Author Norman Ohler reveals how Nazi Germany, the CIA, and Hitler himself shaped the history of meth, LSD, and the drug war.

Norman Ohler — German novelist-turned-nonfiction author of Blitzed and Tripped, who works directly in archives uncovering the hidden drug history of Nazi Germany and the psychedelic age.
Norman Ohler discusses his book Tripped, which traces how Nazi scientists tested psychedelics like mescaline and LSD in concentration camps, how that research passed to the American military and CIA's MK Ultra program, and why LSD was ultimately criminalized. He explains the origins of LSD at Sandoz, the prohibitionist legacy of Harry Anslinger and William Randolph Hearst, and the suppressed medical potential of psychedelics, including his own family's use of LSD and psilocybin to treat his mother's Alzheimer's. The conversation then turns to Blitzed, detailing how methamphetamine (Pervitin) fueled the German Blitzkrieg through the Ardennes. Ohler closes with a detailed account of Hitler's escalating drug use under his physician Theodor Morell, from vitamins to the opioid Eukodal (oxycodone) and cocaine, and a possible LSD link to JFK's peace speech.
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Norman Ohler
“this is your book it's called tripped Nazi Germany the CIA and the dawn of the Psychedelic Age” — Norman Ohler 00:00:01Find it on Amazon
Norman Ohler
“my previous book which is called Blitz drugs in the Third Reich” — Norman Ohler 00:00:32Find it on Amazon
Norman Ohler
“that's what I intend to change with my book Stone sapiens which will be the next book and kind of conclude the trilogy” — Norman Ohler 00:40:44Find it on Amazon