tv Documentary RT August 10, 2021 4:30pm-5:01pm EDT
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or is the last night fast and furious? a tom cruise is top, gone to the list goes on. but those are the films that made it to the big screens despite the at it's a lot of stories like a documentary on guantanamo bay trials have been rejected completely and never came to be. all right, thanks for joining us or an aussie international that wraps up this half hours news program for this hour though in about 30 minutes time, we're back with more of your worldwide uses. ah . so what we've got to do is identify the threats that we have. it's crazy going from station let it be an arms race is often very dramatic. development only personally, i'm going to resist. i don't see how that strategy will be successful,
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very political time. time to sit down and talk hello. in the traditional motion picture story, the villains are usually defeated he ending as a happy one. i can make no such promise for the picture you're about to watch. a story isn't over. i remember bringing my father down and he'd gone from a man to this almost non human creature. curious who started to try to get rid of the equipment that they used to put him in sensory isolation. he's mumbling incoherently, he's trying to remove his goggles. he's trying to remove his costs over and over
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again that he's been coherent. oh, we trust doctors. we put our lives in there, but some betray that trust. ah, but the last 60 years doctors working to the british and american psychological torture to destroy the secretary jim, can i have your name mentally trying to spell me? oh ma'am, i don't know what the mistake is, but i know the way i'm spelling it wrong. to tell the story, we need to go back to the 1950s. when scottish psychiatry, doctor, you and cameron experimented on his own patients, is the period of amended change. with the enormous amount of world unrest, we are seeing a normal demand for knowledge concerning effects of stress.
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the door's locked when this was the agent's heat identified, soap and the medicine. when they lifted of my head, i see andrew standing in front of me in the middle of the desert. enough kinda stuff. andrew looked into it and nothing. i, we, the british government can do about your situation. you have to cooperate with the americans. they say, what do you think about water voting? i said i like it a lot. i don't think it's stuff. oh no. it's like kind of a special responsibility to actively does opening up this territory. and
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in the past we have foolishly released hundreds and hundreds of dangerous terrorists only to meet them again on the battlefield. i just signed an order to keep open the detention facilities in guantanamo bay. who, a few minutes ago dr. new and cameron, the chairman of the organizing committee opens is the 3rd world congress of
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psychiatry, with these words these days and hours of the occasions. but summing up the termination, borrow the imagination and drive us forward in the greatest of endeavour. me to go see the ellen memorial institute, where my father spent on and off for tragic years. me one year after my bar mitzvah. 14. and i remember the christmas holidays that year with my father pacing, singing a sort of crazy song from the i think the 30s called mary dodson. does he go to middle landsey driving all her and all her know or again and my being very puzzled and not understanding what was happening to, which is how he ended up in 1956. going to see you and cameron at the moral
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institute me by far the most chilling experiments we have uncovered, took place at those gothic estate called ravens greg halfway up mount royal and montreal. then the drug began to take hold very rapidly. things became very furry and very frightening. i thought this was the coldest in most impersonal treatment that anybody could give to anybody in the world. ah, i haven't ever had to talk about this publicly. i don't like to reflect on what happened to her because it breaks my heart.
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i my mom and dad both worked so i would go over to her house after school. but even as a young kid, i remember being like that's my grandma. you watch out, you don't mess with her. me. she did suffer from post partum depression, which probably was miss diagnosed. i. my mother was very familiar with mon trills from having lived there. so they chose the ellen i by the 950 s the island memorial institute was one of the world's leading psychiatric hospitals. it's director, doctor, you and cameron with the president of the american canadian and world psychiatric associations. my mother thought dr. cameron,
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was god my mother thought dr. cameron was got me trying to decide such a photograph of camry. you know, it's very interesting that his is the only photograph in which there is no name. and that he was the founder of this place, and that odd goes to the 2nd, 3rd, 4th, etc. directors somehow do no harm. good, forgotten. you and cameron was born in breach of ellen, sterling, cher 91. the son of a presbyterian minister cameron soon grew scotland, or in 1942, he became an american citizen. ambitious and driven cameron dreamed of winning the nobel prize. his work on the frontier tree for people
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to say that this is the story of one patient or one family and some people down play it because of that to see this only and simply as a horrendous experience that happened in montreal. the 1950s is to really missed the big picture. in 1951 written america and canada held a secret meeting in the ritz carlton hotel in montreal to projects for disgust. the 1st was the caea program. sometimes, in spite of everything a man can do. he falls into the hands of the enemy. if you were an airman, whose plane was shot down into enemy territory, the soldiers marines captured income that on the enemy lines. your 1st feeling might be one of helplessness. as if suddenly,
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the whole world had dropped out from under you, leaving you with the enemy's mercy. such a feeling is quite understandable. for a minute or 2 with fear done, the survival, evasion, resistance, and escape with the thought there was a hidden agenda had been meeting the primary objective was offensive in developing techniques that we could use against captured sodium. so as a possibly a mobilization of psychology department states that research was dominant within the versus the better part of the scene, researches began similar experiments in psychiatric hospital in the u. k. the in the u. s. the cia had over 160
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secret projects in 18 institutions. $25000000.00 was allocated to human experimentation. it was code named em, hey old. the dog to cameron's work at the allen memorial institute was one of the largest projects in m k. ultra. you are an angry person. you are angry at the doctors. you are angry at the nurses. why are you so? is it because you ate your mother? doctor cameron began trialing past breaking the new nurse. why are you so angry? because you age your mother. my thought would be forced to listen to these voices were high voices, low voices, space voices faster, slower because i don't get
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the me and you seem to be able to manage a good relationship with dr. cameron had people listening to recordings. he saw an ad in the paper for how to learn a language while you sleep. and it was a recording of a voice speaking in spanish that you would put in your pillow with one of the things that the tape said was you are an angry person. you are going to doctor at the nurses. why are you so angry? because you have your mother and she had to listen to this over and over and over again. i mean, as many hours in a day that she could ah,
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what came back was a somnolent ah man, who barely could who couldn't really carry on a conversation, who lay down in a couch all day, mostly sleeping, who was a different person, the naval transport bearing 400 korean prisoners of war docs in san francisco and had seen w motion in 1953 americans began returning from the korean war. allison was suspected of having been brainwashed. ah, communist fear gripped america. we all know the atomic is very dangerous,
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since it may be used against us, we must get ready for it. with terror came a huge opportunity for an unofficial psychiatry, the american government. we're not spending a $1000000000.00 a year on psychological warfare. hundreds of thousands of people with test subject ah brainwashing is so death. there's a master mind behind mind manipulation. one, no, no borders and my number is emerge. we don't have authority. we don't actually a whole world needs to take action and be ready. people are judge crisis, we can do better,
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we should be better. everyone is contributing each in your own way. but we also know that this crisis will not go on forever. the challenge is paid for the response has been massive. so many good people are helping us. it makes us feel very proud that we are together in oh, the i think is part of mental health revolution. we increasingly freeze political claims inside the language of mental health became more common. so if you disagree with something i said on this program, you know, just say i just agree with you. i think you're wrong because of the following problems in your adventure logic. your see your micro grass mate, you say you triggered me. you said your heart be again some psychological way
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because news or psychological terms. and i guess an enormous problems or politics because it's almost impossible to have a discourse on that terrain. the o life for many is appallingly confusing. we have a very considerable obligation to undertake social engineering. it will take bold, planning and brave hearts to develop this field. you see i used all kinds of exotic techniques. they were convinced that hypnosis could actually work time somebody wake them up and some must do something that they ordinarily wouldn't do. and then if it's not procedures, then forget all that stuff dr. cameron didn't set out to develop interrogation
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methods by his techniques prove useful to the cia. the 963, many of the psychological experiment, codified for the 1st time in the cuba counter intelligence menu. see a guide on how to torture. the bark is a curious name. it's christian. it's a name for itself. and that was the foundation for the method of psychological interrogation, psychological torture, disseminated within the us intelligence community and worldwide among allies for the next 30 years. within the decade, britain will be using these techniques on her own. this is
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the terrorist campaign continues as an unacceptable level in the 1st 6 months of 971 over 300 ripped to northern ireland. the ordinary law cannot be comprehensively or quickly enough with such ruthless viciousness the british government response was to introduce in time without trial. the on the 9th of august, 197-1342 people were arrested throughout northern island. suspected terrorist 23 years of age. 30 in the morning, making no mercy of panama stomach and settled right in the bed. only to discover that there was i had been awakened by the british army rifle. me in the stomach.
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at 6 morn pneumonia come into the bedroom, she says better get up, there's soldiers o'ryan house. the next thing was still gone on the head and told me i was under arrest everybody command? no. tell you what's up. no, no, it's a shooting and bomb. and so many dad in the porch were coming in from maria's lake in uri and dairy and the see him picture was emerging of man being arrested. the fish it looked like wor, header opted in belfast. british intelligent. you dr. cameron's experiment in sensory overload and that probation on the irish prison
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you see coming in and putting a bag via ahead stepped and overall spot on us. spread eagled again the wall for hours on land. just over my head. such were panic said n like the hell's going on ah, well, you see him take me to state, devising message, to essentially destroy the personnel to individual by scientific professor tim show is one of the 1st to make the connection between them until experience and interrogation techniques 9 and in
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1974, he presented a b b. c documentary with the irish prisoner who by then had been nicknamed the hooded men, 14 was subjected to a technique which is later comes to you may think we known as interrogation. and that when i did try go to that room most usual at the time. i could feel everything of the different textures of the floor. i finish up with their insistence, not a assistance in sessions that i have my fingertips against the wall, one with toes and a stress position me and it seems itself to be completely innocuous. all you're doing is leaning forward against the wall. why should this be a problem? the but it is a fall if you have to retain that position, so it becomes extremely painful when it doesn't appear to be painful from the point of view of the lay. observe me. after considerable
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experimentation, it was fund if individuals what place without eyes bandage, they would not only pass into a confused and extremely anxious state. but they would show some interesting phenomenon the and then i start to notice this noise, this high pitch raymond noise, ah, it appears to come in through my hard don't, through my body and through my toes and just chuckles, rate run. and each time it was through the body, it touches every nerve, send you in the body. what it starts to occupy, my main that the picture of my brain, the me, the veracity of the noise. go up and down and go down again. and if you can imagine the inside,
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you heard this noise was exaggerated, a 100 fold. ah, they thought they were going to kill us $8.00 and the rosary on my fingers. and the thing i got that number that i couldn't find last. i know that ended up was a let me of him, a named as a l. s. o that was named is ah, the combination procedures which each in itself is extremely simple and extremely cheap to produce, comes from the obstruction from side to work. and the consequence of this
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that i dude was a long term traumatic us posttraumatic stress disorder, awe on the members in the shop. since the end result of this is my death i had dish, welcome and of death coleman and bring it sooner rather than later. the mother and i wish they just went everywhere everywhere. betron saying, or i was i my wife was fortunate enough to get the phone number in a minister of call northern the she ran, she says, your husband, my husband, take it away. i would like for your deal asking for is because everybody's done
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annual and maria's she's just basically says, these are terrible times. i'll talk to him when he comes in i in 971 island, took the u. k to the european court. they argued that the men had been tortured by the british. the, the european court of human rights eventually decided that the hooded men had not been tortured, but instead enjoyed in human and degrading treatment. ah, the global precedent set by this 978 judgement allowed governments around the world to legally use these techniques. i
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i me on the 30th of july, 2011. the 1st re union of the hooted man and 40 years took place here and just move up. this is a ross offered this we discussed the possibility you can the game on me. hello, my name's francis mcclinton, i'm 70 euro grandfather. and 1971. i was one of the hooted men. we went through the name of torture and help the hooded men kisses, probably one of the most,
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the tories kisses in schumann rates jurisprudence. the dogs in the street know about the had a man. they know what happened to her man and protect it. they know that it was torture. we have documents that make it very clear. express the clear that those the highest level we're not only alteration the techniques but knew exactly what they brought. the reason which was the torture a spoke to all of them in of their experience. all of them seem to come to the white noise motion even in the basins and the machine that was used to crit, white noise, actually cost less than one pined to manufacture. ok. and you see a document and much mode and rece communicated with the british prime minister regarding to torture. when you say that word and paper at that level, you know, that plays have been told, ah,
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through the act of making art is how i process my thoughts and ideas. i was thinking about the family tree and i was thinking about in our family, something came in at a left field and broke a branch on our family tree. me back in 977. the new york times broke the story of doctor you and cameron c i a mind control program. me one of the people reading the story was down or the husband the
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long when i would show the wrong. why don't just don't the rules? yes. to see out the same because the african and engagement equals the trail. when so many find themselves well, the part we choose to look for common ground. self governance is before us further and further away from the day to day reality of people on planet earth in particular, america, with that claim to have a government bind for the people. but if the fed is now completely controlled by wall street banks, and that said, it's not completely controlled by the map, which is a super national organization that serve the global as the recall. then the
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idea of self sovereignty in america takes another huge quantum leap of some version the, with our top headlines here on our teeth and a big announcement coming right from new york where governor andrew cuomo hasn't he is quitting. i mean allegations of sexual harassment, thereby ultimately falling victim to the very me to call himself claims to support . and in a blow to that cause the head of a charity that supports the victims of sexual harassment also quit bowing to pressure over her ties to andrew cuomo. awesome in the program today marks 60 years since the u. s. first, use the agent orange and vietnam, herbicide proven to cause serious health issues among both locals on the soldiers. a veteran fell off its time. immense. i may we.
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