The Early Warning Few Wanted to Hear: Revisiting an Overlooked Chapter in Cold War History.
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The age of enlightenment in 1951
Was when light-angels Spoke to us
in clear, bright, human tongue.
A shadow rose in a dawning age,
Where fear first bled onto history’s page;
One voice spoke out with a warning clear,
A truth the hidden powers feared to hear.
He told of forces sharp and cold,
Of minds remade, of will controlled;
A government triad forged – in secret rooms—
Pain, drugs, and trance with tightening fumes.
Conspiracy Theorist was their weapon
To Silence the prophets sent from heaven
He named the method none would name,
Exposed the heart of a rising game;
A strike at choice, at thought, at soul—
A way to fracture humans whole.
Long before the headlines came,
Long before the world knew blame,
He cast a light where shadows curled,
And touched the nerves of a guarded world.
Conspiracy Theorist was their weapon
To Silence the prophets sent from heaven
Planners whispered, architects drew,
Designing what he already knew;
His early truth, unwelcome, bright,
Split the dark with sudden light.
A storm then rose to mute his claim,
To dim his voice and stain his name;
For secrets shown before their time
Are met with force, denial, crime.
Conspiracy Theorist was their weapon
To Silence the prophets sent from heaven
Yet history turned and proved him right,
Revealed the schemes once kept from sight;
And echoes tell in whispered tone
How early warnings stand alone.
For when one sees what power hides,
And speaks before the tide divides,
The system moves, both swift and sly,
To hush the man who asks it why.
Conspiracy Theorist was their weapon
To Silence the prophets sent from heaven
Thus stands the tale, both sharp and stern—
Of truths revealed too soon to learn;
A signal sounded, fierce and clear,
By one who spoke – when none would hear.
Copyright © Peter Moring 2025
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In the early 1950s, a time when Cold War tensions were only beginning to crystallize, a handful of governments and intelligence services quietly entered what would become one of the most controversial chapters in modern history. Behind closed doors, new methods of shaping human behaviour were being studied, refined, and tested. And in the midst of this hush-hush experimentation, one author stepped forward with a description so direct and so early – that it inevitably raised eyebrows.
That author was L. Ron Hubbard.
In his 1951 work ‘Science of Survival’, Hubbard discussed a procedure he called “Pain–Drug–Hypnosis” – or ‘PDH’. He described it as a deliberate fusion of physical trauma, chemical influence, and hypnotic suggestion, used with the specific aim of overriding an individual’s ability to choose freely. According to his account, this combination had the potential to fracture judgment, destabilise the mind, and create a level of influence that normal defence mechanisms could not resist… (Hmmm? – Ringing Any Bells Yet?)
What made the timing especially striking is that such ideas were not part of any mainstream public conversation. Psychological warfare, behavioural modification, and mind-altering drug use were still tightly guarded topics—discussed in classified meetings, not bookstores. Yet Hubbard laid out a framework that sounded remarkably similar to methods later revealed in government records.
Only two years after ‘Science of Survival’ appeared, the CIA launched ‘MK-Ultra’, a sprawling behavioural research initiative that has since become infamous. Declassified documents show that the programme made extensive use of drugs, sensory manipulation, hypnosis, and coercive techniques. To many observers, the overlap between the themes Hubbard raised and the direction MK-Ultra would take appears more than coincidental.
Whether or not Hubbard had direct knowledge of such efforts is a matter of debate. But the chronology itself raises an interesting question: {What happens when someone publicly discusses a subject that powerful institutions are not yet prepared to acknowledge?}
Some historians and commentators argue that Hubbard’s early description of ‘PDH’ positioned him uncomfortably close to matters that were considered highly sensitive. They suggest that his claims may have illuminated a field still being developed in secret, and that this alone would have been enough to trigger backlash. Others counter that the controversy surrounding Hubbard simply reflected broader cultural and ideological disagreements, unrelated to intelligence work.
Regardless of which interpretation one prefers, there is no doubt that ‘Science of Survival’ introduced ideas that later echoed through real events. ‘MK-Ultra’ would eventually be exposed, the Church Committee would force disclosures, and the public would learn how deeply government agencies had ventured into the territory of psychological control.
Seen in that light, Hubbard’s early commentary takes on a different resonance – not as a complete blueprint, but as an unexpectedly prescient warning. He argued that any method merging trauma, drugs, and suggestion posed a fundamental risk to personal autonomy. And he voiced that warning well before the world learned how far such techniques had been taken behind the scenes.
At minimum, his work serves as a reminder that early insights can sometimes outpace official narratives. At most, it suggests that the first person to speak about a buried danger is often the one most inconvenient to those keeping it buried. Is it any wonder that the CIA invented the phrase ‘Conspiracy Theorists’ shortly after the release of ‘Science Of Survival’?
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