The truth about the CIA no one wants to tell you about

bill burns

The United States’ three letter agencies have a deep history. But none more controversial than the CIA.

And this is the truth about the CIA no one wants to tell you about.

MK-Ultra was a top-secret CIA mind control program that was conducted during the 1950s and 1960s. The program was aimed at exploring the use of drugs and other methods for controlling the thoughts and actions of individuals. It was one of the most controversial and secretive projects ever undertaken by the CIA, and its true scope and goals remain shrouded in mystery to this day.

The origins of MK-Ultra can be traced back to the late 1940s when the CIA became concerned about the use of mind control techniques by the Soviet Union. In response, the agency launched a program to research and develop its own methods for controlling the minds of individuals.

One of the key goals of MK-Ultra was to develop a drug that could be used to control the thoughts and actions of individuals. The CIA experimented with a wide range of drugs, including LSD, mescaline, and other psychedelics, as well as barbiturates and other sedatives. The agency also explored the use of hypnosis and sensory deprivation, as well as various forms of torture and physical abuse.

The subjects of the MK-Ultra experiments were mainly unsuspecting Americans, including prisoners, patients in mental hospitals, and military personnel. The CIA also recruited people from other countries, including Canada and the United Kingdom. The agency conducted experiments on these individuals without their knowledge or consent, and many suffered permanent physical and psychological damage as a result.

One of the most notorious aspects of MK-Ultra was the use of LSD on unwitting subjects. The CIA dosed people with LSD and then monitored their behavior and thoughts, often in an attempt to determine the most effective methods for using the drug for mind control purposes. Some subjects were even subjected to electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) or lobotomies in conjunction with the LSD experiments.

The CIA also experimented with the use of hypnosis as a means of mind control. The agency attempted to induce a hypnotic trance in subjects and then suggest new thoughts, memories, and behaviors.

The goal was to determine whether hypnosis could be used to control individuals, but the results were inconsistent and often damaging to the subjects.

Another key aspect of MK-Ultra was the use of sensory deprivation, which involved depriving subjects of sight, sound, touch, and other sensory inputs.

The CIA believed that sensory deprivation could be used to break down the subject’s psychological resistance and make them more susceptible to mind control techniques.

In addition to the unethical nature of the experiments, the results of MK-Ultra were often disappointing and inconclusive. The CIA struggled to find a reliable method for controlling the minds of individuals, and many of the techniques that they explored proved to be ineffective.

The MK-Ultra program was eventually exposed in the 1970s when a series of investigative journalists uncovered evidence of the program and its goals. In response, the CIA was forced to admit that the program had taken place and to release some of the information about the experiments.

However, the full extent of the program remains unknown, and many of the records have been destroyed or remain classified to this day.

The legacy of MK-Ultra continues to this day, with many people still questioning the true nature and goals of the program. Some have even speculated that the program was part of a larger effort by the CIA to control the minds of individuals and manipulate the population as a whole.

Essentially, MK-Ultra was a top-secret CIA mind control program that was conducted during the 1950s and 1960s while the program was aimed at exploring the use of drugs and other methods for controlling the thoughts and actions of individuals, and its true scope and goals remain shrouded in mystery to this day.

The program was unethical, often damaging to the subjects, and largely inconclusive in its results.

Knowing all of this, do you trust the CIA? And would you want the CIA or anyone from the federal government spying on you?

It’s hard to imagine that the CIA simply did away with all its dark practices.

Stay tuned to the Federalist Wire.