Remember back when being paranoid was fun and all your X-Files-grade conspiracy theories weren’t reaffirmed by even worse realities perpetrated by reptilian politician conspiracy theorists who believe more dismal conspiracy theories than yours? Yeah, me neither.
This book is a pre-internet YouTube hole the old way. This book was sold in head shops and out of the back of counterculture magazines with pot resin caked to it’s front cover.
Author-who-shakes-fist-at-clouds George Piccard explains in Liquid Conspiracy the entertaining—if not semi-dubious—theoretical connections between JFK, his interest in UFOs, and his taste for CIA LSD. Ah, simpler times.
I should mention though, that some of these theories aren’t entirely baseless. Author and drug historian Norman Ohler speaks of JFK’s confidant Mary Pinchot acquiring LSD from Timothy Leary only just preceding his very hippie-coded “We’re all in this together” deescalation speech at the American University.
1999.
Remember back when being paranoid was fun and all your X-Files-grade conspiracy theories weren’t reaffirmed by even worse realities perpetrated by reptilian politician conspiracy theorists who believe more dismal conspiracy theories than yours? Yeah, me neither.
This book is a pre-internet YouTube hole the old way. This book was sold in head shops and out of the back of counterculture magazines with pot resin caked to it’s front cover.
Author-who-shakes-fist-at-clouds George Piccard explains in Liquid Conspiracy the entertaining—if not semi-dubious—theoretical connections between JFK, his interest in UFOs, and his taste for CIA LSD. Ah, simpler times.
I should mention though, that some of these theories aren’t entirely baseless. Author and drug historian Norman Ohler speaks of JFK’s confidant Mary Pinchot acquiring LSD from Timothy Leary only just preceding his very hippie-coded “We’re all in this together” deescalation speech at the American University.
1999.