Lloyd's of London organization
also: Lloyds of London, Lloyd's, loads of London, lloyds of london, Lloyd's Insurance Market, Lloyds, Edward Lloyd's Coffee House, Societies of Lloyds, Loge of London, Lois of London, Lords of London
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Related entities (most co-mentioned)
U.S. Department of Justiceorganization · 4United Kingdomcountry · 4Londonplace · 4Kini Mini Servicesorganization · 4Strait of Hormuzplace · 2Jim Johnsonperson · 2Swedencountry · 2Edward Lloydperson · 2Aegis Defense Servicesorganization · 2Irancountry · 1U.S. Department of Homeland Securityorganization · 1Operation Gladiooperation · 1New Orleansplace · 1Saudi Arabiacountry · 1George H.W. Bushperson · 1Rothschild familyfamily · 1Henry Morgenthau Jr.person · 1Frank Wisnerperson · 1Contrasorganization · 1Miamiplace · 1U.S. Customs Serviceorganization · 1Philippinescountry · 1United Statescountry · 1Iran-Iraq Warevent · 1
Claims (11)
Lloyd's of London exposed
BCCI book_quoted
“But he was the only one that tried to hold BCCI accountable. Yeah, you know, it's interesting. I was going to give you one other blurb talking about the cover-up stuff, but it really fits into what you were just talking about. And this is s…”
▶ The Shadow State Pt 15 BCCI Finale @ 56:32
Edward Lloyd founded
Lloyd's of London guest_asserted
“Ah, good afternoon, Colonel. Do you mind if I give some historical context to one of the entities that is in the book? No, if it's something we covered. Yeah. So, I'll just read through this real quick. Lloyd's of London traces its origins …”
▶ The Colonels Corner The Invisible Soldiers by Ann Hagedoan Part 1 @ 1:11:43
CIA paid
Lloyd's of London documented
“Robertson's orders without authorization from CIA headquarters by one of the Air Arms American pilots. The British allowed themselves to be mollified and the CIA later quietly reimbursed Lloyds of London who had insured it. The $1.5 million…”
▶ The Colonel’s Corner Safe for Democracy Part 10 @ 53:13
Lloyd's of London funded
Aegis Defense Services host_asserted
“And AIG never changed its colors from its original roots. So there's all kinds of insurance things that play out through the Gladio as far as culpability in it and enabling it, not to mention Lloyd's of London, who we know funded Aegis. And…”
▶ The Colonel’s Corner Charlie Kirk Shooting and PRE 9_11 conversation @ 1:37:22
Lloyd's of London investigated
BCCI host_asserted
“were basically turning a blind eye, England in particular. Lloyd's of London, a big insurance company, had insured a number of properties that were going to go under because of BCCI. So they did their own investigation and tried to pass the…”
▶ The Shadow State Pt 15 BCCI Finale @ 8:53
Lloyd's of London exposed
BCCI book_quoted
“Lloyds of London, which is enmeshed in a racketeering lawsuit against BCCI, has fruitlessly made offers to provide evidence of bribery and kickbacks and has made repeated pleas to U.S. attorneys in Miami and New Orleans to seize BCCI record…”
▶ Bank of Credit and Commerce Finale with War Hamster @ 56:37
Lloyd's of London funded
Iran-Iraq War host_asserted
“and gets all of these contracts that basically then lead into the Iraq war. And we were kind of dissecting the explosion in 2003 about all of that. So they also, in that book, talked about a false flag where Lloyd's of London was not like t…”
▶ The Colonel’s Corner safe for Democracy Part 9 @ 1:23:19
Lloyd's of London funded
Brenda Bebe host_asserted
“staging these terror attacks that were actually all fake in order to create this worldwide scare of everybody needing. So Lloyd's of London is not clean is the point I'm trying to make. So it's not at all suspect that, I mean, it is, but it…”
▶ The Colonel’s Corner-The Mafia, CIA & George Bush Part 6 @ 37:24
Lloyd's of London funded
Executive Outcomes caller_asserted
“I don't know. So are you suggesting the Lloyds of London would create a threat so that they can? Yes. Yes. Okay. Well, we know that happened at least once with one of the, whose name I'm not going to remember, the guy that set up the execut…”
▶ The Colonel's Corner Safe for Democracy Part 47 (49) @ 1:22:35
Lloyd's of London carried_out_attack
Strait of Hormuz host_asserted
“entity at the time. But they staged a false flag on a ship in order to then basically require everybody to insure and Lloyds of London kind of dropped their rates and they got the monopoly on this insurance deal through a false flag through…”
▶ The Colonel’s Corner safe for Democracy Part 9 @ 1:23:47
Medici family founded
Lloyd's of London host_asserted
“The D'Amici family were the richest banking family in the world in the 1400s because they also helped introduce the idea of the joint stock company. It's where different merchants can pool their resources to make much greater endeavors, whe…”
▶ The Shadow State 65 Cecil Rhodes & Maritime Empires @ 23:01
Mentions (50)
▶ 8:53
were basically turning a blind eye, England in particular. Lloyd's of London, a big insurance company, had insured a number of properties that were going to go under because of BCCI. So they did their own investigation and tried to pass the…
▶ 56:37
Yeah, you know, it's interesting. I was going to give you one other blurb talking about the cover-up stuff, but it really fits into what you were just talking about. And this is from the same time article talking about the Lloyds of London.…
▶ 57:06
Lloyd's accuses BCCI of taking part in smuggling operations and falsifying shipping documents. Big surprise there. And boy, why would you want to falsify shipping documents if you're shipping arms all over? Yeah, the insurance underwriters,…
▶ 1:37:22
And AIG never changed its colors from its original roots. So there's all kinds of insurance things that play out through the Gladio as far as culpability in it and enabling it, not to mention Lloyd's of London, who we know funded Aegis. And…
▶ 1:02:41
of Frank Wisner and everybody else. So eventually the U.S. taxpayers ends up paying 1.5 million dollars to Lloyd's of London to reimburse them for us sinking the ship. So that didn't do a whole lot and the Guatemalans finally felt pushed to…
▶ 53:13
Robertson's orders without authorization from CIA headquarters by one of the Air Arms American pilots. The British allowed themselves to be mollified and the CIA later quietly reimbursed Lloyds of London who had insured it. The $1.5 million…
▶ 59:44
Well, what I'm seeing here is a whole ton of follow-ups to start with in what you just discussed. I'm also seeing Sweden involved in practically every operation. If it's not through communications, it's through something else. And I'm looki…
▶ 1:00:13
Why Alan Dulles never got fired for this fiasco, I'll never know. Yeah, Lloyds of London didn't care. They got their money. They paid them back. And, of course, our Swedish audience always tells us things always go back to Sweden somehow. I…
▶ 1:21:43
I did want to bring up the Strait of Hormuz and what it's highlighted with the Lloyds of London, right? If you don't have somebody attacking and the propping up of, if you go back to Anglo-Iranian oil, BP, and all that stuff, if you don't h…
▶ 1:22:35
I don't know. So are you suggesting the Lloyds of London would create a threat so that they can? Yes. Yes. Okay. Well, we know that happened at least once with one of the, whose name I'm not going to remember, the guy that set up the execut…
▶ 1:20:41
All right. So I think Illini, you can go. Where did he go? Oh, there he is. I'm here. Go ahead. I guess my first big question for today, because everybody is thinking about how this affects the rest of the world, is obviously going to be on…
▶ 1:22:03
And I don't have it on my table right now. You guys remember when we were doing the book that talked about how the, and I don't remember the name of the military. Do you remember we did the book about the guy in Africa that had gotten arres…
▶ 1:22:32
It's like one of the biggest currently military, paramilitary private entity. And again, I don't remember the name off the top of my head. He was funded exclusively by Lloyd's of London. And they had almost immediately after he set his comp…
▶ 1:23:19
and gets all of these contracts that basically then lead into the Iraq war. And we were kind of dissecting the explosion in 2003 about all of that. So they also, in that book, talked about a false flag where Lloyd's of London was not like t…
▶ 1:24:49
Sure. You go back to the 1980s when Lloyds of London raised the risk premium. They called it war risk. They actually charged an additional 0.125% of the ship's insured value. So fractional. You fast forward to 2019 when they had the tanker …
▶ 1:25:19
was a raise in the rates of about 50. I'm sorry, they raised it how much? Is it saying in this article? Warhamster, they started to raise them, but if I recall correctly, they just outright said we're not insuring anything. Yes. I got a 72-…
▶ 1:25:45
Especially because the entire Iranian Navy is at the bottom of the Gulf of Oman right now, waiting for me to go scuba dive it in a couple of years. That being said, Lloyd's of London is not – that is not a rational action compared to their …
▶ 1:27:44
They're not backing Optimus from their goal of the one world government. They are all in. Go ahead, Illini. I mean, yeah, I just think it's interesting here that Lloyds of London probably has very, very good intelligence. If I recall correc…
▶ 1:31:36
Why are you so mad? Go ahead. Okay, I got one statement. I think Lords of London is tingling their pants a little bit right now. And another thing that I think I found interesting that I don't know, I'm just going to, I thought it was inter…
▶ 1:35:55
Hey, thanks. One possible explanation for Lloyd's of London's position is just the location of the Strait of Hormuz relative to Iran. There's one choke point. I'm guessing that straight's not more than 15 to 20 miles wide. And that would no…
▶ 1:37:23
Yeah, I don't think anybody here thinks it's one reason. There's a whole bunch of reasons. But we were talking just specifically about the action that Lloyds of London took. Colonel, can I add a little bit on Lloyds of London? Sure. I don't…
▶ 1:37:50
For today's audience, Lois of London is not a single insurance company. It's almost like, well, it started out as a coffeehouse that was near the docks. And they had all of the, here's the key word, the intelligence on everything coming and…
▶ 1:38:44
and the underworld and government. And they are like the middleman for that. So what they're playing, you know, obviously they're very, very well informed of what's going on. And for them, like I said, I think it's a big deal for them just …
▶ 40:31
How more international syndicate Gladio can you get? I just, I was jaw dropped when I read that. Close to the time of WatchGuard's inception, Lieutenant Colonel Jim Johnson, then working as a broker for Lloyd's of London, started KMS, Kini …
▶ 41:06
meaning the motion of a snake in tall grass. How more fitting. With Johnson's tie to Lloyd's, KMS was the first company to link the insurance business and the private military companies, a partnership that profitably would identify dangerou…
▶ 41:39
Just sit back and take a second. Lloyd's of London is an insurance company. Think AIG, think CV Star, think of all of the insurance companies that we've talked about over the last two and a half years. So the guy working at Lloyd's of Londo…
▶ 42:11
Of course he does. He's working for Lloyds of London. And Lloyds of London knows where all of the operations are going to happen because they're directly linked. At KMS, which focused on the training of mercenaries and bodyguards, SAS veter…
▶ 42:42
with the CIA in Nicaragua. 1980s, the Iran-Contra had teeny-meeny services working with the Contras to overthrow the Nicaraguan government. KMS, for example, supplied pilots for clandestine airdrops in support of the Contras. The SAS-Lloyd'…
▶ 43:15
inspired the creation of yet another one called Control Risk Group. It doesn't get any clearer than that. Control Risk Group. It was founded in the early 70s. At the time, airplane hijacking and kidnappings were on the rise, and the word te…
▶ 44:43
and it's not ironic that it's an Oxford grad because we know Oxford is the breeding ground for MI6. The firm would specialize in kidnap negotiations. At a time when unprecedented numbers of Americans were traveling, working, and living abro…
▶ 1:11:43
Ah, good afternoon, Colonel. Do you mind if I give some historical context to one of the entities that is in the book? No, if it's something we covered. Yeah. So, I'll just read through this real quick. Lloyd's of London traces its origins …
▶ 1:12:14
but a coffeehouse catering to sailors, merchants, and ship owners. Edward Lloyd provided reliable shipping news, making it a hub for a marine time intelligence. This environment fostered informal business dealings where merchants and banker…
▶ 1:12:42
about voyages, cargoes, and the risk, and the bankers started writing their names under voyages detailed on a blackboard, agreeing to financially backed ships' cargoes against loss at sea, hence the term underwriting. This marked the early …
▶ 1:13:10
A small group of marine insurance moved to Lombard Street, further solidifying the coffeehouse role as a place for obtaining marine insurance. Those early activities centered on facilitating marine insurance, though face-to-face negotiation…
▶ 1:13:38
It also became a meeting place for those involved in marine time trading, including a controversial those of slave trade, insuring the ships and enslaved people. A role for which Lloyds later apologized. The formal insurance market began to…
▶ 39:04
that there was a bombing of a ferry in the Philippines that killed 100 people. And they used that, along with Lloyds of London, who, as I explained earlier, is intricate to this entire operation, to justify adding even more contracts for pr…
▶ 31:58
CEO Christy Clemons had run public relations for none other than Paul Bremer. She had also been a Bush appointee at the Department of Homeland Security's Customs and Border Patrol. Ages had also became an official advisor to Lloyds of Londo…
▶ 5:27
These contracts hardly resembled the feeding frenzy of the Iraq War, but they were lucrative for several firms and resulted in new ones being created, some without any track record and many in search of subcontractors from third countries. …
▶ 35:24
In 1987, Lloyds of London and Lloyds U.S. in federal court sued. So Lloyds of London sued the Lloyds U.S. for basically name infringement. Lloyds of London agreed not to say anything negative about Lloyds U.S. nor interfere in its business …
▶ 35:56
Incredibly, Lloyds of London, which brought the original action, agreed to pay Lloyds US $6 million. It worked out to be about $300,000 per investor compared to their original $30,000 investment in the company. So again, that looks like ano…
▶ 36:24
who was the major supporter of the, and I don't remember the name of it off the top of my head, that private military company that was set up in London that they installed the mercenary that had been thrown in jail for doing a coup down in …
▶ 36:54
doing coups in the world for MI6, he basically cleans himself up, sets up a new organization and gets in business with Lloyd's of London to basically scare the shit out of everybody with mock terror attacks on ships in order to coerce all o…
▶ 37:24
staging these terror attacks that were actually all fake in order to create this worldwide scare of everybody needing. So Lloyd's of London is not clean is the point I'm trying to make. So it's not at all suspect that, I mean, it is, but it…
▶ 48:21
Seems like we are getting close to the axis of this whole corrupt wheel. I mean, mentioning Lloyd's of London and then Paul Helliwell. Lloyd's of London was involved in ensuring the opium and slave trade back in the day with the East India …
▶ 23:28
It's where loads of London comes in. These are the forefathers of loads of London. You had to ensure a massive endeavor like some kind of trip across the oceans. The problem was they were incredibly strong on the sea, and as we pointed out …
▶ 41:45
everything short selling exists they're trading on margin uh they got sophisticated counting techniques um they're trading insurance contracts yeah would we talk about lloyds of london with insurance contracts they didn't start it the dutch…
▶ 41:37
So some of the other major banking houses were, of course, very famous, the Baring Brothers, which was co-founded in 1762. Ambrose Bank, Kleinwert & Sons, Schroeder's, Lazard Brothers, Morgan Grenfell. These are all the City of London great…
▶ 8:53
were basically turning a blind eye, England in particular. Lloyd's of London, a big insurance company, had insured a number of properties that were going to go under because of BCCI. So they did their own investigation and tried to pass the…
▶ 56:32
But he was the only one that tried to hold BCCI accountable. Yeah, you know, it's interesting. I was going to give you one other blurb talking about the cover-up stuff, but it really fits into what you were just talking about. And this is s…
▶ 57:02
to U.S. attorneys in Miami and New Orleans to seize BCCI records. Lloyd's accuses BCCI of taking part in smuggling operations and falsifying shipping documents. Big surprise there. And boy, why would you want to falsify shipping documents i…