What's the Closest Anyone Has Come to a Real Truth Serum?

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  • Опубликовано: 27 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 327

  • @TodayIFoundOut
    @TodayIFoundOut  Год назад +15

    Check out Squarespace: squarespace.com/BRAINFOOD for 10% off on your first purchase of a website/domain using the code BRAINFOOD.

    • @clarencesmith2305
      @clarencesmith2305 Год назад

      It's Navaron the last e is silent but makes the o pronounced.

    • @fredred8371
      @fredred8371 Год назад

      Video starts at 1:29

  • @docmike8601
    @docmike8601 Год назад +126

    Interesting video Simon, I have spent a lot of time working in anesthesia and regularly lecture on the topic. I would offer, it is not the specific medication, so much as it is the depth of sedation/anesthesia of the patient/subject. I have been trained to assess neuro status of patients recovering from anesthesia, and have noticed that there is a depth level, where the patient will answer fantastically. One of my favorite things to ask to assess neuro status is "where did you hide the money." At sufficient affect of the drug, the answers are truly entertaining, and realistically not plausible. As this level of sedation wears off, the patient will answer extremely truthful, I presume from inhibitory neurotransmitters being suppressed. As sedation wears off completely, the patients will either answer quizzically or indignantly at the question. (which means they can be stepped down from post operative care). As with the medications you covered here, and since amnesia is a goal of inducing anesthesia and deep sedation, the patients often don't remember either the question or answers unless they are at a sufficiently lucid state.
    Obviously in anesthesia we do not use the medications you covered here, and using such knowledge and experience for law enforcement would be hugely unethical, but it seems to me much more related to the level of sedation than any particular agent, and why we don't allow visitors to the patient before their are acceptably lucid to prevent them from saying things under the influence they would rather not to friends and family.

    • @James-dx9ho
      @James-dx9ho Год назад +14

      Thank you for your insight

    • @AS34N
      @AS34N Год назад +3

      Very interesting

    • @George-tz6nn
      @George-tz6nn Год назад +4

      So Sir, I suppose then the government no doubt employs anesthesiologists to employ the same skills as those which you possess. However, those whom work for our government have a different purpose as yourself and surely have different set of ethical standards as yourself. Having worked for one of the No Such Agencies while in the US Army I can assure you that your government. Lies to the public each and every day. 100% of their purpose is to empower themselves (the Agencies) they do not answer to the courts, the open government entities we pretend to be the.guys in white hats, congress or the president. Simply put maybe 40% of their efforts are forwarded and offered as what is accurate as this info is only offered to keep their Cash coming yearly, the other 60% is used to empower these Agencies unto themselves... Only. I assure you the us government use Any and All chemicals as needed on a daily basis to keep the government functioning... without any medically ethical standards as those used by yourselves in your higher medical standards. Their purpose is different therefore their ethics are totally different as they answer to a different call and as used in your eyes would not be ethical, yet to themselves this is purpose for which they exist so therefore totally ethical in their own eyes.
      Thank you Sir, for fighting the good fight !!

    • @dark2023-1lovesoni
      @dark2023-1lovesoni Год назад +5

      I worked in the pharmaceutical field for quite awhile. I'm not particularly familiar with the actual administration of drugs to patients, but I know my psychopharmacology and pharmacodynamics like the back of my hand.
      Barbiturates are well known to reduce inhibitions, even just basic maintenance dosages of Butalbital or Phenobarbital have been implicated in numerous examples of patients saying things they shouldn't to their family, coworkers, boss, etc...
      However spy agencies and the like have methods for training resistance to narco-analysis (most often employing Barbiturates). They also teach agents/assets to be familiar with alcohol and resistant to prying questions under it's influence.
      The Scopolamine is a bit more intriguing/disturbing. Because it's a pretty potent anticholinergic and antimuscarinic drug it can easily cause hallucinations and outright delusions at high dosages, which interrogations would likely require. At these dosages it's a deliriant, often causing extremely vivid and realistic delusions (way beyond most hallucinogens, stuff like smoking phantom cigarettes or having full conversations with people that don't exist). It's pharmacology related to drugs like BZ, and other Tropane alkaloid deliriants (Think Angel's Trumpet, Jimson Weed, etc...). These delusions tend to be of an often persecutorial and paranoid nature too (like seeing demons and stuff).
      Plus combining it with nicotine or caffeine would reduce/attenuate it's effect. While mixing it with amphetamine, or even worse cocaine, would be fairly dangerous for the heart and likely increase the chance of seeing life-threatening side effects.

    • @dark2023-1lovesoni
      @dark2023-1lovesoni Год назад +6

      As a thought experiment though, I've always wondered if these deliriant drugs could be used in interrogations if their horrifying delusional effects were learned into instead of avoided. I doubt traditional narco-analysis resistance training would work so well against such a use.
      Imagine this, the spy/subject is first given Scopolamine/Hyoscyamine or BZ, along with LSD.
      Once they're experiencing full-blown paranoid delusions and seeing demons, the interrogator has "actors" start trying to convince the spy/subject they're in Hell or something similar depending on subject's religious affiliation or likely upbringing.
      Then the interrogator administers a drug like MDMA which encourages trust and likely reduces some of the persecutorial delusions while still being hallucinogenic (yes as a substituted amphetamine it'd still be dangerous).
      The interrogator then reveals themselves and "wards off" the other actors/demons. They tell the spy/subject that they are a savior/angel (alter for subject's beliefs) but that they MUST confess everything to be saved/rescued, otherwise they go back with the demons(actors) for eternity.
      Who knows, it MIGHT work, though obviously the interrogator would need a VERY corrupted sense of morals and medical ethics to ever actually do such an interrogation.
      Maybe I'll write a spy fiction book/film with this someday.

  • @jakeolthof
    @jakeolthof Год назад +338

    It is madness to refer to somebody whose government secretly dosed him with LSD as paranoid.

    • @Rachel_M_
      @Rachel_M_ Год назад +83

      _"Just because you're paranoid it doesn't mean they're not out to get you"_ 😉

    • @jesseberg3271
      @jesseberg3271 Год назад +17

      ​@@Rachel_M_ also phrased as, "Even paranoids have enemies."

    • @DeepFleeceheart
      @DeepFleeceheart Год назад +3

      ​@Hercules Shakespeare more often than not, it's those around them who pay the price

    • @lordalexandermalcolmguy6971
      @lordalexandermalcolmguy6971 Год назад +4

      Wish they'd set me up with free hallucinogens

    • @vic5015
      @vic5015 Год назад +3

      ​@@rxzw7744 I disagree with that. Mostly because nicotine has been shown to be more addictive than heroin.

  • @gawf99
    @gawf99 Год назад +109

    As a retired drunk I can tell you that a person "under the influence" of anything will absolutely tell you the truth. But it's the truth as they perceive it at that moment which is extremely warped. The same goes for polygraphs. You cannot get a base line reading on a person who is under duress which is 99% the case so the whole process is rendered useless.

    • @Josep_Hernandez_Lujan
      @Josep_Hernandez_Lujan Год назад +10

      I've told a lot of bs stories while drunk in a bar

    • @gawf99
      @gawf99 Год назад +11

      @@Josep_Hernandez_Lujan If only my life were as grand as I said it was at the bottom of a bottle lol

    • @MarioRossi-zg2ie
      @MarioRossi-zg2ie Год назад +3

      I quit drinking because I realized how full of shit I become!

    • @buckfutter99
      @buckfutter99 Год назад +7

      @@Josep_Hernandez_Lujan I ran into a guy like that after a deployment while home on leave. A class mate that was still in his MOS school talking about how he killed a bunch of people. Walked out, never went back to a bar or had a drop of booze. I was drinking to kill myself at the time and hearing someone who had never been in a sh*t sandwich really woke me up and snapped me out of it. Funny how a stupid drunk can change your outlook on life. Not sure what happened to that guy. Hope he found reality.

    • @megachonk9440
      @megachonk9440 Год назад

      Anybody who thinks alcohol reveals truth has never met an actual alcoholic.

  • @jerrymarcin5343
    @jerrymarcin5343 Год назад +5

    You know you have talent when you can open with no it doesn't work but still make a 20 min video that's informative and entertaining.

  • @RAS_Squints
    @RAS_Squints Год назад +13

    First thing that came to mind from this was the movie "True Lies" where Arnold told the tortures how he was going to escape after being given the truth serum.

  • @krisfrederick5001
    @krisfrederick5001 Год назад +13

    "To alcohol! The cause of and solution to all of life's problems" 🍻
    -Homer J. Simspon

    • @thomaseddyson362
      @thomaseddyson362 Год назад

      And now an excuse used by deflecting drunkards to sweep the truth about domestic violence and child abuse under the carpet. Where exactly is the so-called solution again? Their just perpetuating a cycle using deflecting statements.

    • @wmdkitty
      @wmdkitty Год назад +1

      @@thomaseddyson362 Chill, it was a joke.

  • @gilbertdarisse4705
    @gilbertdarisse4705 Год назад +11

    First of all, love the content Simon. Thank you for all you do through all your channels. Second, that Enron mug is the best! I kind of wish I had one now.

    • @ridethecurve55
      @ridethecurve55 Год назад +2

      Now, I know what's in the Kool-aid that Trump gives all his MAGA cult 'followers...oxytocin! Only This can explain why MAGAs are So Willing to give their Orange Grifter vast sums of their money without question so that he can continue to buy 3rd rate lawyers to defend himself, and to live in luxury, without anyone the wiser.

  • @bobdylan1968
    @bobdylan1968 Год назад

    He was ABSOLUTELY thrown out the window. Absolutely.

  • @captainspaulding5963
    @captainspaulding5963 Год назад +40

    My question about things like MK Ultra has always been, did they ever attempt any of these experiments on people who were users of the substance?
    For instance, dosing an unsuspecting, first time user with LSD would give you extremely different results than if you gave LSD to someone that had taken it before, and was aware of what you were attempting.

    • @Typical.Anomaly
      @Typical.Anomaly Год назад +9

      Agreed. I've smoked weed almost every day since the 90s and trip occasionally, and often wish I could have a "first time experience" again, partially due to how naive I was- in general and specifically to those substances. Reflecting on those experiences now, I don't think I would have been as susceptible as described in this video, but I'm talking about one single hit of acid or several pop can pipes in the woods, not a massive dose by any means.

    • @omnigar9611
      @omnigar9611 Год назад +2

      the point was to program people without them knowing.

    • @mrmr446
      @mrmr446 Год назад +2

      I've read a bit on the program and to the best of my recollection the answer is no they didn't. They weren't exactly scientific in their approach even though they probably thought they were and an unknown number were spiked, sometimes just to be observed through one way mirrors, in an extremely callous approach to those affected. The UK military carried out more controlled experiments at Porton Down and soon concluded it had no practical use, only a small number of unsuspecting soldiers affected.

    • @Aztesticals
      @Aztesticals Год назад

      ​@Typical.Anomaly there is nothing quite like having just gone through hell by going out a 6th story window onto an old disused fire escape. Sl8dding the window shut behind you and having to climb down the sides of it and finally drop the last 15 ft onto a 1st story roof into the bushes on 775ug lsd and then run accross campus as the sirens are comming louder and louder and get to your dorm room and hunker down and then have the cops come 3 hours later to ask you about your involvement with a guy who had stripped naked and ran around his dorm building and fought security with a bong and whipped cream dispenser. I mean I was there. But he stole my whole sheet of acid and when I called him on it he ate over 4200ug or 42 blottets the rest of my 50 sheet. I had to fight my kind to stay calm and not show any duress. My pupils were still massive and I was actively seeing visuals and feeling like I was being dragged down into myself by myself. But I held strong and was let go after 15 minutes

    • @jamesbuchanan3145
      @jamesbuchanan3145 Год назад

      I would formally like to volunteer to find out 😂
      I've done my fair share of...."truth serums"

  • @deeceepnw
    @deeceepnw Год назад +15

    Simon, you are amazing!! I don’t know how you manage to bring such cogent and intelligent content on so many channels to your audience. Brilliant!

    • @hometownmedic7355
      @hometownmedic7355 Год назад

      Well, it starts with a fuck off big team, which never seems to get any credit.

    • @AcornElectron
      @AcornElectron Год назад +1

      Works for a Czech MCN 😂

    • @SioxerNikita
      @SioxerNikita Год назад +3

      Very simple. Most of the scripts are other people's scripts that he pays for.
      Karl Smallwood of Fact Fiend wrote a few episodes as well.
      That is how. Simon is a presenter, and I doubt he writes any of the scripts himself.
      This is not deriding Simon, he is an entertaining presenter.

    • @omnigar9611
      @omnigar9611 Год назад

      cocaine and 300 year old wine.

  • @christophermccurry8039
    @christophermccurry8039 Год назад +14

    I recall reading a report a few years back where the CIA revisited scoplomine as a truth serum but came to the conclusion it was not greatly useful. The first problem is it made people very suggestible leading to false confessions and information and the second problem stemmed from the hallucinations. People would tell them what they believed to be true but it was a coin toss as to if they were telling them what they were hallucinating was true or was actually true.

    • @221b-l3t
      @221b-l3t Год назад

      It's great against motion sickness though. Most boats have it aboard for sea sickness and even astronauts have the option of taking it for launch day. Takes a bit for the digestion to adapt to freefall. About 60% of people barf once the engines turn off. Especially now they occasionally send up "civilians". But they've been handling orbit quite well even without years of training so that bodes well for average Joe's one day having a space job. The moon base will need plumbers eventually.

  • @cascadianrangers728
    @cascadianrangers728 Год назад +5

    What's really fascinating is that none of these drugs have much effect on psychopaths and other pathological liars; its as if deceit is integral to their consciousness

    • @cascadianrangers728
      @cascadianrangers728 Год назад

      @@shannon6876 interesting, thank you for sharing your thoughts

    • @221b-l3t
      @221b-l3t Год назад

      ​​​​​@@shannon6876 I've known some who seem to start believing their own lies. At least it looks like that and they will make you question your sanity before admitting it despite being presented wirh evidence. They convince you that you are delusional or misremember things. I used to sometimes record conversations just to reassure myself I didn't imagine it. That worked a treat but then you're accused of all sorts of stuff. Best to avoid these people. At all cost. Fk em. They can be a professionals problem who is paid to listen to that garbage. Had the pleasure of knowing one of the narcissistic variety and one flavoured bipolar. Lovely people. My life feels so simple not having them in my life anymore. So straightforward haha.I don't get lying other than to escape trouble... it's rarely not caught eventually and I couldn't possibly remember what I said to someone last week. It would be exhausting. Just don't answer. If I don't want to say I shrug and make some uncommitted grunting sound. It may be interpreted as is seen fit. Just make a face... most people laugh and forget the question or they understand. No comment.
      And then there is the wonderfully elegant solution of admitting you're wrong and apologising. Not hard. 99% of people are willing to forgive if you admit it. Depends on what of course, I don't mean criminal things.

  • @miahconnell23
    @miahconnell23 Год назад +7

    Datura / Scopalamine comes soooo close to being a real truth- extracting drug: The patient, subject, or victim { pick whichever of those words you feel is most accurate } is made so acquiescent, they’ll happily help you rob their own apartment {see Vice’s doc } .

    • @teknofreak2387
      @teknofreak2387 2 месяца назад

      Its a deliriant, meaning you cant tell hallucinations from reality or if the things you do make any sense

  • @someonebald2022
    @someonebald2022 Год назад +2

    Jeremy Hardy summed up the rambling you do when your wasted thus: "The problem with the drink talking is the drink knows too much!".

  • @ArthurMorgan4376
    @ArthurMorgan4376 Год назад +4

    After severe Resistance to Capture and Resistance to Interrogation training I got to the point where I genuinely didn't care - but I would never say a word to the enemy. No question we were given absolutely 100% of what was going on because they expected us to be exposed to that sort of shit and the more often we were exposed the more we would be resistant to it.

  • @lachlanraidal5100
    @lachlanraidal5100 Год назад +2

    Weird that you would describe the prospect of developing truth serum as "optimistic". I can think of hardly a more dangerous tool in the hands of a repressive regime, an abuser, or an organised criminal group. The potential for harm that such a development may bring, in my view, vastly outweighs any potential for good.

  • @maksdoulton4713
    @maksdoulton4713 Год назад +1

    That is some beautiful jumper under that jacket. The color, the cable pattern, the softness- look of the yarn- damn, where'd you get it?!

  • @MandleRoss
    @MandleRoss Год назад +1

    Check out the novel "The Truth Machine". Don't know where it is available but remember it being a cracking read about an inventor who creates a device that 100% can detect a lie, and its following widespread use in society and the impacts it has.

  • @prophecyempresslerena358
    @prophecyempresslerena358 Год назад +9

    If we ever develop a truth serum with a 100% success rate, be careful of what you're willing to ask. In a number of cases, some things are better left unsaid and you don't need to know every detail of what someone was doing during the morning of a recent murder in the area.
    Imagine how useless it would be to hear someone describe in unusual detail every step of what they were doing in the kitchen before sitting down for breakfast. Then they describe the movement of their mouths with every chew until they prepare to leave for work.

    • @mikemcconeghy4658
      @mikemcconeghy4658 Год назад +5

      Imagine questioning a suspect on where they were and they say, "with your mom" and then you remember that you just gave them a real truth serum. Ouch.

  • @jmanj3917
    @jmanj3917 Год назад +4

    16:23 IKR? It's just SO degrading when people actually catch you lying, and can prove it, and then point out all your lies, and in doing so make you out to be some kind of dishonest person or even a liar.
    The nerve of some people! ..expecting truthful answers and everything...especially when dealing in higher level government stuff.
    Those bastards!

    • @knowEyeDeer
      @knowEyeDeer Год назад +1

      Ever been under the influence?
      Yes, you will tell the truth, but the problem is; if you're sufficiently inebriated it will be a very warped version of the truth. What do you suppose warped truth looks like?
      At best hyperbole, at worst blatant lies. That's why thus far we've not found a working compound. The types that cause inebriation create a hit and miss scenario. I mean you can take testimony from someone inebriated but you don't get to pick and choose.
      So if you wind up with a confession of crime but also testimony that the subject witnessed someone else commit the crime, one answer at a minimum is wrong. You don't get to put one version alone into a prosecution because the entire thing is unreliable.
      That's why chemical or torturous testimony is rubbish. They're both unreliable and the best way to question subjects is to form trust based relationships. Just ask the FBI about interrogation best practices.
      Oxytocin might be useful in helping form trust rapidly, but agent "Jack Bauer" has no place in modern interrogation techniques.

  • @jmanj3917
    @jmanj3917 Год назад +13

    10:55 I've met several veterans who swear by the effectiveness of therapy combined with low doses of MDMA.
    I know many more veterans, including myself, who swear by the effectiveness of therapy combined with microdoses of psilocybin (mushrooms).
    And, for those who are or were "That guy": Notice the key word that was in both of the above examples. The word was "therapy". Just chomping on some 'shrooms or eating a bunch of Molly won't do the trick. The therapy is the part that allows change to occur. The compounds in these drugs help the patient to do the therapy treatment more effectively.
    Also, you won't "get off" with either medication if you're using them correctly, because the number one rule is, "If you can tell that you took the drug, then you took too much of the drug; So, lower your dose".

    • @wmdkitty
      @wmdkitty Год назад +5

      Set and setting, man! Set and setting! I'm due for a chemical vacation, myself, if you know what I mean. (I'm not "that guy", I'm just a fan of chemically-assisted living who enthusiastically agrees with your comment.)

  • @TheGrinningViking
    @TheGrinningViking Год назад +1

    Alexander Litvenyeko was killed by the CIA - his murder was deliberately suspicious and timed to force the UK government to uncritically accept a false flag attack elsewhere.

  • @markvicferrer
    @markvicferrer Год назад +2

    The truth serum scene in True Lies was perfect.

  • @mikemcconeghy4658
    @mikemcconeghy4658 Год назад +23

    Amnesia might be a helpful side effect. You could interrogate the same individual twice and see if you get the same responses. In theory, he shouldn't be able to remember anything he made up during the first session. If you get the same answers twice, it's more likely to be the truth as he understands it.

    • @MadHatter42
      @MadHatter42 Год назад +2

      The video said that people can overcome most serums with enough prep time, so amnesia wouldn’t help if they’ve mentally prepared themselves for interrogation and already have a fake story ready to go.

    • @221b-l3t
      @221b-l3t Год назад

      Benzos could work for that. Z drugs too. I never remembered what I did before falling asleep when taking ambien.

  • @JonnyMack33
    @JonnyMack33 Год назад +4

    MDMA is s bloody good one.. the amount of times I've had to hold my tongue.. and the amount of times I haven't 😬

  • @George_M_
    @George_M_ Год назад +2

    Truth serum is like expecting chatbot ai's to be correct instead if misinformed. The truth isn't some specially universally labeled thing

  • @nathanwest2304
    @nathanwest2304 6 месяцев назад +1

    I honestly would like to see if I'm vulnerable to these "truth serums"
    I generally have a habit of not trusting anyone, even my closest family only knows a fraction of who I really am
    most substances have an ironious or no effect on me
    it can be kinda frustrating, because no stimulant works for me

  • @batman4329
    @batman4329 Год назад +2

    I knew a few people that took gypsum weed (also called crazy weed or stink weed) when we were in high school. It grows in the wild out in the country where I grew up and they read that it was a hallucinogenic. It sounded like a bad idea so I did not take any but was present when they took it. After they took it we went to a Fresno State Bulldog football game. It took an hour or two before it started kicking in. All of a sudden they were completely out of their minds so I left them. One ended up in jail and 2 others ended up in the hospital. One of them almost died and was in the hospital for weeks. They were never the same after and they don’t remember any of it. I heard of other people trying it and being hospitalized also. They just cut open the little spike balls and ate a handful of the seeds without knowing what parts to eat and what parts not to eat or how much. When it kicked in, they looked like they were possessed and they couldn’t communicate with me at all. It was very scary and very stupid. I don’t recommend anyone trying this.

    • @Democlis
      @Democlis Год назад

      They are called Mamona here in Brasil and i had no idea this plant could have such an effect. From my parents i know they used to play with it when theyvwrre children by throwing around the dry, very spiky, "fruit" as a prank as it's suposedly very painfull and when i was little i was warned that is was higly poisonous but no one ever told me that mamonas (gypsum weed) were also allucinogenics.

  • @rationallyruby
    @rationallyruby Год назад +2

    I have a prescription for scopolamine and had no idea it was used for this😶

  • @Karl_Marksman
    @Karl_Marksman Год назад +2

    wow Twilight Sleep sounds so much more pleasant than Amnesiatic Delirium

  • @spddiesel
    @spddiesel Год назад +5

    Today I ACTUALLY found out that Sodium Pentothol is a trademarked name. In 50 years I've never heard sodium thiopental, I looked it up thinking it was an aluminum/aluminium thing.

    • @patg14
      @patg14 Год назад +3

      It's ok. You can say aluminum. It was first called aluminum, then changed to aluminium to suit elitist jerks.

    • @spddiesel
      @spddiesel Год назад +2

      @@patg14 totally not the point of my comment, but thanks. What I was trying to convey is that, while watching this video, I heard the name sodium thiopental for the first time ever. All thru my life I've known it as sodium Pentothol, so I thought perhaps British English pronounces it differently, like the aluminum example I gave. But after looking it up I learned that sodium Pentothol is a trademarked name, and it's what's used in nearly every American TV and movie during the 20th century when they wanna get some answers outta someone. Hope this clears that up.

    • @BusinessSkrub
      @BusinessSkrub Год назад +3

      ​@@patg14 it was actually first called alumium by Sir Humphry Davy, but aluminium by all his colleagues from the start, then he called it aluminum briefly, and finally agreed with his colleagues that aluminium was the best name. It isn't hard to google stuff, instead of just automatically attributing everything to some conspiracy theory nonsense lmao. What in the world would "elites" possibly give a shit whether it was aluminum or aluminium? That's such an obviously silly load of crock.

    • @221b-l3t
      @221b-l3t Год назад

      ​@@patg14 Elitist jerks being the rest of the Non-US world like usual. Same elitists who ask, WTF is Fahrenheit? Are you German?

  • @AshleyVHoney
    @AshleyVHoney Год назад +4

    My mom had twilight sleep during my birth. She also had severe postpartum depression. Always wondered if the experience had anything to do with her postpartum. She’s always been very critical of and cold towards me.

    • @annemettefrederiksen7751
      @annemettefrederiksen7751 Год назад

      Not impossible to be emotionally distant during the time of bonding and perhaps some underlaying psychological reasons prior pregnancy, could have effected her so much that it perhaps felt as someone else giving birth and being altered emotionally during the "sleep "

  • @Crangaso
    @Crangaso Год назад +4

    Guhnz Uhv Na·Vuh·Rown - Guns Of Navarone is a classic. Great movie!!!

    • @cmtippens9209
      @cmtippens9209 Год назад

      And WY-kee-KEE (not wy-KEE-KEE, or whatever it was he said)

    • @Jah_Rastafari_ORIG
      @Jah_Rastafari_ORIG Год назад

      @Crangaso Yeah; while the way he said it may be grammatically correct as a Spanish word, I've only ever heard it pronounced as having a silent 'e' at the end, going back to the mid-1960s...

  • @jaycenzimbeck7638
    @jaycenzimbeck7638 Год назад +5

    Based on Simon's less scripted content, I have to imagine that when that judge was telling those guys off for believing in potions philters and healing by faith that Simon had to stop for a second a say "F**king Legend." Potentially with the foul language fowl quacking to cover his swearing.

    • @marcalvarez4890
      @marcalvarez4890 Год назад

      I can hear Simon laughing and saying that in my head.
      You just made it happen.
      "....hahaFuckingLegendhhaha...!"

    • @jaycenzimbeck7638
      @jaycenzimbeck7638 Год назад

      @@marcalvarez4890 yeah same!

  • @cascadianrangers728
    @cascadianrangers728 Год назад +1

    I can personally attest that a stiff mix of MDMA and cocaine will make people talk for about 72 hours straight, without interruption. It might not contain much information of value, but it can definitely include encyclopedic and complete inventory of any specialty or interest; There is nothing better when it comes to getting someone to talk

  • @helora4507
    @helora4507 Год назад +2

    "We don't have recipes yet to control them..." With governments being so open and honest, I believe it. No government is attempting to control us and, if they could, they would tell us. Wait, was there something slipped in my drink?!? Nah, a government official just told me no; seems legit.

  • @andybrown4284
    @andybrown4284 Год назад +3

    I remember hearing about a spy hunter (might have been german) who came up with the theory of questioning a suspected female spy during childbirth since it would be almost impossible to lie due to the pain and the drugs used.

    • @weedfreer
      @weedfreer Год назад +3

      It was featured on BBCs QI.
      It was more the observation that, if you got a woman you believe to be a spy pregnant, the way to find out if they are not native to that country is to st in on the birth.
      There had been an observation that upon experiencing the pain of the birth, it was impossible for the woman not to revert back to her native tongue when expressing feelings of pain.

    • @estherende9491
      @estherende9491 Год назад

      That is also a plot point in "Seventeen Moments of Spring".

  • @MorganHorse
    @MorganHorse Год назад +2

    A doctor in the early 20th century really said “to the tongue” like that 😂

  • @mrmr446
    @mrmr446 Год назад +2

    The mk ultra program was a response to a remarkably simple technique used by North Korea by which prisoners wrote essays critical of the US for a small reward like cigarettes. Repeatedly doing this had the effect of released pows appearing brainwashed and the CIA were convinced some unknown chemical must have been used by the Communists and the search for one the US could use began.

  • @stevoplex
    @stevoplex Год назад +2

    I'd love to see a video dedicated to more "convenient contrivances ".

  • @AlipashaSadri
    @AlipashaSadri Год назад +1

    That mug though 🤣🤣😂

  • @ludwigiapilosa508
    @ludwigiapilosa508 Год назад +2

    Video begins at 1:30

  • @SathReacts
    @SathReacts Год назад +3

    10:06 I commented (somewhat negatively) about your pronunciation of the camp/state name some weeks ago in a previous video. YOU NAILED IT THIS TIME AROUND!

  • @terrafirma5327
    @terrafirma5327 Год назад +7

    Simon's writers have come closest to a real truth serum. He has to read their fact-based scripts!

    • @xerokewl537
      @xerokewl537 Год назад +1

      Laced with his personal opinion.

  • @andromidius
    @andromidius Год назад +1

    At best, you can make someone relaxed and hyperactive and/or confused. People can slip up and forget to lie (or what the lie was) and accidentally tell the truth.
    If they don't know what's going on. If they are aware of the drugging they are more likely to just play dumb or silent.

  • @paullopez2158
    @paullopez2158 Год назад +1

    Love the ENRON coffee cup. It is the little things in life :)

  • @Nathan-vt1jz
    @Nathan-vt1jz Год назад +1

    I agree that these drugs shouldn’t be used at all to get confessions.

  • @genstian
    @genstian Год назад +3

    What was ever wrong with wine? Or whatever they gave me at the hospital once, that I for a few days pretty much became insane, reality became a fantasy.

  • @jenna2720
    @jenna2720 Год назад +1

    That poor u-boat captain. He was probably very, very confused.
    Also, in California, there was an attempt in the mid-late 1900's to treat marital problems with doses of MDMA in both spouses.

    • @221b-l3t
      @221b-l3t Год назад

      Well it can certainly solve one marital problem. But it won't make you like someone you've grown to hate for 25 years. It just makes sex really awesome.
      LSD is for when you want to know what's really inside someone's head. Not in the sense of any truth but what their honest personality is. Basically if they have a heart. Can't fake that on acid. The problem with LSD is that it lets you see through your own lies about yourself. And see deep inside your brain. So you might not like what you find. You might realise you've beeb deceiving yourself for years. You might realise you're an asshole or selfish or whatever naive, unintelligent, boring... or positive stuff too of course but that's not a problem. Really depends what kind of baggage you carry around because it will become visible. Old memories etc... good and bad. LSD is neutral. It is neither good nor bad. It's you that may be either of those. Scary stuff. Really fascinating scary stuff I alledgedly do not regret at all.
      The one you mentioned is just good fun if you're healthy and it's not garbage (you can send it in for testing, no questions asked in Europe).

  • @buzzard4242
    @buzzard4242 Год назад +1

    It's interesting that your coffee mug is from Enron.

  • @childofcascadia
    @childofcascadia Год назад

    Truth Serum is one of those 80s movie tropes like "knockout gas".
    Like the heroes are in a room. They realize the door they came in is locked from the outside. They look around and suddenly *ssssss*. A gas comes in through a vent. Oh no, knockout gas! The heroes collapse in just a few seconds as they frantically try to break down the door.
    They wake up tied to chairs, with absolutely no bad side effects from anesthetic. The villain is there gloating and prepares the truth serum. He is about ready to inject one of the heroes so they tell him all the secret info. But the heroes manage to free themselves and fight the villain! Yay!
    Seriously, massive trope.

  • @jmanj3917
    @jmanj3917 Год назад

    The interrogators threatened their subjects with your mom, Brain Boy?
    MAHP!!
    Lololol

  • @mrandersson2009
    @mrandersson2009 Год назад +1

    These should be used in the cases of missing people, to extract potentially lifesaving information.

  • @dennisbishop3842
    @dennisbishop3842 Год назад +6

    How are you able to make so many episodes? Keep up the good work.

    • @richielanemusic9
      @richielanemusic9 Год назад +4

      Cos he only talks for 3 minutes.
      Rest is advertising.

    • @KarldorisLambley
      @KarldorisLambley Год назад +2

      all he does is read stuff. other people do the work.

    • @rundown132
      @rundown132 Год назад +2

      @@KarldorisLambley Facts lol

    • @ydid687
      @ydid687 Год назад +2

      narration & komedy

  • @jasonhare8540
    @jasonhare8540 Год назад +1

    Benzos , a Valium Klonopin or Xanax later and they won't be able to wait to tell you what they know .

  • @annasutton4029
    @annasutton4029 Год назад +4

    Holy shit, I’d have taken most anything to forget the agonies of childbirth 😬

    • @shanerasmussen5225
      @shanerasmussen5225 Год назад

      Sure, if you are willing to roll the dice on permanent brain damage, violent halucinations, and that kind of thing then yeah "Twilight Sleep" was a great program.

  • @sue-anngouvea3464
    @sue-anngouvea3464 Год назад

    Working some light pharmacology into these is a great idea

  • @buzzzzzz69
    @buzzzzzz69 Год назад

    Not quite sure what the point about Doctor Michael Mosley was meant to be as he may not be a Heart Surgeon but he is both a Medical Doctor & a Dr. Of Philosophy (as well as some kind of TV producer)

  • @netto6681
    @netto6681 Год назад

    “The fear of being given scopolamine would be enough to make people confess” - so the polygraph is the modern day replacement, and is equally bogus.

  • @ProtagonistVon
    @ProtagonistVon Год назад

    Great video, thanks for the effort.

  • @hicknopunk
    @hicknopunk Год назад +2

    I think the strongest truth serum is alcohol. It brings out people's truest self.

  • @kevinfoster1138
    @kevinfoster1138 Год назад +4

    Wow the very last statement was probably the scariest one I heard all video, if there is/was a drug to remove fear given to say soldiers we would have crazy possible uncontrollable killers on our hands. Fear makes you think! Or even better make you think twice.

    • @Brian-tn4cd
      @Brian-tn4cd Год назад +1

      That was what supposedly made Viking Berserkers so scary, so high on mushrooms that they felt little fear or pain

  • @wally626v_m7
    @wally626v_m7 Год назад +2

    Read a book on brain washing, a couple of conclusions, use of drugs as well torture and other techniques can get someone to talk, but seldom to tell the truth. Turned out what worked best was a mild intoxicant, like beer, and mild stimulant like cigarettes. Just sitting down and have a conversation over drinks.

  • @Silverhornet81
    @Silverhornet81 Год назад

    That ENRON coffee cup is awesome!!

  • @Jayjay-qe6um
    @Jayjay-qe6um Год назад +1

    Reliability and suggestibility of patients are concerns, and the practice of chemically inducing an involuntary mental state is now widely considered to be form of torture.

  • @Styxswimmer
    @Styxswimmer Год назад +1

    I often wonder who hears more confessions, bartenders or priests

    • @willmfrank
      @willmfrank Год назад +1

      "Sometimes a man will tell his bartender things he'll never tell his doctor."
      -- Dr. Boyce (John Hoyt) "The Cage."

  • @Brownyman
    @Brownyman Год назад

    The combination of artificial intelligence and brain scans have allowed the reconstruction of mental images on computer screens.
    Not a truth serum persay but a way of involuntarily getting inside someone’s head.

  • @foo219
    @foo219 Год назад

    It's kind of scary how quick some governments are to reclassify undesirables as subhuman when it no longer suits them to let them have human rights.

  • @anthonyvallejos5656
    @anthonyvallejos5656 Год назад +2

    Okay. This helps to answer a question I've had most of my life. I destroyed my left knee when I was 12. I tore pretty much everything there was to tear, including a nerve and my femoral artery. Long story short, they saved my leg, but I remember the doctors telling me that I had to be awake for some reason while they set my knee but that they were going to give me something that would make me forget. My family doesn't remember this and since I was also in shock I've always wondered if I just imagined it. Does anyone know if they would have used one of those twilight drugs in that kind of situation?

    • @nefuros551
      @nefuros551 Год назад

      There are some types of drugs that you are awake for, but you "brown out" for a little while. I got something like this when I dislocated my shoulder. Everything becomes fuzzy and you don't remember a whole lot.

    • @malloryknox1637
      @malloryknox1637 Год назад +1

      Were u in the US or another country... Different countries use different pharma. Knowing where u were and the year the accident took place in you could be provided with a relatively accurate guess as to your sedatives given as medical treatments for severe trauma change dependent on medical advancement and local practice policies of the time.

  • @Corsuwey
    @Corsuwey Год назад

    I've had some amazing conversations while on low doses of LSD... Not microdosing, but a so much that the ceiling was moving like waves in a lake--for example. BTW, I recorded a couple of my conversations.

  • @quasarsavage
    @quasarsavage Год назад +1

    criminal minds taught me well lol

  • @bohemiansusan2897
    @bohemiansusan2897 Год назад +1

    Twilight sleep was FINALLY banned in 1984 n the US. Thank God!

  • @ferguson8143
    @ferguson8143 Год назад +1

    Closet I would say is alcohol

  • @megs4193
    @megs4193 Год назад

    I wish there was, I have so many things I have seen and other people that would freely put their hand up for this....and you know what would happen 🤨 "I believe you believe it🙄🙄🙄🙄🙄😑🤦‍♀️".

  • @fredred8371
    @fredred8371 Год назад

    Video starts at 1:29

  • @benjamintaylor3934
    @benjamintaylor3934 Год назад

    Red wine. After the second bottle, I'm incapable of deception or restraint! 😂🍷

  • @momcat2223
    @momcat2223 Год назад

    Tangential comment of the day: Almost fell out of my chair when I read your desk mug. Well-played, Fact Boy. Well-played, indeed.

  • @cascadianrangers728
    @cascadianrangers728 Год назад

    I've found gasoline also helps inspire honesty in most people.

  • @vo1non
    @vo1non Год назад

    Alcohol mixed with pillow talk is quite effective.

  • @harryface1633
    @harryface1633 Год назад +1

    My mom's belt always brought out the truth.

  • @paulroberts3639
    @paulroberts3639 Год назад +1

    It is well know that the twenty minutes after a guy has had sex is the only time he is guaranteed to be telling the truth. Because it is the only time he is not making up BS in order to get sex. The best truth drug will make a man think he has just got laid.

  • @mgg114
    @mgg114 Год назад +1

    Yo Simon. Gimme an URL for Vessi, that'd quite nice buddy.

  • @easyethanol6611
    @easyethanol6611 Год назад +1

    I thought scopolamine made it so that you were more impressionable and will do what you're guided to do even if its not what you'd normally do. Like they say happens when you're robbed in Columbia

  • @pakde8002
    @pakde8002 Год назад

    Truthfully Simon is awesome 👍😎

  • @kokomo9764
    @kokomo9764 Год назад +1

    At least for me and my wife, it is my guilt.

  • @Typical.Anomaly
    @Typical.Anomaly Год назад

    7:15 I'm stoned right now and that was definitely funny

  • @steveleamont
    @steveleamont Год назад

    What about devils breath? It is used to zombify it’s victims and render them open to any suggestion and answer any question.

  • @curtislindsey1736
    @curtislindsey1736 Год назад +1

    We've had a truth serum for centuries. It's called alcohol 🤣

  • @Crangaso
    @Crangaso Год назад +2

    Mescaline/Peyote is the MF'n only way to FLY!!!!

    • @hollieBlu303
      @hollieBlu303 Год назад +1

      I agree...I fkn hate planes. At least of I'm on a hallucinogen I don't care anymore 😂

  • @Sir.Slayer
    @Sir.Slayer Год назад

    As a man once said "truth serum? Sure i got some, this here mallet and petroleum canisters should do the trick."

  • @CC-gg4oj
    @CC-gg4oj Год назад

    Simon, please tell us that coffee mug is an ironic placement, not an advertisement...

  • @DisabledPsychedelica
    @DisabledPsychedelica Год назад

    Pretty much what I thought, it’s dumb af to expect one thing to do the job or for it to be perfectly reliable. It’ll probably be a combination of drugs tailored to the person with TMS and VR. Although I think the military and government would go more the “Divergent” route with more making people anxious, afraid, etc to get them to talk vs making them “zombies”

  • @C24U_
    @C24U_ Год назад

    I wonder how the use of brain scans has favored in ascertaining if someone is lying or not. I would imagine that the parts of the brain that require more creative parts to light up while lying then just telling the truth.

  • @AcornElectron
    @AcornElectron Год назад

    Something about sodium, something about government, something about shhhhhhh!

  • @mdemory
    @mdemory Год назад

    sodium penthathol has been around for a while as a truth serum

  • @DS-gt1ft
    @DS-gt1ft Год назад

    The drug is still being used today for sea sickness, morning sickness etc.

  • @joshuaedwards15
    @joshuaedwards15 Год назад

    Love the coffee mug. Hahaha.

  • @bursegsardaukar
    @bursegsardaukar Год назад

    So they are no more as effective as the Confession Booth.

  • @gregmeyer9595
    @gregmeyer9595 Год назад

    So you’re trying to tell me that Veritaserum from Harry Potter isn’t an actual potion?!?! Riiiiiiiiiiight