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Roseanne Barr: "MK ULTRA Mind Control Rules in Hollywood" Roseanne Barr is an outspoken actress and comedienne who never shied away from tackling difficult and controversial issues, even if that meant being unpopular or being tagged as “crazy” by mass media.

Roseanne Barr: "MK ULTRA Mind Control Rules in Hollywood"

While I can’t say that I agree with all of her views, she remains one of the very few people in Hollywood who dare talking about its most damning issue: MK ULTRA. In a recent interview with RT, Roseanne talked about the dark side of the entertainment industry and directly mentioned MK ULTRA as being a major force in Hollywood. Here’s the interview (it is set up to start at the part about the entertainment industry).

Roseanne basically says that Hollywood stars are terrified of using their status to speak out about important issues because there’s a “culture of fear” going on there, where “speaking out” almost automatically equals being shunned from the industry and having one’s career destroyed. More importantly she adds: “It’s also a big culture of Mind Control. What Drugs Are Our Astronauts On? Outer space, at least as we encounter it in science fiction, is basically a drug free-for-all.

What Drugs Are Our Astronauts On?

If character's aren’t piloting starships on Melange or Somec, then they're playing with dolls on Can-D or pumping their brains full of Merge Nine, Semuta and whatever passes for rave music 20,000 years from now. But let's steer clear of the fictional space drugs and consider the buffet of pharmaceuticals that real astronauts might indulge themselves in. Booze: While coffee continues to be readily available in space, alcohol is more of a gray area. In 1969, Buzz Aldrin consumed communion wine on the moon and, if you believe some of the stories, the Russian MIR space station was practically swimming in vodka. While the ISS is technically a dry operation, NASA came under scrutiny in 2007 amid reports of astronauts hitting the bottle before takeoff.

World's Scariest Drug (Documentary Exclusive) Report reveals use of ‘truth serum’ at Guantanamo prison. Two members of the military walk out of the "Camp Six" detention facility of the Joint Detention Group at the US Naval Station in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba on January 19, 2012.

Report reveals use of ‘truth serum’ at Guantanamo prison

Recently-declassified US documents point to the forcible administration of a ‘truth serum’ of severe side effects to all the detainees at the US notorious prison in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. The documents detailed operating procedures for nursing staff at the facility, including the use of the drug, named scopolamine, The Sydney Morning Herald reported on Sunday. According to the paper, information released by the CIA has shown that scopolamine had been disqualified as a truth drug because of its many undesirable side effects, including hallucinations, disturbed perception, headaches, rapid heartbeat, and blurred vision. Anti-nausea.pdf (application/pdf Object) Scopolamine: Powerful drug growing in the forests of Colombia that ELIMINATES free will. Scopolamine often blown into faces of victims or added to drinksWithin minutes, victims are like 'zombies' - coherent, but with no free willSome victims report emptying bank accounts to robbers or helping them pillage own houseDrug is made from borrachero tree, which is common in Colombia By Beth Stebner Published: 22:44 GMT, 12 May 2012 | Updated: 13:43 GMT, 13 May 2012 A hazardous drug that eliminates free will and can wipe the memory of its victims is currently being dealt on the streets of Colombia.

Scopolamine: Powerful drug growing in the forests of Colombia that ELIMINATES free will

What is Devils Breath (Scopolamine), and Why its Important. the missing piece to the puzzle Drug. "Truth" Drugs in Interrogation. Effects of narcosis and considerations relevant to its possible counterintelligence use.

"Truth" Drugs in Interrogation

George Bimmerle The search for effective aids to interrogation is probably as old as man's need to obtain information from an uncooperative source and as persistent as his impatience to shortcut any tortuous path. In the annals of police investigation, physical coercion has at times been substituted for painstaking and time-consuming inquiry in the belief that direct methods produce quick results. Sir James Stephens, writing in 1883, rationalizes a grisly example of "third degree" practices by the police of India: "It is far pleasanter to sit comfortably in the shade rubbing red pepper in a poor devil's eyes than to go about in the sun hunting up evidence. " Polite Dissent » Scopolamine: Superman’s Downfall? April 26th, 2011 Filed under: Comics, Medicine An ex-con masquerading as a TV show host sprays Lana Lang with some scopolamine hoping she’ll spill the beans about Superman’s secret identity. scene from Action Comics #288 (May, 1962) Scopolamine, originally derived from plants in the deadly nightshade family, is a potent anticholinergic drug.

Polite Dissent » Scopolamine: Superman’s Downfall?

It is not used much today because nasty side effects are very common, but it can still be found in treatments for abdominal cramping and motion sickness (that patch for motion sickness your mom gets from the doctor before her cruise? In the early 20th century, scopolamine was used, along with morphine, to provide pain relief during childbirth by placing the mother in a zombified “twilight sleep” (and in fact scopolamine is one of the drugs said to be used to make Voodoo zombie powder). Scopolamine is sometimes mixed with street drugs to prolong the euphoric feelings.

Can scopolamine be used as a “truth serum?”