Size | Seeds | Peers | Completed |
---|---|---|---|
151.2 MiB | 0 | 0 | 0 |
ELF stands for extremely [low] frequency electromagnetic waves,
from the very slow brain frequencies up to about 100 cycles per
second.... But the Mind Control label really upset Koslov. He
ordered the SRI investigations for the Navy stopped, and canceled
another $35,000 in Navy funds slated for more remote viewing
work."
Contrary to Koslov's order to kill the research, the Navy quietly
continued to fork out $100,000 for a two-year project directed by
a BIONICS specialist.
Mind control is not a humanitarian pastime: the project was
military, and if SRI was indeed a source of covert EMR brain
experimentation, test subjects from the community at large were
subjected to torture plied with the same thorough disregard for
human rights as the radiation tests conducted at the height of
the Cold War.
The treatment subjects have received at the hands of their own
government would be considered atrocities if practiced in
wartime.
Mind control was also used in domestic covert operations designed
to further the CIA's heady geopolitical ambitions, and during the
Vietnam War period SRI was a hive of covert political subterfuge.
The Symbionese Liberation Army, like the People's Temple, was a
creation of the CIA. The SLA had at its core a clique of black
ex-convicts from Vacaville Prison. Donald DeFreeze, otherwise
known as Cinque, led the SLA. He was formerly an informant for
the LAPDs Criminal Conspiracy Section and the director of
Vacaville's Black Cultural Association (BCA), a covert mind
control unit with funding from the CIA channeled through SRI. The
Menlo Park behavior modification specialists experimented with
psychoactive drugs administered to members of the BCA. Black
prisoners were programmed to murder selected black leaders once
on the outside.
The CIA/SRI zombie killer hit list included Oakland school
superintendent Dr. Marcus Foster, and Panthers Huey Newton and
Bobby Seale, among others. DeFreeze stated that at Vacaville in
1971-72, he was the subject of a CIA mind control experiment. He
described his incarceration on the prisons third floor, where he
was corralled by CIA agents who drugged him and said he would
become the leader of a radical movement and kidnap a wealthy
person. After his escape from Vacaville (an exit door was left
unlocked for him), that's exactly what he did.
EM mind control machines were championed at Stanford University
by Dr. Karl Pribram, director of the Neuropsychology Research Laboratory: "I certainly could educate a child by putting an
electrode in the lateral hypothalmus and then selecting the
situations at which I stimulate it. In this was I can grossly
change his behavior." Psychology Today feted Pribram as "The
Magellan of Brain Science." He obtained his B.S. and M.D. degrees
at the University of Chicago, and at Stanford University studied
how the brain processes and stores sensory imagery. He is
credited with discovering that mental imaging bears a close
resemblance to hologram projection (the basis for transmitting
images to the craniums of test subjects under the misnomer
"remote viewing?").
The Institute is bonded incestuously to corporate sponsors.
Former SRI Chairman E. Hornsby Wasson, for example, was a
director of several major companies, including Standard Oil of
California, and he went on to become chairman of the Chamber of
Commerce and CEO of Pacific Telephone & Telegraph and Bell
Telephone of Nevada.
The SRI/SAIC psi experiments were supervised at Langley by John
McMahon, second in command under William Casey, succeeding Bobby
Ray Inman, the SAIC director. McMahon has, according to Philip Agee, the CIA whistle-blowing exile, an affinity for
technological exotics for CIA covert actions. He was recruited by
the Agency after his graduation from Holy Cross College (the alma
mater of CIA contractees Edward Bennett Williams, attorney, and
Robert Maheu, hit man). He is a former director of the Technical
Services Division, deputy director for Operations, and in 1982
McMahon was appointed deputy director of Central Intelligence. He
left the Agency six years later to take the position of president
of the Lockheed Missiles and Space Systems Group. In 1994, he
moved on to Draper Laboratories. He is a director of the Defense
Enterprise Fund and an adviser to congressional committees.
Many of the SRI empaths were mustered from L. Ron Hubbard's
Church of Scientology. Harold Puthoff, the Institute's senior
researcher, was a leading Scientologist. Two remote viewers from
SRI have also held rank in the Church: Ingo Swann, a Class VII
Operating Thetan, a founder of the Scientology Center in Los
Angeles, and the late Pat Price. Puthoff and Targ's lab assistant
was a Scientologist married to a minister of the church. When
Swann joined SRI, he stated openly, "fourteen Clears participated
in the experiments, more than I would suspect." At the time he
denied CIA involvement, but now acknowledges, "it was rather
common knowledge all along who the sponsor was, although in
documents the identity of the Agency was concealed behind the
sobriquet of an east-coast scientist."
The Agency's interest was quite extensive. A number of agents of
the CIA came themselves ultimately to SRI to act as subjects in remote viewing experiments, as did some members of Congress.
"If you recall," astronaut Edgar Mitchell, another participant in
the experiments, informed radio disinformation broker Art Bell on
April 30, 1996, "back in the early '70s, I did work at SRI with
Harold Puthoff and Russell Targ and Uri Geller, and I was invited
to brief the CIA on our results. George Bush was head of the CIA
at that time. Subsequently, a great deal of psychic work was done
by CIA, and very successfully because the Soviets were doing it
at that time as well -- very successfully."
Mitchell spins a cocoon of mystical yarns as outrageously
far-fetched as any of his SRI cronies. He claims to have traced
the brain's center of ESP to native creativity, a "relationship
that exists in nature, it's responsible for our
inner-experience.... It involves the zero-point field, quantum
physics, mystical experience, parapsychological functioning...."
The ubiquitous "aliens," he insists, are at the heart of the
federal UFO cover-up, visitors from a civilization "a few
million, or even a few billion years older than we are." His book
The Way of the Explorer is chock-a-block with the astronaut's
rambling Shamanic cover stories, supposedly the culmination of 25
years of research on intelligent life in the universe and the
paranormal.