Spanish-American War event
also: the Spanish-American War, the Maine, Spanish-American War of 1898, first American War of Empire, Spanish American war, american spanish war, the war, war of 1898, Spanish War
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Related entities (most co-mentioned)
Philippinescountry · 16Cubacountry · 14Puerto Ricoplace · 9United Statescountry · 5Spaincountry · 4William McKinleyperson · 4Hawaiiplace · 4Operation Gladiooperation · 3John Hay Whitneyperson · 3Sinking of the USS Libertyevent · 3Mark Hannaperson · 2Helen Julia Hayperson · 2Francis Burton Harrisonperson · 2Joseph Wheelerperson · 2Henry Cabot Lodge Jr.person · 2Theodore Rooseveltperson · 2World War IIevent · 2American Red Crossorganization · 2Versailles Treatyevent · 2United Nationsorganization · 1United States governmentorganization · 1Guyanacountry · 1Republican Partyorganization · 1Chinacountry · 1
Claims (1)
United States carried_out_attack
Spanish-American War host_asserted
“help each other out on the international syndicate side? Yes. But we were not pushed into doing any of this stuff. I don't see any evidence of that. Leaving aside my opinion of the Civil War, I'll just leave that alone. The first official A…”
▶ The Colonel’s Corner Safe for Democracy part 35 (37) @ 1:04:10
Mentions (40)
▶ 27:03
You know, like the Lusitania or the ship over in Vietnam that caused us to go to war, that kind of thing. The Titanic? Huh? The Titanic? That didn't really actually get us into a war, but along those same lines, the Maine during the Spanish…
▶ 27:28
You have to then go back and look at all of those. Were those false flags, too, in order to get us into a war? And what happened after the Spanish-American War? Well, we took over Cuba, we took over Puerto Rico, and we took over the Philipp…
▶ 3:39
events occurred as far as the coups and the takeover, the secret armies being used. In large part during that time, they were actually using the United States Marine in lieu of stay-behind units. And you find throughout the territories that…
▶ 4:10
Each one of them thinking after they had been colonialized by Spain for extended periods of time was going to get their freedom because the country that portends itself to be the beacon of freedom had basically entered the Spanish-American …
▶ 1:50:48
It's a crazy circle. Cousin Nick, go ahead. Then we'll go to Sunshine. No, somebody had mentioned the sugar being like gold, which is really kind of ironic because, yes, it is. As a matter of fact, that's how the Spanish-American War in Cub…
▶ 33:47
And they're basically talking about what we have talked about with the Spanish-American War and ending up with Cuba and Puerto Rico and our involvement in that area. The U.S. resolved to build an interoceanic canal, which we've talked about…
▶ 47:30
um changed our isolationist policy to be um one of the big government um globalist and of course um the author goes on and we've talked about this to talk about the hawaiian the philippine the puerto rico um sessions after the um uh america…
▶ 48:28
the first round of this expansionist globalist agenda in the United States. And then he also makes the observation of someone other than William McKinley had been president in 1898. He might've decided to set Cuba and the Philippines on a p…
▶ 7:01
The League of Nations after the Treaty of Versailles. He was very much opposed to it. Basically, his structure is what ended up becoming the United Nations. And, of course, he's a guy, a big war hawk, supported the Spanish-American War, pus…
▶ 59:03
nationalist who opposed the CIA from being there because in the CIA's eyes, they were just as evil as anyone that was actually literally a communist because both of those people in both of those groups did not want the CIA or the U.S. in th…
▶ 49:44
the wrong person gets elected, like in Chile, they're going to kill them. And then they're going to install their corrupt elitist. And so in these cases where, like what we did with Spain, they had established a corrupt elitist system in th…
▶ 36:42
He married a woman named Helen Julia Hay. And who's Helen Julia Hay? Well, her father was a guy by the name of John Hay, who just happened to be the U.S. Secretary of State from 1898 to 1905. Yeah, he came up in the Panama. Yeah, exactly. W…
▶ 47:12
Oh. That's not good. Yeah. He served as the captain in the Army during the Spanish-American War. Became a congressman in New York from 1907 to 1913. Gets fun here. Hold on. Was he in the Philippines when he was in the Army? Where was he sta…
▶ 47:51
Through his mother, Harrison was the great-grandson of Virginia planter Thomas Fairfax. Oh, that's interesting. Oh, he later left to serve in the United States Army during the Spanish-American War and was an assistant adjutant general with …
▶ 48:18
because we had a lot of people that actually served in the Philippines. And I do know of two others that ended up in that position, both of which served during the Spanish-American. And just so everybody knows, when we took the Philippines,…
▶ 1:42:35
one-ups to each other. You know, I've got this territory over here. I've got this territory over here. And then they would squabble among themselves like the Spanish-American War. The peasantry didn't fare any better under one than they did…
▶ 1:04:10
help each other out on the international syndicate side? Yes. But we were not pushed into doing any of this stuff. I don't see any evidence of that. Leaving aside my opinion of the Civil War, I'll just leave that alone. The first official A…
▶ 7:18
the league of nations uh after the treaty of versailles he was very much opposed to it but basically his structure is what ended up becoming the united nations and of course he's a guy big war hawk supported the spanish-american war pushed …
▶ 36:58
He married a woman named Helen Julia Hay. And who's Helen Julia Hay? Well, her father was a guy by the name of John Hay, who just happened to be the U.S. Secretary of State from 1898 to 1905. Yeah, he came up in the Panama. Yeah, exactly. W…
▶ 47:23
That's not good. Yeah. He served as the captain in the army during the Spanish-American War. Became a congressman in New York from 1907 to 1913. Gets fun here. Hold on. Was he in the Philippines when he was in the army? Where was he station…
▶ 48:24
um because we had a lot of people that actually served in the philippines and i do know of two others that ended up in that position both of which served during the spanish american um and just so everybody knows when we took the philippine…
▶ 29:54
I'm almost sure it was. Let me check real quick. Yeah, okay, yes. So here's where my notes, I was just doing a real quick search. William Howard Taft was the governor of Cuba back in 1906 when we took it after the Spanish-American War. I'm …
▶ 30:47
The Americans, quote unquote, won the Spanish War. And they were fighting with the Americans to win the Spanish War in these locations. And then America turned on them, just like we did in Vietnam, just like we did in China, just like we di…
▶ 35:31
There was a guy by the name of John Hay who was the U.S. Secretary of State from 1898 to 1905. So what's special about 1898? 1898. Spanish-American War. We invade Hawaii. Of course, I've talked all the time about how Sullivan and Cromwell i…
▶ 40:16
It goes back to the Spanish-American War of 1898. You know, we had bones been in there before, during, and after. And because it was the launching pad into taking over the resources in Asia. Yeah, and Stimson is all over the creation and fo…
▶ 17:26
After the Spanish-American War, he's opposing efforts to make the Philippines an American territory. He goes and visits and says the following. He basically declares that Filipinos could not rule themselves and advocated selling the islands…
▶ 34:06
Dick Aldrich's mom, that is. She was a descendant of the Winthrops and also the Astors. You know about the Winthrop family. Yes. But during the Spanish-American War of 1898, she is a nurse in the Red Freaking Cross. Of course she is. Yeah. …
▶ 43:50
in a place called 7a lawyer at atlantique she studied nursing at bellevue hospital school of nursing she would treat victims of yellow fever in florida in 1888 and got a reputation as a very good administrator she spends three years nursing…
▶ 51:10
working for a paper that his family owns, becomes a war correspondent in 1901 in a place that shows up every single show called the Philippines. And what were we doing in the Philippines during that time? Oh, we'd just stolen it from the Sp…
▶ 1:19:15
because the Cubans are rebelling against Spain. Now, Colonel, that's not just the Cubans expelling. This is, we're doing a regime change all around Central and South America already. This is the very, you know, just the early stages of, it'…
▶ 1:21:03
Well, Sherman's interesting because he actually wanted intervention in Cuba, and McKinley completely ignores him. McKinley tried to stay out of the war. And by two years in, Sherman resigns from being Secretary of State and is replaced by W…
▶ 1:21:35
Yes, it was. Want to tell the story real quick? Well, I mean, not in depth, but basically there's an explosion and it is kind of the rallying flag now with looking back for the concept of Operation Northwood and all of that stuff. Because w…
▶ 1:22:11
It's a debacle, but it was the impetus to get us into the Spanish-American War. It was the false flag that got us into the Spanish-American War. Yeah, and pretty much most historians now agree that it was a false flag. There was an investig…
▶ 1:22:35
not that that does any good apparently we can't even solve you know assassinations with all the videos but whatever sorry did i get political yeah or conspiratorial all right so now we got the war hannah would support mckinley's decision ok…
▶ 18:15
to the pilgrim society yeah that event triggered everything we're talking about yes yeah and then that leads you know it's the first time we've ever enforced to enforce the mineral doctrine ever it also opened up a new age of american imper…
▶ 23:11
of the Pilgrim's Society in Britain. And harkening back to what Warhamster just said, he started out as a military officer in the U.S. Army and fought in the Spanish-American War and specifically in the Philippines.…
▶ 24:39
There was one other thing that I wanted to bring up. Let's see. He had some very interesting military exploits along the way. But I found him extremely interesting from the perspective that he not only fought in our Civil War, but in the Sp…
▶ 8:31
He gave an oration at the unveiling of the Statue of Liberty. He's the guy that in 1898 nominated Teddy Roosevelt for governor of New York at the Republican State Convention. That's a big deal. Teddy had just, in 1898, just done the Roughri…
▶ 25:57
All right, move on from Rockefeller. We'll get back to you later, John. Next one, born in 1845, an Elihu Root. Root would be the Secretary of War from 1899 to 1904. What's going on in 1899, Colonel? We are becoming an imperial power, fighti…
▶ 36:19
So pretty impressive guy for being a jackass. He, to me, is like the grandfather of the technocrats. Let me let that marinate. That may work. So 1894 to 96, he becomes a colonel on the military staff of the New York governor. And what happe…