So, re: scopolamine discussion on (pb) >>4642847
Sauce included "passive avoidance tests" in rats. If anon understood, scopolamine decreased passive avoidance (rats that were trained to avoid certain behaviors via negative stimulus (pain)). So, scopolamine might be used to get a subject (person) to do something that their conditioning normally would have them avoid.
Anon thinks scopolomine is used to condition subjects to act in ways that would normally frighten them, or cause them emotional pain (due to violating their moral code). As in, MKultra amoral assassins.
Anon also noted (if correct) nicotine works against scopolamine (nicotine is to this anon's understanding, an actylcholine analog, which is the body/brain's main neurotransmitter, and acts as a stimulant). Anon wonders if this is why anon has a wicked nicotine habit…