Mass Mind Control of the American People

Compiled and Edited by Elizabeth Russell-Manning

“When one reads the following pages, it will become clear there is a cover-up within our own government regarding electrical stimulation of the brain, telemetry, etc. as well as harmful E.L.F waves, exposure to microwaves through TV, stimulation of the brain, etc., in order to control and manipulate people. I believe, there is a secret government within our government, and they are using this type of warfare in order to bring us (the citizens) into complete subjection and electronic control… Our own secret government created these street people by shutting them down electronically, thus keeping them alive artificially and controlling them and manipulating them through electronic means, thus the reasoning behind not providing for them properly. Thus, the government is using them to harass, terrorize and possibly kill us, their fellow citizens, through manipulating them through their computer science techniques whenever it suits them.” Spiral-bound xeroxed collection of articles, excerpts and original hypotheses.

Publisher: Greensward
Paperback: 163 pages
Illustrated

Mind Control in a Free Society: It’s a Bad Match

Edited by Elizabeth Russell-Manning

The redoubtable Russell-Manning gets out her scissors and hits the copy machine once again in order to produce yet another classic work in the great tradition of her earlier, and equally worthwhile, Mass Mind Control of the American People. A fascinating accumulation of material, at first glance seemingly unrelated, continues to retain its deepest secrets (Who pays the Xerox bills?) after a second, or even a third, reading, but the all-encompassing range of her interests is clear. Considerable effort has been channeled by the author into gathering together articles, interviews, clippings and the like pertaining to chemical, electronic, psychotronic and psychological warfare; ELF and VLF beams; Soviet microwaves; “homeosexuality,” mercury-laden dental fillings, potentially fatal carpeting and sewage-eating clams. Russell-Manning slights the reader on occasion—a chapter called “Interview With Lt. ‘Bo’ Gritz” consists of a badly reproduced photo and an address from which a copy of the interview can be ordered, for example. But plainly, a lot of things worry Russell-Manning and she wants her readers to be worried too. She succeeds; after reading this, one can’t help but be concerned. JW

Publisher: Greensward
Paperback: 145 pages
Illustrated