Tuesday, April 7, 2026

The US Government Experimented on Its Own Citizens Without Their Knowledge or Consent

 This is not a conspiracy theory. These are documented historical facts confirmed by government records, congressional investigations, and official apologies.


The United States government ran programs that experimented on its own citizens without their knowledge or consent. Some of those programs went on for decades. Most Americans still do not know the full picture of what happened.


The Tuskegee Syphilis Study


From 1932 to 1972 the US Public Health Service conducted a study on 399 Black men in Macon County Alabama who had syphilis.


The men were told they were receiving treatment for bad blood, a local term for a range of ailments. They were not told they had syphilis. They were not given treatment for it.


When penicillin became the standard cure for syphilis in the 1940s the researchers deliberately withheld it from the study participants so they could continue observing the progression of untreated syphilis.


The study went on for forty years. Twenty eight men died directly from syphilis. One hundred more died from related complications. Forty wives were infected. Nineteen children were born with congenital syphilis.


The study was only stopped in 1972 when a whistleblower leaked it to the press. In 1997 President Clinton formally apologized on behalf of the government.


The men who participated never consented to being part of a study. They were told they were being treated. They were being observed instead while their illness killed them.


MK Ultra


From the early 1950s through at least the late 1960s the CIA ran a program called MK Ultra. The goal was to develop mind control techniques. The methods included dosing people with LSD without their knowledge, sensory deprivation, psychological torture, hypnosis, and other techniques.


Some of the subjects were mental patients. Some were prisoners. Some were ordinary civilians who had no idea what was being done to them. Some were CIA employees who volunteered not knowing the full scope of what the experiments involved.


At least one person died as a direct result of the program. Frank Olson, a CIA scientist, died in a fall from a New York hotel window in 1953 after being secretly dosed with LSD. The government originally called it a suicide. Decades later his family had his body exhumed and a forensic examination suggested he may have been murdered.


The CIA destroyed most of the MK Ultra records in 1973 when the program was about to be exposed. What we know comes from the documents that survived and from congressional hearings held in 1977.


Why These Programs Existed


Both of these programs existed because the people running them decided that their goals were more important than the rights of the people they were experimenting on.


In Tuskegee it was a study of a disease in a population that researchers did not consider worthy of the same care and protection they would have given white patients.


In MK Ultra it was the Cold War logic that finding ways to control people's minds was worth whatever it cost in terms of the rights of the people being used in the experiments.


In both cases the people who were harmed were people with the least power to protect themselves. Black sharecroppers in Alabama. Mental patients. Prisoners. People who trusted institutions that were betraying them.


These programs are in the historical record. The government has acknowledged them. And they are still barely mentioned in most schools.


That should bother everyone.


Robert Lee Beers III is a writer and digital preservation advocate based in North Charleston South Carolina.

Monday, April 6, 2026

The Tulsa Race Massacre of 1921 Was Deliberately Erased From History for Decades

 In May of 1921 the Greenwood neighborhood of Tulsa Oklahoma was one of the most prosperous Black communities in America.


People called it Black Wall Street. There were hotels, law offices, doctors, dentists, grocery stores, libraries, and schools. It was a thriving self-sufficient community that had built itself up from almost nothing in the face of segregation and discrimination.


By June 1 of 1921 it was gone.


What Happened


A young Black man named Dick Rowland was falsely accused of assaulting a white woman in an elevator. He was arrested. A white mob gathered outside the courthouse.


What followed was 18 hours of coordinated violence. White residents of Tulsa, some of them deputized by local authorities and given weapons by the city, attacked Greenwood. Buildings were set on fire. Homes were looted and burned. People were shot in the streets.


Some accounts and historians describe planes flying over the neighborhood. Exactly what role those planes played is still debated but eyewitness accounts described shooting and fire coming from the air.


When it was over as many as 300 people were dead. More than a thousand homes had been burned. Thirty five blocks of a thriving community had been destroyed. Thousands of people were left homeless.


Dick Rowland was never charged with any crime.


How It Was Suppressed


In the immediate aftermath the Tulsa media barely covered it. What coverage there was blamed the Black residents of Greenwood for the violence. Official records were lost or destroyed. Insurance claims from residents of Greenwood were denied. No one was prosecuted.


The people who survived were left with nothing and told to move on.


For decades the massacre was not in Oklahoma history textbooks. It was not taught in Tulsa schools. Many people who grew up in Tulsa in the decades after 1921 had no idea it had happened.


It was not forgotten by the people whose families had lived through it. But the official record looked away for close to a century.


Why It Matters


The Tulsa Race Massacre is not just a story about racial violence. It is a story about how powerful institutions, government, media, and law enforcement, can work together to erase a historical atrocity from the public record.


It is a story about what ordinary people lose when violence is allowed to destroy what they built without any accountability or justice.


And it is a story about how the communities most harmed by that erasure carried the truth anyway. They knew what happened. They told their children and grandchildren. The truth survived in the community even when the official record pretended it did not exist.


That is the power ordinary people have that institutions cannot fully take away. The ability to remember. The ability to keep telling the truth even when nobody with power wants to hear it.


Robert Lee Beers III is a writer and digital preservation advocate based in North Charleston South Carolina.

Nikola Tesla Invented Most of What Edison Got Credit For and History Buried Him on Purpose

 When you flip on a light switch in your house the electricity that comes through the wire is alternating current. AC power. The system that powers virtually everything in the modern world.


Thomas Edison did not invent it. He actually fought against it.


Nikola Tesla invented it. And most people have barely heard of him.


Who Tesla Was


Nikola Tesla was a Serbian American inventor and engineer who worked in the late 1800s and early 1900s. He is responsible for some of the most important technology in human history.


He developed alternating current electrical systems. The same AC power that runs your house, your city, and most of the modern electrical grid.


He did foundational work on wireless communication that became the basis for radio. He worked on early X-ray technology. He invented the Tesla coil. He held patents on systems that anticipated modern radio transmission and wireless power.


He also worked on ideas that were so far ahead of his time that they are only now being fully explored. Wireless power transmission. Resonant frequency technology. Systems for transmitting energy through the earth.


He was one of the most brilliant inventors who ever lived. And almost none of that is in standard history textbooks.


Why Edison Got the Credit Instead


Thomas Edison was a brilliant businessman as well as an inventor. He understood patents, publicity, and how to control a narrative in a way that Tesla did not.


Edison ran large laboratories with teams of people working on problems. When those teams produced results Edison's name went on the patents and the publicity. He was very good at taking credit.


When Tesla developed alternating current Edison went to war against it. He ran public demonstrations electrocuting animals with AC power to try to convince the public it was dangerous. He tried to get the electric chair to use AC so people would associate it with death. He called it the danger current.


He lost that battle. AC power was better and cheaper and it won. But Edison's name stayed more prominent in the history books anyway.


Tesla died broke and alone in a New York hotel room in 1943. The government seized his papers immediately after his death. Some of those papers have never been fully accounted for.


What Got Left Out of History


The reason Tesla got erased from the history that most people learn is partly about business rivalry and partly about how history gets written.


Edison had money, connections, and a gift for self-promotion. He shaped the narrative of the electrical age around himself while it was happening. By the time historians wrote the story down his version was already established.


Tesla had neither the business sense nor the interest in self-promotion. He cared about the science. He died broke while the technology he invented was making other people wealthy.


That is a familiar pattern in history. The people who understood power and money got remembered. The people who just did the work often did not.


Tesla is getting more recognition now than he did for most of the twentieth century. But for generations of students who sat through history class learning about Edison the more important inventor was the one they never heard of.


Robert Lee Beers III is a writer and digital preservation advocate based in North Charleston South Carolina.