DEEP DIVES
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Deep Dive down the Rabbit Holes. Interactive channel for discussion of intel-past and present, Trump Comms, and The Q Key and maps.
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Unsuspecting Test Subjects

Perhaps one of the most disturbing facts about MK-Ultra is that many of the experiments were carried out with test subjects who didn’t know what they were taking.

The effects of LSD — especially any long-term effects — were largely unknown at the time, but the lack of research didn’t stop Gottlieb from giving the drug to anyone he could.

Famously, Ken Kesey — author of One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest — accepted LSD indirectly from Gottlieb, and began carrying out tests of his own. His experiments, which he called “acid tests”, involved offering LSD to fellow college students at parties to see how it changed their perception and mood.
Gottlieb had many ways of procuring new human test subjects for his experiments throughout MK-Ultra’s existence.

One of his earlier methods was using patients of mental institutions, and hospitals for people with drug addictions.

Early on, he used patients at the Addiction Research Center in Kentucky who were already addicted to drugs. Many of them were unaware that these experiments were taking place.
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Whitney Bulger’s Treatment

Whitney Bulger was the leader of the Winter Hill Gang in Massachusetts.

After Bulger was arrested, he agreed to become a test subject in the MK-Ultra program to have his sentence reduced.

He was told the drug was used for treating schizophrenia. He was dosed with LSD more than 50 times…according to his own reports.
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Whitney Bulger
Bulger was eventually released from prison but returned…for numerous counts of murder…following his “treatment”. He recalled in letters from jail that the doctor —who administered his dose of LSD and monitored his reaction—would repeatedly ask him leading questions, including if he would ever consider killing anyone.
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Collaboration With German Nazis & Japanese Torture Specialists

What many Americans don’t know is that during World War II the CIA (OSS at the time) called on torture specialists who worked within the concentration camps in Europe. These specialists helped them to carry out the experiments for MK-Ultra.

Gottlieb and his team of researchers not only mimicked many of the experiments that took place in the concentration camps of WWII, but they also hired so-called “experts” in torture and human experimentation as consultants for MK-Ultra tests.
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2. International Experimentation

Some of the more grotesque and shocking MK-Ultra experiments took place outside of America…mainly in Canada and Western Europe.

Gottlieb is noted to have carried out extensive experimentation in Europe. It was reported that Gottlieb and his team of researchers sought out criminals…both convicted and soon-to-be-convicted…and got them to agree to the testing in exchange for reduced sentences. In some cases, they proceeded with testing, even if the subjects refused.

His tests included offering them high doses of psychedelic drugs, depriving them of sleep for days at a time, using electroshock stimulation repeatedly to try to break down their sense of self, and a variety of other torture methods.

Neither the tests in America nor the ones that took place outside the country were ever scrutinized by other parties in the C-I-A. Gottlieb carried out his experiments without limitations, restrictions, or reprimand for many years.
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Canadian “Driving Experiments”

Donald Ewen Cameron was a Nazi Scientist experimenting with MK-Ultra. He’s best known for his Canadian “driving experiments.”

Cameron
would drive over the border to Canada to carry out tests on non-Americans in prisons and psychiatric hospitals.

Subjects were often placed into an involuntary coma for weeks or months at a time, and delivered repeated messages while unconscious… in an attempt to plant memories or ideas in their heads.

Large doses of LSD and other psychedelics were administered to unknowing or unwilling patients.

He also experimented with paralytic drugs. He intermittently administered electric shocks many times higher than the standard power… to see if the subject could overcome the paralytic state in which they were placed.
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Truth Experiments

In addition to mind control, the CIA worked tirelessly to find out if a variety of drugs could be used as a truth serum. Presumably, the C-I-A planned to use these methods in interrogations if they proved successful.

Many truth experiments involved different forms of psychological and physical torture, but among the most disturbing were those carried out with “uppers” and “downers”.

Subjects would be hooked up to two IVs…one with barbiturates and the other with amphetamines. The barbiturates would be administered until the subject was nearly unconscious. The barbiturates would then be stopped, and amphetamines would be delivered to wake the subject up again.
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Coming out of their drunken-like stupor from barbiturates, the subject would be energized by the amphetamines and would talk uncontrollably and incoherently. The idea was to ask the subject questions… in this state of babbling… to try to get the truth out of them.

Unfortunately, most of the subjects died from the drug interactions, and as a result this type of testing was discontinued.
Long-Term LSD Dosing

Another bizarre and inhumane experiment involved dosing subjects with LSD daily for long periods. In some cases, subjects received an average or above-average dose of LSD every day for more than two months straight.

Gottlieb used this testing method to see the long-term effects of LSD and if repeated hallucinations or psychedelic experiments would gradually deconstruct one’s sense of self.
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The Rise of “Hippie Culture”

The “hippie” counterculture movement that defined American culture in the 60s and 70s was believed to have started as a direct result of Gottlieb’s experiments.

Ken Kesey, mentioned previously, was introduced to LSD that was brought to America…and specifically Stanford University.

Kesey’s “acid tests” were typically accompanied by loud music, other drugs, and alcohol, and they served as the foundation for anti-establishment and hippie culture.
The End of MK-Ultra & Its Aftermath

MK-Ultra experiments came to an end (or did it) in 1973, about 20 years after they began. The project created distrust in the federal government that still exists today.

Destruction of MK-Ultra Records

By 1973, Gottlieb’s superiors ordered the destruction of documents and records from the MK-Ultra project. Reports state that the destruction of documents was ordered because the C-I-A officials feared they would be declassified in the wake of the Watergate Scandal.

It’s believed that most of the documentation was destroyed from the CIA’s archives before the information was released to government officials and the public. However, approximately 20,000 documents remained and were investigated by officials and attorneys.
Frank Church, a lawyer and Senator from Idaho, formed the “Church Committee,” a group dedicated to the exposure of MK-Ultra and related CIA projects. The Church Committee helped complete the CIA’s investigation and eventually pressured the President Gerald Ford to put new laws in place to protect future subjects from such treatment.
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Presidential Order for Transparency:

In 1976, under advisement from the Church Committee, President Gerald Ford presented an executive order, later referred to as the “Presidential Order for Transparency.”

This order stated that any future tests and experiments involving humans…issued by the CIA or other government programs… must be clear, transparent, and upfront with subjects about their intent and methods for experimentation.
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The Montauk Experiments that occurred in the 70s and 80s would lead us to believe that MK Ultra experiments never ended. The false flags that were perpetrated on us by the Clowns-In-America…many
within this past decade…is more proof that the experiments never stopped.

Tomorrow we will continue our discussions on this topic…specifically the Kool Aid Acid Test…and how that ties back to the social engineering by Tavistock.
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Yesterday we briefly talked about Ken Kesey. Many associate Ken Kesey with his famous novel (that later became an Oscar Best Film winner)...”One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest.” Others associate him with the LSD movement. Some, like myself, associate him with both. Today we are going to talk about the latter.

(I will silence the chat and channel until I’m done copy/pasting the presentation).
Ken Kesey studied creative writing at Stanford University from the years 1958-60.

While at Stanford, Kesey volunteered for a CIA-funded study that sought to determine “the effects of psychedelic drugs, particularly LSD, psilocybin, mescaline, cocaine .. and DMT on people.”
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Kesey took these drugs and wrote down what he experienced at the nearby Veterans’ Hospital in Menlo Park, CA.

Kesey enjoyed his drug experiences, and signed up for a part time job at the Veterans’ Hospital, where soon he was stealing LSD out of the medicine chest and using it to turn on all his friends. Access to psychedelics and a bestselling debut novel made Kesey a leader of the West Coast counterculture in the early 1960’s.

The success of his novel, “Cuckoo’s Nest'' allowed Kesey to afford a ranch house in the hills not far from Stanford. The house soon became a center for bohemian party-goers.

His circle of friends were dubbed “The Merry Pranksters.”
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In the summer of 1964, the Pranksters went on a (fake as you will find out) road trip from California to New York in a colorfully painted school bus called Furthur (purposely misspelled).

This trip has been cited in popular culture as the birth of the counterculture. A 2011 documentary on Furthur proclaimed, “Ken Kesey lit the fuse for the explosion that started the sixties.”

Additionally, The University of Virginia library stated that, “Much of the hippie aesthetic that would dawn on the San Francisco scene in the late sixties can be traced back to the Merry Pranksters who openly used psychoactive drugs, wore outrageous attire, performed bizarre acts of street theater, and engaged in peaceful confrontation with not only the laws of conformity, but with the mores of conventionality.”
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Kesey intended to turn the road trip into a movie reminiscent of Jack Kerouac’s beat novel “On the Road.”

He outfitted the bus with audio and video equipment, (although if you look at the footage it is of very low quality).

Now for the red flags…
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This road trip…cited as the “epitome of a spontaneous bohemian adventure”... was in fact planned as a movie from the get go (and a novel, too). Think TAVISTOCK!

As it turns out… Kesey had spent many summers trying to make it in LA as an actor. And author Tom Wolfe rode along to write the novel version of the trip, “The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test.” Prankster Ken Babbs admitted… “ If Tom Wolfe's book never came out, the Pranksters would be nobodies.”
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