Operation Gladio 1968 and East Pakistan
1:58:50
Transcript
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That was good, Bridget. I just hit send when I got your text. Your timing is impeccable. Well, great minds think alike, right? Yep. So I'm going to wait for a few more people to get in here. I need to go post this over on True Social, and then we can get started. Yep, sending out DMs right now. All right.
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So I did something that I have not done thus far. And I was reading about the CIA's overthrowing the Iraqi government back in the 1968. And of course, this is about the millionth time.
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that we've come across something happening in 1968. And so, you know, that's the RFK assassination, the MLK assassination. And I thought, well, you know what? I'm going to go back and just look at events that happened in 1968. And it's actually quite remarkable because from a...
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social, international, national level, 1968 was a pivotal year in so many ways. So I'm going to briefly go through this because it directly leads to what used to be East Pakistan that turned into Bangladesh.
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as a result of another event that actually began in 1968. So, and what's very interesting about 1968 to me is if you look at the CIA coups that happened prior to 1968, a lot of them were focused in South American Africa in a, we want our freedom.
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And it kind of disrupted the international order of things. And then the period of 1968, the Vietnam War, all of that stuff, it becomes pivotal into the 1970s, which saw the creation of much of what I've been writing about recently.
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In 1972, they set up the BCCI Bank. They set up Nugent Hand Bank during that period. And you see this transformational approach to what I would call a full-thrusted Operation Gladio and in a more visible way because they're no longer hiding money laundering underneath the blanket in the Vatican.
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bank where no one can see it. They are coming out in full view of everybody and standing up these multi-billion dollar banks and money laundering right in front of your face. In addition to civil unrest, coups, paramilitary terror events that are taking place during that time too. So it just seems to me.
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that there was a turning point around the 1968 period. So I want to go through some of these events. At the beginning of the year, there was a huge economic push called, I'm backing Britain campaign. And it's almost like they're trying to bolster their view.
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of how they look and then you have a thing called the Prague Spring which I found very interesting which was described as the political liberation and mass protests in Czechoslovakia and it begins on 5 January so that's kind of the and I mean you could call it the year of unrest as you're going to see you have
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John Gorton sworn in as the new Prime Minister of Australia. And you have the, let's see, a couple of earthquakes. You have some significant battles in Vietnam going on. You have a B-52 crash in Thule, Greenland, detonating four nuclear bombs that it was carrying. You have...
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North Korea seizing the USS Pueblo. You have Israeli submarine that sinks, killing the 69 sailors on board. You had a French submarine sink, killing 52 sailors on board. You had the beginning of the Tet Offensive, which was Viet Cong's surprise attacks on the South that was very successful for them, was kicked off in 1968.
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You had more activity, which was not good in Vietnam, where they executed a Viet Cong soldier in the middle of the street. And the photograph that was taken of that event was basically kind of like the shot heard all around the world. It galvanized the anti-war protests.
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And he was shot. Let's see if I can figure out his name. Nguyen Van Lem, L-E-M. And he was executed by Nguyen Ngoc Loan, L-O-A-N, who was the South Vietnamese National Police Chief, trained by our one and only CIA. You have...
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The Winter Olympics of 1968 held in February in France. You have massive amounts of civil rights actions happening inside the United States. We have the Orangeburg Massacre, which was the shooting of student protesters on the campus of South Carolina State College. We had...
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More Vietnam, a massacre, Ha Mai massacre that happened with South Korean Marines. You have a coal mine that had been open for over 300 years in Black County, England. That was closed. You had the unrecognized Rhodesia execute three Black citizens. Let's see.
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The first, oh, another Soviet, not another, another submarine, this time Soviet, sinks off the coast of Hawaii, killing all 98 sailors on board. You have a Polish political protest that happens in March.
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Computer systems are going to change over to a particular language, for lack of a better word. You also have the Laos Civil War kickoff. And it was in March that Lyndon B. Johnson barely beat Eugene McCarthy. We've talked about that before in the primary in New Hampshire.
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We have nerve gas leaking out of a U.S. Army depot in Utah. We have the Maile Massacre, where American troops killed basically a whole village full of people. And Robert Kennedy, after seeing that Johnson barely beat McCarthy, enters the race in March. And I didn't know this. On March 18th,
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The United States Congress repeals the requirement that our U.S. currency be backed by gold. Now, we weren't taking off the gold standard immediately, but this was the precipitous action that had to occur in order for that to happen later on. So, again, just momentous things that happened in 1968. We had more.
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unrest on college campuses in DC, New York. There was a five-day sit-in on Howard University. We have several plane crashes, too, killing quite a few people. One in England. We have a Brazilian high school student shot and killed by police.
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while he was advocating for cheaper meals in restaurants. And that was done by the CIA-couped Brazilian dictator that they installed. And let's see, bombs exploding in department stores in Frankfurt.
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You have two people that looks like Operation Gladio. I haven't come across this one before, so I didn't get a chance to look at it. But it has all the telltale signs. They say basically they're members of the Red Army faction, which we came to appreciate usually is. It's like the Red Brigade that they talked about in Italy, that they're normally infiltrated organizations made to look communist, but actually.
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part of Operation Gladio's strategy of tension. You have April 4th, the assassination of MLK, and then the immediate riots in the aftermath. We have a shootout between Black Panthers in Oakland, California, and German left-wing students blockading Springer Press headquarters in Berlin. Oh, and Trudeau's dad takes...
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office as the 15th prime minister of Canada. We have also in April Mubatu. Remember, he was the guy that was put in place after the CIA couped the Congo and he turned it into Zaire and then it eventually comes back to being Congo. He had captured a whole bunch of mercenaries, quote unquote mercenaries. They were actually people that were trying, they were
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patriots that were trying to fight back against him and the CIA. We have, oh, the United Methodist Church is created. And it was created in Dallas, Texas, with a merger of the former Methodist and Evangelical United Brethren churches. You have the Columbia University war protest for anti-Vietnam protesters.
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We had the nuclear weapon boxcar being tested at the Nevada test site. We have the Israeli Broadcasting Authority come online. We have another plane crash in Dawson, Texas. We have riots in Paris, student riots. We have an East London building blown up, killing five from a gas explosion.
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And we have what's called the Cantonville Nine enter the Selective Service offices in Cantonville, Maryland, take dozens of Selective Service draft records and burn them with napalm in a protest of the Vietnam War. We have Italian general elections in 1968 that happened in May.
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Student demonstrations in Yugoslavia. We have the assassination on June 5th of Robert Kennedy. We have, oh, that's interesting, Rosemary's Baby comes out June 12th in the U.S. That's gross. The Malayan Communist Party launches an insurgency in Malaysia. We have student demonstrations in Brazil.
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trying to fight back against the CIA-installed military dictatorship. We have the March of 100,000 that took place in Rio de Janeiro in Brazil, fighting back against their military dictatorship. We have July kicks off the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty signing. It was open for signing.
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Saddam Hussein becomes vice chairman of the Revolutionary Council in Iraq after the coup there. So this is the coup that eventually brings him to power, which was also initiated by the CIA. And I found it very interesting in the middle of all of this, the semiconductor company Intel is founded in July as well, which we know eventually is the one that transfers
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all of the chip manufacturing to Taiwan, weirdly enough, right about the time where the defense agreement will no longer be in effect for us to have to come to their defense. So we're going to put chip manufacturing over there so we have to come to their defense. Nothing like always putting our young men's lives on the lines for dumbass decisions.
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More activity in Vietnam, none of it good. The Republicans have their convention where they nominate Richard Nixon in August. We have the Warsaw Pact invasion of Czechoslovakia. We have France exploding their first hydrogen bomb in French Polynesia.
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Then we have, at the end of August, the 1968 Democrat Convention, which we talked about, and they had a bunch of violence between the anti-war protesters. And the Youth International Party was there causing havoc. We have Swahili land become independent from the UK. We have another airplane crash in Air France, just off the coast of Nice.
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We have Albania officially withdrawing from the Warsaw Pact based on the invasion of Czechoslovakia. We have a student demonstration that ends in a massacre in Mexico City, Mexico that happened 10 days before the 1968 Summer Olympics that left an estimated 300 to 400 dead.
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And in Peru, they had a coup which brought Juan Alvarado to power. We have some activity with the Apollo mission. And in Panama, another military coup led by Colonel Boris Martinez and Colonel Trujillo, who overthrew the democratically elected president.
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Arias, and that was a CIA coup as well. Then we have Equatorial Guinea claiming independence from Spain. We have, let's see, Lyndon B. Johnson announces to the nation that he has ordered a complete cessation of all air and naval artillery bombardment of North Vietnam, effective 1 November 1968.
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We have the election on November 5th. Seems so weird because, of course, they're the Democrat candidate, Hubert Humphrey. Let's see. Richard Nixon defeats a Democrat candidate, Vice President Hubert Humphrey. And then Hubert Humphrey, just like Kamala Harris, never received a single vote in the primary.
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It's so weird, the analogous between this year's election and the 1968. So let's see what else. There was a couple more. We have the Republic of Maldives declare their independence. And the one I'm going to talk about on November 7th, 1968 movement in, there was actually a thing called the 1968 movement.
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in Pakistan, which led to the resignation of General Khan and ultimately led, there was a civil war, but it leads to the, and a war with India. It leads to the formation of Bangladesh. So we also have, I was thinking there was one more. Oh, in Mali, the president, Modibo.
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Kiatas regime is overthrown in a military coup. And we have a mine disaster that killed 78 men. We have, let's see, a Pan Am flight that was hijacked. So you can kind of see how all of these, if you were going to pick a critical year for the strategy of tension, this would be the year I would pick.
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The Khmer Rouge was actually formed in 1968 without a specific date assigned to it. So definitely a lot of crazy things. But let's go back to this 1968 movement in Pakistan, which leads to the creation of Bangladesh. And so, Bridget, if you wouldn't mind finding a picture.
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that shows just like, you know, it has to be post-World War II, but before the 1968 timeframe that shows East Pakistan so that you can see, again, strategy of tension. This was all done after World War II, where we're going to have Pakistan on the western side of India.
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And instead of just drawing Pakistan and saying, OK, that's Pakistan and whatever else is on the east side of India, landmass wise, be something else completely. We're not going to do that. We're going to take Pakistan and loop it all the way around India to include it coming around on its eastern side. So it's basically surrounded. And as I have said for a very long time, Pakistan has basically functioned.
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as an intelligence operation posing as a country. And in doing that, you, of course, are encircling slash controlling India from an international perspective because you can poke holes in it, start crap on any part of it. And they drew the lines to create Pakistan.
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in some particular areas that were known to be friction point, just like they did on the western side of Pakistan, where they took some of what was formerly Afghanistan. So they did this on purpose in order to always have an excuse to go to war. So if you already have people that don't like each other, that are semi-living side by side, not bothering each other, all you have to do is go in there.
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dress up like the other side, kill a few people, blame the other side, and it's like throwing dynamite in something. And they did this perpetually. So anyway, not good. I want to just talk a little bit about the Bangladesh Liberation War, which is what some people call it.
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And it was ended, it began in the 1968 timeframe, it ended in 1971. And it created, as a result of the quote-unquote settlement, negotiated settlement, the creation of Bangladesh. Now, prior to all of this, that area used to be called Bengal.
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B-E-N-G-A-L. And again, you know, we're going to just take everybody's heritage away from them and just make up all of these names and all of these boundaries so we can create all the havoc. And so you've got, again, if you see these maps, I'm going to have to do this, just completely isolating East Pakistan from West Pakistan. But
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Every time they elected a leader in West Pakistan, they supposedly were making policy for East Pakistan, and they literally had nothing in common. Nothing. And what really pissed people off, from what I've read, is at least Bengal was a country. The people were, prior to this World War II garbage, had lived as a governing entity.
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Pakistan didn't even exist before the end of World War II. It's a completely made up country. And the fact that they completely made up this country and then gave it an authority over something that had been a country that just got squished down to being nothing. It just infuriated everybody in that area.
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This is from an article by Eric Strayhorn called the Bangladesh Liberation War. He says that although the war is best remembered for its dramatic alterations of South Asia's geopolitical landscape, it also bears a more complex and lesser known set of legacies for the Cold War and international relations.
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the 20th century genocidal and sexual violence and limits of international law in post-conflict societies. The province of East Pakistan was created during the independence from the British Empire, blah, blah, blah, after World War II. At that time, the South Asian subcontinent was partitioned into the two countries of India.
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and Pakistan and basically what that kind of did more or less was put what had again coexisted in India a Hindu and a Muslim population they separated primarily not everybody it wasn't a clean break but they were basically setting up India to be Hindu and Pakistan to take the
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Indian Muslims and move them over to their own country, you know, so they can just fight against each other as separate countries. And it also said that it took the territory of Bengal and turned it into East Pakistan. East and West Pakistan were geographically, culturally, and thought process wise, very distant and very distinct.
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An independent movement for East Pakistan grew almost immediately. And their demands were the use of their own actual language because Pakistan tried to force them not to use the Bengali language. So the seeds of political crisis that led to liberation war were...
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Many, but along the lines, you have the Awami League won a victory in the Pakistani elections. The League was a political party led by Sheikh Rahman, who had campaigned for autonomy in East Pakistan. However, there was immediate pushback from that by General Khan and...
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of the Pakistani People's Party, which attempted to prevent the League from forming the next government. After months of negotiation, the Pakistani army was deployed to East Pakistan. It pursued reprisal for anyone that supported Bangladesh liberation.
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and perceived enemies of the state like the significant Hindu minority. So, they began deploying fighter jets, tanks, and napalm, and creating radical militias, you know, kind of like Operation Gladio, to participate in the systematic murder and deportation of anyone that the Pakistani army decided had committed a war crime.
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This led to genocidal-level murder. What became of the conflict as a quote-unquote civil war ended up being an international one because all of the East Pakistanis fled into India for protection. And the Bangladesh people formed their own militia called the Mukti.
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which got most of its arms and support from India. So there was 15 million refugees that fled across into India in the intervening genocide. So Prime Minister Idira Gandhi stands up and says, okay, I'm going to get involved because I can't handle all of these refugees coming into India and I want this shit stopped.
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Pakistani, excuse me, Pakistan preempted her by attacking India from the West. And they did so in December 3rd. So that fighting only lasted two weeks and Pakistan got their butt kicked. So they began reassessing.
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Because they were afraid if they allowed India too much success, that some of the territory that they had given away, supposedly under the guise of buying peace, would be re-confiscated. So, and of course, the U.S. was all in Pakistan's business with, even back then, CIA presence and everything else.
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So the Nixon administration dispatched the aircraft carrier Enterprise to the Bay of Bengal, and it was supposed to act as a deterrent to keep India out of the conflict. But no one in the Nixon administration said anything about the ongoing genocide, and it gets really bad, as we're going to see in a minute. The American diplomats, just like what happened in Taiwan,
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are looking out their window, watching people get slayed in the road in front of their embassy. They are watching people get gunned down. And nothing is done about it by the U.S. As a matter of fact, the White House begins to illegally transfer weapons to Pakistan, which was a direct violation of the congressional sanction that had already been placed.
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You know, kind of like the Iran-Contra. The U.S. was complicit in the unfolding humanitarian crisis. Estimates of the death toll vary from thousands to at least 3 million people. Furthermore, the Pakistani army used rape as a weapon of war. Over 200,000 women and 25,000 children reported as being raped.
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as basically a punishment. The memory of these events have been written about quite a bit. The government of Pakistan has never acknowledged having committed any of these wartime atrocities. And let's see. In Bangladesh, the political consequences of the liberation war continue.
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And we had two of their early leaders in Bangladesh wanted punishment to be, or accountability is probably the better word, to be enacted within Pakistan in like an international tribunal. And supposedly...
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In 1973, there was an International Crimes Tribunal Act and a 2009 International Crimes Tribunal Amendment Act. And by 1975, approximately 750 people had been tried and convicted of war crimes. But despite these tribunals,
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None of this was ever adjudicated at the International Criminal Court, nor was any of it ever acknowledged by any of those international institutions. You know, the ones that were created after World War II to make sure shit like that doesn't happen. Individuals who aided the Pakistani army and who were involved in the assassination of Mujib in 1975 have served.
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in the government of General Rahman, General Irshad, and the Bangladesh National Party led by Zia, Z-I-A. Now, Zia comes up, I'll have to check and see if that's the same one. General Rahman halted the war crimes trials and they did not resume until 2010.
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The legacy of the liberation war continues to shape civic life in Bangladesh today. As trials have been conducted in recent years, there have been violent protests by both of their opponents and by those demanding harsher sentences for those convicted. Since 2013, there have been a series of murders of prominent human rights activists by Islamic people, basically in retribution.
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for demanding those trials even be held. So that's not good. Let me look at this one other area. One of the aspects that I think was interesting about this Movement 68 was that actually happened in October 1968. It was led by...
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an organization called the National Students Federation. And it, of course, originally gets dubbed as a communist entity. It doesn't appear like it was actually communist. It could have been labeled as that because we know they like to do that. So they would have an excuse to actually ship weapons there because it's under the guise of quote unquote.
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fighting communism. But this is yet just another example of the use of student populations in order to bring about drastic changes in the landscape of international diplomacy. So I thought that was very interesting. And there is also a book.
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I ordered this book. It's called Uprising in Pakistan, How to Bring Down a Dictatorship by Tariq Ali. And it basically describes the revolution that happened in Pakistan in 1968. And the reason why I think this is very important, again, is because so much crap has come out of Pakistan.
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But Pakistanis have been used all over the world in this Operation Gladio scenario. We had, of course, you know, we know about the Awan brothers here. We know that Barack Obama spent time in Pakistan, you know, which would have been, let's see, if he did that, it's likely to have been around like 19, 20 years old.
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which would have been in like 1980, 1981. And so this is in the immediate aftermath of all of the stuff that we're talking about now. And so I think it's really important to understand the different dynamics. Like I was reading earlier, and that's, again, we had the revolution in Iraq.
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The revolution in Iraq was instigated by big oil. You had, let me see if I can find that real quick, because I do, I love naming names. You have what they referred to as, let's see, I got to find the names of the oil companies. We know that one of them was BP, and they were being threatened just like what happened in Iran.
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in the takeover of the oil industry to nationalize it, the same thing happened in Iraq. But it happened about 10 to 15 years later. So these oil companies knew exactly what was happening and made sure that they did exactly what they did. Oh, here they are. They did exactly what they did in Iran. They overthrow the government. And now all of these years later,
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Oh, shoot. What just happened? It just closed my tab. Well, poo. Hold on just a second. Now you're just making us feel normal. What happened to you? Basically, it was BP Dutch Shell Oil. It was a subsidiary of Standard Oil.
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Exxon. At the time, it was called Esso. And I think there was one other one. But how did that happen? It just closed the tab. That's crazy. But anyway, that's kind of one of those rabbit holes that you go down and you realize that 1968 was a pivotal year for so many different...
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storylines that wrap themselves around operation gladio and i like i said i ordered this book about the uprising in pakistan because i do want to know who the players are because of the spillover later on into bcci and then they end up owning banks here in the united states they basically are part of a storyline that goes on for like the next
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from this time period for the next 50 years. And weirdly enough, a lot of them do have the last name Awan. And so there, I am told just by reading that there's like six major families in Pakistan that had lived in different and was educated very well off in India.
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But they didn't live in the borderland that became Pakistan. They lived in metropolitan areas. They were bankers and everything else inside of India. So once Pakistan was set up and it was highly encouraged that all the Muslims, regardless of what line of work you're in and where you lived, go over there, a lot of them did pick up and leave. And they did so in a way.
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that then allowed them to monopolize, because they were all modern. They were all Western. They had been educated in English schools because that's who, you know, basically India was a colony of England. So a lot of them had went back to Britain and been educated there. So these are, we think of them as Middle Eastern. They were not Middle Eastern. They were very westernized Middle Eastern.
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Some of the banks that they worked in were subsidiaries of the London banking system, which is why Abedi ends up taking his bank and setting it up in London, because he had worked in the banking system in India. He was part of one of those families. And those families, as westernized as they were, went and plopped down in the Never Never Land.
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of what is now called Pakistan. And all that was, was a bunch of tribes, you know, people that had lived in these little villages. There was some infrastructure, but not very much at all in the mid 1940s. And so these guys knew all of the people to call for money. They knew all of the people to call for construction and they set up and monopolized everything.
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They became the ship manufacturers. They became the construction companies. They became the bankers. They became everything because they were educated and everybody else wasn't. And so it is an amazing story when you start digging into, because it blows all of our preconcepts out of the water. This was not some backwoods, uncouth country.
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That basically struggled for a while and managed to find their way. These were very well educated and became very wealthy, like billionaire wealthy families because they bought up. So let me just give you an example. And I don't even remember what the name of this family was. But at the end of the day, he ended up with all of the, what do you call them?
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franchise rights for the aviation. He ended up with all of the franchise rights for most of the large automobile manufacturers. He ended up with all of the franchise rights to the telecom. And his family, his brothers, his cousins, they all end up working in all these industries. And so this guy,
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who had lived in the westernized India, went to English schools, basically was planted down in Pakistan, and then he became a contact for the West. And that's the reason why, I mean, there's a whole bunch of reasons.
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You can kind of understand how Pakistan became basically a satellite of the West planted in the Middle East when you start digging into some of these families. And they all intermarried, by the way. A lot of the Pakistanis married both U.S. and English women. Lots of them did. And so there's this melding of the culture.
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And the control of Pakistan that about the only way at this point, and I don't care if it offends somebody, the only way that I can categorize Pakistan is a satellite country of the West. It's so crazy. Okay, that's it. So we're going to open for questions, comments. If I can ask you a question. Sure.
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just create Pakistan or East Pakistan in order to steal the oil from India. I mean, it almost seems there was such a bizarre rearranging of borders from like 1947 to 1970. I mean, it was like they were spontaneously...
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Adding countries and rearranging the borders and rearranging. And why did India allow it? OK, well, yes, they didn't really have a choice. There was a there's this war machine that is set up and people know that at the end of World War Two, that the.
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The reshuffling of the deck was going to be done. And they, I honestly, I just keep going back to this. I honestly think that's the reason why they did the nuclear weapons. This was just another string of terrorism in order to scare the shit out of everybody. So you drop a couple nuclear weapons that you didn't really have to. And I don't buy the bullshit about, oh, it saved lives. That's all just a.
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propagandized psychological warfare pile of crap. So if you look at what that actually did, who's going to stand up to the West after they just saw them obliterate hundreds of thousands of people with a nuclear weapon? And so in the aftermath of World War II, you have these icons now. You have
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you know, Churchill going into it. Obviously, Roosevelt switches over to Truman. But you've got these icons of the West and these weapons that they obviously don't hesitate to use. So who's going to stand up to them? But what I was going to tell you, Bridget, in that window that closed that I'm now pissed off about.
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had, and I'll have to find it and I'll post it later because it's incredible. There is a picture of Iraq in this guy's dissertation that illustrates why they got rid of Kurdistan. So Kurdistan had basically all of the oil. And again, you guys have to keep in mind, you go, oh, well, they didn't have.
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all of those oil wells identified. You're absolutely right. They did not. But behind the scenes, something that I have found out since doing all of this research is these geological survey teams that have been dispatched by the Standard Oil people and the BP people and all of these international syndicate everything people all over the world. They have mapped every inch of the world.
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They flew flights all over South Africa. They knew exactly what looked like where the gold mines would be. And there's identifying factors of what is likely to be a gold mine versus this versus that. Then they would go back on ground and do these safari-type investigations to confirm or deny.
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What they suspected was where all of the resources are. And so the area where Kurdistan, the Kurdish part of Iraq, is exactly where all of the northern oil wells are. And that is all of Iraq's...
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oil, except for one little part that's just north of Kuwait. And of course, that's what they used to get us into the Iraq war initially was the sideways drilling into those. Oh my God, they're still in our oil bullshit. So yeah, that has everything to do with that. Also where it's located, I'm sorry to interrupt, but where it's located and things like that, you know, like where the golden triangle is, you know, it's close to China, you know, Iraq, Iran.
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And that area, like the oil fields that you were talking about, I think that the Kurdish also, there's another area that they just, I don't know what the word is, but they included, I didn't want to say incorporated because it's not a corporation, but they had also included that were not in part of their estimates or whatever. So it's even more, and the oil that's from that area is supposed to be the purest and like, if you want to say like the Rolls Royce of oil around the world. Yeah.
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It'd be interesting. I haven't seen that, but it'd be interesting to know if that's more so than the ones that they hid and killed a million people for in Indonesia. It's crazy, but you can see what drives the whole thing. Obviously, the resources and the international syndicates.
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what appears to be a desperate need to control them. Yeah, I'm going to have to put out another call to action on another book that I found, which I cannot find anywhere. I'm going to post it later. So, seems like it'd be, oh, I can't, go ahead and call on him, Bridget. I can't see anybody's hands. Okay, well, no, I was going to say, Alfred, time on up. I was going to see if he had.
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A question or some info? Hi. Yeah. Hi, Colonel. Hi. I do, but I don't want to get off topic. I mean, it's on topic, but it's not 1968. Well, I guess 1972. I actually have three questions that have been bothering me, and I'm just wondering if I could ask them. Sure. Okay. First one, Nixon, you know, so Nixon, you know, I was listening to you. You were talking, I think, on one of these shows.
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Maybe it was Trump frogs. And you were saying that the second coup, the first one being candidate, second one being Nixon being forced to or being impeached and forced to resign was technically a coup as well. And my question is, you know, he was playing ball. Like I assume like I see him as sort of part of the syndicate having taken.
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you know, the money off the gold standard and all that, or fractional reserve gold standard. And I guess I'm just a little confused. So it was what he, going into China, that was what caused them to turn on him? So he was definitely part of the syndicate. Right. What most people, see, we think in linear things. We think in normal, you know, you're either good or bad. That's not how any of these people think. Right.
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Nixon definitely played on their team. He was Eisenhower's vice president. He helped set all of this up. He knows all about Operation Gladio. He's the guy that got paid by ITT, PepsiCo, and Freeport to overthrow and murder Allende. So he's definitely in this. Right. So why did they turn on him? I don't know that, Alfred. There is a huge question on
57:48
What I have determined is that there are actions that some of them take that may appear to be in concert with the syndicate, but not everybody in the syndicate likes them. And you also have to look at some outside things.
58:18
Nelson, I believe I've got this gut feeling that getting Nelson Rockefeller in as the VP was critical. Nelson Rockefeller had ran for president a couple of different times and was never able to get to that level. But the rearranging of those deck chairs made an entrance for him to occupy.
58:47
That level of authority. Now, I'm going to be digging into Nelson because this is bugged me, Alfred. This has been one of my big it's at the top of my list of unknowns is what did Nixon do to cross that line? Because he was definitely set up by the CIA using the Cuban exiles and they wanted him out of office. Why?
59:17
There are several things that happened that – and it wasn't taking us off the gold standard because taking us off the gold standard was good for them. Yeah, no, that gave them the sky, didn't it? Well, if you understand – and you understand the fact that Nixon gave the M Fund –
59:42
authority to use back to the japanese which was one of the major funds that collected all of the gold that had been being collected out of the philippines on the u.s side you understand that that gave them um like 20 times
1:00:02
the amount of money to do covert operations. And I honestly believe that the whole reason we were taken off the gold standard was because they had retrieved enough of that golden lily treasure in order to use basically like a blank check on all covert operations. And instead of it being $35 an ounce, it became very quickly.
1:00:31
$100 an ounce, $200 an ounce, $300 an ounce when we were taken off the gold standard. And so I think all of that is part of the, and I don't think, again, you know, Nixon was running in 1968. Congress passes the law, allows it in 1968. He gets into office and then he takes us off the gold standard. I don't think any of that was not planned. Right.
1:01:00
Yeah, and that was a big deal. My next question, why was, and I don't know, I don't think you've ever talked about this, but I always wondered about this. Why was the Reagan, why was there an assassination attempt against Reagan on Connecticut Avenue in D.C.? So, I don't know that we will ever know for sure. Okay.
1:01:25
People think, oh, you know, he wasn't one of the guys and this is what got him to be one of the guys. But you can't say that if you know anything about Reagan's past. Right. He was one of the guys. Was definitely one of the guys. Yeah. Now, was there a particular issue that he was not going to go along with them on? And that was his warning shot that he needs to get his shit together because he's not going to have a choice. Yeah, I do.
1:01:54
I think there is something to say, and especially like with Nixon. And we've seen it in other cases where we actually have documents to prove this, where they have assassinated or overthrown a government because they decided to. And Noriega is probably the best example of that. Noriega is one of the guys. But Noriega got a little too big for his britches. Noriega started trying to set up his own independent drug network and got caught.
1:02:24
And he got taken down. And so if any of these people are working side and not going along 100 percent with the program, they get warning shots and then they get shot. That seemed like it was a pretty serious attempt, though. I mean, more than just a warning shot, because, yeah, I mean, he got hit and that other guy got hit. Brady or whatever got hit in the head. And I mean, it looked like they don't.
1:02:58
You're not going to be able to control all factors. Correct. Yeah. But that's what they did to Pope. What is it? John Paul II when they shot him. If you go back and you look at the actual pictures of how close that guy was, the guy was a gray wolf. He was a trained assassin. Like he could shoot you at 400 yards. Okay. He's two feet away from him and doesn't kill him.
1:03:25
That was not meant to kill him. That was meant to warn him because he had started the thing that is absolutely not allowed. And he was sending some of the Vatican profit for money laundering for drugs to Lech Walesa's Polish initiative to get out of the Soviet Union. And in order to make that work, he had started a back channel communication with the Soviet Union. And you're not allowed to talk to him.
1:03:53
So as soon as that back channel communication began to basically grant Poland their independence, because that's where he was from, he gets shot. So, okay. Last question that I had, and this has been bothering me, because given like, you know, I've delved into all the stuff that you've said. I've been listening to a lot of like the Alpha Warrior stuff. I've been reading that book, The Black Sun Never Sets on the Empire. I'm almost through with it.
1:04:24
And so, you know, it starts to make you really think about stuff. And this question is, has the CIA ever done anything positive for this country? No. To your knowledge? No. Yeah. Not even by accident? No. Yeah. That's kind of what I think, too. Not a single. Not a single fucking thing. As a matter of fact, I would go one further. And I have mentioned this and you may have heard this. I think.
1:04:55
their actions has put a target on every single American, whether you even leave the country or not. Yeah, I think so too. But, but more importantly, if you were to go and actually had, you know, like 2020 vision and you could see every aspect of something, I would venture to say that there is a lot of dead military that were supposedly
1:05:27
you know, killed in this, that, or the other accident or whatever, while we're living in a foreign country on assignment there, that actually had to do with something that the CIA perpetrated, pissed people off, and we get caught in the crosshairs. And I think there's probably plenty of Americans not being in the military that that same thing has happened.
1:05:53
I mean, if you go to, I'm actually shocked it's not more. I'm actually shocked it's not an everyday thing that happens. Because if you go to countries like we've delved into, Chile and Paraguay and Uruguay, and you read, especially Nicaragua, you read what not just the Cuban exiles or these trained terrorists or
1:06:23
But some of our own military has done. I mean, Vietnam's a good example. You know, some of the crazy, crazy, awful things that have been done to people with our weapons, with our money, that I'm actually shocked that there's not more of us harmed going into these countries.
1:06:49
99% of the people going into these countries have no idea what we did there because it's all hidden from us. So they're literally setting us up every day. Every day you get on an airplane and you go to a foreign country that the CIA has done some nasty shit in, you are literally putting a price on your head and you don't even know it if you don't know anything about any of this stuff. Jeez. Well, thank you very much. Sure. All along, go ahead.
1:07:22
Yeah, I just wanted to comment on the possible reasons for getting rid of Nixon by the CIA, which is definitely open to discussion. There's many big reasons out there, but two of the ones that I've been focusing on recently involve, one, a conflict that was possibly going on within the...
1:07:52
Upper echelons of the U.S. government regarding Iran and Saudi Arabia and the other one regarding policy towards the Soviet Union. Just briefly regarding the first one, I would urge folks to take a look at a book if they get a chance called Oil Kings. I can't I think the last name of the author is Cooper. It's just and it primarily is focusing on like 73, 74, 75 and 76.
1:08:22
that seems to have been going on in the Nixon and Ford administrations between advocates of like a full Saudi Arabia tilt as opposed to an Iran tilt. And Cooper makes the argument, I guess, that, you know, Nixon and debatably Kissinger, although you can never tell with that one because he's got a foot everywhere, was more leaning towards staying with the Shah.
1:08:52
And again, this is right. This is about two years before the CIA knew but did not tell Jimmy Carter that the Shah had cancer because they knew that by 76 or possibly early 77. But anyway, the other part led by which Cooper makes the case is led by Simon, the Treasury secretary in the I think it was was it Nixon, possibly Nixon and Ford White House. Definitely Ford.
1:09:22
no, definitely Nixon, I'm sorry, was more partial towards a full Saudi tilt, which sounds kind of counterintuitive a little bit to me because I kind of already, I see the JFK assassination as also tilting towards Saudi Arabia as opposed to Egypt, who wanted to share the oil, right? And the Rockefellers of this world didn't want pan-Arabism in Nasser, so they got rid of him. And JFK was tilting towards Nasser.
1:09:52
So that's one possible reason, disagreements, I think, about Saudi Arabia versus Iran. But in another one, you know, which which and that deals with the entire international oil market. Right. Those are market centers for the whole, you know, world oil economy and also for U.S. banks who are later going to process Saudi's oil, you know, through Chase Bank and whatnot.
1:10:23
Soviet Union policy. Now, it seems like for Nixon's detente to happen with China, right? He's got to kind of like have a detente with Soviet Union too. Because like, think about it. These are the three big players. They're all scoping each other. And if you're going to change policy towards one, you're going to... Uh-oh, we lost him. All along we lost you. Yeah, take him down and try to bring him back up. Some disagreements.
1:11:01
Oh, so hello. All along, we lost you for a minute. Are you having a bad connection or is it that you're getting answered by X? Oh, yeah. Sorry. Phone call was interrupting. Yeah. So I was trying to say in too many words, I'm almost done here, I promise, that basically I think that Nixon and Kissinger were initially cool with detenting the Soviet Union.
1:11:30
possibly on a temporary basis, in order to facilitate the detente with China. Once the detente with China happened, I think there may have been disagreement about whether to freeze up the Cold War again with the Soviet Union, which is what CIA Director H.W. Bush did in 1976 with his Plan B re-estimate on Soviet nukes, which already starts freezing up the Cold War again in 1976 with H.W. Bush.
1:12:00
leading to Reagan's, you know, refreezing the ice cube, metaphorically speaking, with the Soviet Union and ending detente with Russia. So I think in short, whether or not to refreeze the Soviet Union ice cube, in other words, go back to old hardcore Cold War policy and end detente with Russia, may have been a difference that also was a big cause of Nixon's, of the CIA getting Nixon.
1:12:28
There are many candidates there, so yeah. Yeah. I'm still working on trying to ferret my way through what would be a smoking gun, but thus far I've not found any. You can find quibbling differences, but I have not found any that to me would warrant that drastic.
1:13:00
of a step. But I do keep coming back to the shuffling of the deck and how it occurred. And first them trying to get... Because if they just wanted to get Nixon out, they could have just got Nixon out. They could have just did what they did. But they took Agnew out first. And everything about it was very strategic. So...
1:13:28
The taking of Agnew out to me makes it bigger than just Nixon. It was because they wanted what they ended up with of Ford and Nelson Rockefeller. And once you find out the backdrop as we go through Nelson Rockefeller specifically and all of his shenanigans in
1:13:58
Latin America, I think we're going to find an answer as to why it happened. And I'm not sure that it was just isolated to Nixon himself. Yeah, I agree completely because if you think of it, the period from the JFK assassination to its connected Watergate is, you know,
1:14:28
The big unifying idea that I see in this period is, you know, the national security state, name change to deep state, replacing the three branches as the real government. And so you're absolutely right. It's definitely not merely about Nixon or even merely about JFK. You know, there were huge policy differences between CIA and JFK, but it's also about what I would call the
1:14:57
creation of CIA autopilot government, which is kind of what I see us on right now. Well, absent Trump. Go ahead, Matt. Matt? Oh, sorry. Sorry, I was trying to find my way back to the app. Hey, Colonel, Bridget, Stella, good to see you guys again. Yep, yep, I see that.
1:15:31
What difference does it make, Colonel, that they took, and forgive me if you've already been over this, what difference does it make that they took out Spiro Agnew and not, and Nixon as well? Like, what difference would it have made if they just took out Nixon? Because they would have got Agnew. So if you just take Nixon out, you get Agnew. And Agnew's not going to necessarily be as controlled as Nixon in who he selects as the vice president.
1:16:01
Ford was completely owned by the establishment. Ford was the guy they stuck on the Warren Commission because he's adult. He was completely under their control. So you have to get Ford in there first so that Nixon, when you do him, you're going to move Ford up and then Ford would be able to pick whoever they want to come in, which was Nelson Rockefeller. So then the Ford Rockefeller.
1:16:31
last two years, basically, is what they were working with to do what? And I have not went back and looked at what laws were passed during those two years or however long it was, that period of time, what international coups happened during that specific period of time, because there was some reason that
1:16:58
Nelson Rockefeller had to be there. I don't know what that is yet. But there was some reason. And you could not have gotten him in without getting Agnew out first in order to then get Ford in and then you do Nixon. Because otherwise, Nixon had just won the biggest landslide election ever. Re-election. Correct.
1:17:26
Re-election, yeah. He got one of the biggest election routes in modern times, and along with getting us out of Vietnam, he was on his way to a historic presidency, and it turned out to be historic for all the wrong reasons. So whatever that was, they had an agenda, and us trying to figure out what that agenda is, I'm sure we will figure it out, because we're not letting go of this.
1:17:58
But, yeah, it was done a particular way. And we have to understand that the way it happened was for a purpose. And we're going to find out what it is. Carrie, go ahead. Yeah, I want to go back to the resources. I'm wondering if you think it would be a good idea to have like a map that.
1:18:28
lays all of that out, like in terms of what Operation Gladio has done, in terms of where they've been and what the resource was they were grabbing. So we're working on a map. We're working on an interactive map that if you put your cursor over it, it will pop up like a date.
1:18:58
The companies, the international syndicate players that were involved in the coup as we find them out. So, yes, I do think it would be extremely helpful to have a map. And I have a couple of people that know way more about that kind of crap than I do who is working on that. Because virtually every country, to include our own.
1:19:30
is going to be on the map. There's almost no country that hasn't in some way, shape, or form been cued by the international syndicate at some point post-World War II, unfortunately. Yeah, we should put on the map, as well as oil and all of the other things, we should put human as resource.
1:20:01
Because I think they go in some places just to get some slaves like they did before. Also, on the Nixon thing, I just want to posit something that we ran into at Occupy Wall Street, which was that they don't like this when you delegitimize the system. And I'm not saying that this is absolutely what they are trying to do.
1:20:32
when they have an agenda, they're doing a lot of shit at one time. But I think, you know, there was all that stuff happening with, you know, the Rand Corporation being basically the leaks from there, you know. So, you know, they had to, like,
1:21:03
clean it up kind of thing. And them being legitimate is so super important as cover, hyper important. Right. I agree. Matt, go ahead. Matt, did we lose you? Alfred, go ahead. Oh, thanks. So Nelson, wasn't he just really directly involved in the building of the World Trade Centers?
1:21:44
Wasn't that his baby? I swear I read something or saw some crackpot thing on YouTube that he was basically drawing too much attention to this New World Order concept with building these towers the way he did these behemoths that were filled with asbestos. And that he was actually assassinated, and probably by his own family. I don't know how true that is, but this is stuff I've heard.
1:22:14
Do you know how Nelson Rockefeller died? He died of a heart attack having sex with some woman who disappeared. That was like 20 or 25 years old. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I forget her name. But she disappeared. She was gone out of the public eye after that. And that was part of why I think people suspected. And I think they cremated his body like really quickly. I remember.
1:22:43
So I don't know. Boy, that's not suspicious, right? Yeah, that's a good one, isn't it? It is very interesting. I'm going to wrap it whole of any one of them, but particularly Nelson Rockefeller. Yeah. But he's like the sole guy.
1:23:11
When you start looking at Latin America, his name comes up over and over and over again. You can't, like, you know, not pay attention. Colonel, if I could just interject for a second on that. I think Nelson is absolutely key in the development of the, you know, world global government because the big, you know, qualm for the elites.
1:23:40
And CIA was basically, how can you have, you know, this U.N. thingy while still maintaining your control over like the shit that you're still bossing over directly, like mostly. And so Nelson Rockefeller, you know, as you mentioned, his bailiwick was South America. And so he if you look at the formation of the U.N., like at San Francisco Conference of 45.
1:24:09
He is like the one with the tricky question. And this overlaps also with Operation Paperclip with all the Nazis going to Argentina and whatnot and other places in South America. He's like, Argentina had never declared war on Hitler. And it's like, so it was this kind of a tricky wicket, as it were, for U.S. diplomats, because like, how can they get Argentina and like a unified South America into the U.N.?
1:24:39
without having a situation where the U.N. could just, like, go around the back of the U.S. and go to the U.N. against U.S. domination of South America. And so Nelson Rockefeller was really the key guy there in terms of having your cake and eating it too, namely having a U.N. where the U.S. could still dominate, you know, South America absolutely.
1:25:08
He was critical in the development of the OAS in a way that the Organization of American States could still be very pliable and controlled by the U.S. and, again, independent of largely the South American population. And it's kind of interesting. Well, yeah, the 1948 meeting where the OAS was going to be formed was in Colombia, and there was a key assassination led by...
1:25:38
of this Gaetan there in 1948. And the guy who was covering it as a journalist was none other than Gabriel Garcia Marquez, author of A Hundred Years of Solitude. So he later writes a novel about how an assassination and a massacre was, it's fictional, but it's about how a whole country learns to forget and becomes an entirely gigantic forgetting machine. And I think it's not just about...
1:26:06
If you know what I'm saying, it's interesting that he started that as a journalist covering a CIA coup and a key CIA coup for Nelson's people in South America. Yeah, I think actually the the World Trade Center focused primarily on David Rockefeller, not Nelson. But the U.N. ground was formerly part of the Rockefeller owned.
1:26:34
real estate in you know the Manhattan New York City area so they're intimately involved both as a family and then Nelson kind of focused on South America in establishing all of the world governance that you know and of course they were a huge part of Chase which
1:27:04
is part of this whole international syndicate as well. So they're definitely in the middle of everything. Matt, go ahead. I promise I won't have my mic muted this time. But anyway, Colonel, I did have a question for you, and I thought I'd get to it the other night when I had you on, but I didn't.
1:27:33
I remember hearing stories earlier this year about gold migrating from the West to the East, where we here in the West have less and less gold reserves, and basically China and our adversaries have it all. Do you know anything on that? Well, it depends on what period of time you're talking about. If you're talking about— Now. Talking about now.
1:28:03
A hundred tons of gold. China's got like 30,000 of it or something like that. I don't know how much gold we do have because there's never been an audit of the gold that we do have. I don't know if you – I wrote a whole paper on that. If you go to my sub stack, you can read the ridiculous attempt, and I would put attempt in quotations.
1:28:31
Of anybody ever trying to validate the amount of gold the United States has, because it's a joke. Every time somebody gets a spur under their saddle that says, oh, my God, we've got to figure this out. You have ridiculous shit like.
1:28:48
Oh, well, we'll do one. It's going to take 10 years. We're only going to do a section of the storage facility once a year. So that would give them plenty of time year by year by year to move the shit around. So you'd never be able to actually validate the amount of gold we have. So I honestly, anything about the amount of gold the United States has are lying because they have no idea how much gold we do have.
1:29:12
And the Federal Reserve, for their part, won't tell Congress because Congress tried to ask them and they said, screw you, we're not telling you. At least that's what Jerome Powell said. Jerome Powell said, I referred him to the New York City office and the New York City office would probably say, screw you, we're not telling you. But in reality, it should not be the Federal Reserve because they're not even government that tells us how much gold we do have. There should be somebody in the government.
1:29:43
that has responsibility for the amount of government gold there is. So the Federal Reserve, as a private entity, in backing up the production of dollars, may have their own staff. And they don't have to because they're not a public organization, which is the reason why.
1:30:12
Congress are a bunch of dumbasses forever allowing their responsibility of being in charge of the money supply to be handled by a private entity. Again, there is nothing about Congress today that is constitutional. They will not pass a budget. It's their only fucking job besides control of the currency, which they gave away 100 years ago.
1:30:39
So they have no job. They're just collecting a bunch of paychecks. Stellar, go ahead. Yeah, because like the comics hasn't, I don't think it's ever been audited.
1:30:53
Go back a few years. Whoever was just asking that, go back a few years and look at the nickel crisis that happened. It was out of England. I think it was the London something. There's stuff there that they do the nickel. So a few years ago, because of the shorts that were coming in, they got busted. So there was a forced audit that was done. I think it was the London exchange or something like that, a metal exchange.
1:31:22
or something. But anyway, it had to get audited. It forced an audit to be done. And they found bags and bags. I think it was 150 tons that was supposed to be like their reserves that were bags of rocks.
1:31:37
So kind of keep an eye on what happened with that because that's what's going to end up happening with the silver. You know, people are so focused on the gold, but it's the silver that is also, if not more so, that is manipulated and the shenanigans that go on with that. So what's really going on right now is a big squeeze on silver because that is manipulated and they have stuff that's foreseen as like.
1:32:02
Because of the naked shorts, that is like a year's supply, two years supply that's way out there. The paper is what is being from the stock exchange and stuff like that. So keep an eye on what's going on with the silver market, because if they force an audit to be done, that's huge. And again, the Chevron deference, these things like the SEC, who's supposed to be overseeing things, they're not.
1:32:29
It's not for the people. It's against the people and letting the shenanigans of these lies and naked shorts and paper ounces. It's so overshot. And then also look in the last four years about what happened in Australia where something similar like this happened as well. Sorry. There's also stuff about the manipulation of silver. And I think you guys kind of covered this the other day.
1:32:56
When it comes to the Silver Institute and things of that nature, that's a whole rabbit hole. I think Dr. Kirk Elliott's covered this on several media hits he's done. Well, the reason why I was saying go back to the Australian Perth Mint. It was like four years ago, five years ago. Because according to our constitution, the mint is supposed to provide.
1:33:23
Whatever the demand is for our silver eagles, that's classified as currency according to our Constitution. So they're supposed to keep up with the demand if the people want it. So there was such a high demand that the U.S. got bamboozled. There's also specifications and protocols that are followed.
1:33:41
for the eagles that are sold here in the United States by the U.S. Mint. They have to come from a commonwealth or from something of the United States type of thing. Well, we were short. So we ended up ordering silver from China. Well, when we got the order, it was counterfeit. It was lead or something like that. It was a big scandal years ago. Well, because of the squeeze that was going on, we ended up getting silver from
1:34:09
Australia. So Australia let us have their silver so that we could kind of keep up with it.
1:34:14
Well, in the meantime, their stuff started to collapse. So similar to what's going on within our stock market where, you know, you can, you know, all these paper ounces, these people thought that they were buying silver for their government to hold. And it was paper. It wasn't real. They were overselling that one ounce. So there could have been 100 or 200 people that were buying or banking that one ounce that their whatever their retirements had set.
1:34:43
up. And so they got caught with their hands down too. So if you start reviewing some of the things that happened in these other countries, and it hasn't been that long, it's only been in the last six or seven years at the most. And if you start searching that, you'll start seeing, oh my goodness, oh my goodness, oh my goodness. And you'll start seeing the patterns and kind of like what you were talking about, you know, like in 68, what was going on, not only with what you were talking about, but what was going on in gold in the financial markets here. You know, I put
1:35:11
two different articles in the Purple Pill. But it's almost like what's happening now is a reverse of what was happening. What they were putting in is now becoming a reverse, even to the point of back then the highest prices for gold that they wanted to manipulate and things like that. So it was just a tie around, or I guess as Trump says, the weave. Sorry. Is the colonel there? Carrie, go ahead. Hey, yeah. So the place where we were,
1:36:01
occupying and occupied wall street was wall street but the federal reserve is right there so we um protested a lot there and it's a fucking crazy place you can't imagine like it has checkpoints and shit and like weird metal things that come out of the street to protect it in case blah blah and it's really if you know anything about the geology of manhattan it's
1:36:31
manhattan is a mountain that was a mountain range that was covered over by the ice age but um so you can dig really far down and there's gold there and they that's one of the places where they store other people's gold and um the federal reserve is crazy like it's insanity um
1:36:59
And we tried really hard to press up against it, but it's so fucking difficult. It's so hard. Oof. Okay. I was just going to tell Stellar that nickel shortage that happened there in London, it was like 600.5 million.
1:37:30
That was missing. Tons. Yeah, because it was tons. I was undervaluating it. But yeah, I remembered that. That's why I was trying to use some of those as references of what's going to end up happening. Yeah, it was a lot. Once, like Colonel Towner said, you know, once we get them to do the audits, that's going to be a big shocker, like Colonel Towner said. Right. Anybody that's holding silver, I know some have said silver could outnumber gold.
1:37:59
I mean, that would blow my mind, but I've heard rumors of that. I know I've gotten plenty of physical silver just in case. They're right about that. All along, go ahead. Yes, Stella's comment on the nickel reserves brought to mind a scandal that was covered.
1:38:30
During the JFK administration, there was something that was known as the stockpiling scandal. And it involved like the Pentagon stockpiling of strategic commodities, one of which was nickel, which is, by the way, I learned is nicknamed the war metal because of its use in military production. But what's interesting about this scandal is.
1:39:00
So JFK, you know, was basically saying that the Pentagon and their cronies were manipulating like stockpile of commodities in order to impact like the prices of the stock of the commodities. Okay. And it did get actually, you know, unlike today, something like this, we would never hear about it.
1:39:27
But it did get actually significant stories in the mainstream press. And one of the key reporters, I might add, that covered this in the Washington Post was Larry Stern or Lawrence Stern, as his byline sometimes goes. And that's a guy who, again, Sterling Seagrave said he believed he was murdered. And again, Sterling Seagrave worked at the Washington Post in the early 1960s and believed that both Phil Graham was murdered.
1:39:54
And I've gotten a lot of collaboration on that since looking into it. And also Larry Stern, who was basically the main intelligence beat writer for The Washington Post at the time of the JFK assassination. And his articles are a woozy, as it were. But, yeah, a lot of them related to the strategic stockpiling scandal of the Pentagon that was impacting global prices. And on a side possibly related note.
1:40:24
The morning of the JFK assassination in the Wall Street Journal, there was a gigantic scandal that became known as the, I think it's called the Great Salad Oil Scandal of 1963. Now, that's kind of like a friendly euphemism, but basically it was, again, a massive international commodity scandal that broke literally.
1:40:52
in the wall street journal on november 22nd 1963 um so there seems to have been you know there's always going to be these commodity schemes going on the question is when is the public going to know about them and it requires you know to some extent a president who's capable of using the bully pulpit against these this kind of you know pardon me deep state shenanigans and uh
1:41:22
That may have been shot to death in late 1963. But anyway, yeah, the commodities thing is definitely interesting also in looking at yet one more gigantic reason why JFK was seen as an enemy of the deep state. Yeah, I agree. Cousin It, hey, I see you in there. What? What's going on? Nothing.
1:41:56
The internet's going to break. I know, right? We miss you. Oh, right. Right. I'm sure you'll find another bitch. No worries. There's plenty of us out there. Ain't no bitch like you. Ain't no one like our cousin. That's true. That is true. I am not quite right. I totally get it. So I did miss most of it.
1:42:22
But I see we're talking about Pakistan, the invented made-up country. Yep. Cool. Well, we were actually talking about the additional made-up country of East Pakistan, which is now Bangladesh, too. Right. Well, yeah. Yeah, we can add that to the list of the bullshit-o-meter stuff. Yep. Bye.
1:42:48
These people had to feel like they were stuck in a giant spell game at some point. Well, yeah, but I mean, look at, okay, so has everybody followed Moldova lately? Right, so we all know that Samantha Power went to Moldova last year and started, you know, with the USAID crap. So there's like 17 million Moldovans in Russia that are, you know, on like work visas.
1:43:17
And Moldova is up for elections. And isn't it interesting that there are no places to vote? Last year, they had like 14 or 17 different locations for all the Moldovan citizens to be able to vote in their election. You know how many they have this year? Two. Now, why would that possibly be? And there was Samantha Bauer last year showing up.
1:43:48
And there's the IMF loans. They're waiting in line. They're going to vote. They're not stupid. But can you imagine only having two voter locations for like 17 million or 1.7 million? I forget what it was. I have no idea. But millions of people are on work visas from Moldova, and there's only two places to vote. Because unlike here, they don't do mail-in.
1:44:18
They actually have polling stations for them set up in Russia. Because at one point, Moldova was part of Russia, so no big thing. But yeah, you can thank Samantha Power for that. So it'll be very interesting to see when the queer parades start in Moldova. Because you know that's coming. Yeah. Well, they have to let the gender studies contract first, but it's on its way. Stellar, go ahead.
1:44:48
I have a question. So the East Pakistan is now, but where it's located is so close to like Burma and, you know, the different Malaysian places or that other country.
1:45:01
There's a lot of really precious stones that are there too, like emerald, rubies, and things like that. Is that stuff that they would also try to steal resources from as well besides the oil? And I'm sure that there's probably a lot of gold. I mean, just like the United States has crap loads of gold too, because whenever they've had those pineapple expresses go through California, there are chunks of gold that's in people's yards. So just was questioning that as well.
1:45:29
So, obviously, it's always about the resources, right? And Bangladesh has quite a few natural resources. They have, like, it's not quite half, but a lot of forest with some very, very, very valuable wood. They also have...
1:45:58
natural gas and we were looking at this a while back a war hamster and i are going to do a show on bangladesh at some point and so um uh cousin it and um bridget did a whole bunch of research on this for me and in anticipation of that but it just keeps getting pushed off um so maybe now um let's see if he's in here we can embarrass him
1:46:22
enough to get it scheduled so that we can actually talk about this in depth because there's a lot of very interesting things they're very agricultural as well um and we know that most of the things like they're a big sugar cane uh producer and you know sugars like gold so there's just there was a whole bunch of different aspects of they also um have a lot of um
1:46:49
the the fisheries that um make a lot of money based on the harvest there so yeah i i didn't see um in looking that they add a lot of not that they don't but um again so much of this stuff we don't even know because they won't even release these geology geology studies
1:47:15
They keep them like secret until they can gain control of countries. And then they start releasing them. And the only way you can actually track the resources is by looking at where the mining companies show up. And so because they just couped Bangladesh, now would be a good time to start looking at what mining companies show up there to know exactly what they do have. Because I was just wondering about that, because I do know that like Burma, which is right next to those areas that you're talking about.
1:47:44
you know, some of the most precious rubies and sapphires are from that area. The Burmese rubies, you've got the Ceylon sapphires. I mean, there's a lot of, I mean, so that's why I was wondering, and I'm sure that some of these, you know, stones would be used for probably technologies as well. Just was curious. And, you know, and they talk about, you know, like in India, you know, I don't know if that's where the big, you know, that diamond came from that England took.
1:48:14
But it was supposed – like that was one of their things. So I'm just wondering if there's diamonds and stuff like that that's in India besides the oil. And it just seems like all over the planet and especially these places that were – they make the country sound like they're destitute and desolate. And I never thought – I had no idea that the people that were there were married to Westerners from England or the United States and very –
1:48:42
very western in that regards when you would i always thought that they were you know not so much so so that's just you know it's kind of eye eye opening that's all of this for me um and again you know supposedly well educated in the geography and the international play
1:49:03
of all of these different countries having a master's degree that's in it. And then you figure out once you start looking at stuff with Gladio glasses on, the entire world looks completely different because you begin to look at different things, not just what has been told to you and you memorized because supposedly that was the, you know, God's honest truth, only to find out that it's all just a pack of lies. And I have one of those other...
1:49:33
is that in each of these countries, there is groomed this echelon of elite. And it is through marriage and education that they develop them. And I just found another example today of the importing of foreign students into the United States to be used as targets for the CIA.
1:50:00
to basically groom while they're here co-op them and then they return to their home countries and they're used as spies inside of their home countries and they are put on these tracks in order to be you know a zuckerberg in their home country using assets of the cia
1:50:19
And then once they buy up a whole bunch of whatever assets it is that the CIA wants them to do, they live off their 5% of a foundation that they set up while the CIA gets to manipulate the rest of the money. And that's, in fact, exactly what we found out with Abedi. They all have to set up these foundations. And then those foundations are never used for what they say they're going to be used for.
1:50:48
It's a crazy circle. Cousin Nick, go ahead. Then we'll go to Sunshine. No, somebody had mentioned the sugar being like gold, which is really kind of ironic because, yes, it is. As a matter of fact, that's how the Spanish-American War in Cuba started. That's why the Marines were sent down to Cuba in the first place in the 1800s. And that whole bullshit about remember the Maine, that was the false flag.
1:51:19
Obviously, somebody blew up the main in the harbor in Havana and blamed the Spanish for it. And it was never the Spanish. It was solely to take over Cuba for the sugar and for the oil. And they called the sugar the white gold and they called the oil the black gold. So it kind of rang some bells. So that's all. But yeah, remember the main bullshit? This has been going on.
1:51:48
A long time, guys. A long time. Same reason that we took over Hawaii. There was not a pineapple there. It was all about sugar cane. And it's the same thing. Exactly. And it's the same thing you just said, how they marry into the, you know, within, and that's what they did in Hawaii, too, just like you guys are just saying. Yep. Sunshine, go ahead. Yeah, this is kind of a speculative question for you, Colonel, but do you think,
1:52:18
like the United States, like just like with all of our land, do you think we could be much more resources? You know, we could have a lot more resources here than they've ever told us, especially having like all these national parks and everything, you know, like the Bachman oil shelf. I mean, that was found just not too long ago.
1:52:46
I have land up there. I'm still waiting for them to ask me to drill. You know, I own the mineral rights. But I'm like thinking like all these national parks and all these other places, we could really be much more mineral developed than we ever thought we were. So I tell you 100%, this is not speculative at all. We are. The problem that we have, again, is our lying government.
1:53:17
Part of the realization of how this operation works is that they create the national park system, as we found out in the World Wildlife Fund, and they use these national police forces called park rangers or whatever you want to call them, and they are there to keep the citizenry off.
1:53:43
from ever discovering anything that may actually be there. And I would argue that who set up that national park system that it was all based on geology studies, just like the rest of the world. So there...
1:54:02
Had to have been at some point in the United States, these same little peons going all around in airplanes looking for rock formations that look like gold or whatever it is, whatever aspects they look for in order to determine where all of the uranium is and all this other stuff. And they set up these national park systems. Everything that I have told you applies here.
1:54:27
It is just a matter of being able to find the documentation that would, where we have documentation, thanks on whistleblowers and everything else in other countries, there's not anything that we have found to date that they did there they haven't done here. And so, but here's the problem that you have, Sunshine, is if we were, and you're seeing it play out with oil right now, if we were to use our own,
1:54:57
We can't be manipulated by foreign wars of other places. So, and there is no better, and I just keep harping on this because there's no better example. If you look at what they purposely did with the chip industry in placing it in Taiwan, of 190 countries, we're going to put it on an island off the coast of China.
1:55:24
And the reason that they do that, and while that one was on purpose, this is the same true with natural resources. They will stop our own, just like we gave up the whole chip industry that was in Texas. It wasn't in Taiwan. It was perfectly safe in Texas, but we can't leave it there because we control that. We have to put it somewhere where we can then use that as a manipulative psyops to justify.
1:55:53
additional war and more dead bodies. So the same is true with resources. We would have never had the bullshit 1970s oil problem had we been using our own. We would never have gone to Iraq if we would have been using our own. The resource manipulation is part of this overall
1:56:20
international syndicate play in order to keep the military industrial complex, keep the strategy of tension, keep the chaos going so they can control us. There is no reason to believe that we can't use our resources to the fullest extent possible and negotiate on a fair basis with other countries the exchange of resources.
1:56:48
But that doesn't allow them to manipulate us. So I'm just going to jump in real quick because of the Balkan formation. Not for nothing, Sunshine, you know who else owns that property up there that just happens to be near the military bases? Why, that would be China sitting on the Balkan formation. That's why they bought all the farmland in that area. The military base happens to be a bonus.
1:57:21
I mean, I have like 490 acres up there myself and I will never sell. You know, I mean, I've been approached before, but no way will I sell. I own the mineral rights and I'm like, you know, I'm waiting for the day they knock on my door and they want to drill. But until then, I leased it out for farming. That land was in my family since the 1800s. There you go. That's awesome. Okay.
1:57:58
That is really cool. Yep. We're at six o'clock and I need to jump off here so I can eat dinner. Carrie, real quick. Yeah, you might want to put your property in a trust if they can get at you. It already is. Well, okay. Thank God. Yep. All right.
1:58:27
So, everybody, thanks for being here. We'll be back tomorrow, 4 o'clock. I'll be on the pond. Right, Stellar? 8 o'clock? I already saw the link, so yeah. Okay. All right. 8 o'clock, pond. See you guys later.
Entities here
Richard Nixon20Nelson Rockefeller13Pakistan11China10Iran8United States8India8Soviet Union8Gerald Ford6Moldova4Spiro Agnew4Operation Gladio4Saudi Arabia4U.S. State Department3Ronald Reagan3United Kingdom3Federal Reserve3Chase Manhattan Bank2National Park Service2Cuba2World Trade Center Commission2London Metal Exchange2Explosion of the USS Maine2Spain2Sterling Seagrave2Larry Stern2Agha Hasan Abedi2Vietnam2Burma2Samantha Power2Pope John Paul II2Australia2Henry Kissinger2The Washington Post2Kurdistan2Spanish-American War1Standard Oil1Catholic Church1Grey Wolves1U.S. Navy1
Claims made here
Operation Gladio carried_out_attack
Pakistan host_asserted
▶ 43:35
“storylines that wrap themselves around operation gladio and i like i said i ordered this book about the uprising in pakistan because i do want to know who the players are because of the spillover late…”
Agha Hasan Abedi member_of
London banking system host_asserted
▶ 45:28
“Some of the banks that they worked in were subsidiaries of the London banking system, which is why Abedi ends up taking his bank and setting it up in London, because he had worked in the banking syste…”
Standard Oil spied_on
Kurdistan host_asserted
▶ 52:19
“all of those oil wells identified. You're absolutely right. They did not. But behind the scenes, something that I have found out since doing all of this research is these geological survey teams that …”
BP spied_on
Kurdistan host_asserted
▶ 52:19
“all of those oil wells identified. You're absolutely right. They did not. But behind the scenes, something that I have found out since doing all of this research is these geological survey teams that …”
Richard Nixon paid
Freeport-McMoRan host_asserted
▶ 57:18
“Nixon definitely played on their team. He was Eisenhower's vice president. He helped set all of this up. He knows all about Operation Gladio. He's the guy that got paid by ITT, PepsiCo, and Freeport t…”
Richard Nixon overthrew
Salvador Allende host_asserted
▶ 57:18
“Nixon definitely played on their team. He was Eisenhower's vice president. He helped set all of this up. He knows all about Operation Gladio. He's the guy that got paid by ITT, PepsiCo, and Freeport t…”
Richard Nixon assassinated
Salvador Allende host_asserted
▶ 57:18
“Nixon definitely played on their team. He was Eisenhower's vice president. He helped set all of this up. He knows all about Operation Gladio. He's the guy that got paid by ITT, PepsiCo, and Freeport t…”
Richard Nixon paid
PepsiCo host_asserted
▶ 57:18
“Nixon definitely played on their team. He was Eisenhower's vice president. He helped set all of this up. He knows all about Operation Gladio. He's the guy that got paid by ITT, PepsiCo, and Freeport t…”
Richard Nixon reassigned
M-Fund host_asserted
▶ 59:17
“There are several things that happened that – and it wasn't taking us off the gold standard because taking us off the gold standard was good for them. Yeah, no, that gave them the sky, didn't it? Well…”
Grey Wolves attempted_assassination_of
Pope John Paul II host_asserted
▶ 1:02:58
“You're not going to be able to control all factors. Correct. Yeah. But that's what they did to Pope. What is it? John Paul II when they shot him. If you go back and you look at the actual pictures of …”
Catholic Church laundered_money_for
Lech Wałęsa host_asserted
▶ 1:03:25
“That was not meant to kill him. That was meant to warn him because he had started the thing that is absolutely not allowed. And he was sending some of the Vatican profit for money laundering for drugs…”
Pope John Paul II spied_on
Soviet Union host_asserted
▶ 1:03:25
“That was not meant to kill him. That was meant to warn him because he had started the thing that is absolutely not allowed. And he was sending some of the Vatican profit for money laundering for drugs…”
Richard Nixon member_of
Rockefeller Foundation caller_asserted
▶ 1:09:52
“So that's one possible reason, disagreements, I think, about Saudi Arabia versus Iran. But in another one, you know, which which and that deals with the entire international oil market. Right. Those a…”
George H.W. Bush spied_on
Soviet Union caller_asserted
▶ 1:11:30
“possibly on a temporary basis, in order to facilitate the detente with China. Once the detente with China happened, I think there may have been disagreement about whether to freeze up the Cold War aga…”
Gerald Ford member_of
Warren Commission host_asserted
▶ 1:16:01
“Ford was completely owned by the establishment. Ford was the guy they stuck on the Warren Commission because he's adult. He was completely under their control. So you have to get Ford in there first s…”
Nelson Rockefeller involved_in
World Trade Center Commission host_asserted
▶ 1:21:03
“clean it up kind of thing. And them being legitimate is so super important as cover, hyper important. Right. I agree. Matt, go ahead. Matt, did we lose you? Alfred, go ahead. Oh, thanks. So Nelson, wa…”
Nelson Rockefeller involved_in
Organization of American States host_asserted
▶ 1:25:08
“He was critical in the development of the OAS in a way that the Organization of American States could still be very pliable and controlled by the U.S. and, again, independent of largely the South Amer…”
Gabriel Garcia Marquez wrote
One Hundred Years of Solitude host_asserted
▶ 1:25:38
“of this Gaetan there in 1948. And the guy who was covering it as a journalist was none other than Gabriel Garcia Marquez, author of A Hundred Years of Solitude. So he later writes a novel about how an…”
Gabriel Garcia Marquez covered
Jorge Eliécer Gaitán host_asserted
▶ 1:25:38
“of this Gaetan there in 1948. And the guy who was covering it as a journalist was none other than Gabriel Garcia Marquez, author of A Hundred Years of Solitude. So he later writes a novel about how an…”
David Rockefeller involved_in
World Trade Center Commission host_asserted
▶ 1:26:06
“If you know what I'm saying, it's interesting that he started that as a journalist covering a CIA coup and a key CIA coup for Nelson's people in South America. Yeah, I think actually the the World Tra…”
Jerome Powell stated
Federal Reserve host_asserted
▶ 1:29:12
“And the Federal Reserve, for their part, won't tell Congress because Congress tried to ask them and they said, screw you, we're not telling you. At least that's what Jerome Powell said. Jerome Powell …”
U.S. Navy received_from
Australia host_asserted
▶ 1:33:41
“for the eagles that are sold here in the United States by the U.S. Mint. They have to come from a commonwealth or from something of the United States type of thing. Well, we were short. So we ended up…”
U.S. Navy ordered_from
China host_asserted
▶ 1:33:41
“for the eagles that are sold here in the United States by the U.S. Mint. They have to come from a commonwealth or from something of the United States type of thing. Well, we were short. So we ended up…”
Sterling Seagrave believed
Larry Stern host_asserted
▶ 1:39:27
“But it did get actually significant stories in the mainstream press. And one of the key reporters, I might add, that covered this in the Washington Post was Larry Stern or Lawrence Stern, as his bylin…”
Sterling Seagrave believed
Philip Graham host_asserted
▶ 1:39:27
“But it did get actually significant stories in the mainstream press. And one of the key reporters, I might add, that covered this in the Washington Post was Larry Stern or Lawrence Stern, as his bylin…”
Great Salad Oil Scandal reported_by
The Wall Street Journal host_asserted
▶ 1:40:24
“The morning of the JFK assassination in the Wall Street Journal, there was a gigantic scandal that became known as the, I think it's called the Great Salad Oil Scandal of 1963. Now, that's kind of lik…”
USAID operated_in
Moldova host_asserted
▶ 1:42:48
“These people had to feel like they were stuck in a giant spell game at some point. Well, yeah, but I mean, look at, okay, so has everybody followed Moldova lately? Right, so we all know that Samantha …”
Samantha Power involved_in
Moldova host_asserted
▶ 1:42:48
“These people had to feel like they were stuck in a giant spell game at some point. Well, yeah, but I mean, look at, okay, so has everybody followed Moldova lately? Right, so we all know that Samantha …”
United States targeted_for_regime_change
Cuba host_asserted
▶ 1:51:19
“Obviously, somebody blew up the main in the harbor in Havana and blamed the Spanish for it. And it was never the Spanish. It was solely to take over Cuba for the sugar and for the oil. And they called…”
United States carried_out_attack
Explosion of the USS Maine host_asserted
▶ 1:51:19
“Obviously, somebody blew up the main in the harbor in Havana and blamed the Spanish for it. And it was never the Spanish. It was solely to take over Cuba for the sugar and for the oil. And they called…”
United States targeted_for_regime_change
Hawaii host_asserted
▶ 1:51:48
“A long time, guys. A long time. Same reason that we took over Hawaii. There was not a pineapple there. It was all about sugar cane. And it's the same thing. Exactly. And it's the same thing you just s…”
World Wildlife Fund founded
National Park Service host_asserted
▶ 1:53:17
“Part of the realization of how this operation works is that they create the national park system, as we found out in the World Wildlife Fund, and they use these national police forces called park rang…”
United States supplied_arms_to
China host_asserted
▶ 1:54:57
“We can't be manipulated by foreign wars of other places. So, and there is no better, and I just keep harping on this because there's no better example. If you look at what they purposely did with the …”