Hallucinogenic weapons

  • Auteur de la discussion Auteur de la discussion Jakobien
  • Date de début Date de début

Jakobien

Alpiniste Kundalini
There were many acid tests happening in the 1950s and 1960s. Ken Kesey and his Merry Pranksters dosed sometimes-unsuspecting proto-hippies. The CIA was dosing unsuspecting mainstreamers. Leary dosed fully cognizant artists, therapists and students. But meanwhile, over at Army Chemical Center at Edgewood Arsenal in Maryland, psychiatrist James S. Ketchum was testing LSD, BZ and other psychedelic and deliriant compounds on fully informed volunteers for the U.S. military.

As an Army psychiatrist just out of residency, Dr. James E. Ketchum was assigned to Edgewoord Arsenal’s Medical Research Laboratories, first as a research psychiatrist in 1961. He became Chief of the Psychopharmacology Branch in 1963, and then became Acting Chief of Clinical Research in 1966. After a brief hiatus at Stanford University, he returned as Edgewoods’ Chief of Clinical Research in 1968, staying there until 1971. Dr. Ketchum and his team were looking, primarily, for non-lethal incapacitating agents, and he was central to many of the experiments with these compounds that took place during that time.

Now, Dr. Ketchum has released his fascinating self-published memoir, Chemical Warfare: Secrets Almost Forgotten, primarily detailing his times at Edgewood. The book boasts charts, graphs and experimental reports — a veritable goldmine of information for those who are interested in psychedelics, deliriants, or chemical warfare. It’s also a funny, observant, and reflective personal memoir, casting a light not only on Ketchum and his work, but on a decade that saw 60s counterculture and the military share an oddly intersecting obsession with mind-altering drugs.

Dr. Ketchum himself has remained intrigued by these chemicals, as reflected in his ongoing friendship with Dr. Alexander (Sasha) Shulgin, who wrote a foreword for this book.

Zen monkeys did an interview with Dr. Ketchum.
 
If you've never read "The Electric Kool Aid Acid Tests" then you need to go buy a copy now. Right now. Do it!
 
Cool! Thanks Jacobien, you always come with the most interesting stuff :D
 
Brewmaster a dit:
If you've never read "The Electric Kool Aid Acid Tests" then you need to go buy a copy now. Right now. Do it!

I've read it and I didn't think it all that well written really. Maybe it just wasn't my kind of writing, but I thought it lacked a lot in terms of writing craft.

As for this book, I look forward for time set aside for it. Thanks guy
 
You're obviously some sort of crazy person. Get back to you cell.
 
If you've never read "The Electric Kool Aid Acid Tests" then you need to go buy a copy now. Right now. Do it!

i'm already reading like 3 books at the same time. :retard:
But when im ready with those ill definitely check The Electric Kool Aid Acid Tests
thanks for the tip :wink:
 
Hehe, the CIA actually introduced a lot of students to lsd because they were afraid to test it on themselves. Bad luck for them... ;)
 
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