http://thebrainpolice.blogspot.com/2010/03/terrible-mistake.html

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 10, 2010

A Terrible Mistake?

Today in the French News, was the startling announcement that the French
Government is demanding explanations from the United States for a mysterious
outbreak of mass insanity in the South Eastern Village of Pont-Saint-Esprit
that occurred almost 60 years ago. 500 hundred people were affected and
there were 5 deaths. The implications could have long range effects on
Franco-American relations.

The incident occurred in 1951 and started with the hospitals being flooded
with people in various stages of outward insanity. Children tried to murder
their parents, victims screamed that "red flowers were growing from their
heads", that their heads ahad turned to molten lead, their stomachs were
filled with snakes. Others were enthralled and claimed they saw heavenly
visons, heard cosmic music and were filled with the holy spirit.
At the time, scientists came up with various explanations ranging from
mercury tainted wheat to a recurrence of ergotism, or St. Anthony's Fire,
alegendary afflicion that vanished with the Middle Ages and was caused by
rye grains infected with the ergot fungus, which among other substances,
produced lysergic acid which is the active ingredient of LSD.

Mercury tainted wheat sold illegally by an Italian firm in the this decade
in Iraq was responsible for an outbreak of seeming insanity in an Iraqi
village, but the symptoms also were lethal in many cases, from the mercury.

The Pont-Saint-Esprit mystery was speculated about for years. Indeed a
tantalizing clue was given by Albert Hoffman, the Swiss scientist who worked
for Sandoz Laboratories who developed LSD and documented its effects. He
wrote in his work, LSD, My Problem Child, about the connection with Sandoz
and the American CIA and how Sandoz was able to interest the Americans in
the possible use of an aerosol delivered LSD for military use.

Recently after the allegations of American involvement began to resurface in
2009 and were never successfully quashed, the Author, H.P. Albarelli Jr.
just released a book in the USA called A Terrible Mistake: The Murder of
Frank Olson and the CIA's Secret Cold War Experiments.

He documents through the revelations of Ex CIA personel that the outbreak in
1951 in Pont-St-Esprit was the direct result of a covert CIA experiment with
an aerosol LSD which was carried out by the Special Operations Division of
Fort Detrick, MD.

He documents that the scientists who produced the explanations were experts
working for Sandoz which was supplying the US Army and the CIA with LSD for
experimental use.
He goes on to say, that at one point and this has been documented in many
places, the CIA entertained the idea of using  LSD in a control in an
American city by placing it in the water system, but the results of the
French experience were so horrific that they reconsidered it.

Indeed, in documents that Alberelli obtained from Ft. Dertrick, the Special
Operations Force had considered, in a 1950 memo, using the aerosol in the
New York City Subway System in a test to study its effects.

The unfolding of this story took a few years of research and the results are
so damning that we are on the verge of diplomatic and political scandal
because of Albarellis work.

There are many documented articles and interviews with survivors of the
Pont-Saint-Esprit tragedy if you are interested and many articles available
with the evolution of the story over the last 60 years.

POSTED BY MICRODOT AT 6:47 PM
2 COMMENTS:

 Engineer of Knowledge said...
Hello Microdot,
I will be very interested in how this story develops. During the McCarty era
of paranoid Communism fear in the U.S., I would not put pass anything of
this type as France was becoming more Socialist.

7:18 PM
 microdot said...
This story is all over the French News services today. I don't know if it is
trying to deflect reality from the upcoming regional elections this weeke
end. The UMP party is going to get royally reamed....

I believe the Special Operations Force wanted to try out their new toy and
didn't expect the results. Why they chose Pont-Saint-Esprit is another
mystery remaining to be answered, but there was an American base near there
until the 60's.


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