Pubdate: Thu, 01 Apr 2010 Source: StarPhoenix, The (CN SN) Page: A3 Copyright: 2010 The StarPhoenix Contact: http://www.canada.com/saskatoonstarphoenix/letters.html Website: http://www.canada.com/saskatoonstarphoenix/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/400 Author: Les MacPherson Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hallucinogens.htm (Hallucinogens) LSD RESEARCH SHOWS CANINE-HIPPIE PARALLEL Among the movies released on video this week is The Men Who Stare at Goats, a dark satire on paranormal research by the U.S. military. The idea was that a soldier with psychic training could kill an enemy by fiercely staring at him and willing his heart to stop. To that end, a secret army research unit experimented by staring at goats that had been de-bleated "for security reasons." SPOILER ALERT: Except for the debleating, the goats came away unharmed. Never officially confirmed or denied, the story seems almost too absurd for anyone to have made it up. There are precedents, too. Consider, for example, the men who gave LSD to dogs. Getting dogs high on LSD was part of a Soviet project back in the early 1960s at the height of the Cold War. The experiments came to light last year through The Memory Hole, a website that publishes declassified government documents. In this case, the document is an English translation of a Russian research paper, presumably acquired by the Americans through its intelligence sources of the day. LSD still is little understood and was even less so in 1962 when the paper was written. The drug wasn't even illegal yet. Researchers then thought it might have intelligence applications, perhaps as a truth serum for captured spies or as a chemical weapon, clandestinely introduced through a water utility, say, to sow confusion among an enemy population. That the Soviets experimented on dogs is somewhat to their credit. Around the same time, the CIA also was secretly studying the effects of LSD, only on people, often without their knowledge. The agency found the drug to be too unpredictable in its effects to be of any practical use. I know one or two old hippies who could have told them that. Dogs given LSD likewise behaved unpredictably. Sometimes they were restless, sometimes lethargic. Sometimes they barked for no reason, sometimes they lapsed into a catatonic state. "Not infrequently the animal would be frozen in one position for a long period of time with his muzzle pressed against the wall, and whining." Yup, that would be LSD. Often the subject dogs ignored or reacted inappropriately to external stimuli. They showed fear of familiar objects. They appeared to be lost in familiar surroundings. Again, there were quite a few hippies who reacted likewise. But that didn't stop them from doing it again and again, God bless them. As with hippies, the dogs' ability to perform routine tasks dropped off sharply when they were blasted on acid. They now were lost in an obstacle course they had previously learned to negotiate in a few seconds. Of six dogs tested, four were able to do the course as usual the next day while one took two days and another five days to recover. That's still better than some hippies who never did recover. In a related experiment, dogs were taught to avoid an electrical shock by jumping over a barrier when warned to do so by a particular sound or flashing light. Given LSD, they failed to respond to the warning in time to avoid the ensuing shock. They did react appropriately, however, when the actual shock was delivered. This is something to keep in mind if you're ever dealing with someone on LSD. Based on these fairly dramatic results, the researchers determined LSD induces in dogs a kind of chemical psychosis. This, according to the paper, was contrary to earlier Soviet research which, remarkably, found dogs were unaffected by LSD. Either the earlier research was seriously flawed or the scientists in charge got ripped off by their dealer. Authors of the later paper conclude further research would shed more light on both normal and pathological psychologies. On this, they were wrong. Subsequent years of experimentation with LSD appears not to have shed more light on anything, with the possible exception of Jimi Hendrix's guitar solo in Hey Joe. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom