The German Navy conducted human drug experiments at Sachsenhausen concentration camp, testing methamphetamine combined with cocaine in chewing gum on prisoners from the Shoe Runners Unit.
#481 – Norman Ohler: Hitler, Nazis, Drugs, WW2, Blitzkrieg, LSD, MKUltra & CIA
35 million meth doses were distributed to German soldiers before the French campaign — and Hitler himself was injecting oxycodone intravenously by 1943 while his generals thought he was sober.
Lex Fridman Podcast
#481 – Norman Ohler: Hitler, Nazis, Drugs, WW2, Blitzkrieg, LSD, MKUltra & CIA
35 million meth doses were distributed to German soldiers before the French campaign — and Hitler himself was injecting oxycodone intravenously by 1943 while his generals thought he was sober.
TL;DR
Norman Ohler, author of *Blitzed: Drugs in the Third Reich*, joins Lex Fridman to reveal how methamphetamine, opioids, and a cocktail of experimental substances shaped Nazi Germany's military campaigns and Hitler's deteriorating leadership. Ohler explains how 35 million meth doses fueled the Blitzkrieg's French campaign [1] — Norman Ohler "When Hitler fell ill with a severe flu in August 1941 — just as the critical decision to split forces toward Leningrad instead of Moscow wa…" 2:01:03 , how Hitler's personal physician Dr. Theodor Morell secretly escalated his patient from vitamins to intravenous opioids [2] — Norman Ohler "After the July 1944 bomb assassination attempt, Hitler began receiving cocaine from Dr. Giesing for his blown eardrums — not knowing that D…" 2:09:55 , and how the CIA continued Nazi LSD experiments under MKUltra [3] — Norman Ohler "Harro Schulze-Boysen, a Luftwaffe Ministry officer, built Nazi Germany's largest resistance network — over 100 people — by using Thursday-n…" 2:38:18 . The single most useful takeaway: Hitler's drug-addled decision-making — not just ideology — explains his catastrophic military blunders after 1941 [4] — Norman Ohler "Hitler's drug degeneration post-1941: Hitler's first intravenous opioid injection in August 1941 marked the turning point after which his d…" 2:01:03 .
Norman Ohler, historian and author of Blitzed: Drugs in the Third Reich, joins Lex Fridman for a 4.5-hour exploration of psychoactive drugs in Nazi Germany and human history. Topics include Pervitin (methamphetamine) and the Blitzkrieg, Hitler's opioid addiction via Dr. Morell, the German resistance movement, LSD's Nazi origins, the CIA's MKUltra program, and Ohler's forthcoming Stoned Sapiens — a world history through the lens of drugs.
-
Lex opens with a crisp summary of Norman Ohler's credentials — author of Blitzed, praised by Ian Kershaw and Antony Beevor — and previews the conversation to come. He then delivers full sponsor reads for Uplift Desk, Fin AI, Shopify, LMNT electrolytes, and Hampton, weaving in personal anecdotes about each. The intro positions the episode as an unusually deep dive: not just military history, but a pharmacological lens on one of the most-studied regimes in human history.
-
Lex opens with a crisp summary of Norman Ohler's credentials — author of Blitzed, praised by Ian Kershaw and Antony Beevor — and previews the conversation to come. He then delivers full sponsor reads for Uplift Desk, Fin AI, Shopify, LMNT electrolytes, and Hampton, weaving in personal anecdotes about each. The intro positions the episode as an unusually deep dive: not just military history, but a pharmacological lens on one of the most-studied regimes in human history.
-
Ohler begins with the Versailles Treaty as context: a humiliated Germany where the economy collapsed, everything was cheap, and people in Berlin reached for morphine, cocaine, mescaline, and ether to cope, rebel, and explore. Meanwhile in Munich, the nascent Nazi movement was drinking beer in the Bürgerbräukeller — a drug that, Ohler argues, facilitates group aggression and us-vs-them thinking. Hitler alone was a teetotaler, positioning himself as the pure leader above his drunken followers. The cultural rift was ideological: Berlin's LGBTQ-inclusive, diverse drug scene versus Munich's ordered, alcohol-bonded nationalist movement. When the Nazis took power in 1933, one of their first acts was prosecuting drug users, connecting anti-drug policy directly with antisemitism.
-
Ohler grew up fascinated by the walled city of Berlin and drove there the night the Wall fell. In New York in the early 1990s, he was a novelist living for $300/month in pre-Giuliani Manhattan, took LSD for the first time, and heard about Kurt Cobain's death just before a cassette of Berlin techno arrived and changed his musical world. He moved to Berlin in the mid-90s for the electronic music scene — parties in abandoned East German buildings, the famous Tresor club in a former bank vault. His friend Alex the DJ first told him 'the Nazis took a lot of drugs.' Ohler didn't believe it — but an antique dealer had found original 1940s Pervitin tablets in an old Berlin apartment, and they were still potent decades later. That story, combined with a professor's claim that 'there would be no Blitzkrieg without methamphetamine,' launched Ohler into the archives.
-
Ohler grew up fascinated by the walled city of Berlin and drove there the night the Wall fell. In New York in the early 1990s, he was a novelist living for $300/month in pre-Giuliani Manhattan, took LSD for the first time, and heard about Kurt Cobain's death just before a cassette of Berlin techno arrived and changed his musical world. He moved to Berlin in the mid-90s for the electronic music scene — parties in abandoned East German buildings, the famous Tresor club in a former bank vault. His friend Alex the DJ first told him 'the Nazis took a lot of drugs.' Ohler didn't believe it — but an antique dealer had found original 1940s Pervitin tablets in an old Berlin apartment, and they were still potent decades later. That story, combined with a professor's claim that 'there would be no Blitzkrieg without methamphetamine,' launched Ohler into the archives.
-
Ohler's girlfriend pushed him to try the archives; a monocausal professor gave him the filing 'signatures' for Professor Ranke's files — the head of Army Institute for Physiology, whose job was to improve soldier performance. At the archive in Freiburg (deliberately decentralized, a post-Nazi design choice), Ohler held Ranke's handwritten war diary and original letters to the Temmler company about production timelines. The tricky part: nothing was labeled 'drugs' in the finding books; everything was catalogued by name, position, and campaign. No one had come looking for drugs before. Ohler also describes the Navy's human experiments at Sachsenhausen — the Shoe Runners Unit testing meth-cocaine combinations in chewing gum — and how Hans Mommsen, the greatest National Socialism historian of his generation, declared that historians had 'missed' the drug angle entirely.
-
In a story almost too absurd to be true, German pharmaceutical nationalism gave birth to military-grade methamphetamine. The Temmler Company's head assumed Jesse Owens must have been on drugs — specifically, American Benzedrine — since no Black athlete could otherwise outrun Aryans. His chemist Fritz Hauschild traced methamphetamine back to a 1917 Tokyo discovery and remade it. The chemists tested it on themselves, loved it, patented it, and marketed it as Pervitin. No prescription was needed. No stigma attached. Negative effects only emerged publicly in 1940, when a relative of Albert Speer warned that Pervitin violated Nazi ideology and would cause addiction. Before that, universities tested it and praised it: reduces fear, suppresses appetite, eliminates the need for sleep — perfect for a soldier.
-
Before the attack, morale was poor — soldiers knew they were fighting the combined might of Britain and France and expected to lose. The meth changed that immediately: fear gave way to a 'party mood,' the rush of combat felt thrilling rather than terrifying, and the advance became self-sustaining. The tanks rolled day and night through the Ardennes, reached Sedan in three days, and cut the sickle behind Allied forces still positioned in Belgium. Rommel's division, using more meth than any other, drove at night through sleeping French villages in acts Ohler calls war crimes. The French, meanwhile, received three-quarters of a liter of red wine per man per day — they stopped at night; the Germans never did. Within six weeks, France was defeated. But the campaign's success planted the seeds of overconfidence.
-
The German army was on the outskirts of Dunkirk, one order away from closing the escape route for the entire British military. But Hitler, still fighting intellectually in WWI mode, worried about exposed flanks while his tank generals on meth were ready to sprint. Then Göring, high on morphine, arrived and made his pitch: let the National Socialist Luftwaffe win the campaign from the air, not the army generals who would then become too powerful. Hitler gave the Halt Order. The generals who received it couldn't believe it — they were moments from complete victory. The British evacuated through the gap. Churchill's 'miracle of Dunkirk' was, as Ohler frames it, a side effect of drug-influenced decision-making at the highest level of Nazi command.
-
Morell operated on the Kurfürstendamm giving injections to opera stars before premieres. He was brilliant but physically repellent — notoriously poor eating habits, difficult appearance — which paradoxically made him safe in Hitler's eyes. He was not a threat, not part of any organization, and completely dependent on Hitler's approval. Their meeting was arranged over spaghetti with nutmeg at a small dinner; Hitler complained about bloating and flatulence; Morell pitched Mutaflor — a probiotic made from the gut bacteria of one WWI soldier who survived Serbian dysentery. It worked. Hitler's bloating vanished. He became a new man. He asked Morell to be his physician; Morell accepted over his wife's objections. From 1936 to 1941, Morell's regimen was harmless: daily vitamin and glucose injections. Hitler never got sick. He exercised with resistance bands specifically to keep his arm raised during long parades. All of this was still entirely manageable — until the Soviet Union.
-
Morell operated on the Kurfürstendamm giving injections to opera stars before premieres. He was brilliant but physically repellent — notoriously poor eating habits, difficult appearance — which paradoxically made him safe in Hitler's eyes. He was not a threat, not part of any organization, and completely dependent on Hitler's approval. Their meeting was arranged over spaghetti with nutmeg at a small dinner; Hitler complained about bloating and flatulence; Morell pitched Mutaflor — a probiotic made from the gut bacteria of one WWI soldier who survived Serbian dysentery. It worked. Hitler's bloating vanished. He became a new man. He asked Morell to be his physician; Morell accepted over his wife's objections. From 1936 to 1941, Morell's regimen was harmless: daily vitamin and glucose injections. Hitler never got sick. He exercised with resistance bands specifically to keep his arm raised during long parades. All of this was still entirely manageable — until the Soviet Union.
-
The turning point was August 1941: Hitler sick with the Russian flu, a critical strategic decision about Moscow pending, and Dr. Morell injecting Dolantin — a synthetic opioid — intravenously for the first time. Hitler dominated the room, ordered the catastrophic split toward Leningrad and the oil fields instead of Moscow, and fell in love with what opioids felt like. Over the next two years he became experimental: bull's testicle extracts, pig liver hormones, the full range of Morell's pharmaceutical company output. Then in July 1943, before meeting Mussolini who wanted to quit the war, he received his first Eukodal — oxycodone — intravenously. He monopolized that meeting for two hours while Mussolini couldn't get a word in. By September 1944 he was taking Eukodal every other day. After Stauffenberg's bomb attempt blew out his eardrums, a new doctor (Giesing) began treating him with liquid cocaine — unaware that Morell was simultaneously injecting opioids. The resulting speedball became the signature of Hitler's terminal drug phase. [1] — Norman Ohler "When Hitler fell ill with a severe flu in August 1941 — just as the critical decision to split forces toward Leningrad instead of Moscow wa…" 2:01:03
-
The turning point was August 1941: Hitler sick with the Russian flu, a critical strategic decision about Moscow pending, and Dr. Morell injecting Dolantin — a synthetic opioid — intravenously for the first time. Hitler dominated the room, ordered the catastrophic split toward Leningrad and the oil fields instead of Moscow, and fell in love with what opioids felt like. Over the next two years he became experimental: bull's testicle extracts, pig liver hormones, the full range of Morell's pharmaceutical company output. Then in July 1943, before meeting Mussolini who wanted to quit the war, he received his first Eukodal — oxycodone — intravenously. He monopolized that meeting for two hours while Mussolini couldn't get a word in. By September 1944 he was taking Eukodal every other day. After Stauffenberg's bomb attempt blew out his eardrums, a new doctor (Giesing) began treating him with liquid cocaine — unaware that Morell was simultaneously injecting opioids. The resulting speedball became the signature of Hitler's terminal drug phase. [1] — Norman Ohler "When Hitler fell ill with a severe flu in August 1941 — just as the critical decision to split forces toward Leningrad instead of Moscow wa…" 2:01:03
-
The turning point was August 1941: Hitler sick with the Russian flu, a critical strategic decision about Moscow pending, and Dr. Morell injecting Dolantin — a synthetic opioid — intravenously for the first time. Hitler dominated the room, ordered the catastrophic split toward Leningrad and the oil fields instead of Moscow, and fell in love with what opioids felt like. Over the next two years he became experimental: bull's testicle extracts, pig liver hormones, the full range of Morell's pharmaceutical company output. Then in July 1943, before meeting Mussolini who wanted to quit the war, he received his first Eukodal — oxycodone — intravenously. He monopolized that meeting for two hours while Mussolini couldn't get a word in. By September 1944 he was taking Eukodal every other day. After Stauffenberg's bomb attempt blew out his eardrums, a new doctor (Giesing) began treating him with liquid cocaine — unaware that Morell was simultaneously injecting opioids. The resulting speedball became the signature of Hitler's terminal drug phase. [1] — Norman Ohler "When Hitler fell ill with a severe flu in August 1941 — just as the critical decision to split forces toward Leningrad instead of Moscow wa…" 2:01:03
-
The turning point was August 1941: Hitler sick with the Russian flu, a critical strategic decision about Moscow pending, and Dr. Morell injecting Dolantin — a synthetic opioid — intravenously for the first time. Hitler dominated the room, ordered the catastrophic split toward Leningrad and the oil fields instead of Moscow, and fell in love with what opioids felt like. Over the next two years he became experimental: bull's testicle extracts, pig liver hormones, the full range of Morell's pharmaceutical company output. Then in July 1943, before meeting Mussolini who wanted to quit the war, he received his first Eukodal — oxycodone — intravenously. He monopolized that meeting for two hours while Mussolini couldn't get a word in. By September 1944 he was taking Eukodal every other day. After Stauffenberg's bomb attempt blew out his eardrums, a new doctor (Giesing) began treating him with liquid cocaine — unaware that Morell was simultaneously injecting opioids. The resulting speedball became the signature of Hitler's terminal drug phase. [1] — Norman Ohler "When Hitler fell ill with a severe flu in August 1941 — just as the critical decision to split forces toward Leningrad instead of Moscow wa…" 2:01:03
-
Ohler discovered Harro through a last letter written to his father, found by accident while researching drug use in Göring's Luftwaffe. Harro was a Luftwaffe Ministry officer who had seen his best friend tortured and killed in an early concentration camp, and bore SS-carved swastikas on his thighs as proof of his own torture. He decided to 'march through the institutions' — infiltrate the system to fight it from within. He and Libertas (a name meaning 'freedom') met on the Wannsee lake in 1934, fell in love, and built a network using parties as a recruitment tool: make a mildly critical remark about the regime, see who responds positively. Over 100 people — artists, workers, leftists, patriots — eventually joined. They glued 1,000+ stickers over Berlin in May 1942 reading 'The Nazi Paradise.' They were ultimately caught when the Soviets sent a decoded radio message with Harro's name and address in plain text — possible betrayal by Stalin himself. Harro and Libertas were executed.
-
Ohler discovered Harro through a last letter written to his father, found by accident while researching drug use in Göring's Luftwaffe. Harro was a Luftwaffe Ministry officer who had seen his best friend tortured and killed in an early concentration camp, and bore SS-carved swastikas on his thighs as proof of his own torture. He decided to 'march through the institutions' — infiltrate the system to fight it from within. He and Libertas (a name meaning 'freedom') met on the Wannsee lake in 1934, fell in love, and built a network using parties as a recruitment tool: make a mildly critical remark about the regime, see who responds positively. Over 100 people — artists, workers, leftists, patriots — eventually joined. They glued 1,000+ stickers over Berlin in May 1942 reading 'The Nazi Paradise.' They were ultimately caught when the Soviets sent a decoded radio message with Harro's name and address in plain text — possible betrayal by Stalin himself. Harro and Libertas were executed.
-
Stoned Sapiens starts 1.5 million years ago with Homo erectus in the Great Rift Valley, where khat (a natural amphetamine plant) was available and the species was developing its capacity for persistence hunting through sweat. When Homo sapiens nearly went extinct with only ~1,500 individuals, consciousness became the survival mechanism — and Ohler proposes that 100,000+ years of iboga use in the Central African rainforest, where elephants were observed eating the psychoactive plant, may have stimulated the frontal cortex expansion that created that consciousness. A Columbia University researcher describes iboga as 'a spa for neurons' that interacts everywhere in the brain simultaneously — a 'neurotechnology of the 22nd century.' The book will also cover the Minoan culture in Crete, whose wealth Ohler traces to olive oil and opium trading through a massive harbor he found while swimming on vacation, positioning the Minoans as the original drug dealers of Europe.
-
Israeli scholars have proposed that Moses was experiencing a DMT-like trip from Egyptian acacia plants (which contain DMT and grow in the Sinai) when he had the burning bush vision — fasting for days in the desert with 66 people and processing his trauma of having killed a man. His commandment 'thou shalt not kill' becomes personally resonant in this reading. Ohler also traces the first human hierarchies to beer: at Göbekli Tepe (worked for 1,600 years as a genetic exchange/party venue before beer arrived), then in Sumerian high culture where priests who brewed and labeled beer accumulated status, wealth, and eventually kingship. Before that, he argues, humans organized egalitarian societies without rulers for thousands of years — Çatalhöyük ran without hierarchies for 2,000 years. The church eventually weaponized this dynamic in reverse with the Reinheitsgebot, eliminating psychoactive plant additions to beer (witch brews with nightshade) to standardize religious and political control.
-
When Albert Hofmann accidentally discovered LSD at Sandoz in 1943, the company set up an 'intoxication room' where employees voluntarily tested it during the war — and everyone had transcendent experiences. Sandoz CEO Arthur Stoll recognized its potential as the first effective treatment for trauma at a time when millions had been traumatized by WWII. But Ohler discovered in the Novartis archive — after bribing the archivist with an LSD tab printed with the old Sandoz logo — that Stoll was simultaneously corresponding with Nazi biochemist Richard Kuhn, sending him ergotamine (LSD precursor) in October 1943. SS experiments at Dachau, which Ohler had documented while researching Blitzed, used mescaline and an unnamed hallucinogen (likely LSD). American forces liberated Dachau, debriefed Kuhn, flew a general to Basel, and obtained the LSD technology. The CIA then ran MKUltra, using LSD on unwitting subjects including Ken Kesey — who wrote One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest from his CIA trip. Sidney Gottlieb eventually pressured Stoll to restrict LSD to research only, and in 1966 it was prohibited. [1] — Norman Ohler "Documents in the Novartis archive proved that Nazi biochemist Richard Kuhn received LSD precursors from the Sandoz CEO in 1943 for SS truth…" 4:02:00
-
When Albert Hofmann accidentally discovered LSD at Sandoz in 1943, the company set up an 'intoxication room' where employees voluntarily tested it during the war — and everyone had transcendent experiences. Sandoz CEO Arthur Stoll recognized its potential as the first effective treatment for trauma at a time when millions had been traumatized by WWII. But Ohler discovered in the Novartis archive — after bribing the archivist with an LSD tab printed with the old Sandoz logo — that Stoll was simultaneously corresponding with Nazi biochemist Richard Kuhn, sending him ergotamine (LSD precursor) in October 1943. SS experiments at Dachau, which Ohler had documented while researching Blitzed, used mescaline and an unnamed hallucinogen (likely LSD). American forces liberated Dachau, debriefed Kuhn, flew a general to Basel, and obtained the LSD technology. The CIA then ran MKUltra, using LSD on unwitting subjects including Ken Kesey — who wrote One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest from his CIA trip. Sidney Gottlieb eventually pressured Stoll to restrict LSD to research only, and in 1966 it was prohibited. [1] — Norman Ohler "Documents in the Novartis archive proved that Nazi biochemist Richard Kuhn received LSD precursors from the Sandoz CEO in 1943 for SS truth…" 4:02:00
-
Ohler spent two years in early-90s Berlin clubs going out from Friday to Monday on MDMA, experiencing the first waves of techno in squatted East Berlin buildings. He frames this as research he didn't know he was doing — impossible to write about meth in tanks without understanding what stimulants feel like, or to write about LSD culture without having lived inside it. He also tried crystal meth specifically for Blitzed research, obtaining it through a Polish dealer who mysteriously included a Xerox of the 1938 Pervitin patent. The discussion broadens to literary drug use: Kerouac's On the Road written on speed in two weeks on a continuous paper roll, Philip K. Dick as an amphetamine writer who hallucinated into psychedelic space, Hemingway and Lowry writing drunk. Ohler's own preference is for the Nietzsche Haus in Sils Maria — Nietzsche's actual writing room, where he goes to achieve the focus he can't find in Berlin.
-
Ohler names his major literary influences — Camus' The Stranger for its perfect economy of language, Nietzsche for chiseled aphorisms, Joyce's Ulysses for showing that storytelling has infinite forms, Kafka, Thomas Mann, and above all Pynchon's Gravity's Rainbow ('the most intense novel of the 20th century') as the gold standard he measures himself against. Fridman brings up Dostoevsky and his current fascination with Brothers Karamazov; the conversation touches on Pynchon's Thomas-Pynchon-like privacy and the Russian mathematician Perelman's refusal of all prizes and prizes. Ohler answers the meaning-of-life question with characteristic depth: the universe is narrating a vast story, and consciousness — heightened by mountains, LSD, great art, or simply independent thought — brings us closer to perceiving that story. His Stoned Sapiens Substack is positioned as the next chapter in that project. Lex closes with a Terence McKenna quote about hurling yourself into the abyss and discovering it's a feather bed.
- Pervitin
- The brand name under which methamphetamine was sold over the counter in Nazi Germany from the late 1930s onward; marketed as a performance enhancer with no prescription required.
- Eukodal
- A German pharmaceutical brand of oxycodone (opioid painkiller) produced by Merck; Hitler's drug of choice, administered intravenously by Dr. Morell from 1943 onward.
- Blitzkrieg
- German for 'lightning war'; a rapid, combined-arms military offensive using tanks, motorized infantry, and air support moving faster than the enemy can respond — the defining German tactic in WWII.
- MKUltra
- The CIA's covert mind-control research program (1953–1973) that used LSD and other drugs on unwitting subjects to develop truth serums and interrogation techniques, continuing methods first used by Nazi scientists.
- Default mode network
- A network of brain regions active during rest and self-referential thought; psychedelics like LSD reduce its activity, which is associated with ego dissolution and altered states of consciousness.
- Speedball
- A dangerous drug combination of a stimulant (typically cocaine) and an opioid (typically heroin), taken simultaneously; Ohler argues Hitler was inadvertently taking a speedball in summer 1944.
- Haltebefehl
- German for 'stop order'; refers to Hitler's infamous order to halt tank advances at Dunkirk in May 1940, allowing the British Expeditionary Force to evacuate.
- Ergot
- A fungus that grows on rye grain; the natural source from which Albert Hofmann at Sandoz extracted lysergic acid, the precursor to LSD.
- Monocausal
- Explaining a complex event through a single cause; Ohler's mentor Hans Mommsen warned him against monocausal arguments when attributing Nazi military outcomes solely to drug use.
- Polytoxicomaniac
- A person who abuses multiple different psychoactive substances simultaneously; Ohler uses the term to describe Hitler's multi-drug regimen in his final years.
- Waffengattung
- German military term for a branch or arm of the armed forces (army, air force, navy, SS); Ohler uses it when describing how each branch had its own drug culture.
- Bürgerbräukeller
- A famous Munich beer hall that served as the political birthplace of the Nazi movement and site of the 1923 Beer Hall Putsch.
- Iboga
- A Central African shrub whose root bark contains ibogaine, a powerful psychoactive compound; used ceremonially in Gabon and studied at Columbia University as a potential treatment for addiction and depression.
- Verlorener Sieg
- German for 'lost victory'; the phrase used by General von Manstein to describe the Western campaign after Hitler's Halt Order at Dunkirk prevented a complete defeat of Britain.
- Neuroplasticity
- The brain's ability to reorganize itself by forming new neural connections; Ohler invokes it when discussing how psychedelics and literature can change habitual thought patterns.
- Dolantin
- A German brand of pethidine (meperidine), a synthetic opioid; the first opioid Dr. Morell injected into Hitler intravenously in August 1941.
- Mutaflor
- A probiotic medicine made from the gut bacteria of a WWI German soldier who proved resistant to dysentery in Serbia; the first treatment Morell successfully gave Hitler for his chronic bloating.
- Khat
- A flowering plant native to East Africa and the Arabian Peninsula whose leaves, when chewed, release cathinone — a natural stimulant similar to amphetamine; Ohler suggests Homo erectus may have used it.
- Reinheitsgebot
- The German Beer Purity Law (1516) restricting beer to only water, hops, and barley; Ohler argues it was the first European prohibitionist law, designed by the church to eliminate psychoactive plant additives from beer.
- Ergotamine
- A compound derived from ergot fungus and used as a precursor in LSD synthesis; Ohler found a 1943 document showing Sandoz CEO Stoll sent half a gram of ergotamine to Nazi chemist Richard Kuhn.
Chapter 5 · 23:45
Hitler's drug use
Ohler grew up fascinated by the walled city of Berlin and drove there the night the Wall fell. In New York in the early 1990s, he was a novelist living for $300/month in pre-Giuliani Manhattan, took LSD for the first time, and heard about Kurt Cobain's death just before a cassette of Berlin techno arrived and changed his musical world. He moved to Berlin in the mid-90s for the electronic music scene — parties in abandoned East German buildings, the famous Tresor club in a former bank vault. His friend Alex the DJ first told him 'the Nazis took a lot of drugs.' Ohler didn't believe it — but an antique dealer had found original 1940s Pervitin tablets in an old Berlin apartment, and they were still potent decades later. That story, combined with a professor's claim that 'there would be no Blitzkrieg without methamphetamine,' launched Ohler into the archives.
Claims made here
The German Navy hired the SS's 'Shoe Runners Unit' at Sachsenhausen concentration camp — prisoners who tested shoe soles by walking for days on different terrain replicas — and gave them cocktails of methamphetamine, cocaine, and experimental combinations in chewing gum. The goal: find a drug to keep soldiers awake and combat-ready for seven days straight.
The German Navy paid SS concentration camp prisoners in the Shoe Runners Unit to test drug combinations including methamphetamine mixed with cocaine in chewing gum.
Chapter 6 · 29:37
Response to historian criticism
Ohler's girlfriend pushed him to try the archives; a monocausal professor gave him the filing 'signatures' for Professor Ranke's files — the head of Army Institute for Physiology, whose job was to improve soldier performance. At the archive in Freiburg (deliberately decentralized, a post-Nazi design choice), Ohler held Ranke's handwritten war diary and original letters to the Temmler company about production timelines. The tricky part: nothing was labeled 'drugs' in the finding books; everything was catalogued by name, position, and campaign. No one had come looking for drugs before. Ohler also describes the Navy's human experiments at Sachsenhausen — the Shoe Runners Unit testing meth-cocaine combinations in chewing gum — and how Hans Mommsen, the greatest National Socialism historian of his generation, declared that historians had 'missed' the drug angle entirely.
An antique dealer in Berlin found original 1940s Pervitin tablets in an old medicine chest; they remained potent 70 years later.
Chapter 7 · 46:16
Pervitin
In a story almost too absurd to be true, German pharmaceutical nationalism gave birth to military-grade methamphetamine. The Temmler Company's head assumed Jesse Owens must have been on drugs — specifically, American Benzedrine — since no Black athlete could otherwise outrun Aryans. His chemist Fritz Hauschild traced methamphetamine back to a 1917 Tokyo discovery and remade it. The chemists tested it on themselves, loved it, patented it, and marketed it as Pervitin. No prescription was needed. No stigma attached. Negative effects only emerged publicly in 1940, when a relative of Albert Speer warned that Pervitin violated Nazi ideology and would cause addiction. Before that, universities tested it and praised it: reduces fear, suppresses appetite, eliminates the need for sleep — perfect for a soldier.
Claims made here
Pervitin was sold in German pharmacies without a prescription, and any child could buy multiple packs.
The head of the Temmler pharmaceutical company, furious that Jesse Owens outran German athletes at the 1936 Olympics, ordered his chemist to develop a stronger amphetamine. The result was methamphetamine — branded as Pervitin, sold over the counter with no prescription, and eventually prescribed to the entire Wehrmacht.
Pervitin (methamphetamine) was sold over the counter in any German pharmacy with no prescription required, and a child could buy multiple packs.
Chapter 8 · 1:00:15
Blitzkrieg and meth
Before the attack, morale was poor — soldiers knew they were fighting the combined might of Britain and France and expected to lose. The meth changed that immediately: fear gave way to a 'party mood,' the rush of combat felt thrilling rather than terrifying, and the advance became self-sustaining. The tanks rolled day and night through the Ardennes, reached Sedan in three days, and cut the sickle behind Allied forces still positioned in Belgium. Rommel's division, using more meth than any other, drove at night through sleeping French villages in acts Ohler calls war crimes. The French, meanwhile, received three-quarters of a liter of red wine per man per day — they stopped at night; the Germans never did. Within six weeks, France was defeated. But the campaign's success planted the seeds of overconfidence.
Chapter 9 · 1:18:52
Erwin Rommel (Crystal Fox)
The German army was on the outskirts of Dunkirk, one order away from closing the escape route for the entire British military. But Hitler, still fighting intellectually in WWI mode, worried about exposed flanks while his tank generals on meth were ready to sprint. Then Göring, high on morphine, arrived and made his pitch: let the National Socialist Luftwaffe win the campaign from the air, not the army generals who would then become too powerful. Hitler gave the Halt Order. The generals who received it couldn't believe it — they were moments from complete victory. The British evacuated through the gap. Churchill's 'miracle of Dunkirk' was, as Ohler frames it, a side effect of drug-influenced decision-making at the highest level of Nazi command.
Claims made here
Rommel's tank division used more methamphetamine than any other tank division during the French campaign.
The entire French campaign, from the initial attack to the occupation of most of France, lasted only six weeks — aided significantly by the non-stop meth-fueled advance.
Records show Rommel's tank division used more methamphetamine than any other division in the French campaign. Ohler's archival research found reports of Rommel standing in the open hatch of his tank at night, driving through a French village where soldiers slept — chains becoming bloody. Ohler calls it the moment the Wehrmacht lost its innocence.
Records show Rommel's tank division used more methamphetamine than any other tank division during the French campaign, earning him Ohler's nickname 'Crystal Fox.'
Chapter 10 · 1:23:02
Dunkirk
Morell operated on the Kurfürstendamm giving injections to opera stars before premieres. He was brilliant but physically repellent — notoriously poor eating habits, difficult appearance — which paradoxically made him safe in Hitler's eyes. He was not a threat, not part of any organization, and completely dependent on Hitler's approval. Their meeting was arranged over spaghetti with nutmeg at a small dinner; Hitler complained about bloating and flatulence; Morell pitched Mutaflor — a probiotic made from the gut bacteria of one WWI soldier who survived Serbian dysentery. It worked. Hitler's bloating vanished. He became a new man. He asked Morell to be his physician; Morell accepted over his wife's objections. From 1936 to 1941, Morell's regimen was harmless: daily vitamin and glucose injections. Hitler never got sick. He exercised with resistance bands specifically to keep his arm raised during long parades. All of this was still entirely manageable — until the Soviet Union.
Ohler found a document showing Hitler used an arm expander — resistance bands — specifically to build the endurance to keep his arm raised during military parades that could last for hours. It's a small detail, but one that humanizes Hitler in the most unsettling way: the most powerful man in Europe was doing arm curls to perfect his salute.
Morell was a Berlin celebrity doctor who gave injections to opera stars before big performances. He met Hitler through the Führer's personal photographer, cured Hitler's severe bloating with probiotics, and quickly became his personal physician — then escalated from vitamins to hormones to opioids over the next decade.
Hitler's infamous Halt Order at Dunkirk — which let the British military evacuate — was partly the result of a morphine-intoxicated Göring convincing Hitler to let the Luftwaffe finish the job. The tank generals, many of them on meth, couldn't believe the order to stop. Von Manstein later called it a 'lost victory.'
Chapter 11 · 1:31:06
Hitler's drug addiction
Morell operated on the Kurfürstendamm giving injections to opera stars before premieres. He was brilliant but physically repellent — notoriously poor eating habits, difficult appearance — which paradoxically made him safe in Hitler's eyes. He was not a threat, not part of any organization, and completely dependent on Hitler's approval. Their meeting was arranged over spaghetti with nutmeg at a small dinner; Hitler complained about bloating and flatulence; Morell pitched Mutaflor — a probiotic made from the gut bacteria of one WWI soldier who survived Serbian dysentery. It worked. Hitler's bloating vanished. He became a new man. He asked Morell to be his physician; Morell accepted over his wife's objections. From 1936 to 1941, Morell's regimen was harmless: daily vitamin and glucose injections. Hitler never got sick. He exercised with resistance bands specifically to keep his arm raised during long parades. All of this was still entirely manageable — until the Soviet Union.
Claims made here
35 million doses of Pervitin (methamphetamine) were delivered to the German military before the May 1940 French campaign.
Hitler's famous Halt Order at Dunkirk, which allowed 300,000+ Allied troops to escape, was influenced by a morphine-high Göring convincing Hitler to let the Luftwaffe finish the job instead.
Before the May 1940 invasion of France, the German military prescribed methamphetamine to its soldiers via an official 'stimulant decree,' ordering 35 million doses delivered to the front. Soldiers who had been depressed and afraid suddenly felt euphoric and unstoppable — driving tanks nonstop for 3 days and 3 nights through the Ardennes Mountains.
Temmler delivered 35 million doses of Pervitin (methamphetamine) to the German military before the May 1940 invasion of France.
Chapter 13 · 1:48:57
Invasion of Soviet Union
The turning point was August 1941: Hitler sick with the Russian flu, a critical strategic decision about Moscow pending, and Dr. Morell injecting Dolantin — a synthetic opioid — intravenously for the first time. Hitler dominated the room, ordered the catastrophic split toward Leningrad and the oil fields instead of Moscow, and fell in love with what opioids felt like. Over the next two years he became experimental: bull's testicle extracts, pig liver hormones, the full range of Morell's pharmaceutical company output. Then in July 1943, before meeting Mussolini who wanted to quit the war, he received his first Eukodal — oxycodone — intravenously. He monopolized that meeting for two hours while Mussolini couldn't get a word in. By September 1944 he was taking Eukodal every other day. After Stauffenberg's bomb attempt blew out his eardrums, a new doctor (Giesing) began treating him with liquid cocaine — unaware that Morell was simultaneously injecting opioids. The resulting speedball became the signature of Hitler's terminal drug phase. [1] — Norman Ohler "When Hitler fell ill with a severe flu in August 1941 — just as the critical decision to split forces toward Leningrad instead of Moscow wa…" 2:01:03
Claims made here
The first intravenous opioid injection Hitler received was in August 1941, administered by Dr. Morell during the critical military debate over whether to advance on Moscow or split forces toward Leningrad.
After Germany invaded Ukraine, Dr. Morell obtained a monopoly on all organs from all Ukrainian slaughterhouses, sending them by military train to his factory in occupied Czechoslovakia.
When Hitler fell ill with a severe flu in August 1941 — just as the critical decision to split forces toward Leningrad instead of Moscow was being made — Dr. Morell injected him with Dolantin, a German opioid, intravenously for the first time. Hitler dominated the meeting, made the decision that may have cost Germany Moscow, and fell in love with opioids.
Hitler's first intravenous opioid injection in August 1941 marked the turning point after which his decision-making demonstrably deteriorated as his drug use escalated.
Chapter 14 · 2:07:54
Cocaine
The turning point was August 1941: Hitler sick with the Russian flu, a critical strategic decision about Moscow pending, and Dr. Morell injecting Dolantin — a synthetic opioid — intravenously for the first time. Hitler dominated the room, ordered the catastrophic split toward Leningrad and the oil fields instead of Moscow, and fell in love with what opioids felt like. Over the next two years he became experimental: bull's testicle extracts, pig liver hormones, the full range of Morell's pharmaceutical company output. Then in July 1943, before meeting Mussolini who wanted to quit the war, he received his first Eukodal — oxycodone — intravenously. He monopolized that meeting for two hours while Mussolini couldn't get a word in. By September 1944 he was taking Eukodal every other day. After Stauffenberg's bomb attempt blew out his eardrums, a new doctor (Giesing) began treating him with liquid cocaine — unaware that Morell was simultaneously injecting opioids. The resulting speedball became the signature of Hitler's terminal drug phase. [1] — Norman Ohler "When Hitler fell ill with a severe flu in August 1941 — just as the critical decision to split forces toward Leningrad instead of Moscow wa…" 2:01:03
Claims made here
Hermann Göring was addicted to morphine from 1923, when he was wounded in the Beer Hall Putsch, until his capture by American forces in 1945.
Hermann Göring was addicted to morphine from 1923 — when he was shot during the Beer Hall Putsch — until his capture by American forces in 1945, a span of 22 years.
After the July 1944 bomb assassination attempt, Hitler began receiving cocaine from Dr. Giesing for his blown eardrums — not knowing that Dr. Morell was simultaneously injecting him with oxycodone. The combined effect was a classic speedball: cocaine plus opioids, a combination Ohler describes as 'the end of your drug career.'
Chapter 15 · 2:16:48
Hitler's last days
The turning point was August 1941: Hitler sick with the Russian flu, a critical strategic decision about Moscow pending, and Dr. Morell injecting Dolantin — a synthetic opioid — intravenously for the first time. Hitler dominated the room, ordered the catastrophic split toward Leningrad and the oil fields instead of Moscow, and fell in love with what opioids felt like. Over the next two years he became experimental: bull's testicle extracts, pig liver hormones, the full range of Morell's pharmaceutical company output. Then in July 1943, before meeting Mussolini who wanted to quit the war, he received his first Eukodal — oxycodone — intravenously. He monopolized that meeting for two hours while Mussolini couldn't get a word in. By September 1944 he was taking Eukodal every other day. After Stauffenberg's bomb attempt blew out his eardrums, a new doctor (Giesing) began treating him with liquid cocaine — unaware that Morell was simultaneously injecting opioids. The resulting speedball became the signature of Hitler's terminal drug phase. [1] — Norman Ohler "When Hitler fell ill with a severe flu in August 1941 — just as the critical decision to split forces toward Leningrad instead of Moscow wa…" 2:01:03
By September 1944, Hitler was taking Eukodal (oxycodone) intravenously every second day — a pattern Ohler describes as a 'junkie rhythm.'
Chapter 16 · 2:27:09
German resistance against Nazis
Ohler discovered Harro through a last letter written to his father, found by accident while researching drug use in Göring's Luftwaffe. Harro was a Luftwaffe Ministry officer who had seen his best friend tortured and killed in an early concentration camp, and bore SS-carved swastikas on his thighs as proof of his own torture. He decided to 'march through the institutions' — infiltrate the system to fight it from within. He and Libertas (a name meaning 'freedom') met on the Wannsee lake in 1934, fell in love, and built a network using parties as a recruitment tool: make a mildly critical remark about the regime, see who responds positively. Over 100 people — artists, workers, leftists, patriots — eventually joined. They glued 1,000+ stickers over Berlin in May 1942 reading 'The Nazi Paradise.' They were ultimately caught when the Soviets sent a decoded radio message with Harro's name and address in plain text — possible betrayal by Stalin himself. Harro and Libertas were executed.
Harro Schulze-Boysen, a Luftwaffe Ministry officer, built Nazi Germany's largest resistance network — over 100 people — by using Thursday-night parties to recruit. He and his wife Libertas would make a mildly critical remark about the regime and watch how guests reacted. The Gestapo couldn't crack it for years because there was no communist cell structure to infiltrate.
Chapter 18 · 2:54:09
Stoned Sapiens – Drugs in human history
Stoned Sapiens starts 1.5 million years ago with Homo erectus in the Great Rift Valley, where khat (a natural amphetamine plant) was available and the species was developing its capacity for persistence hunting through sweat. When Homo sapiens nearly went extinct with only ~1,500 individuals, consciousness became the survival mechanism — and Ohler proposes that 100,000+ years of iboga use in the Central African rainforest, where elephants were observed eating the psychoactive plant, may have stimulated the frontal cortex expansion that created that consciousness. A Columbia University researcher describes iboga as 'a spa for neurons' that interacts everywhere in the brain simultaneously — a 'neurotechnology of the 22nd century.' The book will also cover the Minoan culture in Crete, whose wealth Ohler traces to olive oil and opium trading through a massive harbor he found while swimming on vacation, positioning the Minoans as the original drug dealers of Europe.
Homo sapiens nearly went extinct when their population fell to around 1,500 individuals. As they migrated through the Central African rainforest — where elephants were observed eating iboga and behaving strangely — over 100,000 years of potential iboga use may have stimulated the frontal cortex expansion that created human consciousness. A Columbia neuroscientist describes iboga as 'a spa for the neurons' that interacts everywhere in the brain simultaneously.
Chapter 19 · 3:16:00
Religion
Israeli scholars have proposed that Moses was experiencing a DMT-like trip from Egyptian acacia plants (which contain DMT and grow in the Sinai) when he had the burning bush vision — fasting for days in the desert with 66 people and processing his trauma of having killed a man. His commandment 'thou shalt not kill' becomes personally resonant in this reading. Ohler also traces the first human hierarchies to beer: at Göbekli Tepe (worked for 1,600 years as a genetic exchange/party venue before beer arrived), then in Sumerian high culture where priests who brewed and labeled beer accumulated status, wealth, and eventually kingship. Before that, he argues, humans organized egalitarian societies without rulers for thousands of years — Çatalhöyük ran without hierarchies for 2,000 years. The church eventually weaponized this dynamic in reverse with the Reinheitsgebot, eliminating psychoactive plant additions to beer (witch brews with nightshade) to standardize religious and political control.
Claims made here
Israeli scholars have proposed that Moses experienced a DMT-like trip from the Egyptian acacia plant (which grows in the Sinai and contains DMT) when he saw the burning bush and received the Ten Commandments.
Israeli scholars have proposed that when Moses received the Ten Commandments, he may have been on a DMT-like experience from the Egyptian acacia plant — which contains DMT and grows throughout the Sinai. Moses' group had been fasting, alcohol-free, in the desert for days, effectively a psychedelic retreat. The burning bush vision and the commandment 'thou shalt not kill' may both reflect a trauma-processing trip.
Chapter 20 · 3:30:09
LSD, CIA, and MKUltra
When Albert Hofmann accidentally discovered LSD at Sandoz in 1943, the company set up an 'intoxication room' where employees voluntarily tested it during the war — and everyone had transcendent experiences. Sandoz CEO Arthur Stoll recognized its potential as the first effective treatment for trauma at a time when millions had been traumatized by WWII. But Ohler discovered in the Novartis archive — after bribing the archivist with an LSD tab printed with the old Sandoz logo — that Stoll was simultaneously corresponding with Nazi biochemist Richard Kuhn, sending him ergotamine (LSD precursor) in October 1943. SS experiments at Dachau, which Ohler had documented while researching Blitzed, used mescaline and an unnamed hallucinogen (likely LSD). American forces liberated Dachau, debriefed Kuhn, flew a general to Basel, and obtained the LSD technology. The CIA then ran MKUltra, using LSD on unwitting subjects including Ken Kesey — who wrote One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest from his CIA trip. Sidney Gottlieb eventually pressured Stoll to restrict LSD to research only, and in 1966 it was prohibited. [1] — Norman Ohler "Documents in the Novartis archive proved that Nazi biochemist Richard Kuhn received LSD precursors from the Sandoz CEO in 1943 for SS truth…" 4:02:00
Claims made here
Albert Hofmann at Sandoz discovered LSD in 1943, and a document in the Novartis archive shows Sandoz CEO Stoll sent ergotamine (an LSD precursor) to Nazi chemist Richard Kuhn in October 1943.
When the Novartis archivist refused to show Ohler the CEO correspondence he needed, Ohler produced a tab of LSD printed with the old Sandoz logo — made by an underground Basel chemist as an inside joke. The archivist took the tab, the ice broke, and Ohler found the smoking gun: a 1943 letter proving the Nazis received LSD from Sandoz.
Chapter 21 · 3:56:39
Writing on drugs
When Albert Hofmann accidentally discovered LSD at Sandoz in 1943, the company set up an 'intoxication room' where employees voluntarily tested it during the war — and everyone had transcendent experiences. Sandoz CEO Arthur Stoll recognized its potential as the first effective treatment for trauma at a time when millions had been traumatized by WWII. But Ohler discovered in the Novartis archive — after bribing the archivist with an LSD tab printed with the old Sandoz logo — that Stoll was simultaneously corresponding with Nazi biochemist Richard Kuhn, sending him ergotamine (LSD precursor) in October 1943. SS experiments at Dachau, which Ohler had documented while researching Blitzed, used mescaline and an unnamed hallucinogen (likely LSD). American forces liberated Dachau, debriefed Kuhn, flew a general to Basel, and obtained the LSD technology. The CIA then ran MKUltra, using LSD on unwitting subjects including Ken Kesey — who wrote One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest from his CIA trip. Sidney Gottlieb eventually pressured Stoll to restrict LSD to research only, and in 1966 it was prohibited. [1] — Norman Ohler "Documents in the Novartis archive proved that Nazi biochemist Richard Kuhn received LSD precursors from the Sandoz CEO in 1943 for SS truth…" 4:02:00
Claims made here
CIA operative Sidney Gottlieb brought $240,000 to Basel to buy what he believed was the world supply of LSD (400 kilograms), but Sandoz had only produced 400 grams.
Ken Kesey was paid $75 by the CIA to take LSD as part of MKUltra while working in a Menlo Park psychiatric ward, which inspired him to write One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest.
LSD works at microgram doses and is the most potent psychoactive substance known, outperforming even the most toxic snake venom at equivalent quantities.
LSD interacts with approximately 9 different receptor types in the brain, compared to psilocybin which interacts with approximately 5, making LSD a more 'sophisticated' molecule.
When CIA's Sidney Gottlieb arrived in Basel to buy the 'world supply' of LSD, expecting 400 kilograms, Sandoz CEO Stoll informed him they had produced only 400 grams.
One of the CIA's unwitting LSD guinea pigs was Ken Kesey, who received $75 to take LSD while working in a Menlo Park psychiatric ward. On that CIA-administered trip, he had the insight that the patients might not be crazy — they just saw the world differently. He wrote One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest. MKUltra, meant to create mind control, accidentally seeded the counterculture.
Documents in the Novartis archive proved that Nazi biochemist Richard Kuhn received LSD precursors from the Sandoz CEO in 1943 for SS truth-drug experiments in Dachau. When Americans liberated the camp, they immediately debriefed Kuhn, acquired the LSD technology, and handed it to the CIA — which continued the same unethical experiments under MKUltra.
The CIA's MKUltra program directly continued Nazi human drug experiments, using LSD as a potential truth drug — a lineage Ohler traced from SS experiments in Dachau.
LSD is described as the strongest substance on earth because it produces powerful effects at microgram doses — even the strongest snake venom has no effect at the same quantity.
No indexed bits in this chapter.
Show stoppers
Snapshots ()
Key Quotes ()
This episode
Cast
-
Central subject of the episode; his drug use, escalating from vitamins to intravenous opioids, is traced as a key factor in his military decision-making deterioration.
-
Hitler's personal physician and shadow pharmaceutical CEO who escalated Hitler's drug regimen from vitamins to intravenous opioids and hormone concoctions.
-
Luftwaffe Ministry officer who organized Nazi Germany's largest resistance network of over 100 people, documented in Ohler's book The Bohemians.
-
Head of the Luftwaffe; addicted to morphine for 22 years after being shot during the 1923 Beer Hall Putsch; his morphine-influenced judgment at Dunkirk contributed to the Halt Order.
-
Harro Schulze-Boysen's wife and co-leader of the Berlin resistance network; worked for MGM Berlin and was executed alongside her husband after being betrayed.
-
CIA's secret mind-control program that used LSD on unwitting subjects, directly continuing Nazi SS drug experiments from Dachau concentration camp.
-
The 1940 Allied evacuation that Hitler's Halt Order enabled; Ohler argues the decision was partly influenced by Göring's morphine-induced overconfidence about Luftwaffe capabilities.
-
German tank general whose division used more methamphetamine than any other during the French campaign; Ohler nicknames him the 'Crystal Fox.'
-
Widely considered the greatest biographer of Hitler; praised Ohler's Blitzed as 'very well-researched, serious piece of scholarship.'
-
Hitler's girlfriend; discussed in context of her relationship with Morell, her filming of Hitler at the Berghof, and Ohler's discovery of Morell's notes suggesting kinky sexual behavior.
-
Germany's June 1941 invasion of the Soviet Union; the campaign during which Hitler received his first intravenous opioid injection and made the catastrophic decision to split forces away from Moscow.
-
British historian who criticized Ohler's Blitzed as 'crass and dangerously inaccurate,' arguing it potentially excused Nazi war criminals.
-
Legendary military historian who praised Ohler's Blitzed as 'a remarkable work of research'; also told Ohler that British intelligence considered drugged Hitler more useful than a dead one.
-
American author who received CIA-administered LSD at Menlo Park psychiatric ward as part of MKUltra; wrote One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest after having an LSD-inspired revelation about mental illness.
-
Acquired LSD technology from Nazi scientists after WWII and ran the MKUltra program continuing human drug experiments; ultimately engineered the prohibition of LSD to maintain control over its supply.
-
Swiss pharmaceutical company that accidentally discovered LSD in 1943; its CEO Stoll supplied LSD precursors to Nazi chemist Richard Kuhn and later sold the world supply to the CIA.
-
Berlin pharmaceutical company that developed and patented methamphetamine as Pervitin, then supplied 35 million doses to the Wehrmacht for the French campaign.
-
German pharmaceutical company from Darmstadt that produced Eukodal (oxycodone), Hitler's primary drug of addiction; its factory was bombed by the British in December 1944.
-
Swiss pharmaceutical giant that acquired Sandoz in the 1990s and holds the Sandoz corporate archives containing key LSD documents Ohler used for his book Tripped.
-
Central location throughout the episode; discussed as the drug-fueled, cosmopolitan counterpoint to Nazi Munich in the 1920s, and as the setting for resistance networks and post-war techno culture.
Stats
This episode
Claims & Sources
Factual claims made this episode, and whether a source was named.
35 million doses of Pervitin (methamphetamine) were delivered to the German military before the May 1940 French campaign.
On the Road by Jack Kerouac was reportedly written in two weeks on amphetamines using an endless paper roll in a typewriter.
Hermann Göring was addicted to morphine from 1923, when he was wounded in the Beer Hall Putsch, until his capture by American forces in 1945.
The first intravenous opioid injection Hitler received was in August 1941, administered by Dr. Morell during the critical military debate over whether to advance on Moscow or split forces toward Leningrad.
Rommel's tank division used more methamphetamine than any other tank division during the French campaign.
The German Navy conducted human drug experiments at Sachsenhausen concentration camp, testing methamphetamine combined with cocaine in chewing gum on prisoners from the Shoe Runners Unit.
Pervitin was sold in German pharmacies without a prescription, and any child could buy multiple packs.
Albert Hofmann at Sandoz discovered LSD in 1943, and a document in the Novartis archive shows Sandoz CEO Stoll sent ergotamine (an LSD precursor) to Nazi chemist Richard Kuhn in October 1943.
CIA operative Sidney Gottlieb brought $240,000 to Basel to buy what he believed was the world supply of LSD (400 kilograms), but Sandoz had only produced 400 grams.
The British bombing of the Merck factory in December 1944 destroyed production of Eukodal (oxycodone), causing Hitler to go into drug withdrawal in the Berlin bunker.
Ken Kesey was paid $75 by the CIA to take LSD as part of MKUltra while working in a Menlo Park psychiatric ward, which inspired him to write One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest.
Israeli scholars have proposed that Moses experienced a DMT-like trip from the Egyptian acacia plant (which grows in the Sinai and contains DMT) when he saw the burning bush and received the Ten Commandments.
LSD interacts with approximately 9 different receptor types in the brain, compared to psilocybin which interacts with approximately 5, making LSD a more 'sophisticated' molecule.
LSD works at microgram doses and is the most potent psychoactive substance known, outperforming even the most toxic snake venom at equivalent quantities.
Connect
Parsed- Stoned Sapiens Substack substack.com/@stonedsap…
- Norman Ohler's books (Amazon) amzn.to/46uNS18
- Blitzed (Amazon) amzn.to/4mmY2XC
- The Bohemians (Amazon) amzn.to/3KubPhK
- Tripped (Amazon) amzn.to/4nEy7eX
- Episode transcript lexfridman.com/norman-o…
- <b>Feedback</b> – give feedback to … lexfridman.com/survey
- <b>AMA</b> – submit questions, vide… lexfridman.com/ama
- <b>Hiring</b> – join our team: <a h… lexfridman.com/hiring
- <b>Other</b> – other ways to get in… lexfridman.com/contact
- Lexfridman lexfridman.com/sponsors…
- Go to <a href=" lexfridman.com/s/uplift…
- Go to <a href=" lexfridman.com/s/fin-ep…
- Go to <a href=" lexfridman.com/s/shopif…
- Go to <a href=" lexfridman.com/s/lmnt-e…
- Go to <a href=" lexfridman.com/s/hampto…