Did the CIA test LSD on unsuspecting Americans?
Did the CIA test LSD on unsuspecting Americans? You, like any other sane person, perceive a concrete world, one that’s generally calm and unmenacing. Everyday objects remain still and solid and don’t tend to melt into their surroundings. There is no one out to get you; strangers aren’t actually actors in an elaborate and nefarious ruse at which you are the uninformed center. There may or may not be a God; the secrets of the universe remain sequestered from you. All of this changes with LSD. The potent hallucinogen lysergic acid diethylamide can temporarily occupy the psyche of a person who ingests it. Because of its potency and ability to unlock the “doors of perception,” as author Alduous Huxley put it, LSD can be psychically violent. It can hijack the user’s mind, gently revealing life’s latent truths, or it can turn bully, reducing the user to a state of abject fear. Dr. Timothy Leary proposed that the latter, a bad trip, could
Did the CIA test LSD on unsuspecting Americans? You, like any other sane person, perceive a concrete world, one that’s generally calm and unmenacing. Everyday objects remain still and solid and don’t tend to melt into their surroundings. There is no one out to get you; strangers aren’t actually actors in an elaborate and nefarious ruse at which you are the uninformed center. There may or may not be a God; the secrets of the universe remain sequestered from you. All of this changes with LSD. The potent hallucinogen lysergic acid diethylamide can temporarily occupy the psyche of a person who ingests it. Because of its potency and ability to unlock the “doors of perception,” as author Alduous Huxley put it, LSD can be psychically violent. It can hijack the user’s mind, gently revealing life’s latent truths, or it can turn bully, reducing the user to a state of abject fear. Dr. Timothy Leary proposed that the latter, a bad trip, could