5 things the CIA did to you and you didn’t even realize: Shocking details

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The Cia has some very top notch projects throughout the years of their existence its no secret when you take a deep drive into the history of our government some things are better left not said.

Since the The Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) was established on September 18, 1947, when President Harry S. Truman signed the National Security Act of 1947 into law.

This act created the CIA as an independent agency responsible for coordinating the nation’s intelligence activities and correlating, evaluating, and disseminating intelligence that affects national security.

In the 1960s, the CIA had a wild idea: turn a house cat into a furry surveillance device. Project Acoustic Kitty involved surgically implanting microphones, antennae, and batteries into a cat, hoping it could eavesdrop on Soviet officials at the Russian embassy.

The plan? A cat could wander unnoticed, picking up sensitive conversations. After spending $20 million, the first mission ended abruptly when the cat was hit by a taxi shortly after being released. The project was scrapped in 1967, proving that even the CIA can’t herd cats.

Find that weird? Let’s take a deep dive into our top 5 list.

In the 1950s and 60s, the CIA ran Operation Midnight Climax, a subproject of the infamous MKUltra program.

The agency hired sex workers in San Francisco and New York to lure men to “safe houses” where they were secretly dosed with LSD. CIA operatives watched through two-way mirrors, studying the effects for potential mind-control applications.

The experiments, which often involved unsuspecting civilians, were ethically dubious and yielded questionable results before being shut down in the mid-60s.
Why It’s Weird: Spiking strangers with psychedelics in covert brothels is as dystopian as it gets.

4. Mind Control Experiments (MKUltra): The CIA conducted research programs, notably according to Sky HISTORY TV channel MKUltra, focused on mind control and interrogation techniques, sometimes involving unethical experiments on unwitting participants, says Sky HISTORY TV channel.

3. Influence on Art and Culture: The CIA reportedly financed abstract art during the Cold War to counter Soviet cultural propaganda. They also secretly bought the rights to George Orwell’s books “1984” and “Animal Farm” after his death, later funding the film adaptations.

2. Declassified CIA Report, Scientists Tried to Move Consciousness Beyond the Physical Realm

Declassified documents show that throughout the latter half of the 20th century, the CIA had some… interesting… ideas on how to obtain intelligence.

One of the most dizzying reports comes from a 1983 document detailing the “Gateway Experience”—various means of altering the mind to create a kind of psychic spycraft.

The declassified document itself isn’t new—originally drafted in 1983, the CIA declassified the 29-page report back in 2003. The agency is also well-known for its investigations into the inner workings of the human mind and how it could be manipulated for extracting information.

The most famous of these investigations was the 20-year-long MKUltra top-secret project, which started back in the 1950s.

1.

  • Historical Context: The CIA’s Gateway Program was a federal initiative developed in the 1980s that focused on exploring the limitations of human consciousness using sound, meditation, and other techniques.
  • Focus: The program aimed to instruct and train individuals in “switching perceptual modes,” becoming more conscious of their inner resources and abilities, and developing inner guidance.
  • Research: It involved investigating remote perception abilities of “gifted” individuals for intelligence collections and exploring the fundamental nature of paranormal perception phenomena.