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Ted and the CIA, Part 1 by David Kaczynski

PostPosted: Sun Dec 19, 2010 11:36 pm
by Iamwhomiam
I'm sure some of you will find this interesting because what David discusses below has been suggested here before by more than one. Some time ago I suggested to David he that look more deeply into this and I'm a bit surprised by his choice to so publicly discuss it here.

Perhaps someone here's more familiar with Murray's work and would be kind enough to share their insight with David?

Ted and the CIA, Part 1
December 19, 2010 at 9:07 pm by David Kaczynski

Was my brother, Ted Kaczynski (AKA “the Unabomber”), a sort of “Manchurian candidate” - programmed to kill by our government in a CIA-funded thought-control experiment gone awry?

I hope you will excuse the provocative question - especially since I don’t know the answer to it.

What I do know is that my brother was a guinea pig in an unethical and psychologically damaging research project conducted at Harvard University where he attended college in the early 1960′s. While it is true that my brother suffers from paranoia, it is also true that he fell victim to a conspiracy of psychological researchers who used deceptive tactics to study the effects of emotional and psychological trauma on unwitting human subjects. My brother was harmed by psychologists who recognized - at least tangentially - that they were hurting him yet who made no attempt to undo or ameliorate the harm they’d caused to their young and vulnerable subject. Thus, it would be fair to say that my brother’s paranoia maintained a reference point in reality.

Fifteen years after his experience at Harvard, Ted Kaczynski embarked on a mail bomb campaign that targeted leading researchers in technology, behavioral psychologists among them. Is there a connection between my brother’s violent behavior and his earlier experience as a guiniea pig at Harvard? It seems there must be some connection. But how much connection? And what role might the US government have played in unleashing the Unabomber’s anti-social behavior?

After the revelation of Nazi atrocities following World War II, the civilized world struggled to absorb the lessons of such overwhelming horror. “Never again!” became a catch phrase that summed up civilization’s moral resolve to prevent a recurrence of organized dehumanization on such a grand scale. Moreover, the post-war Nuremberg trials revealed the extent to which Germany’s scientific establishment had lent itself to the Nazi agenda through cruel, harmful, and often lethal experiments performed on unwitting or unwilling human subjects. From the Nuremberg revelations emerged the so-called Nuremberg Code - an ethical standard that limited scientific research on human subjects, requiring that research participants provide “informed consent” to researchers before they could be studied at all.

However, it is by no means clear that the “mad” Nazi scientists represented a purely negative example to all. Some Nazi scientists deemed highly useful in our post-war competition with the Soviet Union were readily absorbed into what President Eisenhower later called “the military-industrial complex.” Pressures of the cold war insinuated top-secret government agendas into civilian universities through the funding of various clandstine projects, including research on human subjects. In 1967, according to the CIA’s internal assesment, there were literally hundreds of college professors on more than 100 American college campuses under secret contract to the CIA. Needless to say, universities like Harvard that wanted a piece of the action had to dispense with the ethical standard embedded in the Nurenberg Code. From 1953 to 1963, federal support for scientific research at Harvard increased from $8 million per year to $30 million.

One secret CIA research project that used unwitting American citizens as subjects was code-named MK Ultra. It lasted 10 years and ended in 1963, shortly after Ted graduated from Harvard. MK Ultra experiments used sensory deprivation, sleep learning, subliminal projection, electronic brain stimulation, and hallucinogenic drugs to study various applications for behavior modification. One project was designed to see if subjects could be programmed to kill on demand. Experiments were conducted in penal institutions, mental institutions, and on university campuses. Some hapless human subjects went crazy, and some are known to have committed suicide.

When the media began to catch wind of a program of secret government experimentation on American citizens, former CIA director Richard Helms ordered many records pertaining to MK Ultra destroyed. Thus, the full scope of the program and its abuses may never be known.

The Harvard study my brother participated in was called “Multiform Assessments of Personality Development Among Gifted College Men.” It was overseen by the noted psychologist Henry Murray, who during WWII worked for the OSS (which later became the CIA), where he developed methodologies for interrogating prisoners of war. In his professional life, Murray was known for his brilliance and his grandiosity. In his personal life, according to his biographer, he displayed sadistic tendencies. His research on college men bears a certain resemblance to his research on prisoners of war. He was quite a big wheel in his day, perhaps as well known and influential in military and government circles as he was in academia.

Were the so-called “Murray experiments” part of MK Ultra? It may be that no one living knows the answer to this question. We know that the experiments were highly unpleasant to my brother and to some others who participated. We know that the basic premise of the research was to study how bright college students would react to aggressive and highly stressful attacks on their beliefs and values.

It may seem that I am trying to provide my brother with a handy excuse - a deflection of blame – for having killed three people and devastated numerous lives. But that is not my point. I believe that we are both individually responsible for our actions, and collectively responsible for conditions of harm and injustice that exist in our world. My brother was a victim before he victimized others - and in this he is hardly unique. Those who victimized him exercised cruelty with impunity, and quite possibily with the best of intentions. Status and power are hardly guarantees of good judgment or good character. Thus, the lessons we must learn are complex. The search for one quintissential villain is generally a mistake, a displacement of both understanding and responsibility.

What was done to my brother at Harvard should never be allowed to happen again. Our best insurance against inflicting harm on others – as was done to Ted and by Ted – is to avoid objectification of human beings, to approach others with compassion.

http://blog.timesunion.com/kaczynski/ted-and-the-cia-part-1/271/

Re: Ted and the CIA, Part 1 by David Kaczynski

PostPosted: Mon Dec 20, 2010 1:27 am
by Project Willow
Has he contacted Hank?

Re: Ted and the CIA, Part 1 by David Kaczynski

PostPosted: Mon Dec 20, 2010 2:13 am
by eyeno
Wow interesting. Thanks for that. I never knew that. This place is a gold mine.

Re: Ted and the CIA, Part 1 by David Kaczynski

PostPosted: Mon Dec 20, 2010 9:04 am
by hanshan
....


bumping

will look into this when I can squeeze a moment


...

Re: Ted and the CIA, Part 1 by David Kaczynski

PostPosted: Mon Dec 20, 2010 2:00 pm
by Iamwhomiam
Willow: Hank died in '88, before David learned of his brother's "secret identity." So I guess an answer to your question would be: "No, David did not contact Hank about his brother's involvement in his experiments."

Re: Ted and the CIA, Part 1 by David Kaczynski

PostPosted: Mon Dec 20, 2010 2:37 pm
by DeltaDawn
The information does not surprise me, as I've read about this 'theory/conspiracy' before, what does surprise me is the article coming from David himself. I pray he keeps this investigation/concept going and finds the information he needs, he might be able to open many doors for others.

Re: Ted and the CIA, Part 1 by David Kaczynski

PostPosted: Mon Dec 20, 2010 2:39 pm
by Wombaticus Rex
Source: http://www.counterpunch.org/tedk.html

Ted K., the CIA & LSD

by alexander cockburn and jeffrey st. clair July 15, 1999

It turns out that Theodore Kaczynski, a.k.a. the Unabomber, was a volunteer in mind-control experiments sponsored by the CIA at Harvard in the late 1950s and early 1960s.

Michael Mello, author of the recently published book, "The United States of America vs. Theodore John Kaczynski," notes that at some point in his Harvard years--1958 to 1962--Kaczynski agreed to be the subject of "a psychological experiment." Mello identifies the chief researcher for these only as a lieutenant colonel in World War II, working for the CIA's predecessor organization, the Office of Strategic Services. In fact, the man experimenting on the young Kaczynski was Dr. Henry Murray, who died in 1988.

Murray became preoccupied by psychoanalysis in the 1920s, drawn to it through a fascination with Herman Melville's "Moby Dick," which he gave to Sigmund Freud, who duly made the excited diagnosis that the whale was a father figure. After spending the 1930s developing personality theory, Murray was recruited to the OSS at the start of the war, applying his theories to the selection of agents and also presumably to interrogation.

As chairman of the Department of Social Relations at Harvard, Murray zealously prosecuted the CIA's efforts to carry forward experiments in mind control conducted by Nazi doctors in the concentration camps. The overall program was under the control of the late Sidney Gottlieb, head of the CIA's technical services division. **NOTE: INACCURATE Re: GOTTLIEB** Just as Harvard students were fed doses of LSD, psilocybin and other potions, so too were prisoners and many unwitting guinea pigs.

Sometimes the results were disastrous. A dram of LSD fed by Gottlieb himself to an unwitting U.S. army officer, Frank Olson, plunged Olson into escalating psychotic episodes, which culminated in Olson's fatal descent from an upper window in the Statler-Hilton in New York. Gottlieb was the object of a lawsuit not only by Olson's children but also by the sister of another man, Stanley Milton Glickman, whose life had disintegrated into psychosis after being unwittingly given a dose of LSD by Gottlieb.

What did Murray give Kaczynski? Did the experiment's long-term effects help tilt him into the Unabomber's homicidal rampages? The CIA's mind experiment program was vast. How many other human time bombs were thus primed? How many of them have exploded?

There are other human time bombs, primed in haste, ignorance or indifference to long-term consequences. Amid all the finger-pointing to causes prompting the recent wave of schoolyard killings, not nearly enough clamor has been raised about the fact that many of these teenagers suddenly exploding into mania were on a regimen of antidepressants. Eric Harris, one of the shooters at Columbine, was on Luvox. Kip Kinkel, who killed his parents and two students in Oregon, was on Prozac.

There are a number of other instances. Apropos possible linkage, Dr. Peter Breggin, author of books on Prozac and Ritalin, has said, "I have no doubt that Prozac can contribute to violence and suicide. I've seen many cases. In the recent clinical trial, 6% of the children became psychotic on Prozac. And manic psychosis can lead to violence."

A 15-year-old girl attending a ritzy liberal arts school in the Northeast told us that 80% of the kids in her class were on Prozac, Ritalin or Dexedrine. The pretext used by the school authorities is attention deficit disorder or attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, or ADHD, with a diagnosis made on the basis of questions such as: "Do you find yourself daydreaming or looking out the window?"

Ritalin is being given to about 2 million American schoolchildren. A 1986 article by Richard Scarnati in the International Journal of the Addictions lists more than a hundred adverse reactions to Ritalin, including paranoid delusions, paranoid psychosis, amphetamine-like psychosis and terror.

Meanwhile, uncertainty reigns on the precise nature of the complaint that Ritalin is supposed to be treating. One panel reviewing the proceedings at a conference on ADHD last year even doubted whether the disorder is a "valid" diagnosis of a broad range of children's behavior, and said there was little evidence Ritalin did any good. In 1996, the Drug Enforcement Administration denounced the use of Ritalin and concluded that "the dramatic increase in the use of [Ritalin] in the 1990s should be viewed as a marker or warning to society."

Indeed. Land mines now litter the terrain of our society, waiting to explode.CP


That article is weird, huh? What the fuck does Ritalin have to do with MKNAOMI/ARTICHOKE work with LSD? Seriously. What? The fact that Eli Lily produced LSD for the CIA in the 50's and 60's? By that logic, Cialis is a mind-control drug, too. Anyways, it was relevant and it actually came up during an unrelated search so I brought it here.

Re: Ted and the CIA, Part 1 by David Kaczynski

PostPosted: Mon Dec 20, 2010 2:52 pm
by elfismiles
Iamwhomiam wrote:Willow: Hank died in '88, before David learned of his brother's "secret identity." So I guess an answer to your question would be: "No, David did not contact Hank about his brother's involvement in his experiments."


I thought PW meant has David K contacted Hank Albarelli author of A TERRIBLE MISTAKE.

Re: Ted and the CIA, Part 1 by David Kaczynski

PostPosted: Mon Dec 20, 2010 3:00 pm
by Project Willow
Iamwhomiam wrote:Willow: Hank died in '88, before David learned of his brother's "secret identity." So I guess an answer to your question would be: "No, David did not contact Hank about his brother's involvement in his experiments."


I'm sorry, I should have been more specific. I meant Hank Albarelli. David may be able to get his question about the project being MKULTRA answered if he researched a bit and Hank might know.

Re: Ted and the CIA, Part 1 by David Kaczynski

PostPosted: Mon Dec 20, 2010 3:15 pm
by Wombaticus Rex
Murray Center Seals Kaczynski Data

http://www.thecrimson.com/article/2000/ ... on-buried/

LONDON--Buried in a sleepy corner of the Harvard campus, somewhere in the nation's largest collection of psychological data, lies a slim folder whose sealed contents might help explain what drove the Unabomber to kill.

Theodore J. Kaczynski '62, who was arrested in 1996 after killing three and injuring 16 in a string of mail bombings spread over 20 years, participated in an intensive, sometimes brutal, three-year psychological study while a Harvard undergraduate.

The results of the study, directed by famed psychologist Henry A. Murray, are now housed at the Radcliffe Institute research center named in Murray's honor. But though the records may shed light on Kaczynski's psychological history, the Murray Center has locked the file up for good.

"We have a very strong policy of maintaining the confidentiality of people who participate in studies archived here," Murray Center Director Annemette Sorensen said. "This particular file has been permanently removed, with the reason being that we cannot protect its confidentiality anymore."

Kaczynski's code name in the study--"Lawful"--has become widely known to journalists and researchers, and Sorensen said that because the Murray Center promises to maintain the confidentiality of study participants, there are no circumstances under which Kaczynski's file could be opened.

"It would undermine everything we try to do here, and it would really mean that we would begin to lose control over those important principles," she said.

Author Alston Chase suggested in a recent Atlantic Monthly article that Kaczynski's participation in the Murray study might have pushed him over the edge from an isolated student to a revolutionary against science and society. Kaczynski's bomb attacks often targeted science professors and airline executives.

Called "Multiform Assessments of Personality Development Among Gifted College Men," the study consumed hundreds of hours of participants' time over three years.

In one part of the experiment, subjects were pressured to respond to questions asked under extreme duress, with bright lights and cameras pointed at them and electrodes attached to their bodies.

Dr. Ross Neissuler, who also took part in the study, said that participants also took the Thematic Apperception Test, a psychological test that Murray himself developed.

The experiences left some participants scarred for life.

Chase cites several other participants in the study who were quite disturbed by the experience, and remembered years later how angry, frightened and violated they felt. Chase suggests that feelings of this kind might have driven Kaczynski to lash out against society.

Kaczynski, according to Chase, was already mentally unstable before entering Harvard, and his 8 Prescott Street residence during his first year only served to isolate him further from his fellow students. Murray's study, Chase speculates, took that isolation even further, pushing the psychological limits of the young participants in nearly every way possible.

Murray, a former colonel in the U.S. Army and an agent for the Office of Strategic Services (OSS), made his mark on the government during World War II before returning to Harvard to continue his work as a professor.

During his time at the OSS, according to his former colleagues, Murray was obsessed with mind control and used LSD, among other drugs, attempting to determine how to brainwash subjects. Murray presented his findings after taking LSD at an international conference in Copenhagen.

And some believe that Murray's Harvard studies--which, as Neissuler recalled, "never seemed to have any particular application"--were a continuation of his work at the OSS.

Edwin Schneidman, a former Murray colleague, who worked with Murray while at Harvard, said that Murray's interest in mind-altering drugs continued after the war. "He did do research involving LSD while he was at Harvard," Schneidman said.

Some experts on the Kaczynski case, including The United States of America vs. Theodore John Kaczynski author Michael Mello, have speculated that LSD tests may also have been a part of the study Kaczysnki took part in. But Kacyznski himself does not recall taking the drug, and there is no evidence that LSD was part of the experiment.

Re: Ted and the CIA, Part 1 by David Kaczynski

PostPosted: Mon Dec 20, 2010 3:25 pm
by Simulist
Some experts on the Kaczynski case, including The United States of America vs. Theodore John Kaczynski author Michael Mello, have speculated that LSD tests may also have been a part of the study Kaczysnki took part in. But Kacyznski himself does not recall taking the drug, and there is no evidence that LSD was part of the experiment.

It's really no surprise that there might be "no evidence" of this — even if it happened — since preceding portions of the article demonstrate how officials at Harvard continue to cover up for the abusers.

Re: Ted and the CIA, Part 1 by David Kaczynski

PostPosted: Mon Dec 20, 2010 4:14 pm
by sunny
Sorensen said that because the Murray Center promises to maintain the confidentiality of study participants, there are no circumstances under which Kaczynski's file could be opened.



It seems to me the participants in the study, including Kaczynski, have grounds for a lawsuit which could force the opening of the documents.

Re: Ted and the CIA, Part 1 by David Kaczynski

PostPosted: Mon Dec 20, 2010 5:10 pm
by Elvis
Murray Center Director Annemette Sorensen said,
"there are no circumstances under which Kaczynski's file could be opened.

"It would undermine everything we try to do here...."


Sounds good---open those files immediately.
They're suddenly concerned with victims' privacy? How humane of them.

Re: Ted and the CIA, Part 1 by David Kaczynski

PostPosted: Mon Dec 20, 2010 10:44 pm
by Iamwhomiam
Thanks for clarifying, Williow & elfsmiles. I've never ventured very far researching mk, though I should have understood you weren't referring to Murray. I recall Albarelli's book being released and the Olsen story been discussed here often enough.

Thanks for posting the article on the Murray Center records lockdown, Mr. W.Rex.

Yes, Sunny. Probably could. I wonder how many are alive and well today.

Yeah, Elvis, I wish we could.

Sim, Harvard may not have the records and the Murrary Ctr.'s locked-down theirs, but surely some gov't archive holds them still.

Dawn True. It is surprising that David wrote this. When I talk with him I'll let him know of the importance it is to others that he pursue his inquiry into this matter.

Re: Ted and the CIA, Part 1 by David Kaczynski

PostPosted: Mon Dec 20, 2010 11:13 pm
by lupercal
Good short video on the subject here:



The Unabomber - He Wasn't Paranoid, He Was Conspired Against (Ted Kaczynski)