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OPERATION GLADIO - 'BATTELLE AND THE CIA' - EP.376

1:55:58

Transcript

0:06 What, you think I wasn't going to be smiling on tonight's broadcast? Come on! Welcome to the Alpha Warriors show. I am your host, Alpha. The date is January 15th, 2025. We are live, live, 641 p.m. Pacific, 941 p.m. Eastern. And I wanted to start off this broadcast by saying happy birthday to my son. Today he is 17 years old and I am proud of that young man.
0:34 I also want to say that four years ago today, around this time, I was picking up my house and reorganizing it. Because four years ago today, the corrupt and dysfunctional FBI decided to raid my house. And that was the beginning of my J6 story. And two days ago.
1:01 That part of the story came to the end. If you haven't been tracking my story on social media or watched the other episodes this week, Alpha is free, free, free because he did not submit to tyranny. As a matter of fact, tyranny submitted to Alpha when they dismissed the case against this dude right here. So I've been smiling. My cheeks hurt and I just been appreciating all the love from you guys. So I want to get that out there for everyone.
1:30 And now it is time for Operation Gladio. So let's start with the woman you guys are really here to hear from tonight, Colonel Towner. How are you doing? Well, happy birthday to your son. Thank you, ma'am. I'll make sure to let him know. Congrats again on all of the great news. We seem to have a lot of anniversaries.
1:54 We do. And as a matter of fact, of course, you know, this is the way siblings are. To steal the joy from my son's birthday would be my oldest daughter, who I was on the phone with. And she said, her name is Lily. You know, she's the one that made me a daddy. And she said, can you tell Colonel that she's my favorite?
2:15 I said, of course I will. I love watching her shows. I said, I will make sure not to just tell her. I will tell her while we're doing the show. So Colonel, you are my oldest's favorite. Love you, Lily. So one more thing I want to get to as well. You sent me something today and I was like, this is freaking cool. So let me bring this up on the screen and then you can tell everybody about this.
2:41 Okay, so we actually have two available. This is the new one that's coming out as of tonight. The previous one actually has the Gladio glasses on the back of it. And we've only like talked about it a couple of times on our four o'clock show. And people have been very generous. I'll just say that the response was overwhelming. And so.
3:11 We've already submitted the order. Those will be going out in the mail within the next 10 days. We will get delivery. I want to say a couple of things. The vendor that we're using is a local vendor that's a veteran that's doing all of the screen printing, the design sets for us, the T-shirt setup, everything. We are also going to have a coin. If you turn that, I know I sent you this link, but do you have it live?
3:40 Yeah, it's live. Can you go to the other shirt? Because the other shirt that is already available, this one's going to be available tonight for pre-order. See the front of that shirt? Go ahead and click on the front one. Do you see the Operation Gladio? I do. Okay, so that's an eagle, which represents me as a colonel. The Gladio sword, which we're exposing.
4:04 And if you look in the back, there's like the two compass roses. One's the CIA and one's NATO. So that's the meaning. That's going to be the front side of a challenge coin that we're in the process of designing right now. So that is freaking cool. So the next thing that comes out will be the challenge coin. We're kind of working. I wanted a couple of tweaks on the backside of it.
4:31 And yeah, so we'll have a challenge coin that'll come out in the next couple of days as well. So we'll have two t-shirts. And again, I just wanted to let everybody know that we put our money where our mouth was. We did local. We did veteran. And we want everybody wearing these things. So people will ask you, what's Operation Gladio? This is my favorite. Bridget did this. This is my favorite design. This is cool.
5:02 Right? Yes. It's so cool. Yeah, that's all Bridget right there. Well, good job, Bridget. That is freaking super awesome. So the link for that, you guys, is the first link. So you got to be watching on Rumble. X hasn't let us do the links yet unless somebody wants to drop it in the comments. They can go and copy the link from Rumble and you can go over there and paste it in the comments on X if you guys don't mind helping out that way. Bridget probably will do that.
5:29 Awesome. But if you're watching on Rubble, all you got to do is scroll down and it is literally the first link you will come upon and you can start pre-ordering your Operation Gladio shirts. Not be sunshine. I think that's super cool. I wanted to make sure that we let everybody know. We'll do it again at the end of the show because we know there's always some people. Oh, I think Bridget is saying sunshine came up with that design. Four o'clock watchers. Well, whoever came up with it.
6:02 Sunshine. You know, you guys are awesome. There's so many. You sent me a message. Tell me what we're going to talk about. So I got a little nosy and I was like, I don't want to kind of wait. I'm anxious right now. Let me just go look into it. And very interesting topic, especially when you start talking about like the drone, you know, weapons and stuff. Why don't you start that? Cause that's like the, we'll, we like the bottom line up front.
6:30 Here, let me see. Let me grab that picture. Let me send it to myself real quick. That way everybody can see it. So what we're going to talk about tonight is a company that's called, depending on who you talk to, Battle or Battelle. It's spelt B as in Bravo, A-T-T-E-L-L-E. Now, I got to be honest with you. I've never heard of this company until a couple of days ago.
7:02 came across this company looking up some other information with keywords on Yandex. And the next day, I have already started my page of notes on the company. It was like Monday night. And then on Tuesday, I see someone has posted the name of the company and said, hey, did you know they have like tens of billions of dollars of government contracts?
7:32 And I'm like, who's who's in my computer? I was like, yeah, actually, I just found them yesterday. So let me know when you get that up. I will have in about 30 seconds. OK, so the guy that founded the company is Gordon Battelle, and he was born August 10th, 1883 in Kentucky.
8:01 His dad was a colonel and a steel industrialist. So he was in the steel manufacturing business. And I have it ready to bring you up whenever you want. Okay. And so he basically ends up going to a scientific school at Yale University. So many bad people out of Yale.
8:31 he goes back and works in his father's business in the steel industry. And he ends up working for a Columbus iron and steel company in Columbus, Ohio, which he also spent some time in Missouri and does a whole bunch of different things. So he dies in 1923 at the age of 40, and he left in his will.
8:59 a $1.6 million endowment to set up the Battelle Memorial Institute. His mother dies not long after that and donates like another $3.5 million to this institute on behalf of, you know, her and his dad. So very well endowed because, again, this is 1920.
9:25 So they've got over five million dollars in endowment at this point. Right. Five million dollars in 1920. It's like, you know, 50 billion dollars now. So they start off with a lot of money. OK, go ahead and put the picture up. So one of the first things I found was an article and it had this and I'm like, what the hell is that? And then I started reading the small print and it says it's a drone defender device.
9:54 that uses directed energy to bring down drones. And I'm like, shoot, what the hell? So everything about the conspiracy theory as it relates to directed energy weapons, well, you're looking at one.
10:16 This one specifically was designed to like literally you blast this and it makes airborne drones like drop to excuse me, drop to the ground. So it's real. They have them and they make them. What I found very interesting is.
10:42 This company, and I'm going to go through their financials in a minute, but this company has the contracts to operate all of the, well, most of the labs that the Department of Energy, like directed energy weapons labs. And there's one in New Jersey, which, weirdly enough, just had a whole bunch of unexplained drones in the air.
11:10 So I don't know if they were operating those drones to test these weapons. I don't know what the correlation is, but I believe that there is a correlation. Well, I want to say first, shout out to Common Censored. They just rated the stream. Super, super freaking cool. The second thing, when you sent me this, I did the same thing. What's the fine print say? I want to read the last sentence.
11:39 It quickly disrupts control of the drone, neutralizing it so that no remote action, including detonation, can occur. So they can't blow it up for you to be able to see what it's about. Which tells me that that kind of technology could be utilized on vehicle, you know, vehicle-borne explosion. There's a lot of, you know, we think drones, we think the stuff we see on the news and all that.
12:07 But, you know, unmanned vehicles can incorporate a lot of different kind of vehicles. So knowing that you have the kind of technology that can neutralize this so it doesn't have any connection with the town. Yeah, it's like an EMP. Yeah, it makes you wonder, why were we not afraid of these Chinese air balloons? It also makes you wonder, why did the Chinese choose balloons?
12:38 As the means of transportation, because, you know, it's something you're relying on the current or versus I'm sure there's other technology on there as well. But you would have to physically destroy the balloon in order for that device to come down. So it also makes you at least make the safest option, you know, that there are other countries military that are aware that we have this kind of technology. So they're probably testing countermeasures.
13:05 to this kind of technology. I mean, it is, when you sent me this, Colonel, I'm telling you, you just, you got me going like, what's going on here? So I'll give it back to you. It really caught my interest. Right. And so I think that's what the most interesting thing about this company. So, you know, I just start the normal research into it and I quickly find out that this is the company. So what it does is it,
13:34 It basically does what we used to do in the Air Force and the other services on incubating technology and then handing it off to the commercial market. So, for example, a lot of people don't know that there were three guys that worked in one of our research labs in the Air Force that created fiber optics.
14:00 One of those three guys got promoted to three stars, and he was our commander out at Los Angeles Air Force Base when I was stationed there in the late 80s. General Cromer was one of the three. They never got royalties. They never got anything else. They just had the satisfaction of knowing they were doing something critically important. Los Angeles also created what we now call GPS.
14:27 This boat, the procurement office out there was called Navstar and Navigational Star. And so Navstar initially was a classified program. And we had GPS capability long before anybody actually knew we had GPS capability. And the civilian version, when it was initially.
14:57 allowed to then be handed off to civilians to make garments and all that kind of stuff and be built into our cars eventually. They tweaked the satellite so that you could only get within like five miles from a signal where like if you were trying to spot me, you're only going to get within originally like back in the 80s within five miles of where I'm at.
15:27 because they knew that somebody would hijack the signals, and they didn't want to give them the 100 feet proximity that we were using on our munitions, because we already had in the 80s that technology to get within 100 feet or a window of a building. But anybody, if you hacked into the satellite, you were only going to get the, you know,
15:55 thousand foot or five thousand foot or whatever they had the satellites tweaked at on the civilian side, which is really important when you start thinking about Starlink today, because every Starlink satellite has a part of their satellite proportion so that only the military can use that piece.
16:18 So while we get this amount of the satellite, the military gets this piece. So that entire canopy of satellites around the world is going to be used for Starlink. Every bit of it has a slice for U.S. military to use. And again, that can have a completely different capability than the rest of the satellite for us to use. So just a point of clarification, make sure I'm understanding.
16:48 If we kind of just pick this and I'll just use a random number, a thousand satellites that are in this part of space. Are you talking like it's a percentage of the thousand? Are you talking each one of those individually? Has a portion that is for military use only. Wow. I don't know how I feel about that. Well.
17:12 I would feel good if we had good people in the military. Yeah, so that's the concern. It's just who's controlling that? Because if we're using the civilian portion of this satellite, I would think, well, then that means the military probably has the technology to monitor the civilian side that's being used. And are we running into some Fourth Amendment issues and things like that, if that's the case? You know, under the understanding that corruption is involved. Yeah, yeah.
17:42 So, I mean, at this point, I assume they have back doors into everything. So anyway, back to this company. So you want to know something really cool before you continue? I say you want to know something real cool. What? So now I don't have to be worried about what I say. And I knew you were going to say that. I just I feel so free.
18:07 I don't have to worry about, oh, they're going to take that out of context and violate his bail. Now I can say, you corrupt, evil bastards. I am watching you. So let me just tell you, although I have no idea the feeling that you feel, I can tell you my similar experience was the day I retired for the first time. And I mean, as an enlisted person, I said whatever the hell I wanted to.
18:37 Right. So the first eight years I was fine. But after I got my commission for the next 22 years, you can't. And it was so liberating the day I retired. It was like, oh, my gosh, I can go back to saying whatever I want to say, however I want to say it. I can talk some shit again. I certainly did. All right. Let's keep going. I'm sorry. You guys, forgive me. I'll behave. So.
19:05 This company basically, like I was just explaining, the incubation process in the military of technology and then releasing it for commercial use. So what this company did, it was set up initially as a nonprofit private research, like, you know, incubation kind of thing.
19:31 One of its first success stories was it created the Xerox machine, like real copy machines, not like the drum thing. Yeah. So that was like it created the UPC, the barcode system. This company created that. Oh, that's creepy. Yeah. Well, it gets even creepier. So they also.
20:02 Wait till I get to the kid part of it. Oh, yeah. They have a whole. I'll get to it in a second. All right. So Gordon's grandfather was also named Gordon Battelle, and he was a significant figure in West Virginia's history for all of you history buffs. He basically advocated for abolition.
20:31 even before the Civil War. And they had a legacy of being very benevolent. And so I have no doubt that Gordon's heart was in the right direction when he set this thing up. But just so that you know, it's headquartered in Columbus. Now, why is that important? Well, so is Les Wexner.
21:01 Jeffrey Epstein's benefactor. There's a lot of really crazy things that are in Columbus, by the way. And what I find interesting and corollary to that is a lot of people don't know that they were actually shipping. So Les Wexner had set up at a couple of the old retired Air Force bases around that area port authorities where
21:29 They had their own dedicated customs where they could actually just come and go all they wanted. And they had like these big 747s coming in from Hong Kong, you know, where all of the drugs come in. And they had all of these really big airplanes going back out, you know, like where all the weapons would have been going from when we were doing all kinds of nefarious things all over the world. And so, again, I just think that's more.
21:58 Then a coincidence. But going on, they actually lost their tax exempt status for a period of time. But you know who gave it back to them? Bush Jr. Right after 2001. That's not a coincidence either. OK, so here's some of their current businesses.
22:28 They manage or co-manage almost all of the U.S. Department of Energy. You know the Q clearance guys? Right. Department of Energy laboratories to include Brookhaven, Idaho, Lawrence, Livermore, Los Alamos, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, among several others.
22:57 I just had a really important phone call today with the conversation involving the level of importance regarding the DOE. And then having you bring up the DOE right now as well is quite interesting in my world. So wait till you find out all of the DOE stuff that they're involved in, because this goes directly to the heart of COVID.
23:27 While everybody is talking about Metabiota because of its connection to Hunter, these guys were responsible for almost the entire chain from Fort Detrick. They're there. They're everywhere. And for those that are not familiar with Fort Detrick, I would invite you to go visit Dr. Judy Mikovits' profile and watch her videos to talk about all the...
23:57 dangerous stuff that's out of Fort Detrick. They have hundreds of millions of dollars of contracts for Fort Detrick. They have the custodial responsibility for the lab in Ukraine, the level four lab where all of that shit happened. Oh, and guess where else they're at? The Georgia lab, both of which are named after Senator Lugar from the state of Indiana.
24:27 Both of them responsible for releases of known contagious outbreaks of stuff. The Georgia lab in the country of Georgia has so many bad things that's happened around it where people have gotten sick and died. This company is responsible for those labs. So let's go on.
24:55 It also says their work includes developing solutions for mission-ready security, threat assessments, detection, cybersecurity, and various military applications like missile defense and protective gear. They do a lot with HHS, too. In the health and life science, they're involved in developing vaccines, therapeutics,
25:22 improving neonatal respiratory treatments, pioneering medical technologies. They play a role in the rapid testing of COVID-19, which was what allowed us to perpetuate a lie. They also created a decontamination process of N95 masks. So again,
25:50 They basically they were spraying it with hydrogen peroxide. I mean, there's a lot of other big shit that they say they were doing, but that's basically what they were doing and supposedly decontaminating that. But I have a video clip. I don't know if this may be a two part show because there's a lot of shit. But I have a video clip of the current CEO. You're going to laugh your ass off in not a good way when you hear him talking, because now keep in mind.
26:19 This is hundreds of billions of dollars of taxpayer money has went into this company. And this guy is on video talking about how staying six feet apart from people and wearing a paper mask worked. Jesus. He's a fucking moron. And he's running this company. Okay. And supposedly is an engineer. I'm not an engineer.
26:52 And the day I heard that you could wear a paper mask, just for those of you who've not heard this story, I deployed with the entire Kim gear set up. I went to Northern Iraq. It was 120 degrees every day. Okay. It was hotter than hell. This is a big rubber suit. It's like wearing a rubber, right? You sweat your ass off when you put that shit on.
27:22 And you got that big old nasty thing that mats down your hair, saves your life, but it's a pain in the ass. And every time the siren goes off, you got to drop everything, put that shit on. So this is what we did to avoid an airborne virus weapon of mass destruction, right?
27:47 So nerve gas, all this other shit that we had supposedly been told had been used all over northern Iraq. So this is what we have to deal with every day. So the idea that an airborne virus called COVID was any different than an airborne pathogen called a nerve gas was ludicrous to me. And I'm not a scientist.
28:17 And I'm not kidding. I looked at my husband and I'm like, a paper mask? Do you mean I wore that dumbass thing and sweated my ass off for six months when I could have deployed with a paper mask? What the fuck? And I said, I told him, I said, we don't have to worry about this because every military person in the entire country is going to call them out. And I go over to the VA and every fucking person in the building's got a paper mask on.
28:47 I'm like, I'm literally living in the Twilight Zone right now. I wanted to run through the hall screaming, what the fuck is wrong with you people? You didn't deploy with a paper mask, charcoal filters, rubber suits. And this is an engineer. When we deployed to Iraq in the beginning of the war in 2003, a lot of people don't know, we were in mop suits for the first...
29:21 for the beginning part of that war. And it's the same thing. You literally had everything on with the exception of your mask, unless an alert went out, you know, it was, it was in your bag. And then you had those rubber boots, the ones that went over your boots. It's like, I know I was there in 2001. I know we didn't need that. I just needed to get a piece of paper and go like this. Yes. Yes. And stand six feet apart. That's it. All right. So.
29:51 Next area, they're in energy environment, you know, climate change and material science. Their work includes environmental remediation, agribusiness research, all into that GMO bullshit. Oh, and they made the, oh, and they do cannabis studies too, just so that you know. The agribusiness, they made the first non-melting chocolate.
30:18 What the fuck do you have to put in chocolate to make it not melt? I am quite sure that's not good for your body. So, oh, and so now we get into STEM. I have a whole section of that, but the whole kid thing will totally freak you out. All right. Legal actions. Battelle faced a lawsuit.
30:43 From 1969 to 75, questioning whether or not they were actually a nonprofit because technically they're not. And they lost their nonprofit status in the 90s as a result of that lawsuit. But then, as I told you, Bush gave it back to him in 2001, you know, because they're still not a nonprofit. So we talked about, oh, and they created cruise control.
31:12 for your car. And at the beginning of this company, they were like putting out a patent a week of technology. So government contracts, they manage, we talked about the labs. They had a $400 million contract for critical.
31:37 care decontamination systems that's what that um n95 thing was which was a total joke it's like literally spraying hydrogen peroxide but it was 400 million dollars um involvement in um homeland department of defense and homeland security their contract vehicles include multiple award things like defense health agency omnibus seaport next generation um
32:08 Let's see. Here, I found something while you're talking that's going to piss a lot of people, if not scare a lot of people off. Establishing reproducible polymer nanoparticle manufacturing PMP. Well, what's that, Alpha? Let me just read you guys the first sentence here. Polymer nanoparticles, PMPs, could be the key to unlocking safer, more effective, and more affordable gene therapies.
32:36 Oh, yeah, we're going to get to the genome thing. They're all into modifying your genome. They also do implantable chips in your head. Not even kidding. All right. They got $400 million in COVID relief under the PPP. Now, I want you to understand they are a double digit billion dollar a year profit company and they got $400 million in COVID relief.
33:11 They spend hundreds of millions of dollars a year on what's called Battelle for Kids. On December 1st, 2021, Battelle for Kids was affected by a ransom attack, which accessed data stored about Chicago public school students. Clients were informed that nearly seven months later.
33:40 all of their children's data had been absconced through this hack. And they violated their contract by not telling the school system that all of their kids' data had been stolen. And this is the really sick part of this. If you go and look at Battelle for Kids, they have their entire curriculum, while it's supposedly about science,
34:12 is social emotional learning under the rockefeller castle system c-a-s-e-l which was set up by the um one of the rockefellers sit the the sister um i forget what her first name was that's terrifying yes so it says battelle for kids provides a partnership for 21st century learning p21
34:41 framework for unified collective vision to help practitioners integrate skills into the teaching of key academic subjects. At the bottom of every page of one of their handouts, it says, this is a quote, establishing practical social emotional confidence assessment work group. So that's what they're all about.
35:08 Within the classroom, teachers are encouraged to find examples within key content areas that maximize both social, emotional, and academic skills and explicitly teach these skills. Since P21, the Battelle for Kids merger, more resources and support go out to teachers. Currently, Battelle for Kids is partnered with the Hewlett Foundation of Hewlett Packard, which is a CIA front, by the way.
35:37 which is on the campus of Berkeley. Is it Berkeley? No, Stanford. And every evil story has a Stanford element, by the way. So they're working with Hewlett Packard's foundation. They are also significantly funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.
36:06 The Battelle for Kids. So a woman by the name of Teresa Borowski was a graduate student in community and prevention research, whatever the hell that is, Ph.D. in psychology at the University of Chicago, where her research focused on its social emotional competence development, particularly in dance and art.
36:36 She's the one responsible for this program, by the way. She works as a research specialist with Castle's research team that creates a thing called Frameworks subgroup for assessing work groups of children. She is also co-editor of Measuring Social Emotional Learning blog for these people. Prior to her working at the University of Chicago,
37:06 Teresa worked as a research assistant at a infant recognition lab. I don't even know what the hell that is. Establishing practical social emotional competence assessments of preschool to high school students is a project that Patel for Kids has taken on with a dedication to helping advance the effective use of data to inspire and practice social emotional learning.
37:36 You know, I'm going through their their X profile right now. The audience is tracking while we're listening. And they reposted this back in November post from West Claremont schools. And it's one of those in 2030. Our portrait of the graduate skill sets will be as important as ever. You always see these 2030 agenda plans. Yes. And these people. So I just sent you the link to the handout that I was reading from the measuring part of it.
38:06 For you to post later. It's gross. So it says the estimated revenue and valuation of Battelle for kids was an estimated revenue of $10 million per year from Battelle. Battelle for kids. Let's see. The data is they had 65 employees.
38:36 Now, 65 employees got $400 million in COVID relief. But it's a nonprofit. Yeah. Well, I'm sorry. The $400,000 was for all of their employees, not just this 65. So I take that back. It's still a lot of money for a company that makes about $10 billion a year in profit for the nonprofit.
39:09 Okay, says we are proud to collaborate in State Department education, urban, suburban, rural school districts. They are in more than 40 states. By 2021, 21% of the school systems in the U.S. will have begun engaging their communities to develop a, this is a quote, portrait of a graduate.
39:33 This establishes a common vision of what all students should know and be able to do and succeed in college careers and citizenship for the 21st century. Interested in joining our team, blah, blah, blah. They have a Columbus Young Professionals Club that they started in 2014. And they do have Battelle for Kids.
40:04 In Florida, after the governor has outlawed anything to do with social emotional learning. So I don't know how that's even possible. If you guys are listening from Florida, y'all need to ask questions about that. So there's another article that I will send you that you can put on here that has to do with this.
40:36 involvement with Bill Gates to set up all Common Core state standards back in the day with Bush. I remember the Common Core. Yeah. These guys were working on that with them. Okay. So let me get back to my... All right. A guy by the name of Jim Mahoney, first director in 2001.
41:10 was basically on the group that worked with Bill Gates to create the Common Core stuff for George Bush Jr. And this is a quote from his, I think it's his LinkedIn thing. It says, I joined Battelle for Kids in 2001 as the organization's first executive director. Under my leadership, Battelle for Kids grew into a national not-for-profit.
41:40 That partners with school districts, state districts of education, business and philanthropic organizations in more than 30 states to advance educational equity and opportunity for all students. This work has impacted more than six million students and more than 400,000 educators worldwide, nationwide. So that's kind of it for the.
42:12 kid part of it. But I found an article that talked about some of their specific work. So, for example, where it talked about they're very much into national security doing work for them. Aerospace system solutions to include avionics, in-flight aircraft, de-icing,
42:42 missile defense systems, chemical demilitarization, medical surveillance. That's kind of spooky. And just in case you guys were wondering if there's any connection to the CIA, the answer is unequivocally yes. So hold on because we're going to get to that. Not only does the CIA have people working here,
43:13 DARPA has people working here and these people go work there. So just saying. Also, it says Battelle enables robust cybersecurity, which I find very interesting because we spend a lot of money with them. But we have all these cyber attacks. It's kind of weird.
43:43 They have a heat coat technology that they patented for in-flight aircraft ice protection, which is interesting. I guess that's going to be one less fault for an aircraft going down. You know, a lot of those crashes of aircraft happen because of ice. Well, they'll have to find another excuse now.
44:13 They also, in Homeland Security contracts, are responsible for safeguarding assets like nuclear power plants, Department of Defense buildings, airports, mass transit systems for natural disasters, terrorist threats, and man-made disasters. Man-made disasters, is that like? I was about to say, wait, what?
44:42 is essential to protecting our citizens. Man-made disasters. First of all, there's a play on words there. And before people say, well, maybe like a controlled burn, we have names for that stuff. And it's not called a disaster because if man's in... Yeah, I'm sorry. Okay. Also, they work with transportation systems, which is weird.
45:12 Government and military facilities, dams and levees, chemical facilities to enhance protection of critical infrastructure. These people are everywhere. I wonder if they have any ties to that North Carolina dam. I'm very curious because I've heard a bunch of mixed stories. I haven't been able to get confirmation. Can you see this little machine right here? I do. All right.
45:43 That little machine doesn't cost a whole lot of money. And it allows you to put any size of a liquid container in it and determine whether or not there's explosive material in it. So they've had this for a long time. So why are we still saying that we can't go through security with liquids or that it has to be this tiny little thing? Because they have the technology that says we don't have to do that anymore.
46:09 Well, the other interesting part of that is for those that just caught the Sean Ryan show that he did with Shoemaker, what, two weeks ago or so, maybe a little less than that. Actually, they addressed it on there, but actually goes back to the show that he did with, I believe her name is Sarah, not positive. But they were talking about how these terrorists now have invisible bombs. And by invisible, they mean that these bombs are made out of materials that are not able to be detected by the things you're talking about at TSA and stuff like that.
46:38 Does that mean that this technology that you're talking about where this device can detect these fluids, which then there would be no need for these things that they're making money off of. Does that mean that that technology probably also got leaked to our adversaries, which allowed them to develop some type of materials or composites or whatever to make bombs that could evade? Hold up, hold up, hold up. You're assuming that.
47:10 miss Sarah is actually talking about a threat other than the CIA. Well, she also said that the CIA isn't bad, which is like, they're not corrupt. They're not corrupt. I'm like, get the hell out of here with that one. Yeah. So miss Sarah doesn't know what the fuck she's talking about. We'll just sit that right straight. Okay. So does the enemy, who are you defining as the enemy? Cause see, to me, the terror people,
47:41 are the CIA, the MI6, the BND, the Mossad doing the terror attacks. They're the ones funding ISIS. They're the ones funding Al Qaeda and training them. They are the ones that are behind the Muslim Brotherhood in its current form. So if the CIA is in bed with this company, then they know what this company has and what they're capable of.
48:12 to be able to create something that's not detectable. So it's like the chicken and the egg, right? So if there is actually some rogue enemy out there, your scenario may have relevance, but that's not what's going on. These domestic terror attacks are part of Operation Gladio, which...
48:46 Means they're being perpetrated by these people. So do I think that the CIA knows exactly what technologies they were? They know exactly what technologies we have and what we're capable of detecting and not. So who's creating the shit that's not detectable? Us. So wouldn't.
49:18 If we and just give them the benefit of the doubt, if there's good people working at this lab and the CIA comes to you and says, hey, we need to be able to to get the communists or to get the terrorists. We need to have the capability that will avoid the thing you just created not to. Right. So if I've got a liquid explosive.
49:45 and I've got a machine that detects the liquid explosive, I need you to create an explosive that's not detectable by that same machine. So I can go somewhere else that I want to go to. 100%. Maybe here. Oh, yeah, you know, because they're going to sell it as going towards our enemies, but really they're going to have it deployed here. That's exactly what they do. And what better way to do it than have CIA people working in the company?
50:21 That's why when I came across this company and I'm looking at all the shit they've got their fingers in, I'm like, this is the perfect venue for the CIA to hide all of the shit they're doing. Because these guys, just wait. You have no idea. They're everywhere, this company. As soon as you had mentioned their connection with DARPA, I went in.
50:48 you know, went investigator mode real quick. I found this. I don't know if we'll end up talking. You briefly mentioned it earlier, but it says Battelle neural team advances to phase two of DARPA and three program. This is from 2020. Is that the implant? Yes, this is the implant. So check this out. You know, I, I, I, you know, I did a scan read on it. I'll read this paragraph real quick.
51:14 The program is designed for teams around the country. And remind everybody, this is 2020, so this is almost five years old. Yeah. The program is designed for teams around the country to develop a high-performance, bi-directional brain-computer interface, VCI, for non-invasive clinical applications or for the use by able-bodied members of the military.
51:37 Such neural interfaces would provide the enabling technology for diverse medical and national security applications and could enable enhanced multitasking during complex military missions. We're talking super soldier stuff here. Let me tell you something. And I have it in here. They have a chip to put in your head as a military person that allows you.
52:06 to mentally fly a drone. No joystick. This is insane. And once again, I always operate under the thought process of if this is what they're telling us in 2020, this is probably 20 to 30 years old. Potentially. Potentially.
52:37 Because again, that's what was happening with the GPS. The part that I know for the period of time that I was involved in the whole acquisition process. NASTAR had been around for about 20 years and they released it to the public like in the mid 1980s for it to start being incorporated into stuff. And we'd had it for about 20 years that I knew of.
53:07 Not that that's the first time, but and the top secret, like they had a facility out there that you did the retina scans on to get in of classified military satellites. We were in the middle of doing a officer and enlisted new evaluation program in the military, in the Air Force. And so.
53:31 I had to go to all of the different offices and give briefings to how their organization was going to be set up. And I went everywhere. I went to our labs. I went to the New Mexico lab, the one in Massachusetts at Hanscom Air Force Base. We had a lab there. Arnold Engineering, there's a lab. And this company does a lot of work at all of those labs where I was at.
53:57 But each lab had its own setup of who was going to be like the senior raider is what we call them, like the endorsing and could give out definitely promotes to the officers and stuff like that. And so I had to go brief each of those different locations because I was the project officer for that. And I'm not kidding you.
54:18 When they took me down, it's like four stories underground. Just I could tell by the elevator ride about how long. And you get off and there's like these, you know, palm reader retin. I'm like, where are you taking me?
54:37 And I had never been in that classified of a location ever. Like in maintenance, when we went on deployments, we had, some of us had TS clearances. Like I was at a SAC base, so we did. And the closest you ever got to classified information was when you sat in on the in-brief into a deployment. You know what I mean? And that's just in a skip on the base. It wasn't like any big, but so.
55:06 I went from that environment to my first, I was a lieutenant. And I mean, my eyes had to be that big around. We went into this. And so when you get into the hallways, they have all of these like weird lights and they have music playing in the hallway. So you can't overhear conversations in all of the offices. There's mirrors.
55:33 hanging down in front of every door with their like this. So you can see people coming from this way and this way. So, you know, you don't talk loud while people are going in front of your door. I'm like, where the fuck am I? Craziest place I've ever been. And so I'll never forget. I think I have the, the mill star guy. Yeah. Conduit.
55:59 was the name of the 06 that was in charge of that. And he was such a nice guy. We got to the conference room where I was going to give the briefing. I looked at him and I said, y'all are going to the O club next time. I'm not coming back here. I felt like I had been abducted. It was like the weirdest feeling ever because I've never been, there's, like I said, sound dampening.
56:24 All of the walls are specially coded, so there's no rays getting in. Nobody can eavesdrop. It was the most disoriented experience I've ever had. It was crazy. That's freaking wild. I want to give a shout out to Breadmaker62, dropping a $50 Rumble rent. Great to see the Colonel again. Love these Gladio shows. Congratulations again, Alpha. So very happy for you. And then I saw a pretty fun question from the audience from Spark Truth.
56:54 Colonel, please validate the med bed technology. Can't do it. Can't do it, you guys. There you have it. I will tell you that there is, it's a German company. I will get back with you with the name of it. There is, my natural doctor actually sells them, but they're very, very expensive.
57:23 They are a mat that gives off like a healthy radio frequency. And there's a weird thing, like it goes the length of the mat, but then there's a...
57:41 Again, I don't know any of the scientific names, but there's like a radio frequency that goes around your body and you lay on the mat like this and the frequency goes like this because it's like a core like electric goes, you know, like electric flows and then it puts off the around it, the field, whatever that's called, electromagnetic field that it's like I said, it's made in Germany.
58:09 And it's healing. What it does is excites the white blood cells in your blood. Just like cold plunging. It enhances the purification of your blood, which enhances your ability to get all of the waste out of your body in a more healthy sped up process.
58:39 And it really does. When I started using that, because I was doing that as a result of getting off all of the narcotics in the immediate aftermath of that, it was like night and day as far as the clarity that when you got done with those sessions, it was crazy. You felt like you had this, wasn't it an adrenaline rush? It just was like all of your.
59:07 your brain cells were energized. There are things out there that help your body heal itself, but not the med bed shit. There you guys have it. Again, that's just my opinion. I am not a scientist. I'm just telling you what I think. I read all of the crap about it because
59:35 I was like, what the hell? All right. So going back. So Battelle's work on the environment, which is very important because of them stealing all of our money for it. Battelle's expertise in environmental protection includes solutions in air quality, analytical chemistry, environmental restoration and site remediation, ecology and climatology, environmental health, marine and coastal services and sediment management.
1:00:04 Now, I find this absolutely hilarious because, again, the CEO thinks six feet and paper masks work. So take that for whatever you want. In health, I love that they call it health. They deal with medical device development, science, experience lab support. They work for federal agencies, health care providers and medical device companies to improve the scientific, translate today's discoveries into medical devices for tomorrow.
1:00:34 Device security, drug delivery, usability, testing, human centric designs of medical devices to include chips to plant in your head to let you fly drones by your brain. And it says it's in agribusiness, oil, gas, health, blah, blah, blah. So going on down, they have gotten lots of the base.
1:01:01 contracts for doing the um what is the there's an acronym like uh pfas where you do like the foam for firefighting um how that had like um carcinogenic um material yes yes yes yeah pbas or something like that um
1:01:23 So they have a lot of contracts for cleaning that up. But listen to this. In the early years, Battelle made advances in metal and material science and it landed its first federal contract in 1939 to supply tank armor leading into World War II. Battelle's reputation in metal led to fabricating uranium for the Manhattan Project. Say what? Yeah.
1:01:53 And they, like I said, they're into vaccines and therapeutics for infectious disease threats. They did neonatal respiratory treatments. They do hyper elastic materials to deliver superior forming crash barriers for race cars. Drone defender technology, which is your drone gun.
1:02:19 Airport security checkpoints, that liquid machine, runway de-icing, polyol technology that helps reduce reliance on petroleum, you know, so that stuff that's just free out of the ground so we can go make up shit. Drug delivery technology, they make stuff that allows you to self-inject like diabetes crap.
1:02:49 and stuff like that into you. Probably for Ozempic too. A method to improve direct coal liquidification utilizing a biomass or derived solvent that will change the way jet fuel is produced. What else? The NeuroLife neural bypass technology brain computer interface that empowers paralyzed patients to regain
1:03:20 control of their fingers and hands. So that's that for. And anybody in the civilian sector that doesn't follow the DARPA or follow Operation God, that anyone that doesn't have at least a basic understanding of the corruption exists. Here's that part about, you know, people getting their feelings in their fingertips and all that. And they're all for it because they don't realize what's really going on behind the scenes. Yeah.
1:03:48 It says one notable example of a joint program involving the CIA and Patel is the Science and Technology Directorate of the CIA, which is part of the CIA's broader mission to develop and implement advanced technologies for intelligence gathering and national security purposes. National security purposes or assassinations, whatever.
1:04:13 Battelle has been involved in a number of classified and unclassified research projects with the CIA. Some examples. Battelle, with its deep expertise in scientific research, has been involved in advanced analytical technologies that could be used in data mining, cybersecurity, and signal processing, which is eavesdropping.
1:04:39 These technologies help agencies like the CIA to analyze vast amounts of data in real time, monitor security breaches. So what you're what they're saying is if they can monitor security breaches, then why are they telling us that China's hacking when at the end of the day we find out it's not China at all? And, you know, if they have the ability.
1:05:02 to do this. And I would not be at all surprised. Do you remember when we were told that the CIA had the technology to fingerprint anybody they wanted on a cyber attack? I would not be at all surprised if Battelle gave them that capability based on what I'm reading about what they're capable of doing. Biotechnology and biosecurity, given the CIA's interest in global health threats, bioweapons and other covert biological operations.
1:05:34 Battelle has been involved in developing biotechnologies for detection, monitoring, and defense. Never offense. Never offense. Just defense. The CIA might have to work with Battelle to advance biosecurity technologies to detect biohazards, trace their origins. Huh? Really? You mean not to the wet market? Not to the bat cave?
1:06:02 Or not trace them. So they have the ability to trace them. They're just choosing not to use them. Okay. Here we get to DARPA. DARPA and Battelle have collaborated on advanced resource projects over the years, including cutting-edge technology across defense, national security, and science. Many of these projects have been classified, but they do include DARPA Plan X.
1:06:34 This program focused on improving military cyber capabilities and defense strategies. Battelle has contributed to developing tools and methodologies for cyber warfare and cyber defense to be used by the U.S. Department of Defense. They also are involved in cyber technology and national security to secure communication systems for the Defense Department. Huh.
1:07:04 You would think that if they have all of this technology and have done all of this cyber defense, how did our elections get hacked? How does any elections get hacked? So DARPA have worked with Battelle on advanced materials like nanotechnology, material science for military application.
1:07:36 sensors, lightweight armor, energy storage, Battelle's research. Let's see. We already talked about the nano. They do biodefense, bioterrorism, and biosecurity. Bioterrorism? Didn't even use defense on that one. Let's see. They develop technology for biothreat detection, biodefense, rapid response systems.
1:08:08 for biological agent detection. So wait a minute. Wait a minute. The guy that runs this company during COVID has a specialty of creating or detecting biological agents, but thinks you can wear a paper mask. Yeah. And that six feet works.
1:08:34 So they do have a machine. I listened to a couple of his whatever on YouTube interviews, and they do supposedly have a detection machine that can sit in a room and detect whether COVID is in the air. And you just have to believe it when it gives a positive indicator. I guess. You know, I was.
1:09:06 You got me curious, so I went and I did a search, and I typed in Battelle and surveillance. Now, I haven't read this article. Actually, I'll bring it on the screen so everybody can see what I'm talking about. You don't just have to take my word for it. And this is from 1995. This is 247 pages. I'll include the link in the description if somebody wants to go ham on this later. I'll read the heading and then one quick sentence in here.
1:09:36 Pulling State Telephone Survey Health Data for National Estimates, the CDC Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System, 1995, listed the doctors. So let me just read this first part just to give a little bit more context. Introduction. As a state-based surveillance system, the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System, BRFSS, was not designed to generate national estimates of health risk and health practices.
1:10:02 Nevertheless, there is much interest among the research community in using the BRFSS for such estimates because the all state use the same core instrument sample size and it goes into why they want to use it. So now let's scroll down to the last part of this paragraph. This study is highlighted so everybody can see. This study is part of a project conducted by Battelle with CDC funding. The larger project used from data.
1:10:30 from 1995, 1996, and 1997. In this presentation, however, we focus on 1995 because of the most recent year for which the NHIS data were available, et cetera, et cetera, from the Battelle analysis. Surveillance tools Battelle and the CDC. I don't like either three. I don't like those three words. Independent altogether makes it even worse. So they work with the National Institute of Health.
1:10:58 in getting funding from them to work in biotech research projects, including infectious disease studies, drug development, and clinical trials. This included the COVID-19 research, vaccine, and pandemic response. So, vaccine development, Battelle was involved in key projects related to the development of vaccines, diagnostic tests, and emerging infectious diseases.
1:11:30 And they work with the Bill and Melinda Gates on these projects. I want to get down to, I have a whole bunch of stuff. They work with NASA. The thing with the DOE is the thing, the Department of Energy is the one that bothers me the most. Obviously, the Department of Defense is really problematic as well. And so is the health. I mean, they're in every single vital role, our government.
1:12:00 is doing, this company is at the heart of every contentious issue that we've had in the last 10 years. So here's the ones I wanted to get to. Here's the CIA chick that's on the board. Stephanie O'Sullivan served as a member of Battelle's board of directors before becoming a business consultant in 2017. She spent over 30 years
1:12:30 in leadership roles in the U.S. intelligence community to include the Principal Deputy Director of the National Intelligence at the Office of Director of National Intelligence. She also was an Associate Deputy Director of the CIA. She was also in different management positions throughout the CIA as the Directorate of Science and Technology.
1:12:58 The second guy was Justin J. Jackson. He was hired by Patel to serve as a vice president of senior relationships for special programs. And for anybody that knows what special programs is, that's all their classified shit. In 2013, after his 28 year run at the CIA, 28 years, do a search on him.
1:13:28 Justin J. Jackson. Tell me what you find. Where he served most recently as the Deputy Director of National Clandestine Service. And what does the National Clandestine Service do? They're the people that run Operation Gladio. I brought up one, but it's taking me to Walt Disney Company. Let me see. Justin or Dustin? Justin J. Yeah, Justin J. Jackson.
1:14:03 Let me type in clandestine, see if that doesn't help the search. From the Cold War or Hot Wars, a spy breaks his silence. Sounds like it might be our guy from 2012. There's almost nothing out there.
1:14:33 Yeah, that's what I'm saying. I was exquisitely tailored and codified. He looks like he just stepped off the pages of Gentleman's Quarterly magazine. But in reality, he just stepped out of the dangerous shadowy world of the CIA's national clandestine services and into the bright light world he avoided for 26 years. Starting in the early 1980s as a standout undergraduate student at Colgate University, Harvard trained lawyer and master of several languages. Always, always, always.
1:15:02 Justin Jackson has become an intelligence aficionado. Secret Army Intelligence Agency. Unique capability for the United States government. Oh, here it goes. Here's a quote from him. My job was to collect foreign intelligence from human sources who were reporting on the plans and intentions of our adversaries. I also conducted covert action as directed by the administration.
1:15:31 and I ran counterintelligence operations to detect efforts that foreign countries were making against us, he says. Yeah. So he is a Gladio operator who works at Battelle. Well, are you familiar? I'm trying to see. Okay, I don't want to lose this thing. So I just wanted to try something. So I searched Battelle and corruption, and a case popped up.
1:16:02 Bussleman, B-U-S-S-E-L-M-A-N versus Battelle. And this is from, looks like the opinion rendered in November of 2019. Ordered denying defendant summary judgment motion. Now, I just did a scan read over this, but there's a particular thing I want you guys, well, let me read the background of the defendant here real quick.
1:16:25 A defendant is an energy department contractor that manages the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory in Richland, Washington. Plaintiff is defendant's employee at this location and has worked there for over 30 years. Now, let's scroll down. Talks about her job, stuff she did. But I wanted you guys to hear something that I read. So here we go. In December 2016, this is going to get interesting. Defendant authorized a payment.
1:16:52 a $530,000 invoice submitted by a fraudulent entity posing as a subcontractor. The U.S. Department of the Treasury electronically transferred the funds to the fraudulent entity. Defendant became aware of the fraud in January 2017. Defendant's contract with the Energy Department requires it to comply with various federal policies and guidelines for combating fraud.
1:17:19 Specifically, management must develop internal policies and procedures to combat fraud and ensure that they are properly implemented. So in other words, where it looks like it's going, like I said, I haven't read beyond that. It looks like we, because they call it a whistleblower. Brusselman is a whistleblower. You have a whistleblower saying, hey, we're sending money to fake things in over half a million dollars. Yes. It supports exactly, I wanted to read that so everybody knows.
1:17:45 This is a legal case on here. I'll bring it up so nobody has to take my word for it. Y'all can go research it yourself right here. This is evidence from a case that's documented of a whistleblower that's literally talking about what the colonel is teaching us right now. Yes, that's exactly right. So somebody had done several lawsuits, which we'll probably have to do that next time. They're in some really shady shit.
1:18:15 Yes. Yes. And that is exactly what that looks like. So how would you, if you're a not-for-profit company, be money laundering government contracts by shit like that right there? Half a million dollars. Yeah. Yeah. But wait till you get the prices of what we're paying them. And we're going to get to that before. That'll be our last thing for tonight. Okay. So I did want to cover.
1:18:46 the brain injectables since we talked about that. So this, is this the one that is allowing them to fly the, no, this is still the quadriplegic. I want to get to the one that allows them to communicate. So this is the one that you were just talking about. Okay. So let me go on.
1:19:15 Mind control weapons. This is it. Imagine soldiers sitting in a location thousands of miles away from their target and only using their minds to control a weaponized drone. This is the type of technology that the DARPA wants to create through the next generation non-surgical nanotechnology program. So I'm going to send you this link.
1:19:41 that you can post later in the show notes on this article as well. Because this one, this blew my mind. Because what this is talking about is a basic component of mind control is establishing a link between the brain and an external device. One way researchers accomplish this is by translating brain waves into commands by using electro...
1:20:12 encephalography, EEG sensors. EEG is capable of recording the brain's electrical activity. Science had been working on mind control for decades. Yes, at the CIA. In 1969, Eberhard Fitz, F-E-T-Z, published a paper about his research on a monkey that had one
1:20:36 neuron connected to a dial. When the monkey moved the dial with his brain, it received a reward. It learned how to move the dial faster to get more rewards. That was like obviously the beginning. And then it said in 2018, DARPA announced a call for applications for next generation non-surgical neotechno...
1:21:00 neuro technology program that focuses on developing bi-directional brain machine interfaces for military service members. A bi-directional machine interfaces is a connection between the human being and a machine that allows the person control it with their mind. All right. So just wanted you to know that that's out there and rest assured that Patel is working on that and we have nothing to worry about. You mentioned genome.
1:21:29 Battelle had won an associated contractor's agreement with DARPA, epigenetic characterization and observation called ECHO. The aim is to build a field deployable platform technology that quickly reads someone's genome and identify signatures that indicate whether that person has ever in his or her lifetime been exposed to materials.
1:21:58 associated with weapons of mass destruction. I'm just going to let that sit there for a second. Also, a guy that went the other way is Justin Sanchez, who was a neurotechnology expert and director of the Biological Technologies Office at DARPA, is the second technical fellow that went to work at Battelle. So this guy was at DARPA.
1:22:34 And he went to work at Battelle. So let's go down. I want to get to the money. We can come back to, we'll do the other stuff next week, but let's get to the money. I have a whole bunch of charts down here and I want to give you, I did all of the, excuse me, the years. I started with,
1:23:04 2019, so we had a number before COVID. Okay, so fiscal year 2019 starts in October of 2018. The Department of Energy gave Battelle contracts worth $4 billion. The Department of Defense gave them $250 million. Okay, Department of Energy gave them almost $5 billion.
1:23:35 billion dollars okay and there's a whole bunch of little ones like the science foundation 83 million department of health and human services 120 million it sounds like it sounds like a freaking military budget it's just wait all right that was 2019 fy right so 1 october 2018 they got that money in contracts
1:24:06 It goes up in 2020, let's see, 2021, they were up to $5.6 billion in Department of Energy, $242 million in Defense. So that largely stayed about the same.
1:24:33 They were up to a department. Let's see. They almost got nothing that year in department of, let's see, where's the other one? Oh, hold on. Yeah. All right. So let's go to 2024. We have, no, that's not it. Where did I do with it? My things all got jumbled up here. Hold on. Well, you're looking at that.
1:25:16 I've been looking at these different things, and when you're talking about controlling things with these brain implants or these brain chips, and we're talking about this non-invasive technology. So they were coming up with vaccines that are considered non-invasive, and they're considered intranasal. And during COVID, what was everybody having to get shoved up their nose?
1:25:47 these, these, you know, extended, you know, Q-tip things that, you know, we're touching people, the back of people's brains. A lot of people said, you know, there's quote unquote conspiracies about, you know, certain types of chemicals that could break the blood brain barrier and things like that. But nonetheless, if you guys and you Google on science direct.com and just, you know, search out intranasal vaccines and you'll see a bunch of different graphics of different things that can deploy this kind of technology. As we're talking about Battelle having this now.
1:26:17 back if we when when the quote-unquote conspiracies first started breaking about the bioweapon vaccines you heard a lot of people talking about graphene and graphene oxide and immediately there was a mainstream media push on this that it was it was fake it was this etc you had uh karen kingston who does like a she's her job's always been analysis of like the properties that are in something to figure out what it is and she went and
1:26:47 In China, they had to give out, they actually, on their bioweapons, they actually had all the ingredients listed. And I don't remember, this was several years ago, so I'm shooting off memory here. But one of the things, and I forget the name of it, but it was the science numbers for it. Well, it was graphene oxide. So I had a chance to interview her, talk to her about this in depth, but it put me down a path. I go, let me start.
1:27:11 Everybody's calling it a conspiracy. Let me look. And I ended up finding this company. I'm going to bring it up on the screen, Colonel, because it feeds into what this company is doing. And it makes me curious if there's any connections or mutual investors. But this is called InBrain Neural Electronics. And I'm going to scroll down just a little bit. The website's changed a little bit, but I went and verified. They still have this information. It used to be right at the top, but you got to scroll down. And let me read this. A spark of genius.
1:27:41 Harnessing the potential of graphene, we power up science and technology to decode the brain and revolutionize neural disorder treatments. Unparalleled signal resolution. Graphene enables a novel class of flexible, high-resolution, high-precision, graphene-based implantable neural technology delivering increasing treatment efficiency. Now, when you go to this website and you research it,
1:28:09 What they're doing is this is graphene and nanotechnology that they're putting into the brain for the purposes, this is what they're saying, to help people that are suffering with Alzheimer's and dementia. So everybody says, well, that sounds great because it allows, you know, artificial or synthetic control that's taking place in the brain. But then I started wondering, well, if you control that.
1:28:32 What other stuff can you control? And I'm not going to shoot too far down the conspiracy stuff. You guys can find me on these X spaces for those conversations. If we're putting stuff like this in our military, guys, you know, we saw the other thing they were talking about. You would at least have to consider are some of these catastrophic attacks that we see unfold in our country, whether it be a school shooting, you know, whatever.
1:28:59 Is there more to what was going on in this person? Why aren't we doing autopsies on these people? And I'm just putting it out there because I just don't want people to write it all off as conspiracy, because like I said, you guys can go research this and this website and you'll find it. And then obviously we're talking about, you know, this company tonight. I don't know. It just makes me extremely uncomfortable. So not only why are we not doing autopsies?
1:29:29 They burned the bodies immediately. I did not know that part. But that's what they did. The guy that was the attempted assassin, supposedly, in Pennsylvania. Oh, yes, yes. The guy that was out there in Las Vegas, burnt. Yeah, was it Paddock? Paddock was the Vegas guy. Well, no, I'm talking about the one we just had in the Tesla. Oh, yes, the one with the Tesla. I was going all the way back to the...
1:30:07 And that's not unusual in a lot of the Gladio things that I found. That is one of the things they do almost immediately. Like, for example, they embalm them, too. So when they killed the Supreme Court Justice Scalia, they embalmed him immediately, like like on the ranch. They didn't even take him anywhere. He was embalmed immediately because people.
1:30:35 felt that there was foul play there. And rightfully so, because he was on a ranch that basically was part of the St. Hubris Hunt Club, which is tied directly to Bohemian Grove. It's on a border, blah, blah, blah. There's all kinds of Gladio-ish stuff. And it was Poindexter who was involved in the Iran-Contra with the Reagan administration, blah, blah, blah.
1:31:03 There was a lot of weird things. And they did the same thing to the Pope that they poisoned that was Pope for 33 days because he said he was going to start investigating the Vatican Bank. And you're not allowed to do that when they're money laundering for the CIA and everybody else. So he was poisoned. Everything pointed to the fact that he was poisoned to include the nun that found him was disappeared.
1:31:30 He was involved immediately. And you're not even allowed to do that to a Pope. I was like, I don't even think, I think. Yeah, he did it because he had poison in his blood. Yeah. So anyway, back to the money. So by the time we get to 2024, the Department of Energy contracts has doubled. They went from $3 billion to almost $7 billion a year.
1:32:05 If you actually look at these contracts, first of all, before you look at the contracts, because they're multi-year contracts, I want you to show, and I'll show you why nothing's ever done. Let's see if we can see this map here. The dark green is where most of the money goes. Idaho and Tennessee, because there's two labs there. You see Washington State? I do.
1:32:36 And all of the East Coast from Florida all the way up to include Massachusetts, Michigan, Texas, Colorado and California. That's where they spend their money. So none of those people are going to want to change any of this. Right. Because the senators are going to be fine with spending your money to go to these states for this company. But let me let me.
1:33:05 just tell you some of these open ended. All right. So, um, what the one for, um, let's see, cause these, they're just, the numbers are crazy. All right. Um, one of the contracts for the Battelle Memorial Institute is, um, $5 billion. Um, another one is
1:33:35 Five million. Another one, five million. Four million. And there's, let's see. Let me get to the last page. Because there's pages and pages of four and five million dollars. And then we get to the three million dollars. And let me just give you some of the, because this website is US Spending.
1:34:05 It tells you what they're for. It's like built-in measurements to meet DOD R&D technology solution for built-in trust measurement techniques. Phase three rational integration design of energetic ride, R-I-D-E program. Laboratory support for division.
1:34:33 of one of the labs. That's a $4 million contract. Screening potential medical countermeasures for chlorine, gas, and small animals. That one alone was $4.3 million for that year. Non-human primate experiment.
1:35:02 Air-based technology for airfield protection from blast. Detection. Canine solution and performance enhancements. That canine one, $4 million. What are we enhancing canines? What are we doing to them? Putting neural links in them too? I don't know how you enhance a dog. Somebody's going to have to help me with that one. But those are the kinds of...
1:35:36 Oh, I love this one. A box shredder. Two point four million dollars. I probably need that for elections. Oh, here's a hamster one for vaccine testing. Two point three million dollars. And I'm telling you, there's pages and pages and pages of these contracts to the tune of six and a half, almost seven billion dollars.
1:36:08 In one year. And that's just one agency. That's the Department of Energy. That's not the Department of Defense, Health and Human Services, all of the others. The CIA. None of the CIA's budget's on here. So we don't know how. None of the DARPA business is on here either because that's all classified. You know, the Department of Energy is going to become very relevant here in the month of January, y'all.
1:36:37 This was so crazy because they're in bed with the Department of Energy. And think about all the lab problems we've had, the security clearances, the Chinese people that were caught in New Mexico. These guys are in charge of the labs. There's a there there. You know, for those that you have been kind of, you know, tracking devolution, you know, Patel talks about peds a lot. The most peds written.
1:37:09 Or the department that has the most PEDs ever written is the Department of Energy. So it's just there's a bunch of interesting stuff there. I would tell everybody, go study Executive Order 14110. It's an executive order that Biden put in place. And I got what I would consider very reliable information that we're probably going to see this as one of the first ones that President Trump reverses, if not even the.
1:37:41 first one that he reverses. So it's just the timing on tonight's show, Colonel, one would think it was scripted. My mouth here. All right, I'm going to close with this. Project Clear Vision. This was a covert project conducted by Patel under a contract to the CIA in 1997.
1:38:11 2000. So this would be the end of the Clinton. While this does not directly name specific individuals, it indicates a working relationship with Battelle and the CIA, which implies that former CIA employees have been involved with Battelle. CIA-related projects. I asked Grok to find CIA-related projects with Battelle. Here's what came back.
1:38:42 References from the CIA FOIA documents mentioned Battelle in context with UFO research, Project Blue Book, and other scientific collaborations. For instance, in the 1950s, Battelle was involved in projects related to UFO sightings under arrangements with the Air Technical Intelligence Center, ATIC, which worked.
1:39:08 closely with the CIA. These projects suggest a longstanding relationship. So, very, very interesting. Were you on my call today, Colonel? I don't know. I know all you're talking about. I, in the same conversation on this executive order conversation I was having, I have my notes. I take notes during some of these important calls. Salvador Pais, are you familiar with this guy? Zero Point Technology? Yes.
1:39:43 I'll tell you guys what, you know, go study executive order one, four, one, one, zero rewatch this show. Look at Salvador pies and zero point technology and, and look for a show here and probably in the next 10 days where you're going to see how I just, I'm telling you guys.
1:40:03 Colonel is completely unaware of a conversation I had this morning. The person I had the conversation with earlier today was completely unaware of the conversation I was going to have with Colonel. And right now I'm just freaking the hell out because I was just like, what's going on? What? So you guys do your homework on that. Yes, it is. Let me correct it. It's executive order 14110 in case I said an extra four instead of one. So once again, executive order 14.
1:40:32 110 is the executive order, y'all. Things are about to get very, very interesting. And next show, what we're going to cover is where Battelle has done business worldwide and how it relates to Operation Gladio. Oh, man.
1:40:55 Part two, you guys, is standby to standby. I do want to bring something on the screen. So for those of you, you slackers that showed up late to the show today, you missed out on a surprise, an awesome surprise that the Colonel and maybe Bridget, maybe Sunshine, maybe a team of people. We're trying to figure that out. It's all of us. It's everybody. But what you see on the screen right there is.
1:41:20 one of a different versions of the operation gladio trump t-shirt and let me click on this so you guys can see how super freaking cool this is if you're like oh that is super cool colonel super cool how do we get it down uh on the description on rumble is the link that colonel provided me
1:41:41 It's the first thing you're going to get to. So you can go and preorder these kernel. You want to kind of just give everybody some insight. We shared earlier about the background of these shirts and the vendor, et cetera. So a lot of people had asked about doing something. A lot of people want to help, but I don't want people just giving us money. So I had been talking to my daughter about, I don't know how to do any of that crap as far as setting up this crap that she set up.
1:42:10 So she finally got around to having the time to set all of this up. I gave her two criterias that the person had to be local. I didn't want one of these national companies that lived far away. And it had to be veteran owned. So she found me a veteran owned local company that is producing these shirts. And they're working with us on the designs.
1:42:39 So I'm making available these shirts and basically using the money to somewhat compensate for all of the books.
1:42:50 And the investment that we've made in Operation Gladio. But again, I didn't want to do that. There's been some people that have been very generous in doing rants over on Rumble. There's people that donate to us. Well, to me and my other daughter, who's helped me write articles on Substack. And so she kind of set that whole thing up for me. And I just write and she...
1:43:16 publishes and edits and, and does all that crap for me on, um, sub stack. So, um, trust me, this is, um, we're not making any money here. Um, like I said, we've spent, um, thousands of dollars on books. I'm up to 87 of them now. Um, I don't know if you can, I hate to even show you cause I have a mess on my desk right now, but, um, let me see if I can show you.
1:43:45 This is the pile of books that I just got in. There's like probably 11 of them here that I will be reading over the next little bit to pick our next book club book that we do at four o'clock. But I've got the other 72 of them out in my she shed.
1:44:09 That's where I got all of this knowledge is reading those books. The ones out there I've read, these I've not read yet. And so it's been a daunting task. And some of them are out of print. Some of them we've had to pay like a couple hundred dollars for because they're in private ownership. So it has been a labor of love and anything that y'all could do as far as these t-shirts. But I am sending Alpha one.
1:44:39 because without Alpha, we would still be at probably 5,000 followers on X and struggling to get the word out. And Bridget just said, I need to work on my other bookshelf. So she made me a beautiful bookshelf. And I owe you a picture. I'll get it for next week. By the time she got the bookcase here,
1:45:05 We had completely filled the entire bookcase up. It's a big ass bookcase. It's like four feet tall and three feet wide. And it is completely filled with books. Sweet baby Jesus. Yes. And those are the books I've read. So we're going to do another area over the, there's like a little bank of cabinets and we're going to do another long bookshelf over there.
1:45:34 And I'm not going to fill that one out. I'm sorry. I'll have to bet against you on that one, Colonel. This other design that we see on the front of the T-shirt right here is going to be a Gladio coin. And I think that is freaking cool. So we're going to offer a Gladio coin. We're in designing right now. This is going to be the front side of the coin. And just so that you guys know, as a Colonel.
1:46:01 Our rank emblem is an eagle. And so you have the eagle, the American eagle, clutching the Gladio sword, meaning that we have finally got control of it. And above the head of the eagle, you have the two compass roses. One's emblematic of the CIA's logo and one's emblematic of the NATO. Both of them use, coincidentally, the compass rose because they are tied at the hip.
1:46:31 Um, and we will have a really cool design on the back. I will bring that here as soon as we finish it up there. I, what I have right now, I'm not completely satisfied with, so we're going to tweak it a little bit, but you guys know, uh, somebody, uh, I think Bridget put the link in the chat links down in the description. And I believe I saw one or two different people over on X as well. So just so that y'all know, um,
1:46:59 The challenge coin is anytime that you are anywhere with the Patriots, it is a military tradition. And I don't know if you guys can see this one here. So it's kind of got a blur. This coin right up here, when you make wing commander in the Air Force, that's the level and above that you get your coin.
1:47:30 You have a coin, my coin. It says Commander Colonel Roxanne Taylor on it. And I don't know. It's kind of let me hear. Let me see if I can turn this off because I think that no, that's the lights off of that. So anyway, you get your own coin. And because we don't get to give rewards or medals and stuff like that very often in the military.
1:47:58 When when I would go to my I had like 34 detachments all over the world. And when I would travel, they would always give you like one of the enlisted people or a junior officer to be your escort officer. They take care of your billeting, drive you to the meetings and stuff like that, pick you up at the airport, whatever. And so at the end of the visit, you give them your coin. And the challenge coin is when you're in a bar.
1:48:23 and someone coins you they put the coin on the bar then you look across everybody else if you don't have a coin you're buying if you have the lowest ranking coin on the bar you're buying now obviously as a colonel i would have always been the lowest ranking one and i only carried my own coin when i went anywhere um but i have um and could have had
1:48:48 To include the SecDefs coin, I've got the Deputy Secretary. So I only put in this case the coins that are the most meaningful to me. Like I was on the CENTCOM staff, so I have General Frank's coin. That's what that one is up there. This two-star was my commander in Northern Iraq. He was the Deputy Fifth Corps Commander in Europe.
1:49:09 That was his real job. Then he was task force Bravo commander in northern Iraq during deny flight, which is where I worked for him. He went on to be a three star. I have his three star coin, which he was the Army Space Command commander, Jake Garner. And he engraved his three star coin with the date I pinned on major and came to my promotion ceremony.
1:49:33 So these coins are a very big deal for military people. And so I think since these bastards have used the military in a really bad way, that it's fitting to have a coin that's representative of our exposing Operation Gladio. And so it was very important to me to do this coin thing because we are going to.
1:49:58 if not single-handedly with people like Alpha helping us destroy these bastards for doing what they did to us collectively, both in the military because of the way they used us and lied to us with false intel to get us to kill people that we should have never been killing and to deploy places that we should have never been. We're going to be the death of them. Absolutely. And for those wondering.
1:50:25 But do people still use this challenge coin? Yes, we do. Because I deployed it on CanCon's ass when we were on Myrtle Beach. And he looked at me and his response was, you motherfucker. And I said, yeah, this is the drink I want, sir. So, yes. You're all around me. You better be on your toes because I carry mine. But then he didn't want to give it back to me because he didn't want me to do it to him anymore.
1:50:55 So he gave it back to me before I flew home. But yeah, we still do that. We still do the challenge. Colonel has been awesome. As always, you guys do me a huge solid. If you're new to the channel, like, share, subscribe. The content is free. If you want to take it to the next step and become a supporting member for five dollars a month. Appreciate it. If you're watching on X, you want to subscribe for three dollars a month. Appreciate it. But the content is always going to be free.
1:51:25 I do do some stuff from time to time in addition to it. But just know the critical information is always going to be free. With that said, one of the most critical topics is this, Operation Gladio. And you don't have to just wait Wednesday nights for it. The Colonel's doing this all the time. So you guys need to go over to the Colonel's Corner on Rumble. You need to subscribe for her channel. And then you need to go to your song. Alpha's giving you guys homework here, right? Then you need to get that link. Go to your different social medias and say, hey, listen.
1:51:54 The reason you guys don't know what the hell's going on in the world is because you don't watch Operation Gladio. So you need to subscribe to the Colonel's Corner and you have them go there and you send it to X. This is where the team effort comes into play for getting this information to everybody. So help us by doing that stuff. And it doesn't cost you anything but a few minutes of your time. Colonel, thank you for what you do. Sure. One last thing. Noon tomorrow.
1:52:19 continuing series i'm doing with war hamster on secret societies we're talking about skull and bones um he's a wealth of knowledge i love doing the show with him so um please come and join us the guy and like economics and stuff and all this is just like he's a reformed wall street banker it's like it's like war hamster war hamster is amazing
1:52:47 You got to break that down in the closest version to pictures for me, man. Okay. Like you, you got to paint the picture for me. A brilliant guy. That'll be a great show. Make sure you guys tune in one last thing. If you tuned in late and Oh, go ahead. One last thing. Paul Williams is going to be on the four o'clock show on Friday. Again. Yes. He so enjoyed that show. And obviously if you watch the show, you know, I thoroughly enjoyed it.
1:53:16 He is going to be on the show again. He wanted to come back because we just scratched the surface. If you haven't watched that show, go find it on my Rumble channel last Thursday at noon. And it's going to knock your socks off. This guy was the who's who. And as soon as he started talking about opera, he wrote the book Operation Gladio.
1:53:44 As soon as he, he was, um, what we're going to be at 1130. Um, on Friday, um, as he knew William Buckley, he knew everybody. He was on Fox news. He did interviews all the time. He was on CNN. As soon as he started talking about operation Gladio. Wow. Yes. Inside, inside. If you ever needed confirmation, you're on the right path.
1:54:16 when they censor you you're on the right path you want to know what's important talk about see what you're not allowed to talk about and if they cut them off invited on any of them shows again he's an amazing man um just generically um because he's traveled all over the world he's you know very he was a catholic school teacher he was a catholic um um
1:54:42 worked at all kinds like professor, all of that stuff. And basically out of the Vatican in the Vatican church and their role in operation Gladio and was like cut off. So that's Friday, Friday, 1130 AM Eastern. You guys, uh, one last rumble rant that came in $10 from AP Jonas. Great show by two freedom fighters. And speaking of freedom, you haven't been keeping track of my story.
1:55:13 Alpha is free, free, free. This Monday morning, the United States corrupt DOJ FBI government said, we surrender, Alpha. We surrender. We dismiss the case. Maybe it didn't say all that.
1:55:32 But that's how I took it. You guys, thank you for watching the show. Do us a solid like, share, comment, subscribe. Let us know what you like and just put this information out there. And I will see you guys tomorrow on SITREP, 9 p.m. Eastern over there on Badlands Search for Mountain Rumble. God bless and Semper Fi.

Entities here

Battelle35Operation Gladio15U.S. Department of Energy13DARPA10Battelle for Kids8Department of Defense6George H.W. Bush4COVID-19 pandemic4Justin J. Jackson4Robert Gates3U.S. Air Force3Gordon Battelle3Les Wexner2Columbus, Ohio2Starlink2Fort Detrick2Busselman v. Battelle2Hewlett Foundation2Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation2Teresa Borowski2Karen Kingston2Kurdistan2Jim Mahoney2University of Chicago2Common Core2Eberhard Fetz2National Clandestine Service2Paul L. Williams2Georgia2Stephanie O'Sullivan2Salvador Pais1Project Clear Vision1Project Blue Book1Richland, Washington1Bohemian Grove1St. Hubris Hunt Club1Vatican Bank1Washington State1New Mexico1Pulling State Telephone Survey Health Data for National Estimates1

Claims made here

Gordon Battelle founded Battelle host_asserted ▶ 7:32
“And I'm like, who's who's in my computer? I was like, yeah, actually, I just found them yesterday. So let me know when you get that up. I will have in about 30 seconds. OK, so the guy that founded the…”
Battelle funded U.S. Department of Energy host_asserted ▶ 10:42
“This company, and I'm going to go through their financials in a minute, but this company has the contracts to operate all of the, well, most of the labs that the Department of Energy, like directed en…”
General Cromer member_of U.S. Air Force guest_asserted ▶ 14:00
“One of those three guys got promoted to three stars, and he was our commander out at Los Angeles Air Force Base when I was stationed there in the late 80s. General Cromer was one of the three. They ne…”
NAVSTAR member_of U.S. Air Force guest_asserted ▶ 14:27
“This boat, the procurement office out there was called Navstar and Navigational Star. And so Navstar initially was a classified program. And we had GPS capability long before anybody actually knew we …”
Les Wexner funded Jeffrey Epstein host_asserted ▶ 21:01
“Jeffrey Epstein's benefactor. There's a lot of really crazy things that are in Columbus, by the way. And what I find interesting and corollary to that is a lot of people don't know that they were actu…”
George H.W. Bush pardoned Battelle host_asserted ▶ 21:58
“Then a coincidence. But going on, they actually lost their tax exempt status for a period of time. But you know who gave it back to them? Bush Jr. Right after 2001. That's not a coincidence either. OK…”
Battelle funded Fort Detrick host_asserted ▶ 23:57
“dangerous stuff that's out of Fort Detrick. They have hundreds of millions of dollars of contracts for Fort Detrick. They have the custodial responsibility for the lab in Ukraine, the level four lab w…”
Battelle funded Georgia host_asserted ▶ 24:27
“Both of them responsible for releases of known contagious outbreaks of stuff. The Georgia lab in the country of Georgia has so many bad things that's happened around it where people have gotten sick a…”
Battelle funded COVID-19 pandemic host_asserted ▶ 25:22
“improving neonatal respiratory treatments, pioneering medical technologies. They play a role in the rapid testing of COVID-19, which was what allowed us to perpetuate a lie. They also created a decont…”
Battelle funded Department of Defense host_asserted ▶ 31:37
“care decontamination systems that's what that um n95 thing was which was a total joke it's like literally spraying hydrogen peroxide but it was 400 million dollars um involvement in um homeland depart…”
Battelle funded Defense Health Agency host_asserted ▶ 31:37
“care decontamination systems that's what that um n95 thing was which was a total joke it's like literally spraying hydrogen peroxide but it was 400 million dollars um involvement in um homeland depart…”
Battelle funded U.S. Department of Homeland Security host_asserted ▶ 31:37
“care decontamination systems that's what that um n95 thing was which was a total joke it's like literally spraying hydrogen peroxide but it was 400 million dollars um involvement in um homeland depart…”
Hewlett Foundation funded Battelle for Kids host_asserted ▶ 35:08
“Within the classroom, teachers are encouraged to find examples within key content areas that maximize both social, emotional, and academic skills and explicitly teach these skills. Since P21, the Batt…”
Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation funded Battelle for Kids host_asserted ▶ 35:37
“which is on the campus of Berkeley. Is it Berkeley? No, Stanford. And every evil story has a Stanford element, by the way. So they're working with Hewlett Packard's foundation. They are also significa…”
Teresa Borowski member_of University of Chicago host_asserted ▶ 36:06
“The Battelle for Kids. So a woman by the name of Teresa Borowski was a graduate student in community and prevention research, whatever the hell that is, Ph.D. in psychology at the University of Chicag…”
Teresa Borowski member_of Battelle for Kids host_asserted ▶ 36:36
“She's the one responsible for this program, by the way. She works as a research specialist with Castle's research team that creates a thing called Frameworks subgroup for assessing work groups of chil…”
Robert Gates funded Common Core host_asserted ▶ 40:36
“involvement with Bill Gates to set up all Common Core state standards back in the day with Bush. I remember the Common Core. Yeah. These guys were working on that with them. Okay. So let me get back t…”
Jim Mahoney headed Battelle for Kids book_quoted ▶ 41:10
“was basically on the group that worked with Bill Gates to create the Common Core stuff for George Bush Jr. And this is a quote from his, I think it's his LinkedIn thing. It says, I joined Battelle for…”
Jim Mahoney member_of Common Core host_asserted ▶ 41:10
“was basically on the group that worked with Bill Gates to create the Common Core stuff for George Bush Jr. And this is a quote from his, I think it's his LinkedIn thing. It says, I joined Battelle for…”
Battelle member_of Manhattan Project host_asserted ▶ 1:01:23
“So they have a lot of contracts for cleaning that up. But listen to this. In the early years, Battelle made advances in metal and material science and it landed its first federal contract in 1939 to s…”
Battelle member_of DARPA Plan X host_asserted ▶ 1:06:02
“Or not trace them. So they have the ability to trace them. They're just choosing not to use them. Okay. Here we get to DARPA. DARPA and Battelle have collaborated on advanced resource projects over th…”
Battelle funded Department of Defense host_asserted ▶ 1:06:34
“This program focused on improving military cyber capabilities and defense strategies. Battelle has contributed to developing tools and methodologies for cyber warfare and cyber defense to be used by t…”
DARPA funded Battelle host_asserted ▶ 1:07:04
“You would think that if they have all of this technology and have done all of this cyber defense, how did our elections get hacked? How does any elections get hacked? So DARPA have worked with Battell…”
National Institute of Health funded Battelle host_asserted ▶ 1:10:58
“in getting funding from them to work in biotech research projects, including infectious disease studies, drug development, and clinical trials. This included the COVID-19 research, vaccine, and pandem…”
Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation funded Battelle host_asserted ▶ 1:11:30
“And they work with the Bill and Melinda Gates on these projects. I want to get down to, I have a whole bunch of stuff. They work with NASA. The thing with the DOE is the thing, the Department of Energ…”
NASA funded Battelle host_asserted ▶ 1:11:30
“And they work with the Bill and Melinda Gates on these projects. I want to get down to, I have a whole bunch of stuff. They work with NASA. The thing with the DOE is the thing, the Department of Energ…”
Stephanie O'Sullivan member_of Battelle host_asserted ▶ 1:12:00
“is doing, this company is at the heart of every contentious issue that we've had in the last 10 years. So here's the ones I wanted to get to. Here's the CIA chick that's on the board. Stephanie O'Sull…”
Justin J. Jackson member_of Battelle host_asserted ▶ 1:12:58
“The second guy was Justin J. Jackson. He was hired by Patel to serve as a vice president of senior relationships for special programs. And for anybody that knows what special programs is, that's all t…”
National Clandestine Service carried_out_attack Operation Gladio host_asserted ▶ 1:13:28
“Justin J. Jackson. Tell me what you find. Where he served most recently as the Deputy Director of National Clandestine Service. And what does the National Clandestine Service do? They're the people th…”
Justin J. Jackson carried_out_attack Operation Gladio host_asserted ▶ 1:15:31
“and I ran counterintelligence operations to detect efforts that foreign countries were making against us, he says. Yeah. So he is a Gladio operator who works at Battelle. Well, are you familiar? I'm t…”
Battelle managed Pacific Northwest National Laboratory documented ▶ 1:16:25
“A defendant is an energy department contractor that manages the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory in Richland, Washington. Plaintiff is defendant's employee at this location and has worked there f…”
Battelle overbilled_or_diverted U.S. Treasury Department documented ▶ 1:16:52
“a $530,000 invoice submitted by a fraudulent entity posing as a subcontractor. The U.S. Department of the Treasury electronically transferred the funds to the fraudulent entity. Defendant became aware…”
DARPA funded Battelle host_asserted ▶ 1:21:29
“Battelle had won an associated contractor's agreement with DARPA, epigenetic characterization and observation called ECHO. The aim is to build a field deployable platform technology that quickly reads…”
Justin Sanchez member_of Battelle host_asserted ▶ 1:21:58
“associated with weapons of mass destruction. I'm just going to let that sit there for a second. Also, a guy that went the other way is Justin Sanchez, who was a neurotechnology expert and director of …”
Justin Sanchez member_of DARPA host_asserted ▶ 1:21:58
“associated with weapons of mass destruction. I'm just going to let that sit there for a second. Also, a guy that went the other way is Justin Sanchez, who was a neurotechnology expert and director of …”
Department of Defense funded Battelle host_asserted ▶ 1:23:04
“2019, so we had a number before COVID. Okay, so fiscal year 2019 starts in October of 2018. The Department of Energy gave Battelle contracts worth $4 billion. The Department of Defense gave them $250 …”
U.S. Department of Energy funded Battelle host_asserted ▶ 1:23:04
“2019, so we had a number before COVID. Okay, so fiscal year 2019 starts in October of 2018. The Department of Energy gave Battelle contracts worth $4 billion. The Department of Defense gave them $250 …”
John Poindexter member_of St. Hubris Hunt Club host_asserted ▶ 1:30:35
“felt that there was foul play there. And rightfully so, because he was on a ranch that basically was part of the St. Hubris Hunt Club, which is tied directly to Bohemian Grove. It's on a border, blah,…”
Battelle funded U.S. Department of Energy host_asserted ▶ 1:31:30
“He was involved immediately. And you're not even allowed to do that to a Pope. I was like, I don't even think, I think. Yeah, he did it because he had poison in his blood. Yeah. So anyway, back to the…”
Battelle member_of Project Blue Book documented ▶ 1:38:42
“References from the CIA FOIA documents mentioned Battelle in context with UFO research, Project Blue Book, and other scientific collaborations. For instance, in the 1950s, Battelle was involved in pro…”
Air Technical Intelligence Center member_of Project Blue Book documented ▶ 1:38:42
“References from the CIA FOIA documents mentioned Battelle in context with UFO research, Project Blue Book, and other scientific collaborations. For instance, in the 1950s, Battelle was involved in pro…”
Battelle funded Operation Gladio host_asserted ▶ 1:40:32
“110 is the executive order, y'all. Things are about to get very, very interesting. And next show, what we're going to cover is where Battelle has done business worldwide and how it relates to Operatio…”
Paul L. Williams founded Operation Gladio host_asserted ▶ 1:53:16
“He is going to be on the show again. He wanted to come back because we just scratched the surface. If you haven't watched that show, go find it on my Rumble channel last Thursday at noon. And it's goi…”
Catholic Church member_of Operation Gladio host_asserted ▶ 1:54:42
“worked at all kinds like professor, all of that stuff. And basically out of the Vatican in the Vatican church and their role in operation Gladio and was like cut off. So that's Friday, Friday, 1130 AM…”