-Caveat Lector-
Nice item with story of old Asssassins who used Hash (fom when he word
is derived as I recall) to induce initiates to commit murder for them -
maybe like Sirhan, and Littleton - drugs, suggestion, the painting of
many mental images - TV or a movie to create the - "get the picture"
atmosphere? Good item here.......it is said that there were those who
believed even David Koresh was The Mahdi....the one who will reveal the
deep and secret meanings of the bible when he returns.....so is like the
Alpha and Omega man?
Saba
This article may not be reproduced in any form without the express
permission of Martin Cannon: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Copyright � Martin Cannon, 1997
THE PRE-HISTORY OF MKULTRA
By Martin Cannon
January 1997
The concept of mind control strikes most people as either futuristic or
fabulous. In fact, human beings have employed effective
thought-processing techniques ever since the first oligarches sought to
exploit their underlings, ever since the first mystics sought communion
with their deities, ever since man first sought to understand his inner
self. Mind control, broadly defined, has been with us in one form or
another since the beginning of civilization.
The Mushroom Warriors
Arguably, the Russians really were the first brainwashers, just as the
propagandists of the 1950s alleged.
4500 years ago, the Koyak and Wiros tribes of the central Russian
steppes conducted what may be the first experiments in stimulating
violence through the use of drugs. They derived from the Amanita
muscaria mushroom a drug which reduced the warrior's anxiety and fear
while increasing his strength, stamina, mental acuity, and ability to
withstand pain. The shamans hit upon a noteworthy method of increasing
the drug's potency: The mushroom was first fed to reindeer, and the
soldiers would drink the animals' urine on the eve of battle. Viking
warriors also depended on chemical stimulants derived from deer urine.
(Today's soldiers should ponder this history before complaining about
their MREs.) Combatants in India relied on similar drugs, as did Native
American tribes of the Southwest. Incan warriors made use of the coca
leaf. The tradition continues today: In Vietnam, soldiers sought relief
in a veritable pharma-cornucopia, which offered everything from
marijuana to heroin. The warring tribes of Somalia, Rwanda and Liberia
all routinely partake of the locally-preferred narcotics.
In all ancient cultures, the shaman prepared for healing work by
retreating to a cave, or some other quiet, intensely dark environment --
a sensory deprivation chamber, if you will. Magic could occur only after
prolonged sessions of drumming and chanting: rhythmic sound stimulation.
The shaman would visualize descent into a lower world, just as a modern
hypnotherapist might use "falling" imagery during trance induction. As
William Sargant, a British psychiatrist, said of these ancient rituals:
"Some persons can produce a state of trance and dissociation in
themselves, or in others, with a decreasing need for strong and repeated
emotional stresses, until it may become so much a conditioned pattern of
brain activity that it occurs with only minor stresses and difficulties;
for example, in the primitive religious context, at the renewed beat of
a drum, or the screaming roar of the rhombos... If the trance is
accompanied by a state of mental dissociation, the person experiencing
it can be profoundly influenced in his subsequent thinking and
behavior."
Students of occult history maintain that the heirophants of the ancient
Egyptian mystery schools practiced a strikingly-advanced form of
hypnosis, in which initiates entered profound trances, triggering what
we would today call an out-of-body-experience. Even modern-day,
scientifically-oriented hypnotists recognize their debt to the
Aesculapian priests of ancient Greece, who practiced a hypnosis-based
form of medicine and behavior modification they called "dream healing."
The oracles of ancient Greece, through the breathing of certain vapors
and the imbibing of certain liquids, dwelt within an altered state, as
did, to varying degrees, those who participated in the mysteries.
Sargant does not hesitate to use the term "brainwashing" to describe the
rites of the Oracle of Triphonius. During these mysteries, the initiate
experienced sensory deprivation, sudden confusion techniques, selected
auditory and visual stimuli, drugs -- and possibly even the proverbial
whack on the skull. Unsurprisingly, vivid hallucinations often resulted.
Western civilization, we are told, was founded on the Greek model -- but
to what degree was Greek civilization itself founded on mind control?
Mystery cults expanded throughout the ancient world, always centering
(as Dr. Pierre Janet once noted) in the same types of pastoral locales
favored by modern centers of Marian devotion. At Eleusis, as at Lourdes,
the pilgrim entered craftily-designed alternate world, set amid
grottoes, streams, caves and candlelight rites:
"Initiation ceremonies of secret cults of the mystery-type invariably
involve tests, sometimes most severe ones. The effect of certain
experiences was a carefully worked program of mind training which is
familiar in modern times as that employed by certain totalitarian states
to 'condition' or reshape the thinking of the individual. This process
produces a state in which the mind is pliant enough to have certain
ideas implanted: ideas which resist a great deal of counter-influence."
The Truth About "Magic"
During the Middle Ages and Renaissance, alchemists filled many an
obscure text with descriptions of techniques intended to focus the will
and alter awareness. These auto-induced trance states probably account
for many of the visionary experiences reported in occult lore. In a
sense, magic works -- in spite of, not because of, the theory of the
magician.
Example: Ritualists once set great store by a device called "The
Triangle of the Art." This was, essentially, a round glass (roughly a
foot in diameter) painted black on the reverse and set into a triangular
wooden frame, which was painted white and bedecked with esoteric
symbols. The magician was to sit in a darkened room facing this glass,
flanked on either side by lit candles placed just outside his direct
vision. By studying the dark mirror, concentrating on the reflected
light dancing on his face, the magician would slip into the spirit
realms and commune with forces beyond. Undoubtedly, the device did its
job, though the triangular frame and eldritch calligraphy contributed
little aside from decoration. As the American military would re-discover
in the 20th Century, flickering light can profoundly affect perception
and awareness.
The literature of occultism, stripped of its supernatural pretenses,
records the long pre-history of Mesmerism. The demons called forth by
Prelati and Gilles de Rais, the Colosseum of horrors witnessed by
Buenvenuto Cellini, the spirits evoked by Edward Kelly and John Dee, the
devils who possessed the sisters at Loudon: Mind manipulation may not
explain all of these phenomena, but it explains much. The MKULTRA
scientists merely mapped lands the alchemists had long ago discovered.
As Richard Cavendish points out in his history of The Black Arts:
"There is not much doubt that the procedures of ritual magic are likely
to cause hallucinations. The magician prepares himself by abstinence and
lack of sleep, or by drink, drugs and sex. He breathes in fumes which
may affect his brain and senses. He performs mysterious rites which tug
at the deepest, most emotional and unreasoning levels of his mind, and
he is further intoxicated by the killing of an animal, the wounding of a
human being and in some cases the approach to and the achievement of
orgasm. Through all this he concentrates on a mental image of the being
he hopes to see. It does not seem at all unlikely that at the high point
of the ceremony he may actually see it."
Religion
Similar practices had similar results within the confines of mainstream
faith. Teresa of Avila, the 16th century mystic, may be famous for her
charming homily "God is to be found in the pots and pans" -- yet she did
not receive her visions spontaneously, while going about her daily
labors like other women. To the contrary: In order to experience the
divine, she required of herself (and of her charges) penances, solitude,
strict discipline, chants, and ongoing mental prayer. This continual
hypnotic auto-induction resulted in the state of ecstasy -- the state of
trance -- depicted in Bernini's famous statue. Her fellow Carmelites,
having undergone the same preparation, would experience the same
visions, interviewing celestial visitors alongside Teresa.
History's other great mystics -- inspired seers, such as St. John of the
Cross, Plotinus, and Meister Eckhart -- usually followed similar recipes
for ecstasy.
According to William Sargant, the methodologies of religious conversion
"often approximate so closely to modern political techniques of
brain-washing and thought control that each throws light on the
mechanics of the other." Sargant pays particular attention to the great
English revivalist of the mid-18th century, John Wesley. His technique
("used," according to Sargant, "not only in many other successful
religions but in modern political warfare") involved an all-out assault
on the emotions, primarily the emotion of fear. The preacher would hit
this note at the loudest possible volume for the longest possible time,
until many in the audience succumbed to hysterical collapse. This
approach differs hardly at all from the ultra-emotional "conditioning"
sessions conducted by such modern-day evangelists as Jimmy Swaggart and
Jim Bakker.
Interestingly, Wesley even recommended a form of electro-convulsive
therapy involving Leyden jars. He considered the intentional
electrification of human beings both harmless and beneficial, "a
thousand medicines in one." John Wesley may thus be the first
"programmer" to take a serious interest in the use of electricity to
affect mind and body. All religious systems have incorporated practices
designed to modify consciousness: the chanting of mantras, focusing of
concentration, guided imagery, breathing exercises, group ritual,
intense prayer, etc. Mind control, defined broadly, has affected history
to the extent that religion has affected history. The wars of faith have
rarely been more than the clashes of psychic autocracies.
The Assassins
Perhaps the most innovative thinker in the history of psychological
manipulation was the legendary Persian warlord Hasan I Sabbah, otherwise
known as "The Old Man of the Mountains." Reportedly a boyhood friend of
the poet Omar Khyam, Hasan was the son of a governor. He was educated in
the ways of the Ismailis, a semi-gnostic sect based in Cairo, which used
subtle psychological techniques to instill initiates with a fanatic
loyalty to the Egyptian caliph.
When the ambitious and ruthless Hasan was exiled from Persia in 1078, he
vowed revenge -- and soon achieved it, by perfecting Ismaili
mind-control methods. In the words of Marco Polo, Hasan "caused draughts
of a soporific nature to be administered to ten or a dozen youths." He
would then transport the drugged youths to a beautiful, but inescapable,
valley adjacent to his hillside fortress near Kasvin. Every detail of
this Persian garden corresponded with the descriptions of paradise found
in the Koran -- including a connoisseur's collection of harem girls.
"Upon awakening from this state of lethargy their senses were struck by
all the delightful objects, and each perceiving himself surrounded by
lovely damsels, singing, playing, and attracting his regards by the most
fascinating caresses..." The recruits believed that they had literally
died and gone to heaven. After a few weeks of beatific bliss, the young
fighting men were (much to their disappointment) expelled from paradise
and returned to the outside world. Hasan would them send them on
missions of what we would now call "unconventional warfare." The
promised reward for both success and martyrdom was a revisit to the
garden of delights. Thus, Hasan managed to overcome the most serious
obstacle to effective soldiering: the innate human will for
self-preservation. The troops welcomed death, and maintained their
ecstatic vision of the afterlife through the liberal use of hashish --
hence the term hashishim, from which we derive the word "assassin."
Another "recruiting" technique was more direct: Hasan would purchase
children from the poor, and raise them from infancy to become absolutely
obedient warriors. So great was Hasan's control that he once impressed a
visiting dignitary by ordering one of his men to leap off a cliff, an
order fulfilled without a second's hesitation.
The hashishim advanced Hasan's interests, established a network of
strongholds, and either murdered or intimidated all rival rulers. By
1094 these elite troops, wearing the white tunics and red sashes
characteristic of their sect, had made Hasan the most powerful warlord
in the area now called the Middle East. Reportedly, King Richard the
Lion-hearted once contracted Hasan to have a mind-controlled assassin
perform a "hit" against a rival crusader.
Such, at least, is the story. Alas, figures like The Old Man of the
Mountains invite much myth, and never leave the sort of paper trail
modern-day researchers would prefer. We know, however, that as the
centuries progressed, the hashishim evolved into an extremely widespread
cult, which had made its presence known in Russia, China, and even India
-- where the ways of the assassins may have inspired the notorious
Thugees. Hasan's sect survives to this day throughout the Middle East.
In Gujurat state, India, and in Pakistan, they are now known as the
Khojas, and owe their allegiance to the Aga Khan, leader of the
modern-day Ismailis.
Mesmerism
All sciences of today owe something to the pseudosciences of older
times. As we have seen, hypnotism's debt is particularly large. Many
history books credit Franz Anton Mesmer (1733-1815) as the founder of
the science of hypnotism, yet we should properly classify Mesmer as an
occultist, not a scientist, for he never represented the Age of Reason.
He reflected older traditions.
Specifically, Mesmer adopted and expanded upon the ideas first proposed
by that impressive and irascible 16th Century alchemist, Paracelsus.
This fascinating healer, one-quarter empiricist and three-quarters quack
(at a time when most medical men approached the 100% mark for
charlatanism), made many enemies in his day. His personality may be
gauged by the fact that his real name -- Theophrastus Bombastus von
Hohoenheim -- gave rise to our word "bombast." Paracelsus held that life
flows through an invisible and intangible liquid he called "mumia."
Alchemists generally refer to this substance as a fluid, although we
perhaps ought to think of it as something akin to the aura, or Wilhelm
Reich's orgone energy. Supposedly, bodily fluids (including blood, sweat
and urine) maintain this life essence for a brief period. Paracelsus
favored applying these substances to a diseased body, arguing that
healthy mumia could attract diseased mumia, much as a magnet attracts
iron. This practice apparently led Paracelsus to use actual magnets on
his patients. He cured hysterical disorders in women by placing the
positive pole of a magnet on the head and the negative pole of another
magnet below. Again, the magic worked, in spite of the theory of the
magician.
During the Age of Reason, a few lonely voices continued to propound the
notion of animal magnetism, particularly an English doctor named Richard
Mead and the Jesuit Professor Maximilian Hehle, of Vienna. In 1774,
Hehle used magnets to cure a woman's stomach cramps. After the patient
recovered, Hehle happened to mention his success to a fellow Viennese --
the aforementioned Franz Anton Mesmer.
Mesmer was hooked. He felt that Hehle's experiment confirmed his own
ideas of an "etheric fluid" which pervades all space and controls human
health -- a concept cribbed, obviously, from Paracelsus' idea of the
mumia. During the next year, Mesmer used magnets, and eventually his
hands, to manipulate this imagined ether. Initial successes with
hypochondriacs and hysterics quickly established Mesmer's reputation. It
became tarnished just as rapidly, when he attempted to use animal
magnetism to cure an attractive young pianist of her blindness. She and
a number of pretty female "patients" came to live with Mesmer, creating
something of a scandal: The Viennese sensed that "magnetic" treatment
could allow the unscrupulous to take advantage of the fairer sex. (This
remains a concern in hypnotic practice.)
Mesmer found it expedient to remove himself to Paris. There, he
established a fantastically successful salon catering to the
aristocracy. Mesmer initiated a form of "group therapy": Patients would
enter a large tub filled with water, magnets, and iron filings. They
formed a circle, alternating male and female, pressing thighs together
(the healing sessions contained an undeniable sexual element), and used
their hands to manipulate each other's "ether." Mesmer presided over
these ceremonies in flowing robes of light violet, waving a long
magnet-wand over his patients and any other object he cared to
"magnetize."
Obviously, all this was buncombe. Yet many declared themselves cured, or
at least profoundly affected. Mesmer's treatment sent his charges into
violent convulsions -- a complete physical collapse known as "the
crisis." Some experienced hallucinations, as when certain patients
reported seeing flames shooting out of Mesmer's magnets. These
fascinating, yet disturbing, reports prompted King Louis XVI to
commission an independent study by a respected team of scientists, which
included that esteemed visitor from America, Dr. Benjamin Franklin.
They examined Mesmer's claims, most of which did not stand up under
close scrutiny. The commissioners observed numerous patients touch a
"magnetized" tree to regain health; many mistakenly touched the wrong
tree, yet experienced the crisis nonetheless. Franklin and his fellow
experts determined that "imagination without magnetism produces
convulsions, and that the magnetism without the imagination produces
nothing." So much for Mesmer's theory of the all-encompassing etheric
fluid. The report concluded "...that the existence of the fluid is
absolutely destitute of proof, and that the fluid, having no existence,
can consequently have no use."
Mesmer was proven a fraud -- but a fraud who, disconcertingly enough,
had obtained impressive results. For the discerning eye, the spectacle
of magnetic healing still provided much to marvel at. If "imagination"
alone could produce profound physical effects, then the human mind
possessed previously unguessed-at capabilities. Moreover, Mesmer
eventually discovered the somnambulistic (as opposed to the convulsive)
hypnotic state. This is the form of hypnosis used therapeutically by
later, more scientific practitioners. His magic had worked despite his
theory; it was up to his followers to straighten out the theory.
That process, alas, took the better part of the next hundred years.
Arguably, the process continues today.
Hypnotism
Mesmer's pupil, the Comte de Puysegur, used what he termed magnetic
somnabulism to cure a shepherd boy. The experiment's results largely
accorded with those achieved by modern hypnotic practitioners; the
subject even experienced amnesia covering the trance episode. De
Puysegur also used hypnosis (which had not yet attained that label) to
conduct experiments -- reportedly successful -- in telepathy.
Two surgeons, Dr. John Elliotson of London and Dr. James Esdaile, who
worked in India, performed operations using "mesmeric anaesthesia." The
technique even allowed Esdaile to perform painless amputations. Yet the
British medical establishment was incensed by Elliotson's dabblings in
what they considered the occult; his hospital banned the use of
mesmerism in medical practice. Perhaps no other episode better
exemplifies the limitations of what we might label the "CSICOP"
mentality: The arch-skeptics of Elliotson's day condemned thousands of
patients to agonies hypnosis could have averted. Yet scientific
skittishness was understandable: Many experimenters were uncredentialed,
and many used Mesmer's techniques to explore ESP, always a dangerous
topic.
Interestingly, a number of practitioners -- such as Alexandre Bertrand,
Dr. J.H.D. Petetin, and Dr. L. Rostan -- reported very positive results
in this field. "Magnetized" patients seemed to develop telepathy and
other paranormal abilities. An American doctor, Lyman B. Larkin, used
animal magnetism to cure a servant girl. When entranced, the girl
developed a secondary personality in marked contrast to her natural
character. She also reportedly established paranormal powers, and
communicated with a "fairy" who appeared to her during magnetized
sessions. This case -- with its bizarre combination of hypnosis,
multiple personality disorder, ESP experimentation and visual
hallucination -- could almost be considered a dry run for MKULTRA.
Scottish physician James Braid invented the term "neuro-hypnosis" in the
mid-19th century. He proposed a purely physical explanation of the
process. This theory, though totally erroneous, was carefully couched in
medical terms and thus did much to carry hypnosis into respectability.
(If we compare Elliotson and Braid, we might conclude that respect
accrues not to he who produces results, but to he who masters the
jargon.) Like his predecessors, Braid found that he could use hypnosis
to perform relatively painless surgeries. Many of the most intriguing
hypnotic phenomena -- catalepsy, amnesia, analgesia, loss of sight or
hearing, release of inhibition -- now received, for the first time,
attention from the scientific establishment.
Braid's theories attracted Professor Jean Martin Charcot, the famed
Parisian neurologist. He conducted experiments with hypnotism at the
Salpetriere Hospital, eventually aided by a trio of soon-to-be-stellar
associates: Sigmund Freud, Pierre Janet, and Alfred Binet.
Alas, Charcot founded his work upon flawed assumptions. Like Braid, he
considered hypnosis a purely mechanical process; like Mesmer, he felt
magnets and metals could set the process into motion. Because he
operated primarily on women suffering from hysteria, he concluded that
hypnosis could only work on hysterical females. To Charcot, the hypnotic
state resulted from a disease of the nervous system; if a patient "went
under" easily, that patient was obviously physically ill.
During this period -- which some call the Golden Age of hypnosis --
rivalry developed between the specialists at the Saltpetriere and a
somewhat more advanced school of hypnosis at the Nancy Medical Society,
led by Drs. Ambrose Liebeault and Hippolyte Bernheim. They saw hypnosis
not as a symptom of physiological disorder, but as a psychological
process, helpful in healing common neuroses. Bernheim and Liebeault
asserted that suggestion alone caused hypnosis. Normal people could be
hypnotized, although differing individuals had different levels of
hypnotic susceptibility.
Even though Janet and Freud first established themselves at the
Saltpetriere, the work done at Nancy intrigued both men. Janet conducted
the first serious work into the subject of multiple personality
disorder. Secondary personalities, he felt, could be artificially
induced by the hypnotist -- an important point, long the subject of
dispute. Janet improved upon Charcot's theories considerably when he
investigated hypnosis as a process of dissociation -- the separation of
one segment of the mind from another. Neurotic patients often had
repressed memories of traumatic events in their past; Janet discovered
that once the patient re-awakened the memories, the symptoms of neurotic
disorder often abated. Hypnotic age regression provided a key that could
unlock the past. In 1889, Freud became Bernheim's pupil, after
witnessing a demonstration which made a deep impression:
"A man was placed in a condition of somnambulism, and then made to go
through all sorts of hallucinatory experiences. On being wakened, he
seemed at first to know nothing at all of what had taken place during
his hypnotic sleep. Bernheim then asked him in so many words to tell him
what had happened while he was under hypnosis. The man declared that he
could not remember anything. Bernheim, however, insisted upon it,
pressed him, and assured him that he did know and that he must remember,
and lo and behold, the man wavered, began to reflect, and remembered in
a shadowy fashion first one of the occurrences that had been suggested
to him, then something else, his recollection growing increasingly
clear..."
Freud drew a lasting lesson from this experiment: The mind could know
something -- yet not KNOW what it knew. The unconscious stored
information at differing levels. Note, too, that Bernheim's patient
eventually recalled not what actually occurred during the experiment,
but the hallucinatory pseudo-memories that Dr. Bernheim had suggested.
After making the intellectual segue between the Saltpetriere and Nancy,
Freud eventually became frustrated with hypnosis. The results, he felt,
were capricious and impermanent, and not everyone who needed help proved
susceptible to trance induction. Freud turned to free association as
"the royal road to the unconscious." Thus was born psychoanalysis -- the
long, sometimes painful process which exposed the patient's resistances
and repressions. Freud saw resistance as a signpost directing the
analyst to the root of his patient's problems; hypnosis, by contrast,
concealed these resistances. "The hypnotic therapy endeavors to cover up
and as it were to whitewash something going on in the mind, the analytic
to lay bare and remove something. The first works cosmetically, the
second surgically."
Into the Twentieth Century
Freud's discoveries fascinated healers of the mind, and many followed
his lead in abandoning hypnotherapy for analysis. For a while, hypnosis
settled into the background of intellectual thought -- until military
psychologists brought the technique back into action during World War I,
along with that unsettling new development, electroshock. Doctors in
many armies used both electricity and trance to treat "combat shock" and
other dissociative disorders arising from the strain of battle.
According to the respected historian John Toland, one such patient may
have been a German corporal named Adolf Hitler.
In 1918, Hitler lay in a Pasewalk military hospital, stricken with a
psychosomatic blindness. There, Toland tells us, the future fuehrer was
attended by Dr. Edmund Forster, an important hypnosis researcher from
Berlin University. Hysterical blindness is precisely the sort of symptom
that would have interested a clinician like Forster. He may have opened
the corporal's eyes in more ways than one. During this stay at Pasewalk,
Hitler experienced a "vision" -- perhaps induced hypnotically -- in
which he heard voices entreating him to become the savior of Germany (or
so Hitler later claimed).
Toland obliquely suggests a truly remarkable scenario: Adolf Hitler as
the first Manchurian Candidate. An unsettling notion, to be sure.
Perhaps we should be grateful to Hitler "psychohistorian" Robert G.L.
Waite, who has argued persuasively that Forster never treated Hitler.
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