💾 Archived View for gemini.spam.works › mirrors › textfiles › drugs › armylsd.drg captured on 2020-10-31 at 19:31:03.
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In article <C45JI4.K5M@news.cso.uiuc.edu> manderso@uxa.cso.uiuc.edu (anderson mark david) writes: >I remember reading somewhere that the average price for a gallon of >pure liquid LSD was $80,000. Do you have any source for this? It seems like a ridiculously large amount. >Sounds good? I'd hate to think what they'd do to you if you were >caught with a gallon. If caught you could always chug it. :-) Speaking of LSD, here is some interesting information from the new 3rd edition of the Psychedelics Encyclopedia, which I happened to spot on the new book shelf here at UCR's library. "LSD is a very curious chemical. When given by injection, it disappears rapidly from the blood. It can be observed when tagged with carbon 14 in all the tissues, particularly the liver, spleen, kidneys and adrenal glands. The concentration found in the brain is lower than in any other organ - being only about 0.01 percent of the administered dose. Sidney Cohen, in The Beyond Within, has estimated that an average dose results in only some 3,700,000 molecules of LSD (about 2/100ths of a microgram crossing the blood-brain barrier..." (Does this sound reasonable?) "The Army engaged in covert "field operations" overseas. A notorious example is the torture of James Thornwell, a black American soldier in France, who was suspected of having stolen classified documents in 1961. We will probably never know the full story on at least nine others, refered to as "foreign nationals," whoe were subjected to the Army's LSD interrogation project, "Operation THIRD CHANCE." Thornwell, then twenty-two, was first exposed to extreme stress, which included beatings, solitary confinement, denial of water, food and sanitary facilities and steady verbal abuse. After six weeks, he was given LSD without his knowledge. The interrogators threatened "to extend [his shattered] state indefinitely," according to an Army document dug up later, "even to a permanent condition of insanity." In the late 1970s, Thornwell sued the US governmnent for $10 million; the US House of Representatives approved a compromise settlement of $650,000 in 1980." This is a very interesting book.