Declassified MKUltra files reveal experiments conducted by the CIA went well beyond human mind control.

Hopefully everyone understands by now, the levels of horror and torment they are comfortable inflicting in the name of science and helping the human race is completely fabricated bullshit.
Same as today, they tell you the oppthe CIA is quite possibly the most evil organization to ever exist. I know many will claim it’s the Nazis or even Genghis Khan is sometimes mentioned among these modern day giants of industry.
gets mentioned in this elite category.and when it came time to study the human mind they still pushed full steam ahead with a second thought as the horrific levels of suffering these “secret agents” are responsible for across the globe. metho fiddles of what they’re planning
with human minds during the Cold War. MKUltra. Behavior modification. Mind control. Those words live in the conspiracy lexicon now. But declassified files from 1967 do something uglier than confirm old suspicions. They expand the experiment. Humans were not the only creatures on the table.
Thanks to FOIA work by people like John Greenewald over at The Black Vault, we can read the memos that sound more like bad science fiction than government paperwork. The agency tried to build remote controlled dogs. Actual animals wired up so someone on the other end of a radio could make them run, turn, or stop.

Here is the nasty, fascinating part. The project aimed to control a dog in an open field by firing electrical stimulation into deep brain structures. The method relied on two crude biological tricks. One triggered a primitive reward response. The other produced a tendency for the animal to keep moving in a direction that kept delivering the stimulation.
How did they do this in practice? Picture electrodes cemented to a skull, leads tunneled under skin, wires emerging between the shoulder blades and fixed to a harness. The dogs had brain surgery so that a remote signal could prod them into motion or freeze them in place. The gear had to be robust and powerful because each animal presented different electrical resistance. Reliability was the engineering headache that never fully went away.

They got partial results. The system worked at short range. The files state behavioral control held up for maybe 100 to 200 yards. Field use floundered on simple practicalities. They could not find a test range big enough to push the idea further. The animals were weakened by surgery and wounds, which sabotaged performance. The dogs were not tough enough to be dependable assets.
So the project stalled. There is no evidence in these records that remote controlled dogs were ever sent on missions. But the question that will not leave you alone is this. If the technique had worked reliably, what would they have used the dogs for? Surveillance. Sabotage. Extraction. Psychological operations. The documents do not say. That is the point. The silence forces the imagination to fill the blanks.

Remember that MKUltra also used psychotropic drugs, sensory deprivation, electrical shocks, and other brutal techniques on humans. That we now know the program reached into animal minds changes the frame. Reading about experiments on people is one thing. Reading about animals turned into remote tools is another. It is messier, colder, more mechanistic.
But we’re now forced to imagine these experiments were likely conducted on humans also. But those files will never see the light of day.
The files we do have are both shocking and maddeningly predictable. The Cold War encouraged moral improvisation. If behavior could be coerced, why not try it on creatures you assumed you could control more easily than people? If a reward circuit can be exploited to build conditioned motion, what happens when you hand that circuit to an engineer with funding and a deadline?

There is a thin, grim logic here. The documents show scientists and technicians chasing control for its own sake. They built toys and tested the limits. The animals paid the price. Any human who wandered too close to a protocol paid a price as well. The archive is incomplete, redacted, sometimes surreal.
But the takeaway is plain.
MKUltra was not confined to human subjects in lab rooms. Its reach was wider, stranger, and more mechanical than most people imagine.
Some of these old experiments tell us a lot about how the modern security state learned to think about control. Back then they may have been experimenting on animals by connecting electrodes to their brain. These days people are already so mind controlled they are willingly lining up to let Elon Musk play mad scientist with their brains.
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