Norman Ohler: Hitler, Nazis, Drugs, WW2, Blitzkrieg, LSD, MKUltra & CIA | Lex Fridman Podcast #481

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Summary based on the YouTube transcript and episode description. Prompt input used 79979 of 244987 transcript characters.

Norman Ohler argues 35 million methamphetamine doses enabled the 1940 Blitzkrieg, and that Hitler’s drug addiction explains his military deterioration as the war progressed.

  • The Wehrmacht distributed 35 million Pervitin (methamphetamine) doses before the May 1940 French campaign; the Ardennes push required 3 days and nights without stopping.
  • Rommel’s division drove tanks through sleeping French troops at night — the French had a mandated 3/4 liter of red wine per soldier per day; the Germans were on meth.
  • The Nazi Navy ran human drug experiments at Sachsenhausen concentration camp, testing meth-cocaine combinations in chewing gum to keep submarine crews awake for seven days.
  • Historian Hans Mommsen told Ohler that Hitler’s drug addiction is the ‘missing link’ explaining his shift from effective early-war decisions to catastrophic late-war ones.
  • Israeli scholars argue Moses hallucinated the burning bush: Egyptian acacia (which grows in the Sinai) contains DMT, and the Biblical passage repeatedly mentions acacia near the event.
  • LSD binds to approximately 9 receptor types in the brain versus psilocybin’s 5, making it the more complex molecule and explaining why it works at microgram doses.
  • Ohler traces the origin of social hierarchies to beer commercialization by Sumerian temple-states in Uruk, which monetized brewing and concentrated status around it.
  • Richard Evans called the book ‘crass and dangerously inaccurate’; Ohler rejects this, noting Nazi genocidal policy predates and is independent of any drug use.

Guests: Norman Ohler, historian and author of Blitzed: Drugs in the Third Reich and Tripped: Nazi Germany, the CIA, and the Dawn of the Psychedelic Age · 2025-09-19 · Watch on YouTube