking subject can indicate pathology.
- Bio-Pacer promotional and price
sheet, available from Lindemann Laboratories, 3463 State Street, #264, Santa
Barbara, CA 93105.
- Hutchison, MEGA BRAIN, 117-118.
Compare Light's observations about "the grant game" to Sid
Gottlieb's protestations that nearly all "mind control" research
was openly published.
- Thomas Martinez and John Gunther,
THE BROTHERHOOD OF MURDER (New York: McGraw-Hill, 1988), 230.
- Interview, Sandy Monroe of the Los
Angeles office of the Christic Institute.
- See generally Paul Brodeur, THE
ZAPPING OF AMERICA (Toronto, George J. MacLeod, 1977).
- Until recently, the American
Embassy was on a street named after the composer.
- It was finally determined that the
microwaves were used to receive transmissions from bugs planted within the
embassy. DARPA director George H. Heimeier went on record stating that
PANDORA was never designed to study "microwaves as a surveillance
tool." See Anne Keeler, "Remote Mind Control Technology,"
FULL DISCLOSURE #15. I would note that the Soviet embassy was "bugged
and waved" in Canada during the 1950s, and according to the Los Angeles
TIMES (June 5, 1989), the Soviet embassy in Britain had been similarly
affected.
- Ronald I. Adams R.A. Williams,
BIOLOGICAL EFFECTS OF ELECTROMAGNETIC RADIATION (RADIOWAVES AND MICROWAVES)
EURASIAN COMMUNIST COUNTRIES, (Defense Intelligence Agency, March 1976.)
Brodeur notes that much of the work ascribed to the Soviets in this report
was actually first accomplished by scientists in the United States. Keeler
argues that this report constitutes an example of "mirror imaging"
-- i.e., parading domestic advances as a foreign threat, the better to pry
funding from a suitably-fearful Congress.
- Keeler, "Remote Mind Control
Technology."
- R.J. MacGregor, "A Brief
Survey of Literature Relating to Influence of Low Intensity Microwaves on
Nervous Function" (Santa Monica: RAND Corporation, 1970).
- Keeler, "Remote Mind Control
Technology."
- Larry Collins, "Mind
Control," PLAYBOY, January 1990.
- Allan H. Frey, "Behavioral
Effects of Electromagnetic Energy," SYMPOSIUM ON BIOLOGICAL EFFECTS AND
MEASUREMENTS OF RADIO FREQUENCIES/MICROWAVES, DeWitt G. Hazzard, editor
(U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare, 1977).
- quoted in THE APPLICATION OF
TESLA'S TECHNOLOGY IN TODAY'S WORLD (Montreal: Lafferty, Hardwood &
Partners, Ltd., 1978).
- Keeler, "Remote Mind Control
Technology."
- L. George Lawrence,
"Electronics and Brain Control," POPULAR ELECTRONICS, July 1973.
- Susan Schiefelbein, "The
Invisible Threat," SATURDAY REVIEW, September 15, 1979.
- E. Preston, "Studies on the
Nervous System, Cardiovascular Function and Thermoregulation,"
BIOLOGICAL EFFECTS OF RADIO FREQUENCY AND MICROWAVE RADIATION, edited by H.M.
Assenheim (Ottawa, Canada: National Research Council of Canada, 1979),
138-141.
- Robert O. Becker, THE BODY
ELECTRIC (New York: William Morrow, 1985) 318-319.
- Ibid.
- Ibid., 321.
- See Bowart's OPERATION MIND
CONTROL, page 218, for an interesting example of this
"rationalization" process at work in the case of Sirhan Sirhan,
who was convicted for the assassination of Robert F. Kennedy. In prison,
Sirhan was hypnotized by Dr. Bernard Diamond, who instructed Sirhan to climb
the bars of his cage like a monkey. He did so. After the trance was removed,
Sirhan was shown tapes of his actions; he insisted that he "acted like
a monkey" of his own free will -- he claimed he wanted the exercise.
- Keeler suggests that the proposal
was revealed only because Schapitz' sensationalistic implications may have
worked to his discredit -- and therefore hide -- the REAL research.
Personally, I don't accept this argument, but I respect Keeler's instincts
enough to repeat her caveat here.
- Margaret Cheney's TESLA: A MAN OUT
OF TIME (New York: Dell, 1981), the most reliable book in the sea of wild
speculation surrounding this extraordinary scientist, confirms Tesla's early
work with the psychological effects of electromagnetic radiation. See
especially pages 101-104; note also the afterword, in which we learn that
certain government agencies have kept important research by Tesla hidden
from the general public.
- Noted in Lawrence, WERE WE
CONTROLLED?, 29.
- Particularly one Thomas Bearden of
Huntsville, Alabama; I have in my possession a document written by Bearden
associate Andrew Michrowski which identifies Bearden as an intelligence
agent for an undisclosed agency.
- Kathleen McAuliffe, "The Mind
Fields," OMNI magazine, February 1985.
- May 5, 1985.
- I refer to an individual who later
wrote a very clear-headed and thoughtful letter to Dr. Paul Lowinger, who
has graciously made his files available to me. For now, I feel compelled to
withold this person's name.
- Cameron became president of the
American Psychiatric Association, the Canadian Psychiatric Association, and
the World Association of Psychiatrists, He previously sat on the Nueremberg
panel, helping to draw up the statutes governing ethical medical behavior!
- In particular, Opton and
Scheflin's overview, though excellent in scope and detail, continually seeks
reassurring interpretations of evidence which points toward more distressing
conclusions.
- Martin T. Orne, "Can a
hypnotized subject be compelled to carry out otherwise unacceptable
behavior?" INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL HYPNOSIS,
1972, Vol. 20, 101-117.
- Marks mentions, in a letter to
Orne, the latter's claim to have been an unwitting participant in subproject
84. Yet the papers released concerning subproject 84 clearly establish the
Agency's willingness to put Orne in the know; Orne later admitted to Marks
that he was made aware of his CIA sponsorship (Marks, THE SEARCH FOR
"THE MANCHURIAN CANDIDATE", 172-173). In an interview with Marks,
Orne discounted the story of Candy Jones (which we shall recount later) by
insisting that if such an experiment had occurred "someone in some
agency would have come to me." Why would they come to him about a
super-secret project, unless Orne had a high security clearance and worked
extensively with intelligence agencies? Note also that Orne conducted
extensive studies for the Office of Naval Research from June 1, 1968 to May
31, 1971. He has also been funded by DARPA. Moreover, I consider noteworthy
the fact that Orne somehow became president of the Society for Clinical and
Experimental Hypnosis despite the fact that the organization had decided not
to have a president. (This fact was related to Marks by a prominent hypnosis
specialist in an off-the-record interview that I probably wasn't supposed to
see.)
- The story has been told many
times. See Turner and Christian's THE KILLING OF ROBERT F. KENNEDY, 207-208;
also Peter J. Reiter, ANTISOCIAL OR CRIMINAL ACTS AND HYPNOSIS (Springfield,
Illinois: Charles C. Thomas, 1958).
- John G. Watkins, "Antisocial
behavior under hypnosis: Possible or impossible?" INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL
FOR CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL HYPNOSIS, 1972, Vol. 20, 95-100.
- Milton H. Erickson, "An
experimental investigation of the possible anti-social use of
hypnosis," PSYCHIATRY, 1939, vol. 2. Erickson argues that if a
hypnotist has convinced his subject to misperceive reality, then resulting
actions cannot be considered "anti-social," for the actions would
be acceptable within the subject's internal reality construct. This argument
strikes me as semantic quibbling.
- See generally Flo Conway and Jim
Seigelman, SNAPPING (New York: Lippincott, 1978).
- Lee and Schlain, ACID DREAMS, 8-9.
- John Marks interview with Victor
Marchetti, December 19, 1977 (Marks files).
- Martin T. Orne, "On the
Mechanisms of Posthypnotic Amnesia," THE INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF
CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL HYPNOSIS, 1966, vol. 14, 121-134. Orne's work with
post-hypnotic amnesia was funded by NIMH, the Air Force Office of Scientific
Research, and the Office of Naval Research. I should like to hear what
innocent explanation, if any, the Air Force has to offer to explain their
interest in post-hypnotic amnesia.
- Bowart, OPERATION MIND CONTROL,
242-243.
- Obviously Allan Dulles. This may
have been a hypnotically-induced delusion; on the other hand, Dulles'
legendary sexual rapacity makes this claim rather less unlikely than one
might first assume.
- Always the best indicator of
whether or not hypnosis is genuine; I can't understand why Orne didn't use
this test in the Blanchi case.
- Herbert Spiegel, "Hypnosis
and evidence: Help or hindrance," ANN. N.Y. ACAD. SCI.; 1980, 347,
73-85.
- See, for example, Kroger, HYPNOSIS
AND BEHAVIOR MODIFICATION, 21-22
- See especially Klass, UFO
ABDUCTIONS: A DANGEROUS GAME, 60-61.Orne, interviewed here, makes reference
to the work summarized in his article "The use and misuse of hypnosis
in court" (INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLINICAL HYPNOSIS, 1979, vol. 27,
311-341.)
- Klass argues that ufologists, in
conducting hypnotic regression sessions, inadvertently cue their subjects. A
close reading of his text reveals that he never proves or claims that such
"cues" have taken place in any individual instance; he simply
believes that cueing MIGHT have occurred. Had Klass been more willing to
deal with abductees directly, he might have found evidence of cause and
effect; as it stands, his argument really amounts to no more than a
suggestion. For all that, I find his ideas regarding the running of
"clean" hypnotic regression sessions potentially valuable.
- Marks, THE SEARCH FOR "THE
MANCHURIAN CANDIDATE", 34-37.
- Donald Bain, THE CONTROL OF CANDY
JONES (Chicago, Playboy Press, 1976).
- The use of hypnotized couriers in
warfare goes back to the 19th century.
- Estabrooks, HYPNOTISM, 193-214.
- John Marks interview with Milton
Kline, December 22, 1977 (Marks files). In another interview, Professor
Clare Young (a colleague of Estabrooks' at Colgate University) confirmed
that Estabrooks' hypnosis work for the government has never been published.
- Or could her marriage have been
part of the program? "Long John," as he was popularly known, was
famous in UFO circles, and had provided a forum for such early-day
contactees as Howard Menger. He also knew Jackie Gleason, a prominent (if
unlikely) name in the "crashed disc" rumor vaults. Could Candy
have been assigned to discover what Nebel knew?
- Marks files. John Marks did
excellent work on the Candy Jones story; he erred -- almost unforgivably --
on the side of conservatism when he refused to include information about
this incident in his book. I know the name of the institute involved;
however, since Candy saw fit to keep this aspect of her story secret
(probably for sound legal reasons), I shall follow her lead.
- Scheflin and Opton, THE MIND
MANIPULATORS, 446-447.
- Interviews, Marks files. One of
Marks' informants offered the interesting speculation that Candy's torture
sessions were not conducted in the field, but in the lab -- her entire
mission might have been a hypno-programmed fantasy.
- The information about Candy's CIA
files stems from a telephone interview with Candy Jones. A problem looms
here: CIA cover stories unravel like the skin of an onion; once you remove
the outer layer, the next lie is revealed. In the case of Candy Jones, the
substrata of buncombe involves allegations that she WILLINGLY complied with
the CIA, and used Jensen's hypnosis experiments as a rationalization for her
compliance. Such is the explanation offered by certain of Marks' informants;
alas, Opton and Scheflin seem to have bought this line. Anyone familiar with
the vile acts of self-degradation to which Candy's programmers subjected her
will laugh this story out of court. No one, short of a severely psychotic
masochist, would willingly undergo what she went through.
- Marks files.
- William Kroger, CLINICAL AND
EXPERIMENTAL HYPNOSIS (Philadelphia: Lippincott, 1963), 299.
- Recently, ufologist Jim Moseley,
an acquaintance of Candy's, has claimed that an unidentified source on
Nebel's "inner circle" once, off-the- record, pronounced Candy's
story "a crock." This assertion deserves careful and respectful
consideration. Still, Moseley won't identify his source, and we have no way
of telling if this insider spoke from instinct or certain knowledge, or
indeed, what he really meant. Did he feel Candy was fantasizing or fibbing?
If the former, why did her hallucinations match details of MKULTRA released
only after publication of her book? If the latter, how are we to explain the
many hypnotic regression tapes, at least some of which were made available
to outside investigators? (Fairly elaborate, for a hoax.) In any case, how
could Candy have known the fact (confirmed by Marks' associates) that Kroger
taught "Jensen" at a certain West-coast institute? Why, if the
story was "a crock," would Candy risk libel suits by naming -- to
associates and investigators, if not to the general public -- real-life
hypnotherapists? All in all, I would suggest that Moseley's
"insider" was speaking glibly, and did not know the true facts.
[Or was speaking disinformationally. -jpg]
- Philadelphia, Lippincott, 1976.
- Ibid., 415.
- Similar paranoid outbreaks led to
the dissolution of Dr. Richard Neal's UFO abductee group in Los Angeles,
according to a phone interview I had with Dr. Neal.
- Affidavit of Dr. Simpson-Kallas in
the case of Sirhan-Sirhan, 1973; see Bowart, OPERATION MIND CONTROL, 225.
- All true MPs have experienced some
form of abuse or trauma, psychological or physical, during childhood.
- One was ritually abused in an
occult setting. If I were a "spy- chiatrist" scouting potential
fodder for mind control experiments, I would seek out abused children from
military families. (A military background would ensure that the
"right" doctor gets access to the child.) Abduction researchers
should look for such a pattern.
- I refer here to the vast upsurge
in alien abductions which took place that year; see generally Kevin Randle,
THE OCTOBER SCENARIO (Middle Coast, 1988). Of course, abductions (or,
according to my hypothesis, disguised mind control operations) occurred
previous to this year.
- John Marks interview with Milton
Kline, December 22, 1977 (Marks files).
- Brenda Butler ET AL., SKY CRASH,
expanded edition (London: Grafton Books, 1986), 305-321, 354-355.
- Telephone interview with Nancy
Wright.
- Telephone interview with Miranda
Parks.
- William Moore, "UFOs and the
U.S. Government," FOCUS, vol. 4, June 30, 1989. Moore's role in the
affair strikes me as highly questionable, even scandalous -- although at
least here we have one instance of direct and irrefutable
"insider" testimony of government harassment.
- Some have also raised questions
about his psychiatric treatment of Oswald assassin Jack Ruby. I find it odd
that a CIA mind control veteran -- who did NOT reside or practice in Dallas
-- should have been assigned to the Ruby case.
- Samiel Chavkin, THE MIND STEALERS
(New York: Houghton Mifflin, 1978), 96-107.
- Raymond Fowler, THE ANDREASSON
AFFAIR (New York: Prentice Hall, 1979).
- New York: Warner Books, 1989;
198-202.
- Ruth Montgomery, ALIENS AMONG US (Ballantine,
1985), 49. My article "Psychiatric Abuse of UFO Witness," referred
to earlier, also documents this phenomenon.
- Chung-Kwang Chou and Arthur W.
Guy, "Quantization of Microwave Biological Effects," SYMPOSIUM OF
BIOLOGICAL EFFECTS AND MEASUREMENT OF RADIO FREQUENCY/MICROWAVES, edited by
Dewitt G. Hazzard (U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare, 1977).
- MIAMI HERALD, May 28, 1984 and
June 6, 1984; NATIONAL EXAMINER, vol. 22, no. 18, April 30, 1985. Although
the EXAMINER is a supermarket tabloid, and therefore a questionable source,
this periodical has rendered researchers the service of printing the X-ray
of Petit's brain, showing the implant.
- Los Angeles TIMES, March 28, 1988.
- Raymond Fowler, THE ANDREASSON
AFFAIR, PHASE TWO (Reward, 1982). This book includes rare photographs of the
unmarked helicopters which have plagued this abduction victim and her
family.
- A mutual friend described for me
an incident in which the former SEAL, mistakenly perceiving a threat, almost
instantly felled, and nearly killed, a man twice his size. Whatever the
truth of my informant's other statements, he certainly has received advanced
combat training.
- Fenton Bresler, WHO KILLED JOHN
LENNON? (New York: St. Martin's Press, 1989), 45-46.
- Bowart, OPERATION MIND CONTROL,
27-42.
- Denise Winn, THE MANIPULATED MIND
(London, Octagon Press, 1983), 72-73; Bresler, WHO KILLED JOHN LENNON?, 41;
see generally: Peter Watson, WAR ON THE MIND (London: Hutchison, 1978)
(Watson broke the story on Narut for the London TIMES).
- Larry Collins, "Mind
Control," PLAYBOY, January 1990.
- John Marks interview with Milton
Kline, December 22, 1977 (Marks files).
- Richard A. Gabriel, NO MORE HEROES
(New York: Hill and Wang, 1987), 124.
- Ibid., 150-151.
- See generally: Mark Lane,
CONVERSATIONS WITH AMERICANS (Simon and Shuster, 1970); A.J. Langguth,
HIDDEN TERRORS (New York: Pantheon, 1978).
- John G. Fuller, THE INTERRUPTED
JOURNEY (New York: Dell, 1966).
- This detail plays a part in other
abductions -- for example, it crops up in the Betty Andreasson Luca case.
See Raymond Fowler, THE ANDREASSON AFFAIR (New York: Bantam, 1980), 50-51.
- Stanton Friedman, for example; the
reader is referred to his 1988 Whole Life Expo lecture, "UFOs: A Cosmic
Watergate."
- THE BODY ELECTRIC, 196-202.
- The Fish map has received wide
discussion; for a representative sampling, the reader is directed to the
aforementioned Friedman lecture (note 158); Terence Dickenson, "The
Zeti Reticuli Incident," ASTRONOMY, December, 1974; Klass, UFO
ABDUCTIONS: A DANGEROUS GAME, 20-23; and John Rimmer, THE EVIDENCE FOR ALIEN
ABDUCTIONS (Weillingborough: Aquarian, 1984), 88-92. Incidentally, Klass has
proposed to Friedman a test regarding the ability to recall such material
accurately under hypnotic regression; Friedman, for reasons best known to
himself, declined the offer to participate.
- Jacques Vallee, DIMENSIONS
(Chicago: Contemporary, 1988), 266.
- See Rimmer, THE EVIDENCE FOR ALIEN
ABDUCTIONS, 91-92. None of this is meant to denigrate Marjorie Fish, whose
work has received universal praise.
- Fuller, THE INTERRUPTED JOURNEY,
18-19.
- Athan G. Theoharis and John Stuart
Cox, THE BOSS: J. EDGAR HOOVER AND THE GREAT AMERICAN INQUISITION
(Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1978), 325; Chip Berlet, "The
Hunt for the Red Menace," COVERT ACTION INFORMATION BULLETIN, no. 31
(winter, 1989); J. Edgar Hoover, COINTELPRO (memo), March 4, 1968.
- For example, Delgado's work
pre-dates the Hill incident. Moreover, one of the few pages released on
MKULTRA subproject 119 concerns "a critical review of the literature
and scientific developments related to the recording, analysis and
interpretation of bioelectric signals from the human organism, and
activation of human behavior by remote means." The review took place in
1960-61. Presumably, the CIA wanted to DO something with the information so
derived.
- "UFO Abductions
Workshop," Whole Life Expo, March, 1988.
- Ludwig Mayer, DIE TECHNIC DER
HYPNOSE (Munich: J.H. Lehmanns Verlag, 1953), 225; quoted in: Heinz E.
Hammerschlag (translation: John Cohen) HYPNOTISM AND CRIME (Hollywood:
Wilshire Book Company, 1957), 24-25.
- Numerous articles discuss this
possibility; see, for example, William C. Coe ET AL. "An Approach
Toward Isolating Factors that Influence Antisocial Conduct in
Hypnosis," THE INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL
HYPNOSIS, 1972, vol XX, no. 2, 118-131, as well as other reports in that
issue. The difference between the laboratory and the "field"
settings may account for the success of Mayer's experiment and the apparent
failure of the "aliens."
- For a description of a quite
similar experiment conducted under CIA auspices in 1954, see "CIA able
to control minds by hypnosis, data shows," THE WASHINGTON POST,
February 19, 1978.
- Abductee interview,
"Veronica." The reader will, I hope, forgive my use of a pseudonym
here. For the most part, I hope to deal in this work with published cases.
Suffice it to say, Veronica's testimony proved fascinating, troubling,
convoluted, problematical; in spite of all the questions raised by this
case, I still believe it to have substantial bearing on my thesis. The
reader will forgive me for severing relations with this abductee before
completing an investigation; she keeps a mini-armory next to her bed.
- Abductee interview,
"Veronica," At one point, she ran an informal abductee/contactee
group; as a result, she was able to describe many other cases to me.
- One ARTICHOKE document explicitly
details a failed attempt to use hypnosis to induce the assassination of a
foreign leader. The document is undated; the experiment took place January
8-January 15, 1954. Document reproduced in CIA PAPERS, vol. 1 (Ann Arbor,
MI: Capitol Information Associates, 1986),39-41.
- John Marks interview of Prof. Jack
Tracktir (Marks files).
- Jenny Randles, ABDUCTIONS (London:
Robert Hale, 1988), 52-53.
- As in, for example, the Palle
Hardrup affair.
- Private correspondence, Robert
Durant to the author.
- Abductee interview,
"Polly." I won't give the facial details here; suffice it to say
that this abductor, like Margary's (noted earlier), has something of the
smell of greasepaint about him.
- The base is mantioned in Ann
Druffel's and D. Scott Rogo's THE TUJUNGA CANYON CONTACTS (New York: Signet,
1989) [expanded edition], 157.
- On the other hand, Armstrong asks
us to accept his own channelled material, so he would have an awkward time
should he choose to challenge the "psychic impressions" of others.
- Jacques Vallee, MESSENGERS OF
DECEPTION (Berkeley: And/Or Press, 1979), 192-193.
- Curtis G. Fuller (editor),
PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST INTERNATIONAL UFO CONGRESS (New York: Warner Books,
1980), 307.
- For information of Pelley, see
John Roy Carlson, UNDER COVER (New York: Dutton, 1943).
- Gerald B. Bryan, PSYCHIC
DICTATORSHIP IN AMERICA (Los Angeles: Truth Research, 1940). An essential
book-length expose of Ballardism. One of Bryan's sources alleges that
Ballard, before founding the I AM group, may have practiced some variety of
black magic.
- The student should carefully
compare the I AM dogma with the available information on pre-Third Reich
occultism; the best sources are James Webb's masterful analyses, THE OCCULT
ESTABLISHMENT and THE OCCULT UNDERGROUND (La Salle, Illinois: Open Court
Publishing, 1976).
- Vallee, MESSENGERS OF DECEPTION,
192-194.
- Even a cursory examination of
Williamson's SECRET OF THE ANDES (London: Neville Superman, 1961), written
under the pseudonym Brother Philip, will reveal the I AM connections.
- Personal sources. Van Tassell's
"Integration," a domed structure allegedly built under
extra-terrestrial guidance (located near 29 Palms, California) prominently
displays, to this day, key I AM artifacts such as the portraits of Jesus and
Saint Germain (commissioned by Ballard).
- "The Afghan Arms
Pipeline," COVERT ACTION INFORMATION BULLETIN, no. 30 (summer, 1988).
- Telephone interview with John
Judge.
- Village of Oak Creek, Arizona:
Entheos, 1989, 119. I can't recall ever encountering another book title
which contained so many grammatical errors. Armstrong's accomplishment is
genuinely impressive.
- For further information on I AM,
Prophet's organization, saucer cults, and other groups, see the appropriate
sections of J. Gordon Melton's ENCYCLOPEDIA OF AMERICAN RELIGION.
- Ruth Montgomery, ALIENS AMONG US
(New York: Ballantine, 1985), 128-188.
- Penny Harper, "Are Aliens
Taking Over the Earth?" WHOLE LIFE TIMES, January 1990.
- John Keel, WHY UFOS: OPERATION
TROJAN HORSE (New York: Manor Books, 1970) [paperback edition], 228.
- Hickson and Mendez, UFO CONTACT AT
PASCAGOULA, 242.
- Strieber, COMMUNION, 134;
TRANSFORMATION, 109.
- "Contactee: Firsthand,"
UFO magazine, vol. 4, no. 2, 1989.
- Telephone conversation, Tom Adams.
- Ed Conroy, REPORT ON COMMUNION
(New York: William Morrow, 1989), 365-385.
- "Contactee: Firsthand,"
UFO magazine, vol. 3, no. 3.
- New York: Zebra, 1971. See
especially note 2, Chap. 9.
SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY ON MIND
CONTROL
ACID DREAMS, by Martin A. Lee and
Bruce Shlain (Grove, 1985). Outstanding work on MKULTRA and drugs.
THE BODY ELECTRIC, by Robert Becker
(Morrow, 1985). Important.
THE BRAIN CHANGERS, by Maya Pines
(Signet, 1973). Outdated, but an excellent chapter on the stimoceiver and
related technologies.
BRAIN CONTROL, by Elliot Valenstein
(John Wiley and Sons, 1973). Highly conservative; outdated; still worth reading.
CIA PAPERS, compiled by Capitol
Information Associates (POB 8275, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 48107). Interesting
selection of MKULTRA documents.
THE CONTROL OF CANDY JONES, by Donald
Bain (Playboy Press, 1976). Mandatory reading.
HUMAN DRUG TESTING BY THE CIA,
hearings before the Subcommittee on Health and Scientific Research on the
Committee on Human Resources, United States Senate (Government Printing Office,
1977).
HYPNOTISM, by George Estabrooks
(Dutton, 1957). See especially the chapters on hypnosis in warfare and crime.
Some modern experts in clinical hypnosis decry Estabrooks' work. These
"experts" tend to have a history of funding by CIA cut-outs and
military intelligence. I suspect they denounce Estabrooks not because his work
was shoddy, but because he let the cat out of the bag.
INDIVIDUAL RIGHTS AND THE FEDERAL
ROLE IN BEHAVIOR MODIFICATION, by the Staff of the Subcommittee on
Constitutional Rights of the Committee of the Judiciary, United States Senate
(Government Printing Office, 1974).
MEGABRAIN, by Michael Hutchison (Ballantine,
1986). The only popular book on modern mind machines.
MESSENGERS OF DECEPTION, by Jacques
Vallee (And/Or, 1979). Vallee has been criticized, correctly, for including in
this book invented "conversations" with a composite character he calls
Major Murphy. But the section on cults in this book bears a haunting resemblance
to stories I have heard in my own investigations.
THE MIND MANIPULATORS, by Opton and
Scheflin (Paddington Press, 1978). Conservative, but extremely useful as a
reference work.
MIND WARS, by Ronald McCrae (St.
Martin's Press, 1984).
OPERATION MIND CONTROL, by Walter
Bowart (Dell, 1978). The best single volume on the subject. Difficult to find;
indeed, this book's rapid disappearance from bookstores and libraries has
aroused the suspicions of some researchers. (Tom David Books, POB 1107, Aptos,
CA 95001, carries this work.)
PHYSICAL CONTROL OF THE MIND, by Jose
Delgado (Harper and Row, 1969). Outdated but still essential.
PROJECT MKULTRA, joint hearing before
the Select Committee on Health and Scientific Research of the Committee on Human
Resources, United States Senate (Government Printing Office, 1977).
PSYCHIC WARFARE: FACT OR FICTION?
edited by John White (Aquarian, 1988). See especially Michael Rossman's
contribution.
PSYCHOTECHNOLOGY, Robert L.
Schwitzgebel and Ralph K. Schwitzgebel (Holt, Rhinehart and Winston, 1973).
THE SCIENTIST, by John Lilly
(expanded edition: Ronin, 1988). Bizarre -- Lilly is an
ex-"brainwashing" specialist who claims to be in contact with aliens.
Is he controlled or controlling?
THE SEARCH FOR "THE MANCHURIAN
CANDIDATE", by John Marks (Bantam, 1978). An invaluable book. However, many
people have made the mistake of assuming it tells the full story. It does not.
WERE WE CONTROLLED? by Lincoln
Lawrence (University Books, 1967). Explores possible connections to the JFK
assassination. Dr. Petter Lindstrom's endorsement of this work makes it
mandatory reading.
WHO KILLED JOHN LENNON? by Fenton
Bresler (St. Martin's Press, 1989). Interesting thesis concerning the possible
use of mind control on Mark David Chapman. Better in its analysis of Chapman
than in its history of mind control. In my own work, I have encountered data
which may help confirm Bresler's theory.
THE ZAPPING OF AMERICA, by Paul
Brodeur (MacLeod [Canadian edition], 1976). Contains a good chapter on microwave
mind control technology
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