Anonymous ID: 17ce18 Sept. 5, 2021, 6:09 a.m. No.14524827   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4842

>>14524778

>What I disagree with is when government officials use health as a means to control society and steal our liberties…

 

"We are at War."

 

Interesting article on Mind Fuckery to "win".

Came across it while digging on MKUltra tactics.

 

VAMPIRE ATTACK SUCKS LIFE OUT OF THE COLD WAR

 

THE CIA FAKED VAMPIRE ATTACKS DURING THE COLD WAR.

 

The Philippines was a valuable U.S. ally during the Cold War, but communist rebels were an ongoing problem—until the CIA faked vampire attacks to deter them!

 

REBELS WITH A CAUSE

Marginalized after the end of World War II, members of the Filipino’s People Army became increasingly marginalized when the war ended, despite fighting for years against Japanese occupation. Subscribing to Communist ideals, they began a peasant’s rebellion, claiming independence from wealthy Manilan Filipinos who had grabbed land and worked with Japanese invaders.

 

Since the Philippines was a primary asset to the U.S. during the war, the CIA sent one of their most effective officers, Edward Lansdale, to help quash the Hukbalahap Rebellion.

 

War Sucks

 

The CIA chose to exploit the Huks belief in the aswang, a monster, Filipino folklore said to drain the blood of humans. Back in the ‘50s, residents of rural Philippines still very much believed in and feared the aswang, so Lansdale took advantage of this.

 

A unit of Hukbalahap rebels had taken up a prime position on a hill in Luzon. This was the perfect opportunity for Landsdale to deploy his psywar tactics.

 

When the unit went on patrol at night, Lansdale ordered his people to silently grab the last man in the group, puncture his neck in two places, hang him upside down to drain his blood, then throw his body back out on the trail, a covert and gruesome action.

 

The rebels, of course, returned later to look for their missing comrade, only to find an exsanguinated corpse that looked like the victim of an aswang attack.

 

WINNING TACTICS

While this might seem like an odd tactic, believe it or not, it worked! The very next day, the frightened rebels fled their hilltop position, losing one of their greatest advantages.

 

Although it only took one fake vampire attack to scare the Huks away from that location, it wasn’t the end of things.

 

Lansdale deployed more psywar techniques, such as painting menacing all-seeing eyes on homes in villages where he suspected Hukbalahap rebels were hiding in the night and broadcasting messages from low-flying planes to make the rebels believe spies were in their midst.

 

In May 1954, the Hukbalahap surrendered and the rebellion was over, and Edward Lansdale is largely credited with putting an end to it.

 

While his fake vampire attack wasn’t the only event to end the rebellion, it stands out as one of the strangest tactics used against Cold War combatants.

 

https://www.ripleys.com/weird-news/faked-vampire-attacks/?sid=web-post-0218-mkultra

Anonymous ID: 17ce18 Sept. 5, 2021, 6:29 a.m. No.14524893   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4900

>>14524842

>they are still afraid of weird noises in the dark, creepy animals, or creepy people who look 'off'.

 

Think about history and how these same mental warfare tactics are used. It's sad.

Now think about the events of today. Injecting people with drugs. These "stories" will continue to repeat until the spell is broken. "These People Are SICK!"

 

Buried beneath divisions and sub-groups in the CIA, MKUltra began as early as 1950, but wasn’t official until 1953, technically falling under the US Army Chemical Corps. Motivated to combat the Soviet “truth serum,” its purpose was to develop techniques and drugs for mind control.

 

Secrecy

 

Utilizing a number of fronts, the project tapped into the resources of colleges, hospitals, prisons, mental health facilities, and even brothels.

 

Many of MKUltra’s activities were illegal, though the details of its operations are mostly unknown. Though the project was officially shut down in 1964, it’s outgoing director instructed the destruction of all of the project’s documents in 1973.

 

Even before the sabotage to future investigations, however, its members were instructed not to keep thorough records of their activities

 

“Present practice is to maintain no records of the planning or approval of test programs.”—US Inspector General, 1963

 

They had good reason not to record their activities. They were found to not only experiment on people without consent or knowledge of the risks involved, but would also secretly drug people who would later suffer severe repercussions.

 

Mind Control

Prisoners, mental health patients, civilians, and soldiers were all unwittingly drugged or subject to other forms of “mind control” testing. LSD was their drug of choice, but they also attempted hypnosis, sleep deprivation, isolation, and verbal abuse. Though they never mastered “mind control,” they found many ways to put prisoners under extreme duress, with many of their techniques going on to be used as interrogation tactics in the Middle East.

 

Hoping to develop a technique to compromise and turn Soviet spies, they drugged unknowing soldiers, some of which were found to develop mental disorders in the face of seemingly unprompted hallucinations. With sparse records, few subjects were ever check up on afterward, and Senate committees would end up paying hundreds of thousands in recompensation to families.

 

Proving the Project Existed

While carrying out a Freedom of Information Act request, it was a budget office that stumbled across financial records of MKUltra in 1977. Used as evidence in a Senate investigation, it wasn’t until 2001 that some of the documents were declassified. They revealed surface-level information about some of the projects:

 

Budgeted Projects:

Up to 26 Tests on unwilling participants

8 projects on hypnosis

4 “magician’s arts” projects

1 project on electro-shock, ESP, and aerosols

1-2 projects on controlling animals and organic energy

Operation Midnight Climax

With a true mission relegated to secret bosses and shadow fronts, one operation, directed by Bureau of Narcotics agent, George H. White, became especially questionable.

 

Essentially, he set up a brothel in which the US government paid for prostitutes to lure clients to a safe house, drug them, and then “watch what happened” through cameras and two-way mirrors in the rooms.

 

Recruiting a few prostitutes to establish a cover, it’s unclear how willing the sex workers were to drug unwilling participants for the government. White, however, cared little about a participant’s willingness. After his advances were denied by a local club singer, Ruth Kelly, he drugged her with LSD just before she went up to perform on stage to—once again—”see what happens.” She made it through her performance and escaped to a hospital before the agent could intercept her.

 

“It was fun, fun, fun. Where else could a red-blooded American boy lie, kill, cheat, steal, rape, and pillage with the sanction and blessing of the All-Highest?”—George H. White

 

Murder and Cover-Up

Killed in 1953, Frank Olson’s family wouldn’t know the secret cause of his death for 22 years. Apparently falling from the 13th floor of a hotel in New York City, newspapers said he committed suicide from stress at his job with the Army.

 

The truth was Olson had been working for the CIA and was the casualty of a security risk test. Working on anthrax aerosols, they decided to drug him with LSD, and see if he would yield classified secrets. After the bout, he became confused, seeking help from less than scientific means. After facing a litany of “treatment” including hypnosis and alcohol he was found dead days later. According to the Washington Post, a scrap of paper was found in his pocket with the initials “G. W.” and the address of George White’s New York safe house

 

Murder and Cover-Up

 

more

 

https://cfjctoday.com/2018/02/28/sex-drugs-and-the-cia-operation-midnight-climax-and-project-mkultra/

Anonymous ID: 17ce18 Sept. 5, 2021, 6:59 a.m. No.14524996   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>14524987

1113

Q !xowAT4Z3VQ 04/09/2018 19:36:08

 

>>973183

Did anons ever figure out what Q meant with the "BABY ON FLOOR-HANDS IN MOUTH - THE START"

Was this Syria FF?

 

>>973608

Finally.

Chemicals.

Learn our comms.

Q

Anonymous ID: 17ce18 Sept. 5, 2021, 7:06 a.m. No.14525030   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>14524990

Just like these drugs, being sugar coated as Safe Vaccines, and already in the works a decade ago, history of AZT seems to sound extremely similar. Almost as if they're talking about COVID

 

As it turned out, their first weapon against HIV wasn’t a new compound scientists had to develop from scratch — it was one that was already on the shelf, albeit abandoned. AZT, or azidothymidine, was originally developed in the 1960s by a U.S. researcher as way to thwart cancer; the compound was supposed to insert itself into the DNA of a cancer cell and mess with its ability to replicate and produce more tumor cells. But it didn’t work when it was tested in mice and was put aside.

 

Two decades later, after AIDS emerged as new infectious disease, the pharmaceutical company Burroughs Wellcome, already known for its antiviral drugs, began a massive test of potential anti-HIV agents, hoping to find anything that might work against this new viral foe. Among the things tested was something called Compound S, a re-made version of the original AZT. When it was throw into a dish with animal cells infected with HIV, it seemed to block the virus’ activity.

 

The company sent samples to the FDA and the National Cancer Institute, where Dr. Samuel Broder, who headed the agency, realized the significance of the discovery. But simply having a compound that could work against HIV wasn’t enough. In order to make it available to the estimated millions who were infected, researchers had to be sure that it was safe and that it would indeed stop HIV in some way, even if it didn’t cure people of their infection. At the time, such tests, overseen by the FDA, took eight to 10 years.

 

Patients couldn’t wait that long. Under enormous public pressure, the FDA’s review of AZT was fast tracked — some say at the expense of patients.

 

Scientists quickly injected AZT into patients. The first goal was to see whether it was safe — and, though it did cause side effects (including severe intestinal problems, damage to the immune system, nausea, vomiting and headaches) it was deemed relatively safe. But they also had to test the compound’s effectiveness. In order to do so, a controversial trial was launched with nearly 300 people who had been diagnosed with AIDS. The plan was to randomly assign the participants to take capsules of the agent or a sugar pill for six months. Neither the doctor nor the patient would know whether they were on the drug or not.

 

After 16 weeks, Burroughs Wellcome announced that they were stopping the trial because there was strong evidence that the compound appeared to be working. One group had only one death. Even in that short period, the other group had 19. The company reasoned that it wouldn’t be ethical to continue the trial and deprive one group of a potentially life-saving treatment.

 

Those results — and AZT — were heralded as a “breakthrough” and “the light at the end of the tunnel” by the company, and pushed the FDA approve the first AIDS medication on March 19, 1987, in a record 20 months.

 

But the study remains controversial. Reports surfaced soon after that the results may have been skewed since doctors weren’t provided with a standard way of treating the other problems associated with AIDS — pneumonia, diarrhea and other symptoms — which makes determining whether the AZT alone was responsible for the dramatic results nearly impossible. For example, some patients received blood transfusions to help their immune systems; introducing new, healthy blood and immune cells could have helped these patients battle the virus better. There were also stories of patients from the 12 centers where the study was conducted pooling their pills, to better the chances that they would get at least some of the drug rather than just placebos.

 

And there were still plenty of questions left unanswered about the drug when it was approved. How long did the apparent benefits last? Could people who weren’t sick yet still benefit? Did they benefit more than those further along in their disease?

 

Such uncertainty would not be acceptable with a traditional approval, but the urgent need to have something in hand to fight the growing epidemic forced FDA’s hand. The people in the trial were already pressuring the company and the FDA to simply release the drug — if there were something that worked against HIV, they said, then it was not ethical to withhold it.

 

The drug’s approval remains controversial to this day, but in a world where treatment options are so far advanced it can be hard to imagine the sense of urgency and the social pressure permeating the medical community at the time. AIDS was an impending wave that was about to crash on the shores of an unsuspecting — and woefully unprepared — populace. Having at least one drug that worked, in however limited a way, was seen as progress.

 

more

https://time.com/4705809/first-aids-drug-azt/

Anonymous ID: 17ce18 Sept. 5, 2021, 7:36 a.m. No.14525139   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>14525096

>>14524793

>Are There Parasites in the Pfizer "Vaccines"?

 

>Yes there are

 

>I posted about this EXTENSIVELY in previous breads back when we still had images

 

Trump mocks Oscar win for Parasite: 'What the hell was that about?'

Anonymous ID: 17ce18 Sept. 5, 2021, 7:47 a.m. No.14525201   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>14525188

>“The party desperately needs some people to stand up and tell the truth.”

 

He's not wrong on that part.

Transparency is KEY!

"Conspiracy NO MORE!"

Anonymous ID: 17ce18 Sept. 5, 2021, 8:23 a.m. No.14525329   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5355

>>14525323

>Don't care for the man…bad mojo vibes habbening.

 

Agree.

Feels like "Good Cop, Bad Cop" (same team game)

He was Media. And what is the Media? CIA Programming?

 

Cox won the Election, that Newsom pretends he won.

Anonymous ID: 17ce18 Sept. 5, 2021, 8:57 a.m. No.14525449   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Gotta be comms

Dress looks straight up like a Monarch Butterfly.

 

Kate Hudson Just Brought the Ovary Cutout Trend to the Red Carpet

 

After initially showing up on the streets (and at theVatican), ovary cutouts have officially made their way onto the red carpet — thanks to Kate Hudson. On Saturday, the actress wore the bizarre trend in dress form while attending the Celebration of Women in Cinema Gala at the Venice Film Festival.

 

At the event, Hudson stepped out in a LBD with an unexpected show of skin below her midriff. The halter-neck dress featured two cutouts at the chest — as well as at the waist and hips — and a dramatic slit that ran up her thigh. She accessorized with a single diamond bracelet and see-through heels.

 

As for her glam, Kate styled her hair straight and parted down the middle and wore minimal makeup. A red manicure and matching pedicure added a sophisticated pop of color to her monochrome outfit.

 

Hudson is currently in Venice for the premiere of her new movie, Mona Lisa and the Blood Moon, and she attended the photocall for the film on Sunday morning. Showing off her sartorial range, she paired a nude maxi slip dress with frayed edges over a coordinating long-sleeve shirt and a gold choker necklace.

 

Day or night, we can always count on Kate to ace the assignment.

 

https://www.yahoo.com/lifestyle/kate-hudson-just-brought-ovary-144751237.html

Anonymous ID: 17ce18 Sept. 5, 2021, 9:23 a.m. No.14525577   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Lots of 3 yr deltas coming. This one is fun…

Playbook known

 

John Podesta

@johnpodesta

Real Witch Hunt begins: ‘The sleeper cells have awoken’: Trump and aides shaken by ‘resistance’ op-ed

 

2114

Q !!mG7VJxZNCI 09/07/2018 17:52:10

Logical thinking.

Month: Sept

Public learned GJ empaneled re: McCabe?

Coincidence?

Follow the connections.

We have it all.

Q

 

>>2925398

https://twitter.com/johnpodesta/status/1037506265398894592

[Activated]

If 'schedule' is known….

Better prepared?

SIGINT

Q