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PsiOp-Radio Sunday with guest H.P. Albarelli on MK-Ultra and the Murder of Frank Olson
Illustration by Mack White of biochemist Frank Olson, victim of a government LSD experiment, for Raw Deal: Horrible and Ironic Stories of Forgotten Americans by Ken Smith. (Blast Books, 1998)
http://psiopradio.com/2010/04/29/psiop- ... ank-olson/
Project Willow wrote:Great job SMiles! Thanks for posting.
Sweejak wrote:One of the best shows ever, Smiles. He could go on too, and on.
Sweejak wrote:This almost became a stream of consciousness mega meta meditation on mayhem, man.After listening to your show I went in for 2 hours of Scott Horton interviewing Peter Lance which had a similar effect. OD.
CIA Dirty Tricks- They Hurt and They Kill- In this program Jerry talks with H. P. Albarelli, Jr. about his true Thriller: A Terrible Mistake - The Murder of Frank Olson and the CIA’s Secret Cold War Experiments. The conversation goes far beyond this incident from the cold war 50s, to what is happening today. The writer has spent ten years investigating in detail the hard dirty facts of the CIA’s history. This program explores 1950's Military and CIA Cold War Scientific and Medical experimentation in the fields of Mind Control, Psychological Operations, Interrogation, Torture, Psycho-Weaponry, Chemical and Biological Assassination and follows the trail that leads to the same activities still going on today.
MP3 Running time: 1 hour, 3 seconds
http://www.jerrypippin.com/MurderIncCIA(April2010).mp3
Windows Media Version Part 1
http://www.jerrypippin.com/Murder,%20In ... 20(4-25-10).wma
Windows Media Version Part 2
http://www.jerrypippin.com/Murder,%20In ... 20(4-25-10).wma
http://www.jerrypippin.com/Murder-Inc.htm
Wombaticus Rex wrote:Finally finished the book last night. The end is Chinatown brutal, and the appendix is better than most other books on the subject of CIA mind control experiments. Albarelli is a rare thing, I'm grateful he exists. This book was my top pick for this year:
http://www.brainsturbator.com/articles/ ... ding_list/
On December 27 [1974], five days after [Seymour] Hersh's "massive spying" story hit news-stands, White House Deputy Chief of Staff, Richard Cheney, advised President Gerald Ford to establish an executive branch blue-ribbon commission to investigate possible CIA activities. Cheney, who served in 1969-70 as a Special Assistant to Donald Rumsfeld, then director of the US Office of Economic Opportunity, told Ford he needed to act quickly to avoid the White House being "whipsawed by prolonged Congressional investigations" that were sure to come as a result of Hersh's revelations. Cheney advised that by appointing "a blue-ribbon investigative commission," the White House could seize the offensive, demonstrate leadership in troubled times, help re-establish public trust and faith in government, and perhaps circumvent "Congressional efforts to further encroach on the Executive Branch."
Cheney and Rumsfeld, along with the President's trusted counsel, Philip Buchen, futher advised Ford that he needed to exercise caution in appointing commission members so to avoid charges of initiating a whitewash effort.
"It's important to know I was not on the ARTICHOKE team, in the ARTICHOKE group that the Office of Security or Security Research ran. My knowledge of ARTICHOKE teams stems from my attendance at conferences and meetings at which I represented technical services [TSS]. ARTICHOKE and technical services were, in nearly every sense of the word, separate. They had separate purposes, separate supervision, not all the time in synch with one another... The Church Committee blurred the lines between all these programs, MKULTRA, ARTICHOK, Bluebird, QKHILLTOP, Chemical Corps, NAOMI, SHADE, all of them became one and I was... I didn't have any problem with answering for them all but I didn't... I didn't oversee all those projects. Let's leave it at that.
"From time to time information is developed within the Agency indicating the actual or probably violation of criminal statutes. Normally all such information would be turned over to the Department of Justice for investigation and decision as to prosecution. Occasionally, however, the apparent criminal activities are involved in highly classified and complex covert operations. Under these circumstances investigation by outside agency could not hope for success without revealing to that agency the full scope of the covert operation involved as we as this Agency's authorities and manner of handling the operation. Even then, the investigation could not succeed without the full assistance of all interested branches of this Agency. In addition, if investigation developed a prima-facie case of a criminal violation, in many cases it would be readily apparent that prosecution would be impossible without revealing highly classified matters to public scrutiny.
The law is well settled that criminal prosecution cannot proceed in camera or on production of only part of the information. The Government must be willing to expose its entire operation if it desires to prosecute. In those cases involving cover operations, therefore, there appears to be a balancing of interest between the duty of enforece the law which is in the proper jurisdiction of the Department of Justice and the Director's responsibility for protecting intelligence sources and methods. This is further affected by physical considerations."
H.P. Albarelli wrote:It is certainly intriguing, for a number of reasons, that the Agency included this reference [to Hasan-Dan-Sabah] in its assassination manual. First and Foremost is the nexus among Hasan-Dan-Sabah (also known as The Old Man of the Mountain), Hassan-I-Sbbah, and Iranian born in 1056 near modern-day Tehran, and the Knights Templar, a legendary group that nearly all of the CIA's founders and earliest employees openly admired and sought to emulate.
Respected writer and former Newsweek editor, Evan Thomas, writes in his masterful book, The Very best Men, that Willam Colby, an OSS officer who would later become DCI, "credited [Frank] Wisner [the former OSS officer who founded the CIA] with creating the atmosphere of an order of Knights Templar to save Western freedom from Communist darkness." Other prominent early CIA officials strove to perform "work worthy the Knights Templar" and to belong to a "cultish crusade."
H.P. Albarelli wrote:Related to these esoteric and occult explorations is another CIA-requested task for Mulholland: "an examination and explanation of certain of the Masonic designs and architectural features incorporated into the Federal City." Among those listed for examination were "the capitol complex, the zodiacs of the Library of Congress, Meridian HIll Park, and the recently [1952] installed Mellon Fountain."
H.P. Albarelli wrote:Certain fundamental questions were specifically answered in the course of the instruction and are regarded as being of extreme importance in BLUEBIRD work. The questions are set out in question and answer form below:
Question: What percent of subjects can be subjected successfully to hypnosis techniques?
Answer: 85% to 95%.
Question: Can a person under hypnosis commit an act against his religious or moral scruples or against his training or upbringing?
Answer: Yes. Anything could be done by a person under hypnosis, including murder.
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