Operation Gladio meets Secret Societies with WarHamster Bady 2025-05-22
1:09:12 · ▶ watch on Rumble
Transcript
0:00
Everyone, welcome to another edition of Operation Gladio meets Secret Society with War Hamster Brady. How are you today, Brady? I am wonderful. I am getting sick and tired that it is still in the 40s in May, but besides the weather, everything is great. Okay, I am not going to tell you it's supposed to be like 90 here today. Yeah, I've actually got my heater on right now, which I thought it was... I'm sorry. I chose to live here.
0:32
Of course, I didn't say I thought I'd be gone by now, but life gets in the way. Well, we've got another fun episode of our usual topic today, where we talk about secret societies, meet Operation Gladio and all the insidious connections. And of course, today we're going to get started again with some more Skull and Bones alumni. And we are in the 1960s. And given the overview for people who are new to the show.
1:04
Skull and Bones is a secret society at Yale University. They tap 15 juniors every year to join this secret, perhaps cult. And somehow, this small little group of people, since 1834, find themselves in the most influential corners of power in the United States and foreign governments. They find themselves as business leaders, Secretary of Commerce, CIA, important military positions.
1:33
very much in academia. And I'm not saying there's a conspiracy here, but there are so many darn connections that you can draw that conclusion anytime you want, and I'm not going to argue. So with no further ado, our first bone, I didn't get any pictures today, so I apologize. We're not going to have any photo ops. First gentleman we're looking at today is a guy by the name of David Rumsey, and he is a skull and bones class of 1966.
2:02
Now, all at the same time in 1966, it's important to remember you had some other very prominent people in Skull and Bones, including John Kerry and, of course, George W. Bush, who was class of 65 and 68, respectively. So these guys are all classmates of two guys who ran for president against each other. What are the odds that two presidential candidates come from the same college, same secret society? You've got to have both sides of every coin.
2:32
Uh-huh. So Mr. Rumsey, why is he notable? He got his Bachelor of Arts and his Master of Fine Arts from Yale. Okay. He's also a founding member of what's called Yale Research Associates. Grew up nearby in a place called Lakeville, Connecticut. And his family, as many of these are, have very deep old American founding ties. So would you be shocked if I told you that he attended a private boarding school?
3:07
No. Yeah, just like all these guys. Let's take a picture. He went to this place called the Hotchkiss School. So we're going to talk about the Hotchkiss School a little bit. And we'll just take a look at. This is the Hotchkiss School. Unique educational opportunities. College advising. 614 students. I'm going to brag. They have 42% students of cover, 14% international. And these are all the colleges feeder schools they go to.
3:51
Do we have any interesting people on their board of directors? I'm not sure if I have that here. You know, I just asked Grok if David Rumsey is related to the Rumseys that Bill Donovan married into in Buffalo. And he said that he can't find an actual genealogy source, but there are a lot of overlaps. For example, there was a...
4:22
that was written that said David Rumsey actually was a resident of Buffalo, New York. So that's very, very interesting. Wouldn't shock me. There's very little does these days. Students, alumni. Oh, we got the alumni elsewhere. I don't have the board of directors or anything. So it's a pretty good looking school. So let's talk about this Hotchkiss school.
4:54
Well, first of all, it is one of the, there's a couple of, where do I have this? Hang on. Hotchkiss School is founded in 1891 by a Maria Hotchkiss, and she's the heir to her late husband, Benjamin Hotchkiss's fortune. Benjamin's an interesting guy. He made his money as an ordinance engineer. In the 1800s, he worked as a gun maker on Colt revolvers and Winchester rifles.
5:30
He then goes on to patent a line of projectiles for rifled artillery that was used extensively in the Civil War. So this guy, he's a war profiteer, making very deadly weapons. After the Civil War, he moves to France, and he developed what's called the Hotchkiss gun, which is a cannon revolver used on ships in France and America, too. And they developed the machine gun that was used by American and French troops in World War I.
5:57
Mr. Hotchkiss was also a polygamist. He had a French wife without ever getting a divorce to Maria. Then he passed away, and Maria inherited the rest of the fortune. So she decided to found a school. She was an educator herself. Her top advisor was the guy who was the president of Yale at the time by the name of Timothy Dwight. So in 1891, Tim Dwight wanted this Hotchkiss school to be a feeder school for Yale.
6:28
So they hire a bunch of key staff from the Phillips Academy at Andover, which we talked about a few weeks ago. Okay. All right. So I found a list. This is one of the – Hotchkiss School is one of these eight schools that are called the Eight Schools Association, and it's also a member of the Ten Schools Admission Organization. And I think it's worth looking at the schools that are on this.
7:02
Let me find that real quick. All right. Let's do a quick screen share. And people just think that they've captured the education system now. It's been that way for a very long time. All right. Here are the eight schools association. It says it is a private is a group of large private college preparatory boarding schools in the northeastern United States. Yankees. It was formally established in 2006, but has existed in some form since 73. Let's just take a look at the schools.
7:36
Oh, we've got Choate Rosemary Hall in Connecticut. Deerfield Academy we're going to have to spend some time on. It's got one of the biggest net assets of over a billion dollars. Wow. Hotchkiss School. Lawrence School. Yeah, Hotchkiss only has $665 million in assets. We've got the Northfield Mount Hermon School. Oh, Phillips Academy of Andover and Phillips Academy of Exeter and the St. Paul School, all of which we have looked into. So a nice little small list.
8:05
Wow. And there's another list of 10 schools, a bunch of the same names, with a little bit of crossover. The Hill School gets added, and Loomis Chafee School. We've talked about Chafee before, right? Right. Yeah, well, Loomis is also a big name in asset management. Something we'll hit on later today. Oh, and here at the bottom, we've got the Taft School, obviously named after William Howard Taft, with a long line of Skull and Bones alumni. Any patterns? A couple.
8:38
All right. So like I said, it's got about 600 students. So let's talk about their famous alumni. No particular order. I've got an Alfred Whitney Griswold. There's that Whitney name again, one of the oldest American families. He was Hotchkiss class of 1924, and he became the president of Yale University. Of course he did. How about Jonathan Bush, class of 1949, George H.W. Bush's brother?
9:09
Oh, they got another brother, William H.T. Bush. He went there, class of 1956. Oh, my gosh. All right. Now we've got the Ford family, all of whom would go on to become executives of Ford Motor Company. Edsel Ford, 1958. Henry Ford II, 1936. William Clay Ford Sr., 1943. William Clay Ford Jr., 1975. All went to this high school. Kind of interesting. You've got the Bush family.
9:41
That was involved with financing the Nazis. You've got the Ford family that was involved with financing the Nazis. All of their kids going to the same prep school. Let's let that hang there for a second. Yeah, that's crazy. Uh-huh. And back then they only had about 300 students. Here's a name we've run into before. Got the name of Britton Haddon, class of 1915. He was a bonesman. Another guy.
10:15
Why do we know him? Because the class of 1916 was Henry Luce. These are the two guys that co-founded Time Magazine. Britain had died at 31 years old, and Luce took credit for everything he had and never wrote. We talked about this previously, but they thought this is the school that those two came from. Yeah, and associated Time Life with the CIA. Mm-hmm. And, of course, how many times did Time Magazine feature Adolf Hitler on the cover, if we're going to keep going with that theme?
10:45
Correct. Okay. Next name I have here is Robert Lehman, class of 1908. He went to Yale, but was not in Skull and Bones because he was Jewish and wasn't allowed to. He's famous because he's the grandson of the founder of Lehman Brothers, the company that would go bankrupt in 2008 during the financial crisis. And his name comes up a lot in association with financing a lot of the background information of Europe as well.
11:21
Mayor Sarge put in chat that the Hotchkiss gun is one of the U.S.'s biggest pieces of weapons list. It's good to know. His wife made a good school, apparently. Here's a name that I knew popped up. Raymond McGuire, who's class of 75. He was the former head of my former employer, Citigroup's investment banking division. So I've never met the man, but I definitely knew who he was. Here's another family.
11:54
Remember Mars Incorporated? The candy bars? Oh, yeah. Two of their sons, Forrest Mars Jr. and John Mars, attended in 49 and 53. They both go on to be executives for their parents' company. A lot of incestuousness in these corporations. We've got Harold Stanley, who we've talked about many times. Class of 1904, one of the founders of Morgan Stanley with J.P. Morgan. And, of course, Harold Stanley was a skull and bones.
12:26
You're getting a lot of bonesmen out of this private grooming school, aren't you? Yes, a lot. There's more, believe it or not. I got a Victor Ash, class of 1963. Now, you might remember that name. He also went to the Groton School before he transferred to Hotchkiss. But he was the mayor of Knoxville, Tennessee, and became the ambassador to Poland from 2004 to 2009.
13:00
As from a mayor of Tennessee. So it had to have been the connections. And obviously it's his high school and the fact that, oh, Victor Ashe was a bonesman. Another one. And he was the ambassador to Poland when? 2004 to 2009 under Bush. So it's a Bush connection. So he was in Poland right after the first overthrow of Ukraine in 2004. Indeed.
13:28
I'm sure it's just a coincidence that he was right next door where they were launching operations from. But go on. No, very good catch there. And again, it's only connected. You're going to see so many of these ambassadors and their connections to Bush, either through boarding schools or through Skull and Bones or through Yale itself. Basically, it was a very small club running American foreign policies under Bush. Next name I have. Here's a fun one.
14:03
Donald EASUM, E-A-S-U-M. He was a Hotchkiss class of 1942. And he was the U.S. ambassador in the 1960s and 70s. But I'll get to that in a second. He went to the University of London on a Fulbright scholarship. And that needs to go on our list of things to investigate when we start. Go ahead. Well, I've looked at.
14:30
I've looked into the Fulbright because it's basically the same thing as the Oxford thing as far as grooming people to the CIA. Yeah. Okay. And the State Department. Yeah. I knew I had an exclamation point on that for a reason. Yeah. You ever heard of the Doherty Foundation and the Penfield Fellowship? I've heard of the Daughtery one. This guy Eason also studied in Buenos Aires on a Doherty Foundation grant and a Penfield Fellowship. So those are two more to look into.
15:04
I didn't get a chance to. That's interesting. Yeah, it's like the Rhodes Scholarship. Yeah. So this guy had quite a diplomatic career. He served in the following countries. This is the 1960s and 70s. He was in Nicaragua, Indonesia, Senegal, Gambia, Guinea-Bissau, Niger, and the Upper Volta. Coup, coup, coup, coup, coup, coup.
15:42
I am sure that's just a coincidence. I'm sure too. Oh, I'm reading ahead. Go ahead. He was in the USAID? Oh, yeah. Oh, my God. Oh, he's also a senior fellow at Yale's Stimson Seminar from 1998 to 2004. Who is the Stimson Seminar named after? Henry Stimson? Yes. Who is also?
16:19
What secret society was Stimson a member of? Skull and Bones. I don't know. Was it the pirate one? Holy crap. And you're not going to be shocked to know that he was a member of the Council of Foreign Relations. I would not at all. Well, he was. In fact, you'd be shocked if he wasn't at this point. Holy moly. All right. We're not even done with this boarding school.
16:51
We've got a George McMurdy Godley, Hotchkiss class of 1935. And he is a U.S. diplomat also. Went to Yale, but was not in the Skull and Bones. He was the ambassador to Congo from 1964 to 66. Anything happening in Congo? That was right after they cued him in.
17:23
They assassinated Luwamba on January 17th, 1961. They installed the dictator, Mubatu, and they were basically stealing everything from the Congo during the time he was the ambassador. Nice job if you can get it. So we leave the Congo. Oh, where else? Oh, he becomes the ambassador to Laos, 1969 to 1973. And what were we doing then? Running drugs?
17:56
Yes, exactly what they were doing. But we weren't involved in Laos, were we? CIA sure as hell was. Yeah, I've written about Godley before. Yeah, he's the guy who had to testify in Congress in 1992 about the POWs. He was criticized for leaving the Americans behind, like 135. Yeah. And they made movies about him. That's the guy. Holy shit. So interestingly, when he got nominated to the Council of Foreign Relations,
18:27
He got rejected by the Senate because J. William Fulbright opposed because he was too closely associated to failed American policies in Asia. So he was he was nominated not to the CFR. I think you mistakenly said that he was nominated for the secretary of state for East Asia. Right. I may have gotten that wrong, but yeah, he got a nomination. He got a nomination shut down and maybe he was in the CFR. Maybe I got it. Maybe I read it wrong.
18:58
Yeah. Interesting career he had. Holy moly. Yeah. Of course, now we've got Winston Lord, who we've talked about the Lord family many times, one of the oldest families in America, 1955 class of Hodgkin's class. He was a bonesman. And as a reminder, Winston Lord became the U.S. ambassador to China. Okay, the next name I have is a Clark Rant Jr., class of 1966. Oh, he was also the U.S. ambassador to China from 2001 to 2009.
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Two ambassadors to China from the same boarding school. Remind me, who was the gatekeeper when we opened up China in the 1970s? Would that have been the Bush family? Yes, it was. With Kissinger, yeah. And now we got two ambassadors to China coming from the same boarding school. That's crazy. Yeah, I think there's a lot to this pattern. So Rand Jr. went to Yale, was not in Skull and Bones. He lived in Hong Kong for about 18 years, and that's how he became the...
20:07
U.S. expert on China. And he is currently the advisor to a private equity fund. We'll be talking more about private equity today. Common theme. It's called Hopu Investment Management. It is a Chinese private equity fund. And he is one of their advisors. He makes a lot of money. Oh, wait a minute. It says here that he served in the U.S. Air Force Security Service. So he was intel. Is that what U.S. Air Force Security Service would be? Well, yeah.
20:41
That's what it is. Excellent. All right. Next name I have here is someone we've talked about before. Mr. Strobe Talbot, lifetime friend of Bill Clinton. And I believe Bonesman as well, right? I think so. Yeah, he was Yale. Oh, and he's an Oxford and Rhodes Scholar, too. Yeah. Yeah. He was a Rhodes Scholar with Clinton at the same time. Yeah. Wow.
21:16
So we've already talked about Talbot, but he's in there, too. Next name I have is a Paul Warnke, W-A-R-N-K-E. He was the U.S. Secretary of Defense for International Security Affairs. OK, and let me tell everybody what that is. That's the CIA conduit into the Department of Defense. Mm hmm. Guess where he went to college? Yale? Yes. He was not in the Bonesman, though. Not all of them get to be.
21:47
World War II, he served in the Coast Guard. Then he comes back and goes to Columbia Law School and joins a firm by the name of Covington and Burling. Okay. Guess who's running Covington and Burling at the time? Dean Atkinson? You got it. None other than Dean Atkinson. Atkinson. We were just talking about him, weren't we? Uh-huh. And we talked about Covington and Burling. Yes.
22:21
They're in the news right now. That is where Obama's former attorney general is currently working and a lot of the other alumni of the Obama administration. And he was Robert McNamara's legal counsel when he was the SecDef during Vietnam. Yeah, he was the general counsel of the SecDef in 67. He actually had some pretty good positions.
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opposed expansion of Vietnam War. And when Clark Clifford became the new SecDef, he was one of the top civilian leaders trying to educate Clifford about, look, we might want to pursue peace here. That's not working out militarily. So he's on the right side of history on that one. And who was Clark Clifford again? Wasn't he the guy that was illegally involved in BCCI? God, there's such a small circle these people run in.
23:19
So he's money laundering for the CIA. Yeah, no big deal. All right. So Warnke also was the counsel for the Secretary of Defense in 1967 when the USS Liberty was fired upon by the Israeli Air Force. And his quote. Go ahead. Here's his quote. I found it hard to believe that it was, in fact, an honest mistake on the part of Israeli Air Force units. But it was McNamara that.
23:50
hid all of that and you cannot tell me he hid all of that with his general counsel not knowing it that's the lead legal advisor to McNamara he would have been sitting right next to him interesting huh yeah okay who else we have here a little bit more on him um because he wasn't done by any stretch after the liberty he was also the chief thought negotiator for Carter in 77 I think it was
24:25
And then, of course, he was a writer for the Council of Foreign Relations Foreign Policy magazine. And he wrote the famous Apes on a Treadmill article, which basically talked about the futility of the nuclear arms buildup. And so he's actually on the right side of a number of things in history. But as you just pointed out, he sure as heck knew what the other people who were on the wrong side of history were doing. Yeah. All right. Next name we have is a Charles Charles Yost.
24:58
Class of 1956, he became the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations. He was Princeton educated, not Yale. And he also went to, we've heard this one before, the French school called École des Hautes Études Internationales. My French is getting better. I practiced that one, which is basically international studies. So, of course, he... Go ahead. No, jump in, please. Well...
25:25
I'm sure you're going to cover where he was the ambassador. I'll have a couple of things to say about that. Yeah. Well, he joined the U.S. Foreign Service in 1930. He worked on the United Nations Charter when it was being drafted in 1944. And then he became a writer for the Council of Foreign Relations of all places. And where else did you want to mention he was posted? Well, he was in.
25:52
Morocco during the time of Eisenhower's administration, which is where they were launching a lot of their North African operations out of, because Morocco was basically a colony of Britain for all intents and purposes. And it just happens to be co-located with all of the activity that was going on in North Africa.
26:21
During that time, like in Algiers and stuff like that. So that's a really big deal. Then he moves on. It looks like only to Syria for a month before he's moved on. He also was the ambassador to Laos in the 50s, which is when we were first going in there. And ends up he was also for a little bit of time the ambassador to Thailand.
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right after the Second World War, which is interesting because Thailand was the hotbed of operations at that time for the setting up of Chiang Kai-shek, who eventually ends up in Thailand because they were trying to figure out where to put him. And Thailand was kind of one of their staging bases. Indeed.
27:19
So he's been in the mix of everything. Amazing amount of diplomats and some of the craziest places all from the same boarding schools. Okay, we got some people in the judiciary that are worth mentioning. Robert Bork, who of course got borked. He was a Reagan nominee for Supreme Court that got shot down. I believe it was Joe Biden that let that attack on Bork.
27:53
Too bad. I think Bork would have been a very good Supreme Court justice. He probably would have been one of the more conservative ones we see. They wouldn't have attacked him if he wasn't. Say again? They wouldn't have attacked him if he wasn't. No. That's when Kavanaugh was up to try to Bork him as well. It was ridiculous. Somehow he got through. Say what you want about Mitch McConnell, but at least he got the judges through.
28:20
We also have Potter Stewart, who did become the Supreme Court. We've talked about him before because he was an alumni of Skull and Bones, one of four. I think there's five different Supreme Court members that have affiliations to Skull and Bones. And Potter is interesting because his father was the mayor of Cincinnati, Ohio, where we've. Yeah, that's funny. I've got a number of military high ranking guys.
28:50
I didn't grab all of them, but they've got a Thaddeus Beal, who was the undersecretary of the Army. You've got a Douglas Campbell, who apparently was the first American flying ace. You've got an Artemis Gates, who was the undersecretary of the Navy, a bit of a war hero. You've got a Paul Nitsi, who was the secretary of the Navy. You've got an Elliot Strauss, who was a rear admiral and a key allied staff officer for the Normandy invasion. A lot of military brass from one school.
29:22
Paul Mitzi. I don't. Was he actually in the military or did he just serve in? Because he's very interesting. His name comes up in so much of the back end of everything that was happening during that time. Because remember, yesterday we were talking about him because he was involved with the Dylan Reed law investment.
29:53
He comes up in he was very close friends with everybody at Standard Oil. He was basically like tied at the hip with George Kennan. And it says here his brother in law founded the Aspen Institute. So, yeah, I just put down that he's secretary of the Navy. But, yeah, you know, you can dive deeper on a lot of these guys.
30:23
Yeah. Yeah. Last name on the alumni that I wanted to talk about was, of course, was Porter Goss. Oh, my God. Not him, too. Holy shit. Class of 1956. He would be the last DCI and the first director of the Central Intelligence Agency. Oh. Porter Goss. Yeah. He was a fraternity brother of William H.T. Bush, who's the uncle of George W. Bush. And he was also a fraternity brother of John Neogreponte.
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who was also in the fraternity, and Neil Gripanti would become Bush's DNI. So all of these guys have known each other since high school, become the brain trust of our intelligence division under Bush. Can I say a few things about Goss? Sure. I mean, there's more. I've got more. Go ahead. All right. So he gets recruited by the CIA while he's a junior in college, and that's public record. He would work for the Directorate of Operations.
31:29
In Latin America, the Caribbean, and then Europe. Coup, coup, coup, coup. Yeah, he did wet work. There's no doubt about that. He was in Miami during the Cuban Missile Crisis, stationed in Miami. So he's part of that. Gets out of the CIA and decides to run for Congress from Florida. And he was there from 1997 to 2004. And he sat as the chair of the House Intelligence Committee for eight years.
32:02
Now I'm going to push back a little bit because I don't think he got out of the CIA. Fine. We've talked about, you know, we just recently talked about when we did Jake Sullivan, all the different spooks that are running for Congress. Yes. He's one of them. Yes. And of course he was a member of the Council of Foreign Relations or is a member. And if I don't, if I remember correctly, when he went into Congress,
32:34
There was there was there was something to the fact of when he ran for Congress. There was like someone had left to make it for him. Yeah. His predecessor had left. And I don't have I've read I've read over the details. I forget the guy's name, but it was a special election. They were basically putting him in Congress. Yeah. You know where his district was in Florida? In the Fort Myers, Naples area.
33:06
I remember that from when I researched him down in the southwest corner of Florida. Well, that, ladies and gentlemen, is the Hotchkiss School. OK, hold on. I got a couple of things I want to tell people about Goss, because every time I get a chance to talk about him, I talk about him. Because not only was he in Congress, he was in Congress over 9-11. He was the guy that set up.
33:38
The Patriot Act. He is the guy that was part of the drafting of the Patriot Act before 9-11. This is one of the guys that was in part of the planning of 9-11 and had the Patriot Act ready to go the day after 9-11. So I want everybody to understand this. This is a career CIA officer who went around assassinating people who was placed in Congress.
34:10
Just prior to 9-11 was there when 9-11 happened and is the guy that sponsored the Patriot Act that had already been written. And he just happens to have longtime Bush family connections. Just so happens. OK, now you can go on. And then Bush would make him the, like I said, the director of the CIA. Yes, that was his reward.
34:47
Okay. Ladies and gentlemen, that is your Hotchkiss School. That's crazy. Yeah, I'd say that's every bit as juicy as the Andover or the Groton School or any of the other ones we've covered. I really want to say that one's better. It might be. Oh, and this one guy I noticed on here, Frederick Vanderbilt Field.
35:12
I only mentioned him because I recognize that name and the Institute of Pacific Relations is a CIA front and he basically was there. So it is a big deal. He's a big deal, too. I ran across his name a couple of times. He also it says that his organization, the the Pacific.
35:42
organization was funded by none other than Carnegie and Rockefeller, which I found in my research already. Small circle. Yeah. Holy crap. This is crazy. And not to mention they had a whole bunch of people in literature, journalism that obviously we don't have time. Oh, but there's a Loeb, William Loeb, L-O-E-B.
36:13
A whole bunch, not a whole bunch in medicine, but they've got the entire field of operations covered. They've got someone everywhere. So that's critically important. Their entertainment list is very interesting, too. We don't have time to go through it, but just understand that they have someone everywhere. They all know each other. Yep. Give them back to David Rumsey. There's a little bit more about him.
36:46
than just where he went to high school. He made his money as a real estate developer. And then he would join Charles Feeney's company called the General Atlantic Holding Company of New York. This is a private equity firm that manages $103 billion in assets under management. It's the ninth biggest private equity firm in the world. Growth equity firm, someone who provides capital and strategic support for global growth companies.
37:16
My professional career the last decade, I specialized in managing money for the high net worth people. I was the portfolio manager of a private family office. We did a lot of work with private equity. And I'm telling you right now that people may be rewarded with a stock market. The smart money is in publicly traded companies. It's in private. This company itself, as of 2013, it's the most recent data I have.
37:46
at a rate or eternal rate of return called an IRR of 24% annualized. And that stomps the stock market. So can I also say that these are the places, the two places, the primary two places that the CIA launders money, real estate and in private equity.
38:11
Yeah. Did you know that the National Association of Realtors has successfully lobbied for decades to make sure that the NAR, National Association of Realtors, does not have to follow know your customer rules? Meaning drug money, cartel money comes up to Florida and buys real estate to launder it. And the NAR lobbies to keep it that way. And they buy it with cash. That's how they launder it. Yeah. So the initial CEO of this.
38:44
General Atlantic Holding Company was a guy by the name of Steve Denning, and he came from McKinsey and Company. Talk about connected. Tying politics to business, yes. Let's look at some of their biggest holdings over the years. How about United Health Services? Stocks down over 50% in the last month. Royalty Pharma is a recent IPO they did in 2020, right before COVID.
39:17
Yeah. Hey, we got a Rumble rant or $10 funding. Thank you, Fergie62. Oh, Fergie's my buddy. The early investor in a company called JIO Platforms. That's an Indian digital services giant. They're an early investor into ByteDance, which is TikTok's parent company. And of course, I couldn't leave off the list. They were the early investor of CrowdStrike.
39:50
Oh, my gosh. Are you kidding me? Who is CrowdStrike? CrowdStrike, the FBI-connected company, supposed to be a cyber intelligence firm that accredited Russia to the hack of the DNC. There was no evidence of it. Oh, my gosh. Well, there's your real investor. Okay, so this company was founded in 1980 by Charles Feeney. Who's Charles Feeney?
40:24
He was the co-founder of Duty Free Shoppers Limited. You go to the airport and you see Duty Free, that's Feeney. And he was basically a travel retailer for Hong Kong luxury products. Feeney's worth looking into, going off on a little bit of a tangent. He went to Cornell University and was a member of a secret society called the Sphinx Head Society. Oh, I've heard of that one. Yeah, they are described as similar to Skull and Bones.
40:57
Cornell's co-founder and the first president of the university was Andrew Dixon, who was a Bonesman. So there is some connection there. They built their clubhouse in 1926 to resemble an Egyptian tomb. Now, we asked about the tomb at Skull and Bones on Yale's campus. And then you see the connection between Columbia and the Egyptian tomb. And you wonder there's got to be some kind of connection there, right? Right. Sphinx Head doesn't seem to be as prominent.
41:29
as Skull and Bones is. And the only really famous alumni, they tap 40 seniors every year. And the only very short list of famous alumni, the Tatas on his chair, Rat and Tata, David Skorton, who's the president of Cornell, Adolph Coors Jr. and Peter Coors of the Coors beer family, found Kenneth Derr, who's the CEO of Chevron, Oscar Meyer Jr. from Oscar Meyer Wieners, and Neil Becker from the Council of Foreign Relations. And that's about all I had on their famous alumni.
41:59
So hold on just a second. The Coors family is the one that was co-funding some of the CIA clandestine operations. So I think what you may have stumbled upon, and I'll have to go back and look, you know, there's tears to this, right? Obviously, Skull and Bones is, I think you may have just stumbled upon because so.
42:25
Understand that you've got all of these people up here that's going to be in the hundreds of billions of dollars and in the government, but you have to have your next tier down of the CEOs that are basically operating and funding these things behind the scenes because they're the ones that ultimately get rich too. The oligarchs, the CEOs running these.
42:52
international corporations. So I'll have to take a look into that. I've heard it, but I have not done any research into it. Yeah, if there's something there, we'll do it. But I think you picked up on exactly what I was suggesting, and that's that there are secret societies and there are secret societies. Yes. Like I've always said, what better place to hide a secret society than within another secret society? Talk about that with the Freemasonry. So, yeah, there is.
43:20
There are different hierarchies going on here. Yeah. But Feeney is very well connected, obviously. He was a big funder of Sinn Fein, which is the far left Irish political party that was closely connected to the IRA. In fact, Feeney would fund the Sinn Fein party in Washington, D.C. after the IRA had their ceasefire with the British government. That's interesting because the IRA.
43:49
I have discovered through multiple sources was basically a stay behind capability for Britain to instigate terror and turmoil anytime they needed it. Yeah, it's interesting. I am half Irish, so I read quite a bit about the IRA and the troubles in Ireland. I'm not sure what the versions I read when I was a teenager are as accurate as they probably needed to be.
44:22
This guy is also a very well-known philanthropist. He's associated with far-left causes. He's done a lot of investment with Bill Gates and Warren Buffett. That's who this guy is. And that's who our guy, rough name of our bonesman, Ramsey. That's who Ramsey is. Yeah. What else do I know about this guy? Oh, his big charity is called Atlantic Philanthropies. Thank you. It's based in Bermuda.
44:54
Tax haven. Yeah. Remember how we talked about how these tax-free foundations are one of the biggest scams ever pulled on the taxpayer public? Yeah. This guy has his philanthropy in Bermuda. A lot of what he calls philanthropy is political donations. In fact, he made $27 million of donations, basically lobbyist, to get the passage of the Affordable Care Act under Obama. And over half of their donations from this philanthropy goes to lobbying.
45:23
It was basically a political slush fund that this guy is running under the guise of being a charity or philanthropy. Ladies and gentlemen, that is how they make the hot dogs in D.C. All right. So Rumsey, very successful guy, leaves business to pursue his passion of cartography. And I got to share this with you. He donated a huge map collection to Stanford University of all places. Of course.
45:55
This I have to share because this is one of the neatest websites in the world. So, people, if you want to know where to find great maps, you go to davidrumsey.com. And this guy collected maps from everywhere. Let's see some of the categories. Newspaper maps, imaginary maps, ethnography, title pages, art maps, composite maps, automobile maps, aerial photographs, climate maps, manuscripts, mountains, rivers, space maps. I mean, you want maps, this guy's got them.
46:29
Genealogy maps. I've used this one quite a bit. So you want me to tell you what the big deal about maps are? Go for it. Fill in the blank. That is how the intelligence services under, and I learned this in Nelson Rockefeller's book by will be done. So they sent out teams and teams and teams of people to map all over the world because with these maps,
46:59
you can find resources. There are certain fingerprints of areas that are more prone to gold, more prone to oil, more prone to uranium. The topography of the formations that house those resources can be found by mapping.
47:29
Well, these are both great resources this guy has provided. And I had a lot of fun. Us and the intelligence agencies. Exactly. Anyways, I thought it was worth sharing that website. Since we got a bunch of researchers who watched, there's a fun little tool. That's amazing. Yeah. And I think the Stanford connection, of course, I'm sure that stood out really quickly to you. Even more amazing. For those who don't know, Stanford is the West Coast hub of the CIA. Yes.
48:00
They're a recruiting center there. Okay. That was one Bonesman. That's crazy. Next guy we're going to talk to is a guy I've been talking about. It's a guy by the name of David Hoadley Thorne, T-H-O-R-N-E. Golan Bones, class of 1966. And he's best known for becoming the U.S. ambassador to Italy from 2009 to 2013. But there's more to him than just an ambassador. How did he get there? Well, he lived in Italy as a boy for about a decade.
48:36
Because his father was there helping to administer the Marshall Plan. Oh, my gosh. Are you kidding me? Nope. And again, what is the Marshall Plan? Yeah, go ahead. So we came together. What did the Marshall Plan fund? Operation Gladio. In Italy. And his dad was there. Holy crap. By the way, he's got a great grandfather you've heard of.
49:09
None other than Skull and Bones alumni Henry L. Stimson. Oh, my gosh. Are you kidding me? So his grandfather is Stimson, and his father is in Italy implementing Operation Gladio. Uh-huh. Oh, yeah, that's no big deal at all. So let's talk a little bit about David Thorne. He did his master's in journalism from Columbia University of 1971.
49:42
He was in the U.S. Navy during Vietnam from 66 to 70, before he got his master's in journalism. In 1971, he co-authors an article for Veterans Against the War with none other than his classmate at Skull and Bones, John Kerry. And the title of the paper was The New Soldier. It was anti-war activism. John Kerry would marry David's twin sister, Julia.
50:21
Keeping it in the family. Okay. Yeah. Wait a minute. Wait a minute. So, Oh my God, you're blowing my mind. Okay. Keep going. So he becomes an activist. More with Carrie. Yeah. Holy shit. So he becomes, gets out of the war. 71, 72 becomes a political consultant. He worked on John Kerry's first congressional campaign in 1972.
50:55
He helped Joe Biden win his first Senate campaign in 1972. It's David Thorne for you. Worked on both of those campaigns. So wait a minute. You're saying that a bonesman put Joe Biden in the Senate. He helped. I'm going to say he did because nobody could help Joe Biden. Holy shit. This guy's one hell of a Forrest Gump, isn't he? Holy shit.
51:29
So he became a real estate developer, which he learned from his father. You know what his father did when he wasn't working with a Marshall Plan? What? He ran the Italian branch of Bankers Trust. What? Yep. Oh, my gosh. Holy crap. We started to make some connections. That's crazy. Uh-huh. Oh, my gosh.
52:03
Now I got to go back and check on that because I bet that was part of the money laundering thing for the Vatican bank. I'm almost sure it was. It's gotta be. I think that's what I think that may have come up. I know we've talked about bankers trust a number of times. Oh my gosh. Are you fucking kidding me? I'm sorry. I'm like having an aneurysm here. Go ahead. Keep going. All right.
52:34
So then he co-founded something called Advisor Investments. That's another real big player in wealth management. They specialize in Vanguard and Fidelity mutual funds and ETFs. It is a very big asset manager. I think they're above average at what they do. They were a competitor to some degree. He left there in 2009. He would then become Secretary of State John Kerry's senior advisor.
53:06
And his focus, this is a direct quote, who's focused on integrating economic and commercial issues into U.S. foreign policy. Which is what the whole CIA State Department's done for the last hundred years that I know of. Bingo. This guy's running point for John Kerry. Holy moly. Oh, I'm going to put this guy's name on my list and hit. Yeah, because this one goes way back.
53:41
Oh, my gosh. This is absolutely crazy. He currently sits on the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. Why is that a big deal? That's supposed to be a conservative lobbyist. And then he joins something called the American Ditchley Foundation. And I'm going to share something about the American Ditchley Foundation you're going to love. Okay. I'm going to blow this up a little bit because it's very small writing. Okay, what is the American Ditchley Foundation?
54:25
It was established in 1958 to advance US and UK understanding following World War II. Over time, that transatlantic purpose has expanded to a broader mission, promoting global understanding and dialogue among nations around the globe. Today, the American Ditzley Foundation works with the Ditzley Foundation in the UK and the Canadian Ditzley Foundation to bring together experts and leaders from a variety of fields to foster a better understanding of
54:54
and solutions to issues of global concern. Through 10 to 12 conferences each year, generally hosted at the Ditchley Park, a stately Oxfordshire manor. This is it right here. Oh my gosh. Very old money here. Ditchley advances dialogue on subjects of international importance. Conference participants benefit from Ditchley Park's grand beauty.
55:22
yet relaxed atmosphere, which fosters warmth, intimacy, and a thoughtful approach to the problems facing our complex world today. Yeah, that's what they need. Yeah. There's so much. We could do a whole show on this Ditchley stuff. They're directors. I went through them. Some of these names are worth looking into, but there weren't any that just jumped off the page. But there's very old family money. And a lot of it's academia. Exactly what you'd think.
55:55
Like I said, we spent a lot of time on Ditchley. I didn't want to have time to go deep dive. But here's one here. Dr. Kay Shannon, Chair, Council of Foreign Relations. Here's the Fort Morgan Stanley. Community Advocates Public Policy Institute. Oh, National Security Correspondents for the New York Times. American Enterprise Institute. London Stock Exchange. Yeah. I mean, this is a who's who. Basically, this is your Bilderberg group.
56:26
under another name. So that's what this guy is now, Thorne is now doing. He's on the American Dictionary Foundation. And that's what I was trying to make the point last night on Alpha Show. The ones that you know about aren't even as evil as the ones you don't know about. Yeah, and that's something that Catherine Austin Fitz said when she was on Tucker. And we've mentioned this before, but she's trying to track to follow the money too. And she thinks it's the money behind the Ivy League schools are the real power brokers.
56:57
And these are not names that show up in the headlines. They stay in the shadow. At least some of them do. But this American Ditchley Foundation is basically, it's an incubator of globalism. And this guy's got the perfect resume for it. So I think we're going to be seeing more of Ditchley. Yeah, I'm definitely going to have to look into it. We've got time for one more, I think. Skull and Bonesman, Frederick W. Smith. And I wish I pulled a picture of him because he is a fat, ugly bastard.
57:33
What's his name? Frederick's W what? Frederick W. Smith. Smith. You can find a pull a picture if you'd like. He was a skull and bones class of 1966, which means he's classmates with all these guys. Frederick Smith is famous because he's the founder of Federal Express FedEx. That's this guy. He's born in Marks, Mississippi, of all places. They came from money because his father is James Frederick Fred Smith, who is the founder of.
58:05
If you're from the South, you know this, the Tottle House restaurant chain. Yeah. And do they have those in Florida? No. He's also the founder of something called the Smith Motor Coach Company, which you probably know by its new name. It's now called Dixie Greyhound Lines because Greyhound Corporation bought a controlling interest in 1931. So this guy comes from money. He was an amateur pilot as a teenager. And then when he goes to Yale, he becomes friends with George W. Bush and, more importantly, John Kerry.
58:37
because they had common flying interests. They would go fly their small planes on weekends. He goes to the Marines, and he's a Marine Corps pilot from 1966 to 1969. He's a forward air controller in Vietnam, and he flew the backseat of the OV-10. The guy got a silver star, a bronze star, and two purple hearts. This is very interesting to me, because my mom's brother, who is an Annapolis graduate, was also a Marine pilot.
59:10
is those exact same years in Vietnam. And my father was an Air Force pilot in Vietnam the exact same time. And of course, we know that John McCain was a naval pilot back then. Gets out of Vietnam and he founds Federal Express to make it a logistics company. He had about a $4 million inheritance. So 1971, took his $4 million and was able to raise $91 million in venture capital. Sure. Yeah, you don't do that without connections. I mean, I've raised capital. That's what I do.
59:44
And yeah, getting 91 million for a logistics company seems interesting, but it worked, worked out for everyone. So he gets out. When did he get out of the military? I have 69 and 69. And then it says he bought controlling interest in an aircraft maintenance company, arc aviation, which also sold jets and,
1:00:14
A year later, he is founding Federal Express and raises $91 million, said no one ever. It wasn't an instant success story because there's a little blurb that I thought was funny. At one point, the company was running out of money. So he took the company's last $5,000 to Las Vegas and came back with $27,000 in blackjack winning so they could pay their fuel bill.
1:00:42
Yeah, I've heard this. I've heard that story. I have a lot of friends that flew for FedEx. Interesting. Yeah, this guy gets indicted in 1975 for forgery on loan documents. That lawsuit was brought by his two half sisters. But of course, he's found not guilty. Of course. The same night he got that indictment, he's involved in a fatal hit and run.
1:01:16
where 54-year-old Handyman was killed. All charges later dismissed. So this guy, and anyway, keep going. I'm telling you that this guy, everything about him, because if you guys don't know this or not, UPS has a very weird story as well. If you go back and you look at their history,
1:01:44
They end up with all the Flying Tiger aircraft, the DC-8s and stuff like that, because that's where I worked when I got off active duty and was going to school full time on my ROTC scholarship. Their history is very weird, too. And I told you guys that the airlines that they leased these aircraft with all flew for the CIA.
1:02:10
All of them. I saw the documentation on the inside of the aircraft. And these cargo aircraft are the perfect disguise, if you will, for burying weapons and drugs everywhere under the guise of carrying cargo. Oh, that was his first fatal car accident. When he was at Yale, his car rolled and the passenger got killed. Of course, the causes of the crash were never determined.
1:02:46
Oh, yeah. Remember we said earlier about how Ben Gino and Cash can't find evidence of Epstein's suicide because nobody ever investigated as a suicide. Thank you, Bill Barr. Same thing, of course. Of course, it determined the cause of the crash because you didn't want to investigate it because this guy was connected. OK, fast forward. George Bush gets elected and there was a lot of speculation that George Bush was going to make Smith the secretary of defense, but he chose Rumsfeld instead.
1:03:19
When Bush ran against Kerry in 2004, he was kind of caught in the middle, but he endorsed Bush over Kerry. After Rumsfeld left, Bush offered him to be Secretary of Defense again, but he refused the offer because he wanted to be with his terminally ill daughter. He would reemerge in 2008 to become the co-chair of John McCain's presidential campaign, just to bring the whole loop back together. That's Fred Smith. Oh, my gosh. That's crazy.
1:04:00
Yeah, some fun stuff today, huh? Yeah. And just as a reminder, Fred Smith would have known that John McCain, which most of us didn't know. I certainly didn't know until I started doing this research, was the chair of the International Republican Institute under the National Endowment for Democracy and was doing funding coups all over the world. He would have known that.
1:04:30
working for John McCain while he was running for president, who was also still serving as the chair for the IRI. While he was running for president, he was funding coups all over the world. And this guy supported him for president. Yeah, and he's running one of the world's biggest logistics companies. Has FedEx ever used for any illicit activity? I'm going to say that I know UPS was. So I'm going to say, given the beginning of FedEx,
1:05:02
that that was true too. And I'm going to also go out on a limb and speculate that he didn't just win money in Las Vegas. He was given money. Fred Smith, who to thunk it. So big source today. What kind of, we got connections to China. We got, I mean, all from one little, all from one little boarding school.
1:05:33
There are three bones men all on the different international stage. This guy, this guy was going to be the secretary of defense for George Bush right before 9-11. You know, how well connected do you have to be to be offered that position? You know, so that's kind of a big deal. And think about this. You know, they talked about, oh, my goodness, Pete Hegseth's qualification. This guy was a pilot in Vietnam for three years and then ran a logistics company.
1:06:05
And he's supposed to be more qualified. And they weren't worried about Pete Hegseth's qualifications. And killed people. Yeah. Oh, yeah. I wouldn't be surprised if Smith did not want all of that dredged back up. And while they may have wanted him and assured him that they had the.
1:06:29
political clout to get him in because he, they knew he was compromised and would go along with nine 11. Um, I, I would be willing to bet that he didn't want all of that stuff dropped, um, drummed up, which it likely would have at least been discovered. I'm sure they would have done a propaganda campaign to, um, uh, legitimize it. But yeah, he definitely has some skeletons in his closet, which is interesting thing to say from a skull and bones. I wasn't even going to touch that.
1:07:02
Yeah, well, back to our pirate theme. So some new threads to pull on today. But I think everything we talked about today just reemphasizes your and my entire theory of how the world really works. I agree. One big club and we ain't in it. But we're figuring out what the club is. Yeah, I think we got a pretty good idea at this point. Yeah, I do. I should be good to go for next week. Okay.
1:07:35
Do you have anything coming up that you want to share with everybody? We just started something that should be really fun. We did episode one. We're going through James Madison's notes on the Philadelphia Convention through the Constitution. And the show we did yesterday, which is up on my channel, we talked about really what was leading up to the need to – they thought they were going there to amend the Articles of Confederation. But after about two months and sweaty –
1:08:05
convention hall in the middle of summer in Philadelphia, they've realized they're just going to have to rewrite the whole darn thing. And you can get in the heads of the founding fathers. It's not what they were trying to do, but what they were trying to avoid. What did they fear the government could become? And, you know, there's a great quote about the constitution. And I think it was by Thomas Jefferson. No, it was by Madison himself. And he basically said the constitution is there to protect people from the government.
1:08:32
And so it really gives them insight into what the founding fathers were trying to do and how badly off the rails this country has become as a result of not paying attention to those lessons. So what's the name of your channel on Rumble, Brady? Just look up War Hamster. There's a couple of them on there. The bigger one is the one you want to watch. I think it's War Space Hamster. I'm not sure. But yeah, that's where I got a lot of that stuff for. That series is called The Refederalist Report. And yeah, some good stuff on there.
1:09:02
Awesome. All right. Until next week. Cheers everyone.
Entities here
Skull and Bones23Frederick W. Smith10Hotchkiss School8George H.W. Bush8David Rumsey6John Kerry6Porter Goss6CFR6Paul Warnke5Charles Feeney5FedEx5David Hoadley Thorne5Charles Yost5G. McMurtry Godley4John McCain4Paul Nitze3Henry Stimson3U.S. Supreme Court3U.S. State Department3Vietnam War3Phillips Academy3American Ditchley Foundation3Rhodes Scholarship3Donald Easum3Clark Rand Jr.3United Kingdom3Robert F. Kennedy3Fulbright Program3U.S. Navy3Italy3Marshall Plan2September 11 attacks2U.S. Congress2Morgan Stanley2John Negroponte2William H. Tucker Bush2Joe Biden2CrowdStrike2Donald Rumsfeld2Laos2
Claims made here
Skull and Bones member_of
David Rumsey host_asserted
▶ 1:33
“very much in academia. And I'm not saying there's a conspiracy here, but there are so many darn connections that you can draw that conclusion anytime you want, and I'm not going to argue. So with no f…”
Skull and Bones member_of
John Kerry host_asserted
▶ 2:02
“Now, all at the same time in 1966, it's important to remember you had some other very prominent people in Skull and Bones, including John Kerry and, of course, George W. Bush, who was class of 65 and …”
Skull and Bones member_of
George H.W. Bush host_asserted
▶ 2:02
“Now, all at the same time in 1966, it's important to remember you had some other very prominent people in Skull and Bones, including John Kerry and, of course, George W. Bush, who was class of 65 and …”
Benjamin Hotchkiss founded
Hotchkiss School host_asserted
▶ 4:54
“Well, first of all, it is one of the, there's a couple of, where do I have this? Hang on. Hotchkiss School is founded in 1891 by a Maria Hotchkiss, and she's the heir to her late husband, Benjamin Hot…”
Maria Hotchkiss founded
Hotchkiss School host_asserted
▶ 4:54
“Well, first of all, it is one of the, there's a couple of, where do I have this? Hang on. Hotchkiss School is founded in 1891 by a Maria Hotchkiss, and she's the heir to her late husband, Benjamin Hot…”
Timothy Dwight appointed
Hotchkiss School host_asserted
▶ 5:57
“Mr. Hotchkiss was also a polygamist. He had a French wife without ever getting a divorce to Maria. Then he passed away, and Maria inherited the rest of the fortune. So she decided to found a school. S…”
Hotchkiss School member_of
Eight Schools Association host_asserted
▶ 6:28
“So they hire a bunch of key staff from the Phillips Academy at Andover, which we talked about a few weeks ago. Okay. All right. So I found a list. This is one of the – Hotchkiss School is one of these…”
Hotchkiss School member_of
Ten Schools Admission Organization host_asserted
▶ 6:28
“So they hire a bunch of key staff from the Phillips Academy at Andover, which we talked about a few weeks ago. Okay. All right. So I found a list. This is one of the – Hotchkiss School is one of these…”
Britton Hadden founded
Time-Life host_asserted
▶ 10:15
“Why do we know him? Because the class of 1916 was Henry Luce. These are the two guys that co-founded Time Magazine. Britain had died at 31 years old, and Luce took credit for everything he had and nev…”
Henry Luce founded
Time-Life host_asserted
▶ 10:15
“Why do we know him? Because the class of 1916 was Henry Luce. These are the two guys that co-founded Time Magazine. Britain had died at 31 years old, and Luce took credit for everything he had and nev…”
Robert Lehman member_of
Shearson Lehman Brothers host_asserted
▶ 10:45
“Correct. Okay. Next name I have here is Robert Lehman, class of 1908. He went to Yale, but was not in Skull and Bones because he was Jewish and wasn't allowed to. He's famous because he's the grandson…”
Raymond McGuire headed
Citigroup host_asserted
▶ 11:21
“Mayor Sarge put in chat that the Hotchkiss gun is one of the U.S.'s biggest pieces of weapons list. It's good to know. His wife made a good school, apparently. Here's a name that I knew popped up. Ray…”
Forrest Mars Jr. member_of
Time Inc. host_asserted
▶ 11:54
“Remember Mars Incorporated? The candy bars? Oh, yeah. Two of their sons, Forrest Mars Jr. and John Mars, attended in 49 and 53. They both go on to be executives for their parents' company. A lot of in…”
John Marshall member_of
Time Inc. host_asserted
▶ 11:54
“Remember Mars Incorporated? The candy bars? Oh, yeah. Two of their sons, Forrest Mars Jr. and John Mars, attended in 49 and 53. They both go on to be executives for their parents' company. A lot of in…”
Stanley Harris founded
Morgan Stanley host_asserted
▶ 11:54
“Remember Mars Incorporated? The candy bars? Oh, yeah. Two of their sons, Forrest Mars Jr. and John Mars, attended in 49 and 53. They both go on to be executives for their parents' company. A lot of in…”
Victor Ashe appointed
Poland host_asserted
▶ 12:26
“You're getting a lot of bonesmen out of this private grooming school, aren't you? Yes, a lot. There's more, believe it or not. I got a Victor Ash, class of 1963. Now, you might remember that name. He …”
Donald Easum member_of
USAID host_asserted
▶ 15:42
“I am sure that's just a coincidence. I'm sure too. Oh, I'm reading ahead. Go ahead. He was in the USAID? Oh, yeah. Oh, my God. Oh, he's also a senior fellow at Yale's Stimson Seminar from 1998 to 2004…”
Donald Easum member_of
Yale Stimson Seminar host_asserted
▶ 15:42
“I am sure that's just a coincidence. I'm sure too. Oh, I'm reading ahead. Go ahead. He was in the USAID? Oh, yeah. Oh, my God. Oh, he's also a senior fellow at Yale's Stimson Seminar from 1998 to 2004…”
Henry Stimson member_of
Skull and Bones host_asserted
▶ 16:19
“What secret society was Stimson a member of? Skull and Bones. I don't know. Was it the pirate one? Holy crap. And you're not going to be shocked to know that he was a member of the Council of Foreign …”
G. McMurtry Godley appointed
Congo host_asserted
▶ 16:51
“We've got a George McMurdy Godley, Hotchkiss class of 1935. And he is a U.S. diplomat also. Went to Yale, but was not in the Skull and Bones. He was the ambassador to Congo from 1964 to 66. Anything h…”
G. McMurtry Godley appointed
Laos host_asserted
▶ 17:23
“They assassinated Luwamba on January 17th, 1961. They installed the dictator, Mubatu, and they were basically stealing everything from the Congo during the time he was the ambassador. Nice job if you …”
Mobutu Sese Seko installed
Congo host_asserted
▶ 17:23
“They assassinated Luwamba on January 17th, 1961. They installed the dictator, Mubatu, and they were basically stealing everything from the Congo during the time he was the ambassador. Nice job if you …”
William Fulbright removed_from_power
G. McMurtry Godley host_asserted
▶ 18:27
“He got rejected by the Senate because J. William Fulbright opposed because he was too closely associated to failed American policies in Asia. So he was he was nominated not to the CFR. I think you mis…”
Clark Rand Jr. appointed
China host_asserted
▶ 18:58
“Yeah. Interesting career he had. Holy moly. Yeah. Of course, now we've got Winston Lord, who we've talked about the Lord family many times, one of the oldest families in America, 1955 class of Hodgkin…”
Winston Lord appointed
China host_asserted
▶ 18:58
“Yeah. Interesting career he had. Holy moly. Yeah. Of course, now we've got Winston Lord, who we've talked about the Lord family many times, one of the oldest families in America, 1955 class of Hodgkin…”
Clark Rand Jr. member_of
Air Force Security Expert host_asserted
▶ 20:07
“U.S. expert on China. And he is currently the advisor to a private equity fund. We'll be talking more about private equity today. Common theme. It's called Hopu Investment Management. It is a Chinese …”
Strobe Talbott member_of
Skull and Bones host_asserted
▶ 20:41
“That's what it is. Excellent. All right. Next name I have here is someone we've talked about before. Mr. Strobe Talbot, lifetime friend of Bill Clinton. And I believe Bonesman as well, right? I think …”
Paul Warnke member_of
U.S. State Department host_asserted
▶ 21:16
“So we've already talked about Talbot, but he's in there, too. Next name I have is a Paul Warnke, W-A-R-N-K-E. He was the U.S. Secretary of Defense for International Security Affairs. OK, and let me te…”
Dean Acheson headed
Covington & Burling host_asserted
▶ 21:47
“World War II, he served in the Coast Guard. Then he comes back and goes to Columbia Law School and joins a firm by the name of Covington and Burling. Okay. Guess who's running Covington and Burling at…”
Paul Warnke member_of
Covington & Burling host_asserted
▶ 21:47
“World War II, he served in the Coast Guard. Then he comes back and goes to Columbia Law School and joins a firm by the name of Covington and Burling. Okay. Guess who's running Covington and Burling at…”
Paul Warnke member_of
Robert F. Kennedy host_asserted
▶ 22:21
“They're in the news right now. That is where Obama's former attorney general is currently working and a lot of the other alumni of the Obama administration. And he was Robert McNamara's legal counsel …”
Robert F. Kennedy covered_up
USS Liberty incident host_asserted
▶ 23:19
“So he's money laundering for the CIA. Yeah, no big deal. All right. So Warnke also was the counsel for the Secretary of Defense in 1967 when the USS Liberty was fired upon by the Israeli Air Force. An…”
Paul Warnke member_of
CFR host_asserted
▶ 24:25
“And then, of course, he was a writer for the Council of Foreign Relations Foreign Policy magazine. And he wrote the famous Apes on a Treadmill article, which basically talked about the futility of the…”
Charles Yost appointed
United Nations host_asserted
▶ 24:58
“Class of 1956, he became the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations. He was Princeton educated, not Yale. And he also went to, we've heard this one before, the French school called École des Hautes Étu…”
Charles Yost member_of
U.S. Forest Service host_asserted
▶ 25:25
“I'm sure you're going to cover where he was the ambassador. I'll have a couple of things to say about that. Yeah. Well, he joined the U.S. Foreign Service in 1930. He worked on the United Nations Char…”
Charles Yost appointed
Morocco host_asserted
▶ 25:52
“Morocco during the time of Eisenhower's administration, which is where they were launching a lot of their North African operations out of, because Morocco was basically a colony of Britain for all int…”
Charles Yost appointed
Thailand host_asserted
▶ 26:21
“During that time, like in Algiers and stuff like that. So that's a really big deal. Then he moves on. It looks like only to Syria for a month before he's moved on. He also was the ambassador to Laos i…”
Charles Yost appointed
Syria host_asserted
▶ 26:21
“During that time, like in Algiers and stuff like that. So that's a really big deal. Then he moves on. It looks like only to Syria for a month before he's moved on. He also was the ambassador to Laos i…”
Charles Yost appointed
Laos host_asserted
▶ 26:21
“During that time, like in Algiers and stuff like that. So that's a really big deal. Then he moves on. It looks like only to Syria for a month before he's moved on. He also was the ambassador to Laos i…”
Robert Borkenstein appointed
U.S. Supreme Court host_asserted
▶ 27:19
“So he's been in the mix of everything. Amazing amount of diplomats and some of the craziest places all from the same boarding schools. Okay, we got some people in the judiciary that are worth mentioni…”
Potter Stewart member_of
Skull and Bones host_asserted
▶ 28:20
“We also have Potter Stewart, who did become the Supreme Court. We've talked about him before because he was an alumni of Skull and Bones, one of four. I think there's five different Supreme Court memb…”
Potter Stewart member_of
U.S. Supreme Court host_asserted
▶ 28:20
“We also have Potter Stewart, who did become the Supreme Court. We've talked about him before because he was an alumni of Skull and Bones, one of four. I think there's five different Supreme Court memb…”
Paul Nitze member_of
U.S. Navy host_asserted
▶ 28:50
“I didn't grab all of them, but they've got a Thaddeus Beal, who was the undersecretary of the Army. You've got a Douglas Campbell, who apparently was the first American flying ace. You've got an Artem…”
Elliot Strauss member_of
U.S. Navy host_asserted
▶ 28:50
“I didn't grab all of them, but they've got a Thaddeus Beal, who was the undersecretary of the Army. You've got a Douglas Campbell, who apparently was the first American flying ace. You've got an Artem…”
Thaddeus Beal member_of
U.S. Army host_asserted
▶ 28:50
“I didn't grab all of them, but they've got a Thaddeus Beal, who was the undersecretary of the Army. You've got a Douglas Campbell, who apparently was the first American flying ace. You've got an Artem…”
Artemis Lamb Gates member_of
U.S. Navy host_asserted
▶ 28:50
“I didn't grab all of them, but they've got a Thaddeus Beal, who was the undersecretary of the Army. You've got a Douglas Campbell, who apparently was the first American flying ace. You've got an Artem…”
Paul Nitze member_of
George F. Kennan host_asserted
▶ 29:53
“He comes up in he was very close friends with everybody at Standard Oil. He was basically like tied at the hip with George Kennan. And it says here his brother in law founded the Aspen Institute. So, …”
Paul Nitze member_of
Standard Oil host_asserted
▶ 29:53
“He comes up in he was very close friends with everybody at Standard Oil. He was basically like tied at the hip with George Kennan. And it says here his brother in law founded the Aspen Institute. So, …”
Porter Goss member_of
Skull and Bones host_asserted
▶ 30:23
“Yeah. Yeah. Last name on the alumni that I wanted to talk about was, of course, was Porter Goss. Oh, my God. Not him, too. Holy shit. Class of 1956. He would be the last DCI and the first director of …”
Porter Goss member_of
Directorate of Operations host_asserted
▶ 30:55
“who was also in the fraternity, and Neil Gripanti would become Bush's DNI. So all of these guys have known each other since high school, become the brain trust of our intelligence division under Bush.…”
Porter Goss member_of
U.S. Congress host_asserted
▶ 31:29
“In Latin America, the Caribbean, and then Europe. Coup, coup, coup, coup. Yeah, he did wet work. There's no doubt about that. He was in Miami during the Cuban Missile Crisis, stationed in Miami. So he…”
Jake Sullivan member_of
CFR host_asserted
▶ 32:02
“Now I'm going to push back a little bit because I don't think he got out of the CIA. Fine. We've talked about, you know, we just recently talked about when we did Jake Sullivan, all the different spoo…”
George H.W. Bush appointed
Porter Goss host_asserted
▶ 34:10
“Just prior to 9-11 was there when 9-11 happened and is the guy that sponsored the Patriot Act that had already been written. And he just happens to have longtime Bush family connections. Just so happe…”
John D. Rockefeller funded
Institute of Pacific Relations host_asserted
▶ 35:42
“organization was funded by none other than Carnegie and Rockefeller, which I found in my research already. Small circle. Yeah. Holy crap. This is crazy. And not to mention they had a whole bunch of pe…”
Andrew Carnegie funded
Institute of Pacific Relations host_asserted
▶ 35:42
“organization was funded by none other than Carnegie and Rockefeller, which I found in my research already. Small circle. Yeah. Holy crap. This is crazy. And not to mention they had a whole bunch of pe…”
David Rumsey member_of
General Atlantic Holding Company host_asserted
▶ 36:46
“than just where he went to high school. He made his money as a real estate developer. And then he would join Charles Feeney's company called the General Atlantic Holding Company of New York. This is a…”
General Atlantic Holding Company funded
Royalty Pharma host_asserted
▶ 38:44
“General Atlantic Holding Company was a guy by the name of Steve Denning, and he came from McKinsey and Company. Talk about connected. Tying politics to business, yes. Let's look at some of their bigge…”
Steve Denning headed
General Atlantic Holding Company host_asserted
▶ 38:44
“General Atlantic Holding Company was a guy by the name of Steve Denning, and he came from McKinsey and Company. Talk about connected. Tying politics to business, yes. Let's look at some of their bigge…”
Steve Denning member_of
McKinsey & Company host_asserted
▶ 38:44
“General Atlantic Holding Company was a guy by the name of Steve Denning, and he came from McKinsey and Company. Talk about connected. Tying politics to business, yes. Let's look at some of their bigge…”
General Atlantic Holding Company funded
UnitedHealth Group host_asserted
▶ 38:44
“General Atlantic Holding Company was a guy by the name of Steve Denning, and he came from McKinsey and Company. Talk about connected. Tying politics to business, yes. Let's look at some of their bigge…”
General Atlantic Holding Company funded
CrowdStrike host_asserted
▶ 39:17
“Yeah. Hey, we got a Rumble rant or $10 funding. Thank you, Fergie62. Oh, Fergie's my buddy. The early investor in a company called JIO Platforms. That's an Indian digital services giant. They're an ea…”
General Atlantic Holding Company funded
ByteDance host_asserted
▶ 39:17
“Yeah. Hey, we got a Rumble rant or $10 funding. Thank you, Fergie62. Oh, Fergie's my buddy. The early investor in a company called JIO Platforms. That's an Indian digital services giant. They're an ea…”
General Atlantic Holding Company funded
Jio Platforms host_asserted
▶ 39:17
“Yeah. Hey, we got a Rumble rant or $10 funding. Thank you, Fergie62. Oh, Fergie's my buddy. The early investor in a company called JIO Platforms. That's an Indian digital services giant. They're an ea…”
Charles Feeney founded
Duty Free Shoppers Limited host_asserted
▶ 40:24
“He was the co-founder of Duty Free Shoppers Limited. You go to the airport and you see Duty Free, that's Feeney. And he was basically a travel retailer for Hong Kong luxury products. Feeney's worth lo…”
Charles Feeney member_of
Sphinx Head Society host_asserted
▶ 40:24
“He was the co-founder of Duty Free Shoppers Limited. You go to the airport and you see Duty Free, that's Feeney. And he was basically a travel retailer for Hong Kong luxury products. Feeney's worth lo…”
Andrew Dickson White member_of
Skull and Bones host_asserted
▶ 40:57
“Cornell's co-founder and the first president of the university was Andrew Dixon, who was a Bonesman. So there is some connection there. They built their clubhouse in 1926 to resemble an Egyptian tomb.…”
Ratan Tata member_of
Sphinx Head Society host_asserted
▶ 41:29
“as Skull and Bones is. And the only really famous alumni, they tap 40 seniors every year. And the only very short list of famous alumni, the Tatas on his chair, Rat and Tata, David Skorton, who's the …”
Kenneth Derr member_of
Sphinx Head Society host_asserted
▶ 41:29
“as Skull and Bones is. And the only really famous alumni, they tap 40 seniors every year. And the only very short list of famous alumni, the Tatas on his chair, Rat and Tata, David Skorton, who's the …”
Oscar Mayer Jr. member_of
Sphinx Head Society host_asserted
▶ 41:29
“as Skull and Bones is. And the only really famous alumni, they tap 40 seniors every year. And the only very short list of famous alumni, the Tatas on his chair, Rat and Tata, David Skorton, who's the …”
Neil Becker member_of
Sphinx Head Society host_asserted
▶ 41:29
“as Skull and Bones is. And the only really famous alumni, they tap 40 seniors every year. And the only very short list of famous alumni, the Tatas on his chair, Rat and Tata, David Skorton, who's the …”
David Skorton member_of
Sphinx Head Society host_asserted
▶ 41:29
“as Skull and Bones is. And the only really famous alumni, they tap 40 seniors every year. And the only very short list of famous alumni, the Tatas on his chair, Rat and Tata, David Skorton, who's the …”
Adolph Coors Jr. member_of
Sphinx Head Society host_asserted
▶ 41:29
“as Skull and Bones is. And the only really famous alumni, they tap 40 seniors every year. And the only very short list of famous alumni, the Tatas on his chair, Rat and Tata, David Skorton, who's the …”
Peter Coors member_of
Sphinx Head Society host_asserted
▶ 41:29
“as Skull and Bones is. And the only really famous alumni, they tap 40 seniors every year. And the only very short list of famous alumni, the Tatas on his chair, Rat and Tata, David Skorton, who's the …”
Charles Feeney funded
Sinn Féin host_asserted
▶ 43:20
“There are different hierarchies going on here. Yeah. But Feeney is very well connected, obviously. He was a big funder of Sinn Fein, which is the far left Irish political party that was closely connec…”
Charles Feeney funded
Atlantic Philanthropies host_asserted
▶ 44:22
“This guy is also a very well-known philanthropist. He's associated with far-left causes. He's done a lot of investment with Bill Gates and Warren Buffett. That's who this guy is. And that's who our gu…”
Atlantic Philanthropies funded
Barack Obama host_asserted
▶ 44:54
“Tax haven. Yeah. Remember how we talked about how these tax-free foundations are one of the biggest scams ever pulled on the taxpayer public? Yeah. This guy has his philanthropy in Bermuda. A lot of w…”
David Rumsey funded
Stanford University host_asserted
▶ 45:23
“It was basically a political slush fund that this guy is running under the guise of being a charity or philanthropy. Ladies and gentlemen, that is how they make the hot dogs in D.C. All right. So Rums…”
David Hoadley Thorne member_of
Skull and Bones host_asserted
▶ 48:00
“They're a recruiting center there. Okay. That was one Bonesman. That's crazy. Next guy we're going to talk to is a guy I've been talking about. It's a guy by the name of David Hoadley Thorne, T-H-O-R-…”
David Hoadley Thorne appointed
Italy host_asserted
▶ 48:00
“They're a recruiting center there. Okay. That was one Bonesman. That's crazy. Next guy we're going to talk to is a guy I've been talking about. It's a guy by the name of David Hoadley Thorne, T-H-O-R-…”
David Hoadley Thorne member_of
U.S. Navy host_asserted
▶ 49:42
“He was in the U.S. Navy during Vietnam from 66 to 70, before he got his master's in journalism. In 1971, he co-authors an article for Veterans Against the War with none other than his classmate at Sku…”
David Hoadley Thorne member_of
Veterans Against the War host_asserted
▶ 49:42
“He was in the U.S. Navy during Vietnam from 66 to 70, before he got his master's in journalism. In 1971, he co-authors an article for Veterans Against the War with none other than his classmate at Sku…”
John Kerry member_of
Skull and Bones host_asserted
▶ 49:42
“He was in the U.S. Navy during Vietnam from 66 to 70, before he got his master's in journalism. In 1971, he co-authors an article for Veterans Against the War with none other than his classmate at Sku…”
John Kerry member_of
Julia Thorne host_asserted
▶ 49:42
“He was in the U.S. Navy during Vietnam from 66 to 70, before he got his master's in journalism. In 1971, he co-authors an article for Veterans Against the War with none other than his classmate at Sku…”
David Hoadley Thorne funded
Joe Biden host_asserted
▶ 50:55
“He helped Joe Biden win his first Senate campaign in 1972. It's David Thorne for you. Worked on both of those campaigns. So wait a minute. You're saying that a bonesman put Joe Biden in the Senate. He…”
David Hoadley Thorne member_of
Bankers Trust host_asserted
▶ 51:29
“So he became a real estate developer, which he learned from his father. You know what his father did when he wasn't working with a Marshall Plan? What? He ran the Italian branch of Bankers Trust. What…”
Bankers Trust laundered_money_for
Catholic Church speculative
▶ 52:03
“Now I got to go back and check on that because I bet that was part of the money laundering thing for the Vatican bank. I'm almost sure it was. It's gotta be. I think that's what I think that may have …”
David Hoadley Thorne founded
Advisor Investments host_asserted
▶ 52:34
“So then he co-founded something called Advisor Investments. That's another real big player in wealth management. They specialize in Vanguard and Fidelity mutual funds and ETFs. It is a very big asset …”
David Hoadley Thorne member_of
American Ditchley Foundation host_asserted
▶ 53:41
“Oh, my gosh. This is absolutely crazy. He currently sits on the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. Why is that a big deal? That's supposed to be a conservative lobbyist. And then he joins something called the …”
Shannon member_of
CFR host_asserted
▶ 55:55
“Like I said, we spent a lot of time on Ditchley. I didn't want to have time to go deep dive. But here's one here. Dr. Kay Shannon, Chair, Council of Foreign Relations. Here's the Fort Morgan Stanley. …”
Frederick W. Smith founded
FedEx host_asserted
▶ 57:33
“What's his name? Frederick's W what? Frederick W. Smith. Smith. You can find a pull a picture if you'd like. He was a skull and bones class of 1966, which means he's classmates with all these guys. Fr…”
Frederick W. Smith founded
Totle House host_asserted
▶ 57:33
“What's his name? Frederick's W what? Frederick W. Smith. Smith. You can find a pull a picture if you'd like. He was a skull and bones class of 1966, which means he's classmates with all these guys. Fr…”
Frederick W. Smith member_of
Skull and Bones host_asserted
▶ 57:33
“What's his name? Frederick's W what? Frederick W. Smith. Smith. You can find a pull a picture if you'd like. He was a skull and bones class of 1966, which means he's classmates with all these guys. Fr…”
Frederick W. Smith founded
Dixie Greyhound Lines host_asserted
▶ 58:05
“If you're from the South, you know this, the Tottle House restaurant chain. Yeah. And do they have those in Florida? No. He's also the founder of something called the Smith Motor Coach Company, which …”
Greyhound Corporation funded
Dixie Greyhound Lines host_asserted
▶ 58:05
“If you're from the South, you know this, the Tottle House restaurant chain. Yeah. And do they have those in Florida? No. He's also the founder of something called the Smith Motor Coach Company, which …”
Frederick W. Smith member_of
United States Marine Corps host_asserted
▶ 58:37
“because they had common flying interests. They would go fly their small planes on weekends. He goes to the Marines, and he's a Marine Corps pilot from 1966 to 1969. He's a forward air controller in Vi…”
Frederick W. Smith member_of
FedEx host_asserted
▶ 59:10
“is those exact same years in Vietnam. And my father was an Air Force pilot in Vietnam the exact same time. And of course, we know that John McCain was a naval pilot back then. Gets out of Vietnam and …”
Frederick W. Smith funded
Pan Aviation host_asserted
▶ 59:44
“And yeah, getting 91 million for a logistics company seems interesting, but it worked, worked out for everyone. So he gets out. When did he get out of the military? I have 69 and 69. And then it says …”
George H.W. Bush appointed
Donald Rumsfeld host_asserted
▶ 1:02:46
“Oh, yeah. Remember we said earlier about how Ben Gino and Cash can't find evidence of Epstein's suicide because nobody ever investigated as a suicide. Thank you, Bill Barr. Same thing, of course. Of c…”
Frederick W. Smith member_of
John McCain host_asserted
▶ 1:03:19
“When Bush ran against Kerry in 2004, he was kind of caught in the middle, but he endorsed Bush over Kerry. After Rumsfeld left, Bush offered him to be Secretary of Defense again, but he refused the of…”
John McCain headed
International Republican Institute host_asserted
▶ 1:04:00
“Yeah, some fun stuff today, huh? Yeah. And just as a reminder, Fred Smith would have known that John McCain, which most of us didn't know. I certainly didn't know until I started doing this research, …”
International Republican Institute carried_out_attack
National Endowment for Democracy host_asserted
▶ 1:04:00
“Yeah, some fun stuff today, huh? Yeah. And just as a reminder, Fred Smith would have known that John McCain, which most of us didn't know. I certainly didn't know until I started doing this research, …”
International Republican Institute funded
National Endowment for Democracy host_asserted
▶ 1:04:00
“Yeah, some fun stuff today, huh? Yeah. And just as a reminder, Fred Smith would have known that John McCain, which most of us didn't know. I certainly didn't know until I started doing this research, …”
Frederick W. Smith founded
FedEx speculative
▶ 1:04:30
“working for John McCain while he was running for president, who was also still serving as the chair for the IRI. While he was running for president, he was funding coups all over the world. And this g…”
Frederick W. Smith appointed
George H.W. Bush host_asserted
▶ 1:05:33
“There are three bones men all on the different international stage. This guy, this guy was going to be the secretary of defense for George Bush right before 9-11. You know, how well connected do you h…”
Frederick W. Smith member_of
Skull and Bones host_asserted
▶ 1:05:33
“There are three bones men all on the different international stage. This guy, this guy was going to be the secretary of defense for George Bush right before 9-11. You know, how well connected do you h…”
Frederick W. Smith member_of
Skull and Bones host_asserted
▶ 1:06:29
“political clout to get him in because he, they knew he was compromised and would go along with nine 11. Um, I, I would be willing to bet that he didn't want all of that stuff dropped, um, drummed up, …”