Area 51 The Revealing Truth of Ufos, Secret Aircraft, Cover-Ups & Conspiracies
The controversy surrounding Bob Lazar has a particularly important aspect that many researchers are either completely unaware of or have over-looked —possibly not realizing the importance of that certain aspect. It’s the distinct possibility that while working out at S-4, Lazar may have had his mind tampered with. We’re talking about ways and means to blur reality, to have the targeted individual—in this case, Lazar—see and experience something that may not actually be part of what passes for reality.
Timothy Good made a notable statement on this issue. Good stated that Lazar told him, “Security was formidable, and various methods of intimidation (including the possible use of drugs and hypnosis [italics mine]) were used to ensure that those who worked at the base kept their mouths shut.” Renowned ufologist Dr. Jacques Vallée noted something that was almost certainly connected to the drugs/hypnosis issue. Vallée, speaking on KLAS- TV’s show UFOs: The Best Evidence, said he asked Lazar “if he felt that his memory might have been tampered with.” That question was asked for a good reason. Lazar has admitted that on a couple of occasions, all he could remember was being flown out to S-4 … and flying back.
That’s all. His mind had been wiped clean of around two days’ worth of memories, and he never, ever got those missing days back. In light of that, we have to seriously wonder if Lazar genuinely recalled his experiences as he remembered them but that what he remembered wasn’t real. It may well have been part of an ingenious plan to have Lazar become the ultimate patsy in a plot to convince someone—maybe the Russians—that the U.S. government has UFOs and alien technology in its secret arsenals. In that sense, the entirety of Lazar’s story needs to be addressed very carefully not because he was a liar but because his memories cannot be trusted.
Of course, though, that’s not due to him. It’s all due to whoever it was who messed with his mind. For those who may think that such mind-altering technologies do not—and cannot—exist, it’s time to think again. It’s time to take a look at the strange and controversial world of MKUltra, one of the most notorious of all the many and varied mind-control-driven programs of the CIA.
Within the annals of research into conspiracy theories, perhaps no term creates more emotion than mind control. Indeed, mention those two words to anyone who is even remotely aware of the term, and it will invariably and inevitably (and wholly justifiably, too) provoke imagery and comments pertaining to political assassinations, dark and disturbing CIA chicanery, sexual slavery, secret government projects, and even alien abductions and subliminal advertising on the part of the world’s media and advertising agencies.
Yes, the specter of mind control is one that has firmly worked its ominous way into numerous facets of modern-day society, and it has been doing so for years. Consider, for example, the following: “I can hypnotize a man, without his knowledge or consent, into committing treason against the United States,” asserted Dr. George Estabrooks, Ph.D., chairman of the Department of Psychology at Colgate University way back in 1942, before a select group of personnel became attached to the U.S. War Department.
Estabrooks added: “Two hundred trained foreign operators, working in the United States, could develop a uniquely dangerous army of hypnotically controlled Sixth Columnists.” Estabrooks’s pièce de résistance, however, was to capitalize on an ingenious plan that had been postulated as far back as the First World War.
As he explained: “During World War One, a leading psychologist made a startling proposal to the navy. He offered to take a submarine steered by a captured U-boat captain, placed under his hypnotic control, through enemy mine fields to attack the German fleet. Washington nixed the stratagem as too risky.
First, because there was no disguised method by which the captain’s mind could be outflanked. Second, because today’s technique of day-by-day breaking down of ethical conflicts brainwashing was still unknown. “The indirect approach to hypnotism would, I believe, change the navy’s answer today. Personally, I am convinced that hypnosis is a bristling, dangerous armament which makes it doubly imperative to avoid the war of tomorrow.” A perfect example of the way in which the will of a person could be completely controlled and manipulated was amply and graphically spelled out in an article that Dr. George Estabrooks wrote in April 1971 for the now defunct publication Science Digest. Titled “Hypnosis Comes of Age,” it stated the following: “Communication in war is always a headache. Codes can be broken.
A professional spy may or may not stay bought. Your own man may have unquestionable loyalty, but his judgment is always open to question. “The ‘hypnotic courier,’ on the other hand, provides a unique solution. I was involved in preparing many subjects for this work during World War II. One successful case involved an Army Service Corps Captain whom we’ll call George Smith. “Captain Smith had undergone months of training. He was an excellent subject but did not realize it. I had removed from him, by post-hypnotic suggestion, all recollection of ever having been hypnotized.
https://scienceandspace.com/ufos/messing-with-the-mind-part-2/