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Antony Sutton book review of relationship of Wall Street and FDR

2:08:49

Transcript

0:00 Good morning, Colonel Towner. Good morning, Cousin It. If you guys can repost the space, that would be appreciated so we can get some more people in here. Thanks. Hello. Yeah, obviously, definitely need to get it reposted. Get as many people. This one's going to be a very interesting deep dive into
0:35 And he may be in touch with other people that have done lots of reading of nonfiction. One of the most interesting from the perspective of tons and tons and tons of books have been written about him. And as Antony Sutton articulates, zero.
1:05 Well, let me say all but one makes no mention of his Wall Street ties. Not one. Well, one. And the one that does is like a three volume book that attributes one chapter with very shallow paragraphs on the subject at all. So of volumes and volumes of information about FDR.
1:35 Almost nothing absent Anthony Sutton's book has been written about his actually extraordinarily deep ties to Wall Street. And I want everyone to understand what those ties are because they matter for the foundation that basically Operation Gladio was based on.
2:05 Because the players that are inside the international syndicate are basically the ones that FDR was in bed with. And the timing of his presidency is crucial. The intervening periods of World War I and then obviously into World War II. Because a lot of people are under the assumption.
2:35 That his dying when he died was almost kind of like a coup itself, saying that he was opposed to all of the stuff that would be thought of as the background for Operation Gladio. But what you're going to find out today is he was not only a part of it, he was raised in it.
3:02 And his entire background is steeped in it. I mean, like for hundreds of years, his family has been what many people would characterize as royalty, as royalty as you can get inside the United States. And I'll explain to you why that is. I was just fascinated by reading this because, again, I've read two other historical nonfiction books about FDR, didn't know any of this.
3:31 Because none of it is talked about to the extent that it is here. So it's quite an amazing discovery. And obviously plays right into what we're talking about here. So. Excuse me. I'm just testing and making sure that. Okay. Thank you. New toy. All right. Let's get this out one more time.
4:03 If everybody could repost and everything, that would be so appreciated so that we can learn all together as a group because Colonel Towner and Cousin, it really spreads a lot of fire and a lot of this stuff. It's going on right now. And, you know, knowledge is power. So we need to spread this knowledge. Thank you again, Colonel Towner. Please repost. All right. So we're going to go ahead and.
4:32 Start because anybody that comes in a little late can obviously we're recording it so they can go back and listen to the beginning. So just to start off with a brief overview, FDR spent the years 1921 to 1928 as a banker and a speculator on the markets. And he did this as a banker.
4:59 at what we learned was a very important address yesterday, 120 Broadway. And his office, when he was speculating internationally on stocks, was at 55 Liberty Street in New York City. And we talked just briefly a second ago about no one having written about FDR's
5:25 history as it relates to him being in industry and associated with Wall Street and just businesses in general. You quickly find out when you begin looking into his actual business background, he not only has ties in the banking industry. Like I said, he was a speculator on the stock market and not to the advantage of the people he was speculating on.
5:54 And he also had a lot of businesses relating to insurance. And that gets very interesting. So FDR, when he was running against Hoover or when he was running ad campaigns or helping people.
6:23 that were basically anti-Hoover. His biggest criticism of Hoover was his relationship with the bankers, which is ironic once you find out what FDR's relationships were with the bankers. And Hoover, who ran as a Republican, he had J.P. Morgan's backing when he ran against Smith, who was a Democrat.
6:53 Smith had the DuPonts, which was part of the military-industrial complex at the time. But the irony is, as we have all learned about the Uniparty, J.P. Morgan was DuPont's banker. So if you can look at the triangle, you basically have Hoover on one side, Smith on the other side, and DuPont and J.P. Morgan.
7:22 on the bottom tying both of them together. So you quickly see it really doesn't matter. It's all one big family. DuPont and Rockefeller were the largest donators to the 1928 Hoover campaign. So you were really going to get one of these uniparty candidates no matter who you voted for. The Hoover...
7:52 bankers switched to FDR in 1932, basically almost verbatim. If you look at the funding donations to Hoover in 28, they all basically switched to FDR in 32. And the reason for that was these bankers had created a thing called the Swope Plan, S-W-O-P. And we'll get into that a little while later. But it basically was socialism.
8:22 And because Hoover refused to endorse that plan because it was just a step too far, even though he kind of was a bought and paid for candidate as well, he just refused to not only say that it was a good plan, he refused to implement it. And so that caused all of the Wall Street people.
8:50 to switch their alliance over to FDR in 32. And by the way, Gerald Swope, when he wrote the plan, was General Electric's president. So people scratched their head wondering why all of these large industries would want socialism. And they weren't really advocating for socialism as it's been defined in modern days. What they wanted was a Mussolini-type
9:21 fascist totalitarian where big business was in bed with the dictator and they basically were running monopolies. And that's kind of what you get when the nuts and bolts of the SWO plan. But like I said, we'll get to that in a minute. But I will say at this point, the SWO plan was the basis for FDR's National Recovery Act. They refer to it as the NRA.
9:50 The NRA did get passed through Congress and it was signed into law. But immediately enough people contested it that law cases went up to the Supreme Court and it was struck down in its entirety as unconstitutional because it literally was implementing a totalitarian type of structure. And I'll explain to you how later on. But it's interesting.
10:18 that his signature piece and the whole reason that he was elected as president, FDR, as opposed to Hoover, was struck down as unconstitutional. So you have to keep that in mind. After the 1928 election of Hoover, the Democrats were $1.6 million in debt to a guy by the name of John Rashkob, R-A-S-K-O-B, who was the
10:47 vice president of both DuPont and General Motors. And at the time, General Motors was the largest corporation in the world. And another guy by the name of Bernard Baruch, B-A-R-U-C-H, who is a notorious Federal Reserve slash Wall Street banker. So in 1930, the Bank of the United States had a Christmas failure.
11:18 And that was part of one of the induced known about planned financial crisis in order to manipulate markets. And I'll explain to you just briefly what the Bank of the United States was. This was a bank that was set up. And there's a long story. I'm just giving you the Reader's Digest version. It was set up near where.
11:46 All of the people coming in through Ellis Island initially lived and began finding jobs. The name was questioned continuously. There were lawsuits brought against it saying that it was false advertising because everybody that came in that was new to America would think that was a government bank. And it got more.
12:16 business than all of the other banks. And the irony of this was a large portion of the people that was coming over at the time were Jewish, and the owners of the bank were Jewish. And they knew exactly what they were doing. At the time it failed, it had 450,000 depositors, with 400,000 of those depositors having less than $400 in the bank, and they basically lost all of their money.
12:46 And like I said, it was almost there's a long story there, but a lot of people speculate it was controlled demolition of the bank, basically because the money had been embezzled and or not properly managed is probably the better way to say that. But anyway, the it was under contention the entire time it existed, mainly because of the name and how it was being operated. So.
13:14 Later on, there's a report that was written that was discovered that had foretold the crisis was going to happen. And all of this was done while FDR was the governor of New York. And also, the report that foretold it happening was dismissed out of hand by the administration of FDR in New York.
13:42 And the state paid for another report that was more favorable to leaving the bank open until it crashed. So that one was hung around. It should have been hung around FDR's neck. But of course, all they did was hire people to come in and cover it up. So I'm going to go over a listing of FDR's businesses.
14:12 I mean, his business experience went on for the better part of 20 years. And anytime that you pick up a biography of FDR, almost no mention of any of the stuff I'm about to tell you. He was the vice president of a company called Fidelity and Deposit Company that was located, their New York branch was located at 120 Broadway. And if you don't understand the significance of that, go back and listen to yesterday's.
14:43 Because everything in the world was controlled from 120 Broadway to include the Bolshevik Revolution. And in the future, the American participation in Hitler's rise to power all emanated out of 120 Broadway. It's a big deal. He was also during this time period president of the industry trade association called American Construction Council. He was.
15:11 partner at Marvin Hooker and Roosevelt, which was a law firm located at 120 Broadway. He was president of United European Investment. He was director of International Germanic Trust, which was located in the Standard Oil building. He was director of Consolidated Automatic Merchandising Corporation.
15:41 which was, if you do the research into that particular company, it functioned as a front company for money laundering. He was the founder of Georgia Warm Springs Foundation, which another suspected money laundering opportunity once you realize who was on the board of directors.
16:07 what their roles were at the time, which we'll go into a little bit later. It was also registered and headquartered and ran out of 120 Broadway. He was a director on the American Investigation Corporation, a director at Sanitary Postage Surface. And that was like a postage stamp, individual stamp dispenser. He was chairman of General Trust.
16:36 He was a director of Photomation Oil Company. He was the incorporator of an entity called Federal International Investment Trust, which was basically kind of a disguise on how to fund German businesses without looking like you're funding German businesses in the lead up to World War II.
17:08 So I did want to read. This is a weird thing. Now, Anthony Sutton being the scholastic researcher that he is. Hold on just a second. He he didn't want to talk disparaging about FDR. And so what he did was put it in a footnote. One of the most salacious.
17:52 examples of FDR's behavior. He didn't want to make a scholastic book or an academic book about salacious, but he also didn't want people to think there wasn't any just because he didn't talk about him. So he put it in a footnote, and I'm going to read you the footnote. He's talking about his speculation in the investment arena.
18:21 primarily done off the backs of Germans during the inflationary period leading into the Weimar Republic. This is what he says. This raises a legitimate question concerning the scope of this book and the nature of relevant evidence. The author is interested only in establishing the relationship between Wall Street and FDR and drawing conclusions from that relationship. Therefore,
18:47 Episodes that occurred in 1921 while FDR was on Wall Street but not associated directly with his financial activities are omitted. For example, in 1921, the Senate Naval Affairs Committee issued a report with 27 conclusions, almost all critical of FDR. And just in case you didn't know, FDR served as the Assistant Secretary of the Navy for a period.
19:13 and they pose serious moral questions about FDR. The first conclusion in the Senate report reads as follows, quote, that immoral and lewd acts were practiced under instructions or suggestions by a number of enlisted personnel in the U.S. Navy in and out of uniform for the purpose of securing evidence against sexual perverts.
19:40 An authorization for the use of these enlisted men as operators or detectives was given both orally and in writing to Lieutenant Hudson by Assistant Secretary Franklin D. Roosevelt with the knowledge and consent of Joseph Daniels, Secretary of Navy. It goes on to say the 27 related conclusions and minority report are contained in the U.S. Senate.
20:08 Committee of Naval Affairs, 67th Congress, first session, alleged immoral conditions at Newport Naval Training Station. However, while FDR's conduct in the U.S. Navy may have been inexcusable and may or may not reflect on his moral fiber, such conduct is not pertinent to this book, and these incidents are omitted, except for in the footnotes.
20:36 I wanted to read that just so that you know what you're about to hear is strictly the business-related aspects of FDR and not some of the weirder stuff, because there's some really weird stuff out there, if you look. And if you want to know any more about that, all you have to do is look up that Senate report. Okay, from the 1920s to the 1940s,
21:08 I basically kind of did a overview of both the Delano family ties with Wall Street and the Roosevelt ties. Because as I said earlier, they're like the royalty within the United States when it comes to the leadership realm. And I'm just going to give you some examples.
21:38 The Delano side, they were into and owned many railroads, Northwestern Life Insurance of Chicago, Aviation Corp with Harriman as a partner. They owned a portion of Pan Am Airlines, P&O Steamship, a part of Brown Brothers, which was later merged with Harriman to become Brown Brothers Harriman, had substantial stock in Cuban cane.
22:08 and American Banknote Company. Now, what's interesting about American Banknote Company, for those of you who follow me routinely, American Banknote Company was the company that screwed Nicaragua out of the Panama Canal. So for those of you who remember when we talked about Nicaragua and how there was an actual
22:38 Congress-approved canal project that was given to the country of Nicaragua, but we later cued the government and screwed the entire country up thanks to the United Fruit guys. The way that they got the canal project out of Nicaragua was a stamp, and now it makes perfect sense that we know who actually owned part of America Banknote Company.
23:07 American Bank Note Company kind of printed like money and stuff like that for foreign countries. They also printed stamps. And there was a tourist edition of stamps commissioned from Nicaragua. And American Bank Note Company put a volcano on one of them. And then they took it upon themselves to mail.
23:35 um a postcard with that stamp on it to all the senators drawing attention to the fact that there was a volcano that they alleged was right near the canal so that it was dangerous to build the canal in nicaragua and you really needed to go to panama to do that because there was some of this international syndicate that owned the property down there and was going to make billions of dollars on the sell of it to build that canal um and so congress then
24:04 Basically, through all the money they had already spent on building the port and the initial part of the canal away and took the canal project away from Nicaragua. And that's what's so important about understanding our history and being able to tie these threads together. So at the same time they're destroying Nicaragua and they're stealing Panama from Colombia, the people that were behind it.
24:31 are the international syndicate. And by doing this research, you can tie them all together and put them all in the same place to know what you're learning about is, in fact, factual. And by this, you begin to be able to identify some of the members of the international syndicate, even though we don't focus a lot on that. One of FDR's uncles was in the Federal Reserve. He also was a member, one of the Delanos.
24:59 was a founding member of the League of Nations, and he served on, of all committees in the League of Nations, on the Opium Committee. You just can't make this shit up. He also was part of the founding, one of the Delano uncles, was one of the founding members of the National Park Commission to begin stealing land.
25:27 I say it's stealing, from the states to create national parks, which, of course, we know potentially are tied to places where if it holds true in the United States, what's true everywhere else, that's the ideal place to put Gladio units. Also part of the Industrial Planning Commission and
25:51 basically was a specialist. One of his uncles was a specialist in socialist planning for places like Russia. Okay, on the Roosevelt side, they founded the Bank of New York. And in 1784, they founded several investment banks. Brian Cates is going to love this. They have so many ties, the Roosevelt family does, to sugar.
26:23 which again explains so much of why sugar is so invasive and unhealthy in the United States. They set up one of the very first sugar refineries in New York in 1740. And that's where they began having ties to Cuba, which then also explains their fascination and attachment to Cuba for so long.
26:49 and the sugar cane plantations that were down there in the 1930s. They were also owners of consolidated coal. They owned, on the Roosevelt side as well, railroad steamboats. And one of them was chairman of the Maritime Canal Company. And that's the company that was formed to create the Nicaraguan Canal.
27:18 So it'd be very easy to scuttle that project if you wanted to, if you're in charge of it. And he would have been responsible for that contract to do the stamps at the place that was owned by the Delanos, all in the family. He organized, one of the Roosevelts organized Southern Railway Security Company, which was basically a cartel formed to monopolize ownership of railroads.
27:49 through trade associations, and that's going to come into play later on because that basically was the foundation of the National Recovery Act, the NRA, that was found unconstitutional. And this particular uncle that did this played integral in the development of FDR. So FDR went to Groton as far as the school goes. He then went to Harvard and to Columbia.
28:17 He didn't get a law degree in Columbia, but he was able to pass the bar exam. So obviously he didn't need the law exam because he went on to open his own, went into partnership and had a law firm. We have Thomas Lamont, L-A-M-O-N-T. If you've done any research into this international syndicate, you know he was in partnership with J.P. Morgan.
28:47 And he was very good friends with FDR going way back while FDR was on Wall Street. Because when FDR went to D.C. to take the assistant secretary of the Navy's job, Thomas Lamont leased his townhouse in New York City from FDR. So moving on.
29:17 There's a passage that I wanted to read that this is a passage that goes along with the progressive party, which Teddy Roosevelt was the founder of, basically. And the progressive party was backed by JP Morgan money and influence. And this is a passage out of their original business plan.
29:49 We therefore demand a strong national regulation of interstate corporations. The corporation is an essential part of modern business. The concentration of modern business in some degree is inevitable and necessary for national and international business efficiency. So, and Antony Sutton says this, the only really significant difference between this statement backed by Morgan Money.
30:17 and obviously all of the politicians that Morgan Money buys. And the Marxist analysis of Karl Marx thought of concentration of big business as inevitable rather than necessary. So minor technicality. Yet Roosevelt's progressive party plugging for business regulations was financed by Wall Street, including the Morgan-controlled International Harvester Corporation and J.P. Morgan Partners.
30:48 So just as they do today, calling for Internet regulations, you understand that this is this has been going on for 200 years. This is what they do. They want to create monopolies in any way that they can. And once monopolies was deemed unconstitutional, they went about creating monopolies in a completely different way. They did it through regulation.
31:17 They did it through organizing. I read to you that FDR was a construction trade director, president of the council. So basically what they did was they got the international syndicate members to be in charge of all of these newly created under the National Recovery Act, the NRA. They instituted all these trade associations and set up,
31:48 formally recognized trade unions. So they captured the labor, they captured the industry, and they owned the businesses. So they were right back in the pre-monopoly being struck down boat of owning all the facets. So all the disillusionment of monopoly did was give people control back of their labor and of their trade.
32:16 So they just figured another way around that because they still owned the companies. They just figured out a way to own the labor and the trade through these government sanctioned trade organizations and labor organizations. And then they basically were right back in business with monopoly control. And that's what all of this is really all about. And in addition to monopoly control of the industries in the United States.
32:45 And less developed countries like Honduras, Nicaragua, El Salvador, and all of the South American countries and all the countries in Africa and Southeast Asia, because they had less of a developed constitution and less of a developed judicial system that could even try to keep up, like trying to break up monopolies or whatever, they were able to go in and have their way with those countries.
33:13 without the benefit of the protection of a constitution. And they did it in such a bullying way that if they had a good constitution, they took over the country through blockade or whatever, Gladio operations, and rewrote the constitution to allow them to rape, pillage, and steal resources. So they were doing it here in America long before they were going out and doing it other places. And they just perfect their...
33:41 way of doing it over time, they don't ever stop doing it. So that's kind of the important thing to understand. One of the major businesses, which is kind of very interesting to me, I didn't know, I know about bonding businesses because we own a construction company and we're in real estate, but I didn't understand the other side of that.
34:04 And one of the first businesses that Roosevelt gets into is being vice president of Fidelity and Deposit of Maryland. Weirdly enough, this company had a New York office at 120 Broadway because they knew where all the heavy hitters were. They were the fourth largest bonding and security company for construction in the United States.
34:32 There was a guy by the name of Van Lear Black, V-A-N space L-E-A-R, and then his last name is Black. He also owned the Baltimore Sun and was chair of the Fidelity company. So why would this guy that's this big business guy doing bonding and surety?
35:03 insurance, hire this young lawyer who didn't ever even graduate and had zero experience in this? Well, the answer was he was paying for the political capability of Roosevelt and his connections, because evidently the way the bonding business works in the big league is
35:29 They would put bonding offices for, because I don't know if you guys know that most government officials that deal with money all have to be bonded. All of the construction companies have to be bonded. And there's surety bonds. There's the bonding of the contracts. So you have like an insurance policy. It's big money, especially if you're in a big business.
35:58 So they would, in New York specifically, they would locate these bonding businesses in the same building, usually a bank building, and the headquarters of the Democrat Party. So all of the union people, the treasurer and the president have to be bonded. All of the construction people, the owners, anybody that deals with money has to be bonded. And the government,
36:28 If you have a government contract, you have to be bonded. So they were always located near government buildings in this arrangement. And so basically what FDR did for this company was he called up all of his family owned businesses and got all of their bonding businesses switched over. They targeted all the trade unions, which were primarily Democrat anyway, and then they would promise them favors.
36:55 in return to moving all of their bonding businesses to this guy. That's what FDR's job was. So I want to read to you, here's a quote by another author. Whether Van Leer Black hired him because it was smart business move or merely to collect a celebrity is impossible to determine. The worst Wall Streeters unfriendly to Roosevelt were able to charge was that the company wasted.
37:25 the $25,000 per year. But that only tells a part of the story because there's kickbacks, evidently, involved in bonding. So there was a lot of money changing hands as a result of having politicians working in the bonding business. So I want to show you or tell you just quickly what the difference
37:56 was on the money that they made. So let me find the chart real quick. All right, here it is. So in the year 1923 to 1924, so January to January of the year 1923, which was the first full year that FDR worked for this surety bonding company.
38:33 Six largest bonding companies went anywhere from the number one that year made a profit of $3 million. The worst one, the number six one, lost $1 million. Number five lost $1 million. Number four lost $700,000. Number three made $3,000.
39:01 Another Fidelity and Casualty was number three. Oh, excuse me, that wasn't. National was number two. They made almost $700,000. Fidelity and Deposit, where FDR worked, made $3.15 million, while everyone else either lost money or didn't even break a million dollars. So obviously...
39:32 The money that FDR was bringing in due to his political clout and his family ties was substantial for the media baron of the Baltimore Suns. And I would encourage anybody to go look into that guy at the Baltimore Sun, Black. He has a very interesting background, like very shady.
39:57 And keep in mind, Baltimore was up to their eyeballs in mafia at this time. So just leaving that out there. He was also involved in international speculation, primarily with German businesses, where he made lots of money based on shorting hyperinflationary items in Germany.
40:27 And at the time, J.P. Morgan and Heimler Slott, which goes on to be Hitler's banker, is involved in these deals with FDR. And this was all around a thing called the Young Plan, which there's some information in Antony Sutton's book about that.
40:53 But the money that Max Warburg is involved in this, it's a fairly complicated thing. They actually got involved and created a thing called the United European Investors Limited with FDR.
41:15 I'm not going to go into it. It's way too in-depth in order to cover in the limited time that we have here today. I just want to let you know that he was doing some really sketchy things. Also, there's a guy by the name of William S-C-H-A-L-L. I suggest people look into him as well. He was the president of the bank in Puerto Rico and also involved in sugar plantations.
41:45 And he was doing business with FDR and the United European Investors in Germany. And as it turns out, another partner whose last name was Mueller, M-U-L-L-E-R, and William Shaw, S-C-H-A-L-L, go on to be suspected as German spies by the U.S. government.
42:15 but FDR is doing business with them. And there was a lot of speculation at the time that they were suspect. And there's another guy by the name of Pavenstedt. It's P-A-V-E-N-S-T-E-D-T that I would also encourage you to look into because Shaw and Pavenstedt
42:46 again, suspected of spying, merge a business into the United European Investors, which is FDR's company. So they were speculating on German inflation. And there are some people that believe that the inflation was partially caused by the speculation that was going on by people.
43:16 in New York in order to create the conditions to usher in Hitler. So you can do your own research into that. I think there's a very good case that you could actually make that argument, but you need to form your own opinions. Let me move on to the next item. So the people that were involved
43:56 in the European investors basically gave FDR, they were very flattering to him, and suggesting that it was his financial insight and the legal part of it that they were able to pull off what they did pull off. So again, you can form your own opinion.
44:25 investment that he was involved in is called the International Germanic Trust, and it was founded in 1927, was prompted, according to its promoters, by a demand for American banking institutes in Central Europe. Among the organizers of the trust, as approved by the banking department in the state of New York, were FDR, Herman Metz, a director of IG Farben,
44:56 James Beha, superintendent of insurance in the state of New York, and E. Roland Harriman of the international baking firm W.A. Harriman & Company. The president of the Associated International Germanic Company and chairman of the executive committee of the trust company was Harold Aaron, who had more than his share of lawsuits.
45:25 involving stock promotions. Some people might call him a shyster or one of those Ponzi scheme guys. The main offices of the International Germanic Trust was on the ground floor of 26 Broadway, the standard oil building. The authorized capital was 30,000 shares and to provide a capital of $3 million.
45:51 In its application to the banking department, it was represented by Senator Robert Wagner. Although not listed among the organizers, FDR's old friend, James Beha, B-E-H-A, who was superintendent of the insurance for the state of New York, became a member of the board of directors. And the Harold Aaron, A-R-O-N,
46:21 listed the company. This is what he said the objective of the company was. There appears to be a real need for an institution of sufficient size and backing to take the place of those institutions which existed before the war and were primarily concerned in financing commercial intercourse between America and Central Europe businesses. Through its incorporators, the trust company will have and develop relations both with America's
46:48 of German descent through this country and with business and banking institutes in Germany. It is the intention of the company to stress particularly the development of its foreign and trust departments and to provide an effective fiscal agency in the expected liquidation of business properties and trust still in the government custody. Now, let me explain to you what that basically just said.
47:16 They set this company up to take possession of everything that was during World War I and will be during World War II confiscated by the U.S. government for liquidation, like the patents and that type of thing. So they are preparing with FDR in charge, who, by the way, gets us into World War II, to be able to manage the assets that are going to be...
47:46 confiscate it. So I think that's fairly important to understand. They are setting up the capability to manage the war before we ever even got into a war. Because when they were doing this, World War I was long afterwards over. The next was American Investigation Corporation that he was a part of. This consisted of
48:20 German scientists and engineers made an early and successful start in the use of lighter than air vehicles or airships for passengers and freight transportation. In the early 1910s, Germany operated scheduled airship passenger service. Patents for airships were seized in World War I by the U.S. government under the 1917 Trading with the Enemies Act.
48:46 After the war, Germany was forbidden by the Reparations Commission to construct airships. This left a field open for American Enterprise. And so basically what these guys did was created another company that allowed for the confiscated property rights from Germany from World War I, like this one, as it related to airships.
49:17 to be able to take advantage of that information. And that's just another example of him capitalizing on being in the right place at the right time, knowing the right people. Right. I want to tell you some of the people that was involved.
49:46 In this particular venture, the American Investigation Corporation, so that you can get a better understanding of some of the potential international syndicate members. You have W.E. Boeing of Boeing Aircraft. You have Edward Clark. He owns a mining company. You have Benedict Crowell, C-R-O-W-E-L-L of Crowell and Little Construction, which was a huge construction company.
50:15 of which I'm sure had all of their bonding businesses with FDR. Arthur V. Davis of Aluminum, basically Alcoa. L.L. Dunham, Equitable Building Association. Snowden Ferenstock, who owned Bertron, Griscom, and Company. Marshall Field. He actually is like of Marshall Field, if y'all remember that old retail store.
50:49 That's the same guy. He's from Chicago. E.M. Herr, H-E-R-R, president of Westinghouse. J.R. Lovejoy, vice president of GE. John McCoon, president of Union National Bank. Mellon of Mellon National Bank. Also another Mellon family member who was president of Gulf Oil. Theodore Pratt, president of Standard Oil. FDR.
51:21 who at the time was vice president of that bonding company, Fidelity and Deposit. Philip Wrigley of the Wrigley Company, like the gum company. Owen Young, vice president of General Electric. So those are the people that were all involved in that one company. And let's move on to, let's see. Okay, so.
52:05 Also, part of that company was in the business of working with the government's alien property custodian. And they basically were able to, through no bid contract, to buy patents from German companies that had been confiscated by the government.
52:37 And some of those had to do with his prior Navy contract. Some of them had to do with other like rubber production of different patented methods. But the most important part of it was that they were getting access to these that were supposed to be sold to the highest bidder through sole source contracts, meaning.
53:07 that there was no competition at all. They must have had someone on the inside letting them know who it was. They would make a bid and those patents would be released with no competition at all. And let's see. Oh, the FDR, the vending machines. This is crazy. Most of the people...
53:35 that I've read anything about believes this whole vending machine thing was a scam that basically was for money laundering. If you look at the people that were involved, for example, some of the people involved, now get this, these are actual like stamp vending machines. You had Remington Arms Company and DuPont Company involved in it. So I'm not sure what all of those people have anything to do with vending machines.
54:05 There was a huge overlap between that venture and this thing called Georgia Warm Springs Foundation. So most of you probably know that FDR had property in Georgia, in Warm Springs, that he went down for therapeutic treatment, supposedly, because of polio. But what you find when you start digging into Georgia Warm Springs and who the trustees are.
54:35 I'm going to tell you. All right. FDR obviously is the president. Basil O'Connor, who happens to be an attorney in the law firm that FDR was in at 120 Broadway. He's one of the trustees. Jeremiah Milbanks of Chase National Bank in New York. James Moffitt, who is in he's in bed with everybody.
55:04 His name comes up almost in every one of my digs into the international syndicate. He was a vice president and director on the board of Standard Oil, a Rockefeller acolyte. George Foster Peabody, who was the original owner of the property. And Leighton McCarthy, director of Aluminum, basically Alcoa, the Canadian subsidiary of Alcoa.
55:34 for aluminum. Eugene Wilson, vice president of AT&T, located right down the block from 120 Broadway. William Wooden, secretary of the treasurer under FDR. Henry Pope, director of Link Belt Company. And Kacen Calloway, president of Calloway Mills, incorporated in New York. So those were the initial not.
56:01 an all-inclusive. Those were just the original people. And also, eventually, a guy by the name of Walter Teagle, who was one of the key administrators of that National Recovery Act that was illegal and unconstitutional, was involved in this as well. So that kind of goes over
56:36 the primary background of FDR. What I do want to also bring up is there is a very deep, and I don't, obviously, I don't want to bore you guys with all of the details. I highly recommend reading this book. But the background of FDR in corporate socialism goes very deep. His uncle wrote kind of a pivotal
57:05 back in the mid-1800s on that subject. And corporate socialism is basically mercantilism or the totalitarian fascist model of monopolistic business in bed with a dictator. All of those models is what they mean by corporate socialism because
57:34 The Soviet Union basically taught these people, it's almost like they were doing multiple experiments on different economies to see which was the best model. The communistic slash socialistic model of the government being involved in central planning was proven to be a failure.
57:53 And so what they wanted to do was come up with a model that was more like Mussolini's model, where you just got in bed with big business and awarded them monopolistic power. So they had the headaches of running the business while you had their money coming into your personal coffers to run the government that was conducive to them running the monopolies. So it was kind of like the good old boys club.
58:21 model. And so I'm apprehensive of using the word socialism only for the reason why people use it today when you think it's some portion of the central planning is being done or the majority of the central planning is being done by the government. In the case of what they're talking about, the central planning is more done by committee of monopolistic powers as opposed to the government per se. They own the government.
58:51 And they decide who's going to be the figurehead in the government. That's what they mean by corporate socialism. So I just want to make that distinction. They did go into a little bit, and I will read this one part. Old John D. Rockefeller and his 19th century fellow capitalist, using that term very lightly, were convinced of one absolute truth. There was no great monetary wealth.
59:20 that could be accumulated under impartial rules of competitive laissez-faire society. The only sure road to acquisition of massive wealth was monopoly. Drive out your competitors, reduce competition, eliminate laissez-faire, and above all, get the state protection for your industry through compliant politicians and government regulation. This last avenue yields a legal monopoly and a legal monopoly always leads to wealth.
59:48 And that is critical to understand the international syndicate. That is what they do everywhere. This robber baron scheme is also under different labels, the socialist plan. The difference between a corporate state monopoly and a socialist state monopoly is essentially only the identity of the group controlling the power structure. The essential, the essence of socialism is monopoly control by the state using hired planners.
1:00:17 and academic sponges. On the other hand, Rockefeller, Morgan, and their corporate friends aim to acquire and control their monopoly and to maximize their profits. So that's basically a different, that's Antony Sutton's way of saying what I just said. And that's why I'm leery of using the word socialism, because it doesn't depict what the modern use of that term has come to denote.
1:00:47 However, having said that, that type of arrangement that I just read about, which was what Rockefeller envisioned, is what led to the New Deal and initially the NRA. The NRA was put into effect for them to be able to control the trade unions, control labor, so that they basically got a legal monopoly back that could not be torn apart.
1:01:17 Because they believed you couldn't prove the collusion between them having their sycophants in charge of the trade unions, which were the ones that worked directly with the government to create the regulations that allowed them to maintain their monopoly. We see that coming through with the tech and they're trying to regulate the Internet and I'm trying to regulate tech in general. All of this is just for them to perpetuate the same type of business model.
1:01:47 That screws all of us. So I thought it was important to read that so that you can hear in his own words, Rockefeller's own words, what he actually believed was happening. So here's another one. Another author said it this way. This is the story of something for nothing, of making the other fellow pay.
1:02:12 This making the other fellow pay of getting something for nothing explains the lust for franchising, mining rights, tariff privileges, railway control, tax evasion. All these things mean monopoly, and all monopoly is bottomed on legislation. The monopoly laws are born in corruption, the commercialization of the press, education, even a charity.
1:02:40 is part of the price we pay for the special privileges created by law, the desire of something for nothing, of making the other fellow pay, of monopoly in some form or another is the cause of corruption. Monopoly and corruption are cause and effect. Together, they work in Congress, in our commonwealth, our municipalities. It is always so. It always has been so. Privilege gives birth to corruption, just as the poisonous sewer breeds disease.
1:03:10 Equal chance, a fair playing field, and no favors or a square deal are never corrupt. They do not appear in legislative halls nor in council chambers. For these things mean labor for labor, value for value, something for something. This is why the little businessman, the retail, the wholesaler dealer, the jobber, and the manufacturer are not the businessmen whose business corrupts politics. So very well said.
1:03:42 I'm going to go on and give you Anthony Sutton's overview of the lead up to the New Deal. Basically, he talks about a guy in 1841, which was I'm sorry, it wasn't his uncle. It was his cousin. I think I said his uncle earlier, Clinton Roosevelt. He's the guy that wrote the paper that basically talked about what.
1:04:14 eventually gets put into effect called the War Industries Board. FDR actually establishes what his cousin wrote about in 1841. Once we go to war, he establishes the War Industry Board. And then, of course, I mentioned the 1933 National Recovery Administration that gets deemed unconstitutional.
1:04:41 What's interesting is a guy by the name of, let's see, Hugh Johnson. I think that's the guy that was the general in the war. He becomes like the administrator of this. And I recommend, again, going and looking up Clinton Roosevelt and what he wrote. I'm not going to go through it.
1:05:10 But he basically was a big advocate of Mussolini-type government arrangements. And FDR was a big fan of his and took it to heart because he implemented just about everything in that paper as a form of basically a fascist government here in the United States. Thankfully, most of it got overturned.
1:05:36 But they did do basically the New Deal, which was kind of just a dieted version of what they had done with the NRA. So I did want to mention one other guy, and that's Paul Warburg. He features prominently in this, both Paul and Max, as part of the
1:06:06 German banking family of Oppenheim, and their offices had a lot to do with what FDR was doing in Germany at the time. Back in the day, I'm getting moved out of the way by my dog, so let me get my computer over here. He's decided that he's no longer comfortable. Also, the International Acceptance Bank.
1:06:37 That was set up in 1921. Another thing, again, I want everybody to go research. Also, all of the trade councils that got created during this time to implement the New Deal, which was basically capturing all of the trades.
1:07:05 I want to get to me that one of the most fascinating things that he researched. So understand that the Swope plan was basically the precursor to the National Recovery Act. You definitely need to understand those. Gerald Swope of GE, Walter Teagle of Standard Oil, and Lewis Kirsten.
1:07:29 was part of a retail big giant company called William Filene, F-I-L-E-N-E and Sun Retail. The three of them were called the Three Musketeers on the SWOT plan and implementing the, or drafting the NRA.
1:07:50 I don't want to spend a whole lot of time on that. Just know they were trying to turn us into a socialist or totalitarian country with the implementation of it and basically legalizing monopolies again in a different version. So what I do want to get to is the General Smedley Butler story, because Antony Sutton actually pulled out the congressional testimony.
1:08:20 And most of us have been led to believe that what went on was a potential overthrow of FDR. And that's why people have come away with the feeling that FDR potentially was one of the good guys and they were trying to get rid of him. So I want everybody to understand there is a different story involved in that.
1:08:49 I found some very interesting information digging into this story that we will break on a different show because it's crazy town. But let me first set the story up by saying that there was General Hugh Johnson who had been named as the NRA administrator.
1:09:21 Basically, had that actually been allowed to stay as law, would have put him basically in the role of a dictator. It made kind of a third position besides the president and vice president, kind of like a executive office level administrator that would have ran the government and would have ran the government in such a way that would have pissed everybody off.
1:09:48 And it was going to be used to shield the president and vice president. It was never an actual overthrow of the government. It was basically creating a separate entity. So let me go into this just a little bit. The central figure in the plot was Major General Smedley, Darlington, Butler, a colorful and popular.
1:10:15 widely known Marine Corps officer, twice decorated with the Congressional Medal of Honor and 33 years of military service. He testified in the 1934 Congressional Committee hearings investigating Nazi and communist activity in the U.S. that a plan for a White House dictatorship was outlined to him by two members of the American Legion, a Gerald McGuire, who worked for Grayson, M.P., Murphy and Company,
1:10:45 at 52 Broadway, New York City, and Bill Doyle, whom Butler identified as an officer in the American Legion at the national level. General Butler testified that these men wanted to unseat the royal family in control of the American Legion at the convention in Chicago and were very anxious to have me as part of it. A scheme was outlined to General Butler. He was to come before the convention as a Legion delegate from Honolulu.
1:11:15 There would be 200 or 300 American Legion members in the audience, and these planted fellows were to begin to cheer and start a stampede, yelling for a speech, and he was going to be prepared to make a speech. Mifflin, which has extensive material on the plot, the interested reader should also take a look at George.
1:11:44 SELDES, S-E-L-D-E-S, 1,000 Americans, which also had to do with this. The prepared speech was to be written by Morgan associate John W. Davis. To prove his Wall Street financial backing, McGuire showed General Butler a bank book listing deposits of $42,000 and $64,000 and mentioned that their source was Grayson M.P. Murphy.
1:12:11 director of Guarantee Trust Company and other Morgan-controlled companies, a millionaire banker, Robert Clark, with offices at the New York Stock Exchange building. Robert Clark was incidentally known to General Butler from his China days. McGuire and Doyle also offered Butler a substantial sum to make a similar speech in front of the VFW in Miami Beach.
1:12:39 According to Maguire, his group had investigated the background of Mussolini and Italian fascism, Hitler's organization in Germany, and a similar organization in France, and hinted that it was time to establish a similar organization in the United States. General Butler testified to the Congressional Committee about Maguire's statement in the following words. Now, I just want to point out here.
1:13:08 That this goes along with the setup of basically the New World Order and all of these fascist governments. So here's what he says. The time has come to get the soldiers together. Yes, I said, meaning Butler. I think so. One of the other guys said, I went abroad to study the part that the veteran plays in the various setups of these governments.
1:13:34 that they have abroad. I went to Italy for two or three months and studied the positions of the veterans of Italy occupy in fascist setup of governments, and I discovered that they are the background of Mussolini. They keep them on the payroll in various ways, and they keep them contented and happy, and they are his real backbone, the force on which he may depend in case of trouble to sustain him. They're the thugs, in other words.
1:14:03 But the setup would not suit us here at all. The soldiers of America would not like that. I then went to Germany to see how Hitler was doing it. And his whole strength lies in the organization of soldiers too. Imagine that. But that would not do. I looked into Russian business. I found that the use of soldiers over there would never appeal to our men. Yeah, because they're killing everybody. Then I went to France and I found exactly what I was looking for.
1:14:32 It is an organization of super soldiers. He gave me the French name for it, but I don't recall what it is. I never could have pronounced it anyhow. But I do know that it is a super organization of members of all of the other soldier organizations of France, composed of non-commissioned officers and officers. He told me that there were about 500,000 and that each one had a leader.
1:15:01 of 10 or so others so that it gave them 5 million. It almost sounds like Gladio's network, doesn't it? And he said, now this is our idea here in America to set up an organization of that kind. And then Antony Sutton comes back and says, what would be the objectives of this super organization? According to previously cited New York Times.
1:15:28 General Butler is reported to have testified that the affair was an attempted coup to overthrow President Roosevelt and replace him with a fascist dictator. That interpretation is repeated by many writers. However, that is not the accusation actually made by General Butler to the committee. Butler's precise statement concerning the projected organization, the use of which was to be put when established, and the role of the president
1:15:58 is as follows based on his actual recorded testimony. I said, meaning Butler, what do you want to do with it when you get it up? McGuire says, well, we want to support the president. Butler says, the president does not need the support of that kind of an organization since when did you become a supporter of the president? The last time I talked to you, you were against him.
1:16:29 McGuire says, well, he's going to go along with us now. Butler says, is he? McGuire says, yes. Butler says, well, what are you going to do with all these men? Suppose you get these 500,000 men in America. What are you going to do with them? McGuire says, well, they will be the support of the president. Butler says, the president has got the whole American people. Why does he want them? So McGuire responds.
1:16:59 Don't you understand the setup has got to be changed a bit? Now, we have got him. We've got the president. He has got to have some more money. There is not any more money to give him. 80% of the money now is in the government bonds, and he cannot keep this racket up much longer. He's got to do something about it. He has either got to get more money out of us, or he has got to change the method of financing the government.
1:17:29 And we are going to see to it that he does not change that method. He will not change it. Butler says, the idea of this great group of soldiers then is sort of to frighten him, is it? No, no, no, he responds. Not to frighten him. This is to sustain him when others assault him. Butler says, well, I do not know about that. How would the president explain it? So McGuire continues.
1:17:59 He will not necessarily have to explain it because we're going to help him out. Now, did it ever occur to you that the president is overworked? We might have to have an assistant president, somebody to take the blame. And if things don't work out, we can just drop him. He went on to say that it did not take any constitutional change to authorize another cabinet official, somebody that would take over the details or office of the everyday running of the government.
1:18:27 He mentioned that that position would be a type of general secretary of affairs, sort of a super secretary. So going on to the congressional testimony, the chairman, Congressman McCormick, says a secretary of general affairs. Butler responds, that is the term used by him or a secretary of general welfare. I cannot recall which.
1:18:54 I came out of the interview with that name in my head. I got that idea from talking to both of them, you see. They had both talked about the same kind of relief that ought to be given to the president. You know, the American people will swallow that. We have got the newspapers. We will start a campaign that the president's health is failing. Everybody can tell that by looking at him and the dumb American people will fall for it in a second, unquote.
1:19:24 And I could see it. This is Butler saying it. They had that sympathy racket and they were going to have somebody take the patronage off the soldiers and take all the worries and details off of his shoulders. And then he will be like the president of France, I said. So that is where you got this idea, McGuire says. I have been traveling around looking around now about that super organization. Would you be interested?
1:19:53 interested in heading it. I said, I'm interested in it, but I do not want to be heading it. I am very interested in it because, you know, Jerry, my interest is my one hobby is maintaining a democracy. If you get those 500,000 soldiers advocating anything smelling like fascism, I'm going to get 500,000 more and lick the hell out of you. And we will have a real fight right here at home. You know that? McGuire says, oh, no.
1:20:22 We do not want that. We want to ease up on the president. And Butler says, yes, and then you will put somebody in there you can run. Is that the idea? The president will go around and christen babies and dedicate bridges and kiss children? Mr. Roosevelt will never agree to that himself. And then McGuire says, oh, yes, he will. He'll have to agree. In other words, the Wall Street plot was not to depose the president.
1:20:51 But to kick him upstairs and install an assistant president with absolute powers, just why it was necessary to go through the trouble of installing an assistant president is unclear because the vice president was in office. In any event, it was planned to run the United States with a secretary of general affairs and the gullible American public would accept this under the guise of protection from communist takeover. At this point, it's interesting.
1:21:20 to recall the role of many of these same financial players in the Bolshevik Revolution, a role, incidentally, that they could not have known or conveyed to General Butler, and the use of the Red Scare tactics in the 1922 United American Organization. So basically, he goes on to articulate how these same people are the people that created the communist
1:21:49 Bolshevik scare, and then they're going to use that as the excuse to basically transform our own country. Now, there's additional information in here that they find a guy that was an army guy on a base over in Maryland where people approach him trying to figure out if on his army installation they can actually accommodate.
1:22:17 housing for 500 troops, 500,000 troops. And what would be the logistical capability of that? So this was not a insignificant event. There was a lot of planning that went into this. There was a lot of logistical support that went into this. This captain basically gave testimony as well as everything that the people who approached him.
1:22:46 and where he was located in Maryland, if that could be set up there. So it's a much deeper story. And Antony Sutton is the only one that I know of that has actually went back and got the testimony from this particular period of time and looked at it, not just in passing, but the entire depth of it.
1:23:14 The book is out on archive.org. The name of the book, let me get up to the top. I highly recommend y'all go read the entire book because it is fascinating. It's called Wall Street and FDR by Anthony Sutton. But that kind of gives you the overview of it. And I'm going to, at that point, open it up for questions if anybody has any. Does anybody have any questions? Oh, hold on.
1:24:11 Jeff, did you have a question? Go ahead, Miles. Colonel, in Sutton's books, does he talk about the New York mayors that facilitated a lot of these operations for the syndicate?
1:24:46 People like that go on to become governor and but not in depth because he is really at a macro level and that's more of a micro level of the Democrat machine. But there is mention of Tammany Hall in there every once in a while. It's not. Yes. Yeah. The reason I ask is because I think in our history, if you look at New York and Chicago and why certain cities have always been under.
1:25:15 a certain administration or rule that people don't really understand why that happened. And I appreciate the answer. Just so you know, right before 9-11, I met a Pierpont, and she was a very interesting woman. Cool. What you got, Benjamin? Hi, Colonel. Hi, Stellar. Hi, Cousinet. Wow.
1:25:47 I was praying that you weren't going to tell me that Smedley Butler was a bad guy because I've done a lot of reading on him and I love his message. I will tell you that he did do something really bad when he was a major. He was actually down in Panama and he is the military force that took over Panama and couped it. Now, he was actually following orders from a civilian, which he did not have ever done.
1:26:18 He never got those orders officially from the Marine Corps or the chairman, whoever the Department of War, it would have been at the time. But he has been involved in some of the excursions of us cooing governments. Now, in his defense, he's probably like me who, you know, went and deployed. I never killed people. I'll just say that.
1:26:47 Taking over someone's country, but they actually did kill people in the in some of those instances. So that would be the only blight on his record. Otherwise, I agree with you. Well, so taking in what what you dropped down about how what was going on behind the scenes, you know how.
1:27:17 Many of us thought FDR was a good president. He was fighting against this, and we come to find out that he was brought into the game. One thing that this all shows me is when you're in leadership positions, when you're in positions of power, you're an easy target because you're out in the light. One thing that I foresee coming is this.
1:27:41 type of thing has been going on for a long time. You've shown where it's been going on since the 1930s. Then we have the JFK assassination. Then we have what's going on today. I'm under the opinion that things might get a little hairy with taking out some of these people that are still doing these same things today. Do you have any...
1:28:05 insight on some of the main players that people should be looking out for today that are involved in this type of stuff? Well, the only thing that I would tell you is having experienced standing up for what's right on the inside of government, the people that they attack are the good guys. The people they don't attack are in bed with them. I can say that unequivocally. If I was just to take my small little world,
1:28:35 of the Air Force and even just within the small bubble that I worked within, especially it begins in earnest at the colonel level, obviously gets grossly gross the higher in rank you go. But as a colonel, if you are going to do what's right,
1:29:03 Your job every single day is not going to be an easy job. Standing up for enlisted people, standing up for regulations that treat people unfair, standing up to things like the COVID jab. Anytime you take a stand for what is right, you will find yourself very, very lonely. You will take all of the incoming errors.
1:29:33 But the whole thing that I always told people when I went and talked at enlisted leadership schools was you come in the Air Force with two things, your name and your integrity. You need to leave the Air Force with those same two things. And that is not an easy road to walk. But I went in as an Airman Basic. I didn't go in.
1:29:58 I was the first one in my family other than my cousin to serve in the military. I didn't have family legacy like other people. So I didn't have a family reputation to uphold and get along so that you didn't want to cause controversy and embarrass your father or whatever. I didn't have any of that.
1:30:16 And so when you enlist as an Airman Basic and you get to be a Major or Lieutenant Colonel, you are so far beyond your wildest imagination that you thought as an 18-year-old you were ever going to be. To me, my attitude was I have nothing to lose. So why would I not uphold my name and my integrity in this endeavor that I've decided to walk down and at least have the satisfaction when you go home every night.
1:30:44 That you did what was right and you helped somebody and their family where it would be so much easier to go to the officer's club on Friday afternoon and have a beer with your peers. You don't do that very often when you're the one person that's a pain in their ass. So I know what that's like. And that's why I know if you were to take and I'm just going to use this because I.
1:31:13 I love throwing that out there. If you were to take three and four star generals, which are a different breed than one and two star generals, because they don't serve in three and four star positions with permanent rank, it's by assignment. And they risk being retired as a major general because that's their last rank permanently held. You have to successfully serve as a three and four star and then be.
1:31:38 awarded to retire in that rank. It's not a permanent rank. It's by position only. So it can be removed from you at the lick of a switch. So very, very political and very stupid way of doing it. But anyway, if you were to line all the three and four star generals up and you were to look at which ones that have had bad things happen to them, almost without an exception, the ones that had bad things, and I'm not talking illegal where, you know, they like.
1:32:07 wrecked a plane or done stupid stuff. But generally the ones that get the most grief are the ones that are the best. When you talk to the enlisted people and junior officers that work for them, where the people that are talked about within the upper echelons of civilian control as being quote unquote good, they're slime balls.
1:32:30 They're the guys that kiss everybody's ass and are worthless pieces of crap when it comes to supporting you and doing the right thing when you need them to do the right thing. They will leave you hanging every single time. And so that's kind of my rule of thumb. It proved to be true in 30 years of being on the inside, and I'm going with it to be true still today. Thanks for the question. What else we got? Come on, SR71. I know you've got something. Sally?
1:33:08 Yes, ma'am, I do. For some reason, my hand keeps disappearing on me when I hit the little heart. Don't ask me why. I don't know, but I'll have to figure that out. I'm going to blame Cousin Ed. I'm going to say it's the X-Faces because Colonel Towner tells us so much stuff that they don't want us to learn. Okay, now.
1:33:39 Having served in the Corps myself, I can tell you that even the Corps teaches that history wrong. Say what you just said again. There was an echo. I'm sorry. Is this better? Yeah. What I said is I have a comment on Spedley. Having served in the Corps, I can tell you even the Corps teaches that history wrong. I'm not surprised. So, other than that, I found...
1:34:11 Everything you've said today, very interesting and very well worth my time. And I appreciate everybody here that's taking the time to listen to what's going on. And especially you, Colonel. It just blows my mind. Thank you. Sally, did you have anything you wanted to add? Just a little bit. I tried to not take up everybody's time.
1:34:43 It's really interesting when you're talking about FDR and stuff. So my journey is kind of similar to your journey, but obviously was not in the military. I was raising kids, but I started doing, my channel was watching old history documentaries. And we started with World War II, and then we wound up with World War I.
1:35:05 Because we went through World War II, then we went through Operation Paperclip and all these different things. And I'm like, I kept going down these rabbit holes. And before I even knew what Gladio was, I was already digging into the families or the people that were corrupting our presidents. And we ended up going clear back to Wilson. And after knowing what Gladio is, everything is...
1:35:31 Everything just clicks and makes sense. It's like you think that these people are just this. It seems like every president that they tout as being so great seems to be the corrupt ones. And the ones that are slammed and defamed are actually the good ones. It's whoever is controlling history controls the narrative. I can't agree with you more. And that's why I'm afraid we're going to find out Jimmy Carter was a good president.
1:36:08 You're breaking up, Colonel. You got to keep an open mind. You're breaking up. I said you got to keep an open mind. Are you taking the dog out again? No. Can you hear me now? Yep, that's much better. Yeah, I just think we have to keep an open mind. That's all I'm going to say about that.
1:36:39 Do you think Nixon was better than what I mean, because he was always got this bad rap. Do you think that he I mean, he's always one where it's like, is he better than what we were told as well? No, no. And I think he was worse in so many ways because understanding his role as vice president.
1:37:00 during the setup of Gladio, during the Eisenhower presidency. I mean, he was involved in all of that. He was involved in when Eisenhower issued the findings to assassinate Lumumba. Nixon was involved in 100% of the setup.
1:37:22 of Operation Gladio during those eight years as vice president. And then you move forward and he played an intricate role in disassembling the Corsican mafia control over the Vietnam opium market and moving that down to Sicily so that the U.S. and CIA could gain control of that. And during his quote-unquote war on drugs, our drug
1:37:49 access here in the United States increased five times. So I don't think he was a good president in any way, shape or form. I had a quick question about him because like he was supposedly the one who actually won the election back in 1960. And if it had not been for Kennedy's father and Chicago, from my understanding, but I could be wrong. I'm not sure. Do you think that he might have been like?
1:38:22 blackmail through the whole thing because there was so much stuff that did happen. And, you know, wasn't Trump, wasn't he kind of close to them? And, you know, maybe Nixon had like a gun to his head for all kinds of things, maybe. I don't know. So I found an interesting
1:38:43 We just finished our book, Gold Warrior, that's about Operation Golden Lily, the burying of the World War II gold on the Philippines and the recovery of that. So during the Nixon administration, which corresponded, when he was running initially against Kennedy, he turned over as vice president the use of the M Fund. There were three funds that were set up.
1:39:12 And they all had billions and billions of dollars of gold in it that Japanese had basically stole from all of Asia during their invasion and takeover of all of Asia in the lead up to World War II and World War II. So one of those funds that had like over $50 billion, Nixon actually turned over to the Japanese government to use. And in return, they...
1:39:40 largely funded through illegal means, his run for presidency in the 1960 election. I found that just astounding. And so there was a deal made with
1:39:58 JFK's dad and the get out to vote to try to bring JFK over because that was like a squeaker election. And there was mafia involvement in there. And supposedly the deal was struck that JFK would be light on the mafia if they got him the job. And then, of course, he hired his brother and they went after the mafia because it apparently just from what I have read.
1:40:26 And JFK was willing to make that deal because he had no idea how bad it actually was. And once he got into the presidency and understood the depth of depravity of what was going on, he did not feel like he could honor that deal anymore. He hired his brother as the AG, and the rest is history. They went after the mafia, and they went after him.
1:40:53 I think that's kind of like, you know, a 30,000 foot overview of it. What you got, Miles? Yeah, Colonel, I just want to thank you for coming into the front porch yesterday. I think that that atmosphere is more conducive to sharing stories and asking you more questions. We have more people taking a mic. So I really appreciate that yesterday, taking the time to come in there.
1:41:24 You can thank Allie. I think she's the one that invited me. I didn't even know anything about it. I stick my nose in books most of the time. So I just happened to get on and she, I think, is the one that had shared that with me. It was fun. SR-71, what you got? Yeah, Colonel. I'm sitting here thinking about all of the presidents you've mentioned up to this time that are involved or at least connected in some form or fashion. Yet I haven't heard you say one thing about Ford.
1:41:58 About who? Ford. Gerald Ford. Yeah, well, he's kind of a blip on the radar. Ford, in his role in... I don't even know how to describe him. He's kind of a... What do you call those? A doorstop.
1:42:19 The whole way he came about, if you go back where he's from, the money that was poured into his campaigns, he was a bought and paid for guy as well. Did what he was told to do, how he was told to do it. And, you know, he played his role on the Warren Commission. So he was just a good soldier for him.
1:42:49 Okay, I'll buy that. Sally, what you got? There's a book that I read before I found Gladio and when I was doing, I think it was before, just when I was doing history stuff and I was trying to understand things better. But I thought, and I hate to say the name of the book because the title could be misleading, but it's called The International Jew. And it was written by Henry Ford back in, I think, 1919, 1920. And he was kind of spelling out.
1:43:19 The whole plan of what is going on right now, everything that falls along with Gladio of just what their agenda was, what their goal was and everything to a T. If they get derailed from their plan, they just regroup, recalibrate and figure out how to keep continuing to accomplish their plan, which goes along with this narrative. Anyway, it's a book you can't find very well. I think I found it on...
1:43:46 google books but it was very interesting and he he's um label if you google his name he's labeled an anti-semi and an anti this and that and it was it was quite eye-opening it was really crazy yeah what you got cousin it um well you were talking about the nixon and ford or somebody brought up ford i apologize um so nixon one of as far as how corrupt nixon was
1:44:19 The National Archives actually purchased back his presidential records from the library for, I want to say it was $18 million. So there was definitely something in there that they didn't want to get out. At least that's complete speculation. But he's the only president that the National Archives has actually purchased back.
1:44:48 That's just food for thought. Definitely food for thought. All right. Sheila, go ahead. Thank you for the space. Very informative. Now, there was an island in Japan. Well, it was Philippines, but was that part of the deal that America was to give it to Japan? I can't remember the island, but it's the island that they...
1:45:25 Began, I guess. Go ahead. It's Okinawa. It's not Philippines. Was it Okinawa? Yeah. There was an island that belonged to the Philippines but was given to the Japanese after World War II, I think.
1:45:47 Well, we had Okinawa and there was a lot of controversy over us having that. And we eventually ended up giving it back except for the base that we have there. We have never. And there's a lot of movement even today that they want the entire island back, but we won't give them back the basing rights there. Now, whether that was ever contested as part of belonging to the Philippines, they only have like, I don't know, 140 some islands.
1:46:17 It's a small, I don't think it's Okinawa, but it's a small island and they started doing the like the Euro-Asia admixture where I can't remember. I'm so sorry. But anyway, where they even go to the island and the peoples would say that they have their culture or their practices is mixed, is mixed the Philippine, Filipinos who gave them or.
1:46:47 Gifted them the practice of Taoism and then the Japanese because it was something that they inherited. But I just can't remember the name. But anyway, I always thought that that was part of the surrendering of the general and wondered if that was part of the deal. Part of what deal? That America supposedly gave it back to Japan, but it really was never Japan's. It was Philippines.
1:47:18 Yeah, I don't know which one. If you're not talking about Okinawa, I don't know what it is. Thank you. Sure. Okay, 7-1-1-9, and then we'll go to All Rights. Yes, Colonel. Since the Asian realm has been brought up, I was wondering about your thoughts on Sri Lanka. I was doing a little research on it today and finding out about the stay-behind troops that are over there and everything else that's going on, also within India.
1:47:54 Have you got any insight on that? I do. I'm in the middle of two books right now that we had to go through extraordinary means to get a hold of that deals with that area. And I want to finish those. The professor from Australia by the name of Polgreen is the one that wrote both of these books. So I'm not going to comment on it until I finish with and do a little bit more research to confirm to my satisfaction.
1:48:24 that it fits into the whole Gladio scenario. So I'm going to withhold, but as soon as I get that done, I will bring it here. I'll look forward to it, Colonel. All right. All right. Good morning, Colonel Towner. Yeah, thanks for doing this space. I was actually just reading some stuff about the gold seizure in 1933. Did you have a question? All right. Let me think.
1:48:56 No. Excuse me. Can you hear him okay? I can't hear all right. Okay. All right. I'm going to dump the mic from you and then we'll see if we can't get you back in. Yeah, that's what I'm going to do right now. And we'll put you back in. So don't worry. Okay. I just dropped him down. I think he's back up. Oh, thank you.
1:49:27 Okay, let's try that. I want to try that. All right. Do you want to try again? Yeah, sure. Good morning. Thank you, Colonel Towner. Can you hear me now? Yes, I can hear you. Okay, awesome. Yeah, I just hopped in a little bit ago. I didn't hear the full space, but yeah, what she was talking about with Okinawa and stuff.
1:50:00 The whole situation with the Japanese mafia and the Okinawans is still going on today. And how we talked about Operation Gladio and the stuff going on in Hawaii. The Okinawan governor, Ige of Hawaii, that's why they were keeping the COVID mandates.
1:50:22 going for so long was to drive out the, the Japanese, uh, small business owners. And it's like cutthroat, you know, like there's different, um, competing mafias for that. And Okinawa really wants independence from, you know, Japan and that whole conflict has been going on forever. Um, but yeah, specifically about like questions and stuff. Uh, can you like preface what you went over with, uh, with, um,
1:50:50 uh, uh, uh, FDR and wall street. Cause like I said, I just got in a little bit late and I've been researching this stuff about, uh, someone named Louie T McFadden who brought formal charges against the IRS and tried to, you know, he, he was the shady character himself, but he did, he was a Congressman from Pennsylvania that tried to, that actually he was the only one that brought formal charges against the, the.
1:51:18 the Federal Reserve Bank and tried to, you know, appeal that officially and, you know, not have central banking. And then what was the other thing? The gold seizure in 1933. Do you know if there's like a connection between the formation of Wall Street and the executive order that seized all the gold?
1:51:46 Sheila, there was something I wanted to, you know, it's almost two different threads of conversation that I have interest in right now. There was another thing about the gold in the Philippines and Okinawa and Japan and World War II and Douglas MacArthur and the, you know, like that's a whole different, like they're two different cans of worms.
1:52:07 But I just want to say thanks. And yeah, if you can touch on the connection with the gold seizure and the moving to fractional reserve banking and Wall Street, that would be awesome. Let me stop you right there. We're not going to talk about gold seizure. That isn't part of what we're doing with this.
1:52:28 outside of kind of the conversation. I did record this space, and so I'm not going to go back over it for any late arrivals. I will recommend once it's over that y'all can go to my page and then just replay the whole thing so that you can understand. We are looking at this from a very limited perspective. We are trying to form a foundation of what I...
1:52:55 I have been presenting Operation Gladio.
1:52:59 In the presentation of Operation Gladio, I oftentimes refer to an international syndicate that the Gladio is a paramilitary capability of that syndicate. And I felt since we are going to record an entire series of Operation Gladio spaces going country by country, that it was necessary at the onset of that series to briefly, and I do mean briefly,
1:53:28 talk about the International Syndicate and why the Operation Gladio is used to overthrow governments on behalf of the International Syndicate. So I am doing just a very 30,000-foot look at who some of the International Syndicate players are.
1:53:53 where they came from. And I want people to understand Anthony Sutton did the best job I've ever seen. And I've probably read at least 50 books on the late 1800s and early 1900s of taking all of that complicated material in three short books that best describes the interplay of the finance and the politics.
1:54:20 of the international syndicate, with the players going to the Bolshevik Revolution, the players going to FDR, and the players going to Hitler, and they're all the same players. They even occupy the same office building. So that's basically the intent of this, talking about what our country did with the gold and stuff like that. I only touch on Operation Golden Lily.
1:54:48 And we did a book review on a completely different venue, which is my Rumble channel, about that operation because that operation was used.
1:54:58 to a large extent to fund Gladio operations. And I thought it necessary to do a deep dive into that. And so we did that in a completely different forum. I'm not going to basically recreate that. I'm just going to direct people to those book reviews. And you can kind of go through the series of them and explore that entire chapter and how that interfaced with the U.S. government and which presidents were involved and which Nixon was a huge player in that as well.
1:55:28 Just so everyone is aware, I did post the Colonel's Corner, the Rumble channel, in the comments section. So if anybody is interested in following, we always appreciate newcomers. Yeah, right on. I didn't know if it was like open discussion or what you guys, if you were doing a whole series or whatever. But no, that's cool. I appreciate it. Thank you. Sure. I don't know who was next.
1:55:54 I think it was me, and I'll be real brief. I have a question. Rock 2, go ahead. You haven't had a chance yet. We've got about five minutes, so I'm going to try to do Rock 2, Sheila, and Sally. Okay, I'm real quick. Excuse me one second. Can you hear him? Because he is speaking, Colonel. No, can't hear him. Stella, do you know how to do your magic there? Because I don't know how to get him out and put him back in again.
1:56:25 Thank you. Ron, grab the mic. Sheila, go ahead. Okay. So I was wondering, did you touch upon Fernan Marcos's biological grandfather, who was the supposed conservative banker who basically, I mean, he was the reason they knew the connection, the biological connection with his grandfather? I don't believe the authors talked about that. It didn't have any relevance to his role in
1:56:55 basically what he did as far as stealing the gold from the people that had recovered it. And the subsequent, when we decided to depose him and bring him to Hawaii for him to stand trial. So I don't recall that being mentioned. They did talk about his background. That he was only like 70%, not even, he was like 70%.
1:57:24 percent chinese or something yeah it's the chow family i think is where yeah yeah sally um whoever was asking about the golden stuff i there's an ian carroll i posted a link to his um x page but he has gone into really big depth about the gold angle and how it was distributed and so you i i just posted his link for you
1:57:50 Yeah, I thought he pretty much, though, I don't know that he went back to the 1930s. I watched his one show because he was basically talking about the Black Eagle Fund and the stuff that came out of Golden Lily. I'm not sure he touched on how that related to the banning of owning gold in the U.S., but he is a good resource. You're absolutely right. Rock 2, go ahead.
1:58:14 Yeah, I'm busy at work, so I'll be brief, but I'm going to ask a quick question. Senator Joe McCarthy, does he fit into this narrative at all? Well, that's an interesting conversation. So he does eventually when it really depends on what you read of what side of history he was on. Some people believe that.
1:58:45 When this whole push of anti-communism was going on to sell the implementation of stay behind units and create the scare that he was actually a mouthpiece for the anti-communist league in drumming up that hysteria. There are other people's opinions that believe he was a genuine.
1:59:16 communist seeker of trying to root out communism in America. I've read four different books on two pros and cons each of that thought process. I have not formed a completed opinion of that.
1:59:42 It does appear to me there's more validity to the fact that he was on the side of generating the necessary fear to perpetuate the anti-communist mantra. But I haven't closed the door on the fact that he was a genuine person concerned about that. So I still have an open mind.
2:00:12 But I out a 60-40 split at this point where you had to have somebody to create the atmosphere of the anti-communist mantra and the big red wave in order for them to get by with passing all of the monumental defense budgets that then turned around and funded a lot of the Gladio operations. So he could have been a useful.
2:00:39 Right. I'm 60-40 the other way. I'm maybe 70-30 the other way. I think he wasn't proven to be a patriot after the Berlin Wall fell and the Verona Papers came out. But another fun fact was Robert Kennedy was a Joe McCarthy staffer back in the day.
2:01:04 So how everything ties together. OK, let me get back to my rock pile. Good, good space. Good space. Thank you. OK, Colonel, I'm not sure how much time you have left, but we do have two hands raised. One is the watchman and the other one is I can't see your name. I do need to run. So we got to go. OK, the watchman, you are all set. Hey, Colonel Tanner, nice to speak to you.
2:01:35 I've been watching your Gladio series with Alpha Warrior. And your posting is really very interesting. Thank you. I, too, am Air Force Desert Storm era. Got out, made a nice medical career. Awesome. Yeah, I'm very concerned. But I have been reading since.
2:02:02 I just popped in and you guys mentioned McCarthy. I don't know if you're familiar with Dr. Joseph Farrell. I am. I've read almost every one of his books. I absolutely love him to death. Have you checked? Have you read through his McCarthy? Yes. Okay. There's some there's those mammoth transcripts. I want to try to find and read through those. Yeah, that's about the only thing I haven't done. And I think that's probably will.
2:02:34 warrant my final opinion. A lot of the, just like when we were doing our expose on Waco, a lot of times you watch those televised hearings in a completely different viewpoint than even reading the transcripts. And I'm definitely going to have to do that before I finalize my opinion on that, because there's enough video.
2:02:58 during those hearings for you to be able to, but I have read some of the transcripts. I just, I, I need to be able to see that in order to be able to judge for myself. So I'll eventually get there. Yeah. Yeah. We got to compartmentalize that. But that definitely has a strong, strong art. Even when you're talking about Trump and all the people that all the presidents that when,
2:03:27 that he knew, um, his uncle, of course, and then Tesla. And, uh, there's a secret society element to this, a mob element, uh, foreign. So, so do you think he was assassinated? Like I do, um, all those guys, Kennedy, RF Kennedy, but mainly McCarthy is who I'm talking about. Um, I have read the,
2:03:58 thought process that he was but again i until i form an opinion of whether he what side of the aisle he was in i think that would weigh into um that factor as well um if he's with them i doubt it if he was against them most certainly you know what i'm saying so it all kind of forms its own opinion rfk was definitely assassinated as was jfk there's way too many
2:04:25 um anomalies in both of those um and uh admiral forestall as well 100 and then admiral um just uh tangentially around the same time uh admiral bird and a bunch of people around that guy too so yeah and and that has to do with the geophysical year that kennedy was he had a huge announcement the day he was assassinated so that's something
2:04:54 There's also a Masonic. I don't know if Farrell went through this, because I haven't actually bought the books. I've just heard interviews. But he was talking about him, and he was on with Dark Journalist, and he's got his own little deal on his website that I just recently subscribed to, where he can post questions. So I'll ask him that.
2:05:21 He was talking about this. There's a secret society thread that goes back to World War II and the Languedoc area in France where they had that. He was investigating this weird invasion force that had no tactical or strategical. It made no common sense. And so they were looking at that.
2:05:50 And I don't know what Roy Cohen knew exactly, but I know he was involved with Permadex. So anything would go with him. I mean, I don't know how to take Trump and Cohen. That's everything. And I mean, he's a businessman in New York. So who the hell knows? Right. It's complicated. Yeah. But the question, Patriot, what you got? Last question. I thank you.
2:06:23 I'm for this space and I appreciate. So, so I want to thank you for the space and I appreciate. Can y'all hear all the questions? Sarah, she can't hear you. Let me drop you down and bring you right back up. Hold on. Request the mic and it'll, it'll show. Can you hear me now? I can. So thank you for this space.
2:07:16 I appreciate the teaching that you bring to us. I did have a question. Are these spaces posted somewhere? If we want to, I'm sending a link for someone who is not. They're posted.
2:07:51 profile because they're all recorded all you have to do is kind of just scroll through my profile okay and they'll all show up i usually like the one we did yesterday i pinned
2:08:02 As soon as we get off here, I'll pin this one. So I always try to pin the most recent one to my profile. So it's the first thing you see when you go on to my profile. But if you just scroll on down, there will be one. I think we started a few days last week, but around noon every day, Monday through Friday, we're going to do one as we roll through this. And you'll be able to find it on my profile around noon each day, Monday through Friday. Thank you very much.
2:08:33 You're welcome. All right. Thanks everybody for being here. I really appreciate it. We will be back tomorrow. Thank you, Colonel Tanner. Thank you everybody. And we'll see you guys all tomorrow. Yep. Thanks guys. Have a great day. Bye.

Entities here

Franklin D. Roosevelt25Smedley Butler15Operation Gladio13Gerald MacGuire12Wall Street12Antony Sutton12National Recovery Administration12Richard Nixon10Business Plot10West Germany10120 Broadway9American Investigation Corporation9Joseph McCarthy9J.P. Morgan & Co.8International Germanic Trust8Nicaragua7Delano7Bank of United States7United States6Wall Street and FDR6Adolf Hitler6Roosevelt6Georgia Warm Springs Foundation6Fidelity and Deposit Company6Japan6Herbert Hoover6John F. Kennedy6Robert Kennedy assassination5Panama5Swope Plan5Standard Oil5Consolidated Automatic Merchandising Corporation5U.S. Navy5United European Investors, Ltd.5Benito Mussolini5Philippines5Okinawa5John D. Rockefeller4DuPont4Newport Naval Training Station scandal4

Claims made here

J.P. Morgan & Co. funded Herbert Hoover host_asserted ▶ 6:23
“And Hoover, who ran as a Republican, he had J.P. Morgan's backing when he ran against Smith, who was a Democrat.…”
DuPont funded Al Smith host_asserted ▶ 6:53
“Smith had the DuPonts, which was part of the military-industrial complex at the time.…”
DuPont financed_via J.P. Morgan & Co. host_asserted ▶ 6:53
“But the irony is, as we have all learned about the Uniparty, J.P. Morgan was DuPont's banker.…”
DuPont funded Herbert Hoover host_asserted ▶ 7:22
“DuPont and Rockefeller were the largest donators to the 1928 Hoover campaign.…”
Rockefeller funded Herbert Hoover host_asserted ▶ 7:22
“DuPont and Rockefeller were the largest donators to the 1928 Hoover campaign.…”
Wall Street funded Franklin D. Roosevelt host_asserted ▶ 7:52
“bankers switched to FDR in 1932, basically almost verbatim. If you look at the funding donations to Hoover in 28, they all basically switched to FDR in 32.…”
Gerald Swope headed General Electric host_asserted ▶ 8:50
“And by the way, Gerald Swope, when he wrote the plan, was General Electric's president.…”
Gerald Swope proposed Swope Plan host_asserted ▶ 8:50
“And by the way, Gerald Swope, when he wrote the plan, was General Electric's president.…”
John J. Raskob funded Democratic Party host_asserted ▶ 10:18
“After the 1928 election of Hoover, the Democrats were $1.6 million in debt to a guy by the name of John Rashkob, R-A-S-K-O-B, who was the…”
John J. Raskob member_of General Motors host_asserted ▶ 10:47
“vice president of both DuPont and General Motors. And at the time, General Motors was the largest corporation in the world.…”
John J. Raskob member_of DuPont host_asserted ▶ 10:47
“vice president of both DuPont and General Motors. And at the time, General Motors was the largest corporation in the world.…”
Bernard Baruch funded Democratic Party host_asserted ▶ 10:47
“And another guy by the name of Bernard Baruch, B-A-R-U-C-H, who is a notorious Federal Reserve slash Wall Street banker.…”
Franklin D. Roosevelt covered_up Bank of United States host_asserted ▶ 13:42
“And the state paid for another report that was more favorable to leaving the bank open until it crashed. So that one was hung around. It should have been hung around FDR's neck. But of course, all the…”
Franklin D. Roosevelt member_of Fidelity and Deposit Company host_asserted ▶ 14:12
“He was the vice president of a company called Fidelity and Deposit Company that was located, their New York branch was located at 120 Broadway.…”
Adolf Hitler financed_via 120 Broadway host_asserted ▶ 14:43
“And in the future, the American participation in Hitler's rise to power all emanated out of 120 Broadway.…”
Bolshevik Revolution financed_via 120 Broadway host_asserted ▶ 14:43
“Because everything in the world was controlled from 120 Broadway to include the Bolshevik Revolution.…”
Franklin D. Roosevelt headed American Construction Council host_asserted ▶ 14:43
“He was also during this time period president of the industry trade association called American Construction Council.…”
Franklin D. Roosevelt headed United European Investors, Ltd. host_asserted ▶ 15:11
“He was president of United European Investment.…”
Franklin D. Roosevelt member_of Marvin, Hooker & Roosevelt host_asserted ▶ 15:11
“partner at Marvin Hooker and Roosevelt, which was a law firm located at 120 Broadway.…”
Franklin D. Roosevelt member_of Consolidated Automatic Merchandising Corporation host_asserted ▶ 15:11
“He was director of Consolidated Automatic Merchandising Corporation.…”
Franklin D. Roosevelt founded Georgia Warm Springs Foundation host_asserted ▶ 15:41
“He was the founder of Georgia Warm Springs Foundation, which another suspected money laundering opportunity once you realize who was on the board of directors.…”
Franklin D. Roosevelt member_of American Investigation Corporation host_asserted ▶ 16:07
“He was a director on the American Investigation Corporation, a director at Sanitary Postage Surface.…”
Franklin D. Roosevelt founded Federal International Investment Trust host_asserted ▶ 16:36
“He was the incorporator of an entity called Federal International Investment Trust, which was basically kind of a disguise on how to fund German businesses without looking like you're funding German b…”
Federal International Investment Trust funded West Germany host_asserted ▶ 16:36
“He was the incorporator of an entity called Federal International Investment Trust, which was basically kind of a disguise on how to fund German businesses without looking like you're funding German b…”
Delano secretly_owned American Bank Note Company host_asserted ▶ 22:38
“The way that they got the canal project out of Nicaragua was a stamp, and now it makes perfect sense that we know who actually owned part of America Banknote Company.…”
United Fruit Company overthrew Nicaragua host_asserted ▶ 22:38
“but we later cued the government and screwed the entire country up thanks to the United Fruit guys.…”
Delano member_of Federal Reserve host_asserted ▶ 24:31
“One of FDR's uncles was in the Federal Reserve. He also was a member, one of the Delanos.…”
Delano founded National Park Commission host_asserted ▶ 24:59
“He also was part of the founding, one of the Delano uncles, was one of the founding members of the National Park Commission to begin stealing land.…”
Delano member_of League of Nations host_asserted ▶ 24:59
“was a founding member of the League of Nations, and he served on, of all committees in the League of Nations, on the Opium Committee.…”
Roosevelt founded Bank of New York host_asserted ▶ 25:51
“Okay, on the Roosevelt side, they founded the Bank of New York. And in 1784, they founded several investment banks.…”
Roosevelt headed Maritime Canal Company host_asserted ▶ 26:49
“And one of them was chairman of the Maritime Canal Company. And that's the company that was formed to create the Nicaraguan Canal.…”
Roosevelt founded Southern Railway Security Company host_asserted ▶ 27:18
“He organized, one of the Roosevelts organized Southern Railway Security Company, which was basically a cartel formed to monopolize ownership of railroads.…”
Thomas W. Lamont member_of J.P. Morgan & Co. host_asserted ▶ 28:17
“We have Thomas Lamont, L-A-M-O-N-T. If you've done any research into this international syndicate, you know he was in partnership with J.P. Morgan.…”
Thomas W. Lamont paid Franklin D. Roosevelt host_asserted ▶ 28:47
“Because when FDR went to D.C. to take the assistant secretary of the Navy's job, Thomas Lamont leased his townhouse in New York City from FDR.…”
Theodore Roosevelt founded Progressive Party host_asserted ▶ 29:17
“this is a passage that goes along with the progressive party, which Teddy Roosevelt was the founder of, basically.…”
J.P. Morgan & Co. funded Progressive Party host_asserted ▶ 29:17
“And the progressive party was backed by JP Morgan money and influence.…”
International Harvester funded Progressive Party book_quoted ▶ 30:17
“Yet Roosevelt's progressive party plugging for business regulations was financed by Wall Street, including the Morgan-controlled International Harvester Corporation and J.P. Morgan Partners.…”
Van Lear Black headed Fidelity and Deposit Company host_asserted ▶ 34:32
“There was a guy by the name of Van Lear Black, V-A-N space L-E-A-R, and then his last name is Black. He also owned the Baltimore Sun and was chair of the Fidelity company.…”
Van Lear Black recruited Franklin D. Roosevelt host_asserted ▶ 35:03
“hire this young lawyer who didn't ever even graduate and had zero experience in this? Well, the answer was he was paying for the political capability of Roosevelt and his connections…”
Fidelity and Deposit Company paid Franklin D. Roosevelt book_quoted ▶ 37:25
“the $25,000 per year. But that only tells a part of the story because there's kickbacks, evidently, involved in bonding.…”
Adolf Hitler financed_via Hjalmar Schacht host_asserted ▶ 40:27
“And at the time, J.P. Morgan and Heimler Slott, which goes on to be Hitler's banker, is involved in these deals with FDR.…”
Max Warburg founded United European Investors, Ltd. host_asserted ▶ 40:53
“But the money that Max Warburg is involved in this, it's a fairly complicated thing. They actually got involved and created a thing called the United European Investors Limited with FDR.…”
Robert Mueller spied_on United States host_asserted ▶ 41:45
“another partner whose last name was Mueller, M-U-L-L-E-R, and William Shaw, S-C-H-A-L-L, go on to be suspected as German spies by the U.S. government.…”
William Schall member_of United European Investors, Ltd. host_asserted ▶ 41:45
“And he was doing business with FDR and the United European Investors in Germany.…”
William Schall spied_on United States host_asserted ▶ 41:45
“another partner whose last name was Mueller, M-U-L-L-E-R, and William Shaw, S-C-H-A-L-L, go on to be suspected as German spies by the U.S. government.…”
Adolf Pavenstedt spied_on United States host_asserted ▶ 42:46
“again, suspected of spying, merge a business into the United European Investors, which is FDR's company.…”
Adolf Pavenstedt member_of United European Investors, Ltd. host_asserted ▶ 42:46
“again, suspected of spying, merge a business into the United European Investors, which is FDR's company.…”
Wall Street installed Adolf Hitler speculative ▶ 43:16
“in New York in order to create the conditions to usher in Hitler. So you can do your own research into that.…”
Franklin D. Roosevelt founded International Germanic Trust book_quoted ▶ 44:25
“Among the organizers of the trust, as approved by the banking department in the state of New York, were FDR, Herman Metz, a director of IG Farben,…”
Herman Metz founded International Germanic Trust book_quoted ▶ 44:25
“Among the organizers of the trust, as approved by the banking department in the state of New York, were FDR, Herman Metz, a director of IG Farben,…”
Herman Metz member_of IG Farben book_quoted ▶ 44:25
“Among the organizers of the trust, as approved by the banking department in the state of New York, were FDR, Herman Metz, a director of IG Farben,…”
E. Roland Harriman founded International Germanic Trust book_quoted ▶ 44:56
“and E. Roland Harriman of the international baking firm W.A. Harriman & Company.…”
E. Roland Harriman member_of W.A. Harriman & Company book_quoted ▶ 44:56
“and E. Roland Harriman of the international baking firm W.A. Harriman & Company.…”
Harold G. Aron headed International Germanic Trust book_quoted ▶ 44:56
“The president of the Associated International Germanic Company and chairman of the executive committee of the trust company was Harold Aaron, who had more than his share of lawsuits.…”
James Beha member_of International Germanic Trust book_quoted ▶ 45:51
“Although not listed among the organizers, FDR's old friend, James Beha, B-E-H-A, who was superintendent of the insurance for the state of New York, became a member of the board of directors.…”
William E. Boeing member_of American Investigation Corporation host_asserted ▶ 49:46
“In this particular venture, the American Investigation Corporation, so that you can get a better understanding of some of the potential international syndicate members. You have W.E. Boeing of Boeing …”
Marshall Field member_of American Investigation Corporation host_asserted ▶ 50:15
“Marshall Field. He actually is like of Marshall Field, if y'all remember that old retail store.…”
Mellon family member_of American Investigation Corporation host_asserted ▶ 50:49
“Mellon of Mellon National Bank. Also another Mellon family member who was president of Gulf Oil.…”
Owen D. Young member_of General Electric host_asserted ▶ 51:21
“Owen Young, vice president of General Electric. So those are the people that were all involved in that one company.…”
Owen D. Young member_of American Investigation Corporation host_asserted ▶ 51:21
“Owen Young, vice president of General Electric. So those are the people that were all involved in that one company.…”
American Investigation Corporation overbilled_or_diverted United States host_asserted ▶ 53:07
“that there was no competition at all. They must have had someone on the inside letting them know who it was. They would make a bid and those patents would be released with no competition at all.…”
Remington Arms Company member_of Consolidated Automatic Merchandising Corporation host_asserted ▶ 53:35
“You had Remington Arms Company and DuPont Company involved in it.…”
DuPont member_of Consolidated Automatic Merchandising Corporation host_asserted ▶ 53:35
“You had Remington Arms Company and DuPont Company involved in it.…”
Jeremiah Milbank member_of Georgia Warm Springs Foundation host_asserted ▶ 54:35
“Jeremiah Milbanks of Chase National Bank in New York.…”
James A. Moffett member_of Georgia Warm Springs Foundation host_asserted ▶ 54:35
“James Moffitt, who is in he's in bed with everybody.…”
Jeremiah Milbank member_of Chase Manhattan Bank host_asserted ▶ 54:35
“Jeremiah Milbanks of Chase National Bank in New York.…”
Basil O'Connor member_of Georgia Warm Springs Foundation host_asserted ▶ 54:35
“Basil O'Connor, who happens to be an attorney in the law firm that FDR was in at 120 Broadway. He's one of the trustees.…”
James A. Moffett member_of Standard Oil host_asserted ▶ 55:04
“He was a vice president and director on the board of Standard Oil, a Rockefeller acolyte.…”
George Peabody member_of Georgia Warm Springs Foundation host_asserted ▶ 55:04
“George Foster Peabody, who was the original owner of the property.…”
Leighton McCarthy member_of Alcoa host_asserted ▶ 55:04
“And Leighton McCarthy, director of Aluminum, basically Alcoa, the Canadian subsidiary of Alcoa.…”
Franklin D. Roosevelt appointed William H. Woodin host_asserted ▶ 55:34
“William Wooden, secretary of the treasurer under FDR.…”
William H. Woodin member_of Georgia Warm Springs Foundation host_asserted ▶ 55:34
“William Wooden, secretary of the treasurer under FDR.…”
Walter Teagle member_of Georgia Warm Springs Foundation host_asserted ▶ 56:01
“And also, eventually, a guy by the name of Walter Teagle, who was one of the key administrators of that National Recovery Act that was illegal and unconstitutional, was involved in this as well.…”
Franklin D. Roosevelt founded National Recovery Administration host_asserted ▶ 1:04:14
“And then, of course, I mentioned the 1933 National Recovery Administration that gets deemed unconstitutional.…”
Franklin D. Roosevelt founded War Industries Board host_asserted ▶ 1:04:14
“Once we go to war, he establishes the War Industry Board.…”
Clinton Roosevelt proposed War Industries Board host_asserted ▶ 1:04:14
“eventually gets put into effect called the War Industries Board. FDR actually establishes what his cousin wrote about in 1841.…”
Walter Teagle member_of Standard Oil host_asserted ▶ 1:07:05
“Gerald Swope of GE, Walter Teagle of Standard Oil, and Lewis Kirsten.…”
Louis Kirstein proposed National Recovery Administration host_asserted ▶ 1:07:29
“The three of them were called the Three Musketeers on the SWOT plan and implementing the, or drafting the NRA.…”
Gerald Swope proposed National Recovery Administration host_asserted ▶ 1:07:29
“The three of them were called the Three Musketeers on the SWOT plan and implementing the, or drafting the NRA.…”
Walter Teagle proposed National Recovery Administration host_asserted ▶ 1:07:29
“The three of them were called the Three Musketeers on the SWOT plan and implementing the, or drafting the NRA.…”
Hugh S. Johnson headed National Recovery Administration host_asserted ▶ 1:08:49
“But let me first set the story up by saying that there was General Hugh Johnson who had been named as the NRA administrator.…”
Gerald MacGuire recruited Smedley Butler documented ▶ 1:10:15
“He testified in the 1934 Congressional Committee hearings investigating Nazi and communist activity in the U.S. that a plan for a White House dictatorship was outlined to him by two members of the Ame…”
Smedley Butler exposed Business Plot documented ▶ 1:10:15
“He testified in the 1934 Congressional Committee hearings investigating Nazi and communist activity in the U.S. that a plan for a White House dictatorship was outlined to him by two members of the Ame…”
Gerald MacGuire member_of Grayson M.-P. Murphy & Co. documented ▶ 1:10:15
“a Gerald McGuire, who worked for Grayson, M.P., Murphy and Company,…”
Gerald MacGuire member_of American Legion documented ▶ 1:10:15
“a plan for a White House dictatorship was outlined to him by two members of the American Legion, a Gerald McGuire, who worked for Grayson, M.P., Murphy and Company,…”
Bill Doyle recruited Smedley Butler documented ▶ 1:10:45
“General Butler testified that these men wanted to unseat the royal family in control of the American Legion at the convention in Chicago and were very anxious to have me as part of it.…”
Bill Doyle member_of American Legion documented ▶ 1:10:45
“and Bill Doyle, whom Butler identified as an officer in the American Legion at the national level.…”
John W. Davis member_of J.P. Morgan & Co. book_quoted ▶ 1:11:44
“The prepared speech was to be written by Morgan associate John W. Davis.…”
Grayson M.P. Murphy funded Gerald MacGuire documented ▶ 1:11:44
“To prove his Wall Street financial backing, McGuire showed General Butler a bank book listing deposits of $42,000 and $64,000 and mentioned that their source was Grayson M.P. Murphy.…”
Grayson M.P. Murphy member_of Guaranty Trust Company book_quoted ▶ 1:12:11
“director of Guarantee Trust Company and other Morgan-controlled companies…”
Gerald MacGuire paid Smedley Butler documented ▶ 1:12:11
“McGuire and Doyle also offered Butler a substantial sum to make a similar speech in front of the VFW in Miami Beach.…”
Gerald MacGuire attempted_coup_against Franklin D. Roosevelt book_quoted ▶ 1:15:28
“General Butler is reported to have testified that the affair was an attempted coup to overthrow President Roosevelt and replace him with a fascist dictator. That interpretation is repeated by many wri…”
Gerald MacGuire proposed Business Plot book_quoted ▶ 1:20:51
“But to kick him upstairs and install an assistant president with absolute powers, just why it was necessary to go through the trouble of installing an assistant president is unclear because the vice p…”
Smedley Butler overthrew Panama host_asserted ▶ 1:25:47
“I will tell you that he did do something really bad when he was a major. He was actually down in Panama and he is the military force that took over Panama and couped it.…”
Dwight D. Eisenhower ordered_assassination_of Patrice Lumumba host_asserted ▶ 1:37:00
“He was involved in when Eisenhower issued the findings to assassinate Lumumba.…”
Richard Nixon member_of Operation Gladio host_asserted ▶ 1:37:22
“of Operation Gladio during those eight years as vice president. And then you move forward and he played an intricate role in disassembling the Corsican mafia control over the Vietnam opium market and …”
Mafia traded_network_to CIA host_asserted ▶ 1:37:22
“he played an intricate role in disassembling the Corsican mafia control over the Vietnam opium market and moving that down to Sicily so that the U.S. and CIA could gain control of that.…”
Richard Nixon paid Japan host_asserted ▶ 1:39:12
“So one of those funds that had like over $50 billion, Nixon actually turned over to the Japanese government to use. And in return, they...…”
Japan funded Richard Nixon host_asserted ▶ 1:39:40
“largely funded through illegal means, his run for presidency in the 1960 election.…”
American Mafia installed John F. Kennedy speculative ▶ 1:39:58
“And there was mafia involvement in there. And supposedly the deal was struck that JFK would be light on the mafia if they got him the job.…”
John F. Kennedy appointed Robert F. Kennedy host_asserted ▶ 1:40:26
“He hired his brother as the AG, and the rest is history. They went after the mafia, and they went after him.…”
Gerald Ford member_of Warren Commission host_asserted ▶ 1:42:19
“And, you know, he played his role on the Warren Commission. So he was just a good soldier for him.…”
National Recovery Administration paid Richard Nixon guest_asserted ▶ 1:44:19
“The National Archives actually purchased back his presidential records from the library for, I want to say it was $18 million.…”
Louis T. McFadden exposed Federal Reserve caller_asserted ▶ 1:51:18
“the Federal Reserve Bank and tried to, you know, appeal that officially and, you know, not have central banking.…”
United States removed_from_power Ferdinand Marcos host_asserted ▶ 1:56:55
“And the subsequent, when we decided to depose him and bring him to Hawaii for him to stand trial.…”
Joseph McCarthy front_for World Anti-Communist League speculative ▶ 1:58:45
“he was actually a mouthpiece for the anti-communist league in drumming up that hysteria. There are other people's opinions that believe he was a genuine.…”
Robert F. Kennedy member_of Joseph McCarthy caller_asserted ▶ 2:00:39
“But another fun fact was Robert Kennedy was a Joe McCarthy staffer back in the day.…”
Roy Cohn member_of Permindex caller_asserted ▶ 2:05:50
“And I don't know what Roy Cohen knew exactly, but I know he was involved with Permadex.…”