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Mind-Controlled Sex Slaves and the CIA
 
 

Mind-Controlled Sex Slaves and the CIA [Kindle Edition]

Tracy R. Twyman
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Editorial Reviews

Review

"I nearlly jumped out of my seat when I first read this book. I was never convinced of the stories surrounding the sex slave alligations that people like Cathy O'Brien have been making. But now we hear from Mark Phillips, Cathy O'Brien, Ted Gunderson, Noreen Gosch and Palela Freyd who tend to support these claims. Plus there is additional added material on the Mind Control programs like MK Ultra by Commander X and Nick Redfern to really make this volume a must read for ALL conspiracy buffs." --Tim Beckley , editor Conspiracy Journal

PROJECT MONARCH . . . "In the months preceding Sept. 11, 2001, the airwaves of cable news channels were filled with the saga of Congressman Gary Condit, and the cover-up of his affair with intern Chandra Levy. Levy disappeared on April 30, 2001 -- Walpurgisnacht -- the most sacred witch holiday on the calendar. Condit's not very forthcoming statements on the matter, coupled with the fact that Chandra appeared to be on her way to visit him on the night she disappeared, led to speculation that he was somehow involved with her kidnapping and/or death. . . This speculation reached a fevered pitch when bizarre details of Condit's sex life began to mount. 27 other women came forth claiming to have had sexual relations with the Congressman, including two woman (15 at the time), who claimed that he had volently raped them while still a State Assemblyman. Condit was described by one attorney involved in the case as "a serial predator of woman." One of the women, who met the leather-clad Condit at a biker convention, revealed that the Senator referred to his many ladies as his 'Sex Slaves.' She also said that he insisted on using code names with these women while talking on the phone, and refused to wear condoms, starting that "there's a cure for AIDS, anyway . . . Following the media blitz of the Clinton-Lewinski sex scandal, and then the Condit-Levy affair, many people began to wonder:why do so many men in positions of power require lots of sex with a variety of people? And where do such men get this sense of entitlement, this attitude that they should be continually provided with a harem of sexual servants, maintained, oftentimes, at taxpayers' expense? Few, if any journalists brought up the amazing similarity between the story of Gary Condit's Sex Slaves and the stories of dozens of men and women who claim to have been forced into sexual slavery for the wealthy and powerful by none other than our own Central Intelligence Agency, through an offshoot of the MK-ULTRA Mind Control program known as Project MONARCH." --By the author of Mind Controlled Sex Slaves of the CIA, Tracy R. Twyman

Product Description

Book by Tracy R. Twyman about Project Monarch.

Product Details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 168 KB
  • Publisher: Quintessential Publications. (October 28, 2008)
  • Sold by: Amazon Digital Services
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B001JEO4M6
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • Lending: Enabled
  • Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #554,073 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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41 of 45 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Very Scary Read, September 17, 2008
By 
S. S. Casteel (Ventura, CA USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
The admittedly beyond-controversial subjects of mind control and sexual slavery are dealt with surprisingly rationally in this new offering from Global Communications. It's been said that paranoia can be entertaining, but perhaps that is still inadequate to describe this particular tome, which pushes past some barriers in ways that the reader may have trouble dealing with.

The book is called "Mind Controlled Sex Slaves and the CIA: A collection of essays and interviews about Project MONARCH." Project Monarch is an outgrowth of the better known MK-ULTRA program of mind control experiments begun during the early years of the Cold War and first brought to public awareness in the congressional hearings conducted by Senator Frank Church in the mid-1970s. The stunned electorate learned about such things as CIA experiments that sought to discover whether LSD could be used to aid the interrogation process, the idea being that perhaps the anxiety of a "bad trip" could frighten even the most tight-lipped subject into submission. The agency claimed to have canceled the program many years before the Church Committee investigation.

The book's introduction, written by well-known paranormal journalist Nick Redfern, provides an excellent history of what is publicly known about the CIA's mind control experimentation, so any reader unfamiliar with the subject can get Redfern's crash course and quickly be brought up to speed.

The real meat of the book, however, is the interviews conducted by journalist and author Tracy Twyman about Project MONARCH, which is said to be a super secret program to kidnap and "brainwash" children for use as sexual slaves, both to service the politically elite and for various kinds of espionage. For instance, Twyman interviews a "recovered" sex slave named Cathy O'Brien, who claims to have had sex with several different presidents down through the years, as well as with other prominent politicians. There is of course a natural sense of shock on the part of the reader, and the claims made at the very least conjure disturbing mental pictures and are extremely unpleasant to imagine. There is also the now familiar accusation--often made by conspiracy theorists of the more radical stripe--of pedophilia being rampant among the political elite. The alleged scenes of perversion are secretly filmed as well for the purposes of blackmail should the need ever arise.

Twyman also speaks to a housewife and mother named Noreen Gosch, whose son Johnny was kidnapped some twenty years ago while on his paper route in Des Moines, Iowa. Gosch is certain that her son was taken for use as a sexual slave, and her struggle to get law enforcement to follow up on the slave angle is heartrending as well as frightening. It seems there's a pedophile under every rock among even the lower levels of government, with the police and even the newspapers somehow involved in a conspiracy to keep the truth covered up. Reading the details of Noreen's story may make a believer out of even the most stalwart skeptic on the subject, though she does stray into some strange emotional territory.

Twyman interviews Ted Gunderson, a retired FBI agent who now works as a private investigator, and his comments are also replete with big names who participate in the overall Satanic conspiracy and who have even been photographed engaging in perverted sex acts with children. But the names and details are better left to the book and won't be mentioned in this review.

Twyman's concluding essay is very well written, updating some of the storylines begun in the earlier interviews and tying up some of the loose ends. Even as she was writing her conclusion in the early months of 2008, there were breaking stories about pedophilia rings that reached into the upper echelons of government in both Portugal and France. The continuing story of Project MONARCH and its international equivalents is currently a hot topic, Twyman says, but oh how we wish it wasn't so.



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10 of 24 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars A Collection of Essays concerning sexual abuse, September 7, 2009
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I did not like this book. It is great on opinion and conjecture, but has no facts or "meat" to hold my interest. Because the stories are so outrageous, it comes across as wholly strained and unbelievable. While I understand about the history of the CIA and NSA experiments in mind control, the book is a collection of essays written by those close to the victims. Not overly objective (except for one essay), and highly sensational. Too sensational for my own comfort.

Rarely do I ever give a book a low rating. In this case, I feel that it needs to be established why I gave it the low rating. I gave this rating because of three (3) points. Firstly, there wasn't any new or arranged information that wasn't available elsewhere. That is to say, it doesn't stand on it's own merits with a central theme or point that is being presented. The information provided relates to the abuse and forced sexual activities of people who have been placed under the emotional walls and barriers associated with the procedure. This is information that I found to be repetitive and boring personally. I, instead, wanted to read about the organization; activation; personal drama or other more tangible aspects of this experience. Secondly, it failed to produce any proof or cross index of scholarly work, for me to follow up on. For instance, the "tunnels" located under the school. Which school? When? Who were involved? Where can I locate the reports? Without this "meat", I am afraid that it is just conjecture and worthless emotional blather... And finally, I just did not enjoy reading the book. It was easy to read, but rather bland and forced. It was like I was sitting in a group therapy session in a mental hospital. Sorry, but these were my impressions.

If some one wants a good overview introduction to this issue, with short essays that you can read while waiting in a car, or in the bathroom, this could be a book for you. Otherwise, It is rather not worth purchasing...
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