Wednesday, October 19, 2016
Milgram Experiment
Project QKHILLTOP
In
1954, the CIA developed an experiment called Project QKHILLTOP to study Chinese
brainwashing techniques, which they then used to develop new methods of
interrogation. Leading the research was Dr. Harold Wolff of Cornell University
Medical School. After requesting that the CIA provide him with information on
imprisonment, deprivation, humiliation, torture, brainwashing, hypnoses, and
more, Wolff’s research team began to formulate a plan through which they would
develop secret drugs and various brain damaging procedures. According to a
letter he wrote, in order to fully test the effects of the harmful research,
Wolff expected the CIA to “make available suitable subjects.”
Prison Inmates as Test Subjects
in 1951, Dr. Albert M. Kligman, a dermatologist at the University of Pennsylvania and future inventor of Retin-A, began experimenting on inmates at Philadelphia’s Holmesburg Prison. As Kligman later told a newspaper reporter, “All I saw before me were acres of skin. It was like a farmer seeing a field for the first time.” Over the next 20 years, inmates willingly allowed Kligman to use their bodies in experiments involving toothpaste, deodorant, shampoo, skin creams, detergents, liquid diets, eye drops, foot powders, and hair dyes. Though the tests required constant biopsies and painful procedures, none of the inmates experienced long-term harm.
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