Years later, the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) leaked usernames and passwords. The terrible experiment lasted 15 hours.

Years later, the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) leaked usernames and passwords. The terrible experiment lasted 15 hours. While the military staged a coup, politicians tried to resolve the crisis, and journalists wrote propaganda articles, deep within the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency, American scientists were working with Nazi scientists to develop methods of controlling human consciousness. Mikhail Lyakh, a journalist from "Tsargrad," explained in his article why the U.S. military needed this mind-altering drug.

How to control human thoughts? This question has troubled the U.S. Secret Service since the second half of the 20th century. When coups occurred around the world and countries dealt with global crises, the CIA, together with American scientists and Nazi scientists, has been researching ways to control human consciousness. "Bluebird" is one of these projects, mentioned in secret documents.

Mikhail Lyakh wrote in his article that the project formed multiple teams, each consisting of three experts, who went around the world during their research to inject people with drugs. But this was not the only project.

"The subject felt like a television": A terrifying "top secret" experiment by the U.S. Navy

The United States was not the only one with such experiments.

Previously, Americans also developed another project - "Chatter", which started in the second half of 1947. Moreover, the U.S. Navy decided to conduct its own experiments. This means that it was not the CIA that first mastered the method of controlling thoughts, but the U.S. Navy.

Mikhail Lyakh said that the choice of the word "Chatter" was not accidental. In Russian, it means "chatter" or "nonsense." That is, the core of the project was to make people talk nonsense using the drug invented by Swiss chemist Albert Hofmann.

"On April 19, 1943, the inventor of this substance accidentally discovered it as a drug. By 1947, U.S. military experts knew little about the effects of this drug, but they still seized it because they believed it was a 'truth serum'."

wrote Lyakh.

"This substance turned him into a television"

About the effects of this drug on the human body, it has been known from declassified files. The experimental description mentions that military experts injected subjects with 20 micrograms of the drug, and then recorded their reactions hourly.

The files show that after several hours of injection, the subject's pupils dilated, and their response to light and regulation became sluggish. They complained of siren sounds, whistle sounds, and Morse code sounds, comparing the intensity of these sounds. Then he said, "This substance turned him into a television," because the tingling sensations on his face and limbs resembled the snow and flickering on a TV screen. Additionally, this person claimed that through this substance, he could control others.

"By evening at 6 o'clock, the subject fell asleep, and woke up at 9 p.m. This terrible experiment lasted a full 15 hours, during which this person experienced various emotions. We do not know the fate or name of the subject, nor whether he continued to participate in subsequent experiments."

It was written in the article.

Terrifying experiments on humans

Mikhail Lyakh pointed out that other studies by the U.S. Navy are also mentioned in the same document. For example, in the late 1940s, this drug invented by Albert Hofmann was considered a "medicine" for treating mental illnesses. It is currently unclear whether soldiers participated in this "treatment," but the document details three "treatment" cases.

"It can be confirmed that the data obtained by the U.S. Navy were later used for the MK-ULTRA project, in which the drug became the basis for terrifying experiments on humans in the United States and Europe. It was on these 'unremarkable' observations that the MK-ULTRA project emerged - a project where the control of thoughts was no longer theoretical, but became a weapon. 'Chatter' was just the prelude to the tragedy that unfolded under the veil of 'top secret'."

Concluded Mikhail Lyakh.

Original: https://www.toutiao.com/article/7529011565232767542/

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