Mind Control is a little known and a highly controversial topic today. Veteran author and investigator Jim Keith uncovers a surprising amount of information on the technology, experimentation and implementation of Mind Control technology. Various chapters in this shocking book are on early CIA experiments such as Project Artichoke and Project RHIC-EDOM, the methodology and technology of implants, Mind Control Assassins and Couriers, various famous “Mind Control" victims such as Sirhan Sirhan and Candy Jones. Also featured in this book are chapters on how Mind Control technology may be linked to some UFO activity and UFO abductions.
James Patrick Keith was an American author and conspiracy theorist, best known for the books Black Helicopters Over America and The Octopus, co-written with Kenn Thomas, detailing theories around the death of reporter Danny Casolaro. After starting his career with writing and editing the zines Dharma Combat and Notes from the Hangar, as well as contributing articles to Fate Magazine, Keith became an editor at Steamshovel Press. He also authored 12 books covering topics such as mind control, the New World Order, black helicopters, the Oklahoma City bombing, Illuminati and Men in Black. Keith died at Washoe Medical Center in Reno at age 49, following a fall at the Burning Man festival.
Useful only for the extremely niche purpose of getting an overview of what conspiracy theories about mind control were circulating in the mid-1990s - for Keith largely parrots them all without doing any actual legwork himself. He exercises just enough discernment to rule out the most blatant hoaxes and fabrications, but makes quite extreme statements of his own. Full review: https://fakegeekboy.wordpress.com/202...
That is a very interesting book, informing us on psychological warfare and other forms of control and how these devices came about. Although I don't agree on his perceptions of the UFO phenomena, the author make interesting comments of several mind control programmes, the books seems to be a bit obsolete but it still worth reading it.
While I enjoy a good conspiracy theory, I can’t recommend this work. It reads more like a stream-of-consciousness manifesto, jumping from topic to topic. And a number of the theories rely on since disproved ideas (Sinister Process Church theories, I’m looking at you). The citations, while extensive at first glance, tend to break down on further examination, revealing limited and circular references.I’d recommend Keith’s Secret and Suppressed over this work.
A somewhat silly title, but extremely well written and thoroughly researched. Another fitting title for this book would be, "Mind Control, World Control: The Complete History of Mind Control".