In 1500 B.C., the Egyptians were using a hypnocourier system.
'Programmed' virgins served the Pharoah as royal "message bearers from
the gods." The women were sent under military escort to distant
dignitaries who knew the cue which would unlock the messenger's lips
and release the consciously unknown secret message locked in her
unconscious. At journey's end, when presented to the dignitary and
cued, the words of her message would miraculously form themselves at
her lips and speak themselves. She had no conscious knowledge from
where those words came. She had no foreknowledge what words it was
that her mouth would speak.
Modern hypnocouriers are described in a 1963 text on clinical and
experimental hypnosis:
Hypnosis is assuming an ever-increasing role in the psychological aspects of warfare. For instance, a good subject can be hypnotized to deliver secret information. The memory of this message could be covered by an artificially induced amnesia. In the even that he should be captured, he naturally could not remember that he had ever been given the message. He would not remember the message. However, since he had been given a posthypnotic suggestion, the message would be subject to recall through a specific cue, this having been given to him in the form of a posthypnotic suggestion. (William Kroger, Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis in Medicine, Psychology, and Dentistry, p. 299)
The basic system was to read or tell a message to a hypnotized
subject, who then was instructed to remember the message and speak it
on cue. It could be long and complicated. The courier did not
consciously know the message, or even the fact that he carried a
message. The message's intended recipient, who knew the cue, would
speak or act it out when ready. After perceiving that cue, the courier
would go into a posthypnotic trance and speak the message -- like a
human tape recorder on "play." A supplementary hypnotic suggestion
could cause the courier to be amnesic for the meaning of the words he
was speaking. (Bowart, in Operation Often, reported the case of a
military man trained in this way.)
Estabrooks promoted the use of consciously unknowing hypno-messengers
by government agencies:
If one expert can build up a code, another can break it down...a code must be printed somewhere...And human nature is weak. With hypnotism we can be sure of our private messenger. We hypnotize our man in, say, Washington...give him the message. That message, may we add, can be both long and intricate. An intelligent individual can memorize a whole book if necessary. Then we start him out for Australia by plane with the instructions that no one can hypnotize him...except Colonel Brown in Melbourne...It is useless to intercept this messenger. He has no documents and no amount of "third degreeing" can extract the information, for the information is not in the conscious mind to extract... (Hypnotism, 1944 edition, pp 210-211)
An early CIA memo described sealing as "establishing defensive means
for preventing hostile control." In civilian language it means that
sealing the programmed mind blocks it from attempts by other
hypnotists to put that person into trance. Sealing was another CIS
hypnoprogramming goal:
Can we prevent any unauthorized source or enemy from gaining control of the future activities (physical and mental) of agency personnel (or persons of interest to this agency) by any known means? (CIA memo quoted in Scheflin & Oton, pp 1160117)
The usual method of sealing was, and is, simply a hypnotic suggestion
that the subject cannot be hypnotized by any unauthorized person.
Many persons may question, even scoff, at the ideas of mind control proposed by Arizona Wilder in her interview with David Icke, but the knowledge of how to accomplish this has been here for millenia. The technology of mind control has been advanced by science, government agencies and so-called medical professionals. Mind control has even been made easier by the use of chemicals and electronics.
While there is beneficial uses of some of these technologies, the abuse and criminal aspects by these techniques is mind-boggling!
Carla Emery
Carla Emery is a victim, survivor, and researcher of mind control
technologies. Her expertise in this field is invaluable in exposing,
and
thereby protecting, readers against all potential forms of mind
control.
She
has appeared on television and radio, with such hosts as Hilly Rose on
the
Art Bell Show.
She is the renowned author of the book Secret, Don't
Tell: The
Encyclopedia of Hypnotism; Acorn Hill Publishing, 1998.
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