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More on the Mumbai terror event and Tata

41:13

Transcript

0:00 Hi everyone, this is gonna be a wild ride, so I'm gonna give you a heads up, it'll be longer than normal. This Tata Sassoon thing keeps bothering me, and I had a gentleman send me some information that I wanna add to what I posted yesterday. Okay, so obviously the Tata, I'd never even heard of it.
0:27 Until yesterday when I started looking into that, or the day before when I started looking into this H-1B database. And there's just hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of ads. And we find out that it's an Indian company. And I'm like, well, and they preponderantly hire Indians in the United States. And I'm like, why don't you just hire them in your own country where your company is actually at? So there's something more going on here.
0:53 When he sent me the information about the history of Tatas and the Sassoons and them starting with opium. And basically when India was a colony of Britain, they're like what we did with ours in Cuba and Latin America. They create these elites and this elite class in many cases.
1:21 for centuries after they are granted their independence. And their allegiance is still to their former colonial power because it's how they got all of their money. And so obviously the Tatas and the Sassoons being the add-on for the incursion into China with the Indian opium.
1:50 And, you know, the Boxer Wars and all of that other stuff. So the Tatas owe their riches to the British colonial power. That's the easiest way to say that. So I began looking into this. And I came up with a couple of very interesting things. So you guys remember that there was the Mumbai terrorist attack.
2:22 And I went into a little bit of what I found out about the ambassador, which is always a critical thing if we're going to do like a CIA. And I'm not saying it was at this point. I'm just saying that that's one of the things you look for is who was the ambassador because they have to have a friendly as the ambassador because there's a lot of diplomatic cover that has to be afforded.
2:49 a CIA-inspired terrorist attack. And so I mentioned in my other video that it was Tim Romer, R-O-E-M-E-R, who happens to be from the one of two only Democrat areas in all of the state of Indiana. You have the northwest corner outside of Chicago, and then you have one generally Democrat I've not checked lately that's down by Jeffersonville in the southern part of the state, just north of Louisville.
3:19 And so this guy is originally from the Chicago area. And obviously, his uncle was an FBI agent and close ties, Notre Dame graduate. And you can just look through. His name is spelled R-O-E-M-E-R. Just look through. He was in favor of the GATT, the...
3:48 General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade. He was very involved in the Caribbean base at a time when that would be corresponding to CIA operations in there, just making observations. He was a principal sponsor of AmeriCorps National Service Program, which is basically a
4:18 It ends up being almost like something that they were running in Vietnam. AmeriCorps comes up in some very odd ways. I've not found that direct tie, but it is present in some very questionable places, so I'll just say that. He's a fluent foreign language speaker, so he was on the Department of Homeland Security.
4:47 He's one of the first member of Congress to call for the Department of Homeland Security. And, of course, he was on the 9-11 Commission. Definitely, obviously, a Democrat. He served as part of Bill Clinton's economic team. And he was considered as a vice president running mate for Obama. Also, let's see.
5:21 He becomes ambassador to India in 09. So we're going to, oh, and the very last thing that I found really interesting is that he had spent a lot of time on this organization called APCO. Hold on a second. Let me bring it up. Yeah, APCO, A-P-C-O. Now it has a very interesting background.
5:55 and basically it was named after and basically ran by a law firm, but it was a PR entity. So we have a Sullivan Cromwell type law firm and a PR like Hill and Knowlton all in one with this one. It's APCO Worldwide.
6:24 Wikipedia page says it was an independent global public affairs, PR, and strategic communication firm. So it's in 35 different locations all over the world. It has hundreds of people. It's the fifth largest independently owned PR firm. And you know what we've always said about the PR firms. And this one, weirdly enough, is headquartered in Washington, D.C.
6:52 And it was founded by Marjorie, M-A-R-G-E-R-Y Kraus, K-R-A-U-S. And she remains the executive chairman of the organization. So it has a whole laundry list of some very interesting people to include CIA people that are among their population.
7:21 both current and past. And it was a wholly owned subsidiary of a law firm called Arnold and Porter, one of Washington's largest law firms. And it was, that's where Arnold and Porter is where AP Co. stands. That's where it came from. So it,
7:52 is also part of a bigger conglomerate called GREY, G-R-E-Y, Global Group. And there's all kinds of mixing between, but GREY is found in North America, Europe, Middle East, Africa, Asian Pacific, and Latin America. So all of the hotbeds for Operation Gladio. But I'm sure that's just a coincidence.
8:24 It also has a very large presence in Chicago, weirdly enough, and Dubai. So here's some of their notable work. APCO handled the crisis for Merck, and it was part of Kazakhstan's president's team to help him through a four-year-long dispute.
8:55 with his former son-in-law. WorldCom hired them when they got in trouble for not reporting their financial statements correctly. They've done quite a bit of work in India, and it says that they were hired by GUJARAT, Global Investment Summit in India, to help the current
9:25 Prime Minister Modi as part of a rebranding of a pro-Indian initiative. So, very interesting. What I found extremely interesting is that they are also involved in the narrative push to make global warming a good thing. They were also part of a team.
9:57 hired by Philip Morris back in 1992 when their secondhand smoke was deemed a carcinogen. And they basically were paying studies to say otherwise. So they definitely have some very interesting business practices. In 2010, the Malaysian,
10:28 Malaysian opposition leader alleged that Malaysian parliament called One Malaysia concept had mirrored a concept that APCO had helped with called One Israel. And that they basically were like a parallel type system. And then weirdly enough, it was like, oh, no, I was wrong. Almost like someone had gotten to him.
10:59 And they were also involved in a 2010 Hewlett Packard incident where APCO was involved in the recommendation to fire Mark Hurd, H-U-R-D, their CEO. And they basically wrote a mock news story that implicated Hurd in some nefarious stuff.
11:28 HP would negatively be affected by bad press of its CEO being involved in an inappropriate relationship with Jody Fisher. So they basically got him fired over that. They were also involved in a targeted initiative where UK had financial interest in Israel.
11:57 firm called Elbit, E-L-B-I-T Systems. And that's a whole rabbit hole. But there was some controversy of people accumulating in September of this year around their buildings at their headquarters offices in the UK. And so anyway, I posted an article about Elbit.
12:27 because they have a U.S. subsidiary too and are involved in sourcing a whole lot of military equipment. This seems very odd that we're relying on a foreign government to source, but whatever. So I just wanted to put all of that in perspective. So this is APCO. This is a multi-conglomerate law and PR thing that has some very interesting people involved in it. So that's just to put that in perspective.
12:56 And we already talked about the LBIT system and the fact that they're intimately involved in the U.S. So we're going to go on. There was an article, which I can't get access to from the archives because it's like frozen up, that talks about a former CIA spokesperson being hired by APCO to work their PR.
13:28 program in the bigger PR program. All right. So let's go back to these people that are involved in this. So here, we're going to start a story about the, there's a guy by the name of Vladimir G-U-S-I-N-S-K-Y.
13:59 who set up a partnership with APCO, okay? So Vladimir Zuensky is a billionaire that began his ascent to billionaire status during the exact same time that Browder was over in Russia with...
14:30 Safra in trying to cannibalize in the late 80s, early 90s, as the Soviet Union is falling apart, to cannibalize all of their privatization and buy it up for U.S. investors, as well as other, like Safra was not representing the U.S. But anyway, he was funding Browder.
14:58 And so this Juwinski guy is part of that whole thing. And I found it very interesting that he partnered with APCO, which has ties to CIA, and owned by that law firm, Arnold and Porter. And the name of the joint organization that they set up was INFE.
15:29 KS, it's an acronym. And it was aimed at consulting with foreign companies looking to invest in Russia. And a year later, Jawenski sets up a bank in Russia called Most, M-O-S-T, Bank. And it was a subsidiary of a group called Most Group.
15:55 That to me was very interesting because all of those come into play with the Browder foray into Russia. So I found that very interesting. Anyway, let's talk about the actual terror event in Mumbai.
16:28 There was a guy by the name of David Coleman Headley. That wasn't his real name. His real name is Dayoud Saeed Galani, G-I-L-A-N-I. Now, Galani, if you look up that name, there's a lot of interesting things. And I'll dig into that a little later in another video, but I just want to kind of lay this out. So he, this David Coleman Headley, Galani,
16:59 was a product of an American woman whose last name is Headley and a very well-off Pakistani by the name of Galani. And when he got himself into this terrorist group, they suggested that he change his name because it would be easier for him to travel back and forth to the United States because he...
17:30 had been arrested one, two, three, four, five, six, seven times on multiple significant felony counts. And he had gone in and out of India, in and out of Pakistan, all over. And generally speaking, when we find those, they do so under the approval of the State Department guy who's now working at APCO.
18:02 Okay, so very suspicious. Now, even just looking, and there's some other articles, which I'll probably do a much deeper dive on this guy later, but I just wanted to give you the generic thing. So this is all happening around the time that the Swedish or Danish, sorry, newspaper published the cartoon of Mohammed. So there's a lot of stuff going on.
18:32 And it said that Headley went on five surveillance missions to Mumbai for the 2008 Mumbai terrorist attack. And he was very well known and working for Pakistan's ISI, which we've clearly tied like brothers to the CIA. So because there's so much.
19:02 CIA embedded in Pakistan in their ISI network, there is absolutely zero reason to believe that the CIA was not aware, if not condoned, this guy's activity, okay? You just have to keep that in mind. So, just for background purposes, Headley, his mom, Alice Headley,
19:30 worked as a secretary in the Pakistani embassy in Washington. And generally, I'm just going to lay it out there, there are loose ties to Americans working in foreign governments' embassies to the CIA for intelligence purposes. That's not the first time we found that. So his dad, the terrorist guy, David,
20:03 Coleman Headley slash Galani. His dad was, let's see, hold on a second. The mom, Headley, has a younger sister and a half brother. No, I'm going to get this screwed up. So they were a joint family. He evidently, the dad, Galani, working at the Pakistani
20:37 embassy in the United States where Hedley meets him and has an affair, has David Hedley. There's other children in this family. Okay, so it just so happens that one of them, Daniel Galani, became the spokesperson for Pakistani Prime Minister Yusuf Raza.
21:05 Galani. And Wikipedia actually misspells his name because it's the same family. They just put two L's in it when really there isn't two L's. So David Coleman Headley is a family member of a guy that goes on to be the prime minister of Pakistan.
21:32 one of his relatives actually served as the press attache, which means their intel, in Beijing, China. So this isn't just a run-of-the-mill guy. This is a guy that's very well connected to the hierarchy in Pakistan, as well as potentially the intelligence network in America. And he just so happens to be caught up.
22:02 in a terrorist attack in India. And I mentioned to you guys in my previous video that they don't just pick a generic place to do the terrorist attack. The terrorist attack is actually carried out in a Tata-owned hotel. What? Yeah. Yeah. So that you can keep all of the information closely.
22:36 held and controlled. That's not a random thing. So there's a lot of, and by the way, this guy has a known connection to DEA and drug trafficking, and he was involved in moving drugs from Pakistan into the United States repeatedly. So again, close ties to intel. Everything about it is crazy.
23:11 He's worked with also the Department of Defense agents, and he went to a terror training camp, made repeated trips to terrorist training camps. And again, you don't do that without the CIA knowing you're doing it. And let's see, what else?
23:49 First in all of this is his being arrested for different things all along the way. And that is how, after his first arrest, how it was the first formal notice that he was actually working for the government as an asset occurred after one of those arrests. Okay, so that's very, very interesting.
24:20 I wanted to look real quick when we're on this subject because if I recall correctly, this terrorist attack in the aftermath of it, you had the terrorist first hijacked.
24:44 Indian fishing boats and killed the people that were on the boat. And by the way, in all of the research that I did, this David Headley guy talks about actually going and surveilling all of the shoreline because that's the way they were going to do the attack. Obviously, let's see where it gets to. The attackers killed 58 people and injured 104. Their assault,
25:15 ended around 10 o'clock that night security forces and emergency services arrived shortly after and there was a lot to be said about the fact that they basically stayed away while all of these people were being murdered and that no one it was like gone done um before they ever showed up and two gunmen fled the scene and fired at pedestrians and police officers um
25:42 eventually killing at least eight police officers on their way to wherever. The attackers passed a police station. Knowing that they were outgunned against the heavy armed terrorists, the police officers at the station, instead of confronting them, decided to switch the lights off and stay inside. Nothing like some of them go-getter police officers. And they knew that they were outgunned, even though they didn't know how many there were.
26:14 The attackers then headed towards a hospital, but the hospital staff had locked the doors, and the anti-terrorist squad led by police are supposedly pursuing all of these people. More police officers are killed, and there's only one survivor of that brush with it.
26:43 They seized the police vehicle, which was later abandoned. They ran into police roadblocks. A gun battle ensues and one is wounded and the other one is killed of those two. In another cafe, there was people that were killed. There were bomb blasts.
27:14 And at the hotel itself, it says that there were four locations targeted, six explosions were reported. And they originally reported that there was a hostage situation there. And then it was supposedly they all got released.
27:43 Just reading a little bit here, it says a number of European Parliament committees on international trade delegates were staying at the hotel at the time, but none of them were injured. And let's see. Yeah, there was a ton of foreigners at that, which of course then is going to make a better international, they were all safe. But that makes a...
28:15 bigger international event out of it. And it's not just an Indian event because all of these people will go back to their respective countries and make it a much bigger terrorist event or bang for their buck, if you will, for those that are carrying out the attack. So just a, it was a horrific scene.
28:45 And they also attacked a local Jewish center as well, which for them to make a narrative of radical Islamist, you would have to do that. And I'm not saying that as condoning it. I'm just saying, if you're going to generate the biggest...
29:15 bang for your buck in a terror event that is something that you would do and I think we're long past the time where we need to look at these things for what they really are and what the long-term effects of them are and not look at them from an emotional perspective of being there at the time because it is quite obvious.
29:41 that all of these terror attacks were done for reasons. And the reason, at least at the time, was to generate this widespread belief that radical Islamists wanted to kill all of us, like literally all of us. And this was the creation. This is one of the building blocks in that narrative.
30:07 A critical building block, as a matter of fact, in that narrative, while we were in the process of switching from you had to be designated a communist in order to be taken out by the CIA to the radical Islamist objective.
30:26 of the CIA being able to then just mass murder anybody that they wanted to because you're designated as a terrorist, which we now know morphed into domestic terrorist, which is what they're using now to justify political prisoners and the January 6th thing. You just see this, if you step back and look at this unemotionally, you see the projection of
30:56 a narrative and how it morphed over time in order to continue the operation. So anyway, I just wanted to kind of further elaborate on how disgustingly bad this whole thing was and encourage you guys with your Gladio glasses to go back and look over
31:25 this entire operation because it is very, very suspect in all of the different aspects of it and how they occurred. So let me just make sure that I got all of the pieces. I did want to just mention the current
31:55 Well, he died in October 2024, which is kind of interesting. The guy Tata, Ratan Novel Tata, and I'm going to spell that R-A-T-A-N, and his middle name is N-A-V-A-L, and his last name is Tata, T-A-T-A. Okay, so he was in charge of the entire Tata group, Tata Sun.
32:22 the whole thing at different points. What I found very interesting about him is that he was educated at Cornell and he also attended Harvard Business School in 1975 and obviously made lots of donations to Harvard. He also had an investment firm called
32:50 RNT, that's his name, initials, Capital Advisors. And if you look at the companies that he set up, it's very interesting what he funded with that investment. He set up basically the Indian version of PayPal. He also set up the Indian version of Uber.
33:18 And he has an entire eyewear brand glasses. Urban Company is an app for like, oh, what's her name? To get stuff done on your house. So he's in charge of that too. Well, he funded it. So now he owns a portion of that company.
33:44 He also First Cry, which is online baby products. He owns a huge online marketplace for industrial goods. He owns basically the Indian version of Amazon. He owns the platform that does physical fitness there. An app basically like stock trading.
34:17 to do that. He also owns an online rental property marketplace, a coupon e-commerce site. He owns an intelligence platform that offers marketing data from everything else that he's built out. Okay. Oh, he didn't leave out telemedicine. He owns that too.
34:51 So he has all of your intel. Women's apparel and lingerie. And this is my favorite. Goodfellas. It's a dating app for seniors. So this guy's been very, very busy. And he's captured all of the data for Indians. So if you go down and you look at all of his involvement in, I mean, he's given,
35:24 He gained $50 million to Harvard in one donation. He's given lots of donations. He gifted Cornell $50 million. So you get a lot of goodwill. At Harvard, they named a hall after him. They have taught a hall for executive education students. He also bought,
35:57 Tetley T created Tata Motors, bought Jaguar and Land Rover, created Tata Steel, and acquired another steel company called Corus, C-O-R-U-S, that used to be English and the Netherlands, but now belonged to him. So, this is the guy that is...
36:29 has set up consultancy organizations all over the United States and is hiring like 90% Indian people into all of these consulting organizations throughout the United States. And I do mean throughout the United States. There's tons of them everywhere. And a lot of them are doing jobs that you can do from home, which means India. So what's going on?
37:02 Why are you as an Indian company setting up front companies here to do jobs that the American companies have all outsourced to India, right? That's where your call centers are. They're in India. And so obviously you can do pieces of this telecommuting, right? Can you not write code from home? Yes, you can. So why are they here? There's something else going on here, folks.
37:34 And he's into all kinds of, so he's also got himself into trouble. So let me just say this. There are a lot, and it's hard to find, by the way. He has done like steel mills that he wanted to create where they had found ore in the ground. They burned down entire villages in the country of India to facilitate his steel mines going in.
38:06 There was a riot that had occurred that he basically bought everybody vehicles to ensure that they were compensated. Let's just say that. He is all through the University of California in San Diego. Lots and lots. And remember when I said about the fact that he was basically the founder of the Planned Parenthood version in India?
38:36 Well, in San Diego, his research facilities is doing gene editing, stem cell therapy, and disease control. And he has a biological lab set up there, all fully funded by him. And they're dealing in infectious disease and sustainable food sources, which basically means fake food.
39:08 Okay so he has scholarship funds and I guess obviously it would be interesting to find out if these scholarship funds are who's being awarded the scholarship funds and having their education paid for. But he set up the Indian Institute of Technology which was in Bombay. He set up
39:39 at an innovation center at Cornell. We mentioned the executive center at Harvard. He set up a Indian center for neuroscience and they do a lot of research on Alzheimer's. MIT taught a center of technology and design because if you do Harvard, you have to do MIT. Board memberships.
40:10 affiliations. Well, look at that. He's on a Pritzker Architecture Prize Board. I'm shocked. He is also on the Board of Trustees of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace slash CIA. And yeah, that's very interesting.
40:39 That gives you a little bit about him. He's been given all kinds of awards and he was even given, he was knighted by Queen Elizabeth because who isn't that does things like this? So anyway.
40:58 That's it. I just wanted to pass that information on and kind of close out this research project. I do have a couple of things noted that I will do a little bit more research in. And if I find anything else interesting, I will bring it to you. Thanks for being here.

Entities here

APCO Worldwide18Ratan Tata18David Coleman Headley15India13Tim Roemer6Tata Group6Vladimir Gusinsky52008 Mumbai terrorist attacks5United Kingdom3Bill Browder3Sassoon Family3Alice Headley3Arnold & Porter2China2Opium Wars2Operation Gladio2Emanuel Constant2Daniel Galani2WPP plc1Carnegie Endowment for International Peace1Marjorie Kraus1Most Bank1

Claims made here

Tata Group funded Sassoon Family host_asserted ▶ 0:53
“When he sent me the information about the history of Tatas and the Sassoons and them starting with opium. And basically when India was a colony of Britain, they're like what we did with ours in Cuba a…”
United Kingdom funded Tata Group host_asserted ▶ 1:50
“And, you know, the Boxer Wars and all of that other stuff. So the Tatas owe their riches to the British colonial power. That's the easiest way to say that. So I began looking into this. And I came up …”
Marjorie Kraus founded APCO Worldwide host_asserted ▶ 6:52
“And it was founded by Marjorie, M-A-R-G-E-R-Y Kraus, K-R-A-U-S. And she remains the executive chairman of the organization. So it has a whole laundry list of some very interesting people to include CI…”
APCO Worldwide front_for Arnold & Porter host_asserted ▶ 7:21
“both current and past. And it was a wholly owned subsidiary of a law firm called Arnold and Porter, one of Washington's largest law firms. And it was, that's where Arnold and Porter is where AP Co. st…”
APCO Worldwide member_of WPP plc host_asserted ▶ 7:52
“is also part of a bigger conglomerate called GREY, G-R-E-Y, Global Group. And there's all kinds of mixing between, but GREY is found in North America, Europe, Middle East, Africa, Asian Pacific, and L…”
Vladimir Gusinsky founded Most Bank host_asserted ▶ 15:29
“KS, it's an acronym. And it was aimed at consulting with foreign companies looking to invest in Russia. And a year later, Jawenski sets up a bank in Russia called Most, M-O-S-T, Bank. And it was a sub…”
David Coleman Headley carried_out_attack 2008 Mumbai terrorist attacks host_asserted ▶ 18:32
“And it said that Headley went on five surveillance missions to Mumbai for the 2008 Mumbai terrorist attack. And he was very well known and working for Pakistan's ISI, which we've clearly tied like bro…”
Tata Group funded 2008 Mumbai terrorist attacks host_asserted ▶ 22:02
“in a terrorist attack in India. And I mentioned to you guys in my previous video that they don't just pick a generic place to do the terrorist attack. The terrorist attack is actually carried out in a…”
Ratan Tata headed Tata Group host_asserted ▶ 31:55
“Well, he died in October 2024, which is kind of interesting. The guy Tata, Ratan Novel Tata, and I'm going to spell that R-A-T-A-N, and his middle name is N-A-V-A-L, and his last name is Tata, T-A-T-A…”
Ratan Tata member_of Carnegie Endowment for International Peace host_asserted ▶ 40:10
“affiliations. Well, look at that. He's on a Pritzker Architecture Prize Board. I'm shocked. He is also on the Board of Trustees of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace slash CIA. And yeah, t…”
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