(Previous writings about Manson here, here, here, here, and here.)
Many
hippies are socially almost dead inside. Some require massive
emotions to feel any thing at all. They need bizarre, intensive acts
to feel alive – sexual acts, acts of violence, nudity, every kind
of Dionysian thrill.
The
Hippie Trip, Dr Lewis Yablonsky (cited in Chaos: Charles
Manson, the CIA and the Secret History of the Sixties, by Tom
O'Neill and Dan Piepenbring.)
He, the god who appeared among men with his ripe intoxicating drink,
was the same as the frenzied one whose spirit drove the women to
madness in the loneliness of the mountains.
Dionysus: Myth and Cult, by Walter F. Otto.
- Infinite Rapture and Infinite Terror.
In the past, it was always a tiny minority of adventurous
individuals who sought out the undiscovered corners of the world.
Many of them died and many others returned ravaged by extremity and
solitude, never quite themselves again.
The
great tumult of the 1960s is a cultural phenomenon without any
parallel in modern history, and yet it had innumerable precedents.
Its lineage can be traced back to the Romantics, rebels against
industrial and scientific modernity who dabbled in mind-altering
drugs (Coleridge and de Quincey) and free love cults (Blake). The
decadent/symbolist movements of the fin de siècle
pre-empted the 60s with their occult obsessions and proto-psychedelic
flights of intricately weird fantasy, as did the occult revivalists
of the 19th
century.
None of these movements, however, adequately adumbrated the scale
and intensity of cultural and ontological upheaval which was
compressed into the latter half of the 60s. This qantitive and
qualitive difference was facilated by advances in pharmacology and
communication technology. Enovid, the first contraceptive pill, was
approved for use by the FDA on June 23, 1960. Meanwhile, the Swiss
company Sandoz had introduced a new psychoactive chemical called
Delysid to the research market in 1947. It was LSD, of course, and
it had been slowly creeping its way into post-war America via the
unlikely route of Project MKUltra, a top secret CIA mind control
programme which has been shrouded in infamy, mystery and speculative
mythology ever since.
By the middle of the 60s, telephones, radios and televisions had
collapsed the distance between spaces and people, creating a mass
culture in which social change happened at larger and much more
rapid scales. Either by accident or design (depending on who you
want to believe), LSD seeped into this mass culture, and a great
chunk of the population went in search of the undiscovered corners of
human pyschology and experience.
Any adventure in transgression, risk-taking and unfettered
self-exploration carries with it the underlying fear that, like a
policeman, priest or grandiose hangover, some dire consequence looms
on the horizon, waiting to pounce. In the aftermath of the events of
the night of the 8th of August, 1969 at 10050 Cielo Drive,
that fear burst out like a thunderclap through the elite enclaves of
the movie and music industries. The mood of biblical panic that
engulfed LA's hippie royalty probably had two primary sources. One
was just a general superstitious sense that all the freaky hedonism
and druggy abandon had gone too far, somehow summoning Manson and his
acolytes like demons to turn the Aquarian pool-sides red with blood.
Another was perhaps more pointed: the full degree to which the Family
had infiltrated the upper echelons of Hollywood babylon remains
shrouded in mystery. Researching the article that would eventually
blossom into Chaos: Charles Manson, the CIA and the Secret History
of the Sixties, Tom O'Neill found that virtually none of the
surviving Hollywood heavyweights would speak to him about Manson:
I'd been in touch with Diane Ladd's manager, having heard that Ladd,
who'd been married to Bruce Dern at the time of the murders, ran in
some of the same circles as Tate and Polanksi. Her manager promised
to set up the interview. The next day she called back, saying that
Ladd had had an “emotionally visceral reaction.” The manager
said, “I don't know what happened with Diane back in the sixties,
but she adamantly refused to have anything to do with the piece. She
even told me that if her name was in it, she was going to contact her
attorney.” (Chaos.)
For conservatives, the horrors of Cielo Drive have alway been
codified as an inevitable outgrowth of the 60s counter-culture. This
was never entirely convincing: although the saga of the Family could
not have occured at any other time, Manson himself was a product of
the US penal system and a dysfunctional upbringing in the 30s and
40s. Nevertheless, it may not be entirely wrong to suggest a certain
inevitability in the fact that some very dark things slipped through
the many doors thrown open in the latter years of the 60s. The term
“Dionysian” has been applied so frequently to the decade of the
60s (and the subject of rock music in general) as to border on
meaningless cliche. Yet the evocation remains apt, and as we shall
see, often unnervingly so in relation to Manson and his followers.
Dionysus is the most fascinating and puzzling of the Greek gods.
His nature is characterised by insoluble paradox and contradiction.
He is, on the one hand, the great liberator who awakens all the
repressed energies and creative potentialities of the community which
has fallen into the cowardice of habit and convention, the stasis of
excessive order and control. As such, he is also the conduit of all
untrammelled physical joy in being, all ecstatic transport and
epiphany. Yet the doors opened by the Dionysian revel are primordial
and ungovernable: through them comes all the grandeur of life, but
also all its madness and horror. In Dionysus: Myth and Cult,
Walter F. Otto evokes the apocalyptic upheaval engendered by the
outsider “God who Comes”:
The world man knows, the world in which he has settled himself so
securely and snugly – that world is no more. The turbulance which
accompanied the arrival of Dionysus has swept it away. Everything
has been transformed. But it has not been transformed into a
charming fairy story or into an ingenuous child's paradise. The
primeval world has stepped into the foreground, the depths of reality
have been opened, the elemental forms of everything that is creative,
everything that is destructive, have arisen, bringing with them
infinite rapture and infinite terror. The innocent picture of a
well-ordered routine world has been shattered by their coming, and
they bring with them no illusions or fantasies but truth – a truth
that brings on madness.
The ambiguous character of Dionysus is echoed in the drug which fuelled the heightened and fraying ambience of the late 60s. The LSD
experience engendered total transformations of reality whose only
predictable quality was their intensity: enchanted paradises and
looping corridors of madness and dissociation formed a new mental
topography which seemed to have emerged overnight around the familiar
social mores of the pre-Space Age world:
In the myth and in the experience of those who have been affected by
this event, the appearance of Dionysus brings with it nourishing
intoxicating waters that bubble up from the earth. Rocks split open,
and streams of water gush forth. Everything that has been locked up
is released. The alien and the hostile unite in miraculous harmony.
Age-old laws have suddenly lost their power, and even the dimensions
of time and space are no longer valid.
(Dionysus: Myth and Cult.)
The utopian glow of the 60s had already passed its high-water mark
by the beginning of '69. Emerging from their secluded revels in the
desert, Manson and his frenzied maenads embodied with an eerie
perfection the dark side of the Dionysian myth.
2. Murder and Obsession: The Ecstatic Elusiveness of Truth.
“One’s
file, you know, is never quite complete, a case is never really
closed, even after a century, when all of the participants are dead.”
The
Third Man, Graham Greene, cited in Why Popular Culture Still Can't Get Enough of Charles Manson, by Ed Sanders.
David Fincher's best movie Zodiac (2007)
deals with how unsolved murder can become an all-encompassing
obsession. The movie traces an obsession with solving the Zodiac
murders as it plays itself out through three separate characters:
journalist Paul Avery (Robert Downey, Jr.), detective Dave Toschi
(Mark Ruffalo) and cartoonist and later true crime author Robert
Graysmith (Jake Gyllenhaal). Crime holds a peculiar obsessive
power over the imagination. As much as it has been derided as
exploitative trash, the true crime genre has probably never been as
vital.
What
accounts for the enduring popularity of sifting through the often
labyrinthine minutiae of traumatic and appalling events from the
past? Morbidity only accounts for a part of the phenomenon. There
is a perennial appeal to the mind of attempting to solve dense,
seemingly intractable problems. Mystery captures the mind with an
almost erotic ardour, an obsessive passion which is at its height when
in a state of irresolution, where the apparent proximity of the
solution and the ultimate, ecstatic elusiveness of finality and
resolution are equidistant to one another.
This
perhaps accounts for the appeal of the cold case. Sufficiently
distant in the past, an old case can rarely be definitively solved –
but that those not deter us from chasing after some kind of ambiguous
resolution, or provisional certainty that the truth can yet be
wrestled from the hazy fog of time's passage. The past, like the
truth, plays a game with our obsessive imaginations, appearing one
moment within our reach, and the next utterly irretrievable. The
investigation of a cold case, whether in fiction or true crime,
dramatizes our peculiar relationship with the past. It is at once
divorced from the present by cleavage greater than that of the
farthest star in the sky, and yet innumerable threads and links
remain: a detail in a file nobody noticed before, a witness nobody
thought to interview, a memory, a physical trace etched into a wall
somewhere – something to restore the past by decoding its
unfinished business.
Of all
the twentieth century crimes that have taken hold of excitable and
obsessive imaginations, none have enjoyed the same pre-eminence as
those which bookend the 60s: the assassination of Kennedy in '63, and
the Manson Family murders of August '69. Both had the air of ominous
ritual: in the first the slaying of a virile (or, in less flattering
language, priapic) chieftan, and in the latter the slaugther of a
beautiful and pregnant young woman. In the insuing years, America
had careened into a giddy, creative, apocalyptically violent tumult,
and latterly walked on the moon, having in the meantime engaged in so
much labyrinthine conspiratorial sorcery that a not inconsiderable
section of the population would never believe that it really
happened. The lasting legacy of the 60s, of brains rewired by drugs,
technology and subliminal state coercion, was that nothing would
ever be how it seemed any more.
The
Kennedy and Manson murders take their researchers into a strange,
often scarcely credible world which is more like fiction than reality
– more outre than fiction itself, in fact. This is because they
occur not in the everyday world, but in worlds characterised by
different types of power. To attempt to unravel Kennedy's
murder, one enters the complex, compartmentalized and occult (in the
sense of “hidden”, and maybe some others) machinations of the
national security state, a largely unseen world where real power is
exercised through the merging of corporate, military, intelligence
and organized crime networks. The Manson saga takes us into a
different kind of power – the great power over the imagination exercised by movies and popular music, and by the sybaritic
lifestyles of the icons and celebrities who make them – and finally
to the power exercised by Manson himself, the power of the mesmerist,
the hypnotist and cult leader, the psychopath who we despise, but
from whom we cannot withhold our enduring fascination. These are
worlds buzzing, almost mystically, with coincidences, connections and
secrets.
3. A
Story that has Never Been Told in Its Entirety.
The Manson Family murders are solved, insofar as nobody really
debates who actually did the killing. Yet there has always been a
sense that the Manson saga is a story that has never been told in its
entirety. Going all the way back to Ed Sanders' The Family (the
first book on the subject published in 1971), dark rumours and
conspiranoid theories have always swirled around the core story.
Sanders discussed persistent tales of decadence having run amok in
the house on Cielo Drive prior to the grizzly events of August 8/9,
and his book positions the Family within a wider matrix of satanic
biker gangs, organized crime both petty and more professionally
ambitious, and a burgeoning sub-culture of gnostic mind control
control cults (including Scientology and the Process Church of the
Final Judgement) that makes Panos Cosmatos' movie Mandy
feel like the Barry Manilow
track of the same name. Pioneering conspiracy maven Mae Brussell
argued that the killings were a false flag operation against the
counter-culture, and posited Manson as a COINTELPRO
patsy. (Whatever the ultimate validy of this theory, her research
did highlight a persistent, baffling and disturbing leniency shown to
Manson and his followers by law enforcement authorities.)
In
1974, however, vainglorious DA Vincent Bugliosi published his account
of the trial in Helter Skelter, and
this book enshrined forever the official Manson narrative, with its
White Album
inspired race war apocalypse as the scarcely credible, but rarely
thereafter questioned, motive for the brutal killings. Sanders' book
was dismissed as poorly sourced sensationalism, and the weirder
backwaters of the case were largely relegated to underground works
like Peter Levanda's epic melange of true crime, occult history and
conspiranoia Sinister Forces.
What
is striking about Tom O'Neill's book Chaos
(released fortuitously on the eve of Tarantino's Once
Upon a Time in Hollywood)
is that it is, to the best of my knowledge, the first mainstream book
to really wade into the dark, long repressed undercurrents of the
Manson story. This was by no means O'Neill's intention. The whole
thing began – it's hard to avoid the movie-like structure of the
book – as a routine freelance assignment for Premier
magazine, a Manson anniversary piece with a Hollywood angle.
Stonewalled by the luminaries, however, O'Neill found himself
drifting slowly into the obsessive realm charted out in Fincher's
Zodiac. At
an early point in his investigations, the recently departed
activist/journalist Paul Krassner warned O'Neill “This will take
over your life if you let it.” So it came to pass: the Premier
piece, its deadline endlessly deferred, became a 20 year obsession.
There
may not be much in Chaos
which is completely new to seasoned Mansonoids, but O'Neill has done
a heroic amount of investigative legwork, and in many cases provided
substantiation for much that has previously hovered in the ambiguous
realm of rumour and innuendo. Chaos
relentlessly exposes the Manson Family prosecution as riddled with so
many improprieties and irregularities that it could have been struck
out of court many times over. He mounts a very convincing assault on
the legitimacy of the putative Helter Skelter motive, pointing out
that Bugliosi stated on two separate occasions that he didn't think
Manson himself believed in the coming race war/underground getaway
mythos; this is an extremely telling admission, because if Manson
didn't believe in Helter Skelter, and
ordered
the killings, then the race war angle couldn't
have been the actual motive, only at best what Watson, Atkins and the
other Mansonoids had been told it was.
O'Neill
then makes the case, based on circumstantial but undeniably suggestive
evidence, that Manson might have been an asset of some or other of
the deeply immoral underground programs the US government had become
embroiled in in the 60s (COINTELPRO, MKUltra, etc.) This is by no
means implausible. As a COINTELPRO asset, Manson would have been
win-win, in the sense that his activities would both inflame tensions
with black militant groups like the Panthers and present the 60s
counter-culture in general in the most negative light possible. In
relation to MKUltra, many have observed that Manson's activities
dovetailed precisely with those of the shadowy program, ie the use of hallucinogenic drugs and ritualized psychotherapies and sexuality to
create re-programmed and obedient subjects.
To
make the case for MKUltra involvement, O'Neill focuses on Manson's
period in Haight-Ashbury, during which the life-long prison inmate
very rapidly adopted the newfangled role of acid guru, and
particularly on the Haight-Ashbury Free Medical Clinic (HAFMC).
O'Neill isolates no less than three figures associated with the
Clinic who had academic/experimental interests which eerily prefigure
Manson's activities with the Family. Federal officer Roger Smith had
studied how drug use precipitates violent behaviour among gangs,
often using immersive, observer-participant methods to gather data.
Meanwhile, David E Smith, the founder of the HAFMC, had also been
studying the link between drug use and violent behaviour in groups,
this time amongst rodent populations. The first of the two, Roger,
was Manson's parole officer, and his relationship with his charge was unorthodox, to say the very least, and characterised by the kind of
bizarre leniency which would reoccur in various departments
throughout the ensuing saga.
Another occasional
visitor to the HAFMC was Louis Jolyon “Jolly” West, a
psychiatrist
and life-long friend of Charlton Heston who once accidentally killed an
elephant by injecting it with LSD and antipsychotics. “Jolly”
West was also one of the many medical practitioners sub-contracted
under the MKUltra program, and O'Neill discovered his direct
correspondence with its leader Sidney Gottlieb, known in his lifetime
as the Black Sorcerer and the Dirty Trickster. West is one of those
figures who constantly shows up in peculiar places. In 1959, he persuaded DJ Peter Tripp to stage the notorious wakeathon,
in which the radio personality broadcasted his show from a glass
booth in Times Square for 200 hours straight without sleep. In 1964,
West privately examined Jack Ruby, declaring him to be “obviously
psychotic.” (Incidentally, Ruby claimed to have been taking
Preludin at the time of killing Oswald. Preludin was marketed as an
appetite suppressant, but it was in fact an amphetamine substitute
which the Beatles had taken during their Hamburg days, bringing us
back to the subject of amphetamines and violence.) In West we find a
link – however tenuous – between the MKUltra program, the JFK
assassination, and the decaying Haight-Ashbury hippie milieu that
Charles Manson moved in in '68, demonstrating once again the strange
dark tapestry and nexus of coincidence underlying America's cultural
and political tumults of the 60s.
Whether
or not Manson was an informant, asset or unwitting guinea pig of some government program, one persistent and plausible theory of the
Tate-LaBianca murders places them in the more banal realm of dope
dealing and petty crime gone awry. The theory posits the murders as
the end-product of a sequence of messy, confused episodes which began
with Manson shooting (and thinking he had killed) drug dealer Bernard
Crowe, and basically having less to do with mind control sorcery, and
more to do with small time crime spiralling out of control owing to
its participants being thoroughly pickled by isolation and excessive
psychedelic drug use. (Read this interview with James Buddy Day for
a succinct breakdown of this theory.) This is certainly one way of
interpreting the Manson saga – that because of Manson's peculiar
charisma, because he had been swept along in the collapsing historical
wave of the 60s, because the Cielo Drive victims had been beautiful,
famous and well-connected, an otherwise squalid and banal sequence of
events became seared forever into our historical subconscious.
Bugliosi aided this process by covering up the extent to which
Hollywood elites had become embroiled in this small time criminal
world, and by crafting the narrative of a master manipulator which
put the final nail in the coffin of the revolutionary 60s.
Nevertheless,
the Manson story continues to fascinate, because we still have a
sense that crucial parts of it remain elusive and deliberately hidden
from view. The pointed silence of Hollywood's hip set (in his 1993
autobiography What's
It All About,
Michael Caine describes encountering a “scruffy little man” - you
know who – at a party also attended by Jay Sebring and Sharon
Tate), the extraordinary, recurring leniency shown to both Manson and
Susan Akins by the authorities (both should have been busted back
inside many times over before the killings), the eerie dovetailing
of David E Smith and “Jolly” West's research interests with the
emerging dynamics of the Manson Family cult – all of these things
point to a definite, dark something
that
remains elusive about the case. Chaos
manages
to weave a compulsively readable narrative out of O'Neill's dense,
diligent, Ahab-like quest
to
finally bring that something
into the light of day. In the end, the book is perhaps inevitably
anti-climatic – after all the obsessive excitement, the smoking gun
remains elusive, O'Neill refuses to enter the realm of speculation,
and the reader is left, like Oedipa Mass at the end of Thomas
Pynchon's prescient conspiranoid classic The
Crying of Lot 49, on
the threshold of a revelation. O'Neill's investigation ends, more by
virtue of time and necessity than anything else, its threads still
multiplying, and and the Manson case returns to the indecisiveness of
history, to the realm of ambiguity and myth, and the fiction of the
Tarantino film.
Continued shortly.
No comments:
Post a Comment