Secret Societies Skull and Bones with War Hamster Brady
1:09:53 · ▶ watch on Rumble
Transcript
0:00
Hi, everybody. Welcome to the Colonel's Corner. I'm Colonel Roxanne Towner Watkins, and I have Warhamster Brady with me today. And we're doing another segment of our continuing series into secret societies. And I'm going to turn it over to you, Warhamster. Thank you. Good to be here. Thanks for having me on again. This is always a lot of fun. And we've got some fun stuff for us.
0:30
I think the focus today is going to be on classes of 1917 and 1918 and some of their connections. But one thing you're going to find to play out in a lot of these characters that are alumni of Skull and Bones is an awful lot of them are aviators. And we'll get to that in a second here. Ready to dive in? Absolutely.
0:56
All right. As always with this series, you know, we're talking about secret societies, in particular Skull and Bones. Skull and Bones, of course, is from Yale University, founded in the 1830s. They take 15 juniors every year, tap them on the shoulder, and they get introduced into the corridors of power throughout the country and the world. We find Bonesmen alumni, you know, as presidents of the United States, secretaries of state, founders of the intelligence community, and every high branch of the military, diplomats.
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They own some of the most important corporations, sit on all the boards with each other. They marry into each other's families. This is the true ruling class of America. Or that's our theory. And what we're doing here is we're just trying to show all these connections and say, does it really make sense that this is just a normal secret society, little fraternic organization with people who just socialize together? Or is there a lot more to it?
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And I think when we uncover all of these connections, you start to draw the latter conclusion. And that's the purpose of this series. Who are the true rulers of the realm? All right, first bonesman we're going to look at today is important. This guy by the name of Henry Neal Mallon, bonesman class of 1917. He became really good friends with a guy at Yale by the name of Prescott Bush.
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He would become a World War I aviator, became a major in World War I for the U.S. Navy. Later on, he would become the president of a company we've talked about before named Dresser Industries. He became the president in 1928 at the age of 33. Dresser at the time was making equipment for the natural gas industry. Upon the founder of...
2:51
After Dresser's death, Governor Solomon Robert Dresser, the firm, the descendants sold the company to W.A. Harriman and Company, or they took the company public. And W.A. Harriman, Skull and Bones, was the underwriting investment bank. They took the company public, and they named Mallon to be the president and CEO at the age of 33, which is interesting. Mallon would go on to serve on a lot of boards of directors, but dozens of companies, a lot of them in construction and manufacturing.
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And that's going to be an important point here. So Mr. Henry Neal Mallon would then hire a gentleman from Yale, also a bonesman later on, to come work for Dresser Industries in West Texas. That guy's name was George H.W. Bush. So he's friends with Prescott, hires the son. He was such a mentor to Bush that Bush named one of his sons Neal Mallon Bush. Now, Neal Mallon Bush was never a bonesman, but he's worth mentioning because we've come across him before.
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He was famous for his role with the Silverado Savings and Loan in Colorado. That's one of the SNL scandal ones that we talk about when we talk about the IRA and Contra. That name comes up every once in a while. Neil Bush ended up paying about a $500,000 fine. His bank didn't got off scot-free with no investigation whatsoever, thanks to his political connections. And let's just remind the audience real quick that the Savings and Loan,
4:21
from my research was the failures were not unlike what you just described as far as the network of them serving all on each other's boards so that it functions as one organism. A lot of the savings and loans that failed were almost like controlled demolitions because they were on each other's boards and they were inter-loaning, unsecured loans to each other.
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businesses, family members, and stuff like that. And so it could have been seen, and I'm not going to put words in Brady's mouth, him being the actual banker. But from my perspective, it looked a lot like money laundering. I'm just going to leave it at that. Yeah, it did. The whole thing had to do with deregulation of the banks, changing the amount of people. It used to be the savings loans you had to have, I think it was 300 people.
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owners and now got down to a single person could own it and they ended up they did a lot of loans to themselves and their buddies so that's absolutely the case so neil bush the unforgotten bush no one really talks about is a pretty interesting guy he's uh we should talk about him more i think my favorite connection is he was really good friends with the hinkley family that's where john hinkley who would shoot reagan when neil's father was the vice president of the united states so fun connection with that with neil
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He would go on to found something called Ignite Learning. And that was kind of an international, I want to say it's a computer-based education system very early on. And he raised a bunch of money for that. And the investors came from places like the British Virgin Islands, Kuwait, the UAR. And of course, there's a Russian oligarch named Boris Berezovsky, who was really good friends with Neil Bush.
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And Berezovsky was an arch enemy of Putin, who's an oligarch Russian, and spent the rest of his life, his latter years of life, in exile in the United Kingdom. You've heard of Moscow and the Time River? Yeah, that's Boris Berezovsky. He's one of the poster children from that. And he is also one of the guys that was in bed with the Safra and the, what was that, Hermitage investment in basically selling out Russia.
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which is why Putin basically insisted that he was either going to be held accountable or he's going to leave the country because he was in on a network that the West was going to use after the collapse of the Soviet Union to basically take all of Russia's resources. Yeah, and there's a lot to that story about the oligarchs that all got exiled to the United Kingdom. There's stuff that's still coming out about that. There was a gigantic cover-up from the US side.
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had Congress passing laws to protect some of these oligarchs, but that's neither here nor there. But it's interesting that Neil Bush, whose brother is a president, his father was a president, is buddy buddies with this Russian oligarch. So Neil, a little bit later in 2017, would go on to found what's called the George H.W. Bush Foundation for U.S. and China Relations. Well, that's interesting because H.W. Bush was our first American delegate to promote U.S.-Chinese trade back in the 70s.
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A lot of Bush-Chinese connections. He also founded something called Points of Light, which is supposed to be an international nonprofit. It's supposed to increase involuntaryism around the world. What do we know about these international nonprofits? This one has 250 affiliates in over 22 countries, and it's still active. 1995 LA Times article says, this is a direct quote from the article.
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The lone remnant of the Bush initiative has a look of a wasteful Washington-dependent operation. They took in $26.6 million in federal funds, and about $22.3 million of them was basically spent on what they called glitzy promotions. So it was a dirty foundation. But if you look up the foundation watch on those websites, it gets really good scores today. All right, that's enough about Neil. We talked about dresser industries, and it's important because we've talked about war profiteering, the corporations.
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that do all the war profiteering. What just so happens is that the people who own those corporations also end up in positions like Secretary of State and other diplomatic positions, the people who start the wars. So it's war profiteering, and Dresser Industries is one of those. And by 1975, Dresser was about 28% in petroleum, 21% in industrial specialties, 24% energy processing and conversion, construction and mining, and refactories and minerals. That's what Dresser did.
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A lot of these are government contracts. They'd go on in the 80s to purchase Harvester's construction equipment business, which is big, big dig stuff. They would purchase American Standard's Wabco division, which is all the earth moving and mining, tunnel digging. They would merge with a big multinational conglomerate named Ingersoll Rand in 1987. And here's the big one where it gets fun. In 1998, Dresser Industries merges with Halliburton.
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That was hilarious. Yes. Well, that deal was negotiated by Dick Cheney during a weekend of quail hunting. Within a year, they had to settle a bunch of asbestos lawsuits, which dropped the stock by like 80%. So this is 1999. Following year, of course, Cheney becomes Bush's vice president. And we immediately go to war in Afghanistan and Iraq. And Halliburton stock price gets all the way back.
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So my only question was anybody shot during the quail hunting? Apparently not that time. A little more about Dick Cheney because he's a lot of fun. And I did this research when he was endorsing, what was her name? Kamala Harris. So Dick Cheney actually went to Yale University and he dropped out. So he was never in Skull and Bones. He then graduated from University of Wyoming. Joins the staff of a gentleman by the name of Donald Rumsfeld.
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who was the Director of Economic Opportunity back in 1970. Cheney would go on to become the Deputy Assistant to the President in 74, 75. That was Ford. Interesting is that Dick Cheney is the one who wrote the memo to use the Justice Department to limit the damage from Seymour Hersh's famous article about the U.S. subs tapping into Soviet undersea communications, also known as Operation Ivy Bells. Remember that one? Yes, I do.
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Yeah, that's Cheney who did the cover up there. Becomes the White House chief of staff from 75 to 77, and then would manage Ford's 1976 presidential campaign. The one he lost. Yes. Jimmy Carter. Yes. So he goes back to Congress. I'm sorry, he goes back to Wyoming, gets elected to Congress, where he sat from 79 to 89. He was the ranking member of the select committee to investigate Iran-Contra.
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which, of course, the Bushes were neck deep in. Then becomes H.W. Bush's Secretary of Defense from 89 to 93. What's going on then, 89 to 93? Iraq War. End of the Cold War. All that stuff. It was a complete change in Cold War foreign policy to whatever we've had since 1990, basically regime toppling.
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Well, it's always been regime toppling, but it was the transfer from communist to radical Islamist as the boogeyman. Sure. That's Cheney. He's the one who orchestrated all of that. He also oversaw Operation Just Cause, which is, as you've talked about, the invasion of Panama. Do you know the story about when Noriega was hiding in the Vatican embassy? They got him out by blasting loud music outside the embassy 24-7.
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Yes. Yeah, I'm familiar with it. And the only reason we do that, by the way, is to eliminate the competition. Oh, Noriega got a little big for his britches. Yes. Yeah, we've talked about that. And, of course, he oversees the invasions of Iraq and Desert Storm in Panama. Then becomes the CEO of Halliburton and then VP where he pushes for invading Iraq. He's the one who pushed the weapons of mass destruction law or lie, I should say.
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He's the one who pushed the NSA wiretapping and enhanced interrogation. So he's a super nice guy. But this all kind of falls under the same tree of that company, Dresser Industries, which is now known as Halliburton. So pretty interesting connections there with Mr. Henry Neal Mallon in the bushes. And you can't forget of his connection, because I don't think Zapata Oil would have ever been even Zapata Oil without him. Yeah, he co-founded it.
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He paid 50 percent of the money down for Zapata oil. Yeah. And of course, Zapata oil is very important because it's my firm belief that it was named after the Zapata Bay in Cuba. And the reason why they were so dead set on getting Cuba back is because geologists had said that there was a huge oil reserve in the Zapata Bay area.
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And that's the reason why Mr. CIA director back in the 50s, 60s, when Bush was initially found to be serving in the CIA, was already in on all of that activity. Yeah, those connections are all over the place. I mean, a lot of stuff we've been talking about since day one, all ties. Zapata comes up quite a bit. So good job bringing that up. All right. Switching gears to 1918.
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The Yale class of 1918 is a fun one. We've got a gentleman, a spokesman by the name of Frederick Truby Davison. That's T-R-U-B-E-E, Davison. And we've seen Davisons throughout this series. He's one of them. He's interesting. He's an avid aviator. And he's convinced that the U.S. military is not ready to handle any kind of invasion of U.S. soil. And he wants to create something called...
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The first Naval Air, it's called the founder of the, it's called, sorry, the name of it's the first Yale unit. And it's supposed to be a Naval Reserve Air Unit to protect the seaplanes up and down the Atlantic coast. And this guy's going around, Truby Davison is going around to Congress and people in the Pentagon and trying to get them to approve this unit as a member of the reserves. You'd fly down to...
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D.C. to get recognition by the Navy. He put together 12 Yale undergraduates, and a number of them would become Bonesmen. This is 1916, before he became a Bonesman in 1918. People would call it the Millionaire Squadron because the pilots would get wheeled out to their planes in wheelchairs by black porters. That's what these guys are all about. Well, Mr. Davison was actually doing a
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a flying test to get his Navy wings and he had a panic attack and never became a pilot. He broke his back, never saw combat at all. But he ended up receiving a Navy cross for starting the first Yale unit. So there's some other guys. Well, we'll get to the other people in the first unit. Let me tell you a little bit more about Davison first. He then goes off to law school at Columbia. Works for a white shoe law firm called White & Case in Manhattan.
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Somehow he's on the cover of Time Magazine in 1925. Joins the New York State Legislature in 1922 through 1926. And here's where it gets fun. He became the Assistant Secretary of War for the Air in 1926 to 1933. And in 1951, he becomes a trustee of Yale University and also takes a job. Here's your mic drop. He's the first personnel director for the CIA. So that's Mr. Frank Truby Davison.
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Gets interesting. Some of the other people on that first Yale unit were Bonesmen. One of the names is Artemis Lamb Gates, Bonesman of 1918. He would end up being, again, the Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Air and the Undersecretary of the Navy in 1945 for a few months. First of all, he married Alice Truby Davison, the sister of the Davison we just talked about.
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So keep it in the family as usual. And he ended up going on to be the president of a number of companies. Some of them we've talked about. New York Trust Company, Union Pacific Railroad, Time Magazine, Boeing, Middle South Utilities, Safeway, and Abercrombie & Fitch. So that's Mr. Artemis Lamb Gates. See the same connection with the military, and especially when it comes to aviation. A lot of skull and bones there.
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Another guy who was one of them was one of the first air people was a guy named John Vorys, V-O-R-Y-S, class of 1918 Bonesman. And he would go on to become a House of Representatives member from Ohio from 1939 to 1959. And he was an interesting guy. He did what's called the Operation Block Leader. He was trying very hard to keep us out of the war.
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And we've talked about that, how the Bonesmen had financed, especially the Prescott Bush people had financed the Nazis. So there's no coincidence there. Another guy who's part of that group was Earl Clinton Barker Gould. The Gould family comes up again. He ended up being a rear admiral in the U.S. Navy. Another fun one was Albert D. Sturtevant. And he's famous for being the very first American aviator ever to be killed in action in Europe in World War I.
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Last guy from that list who is on this Yale University pilot team is going to be the star of the show today, a gentleman by the name of Robert A. Lovett. And I know you know and love Lovett very well. Yeah. I want to make a point here. I need to.
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research this but i'm like 90 sure because this came up in a different um venue that davison field at fort belvoir where that helicopter took off yesterday is named after a davison that is a major general that was a an aviator in the army and i want to say um
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That because somehow when I was researching him for another story, he came back to a family Davison that was in Skull and Bones because I thought that was very weird. And now I find it even weirder that we're talking about this today. And here we are talking about another Davison that's a Skull and Bones.
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At the same time, I've been talking about Davidson Field all day. So that's kind of freaky right now. Yeah, talk that down. Speaking of further research, I mentioned earlier the, what was the name of that foundation? The Points of Light. Points of Light. Now, I have not done deep research into that. But if any one of our listeners wants to dive into that one, I think you're going to find some nuggets of gold in there. It has a lot of the...
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Same characteristics as a lot of these NGOs do. And I think we might find shenanigans there. The fact that it's international makes that a higher probability. Yeah, yeah. It's got all the earmarks of what we've seen with other ones. And the Bush connections just kind of screams, maybe we ought to peel back the cover a bit. Right. So you're ready to dive into Mr. Lovett. Yes. And people, if you don't know who he is, he's probably one of the,
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Most influential men on the planet in the 20th century. I figured I'd pull up a picture of him. Okay. Let me know when you're ready. There it is. This is Mr. Levitt being sworn in for one of his many roles. I can't tell who that is on his left. The guy who's holding the Bible. Do you recognize that face? No. Yeah, neither do I. The audience might. Let's see if anyone gets it.
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All right. So let's talk about Mr. Lovett. Obviously, he's into aviation because he's a member of that club. Gets tapped to be in Skull and Bones in 1918. He's the son of Robert S. Lovett. This is Robert A. Lovett. Robert S. was the president, once again, Union Pacific Railroad. So connections to the robber barons. He was also a director of National City Bank of New York, which became Citibank, which is the...
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And he's also the president of a director of a Western Union. Lovett marries a debutante by the name of Adele Quarterly Brown. And yes, she is descended from the Brown banking family of Brown Brothers Harriman. Of course. Yes. I mean, it's amazing. These people don't have like three eyes with all the inset. OK, that's funny. Oh, you really can't make this stuff up. They actually we just don't know it.
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Yeah, maybe that doesn't work with reptilians. Who knows? All right, so he gets out of Harvard. I'm sorry, Yale. And Mr. Robert A. Lovett becomes the lieutenant commander in the U.S. Naval Air Squadron. World War I ends, and he joins his father's bank. And then, shortly thereafter, he becomes one of the founding partners of Brown Brothers Harriman in 1926. Was it last week we talked? Yeah, we talked about Harriman's all last week. Yeah. Or one of these weeks.
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As an investment banker, he becomes a director for a company called Freeport Sulphur and sat on that board or led that company for 25 years. That's the company that would then become Freeport Mac Moran. And you've heard of Freeport Mac Moran because they are the world's largest producer of molybdenum. They are a major copper producer and they operate the world's largest gold mine in Indonesia. Okay. And let me say this. I knew you were going to jump on this.
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Freeport is the company in Chile that was mining their copper that paid Nixon to overthrow and kill Allende. Okay, number one. Number two, Freeport is also in that gold mine in Indonesia, the company that basically worked to overthrow Sukarno through the CIA to install Suharto.
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in Indonesia, and it was Sullivan and Cromwell and the Dulles brothers that orchestrate this entire thing because it was known in 1933 to be the largest gold mine ever discovered in the world. Freeport ends up with a concession only because they are basically, Sullivan and Cromwell, via the Dulles brothers, worms their way into the
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the Dutch because that was a Dutch colony deal by basically agreeing to overthrow the government and thereby securing them a piece of the action of the take that's going to eventually occur at this gold mine and what Freeport did because that gold mine was so pure and so big that
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They were reporting to Indonesia. So what happens when you get a concession to mine gold is normally it's like, and I'm just making these numbers up for a reason to illustrate a point. Let's say that 10% of all ore that you mine, so if you get 100 pounds of ore, it will have 10 pounds of gold. This had three times that amount. But the gold that was taken out and reported to the Indonesian government,
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was the normal take. So they were pocketing two for every one that they reported and recompensated the Indonesian government for their share of the profits of the gold. So they were literally stealing gold. That's a theme that's going to be a theme later today as well, stealing gold. Funny historic side note, Indonesia now owns 51% of that mine.
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they took ownership back from Freeport-McMoran. And that happened just in, I think, just the last decade. But, you know, the other interesting thing about all those connections is, you know, we talk about all these gladio operations, what some people like to call the color revolutions, et cetera. They're almost always done because some multinational U.S. corporation wants to get cheap resources or cheap labor. It's a common theme. And if you look at the industries,
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that Lovett is involved in. It just points directly to that. Copper producers, molybdenum, gold mines, it just absolutely fits the pattern. So he's making his money on the private side doing quite well using all his connections. Then the war breaks out and he gets named. Remember, he flew in the Navy for a year or two.
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and has been an investment banker ever since. But now he gets named as a special assistant of air affairs for the Secretary of War, Henry Stimson, who we featured earlier as one of the bonesmen. In that same hiring class was McGeorge Bundy, who we just talked about, and of course, John J. McCloy, were also special assistants to Stimson. So he's keeping great company.
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In 41, he becomes assistant secretary for war, for war, secretary of war for air. These titles were tougher back then. Is he in there? Oops. I think you're wrong. You muted yourself. Yeah, there you go. The old boys, the American elite and the origins of the CIA refers to assistant secretary of war, John McCloy and Robert Lovett as the heavenly twins.
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Because of their air associations. Interesting. It says that they had been deputized to steam up the Manhattan financial specialist and prowl the debris of Europe in its collapse. Capitalism also requires commissars. J. Henry Schroeder, vice president of the bank over there.
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And, you know, they had a U.S. part two. And these guys were basically working with the however you say his name, Hamlar Slott and his protege in order to set up the Bank of International Settlements. Oh, lovely. And anyone who's been following me from day one, the very second.
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Public presentation I did in front of an audience was on the Bank of International Settlements, and it's called Above the Law. The Bank of International Settlements and its charter, it's got super governmental powers. Their officers of Bank of International Settlements are not subject to domestic immigration laws. They can't be arrested. They've got all kinds of cutouts. And it was put into their charter that the Bank of International Settlements, because they knew they were going to be committing crimes. Yes.
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Financial crimes on very large magnitude. Okay, so Mr. Lovett. He's off to a good start in his career, but there's a lot more coming. Okay, 1941, he became the Secretary of War for Air. War ends in 1945, and he submits his resignation to Truman, and Truman refuses the resignation. He wants him to chair what became known as the Lovett Committee. And what does the Lovett Committee do? Well, it advised the government.
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on post-World War II organization of intelligence activities. Yes, this led to the creation of the CIA. I think we got a skull and bones connection to the CIA yet. Have we made that? Just tans and gentle. All right, so then he goes back to private sector for Brown Brothers Haram in 1945, only to get recalled to service by General George Marshall to help implement the Marshall Plan.
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He helps draft what's known as the Vandenberg Resolution, which basically led to the establishment of NATO. Bastard. So think about this. One guy led to the establishment of both the CIA and NATO, pretty much the two organizations that are responsible for every bit of regime change we've seen in the last 70 years. Yes. That's... That's Lovett. That's Robert Lovett. And he's not done yet. Correct.
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So George Marshall was in really bad health. So basically, he gave credit to Lovey. He goes, you did most of the heavy lifting in implementing the Marshall Plan. Is that a good thing? Well, we've talked about this before. Do you want to go into the Marshall Plan real quick again? Well, basically, it was sold as a financial plan to basically
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rebuild Europe from the devastation of World War II. That's what it was sold at. Your point is that because of the need in the United States to prop up the military industrial complex from an economy standpoint, that basically it was money laundering. It was taking our money over there.
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and buying our stuff from there as if we were giving them foreign aid to buy our stuff, which of course is what we do today. So it began this perpetual money laundering of buying military industrial complex items under the guise of it being for a foreign country, when in fact it was for NATO, which then all gets turned on us.
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But during that process, a significant amount of the money, and I'm not talking chump change, I'm talking a significant amount of it, got siphoned off under the plan of creating Operation Gladio and creating these stay-behinds because they were just at this point standing up Chiang Kai-shek and the heroin market that is going to be used covertly to fund it. So they were the jumpstart seed money.
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for Operation Gladio came via the Marshall Plan. Yeah, and there's another part of building out that apparatus is the creation of the World Bank and the Bank of International Settlements. They would lend money to all these other countries so they would have money to buy goods from American manufacturers. And again, World War II is the only, militarizing our economy is the only way we got out of the Great Depression. And had we downsized it completely, we would have gone right back into the Depression.
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And that's really the impetus behind the Marshall Plan. But all these countries are now then basically debtors to the World Bank and the Bank of International Settlements. It's monetary control. It's basically just, what do we call it? We did a show a while back. What do we call it? Recolonization? That's what it was. It was financial weaponry. And there's Levitt right there in the middle of all of this. And again, he's an international banker. He's an investment banker. Perfect guy.
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Go ahead. I'm sorry. Let me know when you're done. Yeah, he's just the perfect. He's got the right skill set to implement all these plans. It's warfare done with a tie on. Okay. So at this same time, post like in the immediate aftermath of World War II, which is what we're talking about, you also have Lovett working with the assistant secretary of treasurer because, of course, he's a banker.
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John Graham and Gordon Gray. And I want to read this because this is as he's setting up NATO and using the Marshall Plan to basically fund stay behind units. Listen to this statement out of this same book, The Old Boys. It would be constituted to counter the vicious covert activities of the.
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Soviet Union, its satellite countries and communist groups to discredit the aims and activities of the U.S. and Western powers. And they're talking about, you know, what they're doing. They're funding the Marshall Plan and the Marshall Plan is going to be used to basically do this. It also says its efforts were to be so planned and conducted, meaning.
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Operation Gladio, that they were to break the surface of the U.S. government could plausibly disclaim any responsibility. Covert operations themselves included propaganda, economic warfare, preventative direct action, including sabotage, anti-sabotage, demolition, evacuation measures, subversions against hostile states, including assistance to underground resistance group, support of indigenous anti-communist elements.
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and threats to the free world. So this is Lovett and what he's working on with the Marshall Plan, i.e. siphoning off to set up Operation Gladio. And, of course, I've made this point a million times. The Soviet Union had just lost over 25 million people. There was no threat. Well, you know, one of the things that we've read about is
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They were planning a post-World War II world before we even entered into the war. Yes. Part of that was decimating Germany and basically moving a big manufacturing base. They wanted Japan defeated, but also one of the two major manufacturing hubs, but under U.S. control. These schemes were in the works for a very long time. Okay. So is Mr. Lovett done? Not by any stretch.
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I'm going to go forward in time before we are closing topic because we'll get to it. That's Operation Golden Lily. We will get there. But I want to go past that. I want to close with that. So he goes back into investment banking in 1949, immediately to be recalled again by Marshall to become the Deputy Secretary of Defense. No longer is it the Secretary of War. We are now the Defense Department. Same people. 1951 to 1953, he becomes the United States Secretary of Defense.
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It's a pretty important time. It means he's the guy who directed the Korean War. I should also point out that him and Marshall were really vocal in opposing the recognition of Israel in 1948. So he did not want Israel to be recognized as a sovereign nation. And can I add one more before we skip forward? In 1948, he was instrumental in recognizing the Ukrainian National Guard, which we now know as Azov Battalion.
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I did not know that. Yes. In his role as Undersecretary of State, Robert Lovett was instrumental, not state, sorry, but instrumental in recognizing the Ukrainian and using them as a, here's a quote, dissident element in combating communism. Sounds kind of familiar.
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Yes, it does. I did not know that about him in the Ukraine. That's awesome. Okay, so he's always arguing for a bigger military. He would say, look, the U.S. goes from full-throttle military when we're in war to zero when we're not, and we need to have some kind of in-between. And he talked about having every single able-bodied man serve for like two years so that we have national reserves.
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That's what he wanted. He wanted a much bigger military presence in the United States and peace. And he got his way for the most part. And this is why he pushes the Korean War. You know, he is fear mongering the Korean War. You talk about the domino effect. Lovett's behind all of this. So we say propaganda. Do we want to talk about the Korean War and all the shenanigans that went on there? Should we should we march forward? Well, I mean, I'll just mention that.
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everything that you learned about the Korean war in class was a lie. As we have found most of our history that the threat in the North was exaggerated. And we were basically putting Gladio stay behind units in the North in order to justify attacking the North. The entire thing was a false flag. We attacked the North. We had no intentions of just
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creating a unified non-nationalist under our control Korea, we went into China, which pissed China off. And the whole reason we were doing this was basically to reinsert Chiang Kai-shek into China because we wanted China's opium fields. And Chiang Kai-shek was the Chinese general that could make that happen.
41:29
And the overwhelming response of China pushing us back out and down to the current DMZ was overwhelming and basically set MacArthur back on his. And he wanted to use nuclear weapons in order to basically take that territory back. He eventually gets fired, blah, blah, blah, for insubordination. And so, yeah, Lovett is in the middle of all of that.
41:57
Yeah, it doesn't hurt that, of course, these people, the cowboys from the South and the West have just rose to political power in America. And they're a bunch of defense contractors and oil mavericks. And they're all affiliated with these skull and bones characters. And they make a lot of money if the war machine keeps turning, the profits keep coming. And we've already talked about some of the companies that make money when rebuilding, not to mention tearing things down. It's a good business.
42:30
In 1953, he goes back to Brown Brothers Harriman and spends three years this time in the private sector before Eisenhower persuades him to join the president's intelligence advisory board. That's a pretty key moment in time. 1956, what the CIA is doing. Basically, this would be the oversight committee for all of our subterfuge.
42:56
or different covert operations. And this is where we have the banana republics falling like every six months all over Central America. This is an awful lot of countries got overthrown as they're basically coming out of the colonial period. They did not have a lot of stability, and we certainly added to that. Well, that's Lovett sitting on that intelligence board under Eisenhower. So he's now served under Republicans and Democrats. So you think there's a uniparty or that there's a power above the presidency?
43:30
Yeah, he's the classic definition of uniparty. Yeah, because these are the people that actually control our foreign policy, not the presidents themselves. We've talked about this ad nauseum. You know, the presidents that actually had the cojones to stand up to, shall we call it the foreign policy complex, which is the CIA, State Department, Pentagon, and their corporate backers, and all the smoke-filled rooms, secret clubs like the Council of Foreign Relations, and later on the Atlantic Council. Those are the ones who really...
43:59
determine uh foreign policy and the only presidents who stood up to it you know are jfk carter and trump it doesn't matter if it's republican or democrat that that is the neocons and neoliberals are both into the wars so um since you mentioned the um foreign intelligence advisory board you know that during the eisenhower administration you also had on that board
44:27
James Killian, General John Hull, Jimmy Doolittle, who shows up again with the guy, remember we talked about Doolittle and his working with William Polly, who was instrumental in setting up Gladio, and Omar Bradley, and Joe Kennedy, like in JFK's dad. Yes, he wanted,
44:58
He actually advised JFK to offer him any, quote, any cabinet position he wanted. Lovett declined due to his health. That's crazy. What he did do is he recommended that Dean Rusk become Kennedy's Secretary of State, and he did. And he actually recommended McNamara to be the new Secretary of Defense. So let me ask you this, because this came up yesterday. Don't you think it's weird that...
45:31
They stayed on through Johnson? Yeah. Like totally weird? Well, the big agenda there was Vietnam, and they weren't changing policy. Johnson to Nixon was not going to get you out of Vietnam the first term. I know, but I just, to me, as diabolically different as Johnson and Kennedy was, to have all of the major kingpins stay, it tells you what you just said is unequivocally true.
46:02
The president is not even relevant. Or they wanted a president that went along with their schemes as opposed to one who was going to put a stop to him, as JFK was. Right, but I'm saying they'll work around him, right? They killed him. But the continuity was the cabinet, not the president. Exactly right. And make no mistake that LBJ was a big warmonger. He's one of the crooked Texas cowboys.
46:35
Personal assassin. So a couple of books. I got some quotes for you to talk about Lovett. The book called The Higher Circles, The Governing Class in America, written by G. William Domhoff. And I highly recommend this one be read. Do you have it? Have you seen it? He basically called Robert Lovett the architect of the Cold War. That's pretty profound. There's another book. It's called The Wise Men, Six Friends and the World They Made.
47:10
It's written by Walter Isaacson and Evan Thomas. Yeah, I have that book. Okay. The six friends in the world they made, the six friends they talk about are Dean Acheson, who we've talked about, and he's got Bones connections through family. Got him in the name of Charles Bolin, who we haven't talked about too much, but he was the ambassador to the USSR, the Philippines. Say that again, the Philippines, France. And, of course, he came from Harvard, where he was a member of the Sikh society, the Porcelain Club, which we will get to.
47:41
sometime in the near future. But that's Charles Boland. It's not a name that comes up too often, but he was one of those six wise men. The third one was W. Averill Harriman, who we've discussed, George Kennan, who we've talked about ad nauseum, Robert Lovett, and of course, John J. McCoy, who always shows up. Okay, that's pretty much most of his life. We left out a big chapter.
48:11
I have one last quote from the old boys on Love It. Go for it. More heat and light both rose out of the sparks thrown off by the panel report talking about the during the church committee and looking at a whole bunch of different things in 1957. Not that church committee, but there was a review that was done in 1957 and a meeting that was on it.
48:39
And Alan Dulles was intimately involved in this. It dealt with the Atomic Energy Commission. So that's in light of what I'm saying. More light. Both rose out of the sparks thrown off by the panel report on covert operations entrusted to Robert Lovett and David Bruce by the Intelligence Advisory Board chairman positions. Second only to Dulles throughout OSS years.
49:06
David Bruce had somehow retained a relaxed probity, which all but invalidated him for invisible government involvement. It had been Bruce's intervention in the Truman Air move on Arbenz, which is the overthrow, the coup in Guatemala. And now this perusal of all the garbage thrown in behind the CIA after four years of Dulles' management,
49:36
left Bruce alarmed. Quote, this is a Lovett quote. He approached it from the standpoint of what right have we to go barging around into other countries, buying newspapers and handing money to opposition parties and supporting a candidate for this or that office. That was in Lovett's testimony. He continued saying he felt, meaning Bruce.
50:02
that this was an outrageous interference in friendly countries. But Lovett did not feel the same way. We know who won that argument. All right. So we can't talk about Lovett without talking about Operation Golden Lily. Go for it. I'll just give the brief background of it, and you can start filling all the gaps. Now, what's interesting, people need to understand, is Operation Golden Lily was something that was supposed to be kept a secret.
50:34
We really don't have a whole lot of documentation, so there's more than one theory on some of this stuff. I'm not sure exactly what is correct, but I'll tell you the story the way I think is most likely. The colonel is going to alter some of it because she's done more reading on the subject than I have, and I haven't changed my tune. I know there's more out there. But it really goes back to, well, first of all, you've got to realize for 6,000 years in East Asia and China, gold has been a big deal. It's a very old civilization. There's a lot of gold.
51:03
When you see estimates for the amount of gold bullion that have ever been mined, it says like 170 billion tons. That is not true. There may have been more than that involved in Operation Golden Lilies alone. So what happened when the Japanese were rampaging across Asia, starting around 1937, what's called the Rape of Nanking, they've basically been getting all the confiscating. And they had this, what was the guy's name? Prince Chichibu.
51:34
had these teams that were rampaging and confiscating gold and other precious metals and jewels and gems. And they had seven or eight years of doing this throughout Asia. And Japan was wreaking havoc everywhere. Their plan was to have it all go to the Philippines. It's sort of like a way station. And their idea was that they were anticipating a peace with the Americans where Japan would maintain.
52:02
control over the Philippines. Well, that didn't happen. Obviously, American subs started playing havoc on the trade routes going from the Philippines to Japan. So instead of shipping all the goods back to Japan, they started taking prisoners of war, forcing them to dig these 100-foot-deep caches all across the island. It's estimated there was about 175 of them. This is known as Yamashita's Gold, General Yamashita. Well, when MacArthur takes back
52:33
The Philippines, when he makes his triumphant return, which is why he's a hero in the Philippines, they get a hold of a limo driver from one of the Japanese generals who gives them a map or gives the locations of some of the stashes of gold. It was such a big deal. MacArthur jumps on a plane, flies all the way back to D.C., and he meets with Truman and three other gentlemen who are on the war board. One of them is Robert Levitt. Another one's John J. McCloy. And the third is a guy named Anderson.
53:00
And so it's the narrative. One of the narratives is a lot of that money ended up in what's called the Anderson Trust has been used to finance covert operations around the world ever since. Now I'm going to turn this over to the colonel because she's going to add a lot more flavor. So this this is so big. We did a big we did the sea graves. A couple has written probably the most.
53:30
well researched book i did a whole book review on it several shows um that basically goes over all of this and i highly recommend it it's on the colonel's corner on my rumble channel um because basically yes they they took it was so much more than just gold it was all of the
53:52
gems. It was all of the silver. It was all of the copper. They were even taking kitchen sinks out of houses throughout China, Indonesia, every place, Korea, Vietnam. They gathered up all of Asians everywhere a Japanese soldier stepped foot. They knew that China didn't trust their finance system and that they had their precious belongings in their backyard.
54:21
hundreds of thousands of people to dig up people's backyard to find all of this loot. And so while 95% of it went to the Philippines, about 5% of it was actually in the emperor's bank. He had his own personal bank and his palace. So his two, there was two grandsons, princes that were on duty in the Philippines while,
54:51
The general did all of the legwork. The princes created a mapping system to account for where all of the digs were. And so they did underground exfiltration using POWs, businessmen that had been captured on all of these islands and civilians. And then once they got the entire.
55:17
um like football field of underground tunnels going off hidden they spent made special porcelain to close it up and painted it to make it look like it blended in all of these with uh cyanide and glass vials this um powdery sand that would come in on you and suffocate you um if you were to even go down one of these things but the maps
55:42
had symbolisms on them that told you exactly where all of the booby traps were. And the princes are the ones that created the mapping system. And there was a little boy that was used as an aid that knew where all the maps were. And eventually the major that had been the driver.
56:05
It was the initial one that kind of got beat up and made the confession of where a couple. But the word got out in the Philippines and a guy by the name of Roxas had uncovered one of the mines behind a hospital in the town. And he got a gold Buddha and he had all of this gold. Well, he gets robbed. And Marcos, who the CIA installed.
56:29
to basically take over this mining operation and find all of these 175 sites. So when they dug them out, everybody, because they didn't want anybody left that knew where any of them were, and they didn't cross-utilize people in these mines, they would dynamite the mine shut with the people in them. They'd have a big party saying, oh, yeah, we're done. They'd dynamite it. There'd be all of the dead bodies because they'd eventually die from suffocating.
56:56
And when some of these were dug out eventually and discovered, they literally had the dead bodies. So they arranged the Burke Society was involved in this as well. They financed a miner from Las Vegas, Nevada area, a gold miner. What they what the CIA and Lansdale and all of them were involved in this with Marcos.
57:23
What their plan was, because gold has fingerprints on it. If you analyze gold, you can tell where in the world it was mined at. However they do that, it can be precisely identified what mine it came out of. You remember earlier I talked about dresser industries and how they were in construction and mining? Yes, exactly. Okay, so they...
57:51
What what the CIA's plans were because they didn't want to sell the gold that they were discovering in the Philippines in these World War Two vestiges on the black market because you get pennies on the dollar. They wanted to be able to sell it on the real market. So their plan was that using Marcos as the stooge, they were going to mine it, mine it as Filipino gold. And they wanted this guy from.
58:22
to they flew him and a couple of buddies over and they were going to have him melt the gold down, mix in Filipino gold and then reform the bars. So number one, it was not identifiable. And number two, it can be sold on the regular market through the Filipino bank and they can get top dollar for it. So this.
58:47
Um, whole plan. And then once they found enough of the mines using this minor guy, cause he had all of the maps that they had, there was three maps that were never found. So they had discovered 172 of them. The little boy that was the, um, aid to one of the princes, he had three that was never found, um, that was given to him by the prince's insurance. So the 172 others went,
59:15
when they found the first few of them, they figured out that they thought they could read the maps well enough. Now, having used this minor guy that figured out the coding on it, they took him out to a cemetery and was going to assassinate him. And he said that you can kill me, but you'll never find those maps. And they said, we've got people going through your hotel room right now. And he goes, well, that's good because they're not there. He had bought a piece of furniture and put those, he had basically,
59:45
They were big, like wax coated maps. He had redrawn all of the maps and put them inside this piece of furniture and shipped it home to his wife. So they had no copies of the map and him and his buddy that had came with him melted and burnt all of the maps on the balcony with a blanket up over there.
1:00:08
hotel room out on the balcony. So the real maps were all gone. He had his own interpretation of them, which only he knew about. So they didn't kill him. But the John Birch Society was in on all of this. They tried to blackmail him. And then when he came back and they weren't able to kill him, they tried to sue him and they took his company. They persecuted him like they persecuted January 6th people.
1:00:37
They were on him for years and years and years with buying off the judges and all kinds of crap. They put that man through hell for him trying to help him. I remember the story of there was a plane load of gold ingots that landed in Europe, which nobody they tried to say was from South America. It was not.
1:00:58
The bottom line is we're talking about probably the biggest treasure in the history of mankind. This is bigger than King Solomon. Oh, it was trillions and trillions. Yes. And that's all controlled today. Well, probably to this day, there's not a whole lot of records of it by the Anderson Trust, which was basically managed by Lovett, McCloy, and Anderson. Three guys that Truman picked. So one other piece of this, because it relates to what's going on today.
1:01:30
Roxas, the guy that kind of was the, he found tens of billions of dollars worth of gold in his legitimate gold bind. He also had, there's two guys. One of them had actually found one of the mines and they basically poisoned him and killed him. His, there was another guy that had basically,
1:01:58
was kind of the money launderer for them. And he got like 10% of everything that he, and he would take a go around the world and he would put money in banks. And his, I think it was just a daughter, but anyway, his heirs and his bookkeeper, there was like this jingle and all kinds of codes to get into all of these book accounts.
1:02:26
or bank accounts that his 10%, not the big, big bank accounts, just the ones that were his, which was his 10% cut, which ended up being worth billions of dollars. And the bank like Citibank, they were in all of the big banks. They were in HSBC. They were in Citibank. They were in Bank of America. They were in all of the big banks. And I'm talking tens of billions of dollars, if not hundreds of billions of dollars worth of gold.
1:02:55
Just a friendly reminder that both Citibank and Chase Manhattan are both banks with deep skull and bones and Rockefeller connections. Correct. So the accountant and the heir shows up at Citibank in New York City to demand the gold after he died. The next day, the president of Citibank ships all of that gold to the Bahamas.
1:03:23
They never got an ounce of the gold. And that gold's floating around somewhere on banks' books right now. Yeah. And it couldn't flood the market with it because it would have depressed the price of gold if you double the supply. But it doesn't mean you can't count it as an asset. And as we all know, we all know banks, the auditing process. Well, and fractional loans. I mean, they want that asset on their books. Sure. Because they can lend against it. Yes.
1:03:54
And of course, we've never even audited Fort Knox or not anytime recently. So where is all the gold? Where is all of the gold? So that's Mr. Lovett. That's the whole class of 1918. They had a lot of influence on this world from just one little group of 15 people at Yale University. So is that just a friendly fraternity? Or are we talking about the true rulers of the realm, the puppet masters in the dark, smoky rooms that really control the fate of nations?
1:04:25
Yeah. And I mean, again, they're at the helm, you know, because obviously they're old enough graduating in that class. They're old enough by the time World War Two comes around to be in all of the key positions to create Operation Gladio. So now you've got your Bank of International Settlements, the World Bank, the IMF. So you've got the financial war already won.
1:04:53
You've got the physical war via paramilitary. Operation Gladio already won. You're living high at this point, right? So now all you have to do is use Operation Gladio and the finance system to blackmail all the politicians. And your three form of power, economic, political, and military, is captured by this class and the ones that come behind it.
1:05:22
Very well said. You know, it's interesting. You got these people in their mid-30s are getting trusted and put in these trusted positions, you know, dictating America's foreign policy and our military stuff. But how is it that they earn this element of trust? It's because of the connection they all have to each other. They were born into it. From the Blue Blood families. And yeah, do they have some kind of a cult? You know, do they have blackmail on each other? Is there some kind of a cult connection? Probably.
1:05:51
We don't know that for certain. But, you know, it's pretty amazing that it's the same people keep popping up in all these positions over and over and over again. You'd think just by random chance there'd be a few more outsiders. But you don't need blackmail over people that are your inbred relatives. They want blackmail over everybody else. I want to know. I wonder if they're like taught all the.
1:06:17
All these secrets, you know, as they're growing up or is there some kind of ritual when they finally get revealed? And I don't know how that works, but none of them ever seem to spill the beans. That's for sure. No. And I do find it all very interesting. And just to make this applicable to today, you look at the rigmarole that we went through with Pete Hegseth to be the secretary of defense. And these guys.
1:06:47
were the Secretary of Defense and the Secretary of Treasury and all of these other positions, the governor of Europe, you know, under the Marshall Plan, McCloy, at a much younger age than what Hegseth is today. And he's, you know, supposedly inexperienced. Unqualified. Unqualified. Yes. They're already trying to blame the helicopter crash on him.
1:07:18
which is pretty sterile. It's like blaming Trump for the price of eggs six days after he's been in office. After they killed like 22 million chickens. Yeah. Why are eggs so expensive? You ever heard of this thing called supply demand? I don't know. Call me crazy. But it's weird. Our eggs are only $3.99 a dozen. And I get the organic brown ones. $3.99 last week. Well, mine's free. I have chickens. That's the smart way of doing it.
1:07:48
They would not last very long where I'm at right now. We had snow yesterday. I spent a half an hour. We have heat lights in their actual coop that we give them like the run of this area of my backyard. And then we have heat lights and they all are in the coop. They usually were out under the roof of the coop. That's like a porch on a rod that we put across up until now. Now they're in the coop. Very good.
1:08:17
We probably have at least probably two more episodes to do on skull and bones. Um, definitely with one and it could be a really long one or spread it out to two, but there's, we just get into a lot more modern names as we go through the decades of the 20th century. And there's going to be some familiar names and some similar themes. All right. It's a date. Thanks everybody for being here. Thanks. Um, Brady for sharing all of your knowledge with us. Um, really appreciate it. This was,
1:08:46
probably my favorite one so far. Really? Yeah. I thought you were going to like this one, but yeah, love it was, uh, I think you might have just as much fun when we do McCloy because he needs a show of his own, but he deserves a show. Yes, he definitely does. He is probably, he, he definitely rivals love it. Yeah. Yeah. There are two peas in a pod sort of, sort of.
1:09:13
Yeah, thanks for having me. These are always a lot of fun. Not even just doing the homework, but just chatting with you. It's kind of cool because, you know, you've done this. We always learn something from each other every time. And that's what it's all about. Nobody can know all this stuff. There's too much to know. Yes, and that's why I jumped at the chance when you suggested this. It was such a great idea. Yeah, it's been a lot of fun. I'm getting really good feedback on my own channels from it, and I just think we're a really good team, and I happen to agree. All right.
1:09:43
Well, thank you. And thanks, everybody, for joining us. Appreciate it. We will see you at 4 p.m. today. Cheers, everyone. Bye.
Entities here
Robert Lovett35Skull and Bones15Bank for International Settlements8Marshall Plan8Frederick Truby Davison8Operation Gladio7Dick Cheney7John J. McCloy7Dresser Industries7Neil Bush6John F. Kennedy4Brown Brothers Harriman4Henry Neal Mallon4Halliburton4Freeport-McMoRan4Zapata Oil3Sullivan & Cromwell3George C. Marshall3Ferdinand Marcos3Citigroup3North Atlantic Treaty Organization3David Bruce3First Yale Unit3George H.W. Bush3Harry S. Truman3Dulles family3Operation Golden Lily3Douglas MacArthur3Boris Berezovsky3Dwight D. Eisenhower3Korean War3Azov Battalion2Chiang Kai-shek2Lyndon B. Johnson2Gerald Ford2Presidential Intelligence Advisory Board2Henry Stimson2Allen Dulles2Martin Anderson2Soviet Union2
Claims made here
Henry Neal Mallon member_of
Skull and Bones host_asserted
▶ 1:51
“And I think when we uncover all of these connections, you start to draw the latter conclusion. And that's the purpose of this series. Who are the true rulers of the realm? All right, first bonesman we…”
Henry Neal Mallon headed
Dresser Industries host_asserted
▶ 2:22
“He would become a World War I aviator, became a major in World War I for the U.S. Navy. Later on, he would become the president of a company we've talked about before named Dresser Industries. He beca…”
W.A. Harriman & Company funded
Dresser Industries host_asserted
▶ 2:51
“After Dresser's death, Governor Solomon Robert Dresser, the firm, the descendants sold the company to W.A. Harriman and Company, or they took the company public. And W.A. Harriman, Skull and Bones, wa…”
Henry Neal Mallon recruited
George H.W. Bush host_asserted
▶ 3:20
“And that's going to be an important point here. So Mr. Henry Neal Mallon would then hire a gentleman from Yale, also a bonesman later on, to come work for Dresser Industries in West Texas. That guy's …”
Neil Bush member_of
Silverado Savings and Loan host_asserted
▶ 3:53
“He was famous for his role with the Silverado Savings and Loan in Colorado. That's one of the SNL scandal ones that we talk about when we talk about the IRA and Contra. That name comes up every once i…”
John Hinckley Jr. attempted_assassination_of
Ronald Reagan host_asserted
▶ 5:16
“owners and now got down to a single person could own it and they ended up they did a lot of loans to themselves and their buddies so that's absolutely the case so neil bush the unforgotten bush no one…”
Neil Bush founded
Ignite Learning host_asserted
▶ 5:46
“He would go on to found something called Ignite Learning. And that was kind of an international, I want to say it's a computer-based education system very early on. And he raised a bunch of money for …”
Neil Bush founded
George H.W. Bush Foundation for U.S. and China Relations host_asserted
▶ 7:12
“had Congress passing laws to protect some of these oligarchs, but that's neither here nor there. But it's interesting that Neil Bush, whose brother is a president, his father was a president, is buddy…”
George H.W. Bush founded
Points of Light host_asserted
▶ 7:47
“A lot of Bush-Chinese connections. He also founded something called Points of Light, which is supposed to be an international nonprofit. It's supposed to increase involuntaryism around the world. What…”
Dresser Industries funded
Halliburton host_asserted
▶ 9:21
“A lot of these are government contracts. They'd go on in the 80s to purchase Harvester's construction equipment business, which is big, big dig stuff. They would purchase American Standard's Wabco div…”
Dick Cheney covered_up
Operation Blue Bell host_asserted
▶ 10:55
“who was the Director of Economic Opportunity back in 1970. Cheney would go on to become the Deputy Assistant to the President in 74, 75. That was Ford. Interesting is that Dick Cheney is the one who w…”
Dick Cheney oversaw
Operation Just Cause host_asserted
▶ 12:29
“Well, it's always been regime toppling, but it was the transfer from communist to radical Islamist as the boogeyman. Sure. That's Cheney. He's the one who orchestrated all of that. He also oversaw Ope…”
Dick Cheney headed
Halliburton host_asserted
▶ 13:02
“Yes. Yeah, I'm familiar with it. And the only reason we do that, by the way, is to eliminate the competition. Oh, Noriega got a little big for his britches. Yes. Yeah, we've talked about that. And, of…”
Henry Neal Mallon founded
Zapata Oil host_asserted
▶ 14:04
“He paid 50 percent of the money down for Zapata oil. Yeah. And of course, Zapata oil is very important because it's my firm belief that it was named after the Zapata Bay in Cuba. And the reason why th…”
Frederick Truby Davison founded
First Yale Unit host_asserted
▶ 15:31
“The first Naval Air, it's called the founder of the, it's called, sorry, the name of it's the first Yale unit. And it's supposed to be a Naval Reserve Air Unit to protect the seaplanes up and down the…”
Frederick Truby Davison member_of
Skull and Bones host_asserted
▶ 15:58
“D.C. to get recognition by the Navy. He put together 12 Yale undergraduates, and a number of them would become Bonesmen. This is 1916, before he became a Bonesman in 1918. People would call it the Mil…”
Artemis Lamb Gates member_of
Skull and Bones host_asserted
▶ 17:38
“Gets interesting. Some of the other people on that first Yale unit were Bonesmen. One of the names is Artemis Lamb Gates, Bonesman of 1918. He would end up being, again, the Assistant Secretary of the…”
Artemis Lamb Gates married
Alice Truby Davison host_asserted
▶ 17:38
“Gets interesting. Some of the other people on that first Yale unit were Bonesmen. One of the names is Artemis Lamb Gates, Bonesman of 1918. He would end up being, again, the Assistant Secretary of the…”
John Vorys member_of
Skull and Bones host_asserted
▶ 18:39
“Another guy who was one of them was one of the first air people was a guy named John Vorys, V-O-R-Y-S, class of 1918 Bonesman. And he would go on to become a House of Representatives member from Ohio …”
John Vorys carried_out_attack
Operation Block Leader host_asserted
▶ 18:39
“Another guy who was one of them was one of the first air people was a guy named John Vorys, V-O-R-Y-S, class of 1918 Bonesman. And he would go on to become a House of Representatives member from Ohio …”
Robert Lovett member_of
Skull and Bones host_asserted
▶ 22:49
“All right. So let's talk about Mr. Lovett. Obviously, he's into aviation because he's a member of that club. Gets tapped to be in Skull and Bones in 1918. He's the son of Robert S. Lovett. This is Rob…”
Robert Lovett founded
Brown Brothers Harriman host_asserted
▶ 23:55
“Yeah, maybe that doesn't work with reptilians. Who knows? All right, so he gets out of Harvard. I'm sorry, Yale. And Mr. Robert A. Lovett becomes the lieutenant commander in the U.S. Naval Air Squadro…”
Robert Lovett headed
Freeport Sulphur host_asserted
▶ 24:27
“As an investment banker, he becomes a director for a company called Freeport Sulphur and sat on that board or led that company for 25 years. That's the company that would then become Freeport Mac Mora…”
Freeport-McMoRan paid
Richard Nixon host_asserted
▶ 24:56
“Freeport is the company in Chile that was mining their copper that paid Nixon to overthrow and kill Allende. Okay, number one. Number two, Freeport is also in that gold mine in Indonesia, the company …”
Richard Nixon overthrew
Salvador Allende host_asserted
▶ 24:56
“Freeport is the company in Chile that was mining their copper that paid Nixon to overthrow and kill Allende. Okay, number one. Number two, Freeport is also in that gold mine in Indonesia, the company …”
Freeport-McMoRan overthrew
Sukarno host_asserted
▶ 24:56
“Freeport is the company in Chile that was mining their copper that paid Nixon to overthrow and kill Allende. Okay, number one. Number two, Freeport is also in that gold mine in Indonesia, the company …”
Sullivan & Cromwell overthrew
Sukarno host_asserted
▶ 25:25
“in Indonesia, and it was Sullivan and Cromwell and the Dulles brothers that orchestrate this entire thing because it was known in 1933 to be the largest gold mine ever discovered in the world. Freepor…”
Dulles family overthrew
Sukarno host_asserted
▶ 25:25
“in Indonesia, and it was Sullivan and Cromwell and the Dulles brothers that orchestrate this entire thing because it was known in 1933 to be the largest gold mine ever discovered in the world. Freepor…”
Robert Lovett headed
Lovett Committee host_asserted
▶ 30:42
“Financial crimes on very large magnitude. Okay, so Mr. Lovett. He's off to a good start in his career, but there's a lot more coming. Okay, 1941, he became the Secretary of War for Air. War ends in 19…”
Robert Lovett member_of
Brown Brothers Harriman host_asserted
▶ 31:19
“on post-World War II organization of intelligence activities. Yes, this led to the creation of the CIA. I think we got a skull and bones connection to the CIA yet. Have we made that? Just tans and gen…”
Robert Lovett funded
Marshall Plan host_asserted
▶ 31:19
“on post-World War II organization of intelligence activities. Yes, this led to the creation of the CIA. I think we got a skull and bones connection to the CIA yet. Have we made that? Just tans and gen…”
Robert Lovett member_of
Skull and Bones host_asserted
▶ 31:50
“He helps draft what's known as the Vandenberg Resolution, which basically led to the establishment of NATO. Bastard. So think about this. One guy led to the establishment of both the CIA and NATO, pre…”
Marshall Plan financed_via
Operation Gladio host_asserted
▶ 33:41
“But during that process, a significant amount of the money, and I'm not talking chump change, I'm talking a significant amount of it, got siphoned off under the plan of creating Operation Gladio and c…”
Marshall Plan financed_via
Chiang Kai-shek host_asserted
▶ 33:41
“But during that process, a significant amount of the money, and I'm not talking chump change, I'm talking a significant amount of it, got siphoned off under the plan of creating Operation Gladio and c…”
Robert Lovett headed
North Atlantic Treaty Organization host_asserted
▶ 35:38
“John Graham and Gordon Gray. And I want to read this because this is as he's setting up NATO and using the Marshall Plan to basically fund stay behind units. Listen to this statement out of this same …”
Robert Lovett opposed
Azov Battalion host_asserted
▶ 38:39
“It's a pretty important time. It means he's the guy who directed the Korean War. I should also point out that him and Marshall were really vocal in opposing the recognition of Israel in 1948. So he di…”
Robert Lovett member_of
Presidential Intelligence Advisory Board host_asserted
▶ 42:30
“In 1953, he goes back to Brown Brothers Harriman and spends three years this time in the private sector before Eisenhower persuades him to join the president's intelligence advisory board. That's a pr…”
Robert Lovett recommended
Robert F. Kennedy host_asserted
▶ 44:58
“He actually advised JFK to offer him any, quote, any cabinet position he wanted. Lovett declined due to his health. That's crazy. What he did do is he recommended that Dean Rusk become Kennedy's Secre…”
Robert Lovett recommended
Dean Rusk host_asserted
▶ 44:58
“He actually advised JFK to offer him any, quote, any cabinet position he wanted. Lovett declined due to his health. That's crazy. What he did do is he recommended that Dean Rusk become Kennedy's Secre…”
Robert Lovett member_of
The Wise Men: Six Friends and the World They Made book_quoted
▶ 46:35
“Personal assassin. So a couple of books. I got some quotes for you to talk about Lovett. The book called The Higher Circles, The Governing Class in America, written by G. William Domhoff. And I highly…”
G. William Domhoff authored
The Higher Circles: The Governing Class in America documented
▶ 46:35
“Personal assassin. So a couple of books. I got some quotes for you to talk about Lovett. The book called The Higher Circles, The Governing Class in America, written by G. William Domhoff. And I highly…”
Walter Isaacson authored
The Wise Men: Six Friends and the World They Made documented
▶ 47:10
“It's written by Walter Isaacson and Evan Thomas. Yeah, I have that book. Okay. The six friends in the world they made, the six friends they talk about are Dean Acheson, who we've talked about, and he'…”
Evan Thomas authored
The Wise Men: Six Friends and the World They Made documented
▶ 47:10
“It's written by Walter Isaacson and Evan Thomas. Yeah, I have that book. Okay. The six friends in the world they made, the six friends they talk about are Dean Acheson, who we've talked about, and he'…”
Robert Lovett member_of
Presidential Intelligence Advisory Board book_quoted
▶ 48:39
“And Alan Dulles was intimately involved in this. It dealt with the Atomic Energy Commission. So that's in light of what I'm saying. More light. Both rose out of the sparks thrown off by the panel repo…”
David Bruce carried_out_attack
1954 Guatemalan coup d'état book_quoted
▶ 49:06
“David Bruce had somehow retained a relaxed probity, which all but invalidated him for invisible government involvement. It had been Bruce's intervention in the Truman Air move on Arbenz, which is the …”
Tomoyuki Yamashita carried_out_attack
Operation Golden Lily host_asserted
▶ 52:02
“control over the Philippines. Well, that didn't happen. Obviously, American subs started playing havoc on the trade routes going from the Philippines to Japan. So instead of shipping all the goods bac…”
John J. McCloy member_of
Anderson Trust host_asserted
▶ 52:33
“The Philippines, when he makes his triumphant return, which is why he's a hero in the Philippines, they get a hold of a limo driver from one of the Japanese generals who gives them a map or gives the …”
Robert Lovett member_of
Anderson Trust host_asserted
▶ 52:33
“The Philippines, when he makes his triumphant return, which is why he's a hero in the Philippines, they get a hold of a limo driver from one of the Japanese generals who gives them a map or gives the …”
Douglas MacArthur funded
Anderson Trust host_asserted
▶ 53:00
“And so it's the narrative. One of the narratives is a lot of that money ended up in what's called the Anderson Trust has been used to finance covert operations around the world ever since. Now I'm goi…”
John Birch Society targeted_for_regime_change
Robert Lovett host_asserted
▶ 1:00:08
“hotel room out on the balcony. So the real maps were all gone. He had his own interpretation of them, which only he knew about. So they didn't kill him. But the John Birch Society was in on all of thi…”
Martin Anderson member_of
Anderson Trust host_asserted
▶ 1:00:58
“The bottom line is we're talking about probably the biggest treasure in the history of mankind. This is bigger than King Solomon. Oh, it was trillions and trillions. Yes. And that's all controlled tod…”
Robert Lovett member_of
Anderson Trust host_asserted
▶ 1:00:58
“The bottom line is we're talking about probably the biggest treasure in the history of mankind. This is bigger than King Solomon. Oh, it was trillions and trillions. Yes. And that's all controlled tod…”
Manuel Roxas funded
Citigroup host_asserted
▶ 1:01:30
“Roxas, the guy that kind of was the, he found tens of billions of dollars worth of gold in his legitimate gold bind. He also had, there's two guys. One of them had actually found one of the mines and …”
Citigroup laundered_money_for
Manuel Roxas host_asserted
▶ 1:02:55
“Just a friendly reminder that both Citibank and Chase Manhattan are both banks with deep skull and bones and Rockefeller connections. Correct. So the accountant and the heir shows up at Citibank in Ne…”
Skull and Bones funded
Operation Gladio host_asserted
▶ 1:04:25
“Yeah. And I mean, again, they're at the helm, you know, because obviously they're old enough graduating in that class. They're old enough by the time World War Two comes around to be in all of the key…”
Robert Lovett member_of
Skull and Bones host_asserted
▶ 1:08:17
“We probably have at least probably two more episodes to do on skull and bones. Um, definitely with one and it could be a really long one or spread it out to two, but there's, we just get into a lot mo…”