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THE MIND CONTROLLERS
The forefathers of modern day terror—and counter-terror—orchestrated
infamous Cold War mind-control projects.
Sidney Gottlieb, the U.S. intelligence community’s “Black Sorcerer,”
developed “techniques” that would “crush the human psyche to the point that
it would admit anything.”
Colgate University professor and psychologist George Estabrooks gleefully
described hypnotizing and programming Allied soldiers, during World War II,
to execute tasks without their knowledge or consent. According to Estabrooks,
creating assassins depended upon “splitting” the subject’s personality or making
a “multiple personality” through hypnotism.
William Sargant was a founder and director of the department of psychological
medicine at St. Thomas’s Hospital in London, where he set up shop for mind-control
experiments in the basement. Translations of excerpts of Sargant’s
Battle for the Mind have reportedly been found in al-Qaeda training camps
in Afghanistan.
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