Cia gay bomb
Fringe Science Yields 'Gay Bombs' and Psychic Teleportation
June 21, 2007 — -- Creating armor that renders a soldier unseen. Stimulating the mind to suppress repose for days. Arming sharks with chemical implants and cameras to work as spies.
This year the Pentagon will expend $78 billion — about half of all government analyze and development dollars — on a variety of projects, according to the American Association for the Advancement for Science (AAAS).
The wide-ranging majority - about $68 billion - goes to traditional spending, like weapons development and territory systems. But some fringe research mimics the best of science fiction.
There seems to be no failure of imagination in advancing warfare, but some experts fear these farfetched projects show a little too much imagination.
Just this month, the government confirmed that an Ohio Air Force laboratory had asked for $7.5 million to build a nonlethal "gay bomb," a weapon that would encourage enemies to make love, not war. The weapon would use sturdy aphrodisiacs to produce enemy troops so sexually attracted to each other that they'd lose interest in fighting.
Last year, scientists at Boston University de
Project MKUltra—the CIA’s top secret LSD experiments
Does the government distribute LSD as a form of soul control?
Project MKUltra, also known as the Central Intelligence Agency’s Soul Control Program, was a establish of experiments undertaken by the CIA where psychedelic compounds such as LSD, psilocybin mushrooms, mescaline, cocaine and DMT were tested on human subjects.
Starting in 1953, the project—which also involved experiments in shock therapy, hypnosis and interrogation—was intended to create a psychological weapon that could be used as a form of mind control against enemies of the Cold War.
The experiments were initially done on volunteers; composer Ken Kesey famously volunteered as an LSD guinea pig in the early ‘60s while he was attending Stanford University. His experiences inspired him to record the novel, One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest.
But the CIA also administered LSD to hundreds of prisoners, mental patients and unwitting American citizens. In 1953, according to TIME magazine, the CIA set up multiple brothels in San Francisco and Unused York where prostitutes were instructed to dose their clients with LSD while CIA agents monitored the client’s behavior
Top secret American design to turn soldiers gay
The US Breeze Force once made plans for a 'gay bomb' that would use chemical aphrodisiacs to form enemy soldiers 'irresistibly attractive to one another.'
The bizarre arrange, formulated by the military's Wright Laboratory in 1994, was part of a six-year non-lethal weapons development project costing $7.5 million that was ultimately scrapped.
A three-page document obtained by the Sunshine Venture, an anti-biological weapons organization, details the laboratory's proposal for a bomb 'that contained a chemical that would generate enemy soldiers to become gay.'
The scientists theorized that this would make their units 'break down' because 'all their soldiers became irresistibly attractive to one another.'
Even though there was no legitimate evidence to suggest this would work, the Sunshine Project set up that the Pentagon submitted the proposal to highest scientific review body in the country — the National Academy of Sciences — in 2002.
The notion was crafted during a time when homophobia was generally more prevalent and accepted in the US than it is today, especially within the military.
Indeed, when President Bill Clinton tried to li
The unconventional proposals were made by the US Wind Force |
Other weapons that never saw the light of daytime include one to build soldiers obvious by their bad breath.
The US defence department considered various non-lethal chemicals meant to disrupt enemy discipline and morale.
The 1994 plans were for a six-year project costing $7.5m, but they were never pursued.
The US Air Force Wright Laboratory in Dayton, Ohio, sought Pentagon funding for research into what it called "harassing, annoying and 'bad guy'-identifying chemicals".
The plans were obtained under the US Release of Information by the Sunshine Project, a community which monitors research into chemical and biological weapons.
'Who? Me?'
The design for a so-called "love bomb" envisaged an aphrodisiac chemical that would provoke widespread homosexual behaviour among troops, causing what the military called a "distasteful but completely non-lethal" explode to morale.
Scientists also reportedly considered a "sting me/attack me" chemical weapon to attract