Timothy Leary on the Culture of Secrecy

by: Timothy Leary and Michael Horowitz, t r u t h o u t | Op-Ed

Timothy Leary on the Culture of Secrecy
Cultural Icon, Timothy Leary, stands next to peace activist Vivian McPeak pictured at an anti-war vigil in Seattle, Washington in 1990. (Photo: Wikimedia)

Largely because of his advocacy of psychedelic drugs, Tim Leary became a high-profile political prisoner whom Nixon called "the most dangerous man in America" (the same label Nixon used to describe Daniel Ellsberg). Leary was sentenced to ten years in prison for possession of .0025 grams of cannabis.

After escaping from prison in 1970, he became the object of an international manhunt. Finally captured in Afghanistan, he was kidnapped by the CIA - there was no extradition treaty between the two countries - and brought back to face four more years in prison, including long stretches in solitary confinement, before he was released in 1976. The following is an excerpt from a text he wrote in maximum-security Folsom Prison, California, in May 1973.

-Michael Horowitz

Secrecy is the original sin. The fig leaf in the Garden of Eden. The basic crime against love. The issue is fundamental. What a blessing that Watergate has been uncovered to teach us the primary lesson. The purpose of life is to receive, synthesize and transmit energy. Communication-fusion is the goal of life. Any star can tell you that. Communication is love. Secrecy, withholding the signal, hoarding, hiding, covering up the light is motivated by shame and fear, symptoms of the inability to love. Secrecy means that you think love is shameful and bad. Or that your nakedness is ugly. Or that you hide unloving, hostile feelings. Seeds of paranoia and distrust.

Before the FBI there were no secret police. Before World War II there was no CIA and America was much less concerned with secrecy. The hidden sickness has become lethally epidemic in the last forty years. They say primly: if you have done nothing wrong, you have no fear of being bugged. Exactly. But the logic goes both ways. Then all FBI files and CIA dossiers and White House conversations should be open to all. Let everything hang open. Let government be totally visible.

The last, the very last people to hide their actions should be the police and the government.

Get Truthout in your inbox every day! Click here to sign up for free updates.

We operate on the assumption that everyone knows everything, anyway. There is nothing and no way to hide. This is the acid message. We're all on cosmic TV every moment. We all play starring roles in the galactic broadcast, This is Your Life. I remember the early days of neurological uncovering, desperately wondering where I could go to escape. Run home, hide under the bed, in the closet, in the bathroom? No way. The relentless camera "I" follows me everywhere. We can only keep secrets from ourselves.

None of the legal experts get the point of Watergate. The Special Prosecutor for the Watergate scandal chasing leaks from his own staff.

We recall the political scandals involving secrets. The heroic figures around whom Washington now revolves: Dan Ellsberg and Tony Russo. Brave Russian dissenters uncovering the secrets that everyone knows about Soviet repression.

Now comes the electronic revolution. Bugging equipment effective at long distance. I laugh at government surveillance. Let the poor, deprived, bored creatures listen to our conversations, tape our laughter, study our transmissions. Maybe it will all turn them on.

Concealment is the seed-source of every human conflict. Let's forget artificial secrets and concentrate on the mysteries.

Written in Folsom Prison, California, May 1973. Excerpted from the original version published in Neuropolitics, Starseed/Peace Press, 1977.

Creative Commons License
This work by Truthout is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 United States License.





     

»



The late writer and psychologist Timothy Leary became a thought-leader in 1960s counterculture with his mantra, "Turn on, tune in, drop out," and his groundbreaking experiments with LSD.

Michael Horowitz was Leary's archivist and editor from 1970 to Leary's death in 1996.
 


Comments

This forum is moderated by software. Please allow up to 15 minutes for your comments to go live and avoid posting the same comment multiple times.



Wise and pithy words from

Wise and pithy words from beyond time, so relevant yet today. Thank you, Tim.



God Bless Him, wherever his

God Bless Him, wherever his spirit flies.



I wonder if Leary wouldn't

I wonder if Leary wouldn't be leery of face book, today. It portrays immense openness. But the secrecy behind the smiles is troubling.

I guess with face book around we won't have to worry about secret police keeping dossiers on all of us. We'll just volunteer all the information anyone could want. When it comes to the superficial world face book represents I'm one of those who has dropped out. In fact I never dropped into this corporate data mining operation cloaked as a social networking site. If anyone thinks an alphabet soup of government agencies as well as myriad corporate spies aren't using face book to gain insight into your every whim you're dreaming.

Organize a protest or dissent through face book and the FBI is on to everyone looking in. Now watched forever.

Why does face book take precedence over a traditional way of commenting on this page? Why is face book, corporate media's medium of the year pushed as the thing to do everywhere we look? "...look at my photos, oh, but you'll have to join face book to see them." Comment to article, but you'll have to scroll past face book first.

I guess you could do My Space. It's only owned by Rupert Murdock.



I have always wondered at

I have always wondered at how in a supposed democracy, people can accept that the government can keep secrets from the people. It has always seemed a contradiction to me. I'm glad that there was at least one other original thinking person who agreed with that. Sure, readers will say, Oh, yeah, that's right. But then if in another article, a let's say Michael Moore (as in a recent interview with Olbermann) says that he understands why you need to have state secrets, the same people will say, uh, oh yeah again. We just don't REALLY get it. Why does the supposedly strongest nation need to be so paranoid about secrecy? Answer: We are not strong; we are weak, and our weakness makes us fearful. But why are we weak and fearful? It's on a spiritual-moral level. The USA is morally bankrupt as a nation. The ruling class is terrified in their hearts because they KNOW that the reckoning is always just around the corner for those who play the game of monopoly with the land and resources of the commonwealth of all. So, their fear degenerates the country in all political and economic ways...So, yes, let's come out of our collective cave mentality and start seeing the world and ourselves as it really is. So much to see, if you get past the fear and start using the mind God gave you!



To Brandy Kennon: I watched

To Brandy Kennon: I watched Timothy Leary advocate "turn on, tune in, drop out". Wow. I hadn't needed encouragement to get a head start. I'd read Aldus Huxley's Doors of Perception when I was 14. You might be interested in the short book. Later that evening a prof I knew introduced me to Dr. Leary, a top Harvard social scientist. I was so young I felt betrayed. Dr. Leary was wearing a suit and drinking a cocktail. That's how naive I was. If you weren't having fun in the 60's you weren't trying. If you didn't participate in the civil rights movement, the anti-war movement, other social causes of important to you you were probably with some jock drinking beer. Beer is not a substitute. Dr. Leary's advice is still good.



Hey Tim, Everyone who knows

Hey Tim,

Everyone who knows you knows of your familiarity with LSD. What is do you think of and what in the world is DMT? Is it possible that the word "drug", or "psychedelic drug" doesn't begin to encapsulate what this molecule is? After all, every advanced piece of technology is merely an arrangement of molecules, of atoms and electrons and all....and almost every "advanced" piece of technology was at one time considered to be an unrealistic fantasy... men once wrote how flight would never be possible, and can you imagine explaining a t.v. or the internet and computers to someone living in 10th century Europe...yikes...she's a witch! burn her!



Thanks Mr. Horowitz for

Thanks Mr. Horowitz for posting this ever timely piece. Dr. Leary certainly understands the Politics of Politics and Communication.



Miss you Timmy!!

Miss you Timmy!!



bag knockoff purses

you definitely love knockoff purses imitation purses online shopping at my estore



uggs outlet sale

click uggs outlet camarillo online shopping wVRxAByz http://www.uggs--outlet.com/



coach outlet

cheap coach outlet online auWezyxc http://www.coach-outlet--online.org/



louis vuitton official outlet

look at louis vuitton outlet suprisely bKEyRgsD http://www.louis-vuitton--outlet.net/



Canada Goose Belgique

An individual's level is generally valueble really. Appreciate it!



Nike Force One

http://indiagiftnetwork.com/index.php/component/k2/item/60-consectetuer-adipiscing-elit/60-consectetuer-adipiscing-elit?start=180



Ralph Lauren

http://tenshou.6.ql.bz/~tenshou/index.php/2011-01-16-07-51-05/2011-01-16-08-02-30/item/1-ホームページリニューアル☆/1-ホームページリニューアル☆.html?start=280



leervxpg

eartkyj