Anonymous ID: 0bc581 May 14, 2018, 6:33 p.m. No.1412783   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>1412071 (last bread)

Did some digging on Cameron at McGill and found this article on the MKUltra program...

 

https://www.mcgilldaily.com/2012/09/mk-ultraviolence/

 

and found the Kubark Counterintelligence Interrogation Handbook. (link to PDF below)

https://nsarchive2.gwu.edu//NSAEBB/NSAEBB27/docs/doc01.pdf

 

The experiments done at McGill were part of the larger MK-ULTRA project led by Sidney Gottlieb of the CIA. In 1963, the year in which MK-ULTRA ended, the CIA compiled all the research into a torture manual called the Kubark Counterintelligence Interrogation Handbook. Yes, a “torture manual” that would eventually define the agency’s interrogation methods and training programs throughout the developing world.

 

Imagine being trapped in a small room. Your hands covered in gloves, your sight blocked by translucent glasses, and your head covered by a pillow. You cannot touch, taste, see, smell, or feel. You are totally deprived of your senses. This is the imagery of torture in foreign wars, of espionage blockbusters, of terrible nightmares. It seems hardly something that would occur in Montreal. But it did occur, right here at McGill.

 

Today, many journalists, doctors, and the general public see the Allan Memorial Institute in Royal Victoria Hospital as the cradle of modern torture, a cradle built and rocked by Scottish-born Dr. Donald Ewen Cameron. To the patients of Dr. Ewen Cameron, our university was the site of months of seemingly unending torture disguised as medical experimentation –– an experimentation that destroyed their lives and changed the course of psychological torture forever.