THE
CONTROLLERS:
A New
Hypothesis of Alien Abduction
by Martin
Cannon
Part
I
Introduction
The Problem
Sancta
Simplicitas
The
Hypothesis
Part II
The
Technology - A Brief Overview
Implants
Abductee
Implants
A Question
of Timing
The Quandary
Remote
Hypnosis
That's
Entrainment
Wave Your
Brain Goodbye
Final
Thoughts on "The Wave"
Part
III.
Applications
Palle
Hardrup's "Guardian Angel"
Screen
Memory
The Super
Spy
The
Scandinavian Connection
Helicopters
and Disks
The Military
and Mind Control
The Ultimate
Motive for Mind Control
Part
IV
Abductions
The Hill
Case and the "Advanced" Aliens
Arms and the
Abductee
"They Will
Think It's Flying Saucers"
Glimpses of
the Controllers
Cults
Grounds for
Further Research
Final
Thoughts
Notes
Selected
Bibliography on Mind Control
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Part
I
Introduction
One wag has
dubbed the problem "Terra and the Pirates."
The pirates,
ostensibly, are marauders from another solar system; their victims include
a growing number of troubled human beings who insist that they've been
shanghaied by these otherworldly visitors. An outlandish scenario -- yet
through the works of such authors as Budd Hopkins[1] and Whitley
Strieber[2], the "alien abduction" syndrome has seized the public
imagination. Indeed, tales of UFO contact threaten to lapse into
fashionability, even though, as I have elsewhere noted[3], they may still
inflict a formidable social price upon the claimant.
Some time
ago, I began to research these claims, concentrating my studies on the
social and political environment surrounding these events. As I studied,
the project grew and its scope widened. Indeed, I began to feel as though
I'd gone digging through familiar terrain only to unearth Gomorrah.
These
excavations may have disgorged a solution.
THE
PROBLEM
Among
ufologists, the term "abduction" has come to refer to an infinitely
confounding experience, or matrix of experiences, shared by a dizzying
number of individuals, who claim that travellers from the stars have
scooped them out of their beds, or snatched them from their cars, and
subjected them to interrogations, quasi-medical examinations, and
"instruction" periods. Usually, these sessions are said to occur within
alien spacecraft; frequently, the stories include terrifying details
reminiscent of the tortures inflicted in Germany's death camps. The
abductees often (though not always) lose all memory of these events; they
find themselves back in their cars or beds, unable to account for hours of
"missing time." Hypnosis, or some other trigger, can bring back these
haunted hours in an explosion of recollection -- and as the smoke clears,
an abductee will often spot a trail of similar experiences, stretching all
the way back to childhood.
Perhaps the
oddest fact of these odd tales: Many abductees, for all their
vividly-recollected agonies, claim to love their alien tormentors. That's
the word I've heard repeatedly: love.
Within the
community of "scientific ufologists" -- those lonely, all-too little-heard
advocates of reasonable and open-minded debate on matters saucerological
-- these claims have elicited cautious interest and a commendable
restraint from conclusion-hopping. Outside the higher realms of scientific
ufology, the situation is, alas, quite different. In the popular press, in
both the "straight" and sensationalist media, within that journalistic
realm where issues are defined and public opinion solidified (despite a
frequently superficial approach to matters of evidence and investigation)
abduction scenarios have elicited two basic reactions: that of the
Believer and the Skeptic.
The
Believers -- and here we should note that "Believers" and "abductees" are
two groups whose memberships overlap but are in no way congruent -- accept
such stories at face value. They accept, despite the seeming absurdity of
these tales, the internal contradictions, the askew logic of narrative
construction, the severe discontinuity of emotional response to the
actions described. The Believers believe, despite reports that their
beloved "space brothers" use vile and inhuman tactics of medical
examination -- senseless procedures most of us (and certainly the vanguard
of an advanced race) would be ashamed to inflict on an animal. The
Believers believe, despite the difficulty of reconciling these unsettling
tales with their own deliriums of benevolent off-worlders.
Occasionally, the rough notes of a rationalization are offered:
"The aliens don't know what they are doing," we hear; or "Some aliens are
bad." Yet the Believers confound their own reasoning when they insist on
ascribing the wisdom of the ages and the beneficence of the angels to
their beloved visitors. The aliens allegedly know enough about our society
to go about their business undetected by the local authorities and the
general public; they communicate with the abductees in human tongue; they
concern themselves with details of the percipients' innermost lives -- yet
they remain so ignorant of our culture as to be unaware of the basic moral
precepts concerning the dignity of the individual and the right to
self-determination. Such dichotomies don't bother the Believers; they are
the faithful, and faith is assumed to have its mysteries.
SANCTA
SIMPLICITAS.
Conversely,
the Skeptics dismiss these stories out of hand. They dismiss, despite the
intriguing confirmatory details: the multiple witness events, the physical
traces left by the ufonauts, the scars and implants left on the abductees.
The skeptics scoff, though the abductees tell stories similar in detail --
even certain tiny details, not known to the general public.
Philip Klass
is a debunker who, through his appearances on such television programs as
NOVA and NIGHTLINE, has been in a position to affect much of the public
debate on UFOs. In his interesting but poorly-documented work on
abductions[4], Klass claims that "abduction" is a psychological disease,
spread by those who write about it. This argument exactly resembles the
professional press- basher's frequent assertion that terrorism
metastasizes through media exposure. Yet for all the millions of words
expectorated by newsfolk on the subject of terrorism, terrorist actions
remain quite rare, as any statistician (though few politicians) will
admit, and verifiable linkage between crimes and their coverage remains to
be found. For that matter, there have been books -- bestsellers, even --
on unicorns and gnomes. People who claim to see those creatures are few.
Abductees are plentiful.
Both
Believer and Skeptic, in my opinion, miss the real story. Both make the
same mistake: They connect the abduction phenomenon to the forty-year
history of UFO sightings, and they apply their prejudices about the latter
to the controversy about the former.
At first
sight, the link seems natural. Shouldn't our thoughts about UFOs color our
thoughts about UFO abductions? NO.
They may
well be separate issues. Or, rather, they are connected only in this: The
myth of the UFO has provided an effective cover story for an entirely
different sort of mystery. Remove yourself from the Believer/Skeptic
dialectic, and you will see the third alternative.
As we
examine this alternative, we will, of necessity, stray far from the
saucers. We must turn our face from the paranormal and concentrate on the
occult -- if, by "occult," we mean SECRET.
I posit that
the abductees HAVE been abducted. Yet they are also spewing fantasy -- or,
more precisely, they have been given a set of lies to repeat and believe.
If my hypothesis proves true, then we must accept the following: The
kidnapping is real. The fear is real. The pain is real. The instruction is
real. But the little grey men from Zeti Reticuli are NOT real; they are
constructs, Halloween masks meant to disguise the real faces of the
controllers. The abductors may not be visitors from Beyond; rather, they
may be a symptom of the carcinoma which blackens our body politic.
The fault
lies not in our stars, but in ourselves.
THE
HYPOTHESIS
Substantial
evidence exists linking members of this country's intelligence community
(including the Central Intelligence Agency, the Defense Advanced Research
Projects Agency, and the Office of Naval Intelligence) with the esoteric
technology of MIND CONTROL. For decades, "spy- chiatrists" working behind
the scenes -- on college campuses, in CIA-sponsored institutes, and (most
heinously) in prisons -- have experimented with the erasure of memory,
hypnotic resistance to torture, truth serums, post-hypnotic suggestion,
rapid induction of hypnosis, electronic stimulation of the brain,
non-ionizing radiation, microwave induction of intracerebral "voices," and
a host of even more disturbing technologies. Some of the projects
exploring these areas were ARTICHOKE, BLUEBIRD, PANDORA, MKDELTA, MKSEARCH
and the infamous MKULTRA.
I have read
nearly every available book on these projects, as well as the relevant
congressional testimony[5]. I have also spent much time in university
libraries researching relevant articles, contacting other researchers (who
have graciously allowed me access to their files), and conducting
interviews. Moreover, I traveled to Washington, DC to review the files
John Marks compiled when he wrote THE SEARCH FOR "THE MANCHURIAN
CANDIDATE"[6]. These files include some 20,000 pages of CIA and Defense
Department documents, interviews, scientific articles, letters, etc. The
views presented here are the result of extensive and ongoing research.
As a result
of this research, I have come to the following conclusions:
1. Although
misleading (and occasionally perjured) testimony before Congress indicated
that the CIA's "brainwashing" efforts met with little success[7], striking
advances were, in fact, made in this field. As CIA veteran Miles Copeland
once admitted to a reporter, "The congressional subcommittee which went
into this sort of thing got only the barest glimpse." [8]
2.
Clandestine research into thought manipulation has NOT stopped, despite
CIA protestations that it no longer sponsors such studies. Victor
Marchetti, 14-year veteran of the CIA and author of the renown expose, THE
CIA AND THE CULT OF INTELLIGENCE, confirmed in a 1977 interview that the
mind control research continues, and that CIA claims to the contrary are a
"cover story."[9]
3. The
Central Intelligence Agency was not the only government agency involved in
this research[10]. Indeed, many branches of our government took part in
these studies - - including NASA, the Atomic Energy Commission, as well as
all branches of the Defense Department.
To these
conclusions I would append the following -- NOT as firmly-established
historical fact, but as a working hypothesis and grounds for
investigation:
4. The "UFO
abduction" phenomenon MIGHT be a continuation of clandestine mind control
operations.
I recognize
the difficulties this thesis might present to those readers emotionally
wedded to the extraterrestrial hypothesis, or to those whose political
WELTANSHAUUNG disallows any such suspicions. Still, the open-minded
student of abductions should consider the possibilities. Certainly, we are
not being narrow-minded if we ask researchers to exhaust ALL terrestrial
explanations before looking heavenward.
Granted,
this particular explanation may, at first, seem as bizarre as the
phenomenon itself. But I invite the skeptical reader to examine the work
of George Estabrooks, a seminal theorist on the use of hypnosis in
warfare, and a veteran of Project MKULTRA. Estabrooks once amused himself
during a party by covertly hypnotizing two friends, who were led to
believe that the Prime Minister of England had just arrived; Estabrooks'
victims spent an hour conversing with, and even serving drinks to, the
esteemed visitor[11]. For ufologists, this incident raises an inescapable
question: If the Mesmeric arts can successfully evoke a non-existent Prime
Minister, why can't a representative from the Pleiades be similarly
induced?
But there is
much more to the present day technology of mind control than mere hypnosis
-- and many good reasons to suspect that UFO abduction accounts are an
artifact of continuing brainwashing/behavior modification experiments.
Moreover, I intend to demonstrate that, by using UFO mythology as a cover
story, the experimenters may have solved the major problem with the work
conducted in the 1950s -- "the disposal problem," i.e., the question of
"What do we do with the victims?"
If, in these
pages, I seem to stray from the subject of the saucers, I plead for
patience. Before I attempt to link UFO abductions with mind control
experiments, I must first show that this technology EXISTS. Much of the
forthcoming is an introduction to the topic of mind control -- what it is,
and how it works.
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