Talk:Project BLUEBIRD

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[edit] Is this reliable

I just want to make sure that the source that wrote this is correct about this operation. To the person who wrote this: Are you positive that this happened?

--Rentastrawberry 00:16, 3 Dec 2004 (UTC)

Well, the article is worded to sound attention-getting, but yes, it's accurate. The CIA didn't call it "mind control", they called it "behavior control". And LSD wasn't widely known at the time. The experiments were largely failures, since the primary goals – making an agent immune to interrogation, or finding a way of forcing a captured spy reveal all he knew – were never met. Quadell (talk) (help)[[]] 01:02, Dec 3, 2004 (UTC)

[edit] Sounds like a Scientology tract

This article is suspicious, especially the parts about children and electroconvulsive therapy. The ideas here are identical to those in Scientology. Are there any Internet references, or any other books? A2Kafir 17:19, 26 May 2005 (UTC)


This is true--- there have also been projects involving service men and prostitutes in San Francisco in the sixties using LSD as a means for extra sensory perception.I believe it is called mk ultra. :)kharrison...Nov 4, 2006 Who is to say that this kind of thing has ever stopped?