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Operation Gladio - World Wildlife Fund Part 3

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0:00 Okay, we're going to go ahead and get started. I am trying to put this over on Rumble as well. Hopefully we'll have better luck than we had last time. Still have no idea what happened with that. Bridget, is Cousin Nick coming in?
0:33 I am not sure. Oh, yep, there she is. She just popped in. All right. So let me give her a mic and find out if she wants to be co-host or just speaker. I know she has computer issues sometimes. Let's get her the, I'm trying to get her the mic, but she's not taking it. Would you mind taking care of that? Oh, there she is.
1:14 Yes, ma'am. Hey, Cousin It, do you want to be co-host or do you want to be speaker? What do you want to do? I can just be speaker for tonight, actually. As long as I can post in the nest as speaker, that'll be fine because I'm out of data. Hey, Froggy. Froggy needs a mic. Yeah.
1:46 Bridget, do you know whether she can post in the nest or you can take care of that behind the scenes? And I'll go ahead and give Frog a co-host so he can be checking out the empire. That sounded great. Oh, shoot. That's right. Yeah. I can't get rid of bots if I'm just a speaker. But Froggy's good at it. He definitely is good at it. I started as a co-host.
2:13 Bro-fessional, if you know what I'm saying, sister from another mister. That's right. You come down hard on them. No bots. All right. I don't care about clicks, likes, or follows. I just want people that are here to speak, like Colonel Tanner, to speak. That's it. Flipping over tables. What'd you say? Flipping over tables. Amen. Amen, Bridget. So it appears that the more we dig into this,
2:45 um, the bigger the nest gets. Um, and I, I do want to take a step back, um, and make sure that everybody is, um, uh, aware of what it is that we've been, um, finding, um, because this is significant. Um, there are groups and they are not the groups that everybody talks about all the time.
3:16 So you hear a lot of people talk about the Club of Rome, the Council on Foreign Relations, the Bilderbergs. There's this entire other realm of groups that until we started digging into this, I was completely unaware of. So we've been touching on the World Wildlife Fund.
3:46 And you can't talk about the World Wildlife Fund without talking about the 1001 Club. And we mentioned early on in this that the World Wildlife Fund was basically set up by eugenicists, people who want all of us dead. And they were losing their grip.
4:17 It was the late 50s, early 60s. And they were losing their grip on their colonial slaves and their monopoly on resources. And they needed other ways in order to do that without appearing to be a colonial power. And they hooked up this way of doing that using NGOs.
4:48 NGOs that they were using look like the World Wildlife Foundation and the 1001 Club and the Safari Club and a whole bunch of others. And the ones like, there's another group called Le Circle, L-E-C-E-R-C-L-E. All of these same, I'd never heard of that.
5:18 I know snow. I see snow here. Snow kind of honed me in on looking into that particular one because snow lives over in Europe and it's very prevalent over in Europe. It's very famous over there, actually. And the people that are members of that are also members of.
5:39 the Bilderbergs, the 1001 Club, the World Wildlife Fund Club. And there's anywhere from a 30 to 40 percent overlap in these different clubs for coordination purposes. And the weird thing about this to me is the more you dig into them, if you go back into the late 1800s, and this is what
6:09 cued me in on them being part of this entire Operation Gladio series. If you go back in the late 1800s, there was a very famous tradition that I don't know how long it went on before that, but I've just followed it back to that point. The Churchills and the Cecil Rhodes, and they kept creating all of these dinner clubs and these gentlemen dinner clubs.
6:39 Happened once a month at and they would like rotate hosting them among the elite in London. And that then moved over to New York City at 120 Broadway. They had a club there that they had hosted these same dinners in. And it was men only. And there's lots of.
7:03 rumors about things that happened at these dinner clubs. But primarily, initially, these were used for planning and coordinating and colluding. And you find out that that's pretty much how the 1001 Club operated, only they have gotten much bigger than just doing them from different houses in London. They were doing them in different countries.
7:33 that were all coordinating within the WWF. And I will give you the bottom line up front where it relates to these two specific, but LeCircle certainly is true for them as well. These were mechanisms for the planners and the international syndicate to formulate
8:05 and coordinate where they were going next. And I'm going to use an example that just got brought up recently. People like George Soros, who made their money manipulating other people's money. I believe he is an errand boy for this international syndicate.
8:38 When they would have these meetings and they would decide, okay, we're going to basically screw up Yugoslavia or we're going to screw up and overthrow Hungary or we're going to screw up and overthrow XYZ country. He was the guy that went in to either short the money or whatever and made money for this international syndicate.
9:09 And understanding that every single thing that they did was plotted out in advance and how they were going to do it. And to the point where they actually even decided who was going to, okay, so the one guy, I'll look up his name in a minute, Khan IV and his predecessor, his grandfather, you know, okay, we're going to go screw up the Congo.
9:38 or we're going to go screw up the Serengeti, and you get to build your luxury hotel there, and then you're going to get the mining rights, and then you're going to get the hydro plant that we're going to screw up the river with, and blah, blah, blah. I do believe after doing the last two weeks of nothing but pretty much the World Wildlife Fund,
10:04 That's exactly what these people have been doing. And in the course of doing that, they completely decimate the location that they're targeting. In addition, creating a footprint on a national park that allows them to quell any resistance. So they will set up Operation Gladio-type units.
10:33 under the guise of park police or national park police forces. But what they really are, because we have found instances where there's prisons on these quote-unquote parks, they are torturing people, they're assassinating people there. And then in the case with some of the UNESCO
10:58 that are both UNESCO and national parks designated areas where they have an even higher level of security. They have put terrorist training camps there and use the local population as guinea pigs on teaching torture techniques and stuff like that. So this is a big, ugly mess. And I wanted to go through.
11:27 A few more of the examples. So we've talked about so far the salmon in Chile. So what happened was in the auspices of, you know, we're helping everybody out and we're all about wildlife.
11:55 And I don't know how you get wildlife from caged salmon, but it wasn't even just the caged salmon in the case of Chile. They endanger the people. Well, first of all, they decimated the actual fishing environment. So they have fjords in southern Chile because southern Chile is very much like Norway.
12:25 They're just like at opposite ends. So the the I'm looking for his name, the Norwegian guy that is like a billionaire. The last thing he needs is more money, goes to Chile and sets up pennies on the dollar. Because, of course, in Norway, you have to.
12:54 pay high prices to labor. You have to pay high processing. You have to abide by all of the EU guidelines on how many caged salmon you can have and where the cage has to be in the water because of their waste is toxic to other wildlife.
13:22 They're a predator fish. So in one of the statistics, it said they eat like 1.7 of their whatever body weight they produce in food. So in other words, by feeding fish to a salmon and they only eat fish, you are having to take two fish out of the ocean to feed and get one.
13:52 salmon of equal weight, if that makes sense. So for every pound of salmon, you've basically spent two pounds of another fish in order to get that salmon. So it makes no ecological sense on why under the auspices of a World Wildlife Fund or project that you would even be involved in anything like that. If somebody wants to just go out and catch wild salmon,
14:21 that feed themselves. That's one thing. But if you're there to protect nature, and that's what your mission is, your stated mission, then why would you be involved, and they are involved, in Chile's salmon industry? Because what has happened down there is they have twice as many salmon in each cage because they don't pay any attention and no one makes them pay any attention to the world guidelines.
14:51 of how many salmon can be in a cage. So the fact that they have double that amount, plus they keep them lower in the water, which puts them closer to the bottom, which means they're destroying all of the rest of the fish and the coral and everything else in the bottom of the ocean. So it makes it more hazardous for the people working there. There's a hundred people killed for every one person killed.
15:19 harvesting salmon in Norway. So if one guy dies in Norway, there'll be a hundred doing like jobs in the salmon industry or the same guy in Chile. So because they have to die to take care of the fish and inject antibiotics and all this other stuff into them because they are so crowded. The guy that wrote this book, Wilfred Huisman.
15:48 said that you're basically, when you eat a farm-raised salmon from Chile, you are basically opening up a medicine cabinet and just ingesting everything in the medicine cabinet. That's how much antibiotics is put into those salmon in order to keep them healthy because they're in very unhealthy conditions. And the fact that the people working there, they're supposed to have
16:19 These decompression chambers, like within 50 feet of the port area. Well, this guy goes down there and he's looking at all of them. Not a single one of them work within seven miles. The closest one they found when they had to medevac somebody was seven miles. And of course he died because he didn't make it. Okay, so the name of the Norwegian company.
16:47 that is doing this is called Marine Harvest. And they're very aware of what they're doing. And this guy, he's such a brave guy. I'm just so impressed with him. He actually tried to sneak onto this guy's property in Norway. This guy actually got Cyprus citizenship.
17:18 because of what he's doing and the risk because Cyprus does not have extradition with Norway. So he has like four different houses. But this guy tracked him down in Norway and snuck on his property and tried to talk to him. Of course, the security came after him. But the guy's name is John Fredrickson.
17:47 He definitely is a very, very not good guy. So as I originally stated out or stated when we talked about this originally, be very careful about the salmon that you eat. Also, what I have found out since in talking to a few people on the internet in restaurants.
18:17 is in the restaurant industry is that most of the salmon that you buy pre-packaged, like the smoked salmon and stuff like that in grocery stores, it'll say on there like wild catch. But because most of the salmon that you order in a restaurant doesn't come labeled, that's where you're going to find the preponderance of the Chilean salmon.
18:47 So just be advised. I'm not telling you what to order on the menu. I'm just telling you to be very, very careful about eating the salmon. Okay. So we go from the, and I want to keep this in mind too. The, there are so many PR people.
19:20 involved in the World Wildlife Fund as far as like having them on retainer. They hire these very expensive, very large, very famous PR. And they write all of their brochures. And so every single thing that you read, if you don't know the truth behind it, it sounds really, really good. But we talked about the Serengeti.
19:47 and the Masai, the Masai, or Masai, M-A-S-S-A-I, indigenous people there that basically they're cattlemen. They had cows and the World Wildlife Fund decided, you know, because they flew over a few times and figured out where all of the wild game migrates to, literally just like 90 days of flying all over Africa.
20:16 They decide where they're going to place their national parks, the quote unquote approved national parks that they will give the corrupt people that run these countries money for. And most of the corrupt people that run these countries were installed by the CIA during a coup that we orchestrated. And then they were allowed to grab this land.
20:44 that has been mapped to reveal that's where most of the wildlife is. And so again, this is a modern version of imperialism. They are using non-profits like the World Wildlife Fund to regain control over land that they had to quote-unquote give up.
21:13 as a colonial power. So it's like they all got in the back room at one of their quote unquote dinner clubs and decided, you know, we may have to formally decolonize, but that doesn't mean we actually have to decolonize. And as a result, they have come up with this scheme to create all of these nonprofits and go back in and monopolize these.
21:43 And one of the mechanisms I have talked about is that when we install a corrupt dictator like we did in the Congo and in several other countries over there, we will go to that guy and say,
22:04 We're going to give you a whole bunch of World Bank loans and billions in some cases. And you're not ever going to be able to pay them back. But here's what you're going to do with the money. You know, you're going to take some. You can put it in an offshore account. You're going to kick some of it back to us. But basically, you're going to leave your country with this, you know, $5 billion debt. And you're not going to spend it on anything there.
22:29 And then I'm going to come along and I'm going to tell you, I'll forgive that debt if you let me set up the national park and run the national park. Me being UNESCO or the World Wildlife Fund. And so that's basically what they're doing. The CIA goes in first and coups the government and gets a stooge in there. And then they come in with their wad of money and buy him. And then they use the World Bank, which, by the way, a lot of our money's there.
22:59 And this just they go from country to country to country to do this. They did the exact same thing in Argentina with GMO Monsanto soy. And they have decimated Argentina with this. And in Argentina.
23:25 Oh, it drives me nuts. It's hard not to get emotional when you start talking about this stuff. But what they did was they created a GMO brand of soy. And they genetically modified it so Monsanto's Roundup won't kill the soy, but it'll kill all the weeds that you spray.
23:56 the Roundup on. So they load up big containers of Roundup in crop dusting airplanes. And they fly low over the soy fields in Argentina. And they dispense that. And I mean, it's basically like an Agent Orange. That's basically what it is. It hangs in the air. The wind takes it into villages.
24:25 The amount of deformed and miscarriages in Argentina has skyrocketed since they started this mess. And people are getting sick with cancer and all kinds of other stuff and they're dying. And they don't care about that because that just means that they get the land for cheap.
24:53 They have gotten people who, you know, 40 years ago were environmentalists, but whether they worked on them, whether they blackmailed them or whatever, they have switched sides and they now work for the WWF and or Monsanto in these countries. And in Argentina's case, the soy.
25:21 has crowded out all of the people who actually does farming for food. So the people are starving and they have hundreds of thousands of acres of farmland. But now the farmland has been destroyed because nothing else will grow on it except for the not genetically modified soy because it is drenched in Roundup.
25:50 This guy took a trip, this author took a trip down to Argentina and he drove all over the country. And this roundup is in the water system now. People are getting sick from drinking tainted water. The kids cannot play outside at all because they have no idea when these crop dusting planes are going to come by. He talked to one of the crop dusters and...
26:20 he had an in-flight emergency, which required him to, cause he wasn't getting air in the cockpit. So he had to crack the door and in came back some of the roundup and he has like burn scars all over his body because it's basically napalm. That's, that's basically what it is. So.
26:47 There is so much devastation. Now, let me tell you what they're using that for. They're not using that soy for food. They're using that soy for biofuel for Europe. And every bit of the climate change bullshit, if you just think they're doing it just to grab our money, that's not why they're doing it. They are doing this to destroy the entire world. Because if they had not suppressed...
27:19 oil and the free-flowing oil. You tell me which is a cleaner process with less injuries, a pipeline with an oil rig or what I just described to you with the soy. How many kids, how many women, how many old people, how many people in general?
27:48 has died as a result of genetically modified soy from Argentina compared to dropping a well off the coast of Argentina and just pumping fuel. There's no comparison. There's no comparison to the environment. There's no comparison to the wildlife. Every one of those...
28:13 millions of acres that have been cleared in argentina for this bullshit soy comes at the cost of their wild animal and rainforest and everything else they are deforesting these and here's how the the argument goes for the deforesting so they say if you've got a forest that's never been touched then it gets to stay but everything else is a degraded forest
28:43 Well, do you know how they decide what's a degraded forest? It can have a million animals in it. If it has one person living there, which all of these forests do because indigenous people live in the forest, then it's degraded. Well, the degraded in their perverse world is targeted to be destroyed. So think about what I just said. They have a program.
29:13 that goes in and destroys people's, basically their houses. They are targeting people's houses all over the world inside a forest because they classified them as degraded and not virgin forest. Now they've got a real slick PR campaign that talks about
29:38 The fact that these forests are degraded and you and I would think, oh, it must be one of those that has all of the trees already felled and it's been harvested and there's like nothing left or fires burned the entire thing and it's just a piece of crap and they're going to do something with it that's good for the locals. No, none of that is true. Like in the Serengeti, they started off with these people who...
30:05 pastured their cows in the forest area and then they moved them over to a volcano area and then they decided they wanted the volcano so they moved them again and their eco-tourism that these people are all benefactors from because they get to build the hotels and all of the infrastructure that supports it
30:33 They then take these indigenous people and put them in camps and bring the ecotourist into the camp and let them dance for the ecotourist. If that's not the most disgusting thing that you've ever heard of, I don't know what is. They have taken all of these indigenous populations and made them into amusement park attractions.
31:03 And they're doing it all under the guise of saving the wildlife. And we've talked about the fact that you can go from product to product. You can get on any of these companies, websites, Shell, BP, all of them, Archer Daniels, John Deere, all of them that are part of this process. They will have that little panda emblem, the logo.
31:32 that the WWF came their brand a long time ago. And that's what they all seek because that gives them quote unquote credit in the world of green. And when, and this is, this is just how perverse the whole thing ends up being.
31:59 If you move over to Indonesia, where they have palm oil. Now, I didn't even know anything about this. But evidently, I mean, I have palm trees and it has the little berries that are the actual seeds that if you don't pick them up, you will get a whole bunch of little palm trees. But those little berries have oil in them.
32:23 And they squeeze that oil. And I want to describe this process. Because the oil is used in makeup. It's used in food. And it's used in machinery. It's used for fuel. You ingest it every time you eat margarine and many other products.
32:55 Um, what they have done is they have taken millions of acres of forest under the definition of quote unquote degraded and kicked all the people out. They do that with Gladio troops. They will bring in, they will burn their entire forest houses down in the forest along with the forest itself.
33:19 And there, because their forest has been there for a thousand years, it's got a lot of peat. And so it'll smolder, making the worst CO2 disaster minus the pipeline explosion that's ever been recorded on Earth is them burning these peat bogs over in Indonesia. And so they do this.
33:47 Then they go in and they plant it with palms. And it takes five years for them to grow to maturity. So, of course, the World Bank's all in on this. They're making bank on every one of these projects. And so these indigenous people that were over there, they keep getting pushed farther and farther and farther away from their land.
34:17 One of the things that keeps coming up in all of these different areas is they've now destroyed the culture. So the culture that these people have, the indigenous people, like in the case of the Serengeti, the cattle people, they wove baskets with supplies. They sold herbs from the forest for medicinal purposes.
34:44 The WWF and the National Park Police that they pay for over in the Serengeti area was so nice that they allowed the people back into their forest one day a year in order to gather their medicinal herbs so that they could at least continue that tradition. But they don't have enough time to gather enough to be able to sell them.
35:12 in any kind of a market. And so they're just decimating. All of the skills that these people have learned over the centuries are all gone. They can't teach their kids that because they're not in their natural habitat anymore. And again, I can't stress this enough.
35:32 When you have people like Eric Prince talking about how corrupt these leaders are, these are not the leaders that the people chose. These are the leaders that the CIA installed. And they are selling their people out because they sold their soul to the international syndicate. And I will say that repeatedly every time I talk about this until I die. Because I am beyond pissed off at...
36:01 people who say, oh, they're just a whole bunch of corrupt people over there. They don't know how to manage their own stuff. That is absolutely not true. They have had their entire countries uprooted with civil wars, all planned and coordinated by the international syndicate using Operation Gladio Forces. We talked about that in Angola. We talked about that in Tanzania.
36:31 We talked about that in, is it Nairobi or Nambia? And every one of those, every country that was on the border of South Africa had South African Operation Gladio forces go across the border into those areas to destabilize them. They were equipped with munitions from Israel.
37:00 at the behest of France. And so this is a very widely coordinated effort. And what drives me nuts the most is in many cases, in the case with South Africa, they actually went up there and killed, you know, like I was telling you the story the other night about one of the guys said that they had killed a million.
37:31 And then he was scratching his head. Well, these people don't have enough bullets to kill a million elephants. And he went back and created his own film that didn't get released because the producer basically buried the film because it was so controversial. And it ended up showing.
37:58 that they basically had a prison and a torture area on one of the national parks under the guise of WWF and were launching those attacks into the countries around the South African border. And South Africa liked it because it made them look good. They weren't destable like the other Black-led countries.
38:29 That's kind of the mantra that they have used, that these black leaders can't lead their own country. Well, if you'd stop killing them like you did Lumumba and the guy in Tanzania when he showed you that COVID didn't work, they may be fine. But we'll never know because you kill them.
38:52 So I also want to bring everybody's attention to HSBC. Now, we came across HSBC because that's basically the Hong Kong bank from the Bank of London. And it was a big player in money laundering for the drug trade coming out of Asia. Well, it also is very big in this.
39:21 So I want to read a couple of things to you. It says here that it is Europe's biggest bank. It's the financial heart of the palm oil industry. Pumping billions into the business bloodstream, HSBC has also contributed $100 million to climate protection programs, a joint project with the WWF.
39:51 Francis Sullivan, head of the bank's sustainability department, greeted the author on one of the floors in the HSBC building. And he was, he had, so this is just crazy. So Francis Sullivan was the director of conservation for the WWF UK. Remember how I told you there's an international.
40:20 headquarters and then each country has their own branch. So the guy that used to be the WWF Director of Conservation is now in HSBC working and in charge of the loans to finance the WWF approved work in these countries. And you will find this over and over and over again.
40:48 You'll go into like Argentina, the guy that was in charge of Argentina branch ends up being in charge of a world bank that does the lending for the program that he was just in charge of. And then he leaves that. And now he's in charge of the round table approving the companies that can come. So they just play musical chairs. It's all the same people. And they just like.
41:17 Turn the music on. They all change chairs so that they all keep it in the same small family. And that's exactly what we found with Operation Gladio. It's all the same CIA agents. It's all the same ambassadors. You have the military generals. You find the exact same setup here. So they're, again, patterns. They're not original. No bank on earth has financed more loans in the new biofuel energy sector.
41:47 than HSBC. Quote, we believe in renewable energy, said Sullivan, quote, and we're prepared to share the responsibility for it, unquote. There's no responsibility on their behalf. He goes on to talk about how it's a high-risk business because you have to wait the first five years. The corporations need a lot of money to bridge that time, which is where HSBC or
42:18 The World Bank steps in. The WWF is a strategic partner of both financial institutions. Imagine that. They need the trusted image of the Panda brand to win over a worldwide public skeptical of controversial biofuels industry. Francis Sullivan found this hypothesis, quote, very bold. The author said,
42:49 about the gigantic HSBC contribution, in air quotes, to the WWF likewise rolled off him like oil on Teflon. Quote, the $100 million were not a reward for the WWF. It was a perfectly ordinary philanthropic donation. Together with the WWF and other partners, we want to use the money to protect the world's great rivers.
43:18 For instance, the Yancey, did Mr. Sullivan believe that it is possible to influence WWF policy with financial donations? That was his question. Here was the guy's answer. The WWF can't be bought, but you should ask them yourself. I can't speak for them because I don't work for them today. I worked for them yesterday. I don't work for them today. In terms of the palm oil industry,
43:48 Sullivan said the bank did follow a strategy coordinated in conjunction with the WWF. In other words, they're calling the shots. The job we do is similar to that of the WWF. We too want to see sustainability become the predominant business principle. When customers from the palm oil industry want loans, we strongly recommend that they convert their production to confirm to the standards of the roundtable.
44:17 And the round table is like a union. They use that round table to basically coerce and drive out small competitors to the big manufacturers. That's basically what it's used for. Because they have really stringent standards to get your panda. But what we find out when people have actually went and looked, they don't comply with any of the standards.
44:45 But they use that to enforce it against small vendors. So if you have a little five acre farm in Indonesia, you won't get anything done. Nobody's going to buy your oil. Nobody's going to process your oil. Nothing. Because you don't meet the standards and you can't afford to meet the standards, but they don't meet the standards on purpose. It's the entire thing.
45:17 is a joke. He goes on to say, we take our responsibility very seriously. Anyone who breaks the rules won't get another loan from us. Had that ever happened before? Francis Sullivan did not want to say because of banking confidentiality. They deny loans to small people. They give the loans to their buddies.
45:54 Okay. Now, I did want to go over this one because this is a guy by the name of Feri, F-E-R-I, last name I-R-A-W-A-N, Erewhon. He's a professional land surveyor.
46:23 There's actually a picture in here. He kind of looks like Che Cavera. And the author made note of that. He implicates two international players as accessories to the crime against humanity being committed in his country, Sumatra, in the name of sustainability. Quote.
46:44 The HSBC Bank and the WWF provide international cover for the often criminal activities of the palm oil companies in our homeland. It's no coincidence that the bank places $100 million at the disposal of the WWF. With the help of the WWF, the industry has succeeded in selling the destructive monoculture to the international markets as sustainability.
47:11 Now, I want to go over that for just a second because this is a very important point. When you take, as I just articulated in Argentina, and you turn half, and that is what it is, half of the production of all of the farmland into soy, and it's not for domestic consumption even as a food, it's for biofuel to ship to Europe. That becomes, as a nation, a monoculture.
47:42 And that is what has happened in millions of acres in Indonesia. So they take large swaths of land. And the only thing that's planted there for miles, a thousand miles, is palm trees. That's one thing in all of that land.
48:12 That destroys the soil. And there's no like crop rotation. There's nothing like that. So it's the least sustainable, least inhabitable when it comes to wildlife, which I thought that's what we're all about, way of doing business. So fairy Erewhon.
48:43 is seen as the leader of the farmers' rebellion in Sumatra, Jami province. For the sustainability rhetoric of a Francis Sullivan, he had only a disdainful shrug. Quote, the HSBC bank says it helps the farmers because it lends them money as part of a program for small holders. That's true. But the farmers are only given a loan.
49:13 if they're allowed to plant palm oil, or they basically have to plant palm trees. And he showed me a photo of farmers in the village that was demonstrating in front of the bank, basically saying that the bank wants to bring us to ruin. And let me tell you about this guy's story.
49:43 Because this is just crazy shit. So the large palm oil companies come in and they basically run people off their land. Well, one group decided to fight back and they actually won in court. And do you know what the World Wildlife Fund did in HSBC? The company that had stolen their land.
50:12 that got shut down in court had loaned that company millions of dollars, like $20 million for their five-year holdover till they could get some oil going. That, the World Wildlife Fund and the bank, and I believe it was a subsidiary of HSBC, was suing those landowners that won their land back.
50:43 saying that they had to pay the $20 million, but they didn't take the loan out. But they're suing them. They're penalizing the people for getting their land back. That's how crazy this is. So anyway, I'm going to go back through this book and I'm going to put a...
51:24 together a list, um, of like Monsanto, um, uh, Archer Daniel, um, they're another one, um, for everybody to have, um, on and any products that I can find that that's associated with this, um, in order for us to be able to, um, do something about it.
51:52 Because this is just, it's absolutely crazy. Unilever is another big company. Here's major food multinational members that are all part of this. You have DuPont, Pioneer, Bayer, Shell, obviously HSBC.
52:23 Archer Daniel Midland, Cargill, Lewis Dreyfus, the Rabobank, R-A-B-O Bank from the Netherlands is another big one that loans these people money. And they're moving their soy production field over into Brazil.
52:55 And Paraguay, I believe, they're also doing it there. South America is going to be like their new frontier because they basically decimated Africa in much of this. So, yeah, it's crazy. Anyway.
53:26 I was just I'm I'm blown away by how when you read this after you understand Operation Gladio, everything makes so much more sense. Listen to this one here. This is another one because this has been in Jerry's people. This guy who is a clown by the name of Jason Clay.
53:50 He personifies like no other the WWF policy for the 21st century. He advocates cozying up to big business far more openly and radically than the people in the old WWF. Who is Jason Clay? He wants to link arms with Monsanto to save the planet. What motivates him? What does he really believe?
54:18 And he's one of those guys that has basically changed seats. Like every couple of years, he'll be at the round table. He'll be at the WWF. He'll be at a bank. But basically, Ben and Jerry's set up an ice cream. And I'm just looking for the name of the ice cream. It had something to do. Oh, here it is. Rainforest Crunch.
54:51 It was a caramel and nut candy and line of ice cream for Ben and Jerry's. They were supposedly hand harvested by indigenous people living in the rainforest. I just told you they're cutting all the rainforest down. So where'd they get this stuff? Virtually none of the ingredients were actually produced by indigenous people.
55:21 The sugar came from industrial plantations, and the milk came from cows, and both were produced on land that was decidedly not rainforest. Beyond this, the aluminum packaging for Rainbow Forest Crunch candy was hardly sustainable. It was all a bluff, but it worked. Ben and Jerry Rainforest Crunch was a tremendous success. The message on the package was, quote,
55:52 Rainforest Crunch shows us that the rainforest is more profitable when its nuts, fruits, and medicinal plants are traditionally cultivated and harvested than when its trees are felled for a quick profit. Except the trees had already been felled for the quick profit because none of this crap came from the rainforest. A few years after the launch of...
56:22 the marketing campaign, the Boston Globe uncovered the truth. 5% of the nuts, at most, that was the most generous way of accounting for it, came from a cooperative in the rainforest. Ben and Jerry's bought the bulk of the nuts wholesale from non-Indigenous middlemen. And they knew they did that. Not only...
56:55 that in order to get what they needed, it turned out that the company could not count on indigenous producers for the quality of nut that they wanted, nor could they produce them in the supply that the demand required. In the end, the nut gatherers were not indigenous, but rather farms in non-indigenous regions.
57:26 And most of the nuts came from areas not even close to Rainforest. In the face of the PR disaster, Ben & Jerry's pulled the emergency brake and, in 1994, removed the flavor from their inventory. It had all been a success, nonetheless, claimed the company, because Rainforest Crunch had at least, quote, created demand for Rainforest products, unquote. That's just crazy. Absolutely crazy.
57:59 They knew it the entire time. They lied to everybody that had ever bought Ben and Jerry's carton of ice cream. And they were fine with lying about it. They just went on about their business. So that's what I've got. And I do need to give everybody a heads up. We've got about 30 minutes for questions and answers.
58:24 Or comments, because I will be doing the Alpha Warrior show live tonight at nine o'clock. So just putting that out there. Open it up. Y'all got anything? Benjamin, I know you got something. I got to go outside first. I have too many kids in the house. I got to go outside so I can talk.
59:03 So he can read. Don't judge me. I'm not judging you. I'm envious. All that little boys. No, they are pretty awesome. But yeah, they're loud with so many of them. You know, it's one of those things that you're in a room full of other kids and everybody's loud. You got to get louder so everybody can see you. That's pretty much how it is every day. Sounds like social media. Go ahead.
59:37 Well, I mean, that's something I've picked up on life, you know, like watching all these kids and then paying attention a lot when I was a kid and dealing with all these different sailors. You know, I've came across a lot more patterns than, you know, your average individual. So, you know, that's just part of how people work. You know, you figure out ways to get people's attention, whether it be good or bad. You know, that's how all these kids are. You know, they want your attention. So that's why we're.
1:00:07 molded that we are in senior leadership like for us you're never late for a meeting you always get there 10-15 minutes early if you're on time you're late you know so if a sailor comes by as you're going to a meeting says hey chief I need to talk to you for a minute you know you stop everything you're doing you know I'll show up late to the meeting I'm not really late because I'm
1:00:27 dealing with the sailor you know your children they're the same way you know that's that's they they need your attention you know they need you to talk to them and break things down for them and unpack things you know it's like all this new material that colonel and everybody gives us you know it's all new material for me a lot and a lot of it so you know the way they unpack it it makes it so much easier for for me to see it in my own mind what what the colonel's laying down you know it
1:00:57 I'll let this, you know, I say it a lot. It's this time is more important than people realize. This isn't simple party politics. You know, people need to hear about this stuff because they're unaware of it. It's like compartmentalization to the nth degree. You know, if they're unaware of something, they don't know it's there. That's why, you know, I come in and I like and repost every comment in the kernel spaces because.
1:01:22 I want to affect the algorithm because I know this is important information that people need to hear about. You know, they need to know what these people are doing. Once they learn the scale and the degree of what's going on, you know, then that lights a fire up under their butt. Colonel lit a fire up under my butt, you know, a while ago. So that's why I support her. And we appreciate you.
1:01:47 And I honestly, I do have to say this for everybody in here. Please go down into the Purple Pill and repost everything. Bridget and Liza spend a lot of time researching and finding stuff for us to provide for you guys. Because everything that we present, we are just scratching the surface.
1:02:16 They will go out and find all kinds of supporting documentation that goes as deep as you want to go. But without you guys reposting that stuff, it doesn't get any traction. And I really appreciate all of the support.
1:02:39 both from Frog and Stellar and Benjamin, SR71, Sally, all of you guys, Carrie, just so much. I can't tell you enough. Because I feel that all of this information has been hidden from us. And we found a string that we began pulling.
1:03:08 we have basically began disassembling a very large piece of cloth that has been used to hide it all from us. We're not all the way through it because we find new things every single day. You know that movie where the guy hears a noise in the car and he tears apart the whole car?
1:03:37 and all the pieces are laying on the floor in the garage, but he's saying, well, at least it's not making the noise anymore. I feel like that's what we're doing. I don't remember that movie because I'm not a movie watcher, but that is a great analogy. When we get done, they are not going to be making too much noise. Oh, off-topic news from the front. Huma Abedin and Soros' kid is getting married. Oh, gosh.
1:04:12 So we're going to have more cockroaches? Oh, that's right. He can't have kids, right? No, I'm joking. HSBC, you mentioned that. They were the ones who acquired SVB when it went kaput. They're the ones that what? Oh, you guys already put it up there. Bridget did. HSBC was also the one when Silicon Valley Bank was collapsing. HSBC was the one who acquired them. Yeah.
1:04:48 HSBC was the one who funded 9-11 and actually got in trouble for it because one of my childhood best friends was in finance for them. And he actually let me know that that problem was happening. He was one of his senior managers. I don't know why someone from Oregon would have that position, but the kid was really smart. But what I was going to say on the topic of... And thank you, Stella. What I was going to say on the topic of...
1:05:12 Little, Little Evil, Little Dr. Evil and Huma Abedin being married. Isn't it if you're married to somebody, you don't have to testify against them? Yeah. That was my response. Oh, isn't that a good twist? Yeah, well, that was my response as soon as I saw it because Little Soros is a homo. He's gay as fuck. So, you know, which like, you know me, I don't care who you love or what you do, but he wouldn't be dating that crusty old evil lady.
1:05:41 When he has that much money, look at the girls he brings to his spirit cooking dinners. They're younger than him, so why would he be marrying her? And I don't care. I like women of all ages. If you're cool, you're cool. But you don't marry them. You're only doing it to cover for a crime. So you can't be testified against. But that does expose Anthony Weiner.
1:06:01 Ooh, people. And that's the real laptop, if anyone doesn't know. Not to get away from this topic, but Anthony Weiner's laptop is the holy grail of destroying Obama, Biden, and Hillary Clinton, and the Clinton Foundation, and yada, yada, on and on. I agree with that. A lot of good things.
1:06:27 Colonel, a lot of good things are happening so fast. It's almost like they throw that stuff out as a distraction. So all the chicken heads will go, oh, look over here. Puma married that little midget. Super rich midget. Smart for her to marry him. As long as there's no prenup. Well, I, yeah, he may be wealthy currently, but I think when they get done with them.
1:06:55 not any of them is going to have two pennies to rub together. Yep. 1-3-8-4-8, 1-3-8-1-8. Those are in place on purpose. Yeah. Amen. And if anybody didn't get to catch Alpha's other show, boy, is there a lot of news coming out. I mean, it's just the links on that video just blew my mind. Yeah.
1:07:27 Well, what Bridges is talking about is Alpha Warrior did a show that kind of put into context things that were happening around the world, but specifically with the state of Israel and what is going on basically right in front of our eyes, but in a way in which most people don't understand them. And the whole time I was watching that video,
1:07:55 I was thinking about Operation Gladio because that's exactly the same thing. It is all happened right in front of our eyes and we didn't even know what we were watching. And I'll post the link into the nest in case anybody wants to watch it. It really was good. Yeah. Thank you. It really was. And sometimes we are so focused on the weeds that you can't see the 30,000 foot look.
1:08:25 That is the one thing as Benjamin is good at articulating that you do learn in the military. You cannot focus on the weeds. You have people that work for you. Their job is weeding. Your job is steering the ship. And you cannot focus on the weeds and be a good ship driver. You just can't. And so as a result of that, you are.
1:08:55 forced into zooming out in order to make sure that you can meet all of your deadlines, requirements, and stuff like that. You are required to, and I think that's kind of the relationship that Bridget and Cousin It and I have, that they are two of the best researchers there could be.
1:09:21 And then what I do is try to zoom out and put it all together in a nice little package that we can deliver to you guys. And it works extremely well as a result. Benjamin, go ahead. I was just going to say, like you were talking about with having other people do the weeds for you, that that's that's something that's trained into us very early in.
1:09:47 The military, you know, like everybody has their role. So the role of the leader, the chief, we'll call it for the Navy, you know, is I have to teach each and every one of the individuals that fall under my authority, you know, their role in that whole dynamic.
1:10:04 We have different jobs, multiple jobs that we do. So I have to stand over them and guide their hand in order for them to be proficient at it. And it's the same concepts I use in my own home with my own children. You know, I got nine of them. So it's like I can't do it all myself. So I have to train my relief. I get them all. I train them all different things that they're responsible for around the house. That way we're a more well-oiled machine, you know, and things like that. Concepts and mindsets I never would have.
1:10:33 been around unless I was in the military. So there's a lot of things that I see that's in the military that we could incorporate into our society. It teaches you how to become a good adult. It teaches you how to present yourself, how you appear. We're always worried about how we look on the outside, but we also focus on how you appear to other people.
1:10:57 You know, that way you're not some silly dude or somebody just saying silly stuff or doing silly stuff. You know, like that's what I teach my children. You know, I want them to be strong. I want them to observe people because like we see with all these operations, if you're not paying attention, people will pull the wool over your eyes. So I train my children to see what is not seen. You know, what's the phrase? Believes nothing that you hear and only half of what you see.
1:11:26 pull some tricks on you right in front of you. And I know these people can. Yeah. Bridget, if you'd do me a favor for the people over on Rumble, could you post that link to the Alpha Warrior video? Thank you. Yeah, I will say that you guys make a great team. I really, really, really enjoy Bridget and the Twisted Sister from Another Master. You guys are just great people.
1:11:59 It's the perfect epitome of where we go and we go. It's new people adding to the mix of researchers and supporting each other. And I think it's really, really wonderful. Bridget sent me some great faith messages today. I really appreciate it. So I just wanted to say that out loud. Cool. Okay. I'm just here for the booze. You keep saying that. I guess you're still wanting me to send you something. No, I'm just teasing.
1:12:30 I'm still waiting. I haven't gotten my check yet. Yeah, I'm still waiting for the bourbon. What the hell? Go ahead, Jeff. Jeff, can anybody hear him? I can't hear him. Yeah, go ahead, Jeff. Oh, can you hear me? Yeah, I can hear you. Okay. I was building a fish pond using bentonite, and I was researching bentonite, and there's two types. There's the natural clay, and then there's the Hal Burton, our CEO.
1:13:08 board, Cheney, ex-president, ex-vice president Cheney runs it and nanotech. And then I researched nanotech more and they're putting it deeper down. Have you heard of cDNA? I'm not a scientist, but it seems like they're changing us synthetically through putting cDNA with mRNA to rewrite our DNA.
1:13:34 To make us synthetic beings. Have you looked into the seed DNA? I have not. I've been downloading some stuff and it's scary. This is like the finer detail of transforming us. You should look into that. I have some of the information on my computer now. You know who's a good follow for that, Jeff? There's a Dr. Robert Malone.
1:14:01 And he actually started the RMNA or whatever it is. Yeah, I know about that. Yeah, that's messaging rewriting. Yeah. Yeah. So he would probably be the better person to pose that question to. Well, it's scary because it's all self-replicating. It creates things in our body. It replicates drugs. It replicates itself.
1:14:30 And it seems like it's going to transform us. You've seen the interior of people's veins with like a synthetic vein. Right, right. I'm sorry to interrupt. Did you have a question for the colonel? Yeah, I was just asking if she's looked into the, you know, because I live in Brazil now and they're doing soy, soy like crazy. And I know they're synthetic in their altering, altering it because they have like greenhouses with experimental stuff. And then.
1:15:00 Tens of thousands of acres of soy. But yeah, I'm looking more. It's all GMO. Yeah. Using this stuff from Monsanto seeds. And but I I'm doing this from a perspective of Operation Gladio. And the aspect of that, when when people start talking about the scientific aspect of that, my eyes glaze over and you could just give me a fork to poke myself in the eyeball with.
1:15:30 I'm sorry, Colonel. No, that's fine. No, that's fine. I just spent 30 years in the military, and that's kind of the way my mind sets. But Marie, 17, is usually in our spaces as well. I don't see her here tonight. She's been doing a lot of research on that as well. You can find her on X. It's just not my forte. Go ahead, Bridget.
1:15:56 Excuse me one second. Trumpy, you've got Marie going on your spaces Friday, right? Yeah, she's going to be in on Friday. I would suggest that he reach out to her because there's some some really interesting things happening with the graphene oxide stuff, too, as well. And the mRNA, the patch that they used was the HIV. So, yeah, I would definitely reach out to Marie CF and send over what you have and see if that's.
1:16:25 what she's looking at, because she's looking at the medical parts of Operation Gladio. Like, I can see the financial sides of Operation Gladio. It seems to be, you know, clicking the dots very well. Thank you, Colonel Towner, Bridget, and Pez and it. We're all sisters from a different mister, I believe, now. I agree. Amen. Yeah, sorry, Bridget. I didn't mean to interrupt. You were going to say something. No, it's all good. I was just...
1:16:55 Direct him over to Trump Frogs and Marie 17. Right on the money. All right. Well, I'm going to go ahead and jump off of here. I've got.
1:17:11 Another show in 10 minutes live. It's going to be on the Alpha Warrior Show. So hopefully I'll see you guys all over there. I know a lot of you guys join us over there. And I really do like doing that one live more so than just being in the chat with him on Wednesday night. So hopefully I'll see you guys all over there. Thank you for being here. Again, we are going to be here tomorrow at 7.30 and Friday at 7.30.
1:17:40 And then we'll get back with after we kind of have a discussion on whether or not we're going to stay with the evenings or the the day, because I there's too much of a conflict with people that we like to be in their spaces like Trump frog to be doing this every night at 730. So we just need to rethink that a little bit. And we'll get back with you on what we're going to do with that.
1:18:10 But anyway, thank you all for being here. Thank you for all you do, Colonel, and your team. Thanks. The terrible twosome. You guys are fearsome. Yeah. It's the terrific threesome. Hey. Probably. That sounds weird. Probably. That sounds a little weird. No, it does not. I don't pitch for that team. Well, I didn't mean it that way. All right.
1:18:47 I'm a dude. I'm a dude. Can't help myself. That's just sick. All right, guys. Talk to you later. Same bat time, same bat channel tomorrow. Have a wonderful evening. And thank you, Colonel Hunter Bridget and Peasant. And I see Sally and everyone else. Bye, guys. Thanks. Bye, everyone.

Entities here

World Wildlife Fund27Argentina11HSBC9Francis Sullivan9Operation Gladio8Chile7Norway6Rainforest Crunch marketing campaign5Bank for International Settlements5Monsanto5Serengeti41001 Club4Ben & Jerry's4Vietnam4Feri Irawan3George Soros3South Africa3Huma Abedin2Congo2UNESCO2Bilderberg Group2Le Cercle2Anthony Weiner2Sumatra2Jason Clay2Archer Daniels Midland2Rabobank2Bayer1Safari Club1Winston Churchill1Yugoslavia1Cargill1Club of Rome1Tanzania1Namibia1Hungary1CFR1Barack Obama1Cyprus1Clinton Foundation1

Claims made here

World Wildlife Fund front_for 1001 Club host_asserted ▶ 3:46
“And you can't talk about the World Wildlife Fund without talking about the 1001 Club. And we mentioned early on in this that the World Wildlife Fund was basically set up by eugenicists, people who wan…”
World Wildlife Fund front_for Safari Club host_asserted ▶ 4:48
“NGOs that they were using look like the World Wildlife Foundation and the 1001 Club and the Safari Club and a whole bunch of others. And the ones like, there's another group called Le Circle, L-E-C-E-…”
World Wildlife Fund front_for Le Cercle host_asserted ▶ 4:48
“NGOs that they were using look like the World Wildlife Foundation and the 1001 Club and the Safari Club and a whole bunch of others. And the ones like, there's another group called Le Circle, L-E-C-E-…”
Le Cercle member_of Bilderberg Group host_asserted ▶ 5:39
“the Bilderbergs, the 1001 Club, the World Wildlife Fund Club. And there's anywhere from a 30 to 40 percent overlap in these different clubs for coordination purposes. And the weird thing about this to…”
Winston Churchill founded 1001 Club host_asserted ▶ 6:09
“cued me in on them being part of this entire Operation Gladio series. If you go back in the late 1800s, there was a very famous tradition that I don't know how long it went on before that, but I've ju…”
Cecil Rhodes founded 1001 Club host_asserted ▶ 6:09
“cued me in on them being part of this entire Operation Gladio series. If you go back in the late 1800s, there was a very famous tradition that I don't know how long it went on before that, but I've ju…”
George Soros member_of 1001 Club host_asserted ▶ 8:05
“and coordinate where they were going next. And I'm going to use an example that just got brought up recently. People like George Soros, who made their money manipulating other people's money. I believ…”
World Wildlife Fund funded Operation Gladio host_asserted ▶ 10:04
“That's exactly what these people have been doing. And in the course of doing that, they completely decimate the location that they're targeting. In addition, creating a footprint on a national park th…”
UNESCO funded Operation Gladio host_asserted ▶ 10:58
“that are both UNESCO and national parks designated areas where they have an even higher level of security. They have put terrorist training camps there and use the local population as guinea pigs on t…”
Bank for International Settlements financed_via World Wildlife Fund host_asserted ▶ 22:29
“And then I'm going to come along and I'm going to tell you, I'll forgive that debt if you let me set up the national park and run the national park. Me being UNESCO or the World Wildlife Fund. And so …”
Monsanto funded Argentina host_asserted ▶ 22:59
“And this just they go from country to country to country to do this. They did the exact same thing in Argentina with GMO Monsanto soy. And they have decimated Argentina with this. And in Argentina.…”
World Wildlife Fund funded Vietnam host_asserted ▶ 33:47
“Then they go in and they plant it with palms. And it takes five years for them to grow to maturity. So, of course, the World Bank's all in on this. They're making bank on every one of these projects. …”
South Africa supplied_arms_to Operation Gladio host_asserted ▶ 36:31
“We talked about that in, is it Nairobi or Nambia? And every one of those, every country that was on the border of South Africa had South African Operation Gladio forces go across the border into those…”
Israel supplied_arms_to Operation Gladio host_asserted ▶ 36:31
“We talked about that in, is it Nairobi or Nambia? And every one of those, every country that was on the border of South Africa had South African Operation Gladio forces go across the border into those…”
HSBC funded World Wildlife Fund book_quoted ▶ 39:21
“So I want to read a couple of things to you. It says here that it is Europe's biggest bank. It's the financial heart of the palm oil industry. Pumping billions into the business bloodstream, HSBC has …”
Francis Sullivan member_of HSBC book_quoted ▶ 39:51
“Francis Sullivan, head of the bank's sustainability department, greeted the author on one of the floors in the HSBC building. And he was, he had, so this is just crazy. So Francis Sullivan was the dir…”
Francis Sullivan headed World Wildlife Fund book_quoted ▶ 39:51
“Francis Sullivan, head of the bank's sustainability department, greeted the author on one of the floors in the HSBC building. And he was, he had, so this is just crazy. So Francis Sullivan was the dir…”
HSBC financed_via World Wildlife Fund book_quoted ▶ 42:18
“The World Bank steps in. The WWF is a strategic partner of both financial institutions. Imagine that. They need the trusted image of the Panda brand to win over a worldwide public skeptical of controv…”
HSBC laundered_money_for World Wildlife Fund book_quoted ▶ 46:44
“The HSBC Bank and the WWF provide international cover for the often criminal activities of the palm oil companies in our homeland. It's no coincidence that the bank places $100 million at the disposal…”
HSBC financed_via World Wildlife Fund book_quoted ▶ 50:12
“that got shut down in court had loaned that company millions of dollars, like $20 million for their five-year holdover till they could get some oil going. That, the World Wildlife Fund and the bank, a…”
Jason Clay member_of World Wildlife Fund book_quoted ▶ 53:50
“He personifies like no other the WWF policy for the 21st century. He advocates cozying up to big business far more openly and radically than the people in the old WWF. Who is Jason Clay? He wants to l…”
Ben & Jerry's covered_up Rainforest Crunch marketing campaign book_quoted ▶ 56:22
“the marketing campaign, the Boston Globe uncovered the truth. 5% of the nuts, at most, that was the most generous way of accounting for it, came from a cooperative in the rainforest. Ben and Jerry's b…”
HSBC funded Silicon Valley Bank host_asserted ▶ 1:04:12
“So we're going to have more cockroaches? Oh, that's right. He can't have kids, right? No, I'm joking. HSBC, you mentioned that. They were the ones who acquired SVB when it went kaput. They're the ones…”
HSBC funded Operation Gladio host_asserted ▶ 1:04:48
“HSBC was the one who funded 9-11 and actually got in trouble for it because one of my childhood best friends was in finance for them. And he actually let me know that that problem was happening. He wa…”