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-----Original Message-----
From: Nicky Molloy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Thursday, 10 February 2000 14:03
Subject: The Controllers - Martin Cannon 3/7



http://www.alientribe.com/abduct028.html

The Controllers part 3

A New Hypothesis of Alien Abduction - part 3 of 7
by Martin Cannon
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 electromagnetic 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 early 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 as 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 prestigious 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 sub-project 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 suburban 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
capabilities 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 ice-pick 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 severely 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 pseudo-memory. 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 pseudo-memory to rationalize abduction
claims, they cite experimental situations in which PSEUDO-MEMORY 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 pseudo-memory creation prove MY
point: Pseudo-memory 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
subconscious) 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].





(end of part 3)




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