EIR releases study linking British psychiatry to assassination

From Higher Intellect Documents

                      EIRNS NEWS BULLETIN

                   EIR releases study linking
              British psychiatry to assassination

WASHINGTON, Oct. 3 (EIRNS)--A behavior control research
project was begun in the 1950s, coordinated by the British
psychological warfare unit called the Tavistock Institute, with
the Scottish Rite Masons, the Central Intelligence Agency, and
other British, U.S., Canadian, and United Nations agencies. The
project became notorious in the 1970s under a CIA code name,
``MK-Ultra,'' and was investigated by the Senate for numerous
abuses. 
    In a groundbreaking study published in the Oct. 7, 1994
issue of Executive Intelligence Review, the magazine founded by
Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr., historian Anton Chaitkin connects this
project to the threatened and accomplished assassination of
political leaders, which has become increasingly frequent in
public life since the 1960s. ``Just since the 1992 election
campaign, for example, President Bill Clinton has been the target
of at least 15 assassination threats. Many of these would-be
killers, and many of the assassins of past years, had been in
destructive 
psychiatric programs, or were members of
psychiatrically manipulated cults,'' Chaitkin explains. 
    ``A great obstacle to clear thinking in this area has been
the assumption that the U.S. government would not sponsor
programs for the murder of American leaders. This logical
assumption misses the point, that the overall project, including
`MK-Ultra,' has been foreign-sponsored and anti-American in its
purposes,'' he writes. 
    The 12-page EIR cover story, written in the form of an
informational dossier captioned "For Your Reference Files,"
outlines the British background of this deeply criminal
enterprise, with its roots in the political and psychiatric
movement called eugenics. It begins with the buildup to World War
I in 1909-13, when the Rockefeller Foundation was created and
lavishly funded with Standard Oil profits, in parallel with the
birth of the British-inspired Federal Reserve, the Internal
Revenue Service, and the Federal Bureau of Investigation. 
    The article continue with such subtopics as: the 1920s: the
pre-Hitler era in Germany; 1930: a New Age in psychiatry;
Mid-1930s: Nazi eugenics in practice; 1934: The Freemasons study
madness; 1936-38: Columbia University's chamber of horrors;
1939-40: the deal for Auschwitz; 1943: research in Nazi-occupied
Poland; 1943: research in North America; The question of
sponsorship; Masonic `charity';  Manchuria in California?; The
official assassination program; Strange deaths: Frank Olson and
Philip Graham; and, The assassins' goals. 

-- 
         John Covici
          [email protected]