An Interrogation Center at Yale? Proposed Pentagon Special Ops Training Facility Sparks Protests
43 minute video plus full transcript
EXTRACT:
Students and alumni at Yale University are organizing against a proposed campus center to train special operations forces in interview techniques. The center would be funded by a $1.8 million grant from the Pentagon and could open as early as April. Dubbed an “interrogation center” by critics, the facility would be housed at the Yale School of Medicine and led by Charles Morgan, a professor of psychiatry who previously conducted research on how to tell whether Arab and Muslim men are lying. We speak to two students at Yale who co-authored an editorial titled “DoD Plans are Shortsighted, Unethical,” and with Michael Siegel, professor of community health sciences at Boston University School of Public Health and a 1990 graduate of the Yale School of Medicine. “Yale has now crossed a line,” Siegel says. “Using the practice of medicine and medical research to help design advanced interrogation techniques, or even just regular civilian intelligence-gathering techniques, interviewing techniques, is not an appropriate use of medicine. The practice of medicine was designed to improve people’s health. And the school of medicine should not be taking part in either training or research that is primarily designed to enhance military objectives.” [includes rush transcript]
Phi Beta Iota: The mind-control atrocities that were tested by CIA and others, and that have been favored by the elites to discredit, “suicide,” neutralize, and otherwise dispose of inconvenient foes, have been centered in Connecticutt. Yale has always had a very evil side behind its moral fascade. Skull and Bones, and the embedded clandestine and covert elements, are the dark side. The money would be better spent on Open Source Everything (OSE) and Multinational, Multiagency, Multidisciplinary, Multidomain Information-Sharing and Sense-Making (M4IS2).
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