Anonymous ID: f707ad Sept. 2, 2018, 5:44 p.m. No.2852321   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2533

>>2852246 LB

 

Grateful Dead Claim Conspiracy of A Thousand Fools

MKUltra

 

Jack-booted cops on horseback have patrolled the Grateful

Dead concert scene for years; military style helicopters have

been a recent addition. After a miniscule tear-gas police riot

quieted the disruption of Grateful Dead concert on July 2 (police

eventually arrested thirty people in connection with the toppling

of a security fence), the band felt compelled to add lecture to

injury. It printed and distributed a note to its ordinarily

docile fans at it's next concert in St. Louis, July 5. One

Deadhead called the note a "Police`R'Us" rap for asserting that

"The security and police whom those people endangered represent

us, work for us – think of them as us." Do the Dead see a

conspiracy against this fusion of higher consciousness and

tighter security?

"Your justly-renowned tolerance and compassion have set you

up to be used," claimed the note, entitled "This Darkness Got to

Give" by the band. It went on to characterize the trouble-makers

as "saboteurs," but described their agenda as a "free for all

party" and "drunken stupidity," which might be an apt description

of some of the more senseless conspiratorial activity of late.

The biggest culprits named in the note are the venders, who sell

unauthorized t-shirts and beer at the concerts. The note makes

the odd claim that "Vending attracts people without

tickets…that have no responsibility or obligation to our

scene." Do people without tickets really go to the concert site

to buy t-shirts and beer? Where do the Dead think these people

are really coming from?

The conspiracy turned dangerous after the July 5 concert,

when a pavilion at a nearby Deadhead campground collapsed and

injured over 100 people.

Meanwhile, the latest issue of New Dawn repeats a recent

charge made by an English anarchist paper that a 1968 FBI memo

stating that it hired the Dead to politicize the counterculture

with drugs. The anarcho-zine, Freedom, claims that the memo

emerged after a law suit, although the reason for the suit and

its participants are not reported in New Dawn. New Dawn is an

impressive conspiracy zine published in Australia. It does quote

a polemic by Freedom that "More progress would have been possible

had not a part of the rebel movement decided that an effective

method of personal rebellion was to go for hallucinogenic drugs

like LSD…The diversion of revolutionary energy into drugs was

clearly harmful to the revolutionary movement, but few seriously

suspected at the time that it was directed by the state."

Perhaps, but it could be that the memo was a form of "snitch

jacket" designed to make the Dead look bad. Similar rumors have long

circulated about Tim Leary, Robert Anton Wilson, and other people

whose work can be connected to recreational drug use, most of

whom give the CIA great credit for inadvertently starting a

psychedelic revolution.