The Colonel's Corner and War Hamster Brady- Secret Societies meets Operation Gladio 250404
1:11:49 · recorded 2025-04-04
Transcript
0:00
Hi, everyone. Welcome to another installment of Colonel Roxanne Towner, myself and Warhamster Brady in a deep dive into secret societies specializing during this initial phase in the Skull and Bones. What do you got for us today, Warhamster? All kinds of fun stuff. You know, we've been focusing a lot on all the business connections to the Skull and Bones alumni.
0:28
how they end up in these different seats of government influence, whether it be foreign policy to international investing. Espionage has always been about investment bankers and lawyers, and we're seeing that quite a bit. Today, we're going to see some connections that bring up a little closer to some of these foundations that we want to get into. And, you know, you'll see the same connections over and over again. It's just too many times to be a coincidence.
0:54
And I'm getting ready to officially call Skull and Bones no longer the order, but the order of Forrest Gump. Because they just keep showing up in the damnedest places. And we're going to give you some more examples of that today. Allow you to draw your own conclusions. If this is just a nice little regular fraternal club, there's something more to it. Yep. Did you go live on Rumble? It's not showing for me. You'll probably take a minute. Yeah, I got it now. Okay. I like looking at that chat too.
1:25
So should we jump in? Yep. All right. The first gentleman we're going to look into today, and again, we're doing this chronologically because that just made sense to do it that way. First guy I want to look at today is a gentleman by the name of Evan Galbraith. And I got a picture of Evan coming up right here. It's Evan Galbraith.
1:56
People may recognize the face. We're getting into modern times now. You can see there on the chyron down below, they mention Rumsfeld, so that's where we're going with that one. All right, so why is Mr. Galbraith? You know, real quick, I thought we'd get through this 1950s pretty fast, but I started going in a deep dive on a few of the characters, and there was just no way we could rush through. We had this stuff we just can't skip over, and this is one of them.
2:27
Well, in 1950s, critical, obviously, because this is the beginning of Operation Gladio. You know, the CIA is formed in the late 40s. You have now a standing military for the first time ever in our history in the late 40s. So the 1950s is critical. Funny you should mention that because Mr. Galbraith has got some ties and connections there. So he's born in 1928 in Toledo, Ohio.
2:57
Comes to Yale. It was a close friend and classmate, of course, of William F. Buckley, Bonesman, who we've discussed before. Yep. The father of conservatism. You want to guess where Evan Galbraith went to law school? Harvard. Oh, of course. Okay. The pipeline continues. Okay, so he gets out of Harvard Law. He goes active duty in the Navy from 1953 to 57. So right after the Korean War.
3:28
Yeah. You know, it's interesting how these guys, you know, these are Ivy League graduates and they keep going into our military as officers. And that's one of the connections we haven't talked enough about is all these Ivy League connections to the brass in the military. We've seen it over and over again, you know, with the gatekeepers, et cetera. So when he's in the Navy, he was attached to the CIA from 53 to 57. So he was like a Navy liaison to the CIA. Yeah, by the way, there's no such thing as that.
3:59
So he was basically in the CIA posing to be in the Navy. But go ahead. Yeah, it's in his bio. It's loud and clear. But like you said, it's right when Gladio is getting started. And there he is. So in 1960 to 61, he becomes a confidential assistant to the Secretary of Commerce, a guy by the name of Frederick Mueller. Now, I looked it up and he is not related tangentially to Bob Mueller, the former FBI guy.
4:32
But while I was doing that, it was kind of interesting. It turns out that Robert Mueller's father, which I did not know until earlier this week, Robert Mueller's father was an executive of one of these companies on the insiders known as DuPont. I did know that. And that is crazy because it explains so much as far as protecting the oligarchs.
4:57
It makes a ton of sense. I mean, that's really what we do. Before there was Gladio, a regime change stuff. DuPont was right down there in South America making their money in food and shipping. So, yeah, that is definitely pretty much down there at the square one. So Secretary of Commerce Department, Secretary of Commerce is really interesting. I wanted to read. This is great from the website. The U.S. Secretary of Commerce heads the Department of Commerce and is responsible for promoting economic growth, job creation.
5:26
Here comes sustainable development while advancing U.S. business interests, both domestically and globally. So I've got to say a couple of things here. First of all, when you first come into the military and you have no military experience, you are never detached to a agency. You cannot represent the Navy because you don't know a damn thing about the Navy. OK.
6:02
So under no in no time in history would somebody as a brand new officer in the United States Navy be attached to the CIA. So why was he attached to the CIA? Yeah. And that's the connection here. Really, his only real job skills to that point is he was a member of Skull and Bones, a secret society, and he went to Harvard Law. Those are his credentials.
6:29
Yes. So he is not a Navy liaison to the CIA because he's not really actually even in the Navy because he doesn't know a damn thing about it. So I just that that's a foot stomper for me. No, no, that's it's important to bring that up because it really highlights that it's who you know, not what you know. Yes. He was part of a secret society, maybe went through some secret rituals, but whatever. He could be trusted. Whereas somebody who's, you know, 10, 15 years in the Navy.
6:58
that didn't have the same background couldn't be trusted. Correct. So also I want to point out that the Secretary of Commerce, over all of these decades of researching into Operation Gladio, all play a pivotal role because why are we cooing all of these countries to steal their resources and open up their markets to the oligarchs in the West? And who does that?
7:28
The secretary of commerce is the action officer for the oligarchs to go into these foreign countries after they regime changed. And so, again, let me just reemphasize this. This guy has no skills. How did he become a quote unquote confidential assistant to somebody significant enough to be the secretary of commerce?
7:57
When basically now his only credentials is the CIA. And under Dwight D. Eisenhower, I might add, who was the creator as from the U.S.'s perspective of Operation Gladio. Well, you've already nailed home the conclusion that we were going to get to, but we're going to hammer it home even further because that's exactly correct. Just last week, we just talked about the Export-Import Bank doing the exact same thing. And these people have their people as the gatekeepers.
8:25
or the bottleneck positions, they were all connected to the same families over and over and over again. It's not a coincidence. All right. So what was going on at that point in time, the Secretary of Commerce was pretty darn important. They were doing some things like the export expansion program, where they were reorganizing the Bureau of Foreign Commerce. They were trying to counter Soviet influence. That was their excuse.
8:54
This comes right on the heels of Sputnik and the great scientific explosion. They're trying to open overseas trade centers. And, of course, they started the first trade center was nowhere other than City of London, 1961. The Department of Commerce was in there trying to integrate Western Europe's economic growth coming out of World War II. This guy, what do we call him? The confidential assistant.
9:28
commerce is creating the following entities, the EEC, that's the European Economic Community, the OEEC, the Organization for European Economic Cooperation, and of course, the Council on Foreign Economic Policy. This is technocratic speak. This is how the bureaucrats do things. They get their people in these positions of these quasi-governmental organizations, and that's how they basically supersede national laws and sovereignty.
10:00
All of these are the predecessor of the European Union, which, of course, is absolutely the poster child for what they want to do with the technocratic state and the Great Reset. Okay, what else are these guys doing? They create something called, and you're going to love this one, the Development Loan Fund, the DLF. Yeah, that's where we give technical investment to less developed nations. Called bribes. Yeah, which is all part of the... Money laundering. Exactly.
10:34
During this time period, while I was there, they created the IDA, the International Development Association. Always this international development, same names, same terms. And I was supposed to tell me if you stop me, if you heard this before, this was aimed to counter Soviet economic outreach. Yeah. So Mr. Galbraith has got a very interesting start to his career. So he spent a lot of time over in Europe and he spends the next 20 years in Europe as an investment banker.
11:05
He started a company called Morgan Guarantee in Paris. I believe that is a division of Morgan Stanley. Basically, he was selling and designing bonds, which is going to get pretty wonky on what that's all about. So the CIA guy turned confidential assistant to the Secretary of Commerce while they're spreading all of this democracy and overthrowing governments throughout Eisenhower's tenure.
11:34
becomes an investment banker in Europe. Yeah. So while, while going on, okay. Yeah. For all the gladiator stuff's going on in Europe, he's on the financial end of the same deal and underwriting a lot of the bonds. Okay. That's probably worth a, Oh, his next job is interesting. Remember the company we talked about, the one of the investment banks we talked about in the last couple of weeks, Dylan Reed. Yes. Yep. He becomes the managing director of Dylan Reed in London in 1969.
12:06
Of course he does. Not what you know, it's who you know. He becomes the U.S. ambassador to France under Reagan from 1981 to 85. In the 1990s, he's the advisory director for Morgan Stanley in New York City. He came back stateside after spreading his wealth of knowledge in Europe. Then he becomes the chairman of the board of none other than William F. Buckley's paper, the National Review. Which is basically a CIA front.
12:42
We've, yeah, we covered that with three, four weeks ago. Sure. It seems like more fun. He's on the board of directors of a company called group. This is going to be French. So I'm going to butcher it. Group Legardet SA in Paris. Legardet is a very big conglomerate in Europe together with a company called Daimler Benz. They control the EADS.
13:10
Which is the defense industry. Exactly. It's the European Aerospace and Defense System, Europe's largest defense contractor and the principal owner of Airbus. Yeah, so it would be like an equivalent of owning Boeing or being at the head of Boeing or Lockheed. Funny you should mention that. They're about to come up again, those companies. But first, Daimler-Benz. We've got to say something about that. Okay. Early Nazi ties.
13:40
They were Hitler and Mercedes-Benz. There's a book called Mercedes and Peace and War. It's a very interesting read if you want to hear about that, how the Nazis were financed. Before the Nazis were in power, Daimler-Benz was in bed with them. And then, of course, when they got into power, they switched to military production. Yes. They got in a lot of trouble. Their name besmirched because they used forced POW labor to build cars and weapons.
14:12
But of course, being the good company that they are after World War II, in 1988, they actually admitted the culpability and paid a whopping $12 million in reparations. But we talk about, you know, what is fascism? It's the marriage of the business world, you know, with the government. Yes. This is one of the poster, this is one of probably the two or three most important companies in Germany when the Nazis came to power. And of course, we've already talked about ad nauseum.
14:41
how many U.S. investment banking ties there are to financing the Nazis, and how many skull and bones connections there are to those investment banks, including Brown Brothers Harriman, Prescott Bush, et cetera. So just to bring that full circle, that's that Daimler Benz. So what does Mr. Galbraith do next? Pretty busy guy for someone who's not a household name. He becomes the chairman of LVMH, which is, of course, the parent of Louis Vuitton. Side note.
15:18
In 22 through 27, he is the Secretary of Defense representative to Europe and NATO under none other than Donald Rumsfeld. So he's right back around to Operation Gladio. That's crazy. Uh-huh. He, more recently, is a member of the New York Young Republican Club. Because why not? Got to influence.
15:59
You've got to help shape conservatism, especially when you're working with the National Review. And when I say that means you've got to shape the neocons, the next generation. He is a member of an organization called the Center for Security Policy. Yeah. Oh, yeah. This is the anti-Muslim think tank founded by Frank Gaffney Jr., who is, of course, the Assistant Secretary of Defense for International Security Affairs under Reagan.
16:36
The donors for the Center for Security Policy are interesting. First of all, the SPLC labels them a hate group. Of course, they do. But the donors include, are you ready for this? Boeing, General Dynamics, Northrop Grumman, Raytheon, and General Electric. Yeah. So they're the war hawks that, and just so that.
17:02
The way they came up in my research is when we transitioned from, I don't remember exactly when they were founded, but when we transitioned from the Soviet Union being the boogeyman to, oh yeah, that makes perfect sense because it was in 87. They are the formation of the new.
17:30
It radical Islamic terrorist being the new boogeyman. Everything that they had originally focused on was building the case that the radical Islamic terrorists were basically there. I mean, they didn't say this, but it was they built the case for the radical Islamic terrorists being the boogeyman versus the communist of old because the Soviet Union collapsed. And this was right in the transition of that happening. So he was a part of it.
18:01
Yeah. I knew you'd pick up on that one. The timing was. And just to hammer that point home, these are the same radical Islamist groups that the CIA founded. So you got people on both sides of the fence, all with the same skull and bones connections. So they fund it. And then they set this guy who started out in the CIA in a position at a think tank to write all the literature that demonizes the thing that they created.
18:28
To create that fear. Yeah, it's the Hegelian manufactured crisis. It's exactly what it is. I mean, we can see it so clearly now in retrospect. I've got to mention that that group has Kellyanne Conway ties. Of course. So Evan Galbraith, what's he been doing lately? Well, you believe he sat on as a director of the Council on Foreign Relations? I do believe that.
19:06
I would be surprised if he hadn't. And my favorite, my favorite is he was a prominent member of something called the Bohemian club in San Francisco. Really? He loves some secret societies. Yes, he does. We, we should probably do an episode on Bohemian club at some point. I know a lot of other people dove into that, but we can probably add some ties to it. Probably. Yeah. And of course, Mr. Go ahead.
19:37
Well, since it goes back to Eastern Europe out of the St. Hubris Club in the Bohemian area of Europe. So and we've dug into that, too. So, yeah, we should do a show on that. I'm reading the Rumble chat and we've got a Shirley Reschooling who has recently been introduced to your work.
20:04
She says, embarrassed to admit I'm from the UK. I deplore what is being done and has been done in my name. Well, congratulations on being wide awake. And we feel the same way over here on this side of the Atlantic. We mentioned the radical jihadists. That came from the British. They are the ones who created the Muslim Brotherhood. So we learned it from y'all. Anyways, welcome. Okay, he is now dead, buried at Arlington Memorial.
20:34
But I thought he was a pretty guy we couldn't quite skip over. Galbraith was buried at Arlington with his three years of non-Navy bastard. You don't miss much, do you? Oh, my gosh. It's so insulting. All right. Next guy we want to look at. How about a guy by the name of Ginsberg? And I'll show you what he looks like right about now.
21:21
This is a gentleman by the name of Thomas Henry Ginsberg, Bonesman class of 1950. Looks like he's got himself a little arm candy. So why is Ginsberg important, you might ask? He's born in 1926 to a Jewish family in Manhattan. He's like, I believe, only the second or third Jewish Bonesman we've ever had. Once again, addressing the idiotic Internet fallacies that the Jews run the world.
21:54
I think quite clearly we've stated that there's some other people that have a pretty big seat at the table as well. And most of these Eastern establishment families and a lot of the, you know, across the pond, British contemporaries, like at the round table, the Protestant ties are in the case of England, Anglican church ties. And that is not something you would consider strictly pro-Jewish.
22:17
In fact, you could probably say that the Puritans in America were about as anti-Jewish. The Jews couldn't even get a job on Wall Street until after World War II at some of the prominent banks. They had to form their own. So he volunteers. He's born in 1926, which means he would have been 18 years old in 1944. But he volunteers for World War II to his credit. He's a U.S. Marine who won a Purple Heart on Iwo Jima. So props to Mr. Ginsburg for his service.
22:50
Then he goes to Yale. Of course, he's a classmate of Buckley. What he's known for mostly is he became the president of Viking Press, which is a very big publisher. It was founded by his father, and I thought it was interesting because he was good friends with an employed one, Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis. Well, Viking gets purchased by Penguin Books in 1975, and Onassis bails on the firm.
23:19
After someone published a book called Shall We Tell the President? And what is that about? It's a fictional political thriller that depicted an assassination plot against fictitious U.S. President Ted Kennedy. And Jackie didn't like that and bailed on him. That's interesting. Yeah. Nothing too deep or dark. But when you're in publishing, though, you control what people read to some degree. You control what people think by reading. Yeah.
23:49
And we talked about that almost two years ago when we did the Robert Maxwell show. And for those who haven't seen that yet, Robert Maxwell, right after Sputnik was launched, decided there was this huge boom in scientific spending and everything like that. And Robert Maxwell created a near monopoly on peer-reviewed studies and published and published. And he basically determined who and what gets published.
24:18
Robert Maxwell has ties to MI6, Mossad, and probably the CIA as well. They wanted to control what we were thinking going back a long way. And now we see they're in the U.S. book publishing business as well. So I thought he was worth mentioning. Absolutely. Another quick one, the class of 1951, a guy by the name of Raymond Price. He's interesting because he was a speechwriter for Nixon, Ford, and Bush I.
24:49
Oh, that is interesting. Yeah. Skull and Bonesman. There isn't a whole lot of detail to his life, but he was, interestingly, one of the people who was falsely named by John Dean as potentially being Deep Throat and Watergate. Hold on a second. Didn't he work for Life Magazine? I didn't see it. Okay. I'm pretty sure he did because
25:24
In looking at, you know, obviously I look at the CIA a lot. He came up in a book that was talking about hiding a whole bunch of that, like the Zabruder film of JFK's assassination. And, you know, we know that Life magazine, Time Life magazine played an intricate part in what we were just talking about. The writing to shape opinion in narratives.
25:53
of the CIA. And I'm, I'm pretty, yeah. Okay. I'm looking at it right here. Yeah. He worked at Life Magazine in 1957. Shall we remind everybody who founded Life Magazine? Go ahead. Oh, I don't know. Colin Benjamin, Henry Luce. Oh, and he also was at the American Enterprise Institute.
26:21
which for all of you guys who don't know, I did do a deep dive into that. That's another CIA front. So FYI. Well, appreciate the additional information. I somehow skipped over that. So good nuggets. Okay. Who do we want to go to next? Yeah, this guy is going to take a while. So we'll jump right in and we want to go into deep detail on him. All right. Our next bonesman.
27:02
Hang on. Looking for him. There he is. This is a gentleman by the name of William H. Donaldson. I know him. I thought you might. Well, why do we feature him? He's a Bonesman class of 1953. He was born in 1931 in a place called Buffalo, New York. There's so many from there. Figured I wouldn't be able to move past that very quickly.
27:48
And those of you who are new to the series, Wild Bill Donovan's hometown was Buffalo, New York. And there's a lot of nefarious characters and a lot of very, very, very, very rich people that are originally from Buffalo, New York. Yeah, you're the one who turned me on to the Buffalo Connections, and now I can't not notice it. It keeps showing up. It does. I want to go back into a bunch of old notes and see what I missed on that by not picking up that connection, but yeah.
28:17
You know, there's a few of these places, Stanford, Connecticut, Buffalo, New York, Cincinnati, Ohio. Yeah. Yeah. Okay. So, um, Oh, interesting. His wife, Donaldson didn't come from a really notorious family. They were probably upper middle class, but his wife was a woman by the name of Jane Phillips Waring. And she is the daughter of someone called Roy Cleveland Waring, who is a very successful Buffalo businessman.
28:52
in real estate and insurance. Ooh. Yeah. We bring that up. We emphasize that because we've seen a lot of these people be execs at insurance companies because they do control vast amounts of capital. So that's where Donaldson comes from. Oh, by the way, his wife, direct descendant of Miles Standish. Oh, my gosh. Yeah, so very old money. I don't think it gets much older than that in America, does it? No.
29:29
Okay, so what's Donaldson done to make him worth our notice? Once again, we've got a bonesman. He serves as the first lieutenant in the Marines in Japan and Korea in 1953 to 55. This is right after he got out of Yale. He becomes, tell me if this sounds familiar, he's the aide-de-camp to the commanding general of the 1st Provisional Marine Air Force.
29:58
I'm sorry, Air Ground Task Force, which I believe was Brigadier General Edward Craig, but I can't verify that. Wait a minute. He was only in the service for two years and he's an aide-de-camp? Uh-huh. No. No. No, that doesn't happen. It's happened twice today. Yeah. No, no, no. Okay, keep going.
30:34
Well, let me just say this for you guys that don't know. There is a ladder of military progression. And every four-star general, probably every three-star general, has at some point served as an aide and an executive officer later on. So the executive officer kind of is like your stamp. The aide.
31:04
is, excuse the terminology, but it's a butt boy. As an aid, you kind of go around and wipe their mouth everywhere they go. You are literally like a servant and that servitude position exposes you to that entire world.
31:26
The rank of those people, you have to actually know something, right? You don't get that job as your first job. You are normally a junior officer, like a captain, but you don't have it as your first job, unless you're a bonesman, apparently. Okay, keep going. With deep Buffalo connections. And that's all he had. That's his whole resume at this point, is he's from a wealthy Buffalo family, married in a wealthy Buffalo family, and he went to Yale and was in Skull and Bones. That's all we have on him. But he gets this position.
31:55
And, of course, that means he gets to meet everybody. But why does he get trusted with all these insider jobs? Yes, because he's skull and bones. Mm-hmm. It's a point that we just keep hammering home, and it's very true. He comes back, goes to Harvard, and gets his MBA in 1958. Begins his career at a bank. So how old is he now? He's 27 years old.
32:26
And it begins a career at a bank called, a bank and brokerage firm called G.H. Walker and Company. Like in Bush Senior? This company was founded in 1900 by a gentleman by the name of George Herbert Walker. Oh, yeah. So like the Walker in the Bush family, Walkers. Exactly. The same family that had the slave ship captain that got mutinied. That Walker family.
33:00
You know, I had a resume that would have matched this guy. I wonder if I would have applied for a job when I would have even gotten an interview. No, because you're not skull and bones, dude. That's exactly right. We've already done the Walker's ad nauseum, so I'll skip over that part. So this is where it gets really interesting. He returns to Yale, and he found something called the Yale School of Management. This is a big deal. He's the dean and professor of management studies.
33:41
You hear about the managerial revolution, which is very similar to technocratic party, the managerial elite that actually runs the world. They run all these NGOs, these international organizations. That's what the school of management teaches. He is prepping basically young global leaders, world economic forum type people. That is what the Yale school of management does. And he is the founder of this whole concept. The technocratic movement is.
34:09
you know, pretty much died in the 1930s, but it was very prominent in the Eastern seaboard, especially at Columbia university. So this is what the Yale school of management is all about is teaching the whole bureaucratic aristocratic revolution. And that's what we're fighting against today. You want to know what the deep state is in America, the administrative state, the bureaucratic state, the people in DC, which is 94% voting Democrat that creates a, you know, you can't get a fair jury trial in DC that all the people that get hired in the government come from.
34:37
Programs like the Yale School of Management. And this is the very first one. This is the founder. And he's a bonesman. Let me make another tie there, though, real quick. So remember that all of these universities to do this stuff gets grants from the government. So he's the one that would be producing the authoritative legal studies, business studies.
35:09
all of those types of things to justify what the government is going to do. And, of course, they also get their endowments from these foundations, which, of course, we'll get into very soon. We're going to deep dive into foundations, but basically they control who's going to get hired. So obviously, and this is Yale University, so you're talking about some of the most powerful foundations and endowments in the world, and they decide he's worthy of creating an entire school of management. Correct. Here's his vision in his own words.
35:42
He wants to form students who could easily and seamlessly flow between public and private management roles. To control the world. They left out that part. Well, that's working. They've come a long way down that path. The whole concept of flowing seamlessly in and out of public and private sector, that is basically talking about fascism. Yes. This is the mercantilist system. It is fascism.
36:17
And we have the most prominent universities in the world creating an entire school of management to teach people how to become good little fascists. Yes. That's a great way of saying it. And this is the father of it. So they got some interesting alumni from the Yale School of Management. I'll just name a few, show you how prominent they are. Indra Nooyi, 1980 Yale School of Management, who became the chairman of PepsiCo until 2018. PepsiCo? You mean the one that pays for coups?
36:51
Okay. Oh, and by the way, have their own Navy. Keep going. Must be a different PepsiCo. Oh, a guy by the name of John Thornton. Same class, 1980. He became the president and co-COO of a small little bank called Goldman Sachs. Of course. Yeah, Thornton's still around. He's the chairman of Barrick Gold, one of the biggest gold miners in the world. Why does that matter? Most of the major gold mines are in what we'd call third world countries that have been couped multiple times.
37:25
once again, by our Operation Gladio. It's all about the resources. Yep. And this guy from the Yale School of Management, founded by a Cullen Bones member, basically was the president and CEO. Oh, he also is a key figure in current U.S.-China relations. He's a professor currently at Tsinghua University in China. Interesting. Bit of a globalist.
37:59
Another notable alumni, a guy by the name of Frederick W. Smith. Does that sound familiar? Yes, but I don't remember from where. Okay, he's a Yale School of Management alumni, 1966. He is the founder and CEO of a company you've talked about known as Federal Express. Oh, that's why he sounds familiar. Yep. Well, just Smith. It's kind of hard to remember Smiths. And my other real interesting one that came out of there is a guy by the name of Vivek Ramaswamy.
38:35
A lot of people have asked questions about Vivek's background. Well, this is another one to keep in mind. All right. So this Donaldson has done a few other things. Remember we talked about DLJ? Donaldson, Lufkin, and Jeanette? Yeah. That's the same guy. Hang on one second. We talked about that earlier. When we talked about James Buckley.
39:13
Buckley went to work for DLJ Investment Bank, which was founded by the Bonesmen. William Buckley's brother, James, went to work for DLJ, which is co-founded by William Donaldson Bonesmen. These are the junk bond kings of the 90s after Drexel Burnham Lambert imploded. And, well, there'll be another Bonesman in the future that worked for DLJ. They are now out of business. They got acquired by Credit Suisse in 2000.
39:45
Of course, Credit Suisse went bankrupt just a couple of years ago. Yes, they did. And they featured prominently in money laundering cases throughout the years. And you know who bought them? Was it Deutsch? My first employee, the company that bought my first, I used to work for Payne Weber and UBS came in and bought Payne Weber. So UBS owns both.
40:15
Payne Webber didn't go out and disgrace like Credit Suisse did. But it's interesting. All these banking collapses that were overseen by the smartest bankers in the world, the same people that do things like sit on our governance boards and write our laws and international treaties, yet they can't keep their own banks solvent. I'm telling you, every single one of these failures is not a failure. It's a purposeful collapse.
40:44
In order to steal people's wealth. I'm saying you're probably right the vast majority of the time. Sometimes incompetence actually happens or because you're not an insider. But not like the entire savings and loan with all of the nefarious people on the board that happen to be on multiple boards of the exact same savings and loans that failed. And then you have all of the.
41:10
like A.I.G. and you go back and you look at C.B. Starr, the guy that created A.I.G. and he's tied up with the opium trade in China. Yeah. So I don't believe that the majority of these failures are actual failures. But anyway. Yeah. Well, you talk about something systemic. You're going to catch some innocent idiots along the way. And the FNL example is a great cause.
41:34
But really, this is what these people do, why they have the control, the fingers on the controls of all the bureaucracy and all the rulemaking. This is exactly how the cartel system works. You and a handful of close associates, business, allegedly competitors, conspire to write the regulation to create higher barriers of entry so competition can't get in there. Remember, competition is a sin, is the foundation of these people, and that's why they create cartels, because monopolies aren't popular, but cartels are.
42:03
And they do that. They create the regulations. They create barriers for entry so other people can't come in. And then if someone does come in, they're not an insider. They don't get the favorable treatment by the regulators as the insiders do. And, you know, you notice that some banks never go to jail and others do. There's a reason for that. So that is this guy. Okay, what's he do now? So far, he has been a banker, worked for the Walkers.
42:35
He's been a Marine. He's founded a school of management. I found his DLJ direct. And then, of course, he becomes the undersecretary of state for international security affairs in the Nixon administration. Did anything on that resume suggest that he should be in charge, an undersecretary of state for international security affairs? Well, yes. If you know about Operation Gladio, because that's basically what that department does. Yes.
43:10
He's also a special advisor to a guy by the name of Vice President Nelson Rockefeller. Of course he was. As anybody who follows us knows, almost all roads end up leading to the Rockefellers in one way, shape, or form. And we're going to get to them again today. They'll pop up again. His next notable stop is he becomes the chairman and the CEO of the New York Stock Exchange. That's interesting.
43:48
Uh-huh. It's one of the most important regulators. People think it's an exchange, but it's also a regulator. We have to follow NYSE rules quite a bit. They control a lot of the trading that goes on in the world. And this guy gets named as, you know, basically, you know, his whole career is creating a firm that, you know, underwrote junk bonds in the 90s, and yet they make him the chairman of the SEC. Well, sure, because you want a criminal in charge of it. When was he the SEC?
44:19
I'm sorry. Yeah. Next, he becomes the chairman of the SEC in 2003 through five. So he was Bush's SEC chairman. And when was he at the New York Stock Exchange? Just prior to that. OK. It was a bit of an issue in 99, 2000, New York Stock Exchange. All the companies they listed were a lot of the old value companies, oil manufacturing, you name it. And the Nasdaq was just rising up with all the tech stocks.
44:51
If you had a three-character ticker symbol, you were on the New York Stock Exchange. If you had four letters, like Amazon, AMZN, you were on the NASDAQ. And there was a big competition because the NASDAQ was rising really fast in the dot-coms, and the SEC was worried about getting steamrolled. And he was there at the New York Stock Exchange while that little battle was going on. And then gets put in charge. Yeah, then he becomes put in charge of the SEC, and the timing is interesting.
45:21
There's a bunch of stuff going on from 2003 to 2005. One is the implementation of Sarbanes-Oxley, which is a huge bit of regulation. Go ahead. Sorry. So Sarbanes-Oxley is a huge 2,000-page bit of regulation, and it is not fun. It's created in response to the Enron auditing failure, and it created something called the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board, the PCAOB.
45:54
And anybody in the accounting world, audit or finance loathes this bit of regulation. Starbucks rules are a pain in the rear end. And by the way, Enron was not an auditing problem. Enron was a crook problem. But go ahead. Well, theoretically, the auditors are supposed to find that out. But once again, that doesn't happen when they're crooks. You know, what's funny about Starbucks is.
46:23
It might have even been well-intentioned, but has it actually improved anything in our public auditing? Do you have any more faith in the books of some of these publicly traded companies today than you did 20 years ago? Are they still going bankrupt and stealing people's money? Happens all the time. Okay, then no. Yeah, well, if you had my previous career, you'd understand that there really has been no change other than additional regulations, which means you have to hire more people, mostly lawyers, to keep you in compliance.
46:51
And most of those regulations hurt us and not them. Yeah, your cost of funds goes up for that. Yes, it does. So he's also there when they finalized the settlement with the 10 major investment firms over the conflicts of interest after the dot-com implosion. It was a total of a $1.4 billion settlement. He's the one who negotiated that with the 10 biggest Wall Street banks.
47:18
This is what was going on then is you would have a broker dealer, say a Merrill Lynch. They were the poster child for this. Their stock analysts would put a buy recommendation on a stock that just so happened their own investment bankers had underwritten and had a large stake in. So the conflict of interest was overwhelming. And when the dot coms blew up, a lot of people were furious about this. You went back and looked at how could you have a price target of $250 when you know it was worth a zero?
47:50
grew up in the dot-com era and all the scandal and watch this stuff. So I know this, you know, this is like part of my childhood. It feels like, you know, I was working for the wall street banks watching this happen. And yeah, I mean, I can go really deep on this topic, but that's probably get us off our mission. So I'm going to, it's going to leave it at that unless you have anything to add or questions. No, I'm good. But this is the guy that oversees it. So you want to have your person in the gatekeeper position. That's how you control.
48:20
They also oversaw what was called a mutual fund reforms of 2003 through 2005. There's there's some issues with mutual funds at the time. But what they decided the solution would be was to require every mutual fund to have an independent board chair. Now, what do we know about boards of directors? Yeah, you get a bunch of insiders, you know, basically from the elite.
48:56
There's a whole little club they all go to, the country club crew that sits on these boards. The result of this was the rise of this ESG investing and all this social environmental garbage. That's what came out of this mutual fund reform. All of a sudden, these mutual fund managers control billions of dollars of investors' money. It's not even their own money. Basically, they're telling these boards of directors, because they're in there looking at sending their analysts to talk to the company, publicly traded companies, and they're telling you, you need to invest in these ESG social governance BS stuff.
49:25
That's a big part of how that came about. It was because of the mutual fund reforms of 2003, 2005. This is how BlackRock wields all its muscle on all these boards. This is the guy that did that. Everyone complains about how BlackRock and State Street and Vanguard, because they manage the shares of everyone else, because they are the mutual fund manager and they decide they get the power to vote the proxies. This all came from that. Nobody talks about that.
49:57
That's crazy. This is Donaldson, the guy who did it. Yeah, Skull and Bones, which is also known as the Order, which basically has always talked about the New World Order, which is synonymous with the Great Reset, which is exactly what ESG investing is all about, what the Rockefellers talked about. Starting to notice a pattern? We got a pattern emerging yet? We have a pattern. We have a pattern. I just want to make sure it wasn't me just imagining things. All right, so what did he do?
50:31
Just prior to that, he had an interesting position. In 1993, Mr. Donaldson sat on the, he was the chairman of a small little entity called the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. That's where I came across him. Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. Which means they're a war machine, just so that you guys know, because they always name these things backwards. So go ahead.
51:05
Oh, yeah, Carnegie names it. This is an exact quote from him. He says, war could be eliminated by stronger international laws and organizations. He founds this endowment in 1910. Have we had any wars since 1910? Like perpetual war? Yeah, like we jumped immediately into World War I, and then World War II, and then Korea. I mean, this is what the, and the Carnegie Endowment.
51:32
founded in 1910, and I've got to hammer this point home again. The Carnegie Endowment was the very first tax-free family foundation. The Rockefellers came about two months later. They created these family foundations in 1910 while their own lieutenants were down on Jekyll Island, South Carolina, creating the Federal Reserve Bank, which got passed in 1913, along with the income tax in 1913. So they took their entire Robert Barron wealth.
51:58
Put them behind these charitable foundations so they never had a generational wealth, would never pay taxes again while the rest of us got the income tax. That's what these guys did. And I'll hammer that point home every single time it comes up because it's disgusting they got away with that. And then turn around and use that money to send us to war. Uh-huh. Interesting. The first chairman of the Carnegie Endowment was none other than.
52:35
Elihu Root. Oh, my gosh. For those who don't remember, Elihu Root, yeah, was the guy whose law firm. First of all, Elihu Root was a secretary of state from 1905 to 1909. He was a secretary of war from 1899 to 1904. He's the guy that framed civilian governments of Cuba, Philippines, and Puerto Rico. I'm sorry.
53:03
And he's succeeded in his position by none other than Bonesman William Howard Taft. The reason we talked about him earlier was because Bonesman Henry Stimson worked for his law firm after law school. So that's Mr. Root. He is the guy that oversaw the Panama Canal, the Philippines, everything. Yeah, he's evil personified. Yeah, that's your Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
53:33
That's the first chairman. They had another former trustee who's worth mentioning. A guy by the name of Robert Brookings. Of the Brookings Institute? Yes, indeed. So in 1917, he's appointed to the War Industries Board and the Price Fixing Committee. Is that fascism? All the war profiteers have to come knocking on his door, and he decides who gets to make the profits of the government.
54:10
Yep. This is where you get the $400 toilet seats. And Brookings Institute, just so you guys have a point of reference, is very similar, if not identical, to the Chatham House. Go ahead. Yeah, that's the next point I'm going to say. You rank the three. Finish your point after I do this because it's my next little bullet point. Carnegie is listed as the third most influential think tank in the world behind the Brookings Institute and Chatham House.
54:43
Yeah. And so just like you have the RIIA, which is the CFR's version in London, you have Brookings and Chatham House. They set up parallel systems in the city of London and in the United States to run this world order from the Fabian Society. These are pieces of it that we're describing.
55:10
Yeah, and we're going to jump across the Atlantic and talk about the secret societies at the roundtable and all that. We're going to get to that sometime this year. And I absolutely agree 100% with everything you just said. They are actually probably the predecessors for our CFR, Atlantic Council, everything like that. All these NGOs and stuff. The Pilgrim Society. All of that. Yes.
55:40
I'm glad you jumped in that with Brookings. There's a lot there. Talking about Carnegie again, one of their directors of the Division of Economics and History was part of drawing up the United Nations Charter in the first place. So the same little group of people that tried to give us the League of Nations after World War I gave us the UN Charter, which is basically a pathway towards global governance, which is the opposite of sovereign nationality. How about some other Carnegie?
56:15
Chairman, 1945, this guy by the name of John Foster Dulles. Have we come across his name before? Oh, just about a billion times. For those who don't know, John Foster Dulles, brother of Allen Dulles. He was the secretary of state when Allen was the CIA. They are the same CIA and secretary of state. One's the public facing, one's the covert.
56:43
John Foster Dulles and his brother, Alan, are both alumni from the law firm Sullivan and Cromwell, who were orchestrating the coups in Hawaii and the Philippines before we had an intelligence agency. So that's now. Everybody forgets Eleanor. Eleanor was in charge of the intelligence and research section of the State Department that serves as the conduit from the CIA to the secretary of state. All three of them work together.
57:15
So he's a director of the Carnegie Endowment until 1952 when he gets picked by Eisenhower to become the Secretary of State. Right before him, or right after that, there was a, not a chairman, but one of the other high-ranking people on the endowment from 1946 to 1949 was none other than Alger Hiss. Yeah, he actually had to resign from the endowment.
57:49
after he got accused of being a Soviet spy by Whitaker Chambers. Imagine that. But if anybody remembers the McCarthy hearings, Alger Hiss was pretty much the poster child for it. Yes. Definitely makes you wonder. So another chairman or president of the Carnegie environment got a name of Harvey Feinberg. If you don't know the name, you probably will at some point. Because he had a...
58:22
Huge background in what is now known as public health. And he's the one who really founded the Carnegie's efforts into doing things like these public health initiatives, like the Rockefellers did with their 2011 project. And if you think they had anything to do with COVID, I haven't gone too deep into that, but if there's something there, that's Feinberg. He deserves a deep dive. Okay, the next person who served on that board that's worth mentioning is none other than Penny Pritzker.
59:00
She was on the Carnegie endowment from 2018 to 2023. Why do we know her name? Because she's part of the Pritzker family that started out as Pritzker. And Pritzker was a law firm that represented all the Chicago mob. And they were involved in the whiskey prohibition running with the Seagram Brockmans in Canada.
59:28
They're nefarious in every way. The hotel chain that they had originally started out as basically brothels. That entire family was enriched by vices. Yeah. Bought up farms in the cheap during the Great Depression. They built the first high in L.A. in 1957 after air traffic started because it was a brothel. They own Braniff Airlines, the Mormon Group, Royal Caribbean Cruises.
1:00:00
But Penny's interesting. Well, first of all, the fun one is they own what's called Superior Bank of Chicago, which is another bank implosion. They were doing subprime lending, overstated their securitized loan valuation. The regulators came in and said, uh-uh, put in some money. And the FDIC ended up having to seize over basically $500 million, but basically screwed all the unsecured depositors. And of course, not a single person went to jail.
1:00:31
Yeah. And of course found that there was no evidence of racketeering. So that that's the Pritzker family. And of course, Penny was also a secretary of commerce. Oh, there's that position again under Barack Obama. Exactly. And her brother who weighs about 400 pounds, who's now the governor of Illinois thinks he's going to run for president and be the Democrat. He's actually trying really hard to leverage his family money into getting him on the ticket in 2028.
1:01:02
I actually hope he does. What's the new president of that guy? That's who he always reminds me of. Say that again? Chris Christie. Chris always reminds me of Chris Christie every time I see him. They appear to have similar diets. Yes, they do. All right, going back to the Carnegie Foundation. They had a guy who was a president there from 2015 to 2021. Oh, I know this one. I'm just going to pull up his.
1:01:40
image for you yeah i know who this one is go ahead it's burns yep the cia director burns yeah he leaves the carnegie um oops i got the wrong one hang on okay and i can share it he would leave the carnegie foundation to become joe biden's director of the cia
1:02:16
Yes. So the war guy that is running the funneling of money into nefarious things becomes the CIA director who channels money into nefarious things. So it really wasn't even a job change. I mean, this is the same position. He was working side by side with the Bonesman, Donaldson, who's been involved in all this other stuff. Yeah. Burns has an interesting background, and I think we're going to close with him.
1:02:49
He was the ambassador to Jordan from 98 to 2001. Okay. Hold on a second because we need to put that in reference. Jordan has always been one of the behind the scenes in the lap of both the British and the United States. Jordan is a Western puppet. It's not even a real country. Go ahead.
1:03:17
Yeah, before we go into his resume, let's talk about his background first. I jumped ahead because you're going to enjoy this. He was born in 1956. You're not going to believe where he was born. I know it was a military base. Which one? Fort Bragg. Of course. He's not just born at Fort Bragg. You want to pull up the picture of his father? Sure. This here is William F. Burns.
1:03:57
Who was an army major general at Fort Bragg. So he would have been the commanding general at Fort Bragg? Mm-hmm. Pretty down high up there. No, I'm pretty sure that's the commanding general. And for those of you who don't know, okay, the Fort Bragg has one of the largest CIA presence on it.
1:04:26
because of their interaction with the Green Beret Special Forces that are trained at Fort Bragg. So this guy, his dad, is the guy that integrated all of the Special Forces capability into the CIA on CIA missions. And I'm not going to attribute nefarious aims on the military.
1:04:56
Unless we have and we do in some cases have direct linkage because everything these soft guys were doing was based on CIA intelligence. And so if you're if you're not seeking other avenues of intelligence, like from NSA or DIA or somewhere else, which you don't normally do necessarily based on.
1:05:26
that position because the CIA is co-located with you right there. And so it's very interesting that his father would have had that close of a relationship with the same nefarious people. And then he ends up as a CIA director, almost like he's born into it. Exactly. His father had some other interesting stations. He was a deputy assistant secretary of state.
1:05:57
for arms control. He was in the Bureau of political military affairs. He was the director of the U S arms control and disarmament agency from 1988 to 89. So Reagan's last year in office. He was a U S special envoy to the denuclearization negotiations with the former Soviet countries, Eastern block. Okay. Interesting guy, huh?
1:06:38
Yeah. The one thing that I've noticed is you have the denuclearization efforts while at the same time the CIA was giving nuclear capability, if you will, to places like Pakistan. So I just it obviously is places that they can control. So. All right. Back to your son, William Burns.
1:07:10
the CIA director until he's only been gone for two months. If you can believe that 2008, he writes a letter to Condoleezza Rice. I'm going to give this exact quote. This is right where Connie Rice is coming in. Obama's coming in. Hillary's going to do the Russian reset. And he says, Ukrainian entry into NATO is the brightest of all red lines for the Russian elite, not just for Putin.
1:07:44
In more than two and a half years of conversations with key Russian players, from knuckle-draggers in the dark recesses of the Kremlin to Putin's sharpest liberal critics, I have yet to find anyone who views Ukraine in NATO as anything other than a direct challenge to Russian interests. And then he's in charge of creating the Ukrainian war. Yeah, so he had been the ambassador to Jordan. He'd been the assistant secretary of state for Near East Affairs.
1:08:16
He had been the ambassador, the U.S. ambassador to Russia from 2005 to 2008. And when he wrote that, then he becomes the. Yeah, go ahead. Yeah. So he knows what he's doing. Oh, yeah. He talked to these all the Russian people and said he's basically saying don't NATO. You know, Ukraine and NATO is a red line. He's also the undersecretary of state for political affairs from 08 to 11. Once again, what's the secretary of state for political affairs?
1:08:53
So you want to know? Go ahead. But he's one of the architects of the entire Ukraine fiasco. Yes, he is. And then he's the director of the CIA when it takes place. Correct. And he's flying missions over Russia, diplomatic missions, trying to talk to his Russian counterparts and getting nothing done. On purpose. While he's overseeing the covert attacks.
1:09:23
of Operation Gladio's cells in Ukraine into the heartland of Russia. So is that... He's the guy who wrote, well, he was working with Jake Sullivan, of all people, to help draft the Iran nuclear deal. Burns is also the architect of the Afghanistan pullout under Biden. And he's also the guy that's warning the world, straight from Burns, that Putin's desperation because he's losing the war would lead to the use of tactical nuclear weapons.
1:10:04
which has always been a load of crap. Correct. That's what they want to have happen. So that's what I have for today. But the William Burns and the Carnegie's, which tie to the bones, which tie to Export-Import Bank, Chamber of Commerce, Buffalo, New York. How many other connections do we make today? Well, it says Burns actually studied at the University of Oxford, too, which is one of those recruiting grounds for people like him.
1:10:36
Of course you do. With a father like that? Yeah. It's crazy. Yeah, it really is. We got through that a little quicker than I expected. I don't want to jump into anyone next. No, that's fine. We're good. Good stuff, though. 1950s. There's a few more. Okay. And we will be back next week to present them. Yeah, I've got a root canal next Thursday. Well, we will reschedule it.
1:11:13
To accommodate your dental. I appreciate that. I'm going to have all, I'm going to be on, apparently they're giving me some really, I can't even drive myself home. They're going to have me on some pretty serious drugs. So I am not sure we can tentatively schedule for Friday. That's fine with me. Okay. Just, I have no idea how much they're going to kick my butt or not. We will tentatively schedule for Friday at noon and we'll keep everybody updated.
1:11:42
All right. Cheers, everyone. Thanks. Thanks, everybody, for joining us today.
Entities here
William H. Donaldson31Eben Galbraith19William J. Burns16CIA16Skull and Bones15Carnegie Endowment for International Peace10Operation Gladio9World War II8Yale School of Management7United States6Yale University6Soviet Union6Dot-com bubble5Allen Dulles5Daimler-Benz5Commerce Department5Frederick Mueller5Ukraine4Center for Security Policy4Thomas Henry Ginsberg4Buffalo4William F. Buckley4New York Stock Exchange4Penny Pritzker4Ray Price4Vladimir Putin4North Atlantic Treaty Organization4Rockefeller Foundation4Royal Institute of International Affairs3Bohemian Club3London3Harvard University3Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette3Fort Bragg3Philippines3Time Inc.3Credit Suisse3Pritzker family3Arlington National Cemetery2Korean War2
Claims made here
Eben Galbraith member_of
CIA host_asserted
▶ 3:59
“So he was basically in the CIA posing to be in the Navy. But go ahead. Yeah, it's in his bio. It's loud and clear. But like you said, it's right when Gladio is getting started. And there he is. So in …”
Eben Galbraith appointed
Frederick Mueller host_asserted
▶ 3:59
“So he was basically in the CIA posing to be in the Navy. But go ahead. Yeah, it's in his bio. It's loud and clear. But like you said, it's right when Gladio is getting started. And there he is. So in …”
Frederick Mueller headed
Commerce Department documented
▶ 4:57
“It makes a ton of sense. I mean, that's really what we do. Before there was Gladio, a regime change stuff. DuPont was right down there in South America making their money in food and shipping. So, yea…”
Eben Galbraith member_of
Skull and Bones host_asserted
▶ 6:02
“So under no in no time in history would somebody as a brand new officer in the United States Navy be attached to the CIA. So why was he attached to the CIA? Yeah. And that's the connection here. Reall…”
Dwight D. Eisenhower founded
Operation Gladio host_asserted
▶ 7:57
“When basically now his only credentials is the CIA. And under Dwight D. Eisenhower, I might add, who was the creator as from the U.S.'s perspective of Operation Gladio. Well, you've already nailed hom…”
Eben Galbraith founded
Morgan Stanley host_asserted
▶ 11:05
“He started a company called Morgan Guarantee in Paris. I believe that is a division of Morgan Stanley. Basically, he was selling and designing bonds, which is going to get pretty wonky on what that's …”
Eben Galbraith appointed
Dillon, Read & Co. host_asserted
▶ 11:34
“becomes an investment banker in Europe. Yeah. So while, while going on, okay. Yeah. For all the gladiator stuff's going on in Europe, he's on the financial end of the same deal and underwriting a lot …”
Eben Galbraith member_of
Australian National Review host_asserted
▶ 12:06
“Of course he does. Not what you know, it's who you know. He becomes the U.S. ambassador to France under Reagan from 1981 to 85. In the 1990s, he's the advisory director for Morgan Stanley in New York …”
Australian National Review front_for
CIA host_asserted
▶ 12:06
“Of course he does. Not what you know, it's who you know. He becomes the U.S. ambassador to France under Reagan from 1981 to 85. In the 1990s, he's the advisory director for Morgan Stanley in New York …”
Eben Galbraith appointed
France host_asserted
▶ 12:06
“Of course he does. Not what you know, it's who you know. He becomes the U.S. ambassador to France under Reagan from 1981 to 85. In the 1990s, he's the advisory director for Morgan Stanley in New York …”
Group Legardet SA member_of
EADS host_asserted
▶ 12:42
“We've, yeah, we covered that with three, four weeks ago. Sure. It seems like more fun. He's on the board of directors of a company called group. This is going to be French. So I'm going to butcher it.…”
Eben Galbraith member_of
Group Legardet SA host_asserted
▶ 12:42
“We've, yeah, we covered that with three, four weeks ago. Sure. It seems like more fun. He's on the board of directors of a company called group. This is going to be French. So I'm going to butcher it.…”
Eben Galbraith appointed
LVMH host_asserted
▶ 14:41
“how many U.S. investment banking ties there are to financing the Nazis, and how many skull and bones connections there are to those investment banks, including Brown Brothers Harriman, Prescott Bush, …”
Eben Galbraith appointed
North Atlantic Treaty Organization host_asserted
▶ 15:18
“In 22 through 27, he is the Secretary of Defense representative to Europe and NATO under none other than Donald Rumsfeld. So he's right back around to Operation Gladio. That's crazy. Uh-huh. He, more …”
Frank Gaffney Jr. founded
Center for Security Policy host_asserted
▶ 15:59
“You've got to help shape conservatism, especially when you're working with the National Review. And when I say that means you've got to shape the neocons, the next generation. He is a member of an org…”
Eben Galbraith member_of
Center for Security Policy host_asserted
▶ 15:59
“You've got to help shape conservatism, especially when you're working with the National Review. And when I say that means you've got to shape the neocons, the next generation. He is a member of an org…”
CIA funded
Muslim Brotherhood host_asserted
▶ 18:01
“Yeah. I knew you'd pick up on that one. The timing was. And just to hammer that point home, these are the same radical Islamist groups that the CIA founded. So you got people on both sides of the fenc…”
Eben Galbraith member_of
CFR host_asserted
▶ 18:28
“To create that fear. Yeah, it's the Hegelian manufactured crisis. It's exactly what it is. I mean, we can see it so clearly now in retrospect. I've got to mention that that group has Kellyanne Conway …”
Eben Galbraith member_of
Bohemian Club host_asserted
▶ 19:06
“I would be surprised if he hadn't. And my favorite, my favorite is he was a prominent member of something called the Bohemian club in San Francisco. Really? He loves some secret societies. Yes, he doe…”
Thomas Henry Ginsberg member_of
Skull and Bones host_asserted
▶ 21:21
“This is a gentleman by the name of Thomas Henry Ginsberg, Bonesman class of 1950. Looks like he's got himself a little arm candy. So why is Ginsberg important, you might ask? He's born in 1926 to a Je…”
Thomas Henry Ginsberg appointed
Viking Press host_asserted
▶ 22:50
“Then he goes to Yale. Of course, he's a classmate of Buckley. What he's known for mostly is he became the president of Viking Press, which is a very big publisher. It was founded by his father, and I …”
Viking Press front_for
CIA host_asserted
▶ 24:18
“Robert Maxwell has ties to MI6, Mossad, and probably the CIA as well. They wanted to control what we were thinking going back a long way. And now we see they're in the U.S. book publishing business as…”
Ray Price member_of
Skull and Bones host_asserted
▶ 24:18
“Robert Maxwell has ties to MI6, Mossad, and probably the CIA as well. They wanted to control what we were thinking going back a long way. And now we see they're in the U.S. book publishing business as…”
Ray Price appointed
Time Inc. host_asserted
▶ 25:53
“of the CIA. And I'm, I'm pretty, yeah. Okay. I'm looking at it right here. Yeah. He worked at Life Magazine in 1957. Shall we remind everybody who founded Life Magazine? Go ahead. Oh, I don't know. Co…”
Ray Price appointed
African American Institute host_asserted
▶ 25:53
“of the CIA. And I'm, I'm pretty, yeah. Okay. I'm looking at it right here. Yeah. He worked at Life Magazine in 1957. Shall we remind everybody who founded Life Magazine? Go ahead. Oh, I don't know. Co…”
African American Institute front_for
CIA host_asserted
▶ 26:21
“which for all of you guys who don't know, I did do a deep dive into that. That's another CIA front. So FYI. Well, appreciate the additional information. I somehow skipped over that. So good nuggets. O…”
William H. Donaldson member_of
Skull and Bones host_asserted
▶ 27:02
“Hang on. Looking for him. There he is. This is a gentleman by the name of William H. Donaldson. I know him. I thought you might. Well, why do we feature him? He's a Bonesman class of 1953. He was born…”
Jane Phillips Waring member_of
Waring Family host_asserted
▶ 28:17
“You know, there's a few of these places, Stanford, Connecticut, Buffalo, New York, Cincinnati, Ohio. Yeah. Yeah. Okay. So, um, Oh, interesting. His wife, Donaldson didn't come from a really notorious …”
William H. Donaldson appointed
1st Provisional Marine Air Force host_asserted
▶ 29:29
“Okay, so what's Donaldson done to make him worth our notice? Once again, we've got a bonesman. He serves as the first lieutenant in the Marines in Japan and Korea in 1953 to 55. This is right after he…”
William H. Donaldson member_of
Skull and Bones host_asserted
▶ 31:26
“The rank of those people, you have to actually know something, right? You don't get that job as your first job. You are normally a junior officer, like a captain, but you don't have it as your first j…”
William H. Donaldson headed
G. H. Walker & Co. host_asserted
▶ 32:26
“And it begins a career at a bank called, a bank and brokerage firm called G.H. Walker and Company. Like in Bush Senior? This company was founded in 1900 by a gentleman by the name of George Herbert Wa…”
George Herbert Walker founded
G. H. Walker & Co. host_asserted
▶ 32:26
“And it begins a career at a bank called, a bank and brokerage firm called G.H. Walker and Company. Like in Bush Senior? This company was founded in 1900 by a gentleman by the name of George Herbert Wa…”
William H. Donaldson founded
Yale School of Management host_asserted
▶ 33:00
“You know, I had a resume that would have matched this guy. I wonder if I would have applied for a job when I would have even gotten an interview. No, because you're not skull and bones, dude. That's e…”
Indra Nooyi headed
PepsiCo host_asserted
▶ 36:17
“And we have the most prominent universities in the world creating an entire school of management to teach people how to become good little fascists. Yes. That's a great way of saying it. And this is t…”
Indra Nooyi alumni_of
Yale School of Management host_asserted
▶ 36:17
“And we have the most prominent universities in the world creating an entire school of management to teach people how to become good little fascists. Yes. That's a great way of saying it. And this is t…”
John Thornton headed
Barrick Gold host_asserted
▶ 36:51
“Okay. Oh, and by the way, have their own Navy. Keep going. Must be a different PepsiCo. Oh, a guy by the name of John Thornton. Same class, 1980. He became the president and co-COO of a small little b…”
John Thornton alumni_of
Yale School of Management host_asserted
▶ 36:51
“Okay. Oh, and by the way, have their own Navy. Keep going. Must be a different PepsiCo. Oh, a guy by the name of John Thornton. Same class, 1980. He became the president and co-COO of a small little b…”
John Thornton headed
Goldman Sachs host_asserted
▶ 36:51
“Okay. Oh, and by the way, have their own Navy. Keep going. Must be a different PepsiCo. Oh, a guy by the name of John Thornton. Same class, 1980. He became the president and co-COO of a small little b…”
Frederick W. Smith founded
FedEx host_asserted
▶ 37:59
“Another notable alumni, a guy by the name of Frederick W. Smith. Does that sound familiar? Yes, but I don't remember from where. Okay, he's a Yale School of Management alumni, 1966. He is the founder …”
Frederick W. Smith alumni_of
Yale School of Management host_asserted
▶ 37:59
“Another notable alumni, a guy by the name of Frederick W. Smith. Does that sound familiar? Yes, but I don't remember from where. Okay, he's a Yale School of Management alumni, 1966. He is the founder …”
Vivek Ramaswamy alumni_of
Yale School of Management host_asserted
▶ 37:59
“Another notable alumni, a guy by the name of Frederick W. Smith. Does that sound familiar? Yes, but I don't remember from where. Okay, he's a Yale School of Management alumni, 1966. He is the founder …”
Credit Suisse acquired
Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette host_asserted
▶ 39:13
“Buckley went to work for DLJ Investment Bank, which was founded by the Bonesmen. William Buckley's brother, James, went to work for DLJ, which is co-founded by William Donaldson Bonesmen. These are th…”
William H. Donaldson co-founded
Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette host_asserted
▶ 39:13
“Buckley went to work for DLJ Investment Bank, which was founded by the Bonesmen. William Buckley's brother, James, went to work for DLJ, which is co-founded by William Donaldson Bonesmen. These are th…”
James Buckley worked_for
Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette host_asserted
▶ 39:13
“Buckley went to work for DLJ Investment Bank, which was founded by the Bonesmen. William Buckley's brother, James, went to work for DLJ, which is co-founded by William Donaldson Bonesmen. These are th…”
William H. Donaldson special_advisor_to
Nelson Rockefeller host_asserted
▶ 43:10
“He's also a special advisor to a guy by the name of Vice President Nelson Rockefeller. Of course he was. As anybody who follows us knows, almost all roads end up leading to the Rockefellers in one way…”
William H. Donaldson headed
New York Stock Exchange host_asserted
▶ 43:10
“He's also a special advisor to a guy by the name of Vice President Nelson Rockefeller. Of course he was. As anybody who follows us knows, almost all roads end up leading to the Rockefellers in one way…”
William H. Donaldson negotiated
Merrill Lynch host_asserted
▶ 46:51
“And most of those regulations hurt us and not them. Yeah, your cost of funds goes up for that. Yes, it does. So he's also there when they finalized the settlement with the 10 major investment firms ov…”
William H. Donaldson headed
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace host_asserted
▶ 50:31
“Just prior to that, he had an interesting position. In 1993, Mr. Donaldson sat on the, he was the chairman of a small little entity called the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. That's where …”
Rockefeller Foundation involved_in
Federal Reserve host_asserted
▶ 51:32
“founded in 1910, and I've got to hammer this point home again. The Carnegie Endowment was the very first tax-free family foundation. The Rockefellers came about two months later. They created these fa…”
Elihu Root headed
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace host_asserted
▶ 51:58
“Put them behind these charitable foundations so they never had a generational wealth, would never pay taxes again while the rest of us got the income tax. That's what these guys did. And I'll hammer t…”
William Howard Taft succeeded
Elihu Root host_asserted
▶ 53:03
“And he's succeeded in his position by none other than Bonesman William Howard Taft. The reason we talked about him earlier was because Bonesman Henry Stimson worked for his law firm after law school. …”
Henry Stimson member_of
Skull and Bones host_asserted
▶ 53:03
“And he's succeeded in his position by none other than Bonesman William Howard Taft. The reason we talked about him earlier was because Bonesman Henry Stimson worked for his law firm after law school. …”
Robert S. Brookings member_of
War Industries Board host_asserted
▶ 53:33
“That's the first chairman. They had another former trustee who's worth mentioning. A guy by the name of Robert Brookings. Of the Brookings Institute? Yes, indeed. So in 1917, he's appointed to the War…”
Robert S. Brookings member_of
Price Fixing Committee host_asserted
▶ 53:33
“That's the first chairman. They had another former trustee who's worth mentioning. A guy by the name of Robert Brookings. Of the Brookings Institute? Yes, indeed. So in 1917, he's appointed to the War…”
Allen Dulles member_of
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace host_asserted
▶ 56:15
“Chairman, 1945, this guy by the name of John Foster Dulles. Have we come across his name before? Oh, just about a billion times. For those who don't know, John Foster Dulles, brother of Allen Dulles. …”
Allen Dulles member_of
Sullivan & Cromwell host_asserted
▶ 56:43
“John Foster Dulles and his brother, Alan, are both alumni from the law firm Sullivan and Cromwell, who were orchestrating the coups in Hawaii and the Philippines before we had an intelligence agency. …”
Eleanor Dulles headed
U.S. State Department host_asserted
▶ 56:43
“John Foster Dulles and his brother, Alan, are both alumni from the law firm Sullivan and Cromwell, who were orchestrating the coups in Hawaii and the Philippines before we had an intelligence agency. …”
Alger Hiss member_of
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace host_asserted
▶ 57:15
“So he's a director of the Carnegie Endowment until 1952 when he gets picked by Eisenhower to become the Secretary of State. Right before him, or right after that, there was a, not a chairman, but one …”
Whittaker Chambers accused
Alger Hiss host_asserted
▶ 57:49
“after he got accused of being a Soviet spy by Whitaker Chambers. Imagine that. But if anybody remembers the McCarthy hearings, Alger Hiss was pretty much the poster child for it. Yes. Definitely makes…”
Harvey Feinberg member_of
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace host_asserted
▶ 57:49
“after he got accused of being a Soviet spy by Whitaker Chambers. Imagine that. But if anybody remembers the McCarthy hearings, Alger Hiss was pretty much the poster child for it. Yes. Definitely makes…”
Pritzker family represented_by
Chicago Mob host_asserted
▶ 59:00
“She was on the Carnegie endowment from 2018 to 2023. Why do we know her name? Because she's part of the Pritzker family that started out as Pritzker. And Pritzker was a law firm that represented all t…”
Penny Pritzker member_of
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace host_asserted
▶ 59:00
“She was on the Carnegie endowment from 2018 to 2023. Why do we know her name? Because she's part of the Pritzker family that started out as Pritzker. And Pritzker was a law firm that represented all t…”
Pritzker family involved_in
Prohibition host_asserted
▶ 59:00
“She was on the Carnegie endowment from 2018 to 2023. Why do we know her name? Because she's part of the Pritzker family that started out as Pritzker. And Pritzker was a law firm that represented all t…”
Pritzker family owned
Royal Caribbean Cruises host_asserted
▶ 59:28
“They're nefarious in every way. The hotel chain that they had originally started out as basically brothels. That entire family was enriched by vices. Yeah. Bought up farms in the cheap during the Grea…”
Pritzker family owned
Braniff Airlines host_asserted
▶ 59:28
“They're nefarious in every way. The hotel chain that they had originally started out as basically brothels. That entire family was enriched by vices. Yeah. Bought up farms in the cheap during the Grea…”
Pritzker family owned
Superior Bank of Chicago host_asserted
▶ 1:00:00
“But Penny's interesting. Well, first of all, the fun one is they own what's called Superior Bank of Chicago, which is another bank implosion. They were doing subprime lending, overstated their securit…”
William J. Burns member_of
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace host_asserted
▶ 1:01:02
“I actually hope he does. What's the new president of that guy? That's who he always reminds me of. Say that again? Chris Christie. Chris always reminds me of Chris Christie every time I see him. They …”
William J. Burns appointed
CIA host_asserted
▶ 1:01:40
“image for you yeah i know who this one is go ahead it's burns yep the cia director burns yeah he leaves the carnegie um oops i got the wrong one hang on okay and i can share it he would leave the carn…”
William J. Burns member_of
United States Armed Forces host_asserted
▶ 1:02:49
“He was the ambassador to Jordan from 98 to 2001. Okay. Hold on a second because we need to put that in reference. Jordan has always been one of the behind the scenes in the lap of both the British and…”
William J. Burns member_of
United States Armed Forces host_asserted
▶ 1:03:57
“Who was an army major general at Fort Bragg. So he would have been the commanding general at Fort Bragg? Mm-hmm. Pretty down high up there. No, I'm pretty sure that's the commanding general. And for t…”
William J. Burns trained
United States Armed Forces host_asserted
▶ 1:04:26
“because of their interaction with the Green Beret Special Forces that are trained at Fort Bragg. So this guy, his dad, is the guy that integrated all of the Special Forces capability into the CIA on C…”
CIA supplied_arms_to
Pakistan host_asserted
▶ 1:06:38
“Yeah. The one thing that I've noticed is you have the denuclearization efforts while at the same time the CIA was giving nuclear capability, if you will, to places like Pakistan. So I just it obviousl…”
William J. Burns carried_out_attack
Ukraine host_asserted
▶ 1:07:44
“In more than two and a half years of conversations with key Russian players, from knuckle-draggers in the dark recesses of the Kremlin to Putin's sharpest liberal critics, I have yet to find anyone wh…”
William J. Burns member_of
Jake Sullivan host_asserted
▶ 1:09:23
“of Operation Gladio's cells in Ukraine into the heartland of Russia. So is that... He's the guy who wrote, well, he was working with Jake Sullivan, of all people, to help draft the Iran nuclear deal. …”
William J. Burns carried_out_attack
Afghanistan host_asserted
▶ 1:09:23
“of Operation Gladio's cells in Ukraine into the heartland of Russia. So is that... He's the guy who wrote, well, he was working with Jake Sullivan, of all people, to help draft the Iran nuclear deal. …”
William J. Burns carried_out_attack
Operation Gladio host_asserted
▶ 1:09:23
“of Operation Gladio's cells in Ukraine into the heartland of Russia. So is that... He's the guy who wrote, well, he was working with Jake Sullivan, of all people, to help draft the Iran nuclear deal. …”
William J. Burns member_of
University of Oxford host_asserted
▶ 1:10:04
“which has always been a load of crap. Correct. That's what they want to have happen. So that's what I have for today. But the William Burns and the Carnegie's, which tie to the bones, which tie to Exp…”