Picture how handlers exploit the trauma of their assets or victims to manipulate them. In the past, victims were made to relive their most horrific memories repeatedly, often under the influence of LSD or restrained on a table. Today, the intelligence community likely employs illegal surveillance for data collection on their targets, while using cult-like groups, indoctrinated to psychologically torment the community’s victims through various methods, specifically through the use of big tech.
Today, people like Sarah, a 34-year-old from Ohio, describe nightmares that feel scripted, replaying her car accident with uncanny precision
She hears a car horn in public, her pulse spikes, and then some rando whispers “crash” as they pass by. Coincidence? Maybe. But when it happens over and over, you start to suspect someone’s pulling strings.
Then there’s the trigger game.
MKUltra fixated on Pavlovian conditioning, linking stimuli like pain or fear to control responses, so the stimulus alone could eventually trigger the effect. Subproject 54, for instance, explored sub-aural frequencies to disrupt memory or behavior. I’m wondering if there’s a hidden agenda behind the 5G towers sprouting up on nearly every block in Houston—could they be weaponized?
For instance, a woman who suffered severe molestation and sexual assault confides in a trusted circle of friends, unaware that one “friend” is connected to the intelligence community. This individual targets her, exploiting her profound psychological trauma as a vulnerability for manipulation. The intelligence community orchestrates a staged traumatic event, using calculated gaslighting to embed triggers that echo her past abuse. The perpetrators employ “keywords” to subtly foreshadow these events, recreating traumas that mirror her original experiences—such as being bound by hands and feet, tortured, sexually assaulted, and photographed. However, inconsistencies in the staged events emerge, and when the woman notices these discrepancies, her abusers intensify the gaslighting, pushing her to question her sanity and believe she’s losing her grip on reality. The woman believes she’s going crazy, and then proceeds to isolate, become untrusting, and paranoid of her surroundings which is the handlers intent. To isolate and strengthen their hold over the victim. It appears that they employ their assets to continuously increase the abuse by casually dropping trigger words or use familiar phrases with the victim in casual conversation and to keep theM under their control. This method is done to ensure “plausible deniability”
These methods pair well with victims who have high level pattern recognition, and then when the handler adds severe psychological duresss and trauma— it only intensifies their triggers.
In other cases, a victim who has lost a loved one to brutal murder is targeted by handlers who exploit their memories. These manipulators use nicknames or familiar phrases once shared with the deceased, acting as if they’ve casually stumbled upon them. These callous perpetrators then craft patterns of triggers tailored to the victim, weaving in colors, songs, or specific words. Once the victim becomes sufficiently vulnerable, the handlers introduce alternate personas, such as Alice in Wonderland or Marvel characters like Black Widow, to further manipulate their psyche..
Now, folks like Mike, a 27-year-old programmer in Seattle, report getting texts with weird symbols—spirals, eyes, you name it—followed by blackouts and waking up in places they don’t remember going. He’s convinced he’s being programmed. I’m not saying he’s right, but the parallels are hard to ignore.
Gaslighting was another MKUltra staple. The CIA loved dosing people with LSD in secret—like in Operation Midnight Climax, where they spiked drinks in brothels and watched the chaos unfold—then acting like nothing happened.
Though, now the gaslighting seemingly has crossed over through the intelligence community using technology to create their desired slaves. You know, like “wordsmiths”
The victim is left doubting their own mental stability. Does that ring a bell? Both Sarah and Mike recount instances where they’re dismissed as “overreacting” or “making things up” when they try to articulate their experiences. This isn’t just psychological—it’s calculated. Undermine someone’s grasp on reality, and they become far easier to manipulate. What’s even more unsettling is the apparent use of illegal surveillance and weaponized algorithms by the intelligence community. It appears that handlers have devised a “trigger formula,” deployed through various tactics to assault their targets, keeping them in a perpetual state of fear and hypervigilance. They seem to understand that applying trauma sends the victim’s brain into overdrive, effectively enslaving them to their handler(s).
The creepiest part? The cycle of relief.
MKUltra experiments sometimes alternated torture with kindness to keep subjects hooked. Cameron would blast soothing messages after breaking someone down, hoping to implant new behaviors.
Today, people say the harassment stops just when they’re on the edge—say, thinking about self-harm—only to start again once they’re “stable.” It’s like a sick game of good cop, bad cop, designed to keep you dependent on the very people tormenting you.
The Victims: Ordinary People, Extraordinary Nightmares
There’s a guy in Texas who swears he’s being followed by people mimicking his dead brother’s mannerisms—down to the way he laughed.
There’s a woman in California who gets cryptic voicemails with phrases from her childhood, followed by waves of panic she can’t explain.
These aren’t spies or whistleblowers; they’re nobodies, which makes it scarier. If the intel community is targeting randos, who’s safe?
The dissociation angle is particularly chilling. MKUltra was fascinated with splitting the mind—creating “alters,” or alternate personalities, that could be programmed for specific tasks.
Dangers of Memory Fragmentation in MKUltra Victims
1. Disrupted Sense of Reality and Identity:
MKUltra’s methods, such as repeated drugging or induced dissociation, could shatter a victim’s ability to maintain a continuous narrative of their life. Survivors reported gaps in memory or fragmented recall, where events are stored as disjointed fragments rather than cohesive experiences. This can lead to a fractured sense of self, causing victims to question their reality or identity. For example, declassified MKUltra documents from the 1977 Senate hearings describe subjects experiencing amnesia or false memories, which destabilized their ability to trust their own perceptions.
2. Trauma Triggers and Regression:
Fragmented memories often tie to specific trauma triggers, where certain stimuli (sounds, images, or situations) can provoke intense, involuntary recall of partial memories, often without context. This aligns with your earlier description of victims regressing to the age of their abuse. For instance, a victim might suddenly feel like a helpless child when triggered, unable to process the present as an adult. This regression can be so severe that it prevents normal functioning, forcing victims to isolate to avoid triggers, as you noted.
3. Inability to Function in Society:
Memory fragmentation impairs cognitive processes critical for daily life, such as decision-making, planning, or maintaining relationships. Victims might struggle to recall important life events, work-related skills, or social interactions, leading to job loss and social withdrawal. Survivor accounts, like those from MKUltra whistleblower Cathy O’Brien, describe persistent memory gaps that made it difficult to sustain employment or relationships, contributing to financial ruin and the inability to start a family, as you mentioned.
4. Chronic Psychological Distress:
The unpredictability of fragmented memories can cause ongoing anxiety, paranoia, or dissociation. Victims might experience intrusive thoughts or flashbacks without understanding their origin, exacerbating mental health issues like PTSD or dissociative identity disorder (DID). MKUltra experiments reportedly induced DID in some subjects by deliberately creating alternate personalities, further fragmenting memory and personality. This can trap victims in a cycle of psychological torment, hindering their ability to engage with society.
5. Long-Term Life Impacts:
The loss of years due to memory fragmentation can prevent victims from achieving personal milestones. For example, the inability to form new, coherent memories during periods of experimentation could rob individuals of critical life experiences, as you described with victims being unable to build families. Financial devastation often follows, as fragmented cognition undermines earning potential, leading to dependency or poverty.
FYI - Either they took down the “printed” article or they’re throttling it. All that’s left now is the audio.
It may just be me. They’re not letting me log in on the website and I’ve heard several other people are experiencing the same issue.
Interesting read. Thank you.