As Jefferson Morley, whoâs published several books about the CIA and written extensively about the JFK assassination, notes, if people believe that the government is capable of concealing facts about an attempt on the life of a US president, thatâs probably because itâs demonstrably done so and is actively doing so. Similarly, if people believe that the CIA is capable of creating brainwashed assassins, thatâs in part because of its very real history of interest in exactly this. The notorious MKUltra wasnât just the inspiration for everything from the Bourne movies to Stranger Things, but an actual program of research into mind controlâespecially replacing true memories with false onesâabout which historians and researchers still have many unanswered questions, largely because files related to the program were destroyed in the early 1970s.
âYou can’t unring the MKUltra bell,â says Morley. âPeople know about it. A lot of people know about it. So to say, âOh, that’s irrational conspiracy,â which is the attitude that we get from the mainstream pressââOh, you know, how dare anybody question the CIA’s account of that?ââ I mean, it just doesn’t ring true to most people, because most people know it’s not true.â
The social memory of the political murders of the 1960s, and of the government in some cases at the least withholding information about them, certainly informs the publicâs understanding of events today. It thus informs collective sensemaking, to use the term employed by researchers at the University of Washingtonâs Center for an Informed Public.
Two days after the July 13 attempt on Trumpâs life, the researchers published an analysis outlining the process by which groups were making sense of the crisis in real time by gathering evidence and interpreting it through a frame, and how this was playing and had already played out. In the immediate aftermath of the shooting, they identified three politically coded frames: one suggesting that the shooting was staged, one focused on the Secret Serviceâs failures, and one suggesting the shooting was an inside job. The first seems to have fallen apart due to the evident reality of the shooting, including the death of Corey Comperatore and the serious injuries suffered by two other Trump rally attendees; the second, given the manifest failures that led to the resignation of the Secret Serviceâs director, seems broadly sound. The third seems likely to linger.
âEvery time thereâs a school shooting, my book sales go up,â says Tom OâNeill, the author of Chaos, which among other things draws intriguing though ultimately inconclusive connections between Charles Manson and MKUltra. OâNeill happened to be watching the rally at which Crooks tried to shoot Trump, and his first thought, he says, was, âWell, there go my book sales again. Theyâre going to skyrocket, because people really want to believe that thereâs no such thing as a lone assassin.â
OâNeill says heâs often asked whether he believes the MKUltra program still exists, and that he can only say that while he wouldnât be surprised, he has no idea, because nearly all the relevant records were destroyed and because, in his view, transparency is almost beside the point. âTheyâre not going to release any of their secrets. Thatâs why theyâre the CIA,â he says. âAnd if they release something, you should be suspicious of what they release.â
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