Mind Wars: The True Story of Government Research into the Military Potential of Psychic Weapons
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-Why are the United States and Russia engaged in a "psychic arms race?"
-Did you know the U.S. government is spending millions of tax dollars on "Stargate"-type psi projects like "Madame Zodiac" and "First Earth Battalion?"
-Can some people use extrasensory powers and "psychotronic" equipment to detect submarines and military installations, or are they elaborate fakes?
-What is the "psychic howitzer?" Can it really blast missiles out of the sky?
In this shocking and controversial book, Ron McRae documents the incredible story of official research into the military uses of parapsychology at the highest levels of government.
Using interviews with confidential inside sources, along with previously unavailable classified documents, the author reveals the suppressed results of longterm, top-secret research carried out by the U.S. Navy, the CIA, and the nations's most prestigious research institutes.
Whether or not you believe in the powers of parapsychology, you'll be convinced that Mind Wars holds profound implications for the future of warfare, science, and mankind.
Hardcover: 155 pages
Publisher: St Martins Pr; 1st edition (April 1, 1984)
Transformation: The Breakthrough by Whitley Strieber (1988-09-01)
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No details.
Hardcover: 320 pages
Publisher: Beech Tree Books (1988)
Were we controlled? The Assassination of President Kennedy
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A Kennedy assassination conspiracy theory that explores the possibility that mind control via hypnotic conditioning was used to manipulate Oswald and Ruby, among others, in a "Manchurian Candidate" -type plot.
Hardcover: 173 pages
Publisher: University Books; First Edition edition (1967)
Human drug testing by the CIA, 1977: Hearings before the Subcommittee on Scientific Research of the Committee on Human Resources, United States ... on S. 1893 ... September 20 and 21, 1977
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>Human drug testing by the CIA, 1977: Hearings before the Subcommittee on Scientific Research of the Committee on Human Resources, United States ... on S. 1893 ... September 20 and 21, 1977
Paperback: 224 pages
Publisher: University of Michigan Library (January 1, 1977)
No details.
Paperback: 160 pages
Publisher: Thorsons (March 23, 1984)
The Boss: J. Edgar Hoover and the Great American Inquisition
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From Publishers Weekly
In Secrecy and Power (1987), Richard Gid Powers argued that the late FBI director achieved greater power than any figure in U.S. history. Theoharis and Cox, from a study of previously inaccessible FBI files plus extensive interviews, shed further light on the methods by which Hoover attained, employed and abused power, demonstrating that "The Boss" more proficiently undermined our constitutional guarantees than any political leader before or since. The authors also speculate about what made "this sad, impoverished man" tick as they probe the darker aspects of Hoover's psyche, elaborating for instance on his identification of political radicalism with filth and licentiousness, "neither of which ever failed to arouse in him an almost hysterical loathing." This important biography adds significantly to the growing dossier demythologizing a legend. Theoharis is a history professor at Marquette University, Cox a freelance writer. Illustrations. Copyright 1988 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal
Hoover was the fourth child born to a willful mother and a weak father. As a young FBI agent, imbued with his mother's Calvinistic sense of rectitude, he distinguished himself with his work ethic and organization of raids on such radical groups as the IWW; as director, he reformed the agency and initiated the illegal break-ins, wiretaps, and cooperation with sources such as Hedda Hopper that enriched FBI files with politically explosive material. Through adroit use of the Freedom of Information Act, Theoharis and Cox have produced a richly documented biography of a Mephistophelian man. Highly recommended. James L. Jablonowski, Univ. of Wisconsin, Milwaukee Copyright 1988 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Hardcover: 293 pages
Publisher: Temple Univ Pr; First Edition edition (April 1, 1988)
Hypnotism and crime. Translated from the German and foreword by Professor John Cohen and Melvin Powers.
Paperback: ? pages
Publisher: Wilshire Book Co. (1957)
Mega Brain: New Tools And Techniques For Brain Growth And Mind Expansion
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The classic book that revolutionized the "mind tech" industry is finally available in low cost Kindle edition. Scientists have learned more about the brain in the last decade than in all of previous history, and the implications of the latest research are clear: The human brain is far more powerful, and has the potential for immensely greater growth and transformation, than was ever before imagined. These discoveries may constitute the most significant development in learning since the invention of writing. Michael Hutchison captures all the drama, excitement, and adventure as we finally begin to comprehend the most mysterious and complex structure in the universe, the source of human culture, a still untapped reservoir of power and skills. He looks at the recently developed machines and devices that may soon allow us to increase brain size and intelligence; regenerate brain cells; trigger specific brain states such as euphoria, long- and short-term memory, sexual excitement, and creativity; and control the brain's electrical activity in order to alter such "involuntary" mechanisms as blood pressure, heart rate, and the secretion of hormones. Megabrain is a lucid and lively account of where the pioneers in brain research are headed -- and where they are taking us. CONTENTS INTRODUCTION: THE LAST FRONTIER PART-I 1. LIGHTING OUT FOR THE TERRITORY 2. GETTING SMART: BRAIN EXPANSION THROUGH STIMULATION 3. THE WISDOM OF AGE: LEARNING THE SECRET OF LIFELONG GROWTH 4. EVOLUTION AGAINST ENTROPY 5. ASCENT TO A HIGHER ORDER: BRAIN AS DISSIPATIVE STRUCTURE 6. RELAXATION AND THE BRAIN 7. IN SEARCH OF THE WILD MIND MACHINE PART-II 8. WE SING THE MIND ELECTRIC, PART ONE: TENS 9. WESING THE MIND ELECTRIC, PART TWO: CRANIAL ELECTRO STIMULATION 10. THE VIDEO GAME OF THE BRAIN: CAP SCAN 11. GAZING AT YOURSELF: THE MIND MIRROR 12. TUNING THE BRAIN WITH SOUND WAVES: HEMI-SYNC 13. PACEMAKERS FOR THE BRAIN: THE SOUND AND LIGHT MACHINES 14. THE PLEASURES OF MERELY CIRCULATING: THE GRAHAM POTENTIALIZER 15. GAZING HARD INTO THE VOID: TRANQUILITE 16. ADRIFT ON THE GREAT LAKE OF UNKNOWING: THE FLOTATION TANK 17. THE EVOLUTIONARY BRAIN AFTERWORD BIBLIOGRAPHY INDEX
Paperback: 202 pages
Publisher: CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform (October 19, 2013)
The Brain Revolution: The Frontiers of Mind Research
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Capabilities, functions, maladies, potentialities, parapsychological phenomena, and electronic stimulation of the brain.
Hardcover: 380 pages
Publisher: Taplinger; 1st edition (1973)
Now a SHOWTIME Original Motion Picture starring William Baldwin, Kelly Lynch, and Peter Gallagher, Brotherhood of Murder chronicles the dramatic true story of Tom Martinez, a man who was undercover for the FBI in one of America's most dangerous white supremist terrorist groups. Given the recent tragic hate-crime shootings, this classic non-fiction book is more relevant than ever. Growing up poor, white and angry on the mean streets of Philadelphia, Tom Martinez was ready for action. And he found it with Bob Mathews, founder of the most violent secret racist society in America, The Order. The charismatic Mathews was a leader Martinez could follow to hell and back. And he did - through counterfeiting, knowledge of bombings, robbery and murder, and, finally, horrified awareness. Martinez had been seduced by the rhetoric into a group whose racial hatred resulted in the largest armored car robbery in American history, and the killing of Denver talk-show host Alan Berg. Here is his riveting story: the vivid, harrowing details of life inside The Order, and how he regained his conscience and his manhood by going undercover for the FBI to bring the group down. Thomas Martinez has refused the security of the Witness Protection Program. To this day he journeys across the country, a marked man, risking his life to warn of the dangers of the neo-Nazi right. His extraordinary story packs the power of a first-rate thriller. But in America today, it is the bone-chilling truth. Updated for iUniverse.com by the author, this story packs the power of a first-rate thriller!
Review
Gripping, well-written. BROTHERHOOD OF MURDER should be required reading. -- Jewish Chronicle of Pittsburgh
Martinezs BROTHERHOOD OR MURDER provides insight into the subculture of hate in America. His personal journey is proof positive that people can change. -- Rabbi Abraham Cooper, Simon Wiesenthal Center
Within the span of two months, America has witnessed three separate but equally despicable and horrifying acts of violence aimed at religious and ethnic minorities: the firebombing of synagogues in Sacramento, a killing spree targeting Blacks, Jews and Asians in Illinois and Indiana, and the barbaric shootings of Jewish day school and the slaying of a Filipino-American postal worker in Los Angeles. Each incident sadly, has been linked to followers of extremist groups whose venomous message of racial superiority and hate may have spurred them to action.
As an insider who blew the whistle on the violent nature of Americas far-right fringe, Tom Martinez offers a compelling and chilling reminder of the potentially explosive nature of hate. He convincingly demonstrates how racial and religious prejudice can be exploited by hate-filled extremists to serve a criminal cause. His story has new immediacy in the light of recent tragedies. -- Abraham H. Foxman, Anti-Defamation League
About the Author
Thomas Martinez grew up poor in the very segregated Philadelphia of the 1960s . Martinez was drawn to hate groups and the ideal of white supremacy through a sense of disenfranchisement that affected many of his contemporaries during the turbulent Sixties. By the time he was 21, Martinez was disillusioned and became seduced by the handsome eloquence of David Duke and the Ku Klux Klan. By his late twenties, Martinez?s fervor for the Klan had begun to wane, and his faith in the quasi-religion of hate had reached an unavoidable stage of doubt. But the need to belong guided his continued involvement in various hate groups such as the National Alliance, Christian Identity, and eventually Bob Matthew?s own organization, The Order. It eventually became too much for Martinez, the knowledge of deaths he never intended, violence he never endorsed, but there was always the support?money, counterfeit and otherwise?that he needed for his growing family. And before long, even that became too much? He had allowed himself to go to far, and the time for redemption was fading quickly?it was 1984, and Martinez, seeking to right his wrongs, became an FBI informant.Thomas Martinez has refused the government offer of the Witness Protection Program, and lives in hiding. He does make appearances speaking out against racism and anti-Semitism.John Guinther is a Philadelphia-based author and journalist. Three of his articles have been cited for excellence by the American Bar Association. He is the winner of the Robert F. Kennedy and Gerald Loeb awards. He has written six other books. Guinther's articles on the Ferber case were nominated for a Pulitzer Prize in 1986. The same year, he was awarded the Louis Apotheker citation for the advancement of the cause of justice by a non-lawyer. His most recent book is Direction of Cities (Viking/Penguin, 1997).
Paperback: 264 pages
Publisher: iUniverse (November 4, 1999)
The Zapping of America: Microwaves, Their Deadly Risk, and the Coverup
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Shows the ways in which the entire population of the United States is being exposed to dangerous levels of microwave radiation and points to a conspiracy of silence between the Department of Defense and the electronics industry.
Hardcover: 343 pages
Publisher: W W Norton & Co Inc; 1st edition (October 1, 1977)
The first fully detailed investigation of secret mind-control experiments and medical tortures that are still being performed around the world--a real life Manchurian Candidate expose.
Paperback: 544 pages
Publisher: Bantam Books; New Ed edition (1989)
Psychotechnology: Electronic Control of Mind and Body
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No details.
Paperback: 348 pages
Publisher: Holt, Rinehart & Winston of Canada Ltd (March 1973)
The Agency: The Rise and Decline of the CIA
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From Publishers Weekly
Ranelagh, a British writer, provides here a major overview of the Central Intelligence Agency from its founding in 1947 to the present. Based largely on hundreds of interviews, the book examines the personality and policies of each director in the context of the times. The agency's public posture is traced in detail: how, for instance, its agents began the '60s as "closet heroes," emerging as public heroes in the Cuban missile crises only to become public villains as a result of the Vietnam War. Favorable emphasis is placed on the contribution of William Colby, the most beleaguered of the directors, whose voluntary disclosures laid open the agency's inner workings, "giving onlookers the extraordinary spectacle of a secret service having its secrets revealed by the nation on whose behalf it operated." Colby's successor, George Bush, is also given high marks, especially for the way he overcame the public's initial skepticism about his abilities. As to William Casey, the current director, Ranelagh draws no conclusions, though he does call him insensitive and "unhaunted by ideals." Photos. Copyright 1986 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal
Much has been written on the Central Intelligence Agency over the past two decades, but until now there has not been an exhaustive and widely accessible history of the CIA. Based on hundreds of interviews and a careful reading of many books and documents, The Agency is a highly readable work of objective scholarship. Ranelagh's writing style is lively, and his character sketches can be devastating. The book is well documented and contains a fine selective bibliography. In addition to documenting the history of the CIA, Ranelagh admirably surveys the politics of the postwar years and is careful to place CIA activities within the context of international events. His final section is an excellent essay on the state of the CIA under the Reagan administration, and on the shift away from human intelligence to a highly technical operation. Highly recommended for public and academic libraries.Thomas A. Karel, Franklin & Marshall Coll. Lib., Lancaster, Pa. Copyright 1986 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Paperback: 869 pages
Publisher: Touchstone Books; Reprint edition (June 1, 1987)
The Mind Manipulators: A Non-fiction Account
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Warns of the threats to personal freedom and individuality posed by armies, intelligence agencies, psychiatrists, prison officials, and others who use mind-control techniques
Hardcover: 539 pages
Publisher: Paddington Press; 1st edition (July 1, 1978)