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date: Sun, 6 Jul 2008 13:33:32 -0700 (PDT),    group: uk.politics.drugs        back       
Using drugs is bad enough, but using them on other people is worse.   
Here is the proposed appendix for the second edition of the book
"Clues - A Paranoid Schizophrenic's Detective Story".  (I wrote this
under the pen-name of Marvin Cohen, and you can see it on 'Amazon').
Any helpful comments or revisions are welcome.

Appendix A
Evil Science?
Just as science fiction stories from years ago have come true, so
sometimes do the dreams of madmen also come true.  This appendix is a
small collection of news items that I would never have noticed it were
not for my own bizarre experiences.


1.	Colonel Dr. Kanatjan Alibekov (aka Ken Alibek), was deputy director
of Biopreparat, a large Soviet biological warfare development program
prior to his defection in 1992.  He published his memoirs, Biohazard,
in 1998.  In his book, he describes a top secret, covert KGB
development program, codenamed Fleta (Flute).  He learned about the
project but could not penetrate it because of its extreme secrecy.
Nevertheless, he was able to learn enough to establish its mission:
the development of psycho-active drugs and neuro-toxins to “alter
personalities and modify human behavior.”
2.	Professor Joseph Douglas Jr. (a former member of the U.S army
science board) wrote an article for the Winter 2001 issue of the
Medical Sentinel of the Association of American Physicians and
Surgeons (AAPSI).  In it he talks of the CIA’s decision in 1953 to
develop drugs that could modify behavior.  This CIA program was called
MKULTRA.
In the mid 70’s, says Joe Douglas, an author named John Marks
submitted a Freedom of Information Act request for related documents.
About two years later, the CIA “found” several boxes of documents—
16,000 pages—that they released to him.  Then The New York Times
commissioned him to write a book on the CIA mind control efforts.  His
book, The Search for the Manchurian Candidate, was published in 1979.
In it, MKULTRA is portrayed as a collection of unprofessional
experiments and LSD tests of a most childish nature.
There is zero indication that anything of value had been accomplished
either by the CIA or the Soviet KGB.  The only contrary indications
were first, the large number of respected participating scientific
research institutes and medical laboratories and second, two
interesting facts that slipped through the censors: namely that by
1957 six drugs had been moved into operational use and had been
employed against 33 targets.  The CIA refused requests for more
information on this data.
3.	You can now purchase a small white plastic nasal inhaler containing
an odorless, colorless synthetic chemical called PT-141. Plain as it
is, however, there is one thing that distinguishes PT-141 from the
4,000 years’ worth of recorded medicinal aphrodisiacs that precede it:
It actually works.  See Palatin Technologies Inc., for more
information on this ‘advance’ of science.
4.	In the New York Times, January 29, 2002, was an article by Andrew
Jacobs titled “In Clubs, a Potent Drug stirs Fear of an Epidemic.”
This article talked about the extraordinarily powerful stimulant known
as “crystal meth.”  Here are some quotes:
”…crystal meth is earning a new nickname: the Evil One…Prized as
aphrodisiac and long lasting stimulant, methamphetamine…is more
addictive and toxic than heroin…Sexual desire is also heightened to
extreme levels, many gay men say, leading to behavior that is both
excessive and dangerous…The drug is also extremely toxic to the brain.
5.	The Hamas organization (a Palestinian terror group) has a "recipe
book" for the preparation of poisons such as potassium cyanide and
hydrogen sulfide gas. "You MUST wear gloves and a gas mask during
preparation and handling of cyanides," the manual warns. "Do not touch
it even with a gloved hand. Inhalation of its odor will lead to
headaches, dizziness, fever and stomach pain." (I include this item
because in my delusions, I was drugged by substances absorbed through
the skin or perhaps via inhalation.)
6.	From the DHS and the FBI, a great movie-plot threat:
They say it is possible to introduce chemical or biological agents
directly into external air-intakes or internal air-circulation
systems. Unless the building has carbon filters (or the equivalent),
volatile chemical agents would not be stopped and would enter the
building untenanted.
date: Sun, 6 Jul 2008 13:33:32 -0700 (PDT)   author:   unknown

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