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Operation Gladio - Burkina Faso

1:50:21

Transcript

0:00 Hello, hello, hello. If everybody could repost the space for us and let everybody know. I'm going to do that myself real quick. And I'm going to put it over on Truth Social as well. And I don't think I'm going to be able to have it on.
0:37 rumbled today because my internet is spotty at best um thank you starlink um because of the storm going through here um right now you're on here huh unless at least i'm on here yeah um but it does um seem to not want to do that um so i'm gonna we're here
1:12 So we've been out since seven 30. So, but I'll stick around for a little while. Okay. Love you. So glad to see your smiling face. Yeah. Love you too. Missed you guys all weekend. Right. Yeah. I was kind of buried in books and grand baby. So it's a big balancing act now. I can only imagine.
1:43 I'm not sure how all that's going to work out, but I'm going to do my best. Anyway, so I am going to, so we're doing, as you can see, Burkina Faso. And if I thought any of the names were difficult before, boy, was I wrong.
2:18 because the names in this one is even more crazy. I mean, like names that have 15 vowels and like maybe three consonants. So it's a very interesting group of names that is going to be involved in this. So I'm going to try one more time to get us up on.
2:50 rumble real quick, and if I can't do it, then so be it. Let's see. It does not look like it is going to let me do that. That's crazy. It won't even highlight for me to actually open it. All right, so be it.
3:27 We're just going to plug through this and we'll go back to Rumble once we can get StreamYard up and running. Okay, so the first thing I have to do, because this is a very confusing thing, as with most of the African continent, because it spent so much time as colonies of Europe, the history of these countries is very crazy with a whole bunch of different names per country.
3:57 If you're not very good with geography, then sometimes that can be very challenging. So what we're going to do is we're going to locate it first. And then we're going to talk a little bit about the history. And then we're going to dive in to one of their many coups that definitely had CIA fingerprints on it.
4:27 So just so that you know, you can envision the continent of Africa on the west side. Like we've spent a lot of time over on the Horn of Africa that was on the east side. So Burkina Faso is on the west side. And as you go up, if you look at it from the fact that on the west side, the...
4:52 peninsula that sticks down and then it has the big bend in it that goes out to the west, it reminds you a lot of the state of Florida. So as you go down the peninsula, you have Equatorial Guinea, you have Angola down there, and then at the very end you have South Africa. If you go up to the big bend, you have Cameroon, you have Nigeria, Benin.
5:21 Togo, Ghana, Cote d'Ivory, and then you have over on the very west side before you start heading north again, Liberia, Sierra Leone, Guinea, Guinea-Basso, Senegal, and it just keeps on going up. All right. So if you were to come back over here where...
5:52 Togo, Ghana, and basically the coast of Ivory is. You have just north of Ghana, Burkina Faso. So, easy for you to say. It has many neighbors. To the north and most of the west is Mali. It kind of goes across the northern border and swoops down around its western
6:22 coastline or border. And it is completely landlocked. It has, as you start across the southern border, it has the Cote d'Aubry. It has Ghana. It has Togo and Benin, B-I-N-I-N. And then as you head up the eastern border, you have
6:52 Let's see. You have Niger. So that kind of gives you Mali, Niger. And most of these for our purposes, what we need to know about this is how many of their neighbors. Most of this entire area was a colony of France, which based on our research and what we've exposed as far as.
7:21 former French colonies, you're going to know immediately they're completely unstable. Colonel, can you hear me?
8:02 I think you're banding, although it might be on my end. Nope, she is banding. Yeah, you're banding. Okay, try again. We'll only fit in bits and pieces. Yeah, we may not be able to do this today with the hurricane. It's weird because she was good in the beginning. Yeah, I don't hear her at all now. Hang in there, folks. I think she's trying something to fix it. Maybe.
9:00 This is where we need a karaoke machine. Right? It's not like, well, we have, you know. Okay, she's going to leave and come back in, guys, and we'll see if it improves. Otherwise, with the hurricane going on down here, there is a lot of interference. So we may have to redo this tomorrow. But I don't want to speak for her either. Can you hear me? Yep.
9:44 Now I can hear you. All right. So we'll go as long as this allows us. No, and I can't hear. Can you not hear me? Cousin it. All right. No, I got you now. Okay. I was going to say, just go out and come back in. We will try this one more time. And if we can't, then we'll just postpone it till tomorrow. And I apologize in advance for the technical difficulties, but.
10:13 We have band after band after band of storm coming through here right now. I live in central Florida, so it's a little dicey. All right, so we're going to start over, and I'm going to talk about the geography. We have moved from the eastern Horn of Africa part to the western part with the Burkina Faso area.
10:43 And the most important part to understand about this area is that it's a former French colony. And as a result of that, we talked at length in several of our other shows about how they manipulated the minority and majority tribal areas in order to pit them against each other as they stole all of their resources. And basically when they...
11:12 supposedly pulled out in the way in which only a colonizing force could do that that didn't really actually do that they left a big mess because they had no intentions of actually ever decolonializing so by setting the thing up for failure it allowed them to maintain their clutches into the country and as a result because they had monopolized all of the
11:41 concessions into the natural resources they continued to take all of the resources out of the country through mining contracts and such as that they had privatized their telephone systems their banking and all of this stuff and so they never left in most cases the exception to that was when they got kicked out by
12:08 Generally not the initial quote unquote president that got elected. But in the case of places like the Congo, the first election actually installed a nationalist leader and he was quickly assassinated. So the message was throughout Africa that if you are going to take care of the citizens and actually decolonialize your country, you are going to get murdered.
12:36 That was a well-known fact among many of these leaders. Some still braved the odds and tried. I've not met one that has not either been thrown out of their country by the CIA or murdered. And sometimes both, because sometimes they were thrown out and come back and got murdered. So this, again, is a pattern that repeats itself throughout the continent of Africa.
13:04 You are noticing, as we pointed out last time, it doesn't matter. I could take a pin the tail on the donkey tail and a map of Africa and stick it on there blindfolded, and I'm going to hit a country that the CIA could. I've not found one in looking at all of them. It's just a matter of which one has maybe some little unique aspect to it that I can talk to you about. Otherwise, this would be completely boring. I would just say,
13:35 Oh, Gannett coup, Burkina Faso coup, Mali coup, Sierra Leone coup, because they pretty much all look alike too. It may be a difference in the fact that one has gold versus uranium versus whatever, but basically they've all been couped. And if you notice, when we studied South America and Central America and the Caribbean and...
14:04 We're going to move on to Asia and the Middle East. It's pretty much all the same. So I'm going to have to recount because when we get to just like this one, there's been five coups in this one country. So I'm sure we're well over 80. That's just a number that I feel comfortable that I can defend. But I'm sure we're well over that. All right. So.
14:33 I need to tell you a little bit about the history of it so you can fully appreciate. Let me pull that up real quick because it is quite interesting, especially the sheer number of coups that they've had.
15:01 Oh, and another thing that I left out of my diatribe there is how many of the generally military people that coup the elected government was schooled in America. Because that's another pattern that repeats itself in Burkina Faso. All right. So, all right. The largest ethnic group.
15:31 is called MOSIE, M-O-S-I-E. And they primarily live around the Volta, V-O-L-T-A River Basin. They're about 52% of the population in Burkina Faso. And they've been there since like the...
16:00 12th century. So very long time. They were previously organized into kingdoms. And I'm going to spell this one because this one comes up a lot and you'll understand why I have no idea how to say it. O-U-A-G-A-D-O-U-G-O-U. Agagadogu. That's going to be my attempt.
16:31 because I do have to say that several times, but that is one of the kingdoms that was there. Tengodogo was another one, and Yatinga was the third primary large that kind of coalesced into this one area. They were colonized just before the 1900s in 1896 by French.
16:58 And they became part of what was called the French West Africa region or large colony. They were later kind of spun off into a what they referred to as a self-governing colony, which kind of I mean, you know how they had like the governorship in the UK, British colonies and stuff like that.
17:27 They didn't get their full independence and an elected president until 1960. But in 1958, supposedly, that process had started. And when they did that, they named this the Upper Volta, V-O-L-T-A. So that was the name of the country temporarily between the time that it was the French colony and the time that it became Burkina Faso.
17:57 So their first president, Yamigo Maurice, and he very much was in bed with the French, like he kind of was their appointed ambassador to oversee their quote unquote former colony.
18:26 Just so that you understand how destabilized they left this country, they had a coup in 1966. They had a coup in 1980. They had a coup in 1982. They had another one the following year in 1983. They had a coup in 1987. And they had two in one year in 2022, one in January and one in September.
18:53 We're going to talk a little bit about one particular one that I was able to get enough information on to say unequivocally there was CIA involvement in it. So, all right. One other thing in, let's see, I wanted to go over.
19:25 challenge, obviously, that this country had, because as with all of the former European colonies, they left most of the people there uneducated and basically no health care because they frankly didn't care if they died. As a matter of fact, I told you that many people were dismembered for not making production quotas. However, the guy that we're going to talk about today, Sankara.
19:55 And he very much wanted to change all of that. But he wasn't around until 1983. So these other coups in 66, in 80 and 82 happened before he came to power. And he basically was a nationalist. He changed everything. He wanted to everybody to have access to education. He outlawed.
20:22 female genital mutilization and polygamy and forced marriages, blah, blah, blah. I mean, he really was trying to turn the country around. As a matter of fact, interestingly enough, they called him the Che Guevara of Africa because he very much was against anything the CIA did. Wherever they were at, he was against it. He spoke up.
20:51 quite loudly against imperialism and how detrimental that was to the continent of Africa. So their resources, they're resource rich as most of these destabilized countries are. They have gold, manganese, copper, and limestone. And again,
21:21 he was one of the people that was very interested in nationalizing those and making sure that those resources were used to the maximum extent of the people and not mining companies. He even created a, he reinstituted people being allowed to be in labor unions and set up
21:49 a mining industry, educating people in engineering and all kinds of stuff so they could be self-sufficient, which, again, is another reason why he was assassinated. So, spoiler alert. So, most of this information comes from a guy whose articles we've discussed repeatedly. His name's Jeremy Kuzmarov, and he wrote a fascinating article about
22:19 Burkina Faso. So we're going to take most of this information from his article. And his first name is Thomas Sankara. And his best friend, Blaise, B-L-A-I-S-E, Kampari, C-O-M-P-A-O-R-E, grew up
22:51 Best friends, they were in a music band together, traveled all over the area. And Sankara's parents adopted Kampari because his parents had died when he was very young. So basically, they're literally legally brothers. And in 1983, the two of them launched a coup against the military regime that had couped the former president.
23:22 I was in charge in 1903 is John Batista Quadrago. His last name is O-U-E-D-R-A-O-G-O. And I know I'm butchering these names, but just bear with me. I'll at least consistently mispronounce them. So Sankara becomes president and Kampari.
23:51 his adopted brother becomes deputy. But four years later, in an act of treachery, Kampari and a group of commandos storm a government building where Sakaro is in a meeting and basically shoots him at point-blank range. Most of the people, because there was never a formal investigation done, as so many of these that we investigated, turns out, he's buried in a pauper's grave.
24:22 No one's allowed to exhume his body to even see how many times he was shot or where he was shot or anything. But many whistleblowers inside the inner circle of the government said that Campari married a woman whose name was Chantal. C-H-A-N-T-A-L. She very much was jealous of Santari and...
24:52 Many people believe that she kind of over the course of time had. I mean, obviously, I'm not going to blame her. I don't know whether what what part of this is true because he actually pulled the trigger. But she was an instigating figure. We'll just leave it at that. And what's interesting about that is she's the daughter of the leader.
25:19 of the ivory coast, which again is a neighbor. And this, um, whole whole fatay, uh, boy, nay, his last name is spelled B O I G N Y. He is a Western puppet like lock, stock and barrel. And so it does make sense that they would use they being the CIA. Um,
25:49 an agent, whether it's an actual agent or asset, to infiltrate this inner circle and knowingly participate and aggravate a situation where they're going to assassinate the nationalist and install another stooge, Campari, who is controlled by his wife.
26:15 one of their assets and she just happens to be the daughter of the Ivory Coast leader so that's exactly what happens what how much of that is part of the CIA plot the CIA is definitely involved in all of this you know who knows until things get declassified we just know what the end result was they get married
26:42 He ends up killing his adopted brother, or the family's, his brother. And the people that make out are all of the international syndicate. And by the way, one of the major international syndicates involved in Burkina Faso is Goodyear Rubber.
27:11 They have major rubber plantations all over this area. And Goodyear has like an entire region of Burkina Faso under their control. And the money that they contribute to the manipulation of the Burkina Faso government is crazy. So there was one witness that was in the room.
27:40 That actually made statements that of what happened. And he was the aid to a Liberian warlord that happened to be present at the assassination. And he said, I was right there when Thomas Sankara said, because you are my best friend, I call you brother. And yet you assassinate me. And that's what.
28:11 Sankara said to Kampari when he pulled the gun on him. Upon hearing those words, Kampari allegedly made an irritated gesture, said something to Sankara in France, and then shot him. If he had not done so, there was another gunman there that... Anyway, so Kampari then becomes the next...
28:43 governor or president. So on, and now this is in 1983. And then later on in April, 2022, they finally have a trial where Kampari goes on trial in absentia and is convicted and sentenced to life in prison. But guess where he's at?
29:13 He's in the Ivory Coast hanging out with his wife's family. So they won't extradite him. And he's basically been sentenced to life imprisonment. But by that time, he'd already been cued as well. So Kampari's head of security and a military general, army commander, with close ties to the U.S.
29:45 was also convicted and given a life sentence. Five other people were found guilty of different crimes as part of the assassination plot. And they were all, those five were convicted. Three basically were found not guilty, including a doctor that filled out a death certificate for Sankara that said he died of natural causes from a gunshot wound.
30:18 The verdict was greeted by Sankara's supporters and Sankara's widow, who had moved to the south of France, fearing her own safety in the aftermath of the assassination.
30:43 Let's see. She is quoted as saying the judges have done their jobs and I am satisfied. Of course, I wish the main suspects would be here before the judges. It is not good that people kill other people and stop the process of the development of a country without being punished. Throughout his 27 year rule from 1987 to 2014.
31:10 Kampari thwarted attempts to investigate the circumstances of the death, including repeated calls for his body to be exhumed. As I stated earlier, Sankara was called the African Sheikha Vera, and he oversaw huge increases in health and education spending. He promoted reforestation, you know, that thing that they're all about. Not really, but they say they are.
31:39 He basically took heritable farmland and gave it to the people so that they could basically like an Allende. Of course, he ended up dead, as did the guy in Guatemala. I mean, in Nicaragua. Only 37 at the time of his death, he broke the power of the Mosey chief who had embodied the feudal and colonial past and attempted to create a Burkina Faso.
32:08 And Ghana Economic Union with a new currency that would end the dependence on the French franc. That really was his death sentence. He basically was doing a mini African community, which later would then expand with Gaddafi's support into a whole of Africa continent. But he wanted to join hands with Ghana.
32:37 among themselves to do much better. Sankara additionally forged relationships with non-traditional states such as Cuba. He repudiated an IMF structural adjustment program that would have forced him to cut back social services. So I just want you guys to understand this too. We are told that the whole reason the IMF there is to help
33:06 the people in these countries and yet part of and this is not the first time I've read this part of the dictate in the IMF is for them to stop helping their people and it's not because they're helping them in a crutch way the way they're helping them is to repatriate their resources that belong to the people that are on the board of the IMF so
33:31 They don't want them having educational programs. They don't want them having health care. They don't want them using because those things require money. And the only way to get those money is to take back their resources. And the people that have the concessions on those resources are also the director serving on the board of the IMF. So the IMF is doing the water carrying and so is the World Bank for these.
33:59 international syndicate asswipes, and they dictate to these developing countries who are struggling to educate their people. And then, of course, you know, the round robin is you have the assholes like Eric Prince screaming about how ineffective African leadership is after they've hamstrung them at every corner. Sankara also called for all African countries to refuse debt.
34:30 offered to them by the international syndicate. He also sought to resurrect the UN's new international economic order, which was a transnational governance initiative that sought to reform the global economy and direct more effort towards developing countries as opposed to the industrial countries.
34:58 I looked into that a little bit. It seems to me like that was more in the dog homerstot mindset of actually helping new and evolving governance as opposed to rigging it for the West. So I found that very interesting. Burkina Faso.
35:21 was valued by outside powers because of its possession of rare earth minerals, including copper, zinc, limestone, manganese, phosphate, and gold, which Sankara sought to keep under national control. Kampari, by contrast, after he murdered Sankara, privatized large sections of the mining industry
35:46 Continuing to cycle the foreign economic domination and underdevelopment of the country in December, which is, of course, why the CIA helped him. In December 1988, the World Bank report tellingly praised the remarkably high standards of financial management in Burkina Faso during Sankara's leadership, but noted a growing prevalence of corruption under Kampari.
36:18 Which, hello, that's exactly what it is. So the Campari was described as cold and calculating and living well beyond his means. When he was couped himself in 2014, French troops evacuated him to the Ivory Coast, which of course is what I said, where his wife's father was the former president.
36:49 A generation after Saqqara's murder, Burkina Faso has been transformed into a U.S. military outpost. It has drone bases in it, and it has been monopolized by the West. In September 2009, Barack Obama posed with Kampari and his wife Chantal at the...
37:18 Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. And let's see, he also provided more than $35 million in security assistance to Campari, even though their security forces were engaging in Operation Gladio-style assassinations of his
37:49 Anybody that he suspected as a threat, he would just murder them. AFRICOM, during Campari's rule, was permitted to open a new surveillance base at their capital's international airport. It was a classified program known as Operation Creek Sand, Creek as in C-R-E-E-K, Sand, and a classified regional intelligence fusion center known as Aztec Archer.
38:19 American Special Forces worked with the chief of Campari's presidential guard, who, by the way, was his assistant in the assassination of Sankara, and went into the field on patrols against Islamic insurgents embedded with local troops. And so basically, during the entire time Campari was in charge, there was a growing...
38:48 Islamic quote-unquote insurgent occurring, which is basically how he controlled his domestic population. In 2018 and 2019, Trump spent 100, not Trump, I mean the Department of Defense, spent $100 million in security cooperation funding for Burkina Faso.
39:19 making it was one of the largest recipients of U.S. security aid in West Africa. This aid fueled greater instability because what happened was a lieutenant colonel, his name is Paul Henry D'Amiba, D-A-M-I-B-A, D'Amiba. He was sent to the United States.
39:49 for at least six different training exercises and several actual in-residence courses. And he's the guy in January 2022 that seized power and couped the government. So Burkina Faso today ranks 144th out of 157 nations in quality of life, as ranked by the World Bank, with 40% of its population in poverty.
40:21 Only one-third educated. Oh, no. Yeah, one-third educated. And fewer than 20% have access to any electricity. They live in like little tin shanties, like lean-tos, something that you would build off the back of your garage. That's what they live in. Entire towns made out of tin-roofed.
40:50 lean-tos and we have spent a hundred million dollars in this country on the day of sounds like some of the areas they were covering in haiti oh 100 100 on oh and you know speaking of which then we're going to send these same um monster um killers that um
41:20 pretend that they have an ISIS problem from Africa, like in Kenya, to Haiti, to police Haiti. Exactly. Not a coincidence, right? No. So, on the day that Sankara was murdered, he had had a meeting with members of his cabinet when soldiers stormed in. The one kind of whistleblower guy said,
41:47 Sankara spoke up and said it's me they're looking for and went outside to face his assassins who killed him and 12 of his associates. The findings of the autopsy made public in 2015 corroborated that Sankara had been assassinated while holding up his arms, contrary to Kampari's claim that it was Sankara that had shot first. The subsequent radio broadcast announcing Sankara's execution.
42:16 referred to him as a traitor to the revolution, an aristocrat, and basically said he was guilty of high treason and engaged in mysticism, which sounds exactly like the CIA, but hey. The commandos that executed Sankara included a guy by the name of Gilbert de Andari, who would later be promoted to the rank of Knight of the Legion of Honor by France.
42:45 In May of 2008. Now, these son of a bitches know this guy murdered Sankara. And they give him a medal for it. Okay. During the 1960s, French President Charles de Gaulle entrusted Jacques Focart, F-O-C-C-A-R-T, with the mission of holding West Africa under French influence, even in an era of decolonization.
43:16 Nicknamed Major Afriki, Foucart set up a network of contacts under de Gaulle and Charles Papadou, which is the guy that came after Charles de Gaulle as president, which organized surveillance across the African region and adopted covert actions and other quote unquote dirty tricks like stay behind units.
43:46 This shadow network was termed La Franca Afrique and was still operational when Sankara was killed. Though its records remain classified, we know that French agents were present at the time of Sankara's assassination and had spoken about destabilization efforts with the U.S. diplomats. And so this was a planned Gladio coup.
44:09 France had withdrawn its financial aid prior to the coup in an effort to bankrupt Burkina Faso economy and provoke the tension in the revolutionary leadership and then destroyed wiretap targeting Campari the day after the assassination. So just like Secret Service, right? They plan the assassination. They have...
44:38 all of the recordings of the assassination. And then as soon as it's successful, they destroy all the evidence and pretend like it didn't happen. On the day of, or when it's unsuccessful, they destroy it all too. On the day of the coup, Chantal Campari just so happened to be in Paris under the company of Ambassador Barry Bagina, her husband's...
45:07 linked to Foucart who obviously knew something was afoot. So, and this, this chick is like a big, a big woman. Let's just say she's a big woman. So he gets his wife out of the country when they're going to assassinate his brother. And she's hanging out with the guy that's in charge of the entire footprint.
45:35 France and their secret stay-behind units in the western part of Africa, just so coincidentally. The French had wanted Sankara removed from the earliest days of his rule because he opposed the colonial model that favored French interest in West Africa. At a reception with President Mitterrand's visit to the capital in 1986, Sankara
46:03 had actually said this. This is a quote. We cannot understand why bandits like Jonas Savimbi, who was Angolian warlord backed by the CIA. And remember, we've already talked about Angola. Killers like Peter Botha, who was the South African leader that was helping the Angola guy.
46:27 have been authorized to travel to France, so beautiful and decent a country. They stain her with their hands and feet covered with blood. Those who allow them to commit such actions will bear responsibility here and elsewhere in the world, now and forever. So that's like throwing fire. So the French, I just love this. The French president, while standing in
46:57 Bikini Fossa, is told by the president, you are allowing murderers and assassins into your country and discrediting your entire beautiful and decent country by their presence. And you bear responsibility for that. That's like poking him in the eye. I love it. Except for the fact that he came back with a gun.
47:27 These comments made Sankara a marked man. Mitterrand afterwards said, quote, I admired Sankara's great qualities, but he is too forthright. In my opinion, he goes too far. This is somewhat troublesome man, this President Sankara. Yeah, I bet, because he told you the truth to your face, ass. This was exactly the view the Belgians had of another pan-African leader.
47:56 Patrice Lumumba of Congo, who was assassinated soon after he publicly criticized their colonial system as well. U.S. diplomats had a view of Sankara similar to Mitterrand's. One diplomat, John C. Baxter, was expelled from Burkina Faso for subversive activities that included concerting with anti-government conspirators working undercover.
48:25 For the CIA. Prior to the assassination, the military attaché at the U.S. Embassy worked closely with his French counterparts. And remember about this military attaché. In every one of these cases, these military attachés
48:43 are CIA assets wearing a military uniform. And they have been the handlers, the CIA handlers, for the assassins when they come in the country. Because remember, the most notorious one was Otto Skorzeny, where the military attachés at the consul in Spain were Otto Skorzeny's handlers.
49:07 The U.S. military training programs has provided access to the very center of power with the U.S. embassy holding a seminar for senior military officers, including Kampari. International military education and training program graduates were mostly pro-Kampari, including Durandere's brother, Dominique. The U.S. ambassador, Leonardo Nahir,
49:36 N-E-H-E-R, who had worked in Congo after Lumumba's assassination. Again, they just repeat the same people. Characterize Burkina Faso under Saqqara as a very radical, very troublesome country for you asshole international syndicate mafia, whose leader led by Saqqara.
50:05 had a Marxist vocabulary and were good friends with Gaddafi. And they were up to the stage every place. They were up on the stage every place in the world denouncing the U.S. and imperialism and siding with Cuba, the Soviets, and Nicaragua. Now let that sink in. So he had a Marxist vocabulary. What the hell does that mean? Words?
50:34 He has words that sound like anti-imperialist, we don't want to be your slaves anymore. And somehow that's bad. And they have no option but to side with Cuba, the Soviets, and Nicaragua at the time. Because remember, Nicaragua was being attacked from four different countries because they were surrounded by CIA-armed Contra and Israeli-armed Contra people to overthrow that government.
51:06 Cuba's government was actively being overthrown. So who else are they going to talk to? Herman Cohen, the former assistant secretary of state for African affairs, recounted in a 1995 book that as a member of the American executive, I accused Sankara of trying to destabilize the entire region of West Africa.
51:32 So the guy that's trying to run his country and keep his own resources is the destabilizing factor, not the fucking CIA that's overthrowing all of the governments and assassinating people. That's not destabilizing at all.
51:53 So another one of the locals said, don't worry, Sankara is just a boy. He will mature quickly. Since we were alone, I insisted that Sankara was hunting the image of an entire French community in West Africa and would eventually hurt his surrounding neighbors. Yeah, because it might actually catch on. Freedom does that sometimes. Let's see. It was unacceptable.
52:24 for the other people to accept Sankara because of the fear that the Pan-Africa movement would spread. So after Kampari seized power, the Reagan administration trained and funded the army in an attempt to stabilize his rule.
52:53 in spite of the reign of terror carried out by Campari, which included arrest, imprisonment, torture, and execution of Sankara's family members and supporters. Now, remember, this is his fucking family, too. They adopted this man. And he sets about murdering, arresting, torturing, and subsequently executing Sankara's family, everybody that had not fled already.
53:22 was hunted down like dogs and killed. In 2009, Italian filmmaker Silvestro Montanaro produced a documentary called African Shadows, which implicated the U.S. and French intelligence agencies in Saqqara's killing, along with Campari. The film includes interviews with two close aides.
53:49 to Liberian warlord Charles Taylor, who had been recruited by the CIA to overthrow Liberian dictator Samuel K. Doe in the 1980s. And we're probably going to go there tomorrow because that is a very interesting story, too. One of these aides, Momo Jiba, J-I-B-A, stated that his boss, Taylor,
54:13 had told him to approach Sankara for help in taking power in Liberia in exchange for a lucrative business opportunity. When Sankara rejected the idea, because they basically were trying to frame him, set him up, Taylor met with a general that later became Burkina Faso's defense minister under Kapari.
54:39 and the country of Chad's president, along with a white Frenchman who was probably part of the Foucart network, which is basically Gladio for France. At the meeting, it was decided that Taylor would be able to use Burkina Faso as a launching pad to wage war in Liberia. Sankara had to be eliminated and Kampari would become president. All of this was part of America's interest in controlling Burkina Faso.
55:09 according to the man. So again, this is exactly the same pattern. So we want to take over Nicaragua. So we're going to take over Costa Rica. We're going to take over Guatemala. We're going to take over El Salvador. We're going to take over, what's the other one? Honduras. And we're going to use all of them to launch attacks into Nicaragua and overthrow Nicaragua.
55:34 And they are talking right here about doing that exact same thing. They want a launching pad, which is Burkina Faso, to wage war in Liberia. And Sankaro refused to play along. He won't let them put Operation Gladio terror cells along his border in order to launch attacks into Liberia to overturn that government. And so, you know, hey, well, we'll just kill you and do it anyway.
56:04 So, according to Cecil Allen, another of Taylor's top aides, the Americans and French sanctioned the plan to remove Sankara. Allen stated that, quote, there was a CIA operative in the U.S. embassy in Burkina Faso, worked closely with the Secret Service at the French embassy, and they made the crucial decisions. The French Secret Service decided to eliminate Sankara. Those are the facts, unquote.
56:33 Now, keep in mind, when they say Secret Service, they're not talking Secret Service like our. They're talking actually like their Operation Gladio forces. Prince Yormy Johnson, another one-time Taylor associate, stated that the CIA had infiltrated the National Patriotic Front of Liberia and convinced their leadership and Campari that Sankara had to be assassinated.
57:02 The U.S. wanted this, Allen affirmed, because they were not happy with Sankara. He was talking of nationalizing all of his country's resources to benefit his people. He had to go. So look at that, right at five o'clock. So that kind of finalizes the actual material.
57:29 There are a lot of references on this article, and I know Bridget has already attached this article. I would definitely look at some of these, because quite frankly, I find looking into the links that they put here sometimes more interesting than the article, although the article's good.
57:54 to convey the information to you because they've already kind of sift through. But for example, one of the articles that is linked to this article is about what Sankara left when they assassinated him. He was being paid $450 a week. He had a car, four bicycles, three guitars, a refrigerator, and a broken freezer.
58:23 He didn't even own his own house, and they assassinated him. And if you look at the guy, Kampari, that assassinated him, go look at his net worth. Go look at his fat wife. They definitely were living the life of Riley with their kickbacks that they were getting from the international syndicate.
58:54 And they killed the guy that basically had given up everything for his country. So I definitely suggest, and I've got that show that's referenced in here that I was just talking about. I want to watch that because I think it's going to link, because it also is about Liberia, and I think it's going to link the two together, which will make it make more sense.
59:25 for us covering Liberia as well. But anyway, go ahead, Bridget. The amount of information that is out there on Burkina Faso and how much and how many times we have just done so much. I mean, I am just shocked. I am just flabbergasted. You know, I've posted a lot of links in the pill and I've posted a lot in the nest.
59:57 But it seems to be, and I just wanted to ask your opinion, I mean, there is a reason why they had so much activity in this tiny little area. And it, I mean, it was obvious that they, by how many coups, how many coups, one coup, and coups upon coups, you know, I mean, was this a key to...
1:00:26 to their operations or in your opinion well it has to do with their resources um there if you look at um the uh well there are several things okay so first let's look at you're not allowed to criticize them even if this country was the poorest country on god's green earth which they are not but let's just say they were and there's nothing to be gained they cannot allow
1:00:56 anybody to stand up to them because if anybody speaks ill of them and their imperialism and gets away with it the next guy's going to do that and so at all cost if you insult them in public if you talk bad about imperialistic west um conquering whatever you will die there there's no way out
1:01:25 You're going to be dead. It's a matter of you are the walking dead at that point. And that's if you have zero resources. You are just not allowed to say it out loud. So as a result of that, that's number one. But number two, the fact that these guys had tons of resources.
1:01:51 It basically has, you know, and they've got water. They had everything. And they had under, they had nationalized their utilities. You know, he basically was getting, he was trying to set up electrical service. He had done a bunch with the water.
1:02:17 He wanted to build railroads. And so, again, all of that stuff came into play. And it's, I don't know, at some point, it's just mind-blowing that all of this has gone on for so long and none of us knew anything about it. Absolutely. I mean, the depth of the depravity is just disgusting. I mean, and...
1:02:53 I'm just speechless, you know, and like I say it all the time, I shouldn't be surprised, but I am. Well, and another aspect of this is if you can look up the, they have a bunch of national parks there too, because they have a lot of wildlife, or at least they did. They had, let's see, I was trying to find that.
1:03:24 There's the mining. What's interesting is I noticed that when you look at normal references like the CIA thing that gives you the country overview or Wikipedia or whatever, they're very quiet about Goodyear. But Goodyear is huge as far as dictating what goes on there.
1:03:50 But they have, let's see, their wildlife is lions, leopards, buffalo, red buffalo, African lynx and cheetahs. And they do have a few national parks. And so that's kind of interesting from the UNESCO standpoint as well.
1:04:20 Interestingly enough, some of them are, it indicates, on the border area of Niger, Burkina Faso, and Benin. So they have, and remember what we said, in order to facilitate the stealing of resources,
1:04:46 What they have done is they set up these national parks under, whether it's World Wildlife Fund or UNESCO or whatever, they set up these national parks and they're always on borderland. So they can transnationally move stuff. They set up their terror training camps there and they can transnationally move.
1:05:10 items across country lines into friendly countries if they have a non-friendly country through the national park system. And sure enough, as soon as you pull up this particular national park, which is its biggest one, it's called West National W National Park, meant for West. It is on the border of Niger, Benin, and Berkeley.
1:05:39 Burkina Faso so there you have it um it just another one of those oh yes it's a UNESCO World Heritage Site damn it I knew it um yeah and then it says oh listen to this on 8 February 2022 which by the way is um right after they had one of their coups
1:06:00 Two African Park Patrol vehicles in Benin portion of the national park ran over landmines suspected to be planted by quote unquote Islamic terrorists. So there you again, you have these assholes going into these national parks. Well, first of all, designating them as a national park. And then they go in and turn them into.
1:06:24 terror training camps so they can control the entire area. Now, just with that one park alone, they can control Niger, they can control Burkina Faso, and they can control Benin with quote-unquote Islamic terrorist attacks when it's really Operation Gladio. And that was one of the research that I was doing while you were looking for links to show people some of the background and the history on that.
1:06:54 They talk a lot about a, you'll love this, a USAID project. Which is CIA. Which is CIA under Operation Enduring Freedom to fight terrorists. That this is a pivotal area to train. I mean, this literally talks about training counterterrorism groups.
1:07:22 Which is exactly how they sold the Columbia training, 20,000 of them down there as counter narcotics. Right. And the 10 African countries being that are comprised this partnership, Algeria, Burka, Fasa, Chad, Mali, Marutina, Morocco, Niger, Nigeria, Senegal and Tunisia. Anyway, it talks about it being.
1:07:52 Purely for the Muslim extremist ideology is what they're trying to do it underneath this umbrella. Just like they're anti-communist. I mean, they're just changing the name. Right. Did you link that in the thing? No, but I will right now. Yeah. I just came up with it. Because what will be interesting is I'm going to take those 10.
1:08:19 And I will compare them timing wise to when they had their coups. That would be, you know, they all did. Right. And that's why I'm like, these names sound awfully familiar. Yep. Yep. Absolutely. Yeah. And that's kind of another tell when you go down through here and you start looking at all of the different organizations. You've got the.
1:08:52 Whether it's UNESCO, USAID, the World Bank, they've been in here, the World Food Program. That's how they manipulate all of these countries. So do we have anybody that wants a mic? Any questions? While I'm working on putting that last link in to the nest, I just posted it.
1:09:29 I would love to send an invite down to Stellar and hear about what she thinks about the latest in the stock market and all this other craziness and see if she can maybe tell us about this portion of the Operation Gladio. And everybody, while we are doing that, Stellar, I'll go ahead and give you a mic.
1:09:58 Please share out the space if you would to let everybody know. Go ahead, Stellar. Oh, my gosh. I'm so excited about all the stuff that's happening. As the dollar keeps dropping, they're manipulating so much with trying not to have all the stuff bleed out. But just know that when the market drops like this and stuff like that, there's a lot of short sales.
1:10:29 And they're still playing. So even though, you know, the market's going down a lot, that's still another, they make money off of that too. So just know that. But it's kind of like they'll make money on it. And then, you know, each time less and less. And, but yeah, it's happening. It's really freaking happening. Two days last week and then today. And then just seeing what's going on with Japan.
1:10:57 You know, if you follow that stuff with, you know, Japan was also an experiment on the fiat and they chose to keep with that. But they do have the quantum, you know, they're using ledger and stuff like that. So they're following the ISOs and how the banking and stuff like that, those protocols. But the shell game is going to end soon because.
1:11:21 You know, there will be a point when there's going to be bank runs and stuff, and that's going to be like the beginning of the end of the banks here. I mean, there's been so many of them in China over the last year and different places throughout the world. And, you know, on the West, the banks are covering each other with their shell games and stuff like that.
1:11:41 Yeah, it's what do you guys think? Are you excited? Because, you know, if they don't have the money, if they're running out of the money and stuff like that, and you guys notice all the different stuff that's showing up, how they're missing another couple of billion dollars here, you know, and all this other stuff, you know, the last time when, you know, trillion dollars went missing, you know, it was like Twin Towers time. Thanks for that reminder.
1:12:10 Absolutely. And I think the Colonel posted on something having to do with Taiwan's market was in a free fall and that immediately. Last night about midnight, Stella, I was thinking about you as I was seeing all this stuff happening right at the beginning. I'm like, she told us it was going to happen. It is. It's really happening. But if you guys did notice, like if you look at the defense stocks and stuff like that in the stock market, those did very well.
1:12:35 I think that Warren Buffett did. I mean, people are saying that it's been a while that he did that, but he didn't. It was over the weekend when he put that, you know, that confirmed that that trade and they they got rid of, you know, half of their Apple stocks for the last two years. If you watch what he's been doing, he's been getting rid of his banking stocks. He's been getting rid of utilities and things like that. So and what has he been buying? Gold and silver and things like that.
1:13:04 You had asked me the other day about people's retirements. With the tokenization and ETFs coming up, that's going to be paper stock and things like that. But I also feel with the flip and the White Hats have it under control. I really do. Because of the systems that we're on and everything, they see what's happening. And I believe everything will be fine. But those ETFs as the stocks get...
1:13:32 you know, go down to nothing. You know, a lot of people's retirements and stuff, people are really concerned about that. You know, if it's in a retirement fund, I do feel that that stuff will be protected. A lot of the funds, you know, now with these ETFs becoming, you know, it's just, it's BS stuff. But I think that that's going to end up being the liquidity, not only the Bitcoin stuff, because like, if you're like me, you know, that Bitcoin is going to flow into Ripple.
1:13:59 And Ethereum is going to flow into Stellar. So if you see like how I see things, you'll be fine because Stellar and especially Ripple, they've got ETFs coming. They've got them in other parts of the world already. So I feel that those because they are liquidity, liquidity token. I feel that when the flip does happen, that people's savings and stuff like that, the liquidity will be coming in through those. So that was my answer for you guys.
1:14:32 Molly, did you have a question? Can you hear me? Yes, I can hear you. Wonderful. I just really wanted to thank you, Colonel Towner and Bridget and Cousin It and whoever else helped in the beginning to form this team. You guys are doing such excellent work. I have listened to every single interview of yours I can find, and you are just really helping to re-educate us.
1:15:04 On what's really been going on. And I'm very very grateful to all of you. Thank you. Thank you Molly. That definitely keeps us energized. And. Affirms. That there are people out there. That want to know the truth. It matters more than you'll ever know. To hear people say that. So thank you for coming up and saying that. But also. I listen to.
1:15:35 A wide range of streams. And if you have discernment, you can really see where God has been working behind the scenes. And we may have not understood it, but all of the pieces are coming into place now. He's breaking down all of the corruption and the new systems that need to be built with truth and honor. They are forming. It's amazing. You can see God working in this.
1:16:04 Okay, so on that note, let me tell you guys the good news of Burkina Faso. The guy that couped the government for the second time in 2022, his name is Ibram Traore. It's spelled T-R-A-O-R-E. And he was 36 years old.
1:16:33 And he was the second youngest serving state leader in the world and the youngest serving president at the time. And he's formerly educated. And what's interesting about him is that he actually has gone to Western military schools.
1:17:03 It says he was disillusioned working inside of the government in Burkina Faso with all of the corruption. And so he and several other officers banded together and basically overthrew their government in 2022 in September. And the West immediately started attacking him.
1:17:33 And he definitely is part of the solution. And it says here that he immediately began construction of the country's first gold refinery on their own so that they don't have to give up the majority of the profit of having gold by sending it outside the country to have it refined.
1:18:00 that he has set up everything inside of the country to do all of their own refining of their own gold, which is where the profit actually is in large part. It also says that he has began efforts to mine coal, ash, and several other different products that...
1:18:27 lay within the ground of Burkina Faso. And then immediately, as if on cue, cue, let me read this. According to Reuters and New York Times, he was suspected as having a Russian mercenary connection to the Wagner group. Russia, Russia, Russia. You know, immediately when they accused somebody of being connected to Russia.
1:18:55 that he's a good guy. So that speaks, Molly, directly to your point that there are good things happening. The problem for most people is they don't know where to dig to find them, which I think part of exposing Operation Gladio, the exposure obviously is good because they can't.
1:19:20 continue to do to you what they have done in the past if you already know what they're going to do and you know what the patterns are and you can recognize them. And just like in the case of reading through this guy's bio and seeing what the CIA PR department that some people call mainstream media says about someone is very telling in where they're
1:19:47 qualifications actually do lie because if those entities are speaking highly of them, they're very bad. If they speak ill of them, they're usually pretty damn good. So, Renee, go ahead. Renee, did you have a question? Yeah, sorry. Can you hear me now? Yeah, I can hear you. Okay, great. Thanks, ladies, for all the hard work you do. So grateful. Please, this question is directed for Stellar.
1:20:28 Just about on the subject of Africa and all these poor countries that have gone through so many tragic events, etc. What do you see with the collapse of the dollar and the turning around of these countries that have been devastated for the past couple hundred plus years from colonization, imperialism?
1:20:58 Coos, Operation Gladio? Do you see bricks coming in? Or as Colonel was just talking about, some people starting to create industry to do their own production, refinement, etc. Where do you see from the financial end what's going to perhaps hopefully happen in Africa?
1:21:25 Well, in Africa for a long time, like in Zimbabwe and a lot of the different countries, they haven't really had a currency. So they've been using dollars, black market, stuff like that because of the sanctions and all the different things that have been put on those countries. Those countries are actually the wealthiest countries you could ever imagine because of the resources.
1:21:45 We're moving from a centralized system. The fiat system that we have is a centralized system, so we don't have control of the monetary system, the people of each country. We have overlords, and if we don't comply with them, they can always turn us off. And yes, they can turn us off in the United States. They've been able to do that since the mid-'80s, but I believe that now things are changing.
1:22:14 We've just never enforced it. Look at what happened with the lockdowns with COVID and England and Europe, Australia, New Zealand, and things like that, Canada. If you didn't get the jab, they pretty much could. They did. Look at what happened with the tracking stuff. The government and the corporations are in control of the banks. And the bank is how they get the power and things like that, the monetary system.
1:22:44 a centralized system. So normally, if you use your credit card, it will go from you to the banking central, Federal Reserve type of a thing, and then it goes back to that person or the store or whatever you purchase stuff from. Now, in the future, it will go from you to me. It will go person to person. There will be no controllers to turn it off. You will become the bank. In Africa,
1:23:12 And a lot of even in South America countries with all of these things that have been going on, look at Venezuela. A lot of them have been using digital assets. Some of the countries in South America even use Bitcoin as a form of currencies, stabilizing their money and stuff like that.
1:23:31 because of the inflation and things like that. So if you look at kind of how that stuff is going, you can see that it's been moving in that direction. The difference from the Great Reset is there will be no central system. It will just be a decentralized system. That's the difference of what they wanted to do and what's going on right now. Does that help? Yes. Great. Thank you. Thank you. And do you feel that
1:23:59 With a decentralization of these considered, you know, like South America, Africa, India, once the fiat currency, U.S. petrodollar, is tanked and tossed out, will that perhaps be the marker of the reset for all these nations and hopefully prosperity?
1:24:26 Yes, but also there's countries right now where if you use the dollar, it's illegal. They will jail you. And if you understand what countries have to do to join BRICS.
1:24:39 You know, I was going to talk to the girls about, you know, what's going on in Venezuela. So like when you join BRICS, you have to pay off whatever debt you owe to the Western system. You know, if you look at what happened with Ukraine, Russia paid off their debt to the, you know, the monetary, the banking systems, and they paid off the debt. And so when all that stuff happened, law and order, there was no way that the, you know, the West could really do anything about what was going on. So that's why we're doing it like, you know.
1:25:08 backhanded or whatever. But technically, to join BRICS, you have to clear out all this stuff. You have to have a clean government. From my understanding, you're supposed to be a republic and things like that. So there's a lot of things with the BRICS that people don't really see. They're using
1:25:32 Right now it seems like even the banking systems as well as BRICS countries are using, you know, Ripple, Ledger for, you know, watching everything. So the movement, again, the transportation from going from point A to point B is very quick. And there's a lot of validators on there. And the validators are making sure that, like, if $5 is going from me to you, that, you know, it's going through about 120.
1:26:00 system or 120 validators to make sure that it's the five dollars so that there's no back-ended things it's very secure because you are the one that's in control of your own assets and everything literally is going to be tokenized birth certificates your property you know titles things like that which you know understanding what they're doing with this meta stuff you know it's really good that we're going to have this blockchain and we are in control of us you know our privacy
1:26:29 our financial systems, they can't enslave us. So it's just being smart about it. But yes, I do feel that. And for many years now, they've been using, like if you're familiar with Stellar, they use their wallets. They've been using those for many, many years now. Very instantaneous sending stuff. You can use it in stores and everything else. And that's what, you know, a lot of times, a lot of their stuff is used with digital assets. So yes, it's already been used right now.
1:26:57 Great. Thank you so much. Okay. Anybody else have any questions? Can I ask something that's off topic? Sure. Okay. So like what's going on in Venezuela? So the Maduro guy, we have two evil people that are really bad. One was inserted in and apparently this other one's trying to be. So both of these are both really bad. But Maduro did apply for BRICS and stuff like that.
1:27:32 Do you think that he might be someone that was like a Gaddafi or a possibility, someone that, well, he's not doing what the deep state wants him to do. So that's why there's issues and why they wanted to have him removed. But do you think that maybe he might be like a Gaddafi or a Saddam Hussein, another pawn that decided to not follow through with what the masters said? I do. So I'm not even going to go with the he's always bad.
1:28:02 If you go back and you start looking, I mean, like looking like under the layers, not what Reuters said, not what. And I said today, the same State Department that's saying that he cheated in the election is the same State Department that said our election in 2020 was the most secured election we've ever had. And it's the same.
1:28:29 election system. So if you can cheat in it, then how did we have the most secured election ever? It's the same system. And that's where the machines came from, correct? Yes. So you can't have it both ways. And again, go back and start looking about Sitco. They're trying to bankrupt Sitco.
1:28:58 They being the oil industry in the United States and in the West, whether it's BP at UK, they have attacked them and attacked them. Who do you think is helping Guyana with their oil production? Oh, that would be us. And why would they do that? Because it's right next door to Venezuela. And you have the exact same capability of drilling there. And all of a sudden they find all of this off the coast.
1:29:27 in a contested area of sovereignty that has been contested for decades. So are they stealing Venezuela's oil by saying they found this new oil in Guyana? There's so much to this story that most people don't dig down deep enough to realize what is the real story. We're being fed garbage.
1:29:56 So when I went back and looked at the underneath of how Chavez came to power, how Maduro came to power, do I think that everything that has gone on there is great? I absolutely do not. But I also understand that 99.9% of the information that we get is garbage.
1:30:26 You really have to go to alternative sources of information to find out. What I unequivocally know today is that Maduro knows that the multiple coups that have been launched against him are at the hands of the CIA, and he says so on a daily basis. He also knows and never shut down the media. Why is that? Every media in Venezuela is owned privately.
1:30:55 Is there any privately owned media in Ukraine? No. No, there's not. It was all shut down. Why didn't the dictator Maduro shut down the media in Venezuela when the guy that's supposedly the most democratic thing that ever has been hatched on earth sitting over in Ukraine shut down all of the media? So what criteria, objective criteria, are we using to grade?
1:31:25 foreign leaders and at what point and at what grade does anybody in the united states think it just it's justified that we go in and overthrow a government i number one don't think we ought to be grading anybody and number two i don't think there's any grade that anybody gets that justifies a foreign government overthrowing another um they can take care of it inside of venezuela if they want and i do think stellar to to
1:31:53 the heart of your question about him wanting in bricks, that tells you everything. So he has had to in the past because of our sanctions against Venezuela. And again, we're the 300 pound or 3000 pound elephant in the room. So we decided that he doesn't like us. We don't like him. So instead of just allowing him to exist in his little fiefdom down there.
1:32:22 Because he is no national security threat to the United States at all. Zero. Absolutely zero. Like a negative zero. He could have stayed down there until he passed away. God rest his soul. Get another leader, whatever. We don't have to be involved. But that's not how we roll. We don't like him. He nationalized the oil industry down there. So now we've got to go down there and kill him.
1:32:48 We've got to assassinate them. We've got to overthrow them, whatever it is that we're going to do. In doing that, you unleash this crazy apparatus called the United States in a tiny little...
1:33:10 Again, he's no threat to anybody. So who else is he going to deal with other than other BRIC nations? Because they've now nationalized or unionized against the United States. And the more BRIC nations unionize against us and the dollar, the more powerful they become. At some point, we will not be the 3,000-pound elephant in the room anymore.
1:33:37 We are going to collectively have a peer competitor through the unionization into the BRICS alliance. But what I found the most disturbing when I was looking at that is the fact that in order to be able to sell the oil because of our sanctions, he basically had to, quote unquote, barter oil for health care. So he was sending people.
1:34:03 in Aravac aircraft to Cuba for medical treatment because they didn't have the supplies because of sanctions to do the medical care. And more importantly, they had to have some currency, if you quote unquote currency, in exchange. So they sat down and decided, hey, you provide a big chunk of my health care and I will give you oil for it.
1:34:29 And so he just went country by country and started a bartering system. And who's going to barter with him? The people that are in BRICS because they don't give a shit anymore because they don't need our dollar. Go ahead, Cousinette. Well, one of the things with Venezuela, too, is that not only did he give the U.S. companies the boot, he made a lot of arrests from what I understand. So I'm trying to get more information on that.
1:35:02 from people that were embezzling from the companies and from the country. So that's pretty interesting. And yes, he is opening up the contracts to the BRICS nations. That's already in the deal. They're talking about it in Russia, on the Russian news. They're talking about it, you know, any of the overseas news channels, they're talking about working with Venezuela.
1:35:32 And Russia's actually been in Venezuela for a little while, too. So it's not like new kids on the block. They've been there. Oh, and one of the things I found before the battery died on the phone is that just today, Venezuela found the Venezuelan authorities busted a weapons cache that came in from the United States.
1:35:58 I posted on my feed before, again, my battery died, that they're arming the stay-behind units in Venezuela. And they have arrested a couple of Americans that are involved with that. I don't know how old the news is, but you're going to probably start seeing it soon, that Americans are arrested in Venezuela. But yeah, it's weapons cash. The video is on my feed if anybody's interested.
1:36:29 There's a lot of crap there, a lot of broken down rifles. Bridget, you've got to look at it because there's some detailing on the side of the trigger assembly that I don't recognize, but it's definitely US-made rifles, which is strange because Galil Weapons is in Colombia.
1:36:54 I don't know. We'll see what happens with that. But yeah, they did open up the contracts to the BRICS countries yesterday or today. And what's important about what Cousin It just said is to the west you have Colombia and to the east you have Guyana. We know unequivocally with proof that there are Gladio terrorist training camps in Colombia and in Guyana.
1:37:23 So those both Guyana and we talked about it when we talked about South America has been cued by the United States. Columbia, ditto. And Columbia is where the 20,000 excess terrorists were trained using drug money that was sent to South Com in order to supposedly fight drugs, which they suck at because.
1:37:49 Drugs has only increased in their frequency in the United States. So they've obviously been doing something else with that money. And we discovered that they have trained over 20,000 terrorists that they now rent to both NATO and the UN to go around and do assassinations all over the world. And that's sitting on the border of Venezuela. OK, so I was just going to say that Venezuela applied for BRICS last summer.
1:38:23 And this upcoming summit, they should be finalizing it. So that's what's going on with BRICS in Venezuela. And you know that they're going to admit them because they're already dealing with them on a one-on-one basis, just not as the entity of BRICS. Which means they'll be able to have currency again because they'll be on their currency system, which is all gold back. You've got the Chinese yuan. You've got the ruble. A lot of those things are already.
1:38:54 Let me just say this, Stellar. What is one of the major news articles being talked about the most with Venezuela? Isn't there airplane loads of gold being flown out of Venezuela? Where would they put them on deposit in order to get BRICS membership? Look it up. There's plane after plane after plane of gold leaving Venezuela.
1:39:28 My opinion is it is to secure and pay off as their application is processed for BRICS so that they can be given BRICS status. Yep. And then that way they can sidestep just like NATO and all the other stuff like with Ukraine. Pay off all the debt, all of the other stuff. Pay off the debt that they own to the bank just like Russia did with Ukraine. Yep. And then United States and England and all that other stuff can't do anything because everything's law and order. That's right.
1:39:58 Well, that's actually interesting, too, because a different South American country by the name of Argentina, their gold reserves have disappeared. I believe that they also applied for BRICS. No, come on now. He's out there kissing the wall and he's on the IMF loan agreement and he's decided to take the dollar as his national currency because his money is so bad. I don't know.
1:40:31 That I haven't seen. You could be right. But there is no rumor of that. We definitely know Venezuela is headed there. Yep. So, interesting. Very, very interesting how all of these things kind of cross over into each other. I love it. Well, I got an update on my power. I don't know if he's just busting my ass.
1:41:05 I stand corrected. They did apply for BRICS, but they pulled out last December. So I apologize. I was not aware of that. Thank you. Was you talking about Argentina, Stellar? Yes, ma'am. I thought that they were still in it, but they backed out. Yeah, he probably got whacked.
1:41:27 Yeah, or that's why they're doing this, because I know that there's a lot of different things that are in Argentina that the government seems to be very interested in. I know there's supposedly they're finding some cities in the Amazon up in the mountains. They're finding different things in the close proximity that it is to Antarctica. Well, there's Argentina is a Monsanto time bomb.
1:41:56 So Argentina has given over like 50 percent of their arable land over to Monsanto in order to produce GMO soy. And Monsanto basically runs that country. It's there was probably a lot of pushback. And if he is prioritizing the battles that he's going to fight, that would not have been one he wants to take on immediately.
1:42:26 But the I don't know if you guys know this. I did not know the significance of how they did the the GMO stuff and the fact that they are basically napalming all of the land in Argentina. They produce a manufactured seed that is genetically modified to grow.
1:42:54 into something that looks like soy and they call it soy, but it also has been genetically modified so that they can napalm it with what they call insecticide or weedicide or whatever. And it will not kill the soy, but it kills every growing thing around it. Roundup ready is what they call it. Roundup ready.
1:43:23 And by doing that, they are razzing, raising the entire landscape of Argentina. Over 50% of the land, they've deforested it. They basically destroyed it. You can't grow stuff on it for like 20 or 30 years.
1:43:46 If ever they've not been able to figure out how long you could recondition soil in order for it to ever grow normal product again. It is one of the most devastating things that they could do to destroy land. In Peru. Okay. So right, you know, right about Peru, they're having people like lawless cities that I don't know who owns the mines, probably nationalized. So they make the people work for like 29 days.
1:44:14 And they have like these huge long things, long hours and stuff like that. They don't get paid. And then one day a month, they're allowed to keep their own gold that they find. And that's how they get free labor. It's so depressed down there, what they're doing down. And a lot of people from Argentina are going up there because like you were saying.
1:44:33 And some of these towns are so lawless. They're so high up in the mountains and stuff like that. They bring in girls for prostitution, but there literally is no law. It's lawless. And it's like Monsanto. I mean, all over South America, it's really disgusting what's been going on. Yes, it is. But when I was reading that, exposing the WWF because they've been intimately involved in all of that, it is...
1:45:03 dumbfounding to me they talked about the airline pilots that um or the pilots that um dump this they they do it like crossed up crop dusting and the one guy had his air conditioner went off and he like cracked his door open in his cessna to get some air into the cabin and the um napalm like um uh
1:45:28 Roundup came back into the cabin through the reverse airflow and burned him all over his skin. He has like second degree scars all over his body from it touching his skin. That's how people, they're having deformed babies. Like 60% of the babies are deformed down there now because that mist carries the Roundup.
1:45:57 into like the next town it they're just devastating the entire area it's crazy so anyway on that note let's see do we have any other hands up um carrie did you want to say something i noticed you had a mic i don't ever see your hand so yeah thank you honey yeah thank you um congratulations on your baby thank you baby um
1:46:32 So my data is that Argentine, Argentinian gold went to London or Basel. So where, where do you have the data about Venezuela's gold? As far as it being shipped out of Venezuela? Where did it, where did it go? Well.
1:47:03 There's not a lot of information on exactly where it went. And the speculation is that it went to one of the primary entities that has the ability to bank with the other current BRIC, like Russia or China. That's the speculation, because no one else has recorded the deposit in the non-BRIC nations, which it would show up.
1:47:33 So I don't know if you know how that tracking works, but you could find where it was deposited if it was deposited in London like Argentina's was. You can't find it right now. And it is assumed that it went to a BRICS aligned country in order to facilitate the BRICS membership. That's the basically I read like three or four different articles.
1:48:04 that makes that, that it's gone. It's not in Venezuela anymore. And because it had not been registered in the official LIBER indexes, that it is in a BRICS-aligned country waiting for the application process to be finalized for Venezuela. Thanks. Yeah, I have distrust of Switzerland.
1:48:33 And I feel that that's where it went. I don't think so. Yeah, I don't think so. Because Maduro is way too smart to put anything in a Swiss bank. Yeah, I think a lot of people have things in Swiss banks. I really do. Well, the International Syndicate has a lot of stuff in Swiss banks because they're under their control.
1:48:59 which I don't think people who are not part of that syndicate use that same system. I hope not. Indonesia is still waiting for their gold back. So they had all those boats that were rerouted to Zurich, and they still haven't been able to get their gold back. I mean, outright theft. Well, and that's what the U.S. does. Whenever the U.S. freezes assets, they are stealing those assets. That's basically what it is.
1:49:30 And they demand other countries do it for them. And there should be no country in the world, if all countries are equal, that have the ability to freeze another country's assets. That's theft. They like theft. They love theft. Theft is good to them. I know. I know. I agree. They're not like you and me, honey. I know.
1:50:05 I know. We don't steal things. All right, guys, I got to get off here. I got a couple of errands to run and I appreciate everybody being here. We will be back tomorrow and we will most likely be talking about Liberia.

Entities here

Burkina Faso25Blaise Compaoré25Thomas Sankara25Venezuela25United States25France18BRICS17Operation Gladio9Assassination of Thomas Sankara9Liberia8Ibrahim Traoré7Argentina7Nicolás Maduro7Soviet Union7Côte d'Ivoire6Nigeria6Benin5Charles Taylor5Bank for International Settlements4Chantal Compaoré41987 Burkina Faso coup d'état4Cuba4Jacques Focart4West Africa4Mali4Nicaragua3UNESCO3Muammar Gaddafi3Guyana3United Kingdom3Togo3Monsanto3Francois Mitterrand3Congo3Ukraine3Ghana3Colombia3South Africa3Angola2Charles de Gaulle2

Claims made here

France colonized Burkina Faso host_asserted ▶ 16:31
“because I do have to say that several times, but that is one of the kingdoms that was there. Tengodogo was another one, and Yatinga was the third primary large that kind of coalesced into this one are…”
Burkina Faso carried_out_attack Yamoussa Ouedraogo host_asserted ▶ 18:26
“Just so that you understand how destabilized they left this country, they had a coup in 1966. They had a coup in 1980. They had a coup in 1982. They had another one the following year in 1983. They ha…”
Thomas Sankara carried_out_attack Yamoussa Ouedraogo host_asserted ▶ 22:51
“Best friends, they were in a music band together, traveled all over the area. And Sankara's parents adopted Kampari because his parents had died when he was very young. So basically, they're literally…”
Blaise Compaoré assassinated Thomas Sankara host_asserted ▶ 23:51
“his adopted brother becomes deputy. But four years later, in an act of treachery, Kampari and a group of commandos storm a government building where Sakaro is in a meeting and basically shoots him at …”
Blaise Compaoré married Chantal Compaoré host_asserted ▶ 24:22
“No one's allowed to exhume his body to even see how many times he was shot or where he was shot or anything. But many whistleblowers inside the inner circle of the government said that Campari married…”
Chantal Compaoré member_of Félix Houphouët-Boigny host_asserted ▶ 26:15
“one of their assets and she just happens to be the daughter of the Ivory Coast leader so that's exactly what happens what how much of that is part of the CIA plot the CIA is definitely involved in all…”
Goodyear funded Burkina Faso host_asserted ▶ 27:11
“They have major rubber plantations all over this area. And Goodyear has like an entire region of Burkina Faso under their control. And the money that they contribute to the manipulation of the Burkina…”
Thomas Sankara traded_network_to Muammar Gaddafi host_asserted ▶ 32:08
“And Ghana Economic Union with a new currency that would end the dependence on the French franc. That really was his death sentence. He basically was doing a mini African community, which later would t…”
Thomas Sankara traded_network_to Ghana host_asserted ▶ 32:08
“And Ghana Economic Union with a new currency that would end the dependence on the French franc. That really was his death sentence. He basically was doing a mini African community, which later would t…”
Thomas Sankara traded_network_to Cuba host_asserted ▶ 32:37
“among themselves to do much better. Sankara additionally forged relationships with non-traditional states such as Cuba. He repudiated an IMF structural adjustment program that would have forced him to…”
Blaise Compaoré carried_out_attack Burkina Faso host_asserted ▶ 36:18
“Which, hello, that's exactly what it is. So the Campari was described as cold and calculating and living well beyond his means. When he was couped himself in 2014, French troops evacuated him to the I…”
Barack Obama funded Blaise Compaoré host_asserted ▶ 37:18
“Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. And let's see, he also provided more than $35 million in security assistance to Campari, even though their security forces were engaging in Operation Gladio-sty…”
Blaise Compaoré carried_out_attack Burkina Faso host_asserted ▶ 37:18
“Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. And let's see, he also provided more than $35 million in security assistance to Campari, even though their security forces were engaging in Operation Gladio-sty…”
AFRICOM founded Operation Creek Sand host_asserted ▶ 37:49
“Anybody that he suspected as a threat, he would just murder them. AFRICOM, during Campari's rule, was permitted to open a new surveillance base at their capital's international airport. It was a class…”
AFRICOM founded Aztec Archer host_asserted ▶ 37:49
“Anybody that he suspected as a threat, he would just murder them. AFRICOM, during Campari's rule, was permitted to open a new surveillance base at their capital's international airport. It was a class…”
Department of Defense funded Burkina Faso host_asserted ▶ 38:48
“Islamic quote-unquote insurgent occurring, which is basically how he controlled his domestic population. In 2018 and 2019, Trump spent 100, not Trump, I mean the Department of Defense, spent $100 mill…”
Paul-Henri Sandaogo Damiba carried_out_attack Burkina Faso host_asserted ▶ 39:49
“for at least six different training exercises and several actual in-residence courses. And he's the guy in January 2022 that seized power and couped the government. So Burkina Faso today ranks 144th o…”
United States trained Paul-Henri Sandaogo Damiba host_asserted ▶ 39:49
“for at least six different training exercises and several actual in-residence courses. And he's the guy in January 2022 that seized power and couped the government. So Burkina Faso today ranks 144th o…”
Gilbert Diendéré assassinated Thomas Sankara host_asserted ▶ 42:16
“referred to him as a traitor to the revolution, an aristocrat, and basically said he was guilty of high treason and engaged in mysticism, which sounds exactly like the CIA, but hey. The commandos that…”
France funded La FrancAfrique host_asserted ▶ 42:45
“In May of 2008. Now, these son of a bitches know this guy murdered Sankara. And they give him a medal for it. Okay. During the 1960s, French President Charles de Gaulle entrusted Jacques Focart, F-O-C…”
Jacques Focart headed La FrancAfrique host_asserted ▶ 42:45
“In May of 2008. Now, these son of a bitches know this guy murdered Sankara. And they give him a medal for it. Okay. During the 1960s, French President Charles de Gaulle entrusted Jacques Focart, F-O-C…”
La FrancAfrique carried_out_attack Thomas Sankara host_asserted ▶ 43:46
“This shadow network was termed La Franca Afrique and was still operational when Sankara was killed. Though its records remain classified, we know that French agents were present at the time of Sankara…”
France funded Jonas Savimbi host_asserted ▶ 46:03
“had actually said this. This is a quote. We cannot understand why bandits like Jonas Savimbi, who was Angolian warlord backed by the CIA. And remember, we've already talked about Angola. Killers like …”
South Africa funded Jonas Savimbi host_asserted ▶ 46:03
“had actually said this. This is a quote. We cannot understand why bandits like Jonas Savimbi, who was Angolian warlord backed by the CIA. And remember, we've already talked about Angola. Killers like …”
Israel supplied_arms_to Nicaragua host_asserted ▶ 50:34
“He has words that sound like anti-imperialist, we don't want to be your slaves anymore. And somehow that's bad. And they have no option but to side with Cuba, the Soviets, and Nicaragua at the time. B…”
United States funded Blaise Compaoré host_asserted ▶ 52:24
“for the other people to accept Sankara because of the fear that the Pan-Africa movement would spread. So after Kampari seized power, the Reagan administration trained and funded the army in an attempt…”
United States trained Blaise Compaoré host_asserted ▶ 52:24
“for the other people to accept Sankara because of the fear that the Pan-Africa movement would spread. So after Kampari seized power, the Reagan administration trained and funded the army in an attempt…”
Charles Taylor recruited Blaise Compaoré guest_asserted ▶ 54:13
“had told him to approach Sankara for help in taking power in Liberia in exchange for a lucrative business opportunity. When Sankara rejected the idea, because they basically were trying to frame him, …”
Blaise Compaoré assassinated Thomas Sankara guest_asserted ▶ 54:39
“and the country of Chad's president, along with a white Frenchman who was probably part of the Foucart network, which is basically Gladio for France. At the meeting, it was decided that Taylor would b…”
France ordered_assassination_of Thomas Sankara guest_asserted ▶ 56:04
“So, according to Cecil Allen, another of Taylor's top aides, the Americans and French sanctioned the plan to remove Sankara. Allen stated that, quote, there was a CIA operative in the U.S. embassy in …”
Ibrahim Traoré targeted_for_regime_change United States host_asserted ▶ 1:17:03
“It says he was disillusioned working inside of the government in Burkina Faso with all of the corruption. And so he and several other officers banded together and basically overthrew their government …”
Ibrahim Traoré overthrew Burkina Faso host_asserted ▶ 1:17:03
“It says he was disillusioned working inside of the government in Burkina Faso with all of the corruption. And so he and several other officers banded together and basically overthrew their government …”
Ibrahim Traoré member_of Wagner Group host_asserted ▶ 1:18:27
“lay within the ground of Burkina Faso. And then immediately, as if on cue, cue, let me read this. According to Reuters and New York Times, he was suspected as having a Russian mercenary connection to …”
Nicolás Maduro funded Cuba host_asserted ▶ 1:34:03
“in Aravac aircraft to Cuba for medical treatment because they didn't have the supplies because of sanctions to do the medical care. And more importantly, they had to have some currency, if you quote u…”
United States supplied_arms_to Venezuela host_asserted ▶ 1:35:32
“And Russia's actually been in Venezuela for a little while, too. So it's not like new kids on the block. They've been there. Oh, and one of the things I found before the battery died on the phone is t…”
Colombia member_of Operation Gladio host_asserted ▶ 1:36:54
“I don't know. We'll see what happens with that. But yeah, they did open up the contracts to the BRICS countries yesterday or today. And what's important about what Cousin It just said is to the west y…”
Guyana member_of Operation Gladio host_asserted ▶ 1:36:54
“I don't know. We'll see what happens with that. But yeah, they did open up the contracts to the BRICS countries yesterday or today. And what's important about what Cousin It just said is to the west y…”
United States trained Colombia host_asserted ▶ 1:37:23
“So those both Guyana and we talked about it when we talked about South America has been cued by the United States. Columbia, ditto. And Columbia is where the 20,000 excess terrorists were trained usin…”
Colombia trained NATO host_asserted ▶ 1:37:49
“Drugs has only increased in their frequency in the United States. So they've obviously been doing something else with that money. And we discovered that they have trained over 20,000 terrorists that t…”
Venezuela member_of BRICS host_asserted ▶ 1:38:23
“And this upcoming summit, they should be finalizing it. So that's what's going on with BRICS in Venezuela. And you know that they're going to admit them because they're already dealing with them on a …”
Argentina member_of BRICS host_asserted ▶ 1:41:05
“I stand corrected. They did apply for BRICS, but they pulled out last December. So I apologize. I was not aware of that. Thank you. Was you talking about Argentina, Stellar? Yes, ma'am. I thought that…”
Monsanto secretly_owned Argentina host_asserted ▶ 1:41:56
“So Argentina has given over like 50 percent of their arable land over to Monsanto in order to produce GMO soy. And Monsanto basically runs that country. It's there was probably a lot of pushback. And …”