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The Colonel's Corner The Invisible Government by Dan Smoot Part 2

1:02:20

Transcript

0:01 Okay. I always look outside my window. I have a big double window here in my office. I've got my hands up in the air dancing around to make sure none of my neighbors are watching me when that song comes on. So anyway. What? I have done this. Yes.
0:33 You live a little bit more remote. Yeah, that's true. So me and the dogs are dancing to the songs pretty much daily. Yep. Okay. Chapter two. World War II and tragic consequences. He basically spends this chapter talking about us getting into World War II.
1:02 And just kind of the high points of this is the emphasis that America, even post-World War I, was very isolationist still. And of course, these globalists hated that at the CFR. And they said that it was necessary for Roosevelt to do a few things.
1:32 in order to counterman that, and that it was going to take an event happening in the United States in order to change that opinion. And I want to read this part because it resonates today. It was necessary for Roosevelt to take steps which the public would not notice or understand, but would be inescapably involving the nation in a foreign war.
2:03 When enough such sly involvement had been manipulated, there would come eventually some incident to push us over the brink into open participation. Then any American who continued to advocate our traditional foreign policy of neutrality would be subjected to public hatred, would be investigated and condemned as pro-Nazi, and persecuted.
2:32 for sedition. Does that sound familiar? Almost to a T, which is why history is so important. The CFR was very involved in maneuvering us into World War II. One of the major steps it took was, again, Roosevelt is running for his third term under the exact same platform Wilson did.
3:05 We are definitely not getting involved in World War II. We are definitely not doing that. But the CFR saw a wedge. And guess what that wedge was? Greenland. Greenland. The same thing that's been in the headlines for the last year. Greenland. Greenland was going to be a wedge. The CFR rode extensively on Greenland.
3:35 and said that Greenland definitely was part of the Monroe Doctrine. And it was written about in the Council on Foreign Relations, a record of 25 years, 1921 to 1946, that was published one January, 1947. I'm not gonna read the whole passage that this guy's quotes, but it is very interesting how they,
4:07 staged this discussion quote one further example may be cited of the way in which ideas and recommendations originating at the council meetings have entered into the stream of official discussion and action so unquote so this is exactly what the Fabians did in the UK they would write about it and see the idea
4:33 And then the idea was picked up based on their writings as the think tank per se. And the Labor Party, their academic people in all of the university systems, the London School of Economics, their people that were embedded in the unions, their people that were embedded in the government and the judiciary, blah, blah, blah.
4:58 would all pick up on this and basically enact it without it ever being an official policy. It's kind of like a very subtle way. Here's our new agenda, pick it up. The article went on to say, on March 17th, 1940, a council group completed a confidential report, which pointed out the strategic importance of Greenland.
5:27 for transatlantic aviation and meteorological observation. The possibility must be considered that Denmark might be overrun by Germany. In such case, Greenland might be transferred by treaty to German sovereignty. It was also pointed out the potential danger to the United States if that happened because of its geography.
5:58 Shortly after this, one of our members of our group prepared the report was summonsed to the White House for a personal meeting with Roosevelt. Roosevelt was very interested in this. And he summoned the Danish minister and they signed an agreement that it would be basically ceded to the United States or their perpetual use via treaty. And that's exactly what happened.
6:29 On April 9th, 1941, an agreement was signed between the U.S. and Denmark, which provided for assistance by the U.S. to Greenland in the maintenance of its status and granted the U.S. the right to locate, construct, airfields, port facilities, radio and meteorological installations, as would be necessary for the quote-unquote defense of Greenland.
7:03 The council's report was only one item of extensive research projects that were done for the U.S. government. And then the author goes on and talks about the proximity of Greenland to Canada and the British Isles, which were just a few hundred miles.
7:35 So neither one of those were suitable to take this on because Greenland obviously is much closer to both of them. It was 1,300 miles from the United States, but we're definitely going to do it. So the Monroe Doctrine closing the Western Hemisphere to further European colonization was proclaimed in 1823.
8:05 Denmark, a European nation, colonized Greenland, proclaiming its sole sovereignty in 1921, a full 100 years later, without any hint of protest from the U.S. So it was fine for Denmark to colonize Greenland, even though the Monroe Doctrine supposedly precluded it if it was actually considered part of the Western Hemisphere. But now...
8:36 We're going to pull some shenanigans because we're looking for excuses to get into World War II. And basically setting up a defense slash offense capability long before we're ever in World War II. Planning ahead. So it says the CFR played a key role in getting the United States into World War II.
9:14 and adopted these policies. The redistribution to other nations of the U.S. reserve of gold, which made our dollar the strongest currency in the world, building up the industrial capacity of other nations at our expense, thus eliminating our preeminent productive superiority, which of course we know about, we've talked a lot about, and Antony Sutton's book did a good job of illustrating.
9:44 how the industrialists in the United States was seeding the industrial capacity, not just in Germany, but even after the Bolshevik Revolution in Russia. Instead of putting that effort here and exporting finished goods. The third one was taking away from the U.S. producers of world markets.
10:14 and even much of their domestic market until capitalistic America would no longer dominate world trade. Basically what we've seen over the last 50 years as well. The entwining of American affairs politically, economically, culturally, socially, educationally, and even religiously with other nations until the U.S. would no longer have any independent policy at all, i.e. building this global network.
10:47 He goes on to talk about the, in October of 43, Cordell Hall, Anthony Eden, the foreign minister of Great Britain, who Eden is a Fabian, by the way, and V. Molotov, the Soviet commissar for foreign affairs, had a meeting in Moscow.
11:11 Eden suggested that they created a European Advisory Commission, which would decide how Germany, after its defeat, would be partitioned. Who was going to occupy what sector? The next month, November 43, Franklin Roosevelt traveled to Tehran for the conference with Stalin and Churchill. Aboard the USS Iowa en route to Tehran,
11:42 Roosevelt had a conference with his Joint Chiefs of Staff. They discussed this post-war division and occupation. Roosevelt predicted that Germany would collapse suddenly and that there would definitely be a race to Berlin. The president said we may have to put the United States divisions into Berlin as soon as possible. Harry Hopkins suggested
12:13 Quote, we'd be ready to put an airborne division into Berlin two hours after the collapse of Germany, unquote. Roosevelt wanted the U.S. to occupy Berlin and northwestern Germany, the British to occupy France, Belgium, and southern Germany, and the Soviets to have eastern Germany. At the Tehran conference, Stalin seemed indifferent. He had his own agenda.
12:44 One, urging the Western allies to make a frontal assault across the English Channel on Hitler's fortress in Europe. Two, finding out immediately the name of the man who the Western allies would designate to command the operation, which of course we know now was Eisenhower. And three, reducing the whole of Europe to a virtual impotent entity. Roosevelt approved.
13:15 Basically, they all approved basically this whole collective agenda. Those agreements were outlined in diplomatic papers that was published in 1961 by the State Department in a volume called Foreign Relations of the U.S. Diplomatic Papers, the Conference at Cairo and Tehran in 1943.
13:45 We know that Roosevelt and his military advisors in November of 43 agreed that America should take and occupy Berlin. Yet, a little over a year later, we did exactly the opposite. In the closing days of World War II, the American 9th Army was rolling towards Berlin, meeting with little resistance. The only thing that was slowing them down is German civilians fleeing on the highway system.
14:18 could have been in Berlin in a few hours. However, Eisenhower halted their forward progress. He let them sit outside of Berlin for several days while the Russians were coming in from the east. To the south, Patton's forces were plowing into Czechoslovakia. When Patton was 30 miles from Prague, the capital, General Eisenhower ordered him to stop.
14:53 He also ordered him not to accept surrender of German soldiers, but to hold them at bay until the Russians showed up. Units of Czechoslovakian patriots had been fighting with the Western Army since 1943. They had promised them that they would have their homelands liberated. We know that did not happen. Czechoslovakian and American troops had to ask the Soviets for permission to come into Prague for a victory celebration.
15:26 Western armies under Eisenhower's command rounded up an estimated 5 million refugees and delivered them to the Soviets. All of this occurred because we refused to do what would have been, at the time, easy to do. Who made the decisions to pull our armies back in Europe and let the Soviets take over? Eisenhower gave the orders in his book, Crusade in Europe.
15:57 published in 1948, before the public was well aware of many of the things that had happened, Eisenhower took his share of credit for making these decisions. When he entered politics four years later, Eisenhower vehemently denied the responsibility. He claimed that he was just a soldier obeying orders that had been given to him by Roosevelt. Memoirs of British military men indicate that Eisenhower went
16:29 far beyond his military duty in cooperative efforts to help Soviets capture political prisoners. In a book called Triumph in the West, author Bryant published in 1959, chief of the imperial general staff revealed that in the closing days of the war, General Eisenhower was often in direct communication with Stalin.
17:02 reporting his decisions and actions to Stalin before Eisenhower's own military superiors knew what was going on. Regardless of what responsibility, General, I don't know what superiors he's talking about. Maybe the Secretary of War. He had no superiors in the theater. He was in charge. Regardless of what responsibility Eisenhower may or may not have had in formulating the decisions, which held back our...
17:30 armies from Eastern Europe, those decisions seem to have been from the conference that Roosevelt had with Stalin in Tehran. But who made the decision to isolate Berlin 110 miles deep inside the Soviet-held territory without any agreements concerning access routes by which the Western powers could get to the city?
17:54 According to author Kroc of the New York Times, George Kennan, who was a member of the CFR at the time, persuaded Roosevelt to accept the Berlin zoning arrangement. Kennan at the time was the political advisor to Ambassador John Winant, who was the U.S. representative to the three-member European Advisory Commission, the one the CFR participated in. According to Mr. Kroc's account in the New York Times,
18:25 in 1961, President Roosevelt and Prime Minister Churchill agreed to enclose Berlin 110 miles within the Soviet occupation zone. Wynette submitted a recommendation embracing this agreement. Wynette felt that it would offend the Soviets if we asked for guaranteed access routes and believed that guarantees were unnecessary anyway.
18:51 When submitting his recommendation to Washington, however, Winant attached a map on which a specific allied quarter of access into the city was drawn. Winant's proposal was never acted on in Washington. Therefore, the British submitted a recommendation. Roosevelt rejected the British plan and made his own proposal. The British and Soviets disliked Roosevelt's plan and negotiations over the zoning of Berlin became deadlocked.
19:20 George Kennan broke the deadlock by going directly to Roosevelt and persuading him to accept the Berlin Zoning Agreement, which Mr. Knox called war-breeding monstrosity and a witless travesty in statescraft. Mr. Kroc says most of his information came from Philip Mosley's article written in Foreign Affairs, i.e. the CFR. He goes on to say that,
19:56 Basically, the incredible zoning agreement that placed Berlin 110 miles within the Soviet zone and reserved no guaranteed access was formulated in the committee group. It's interesting to note that Philip Mosley, a CFR member, was Cordell Hall's advisor when the post-war division of Germany was first discussed at the Moscow.
20:27 He succeeded George Kennan as a political advisor to John Winnett of the European Advisory Commission shortly after Kennan had persuaded Roosevelt to accept the Berlin zoning agreement. So basically, the whole thing's CFR. It's easy to see why the Soviets wanted Berlin arrangement when Roosevelt, or why they wanted it. It is not difficult.
20:56 To see the British viewpoint squeezed against two giants who were his allies, Churchill tried to play the Soviets against the Americans in the interest of getting the most he could in future trade and commerce for England. But why would Americans agree to that Berlin Agreement? The author says there's three possibilities. The Americans who set up the Berlin Agreement, which means George Kennan and Philip Moseley representing the CFR.
21:26 were ignorant. Number two, they wanted to make Berlin a powder keg, which the Soviets could use at will, and so could they, which goes back to the strategy of tension. They have a hotspot. Number three, they wanted a permanent ready source of war, which the U.S. government could use at any time, which is basically the same thing as number two.
21:55 Kennan and Mosley and other men associated with them at the CFR are not ignorant fools. The author did not believe that that was the reason they did it. He was left with only one choice, that they wanted Berlin to be able to use in a strategy of tension type future scenario. So moving on, chapter three.
22:28 the World Affairs Councils. There are many interlocking organizations that work with the CFR to quote-unquote educate the public and to bring pressure on Congress to support CFR policies. All organizations in this incredible propaganda web work in their own way towards a common objective that is dictated by the CFR. We see that playing out today.
22:59 It is to create one world socialist system and to make America a part of it. Again, it goes to the heart of the Fabian goals. All of the organizations have federal tax exemption and are designated as educational groups. They are financed in part by tax exempt foundations. The principal ones being for Rockefeller and Carnegie.
23:30 Most of them also have close working relationships with official agencies in the US government that were all set up by their puppets in Congress. The CFR does not have formal affiliation and can therefore disclaim official connections. This is the very way the Fabians told them to set this up. You don't want to be part of it.
23:59 You want to be on the outside with all of your people on the inside and then pretend like you're just educating the public. But the real and effective interlock between all of these groups can be shown not only by their common objective, one world socialism, and a common source of income, the foundations, but also by the overlapping of personnel, directors, officials of the CFR.
24:29 oftentimes are placed in these positions. The Foreign Policy Association, located at the World Affairs Center in New York City, is probably the most influential of the agencies which can be shown as propaganda affiliates of the CFR. And again, remember, this is written in the early 1960s. This is crazy.
24:59 29, 1960, the March-April term, grand jury of Fulton County, Georgia, handed down a presentment concerning subversive material in schools. My, how things have changed in Georgia. This is a quote. An extensive investigation has been made by the jury into the Foreign Policy Association of New York City. Again, this is in Georgia.
25:28 and its Great Decisions Program, which it is sponsoring in our area. This matter was brought to the attention of the Americanism Committee of Waldo Slatton, the American Legion, and several other patriotic groups. We were informed that the...
25:49 Great Decisions Program was being taught in our public high schools and by various well-meaning civic and religious groups who were not aware of the past records of the leaders of the Foreign Policy Association nor of the authors of the textbooks prescribed for the Great Decision Program. Evidence was presented to us showing that some of the leaders and authors
26:14 had a long period dating back many years in which they either belonged to or actively supported left wing or subversive organizations. We further found that invitations to participate in these quote unquote study groups were being mailed throughout our county under the name of one of our local universities. We learned that the prescribed booklets were available upon request in our public libraries.
26:43 The range of the activities by this group has reached alarming proportions in the school and civic groups in certain areas in Georgia. Its spread is a matter of deep concern to this jury, and we therefore call upon the school officials throughout the state to be particularly alert to this insidious and subversive material. We further recommend that all textbook
27:08 Committee members, city, county, and state recognize the undesirable features of this material and take action to remove them from our school. Finally, we urge the grand juries throughout the state of Georgia give matters of this nature serious consideration. On June 30th, 1960, they wrote further. It is our understanding that the FPA, Foreign Policy Associations,
27:42 Great decision program criticized by our former grand jury in Fulton County has been removed from the Atlanta and Fulton County schools. Numerous letters from all over the United States have been received from individuals and associations commending the presentment of our previous grand jury on the Foreign Policy Association. Not a single letter criticized their efforts.
28:12 In September of 1960, the Americanism Committee further wrote, how can we account for our apathetic acceptance of the presence of Khrushchev in America? What has so dulled our sense of moral values that we look on without revulsion that he was wined and dined by Eisenhower?
28:45 And it goes on basically to talk about this foreign policy association. And they actually had at the time in New York City, several Russian born people that were part of the organization. And they were appalled by the fact that the government supposedly was anti-communist.
29:15 Because we're going around during Eisenhower, especially, we're going around the world knocking over governments because we're told they were communist leaning. We overthrew Iran for that reason. We overthrew Guatemala for that reason. We tried to overthrow Indonesia for that reason during Eisenhower.
29:36 They're just pointing out the hypocrisy. How can you go around overthrowing governments and be entertaining them and having members that are devout communists in national policy, quote unquote, educational, that you're spreading throughout the country as educational material, writing textbooks and putting them in school. Until I read this book, I didn't even know that was going on.
30:08 It's crazy. It goes on to say that there was an article written, The Truth About the Foreign Policy Association, that described it as a communist front. And it calls out Vera Michele's dean, who worked for the research director of the foreign policy organization.
30:41 Until shortly after the American Legion exposed her communist ties, which she then resigned. The American Legion documents said that it was functioning as a communist front.
31:04 It goes on to say that there were more interlocking connections and close relationships between the Foreign Policy Association and other organizations, like the National Council of Churches, that they were having meetings all the time. The Foreign Policy Association had been organized in 1918 and incorporated in New York in 1928.
31:33 Council on Foreign Relations was organized in 1919, the year after, and incorporated in 1921. The Rockefeller and Carnegie money was responsible for both the Foreign Policy Association and the CFR. I know, war hamsters over there saying all roads lead to the Rockefeller. I'm channeling him right now. The late U.S. Congressman Louis McFadden from Pennsylvania.
32:04 As early as 1934, said the Foreign Policy Association in conjunction with comparable British groups, meaning the Fabians, was formed largely under the auspices of Felix Frankfurter and Paul Warburg. Frankfurter is definitely a Fabian. He's written about in the Fabian Freeway a lot, and I do mean a lot.
32:32 And by the way, he goes on to be a Supreme Court justice. And he was a devout communist. It says that Frankfurter and Warburg was promoting a planned socialist economy in the United States to integrate the American system into a worldwide socialist system. Warburg and Frankfurter, early CFR members, were among the many influential persons.
33:02 that had been working very closely with Colonel House. And obviously, he was the right-hand man of Wilson and also had spent a lot of time with FDR. From its early days, the Foreign Policy Association had interlocking personnel that worked in close cooperation with the Institute of Pacific Relations. That was formed in 1925 as a tax-exempt educational organization.
33:32 and financed by the exact same foundations that funded the CFR and the Foreign Policy Association. See, this is how the CIA did all this stuff before the CIA. The CIA was just added fluff. This all went on before the CIA. The Institute of Pacific Relations, IPR, played an important role.
34:06 in shaping political opinions in influencing American policy in Asia. For more than 20 years, the IPR influenced directly and indirectly the selection of Far Eastern scholars for important teaching posts in colleges and universities. The CIA definitely picked that piece up afterwards. They also participated in the selection of officials for posts concerning
34:37 Asia in the State Department. The IPR publications were standard material in American colleges. 1,300 public school systems, the military, and millions of IPR publications were distributed throughout America, all courtesy of the Ford, Rockefeller, and Carnegie
35:05 foundation under education. Along towards the end of World War II, there were rumblings that the powerful IPR might be a communist front. In 1951, the Senate Internal Security Subcommittee, under the chairmanship of Pat McCarran, a Democrat from Nevada, began an investigation that lasted many months and became the most important, careful, and productive investigation conducted.
35:37 The McCarran investigation of the IPR was predicated on the assumption that the U.S. diplomacy had never suffered a more disastrous defeat than in its failure to avert the communist conquest of China. The communist conquest of China led to the Korean War. I disagree with that assessment. And tragic mishandling of this war on the part of Washington and the UN.
36:07 destroyed American prestige throughout Asia. It definitely did that. But we had a hand in starting the Korean War, i.e. stay behind units in Korea, just like in Iran before that, or after that, after that. The Senate investigation revealed that the American policy decisions, which produced
36:35 The consequences were made by IPR officials who were traitors that owed their allegiance to Moscow. Owen Lattimore, the guiding light of the IPR during its most important years, a member of the CFR, was considered an instrument of the Soviet international conspiracy by the committee. Alger Hiss, who of course is a CFR member as well,
37:07 and later Soviet spy, was closely tied with the IPR during his long and influential career in the government. Hiss became a trustee of the IPR after his resignation from the State Department. The secret information which Hiss delivered to a Soviet spy ring in the 1930s kept the Soviets apprised of American activity in the Far East.
37:35 Curry, also a member of the CFR, was an administrative assistant to FDR. Harry Dexter White virtually ran the Treasury Department under both Roosevelt and Truman. Both Curry and White were connected to the IPR. By the time McCarran's investigation ended, the whole nation knew that the IPR was a propaganda machine inside the U.S.
38:08 funded by Ford, Rockefeller, and Carnegie, and promoted a socialist or communist agenda, depending on how you want to classify it. The IPR, thoroughly discredited, had lost its power and influence, but its work was carried on without any perceptible decline on behalf of the Foreign Policy Association, of which it was.
38:38 basically functioning as a subsidiary of it. So that's crazy. It goes on to say that the Foreign Policy Association had a thing called the Councils on World Affairs. That was directly tied to the CFR as well. And as a result, the State Department, they had distinguished visitors come all at taxpayer.
39:19 because it was done on behalf of the State Department. To avert criticism that they were nothing but internationalist propaganda agencies, the Councils on World Affairs distributed little literature about anything that it was doing. And they even produced some anti-internationalist
39:55 presentations. They weren't ever given at any of their official meetings. It was basically like subterfuge so they could say, yeah, yeah, that's not what we're doing. See, look, we produced this thing, but that's not what they discussed at meetings. The Foreign Policy Association, through its Council on World Affairs and their Great Decision Program, managed to enroll
40:25 even conservative community leadership into their organization. The World Affairs Center was set up with a national headquarters in New York City as a former formal affiliate of the Foreign Policy Association to handle the directing of various independent councils on world affairs located.
40:55 throughout the country. In March of 1960, the Foreign Policy Association merged with the World Affairs Center to form one organization called Foreign Policy Association-World Affairs Center. They described that organization, the joint organization, describes its Great Decisions Program as an annual worldwide review.
41:28 of U.S. foreign policy. They provided fact sheet kits to distribute to social groups around the United States, like military, American Legion kind of things, rotary groups, all of those types of social organizations. So where are we at? We got 445. I'm going to go ahead and stop right here.
42:04 Because that's basically, we're going to talk a little bit about, well, let me just cover this part and then we'll stop. At the end of this chapter, it talks about also distributing these information packets to the Catholic Church. And it said that our Sunday visitor, which was the largest and most infallible.
42:33 influential Catholic newspaper in America featured articles by this group and had them on their radio shows all the time. It said the interlock between the CFR and the Foreign Policy Association World Affairs Center can be seen by their officers. And let me just run through these real quick. Eustace Seligman, chairman of the Foreign Policy Association, is a partner in Sullivan and Cromwell.
43:05 the law firm that gave us the Dulles brothers. John Nason, N-A-S-O-N, was president. He's a member of the CFR. Walter Wheeler Jr., the president of Pitney Bowes, was the vice president and a CFR member. Gerald Bill of J. Henry Schroeder Banking Corporation was the treasurer and a CFR member.
43:33 Ms. Andrew Carey was the secretary. Her husband was a CFR member because they didn't let women in. Emily Browbrey, executive vice president and director of Standard Oil, is chairman of the executive committee of the Foreign Policy Association. And I guess it's email because it's not a woman. And member of the CFR.
44:05 Benjamin Buttenweiser, a member of Kuhn, Loeb & Company in New York, a member of the Executive Committee of the Foreign Policy Association and CFR member. Joseph Johnson, an old friend of Alger Hiss, who succeeded Hiss as president of the Carnegie Endowment for International War, is a member of the Executive Committee and also a CFR member.
44:32 Harold Linder, vice president of the General American Investors Corporation, an executive committee member and CFR member. And William Luce, L-O-O-S, executive director of Church Peace Union, was an executive member. And he attended the CFR meeting with communist officials.
44:59 in the Soviet Union in May of 1961. And lastly, Henry Siegbert, formerly a partner in the investment banking firm of Adolf, Luisong, and Sons, was an executive committee member and member of the CFR. So you can see, it's basically the CFR. Okay, that's gonna do us for today. And remember, I need to be off by 5.15 today for dinner.
45:31 So open up. Go ahead, Warhamster. I know you made notes. Should I go ahead and say it? Yeah. All roads lead to Rockefellers because they do. Is that crazy? Yeah. No, I mean, we're going to cover stuff in more detail when we get to the foundations and Rockefellers. They're all over this place. Yes. Should we mention that the United Nations building is built in one Rockefeller Plaza, et cetera?
46:05 Yes. Yeah, the name that popped out today was Felix Frankfurter. Yes. Well, you know what's interesting is I've talked about him when I do my constitutional stuff because he's been on the right side of two major issues, both race-based gerrymandering. He was on the right side of that, and he was also on the right side of what's called the quote-unquote political question, which meant courts should not interfere in the things that legislatures should do. That led us.
46:34 When he got overturned, he left the court in 62, and by 64, they gave us Reynolds v. Sims, which is my number one political enemy. I want to see that overturned. But Frankfurter was actually all about judicial restraint, and it was probably the biggest federalist we had on the court during the middle of the 20th century. And it's a total contradiction to the fact that he's a Roosevelt ally and a Fabian. But as a judge, he's got a few decisions I disagree with.
47:02 But overall, I mean, he was probably the guy in the middle of the 20th century that I could stand. The only one or one of the only ones. He is definitely a mixed bag because he was definitely a communist slash socialist. And I guess it does kind of the whole race thing is very interesting because obviously with his.
47:32 The Fabian part of him thinking that you don't want to promote, and let's just cut to the chase, race-based gerrymandering was giving predominantly black people at the time offices because they were designing. And that goes against the...
48:01 the racist elements of the Fabian because they thought minorities were less, they think we're dirt. They think blacks and other people are less than dirt. So that may have had something to do with it. Yeah, the big case he did on the gerrymandering was Gourmelian versus Lightfoot. And I wrote about this a while back. It's a 1960 decision, two years before his death.
48:31 But they actually reversed a district in Alabama because it actually had been gerrymandering. And it is spelled with a hard G, not a – Yeah. But he basically reversed one that was actually a truly racially discriminating map in Alabama. And then, of course, Brown versus education. He had some pretty strong opinions. And do you remember the phrase, all deliberate speed versus gradual implementation? Yes.
49:00 You know, that's the thing that he wrote. So it's a fascinating man. I don't quite understand him, to be honest with you. Yeah. Very interesting. SR, go ahead. Thank you, Colonel. And thank everyone for attending here on Spaces and on Rumble. I'm listening to all of this and all the names of the people that are people that are being called out. We do have some government.
49:32 agencies and government personnel involved, but for the most part, they're taking everything they need to set this up from civilian counterparts. Not a single one of them was elected. Not a single one of them was given any authority per se to do any of this. And it just blows my mind. Well,
50:02 What they do, now there's definitely Fabians that were elected. What we're focusing on right now is that silent part that serves in the shadows. Now, to be clear, the CFR, what we learned yesterday, was the CFR had already redone the Foreign Service. They basically took over the Foreign Service of the State Department.
50:30 They had seated people throughout the State Department and Treasury and some of the other places. They're not normally in the top position, although some of them do eventually get there, because they want to work in the shadows. They work at that layer down. And they do it through front organizations like this Foreign Policy Association, where they can permeate.
50:59 You have to remember the Fabians are turtles. They permeate the entire environment with this multi-track initiative in academics, in civil service, in civic organizations, and they just blanket it. And then they have the right people in government that will enforce.
51:29 this agenda at the time where it says, you know, I don't remember, maybe Warhamsa remembers the thing about you go slowly and then you strike fast like a snake. And that's what they do. They have all of their players where they need them. They have this educational base of people. And then when the timing is right, when they need
51:57 an event to happen, then they ignite that event and all of their people that are invisible to us because we don't know what these associations are. Now, we all do now, but people back then, which is why I found this book fascinating, that this guy figured all of this out while it was happening in the 1960s. He's watching it happen all around him. And that's just fascinating to me.
52:27 Exactly, Colonel. They're the influential layer that nobody talks about. Yeah. They lurk in the shadows. Well, Colonel, it's like we said pretty much in the first couple of videos we ever did together several years ago, is America's foreign policy was not run by our elected officials a long time ago. It's always been done for the benefit of multinational corporations. And that goes back to at least the 1890s. Yes. You know, when we talk about intelligence.
52:57 You mentioned it on today's show. These corporations always had their own private intelligence networks. You need that when you're run by smugglers and pirates. International trade requires an underground in ports, etc. And America could not have a standing intelligence agency until the Intelligence Act of 1947. So it's all done by private. And the most probably influential of those intelligence agencies apparatus was Sullivan and Cromwell.
53:29 Yes. I mean, we've been talking about it for years. You're just going back and bringing up the research that confirms everything we said. Yeah. And the Catholic Church. The Catholic Church has always been a source of worldwide intelligence. Well, we're going to have to talk about the Jesuits at some point, a couple of those other orders like Malta, et cetera. Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. We'll have to do it at some point. Yep. Renee, go ahead.
54:01 Hey, good afternoon, everyone. Just curious if in your studies over the past several years and War Hamster, this applies to you as well. Did you guys come across in especially Columbia University every time something would lead me there? Of course, others, Harvard, Yale, et cetera, but particularly Columbia with about Russian studies and Russian courses and literature for some reason.
54:30 That always surfaced for me. I was curious if you guys had that happen as well. Yes. In the turn of the century, like late 1800s, early 1900s. Yes. Okay. And interestingly enough, the most recent indictment of that $35 million, I made a comment on it today, that $35 million home, the guy tied to that.
54:58 And several of the New Jersey people that have been picked up at that ICE protest were all in Iranian studies. Isn't that weird? Totally. Hey, another question. Can we make the dry tortugas great again? Maybe we should put all the turtles in there off of Florida, the dry tortugas, the old fort. We're not allowed to even kill the turtles down here.
55:31 But the Fabian turtles I'm talking about. I know. Put them in that old fort. I'm just joking. All of the turtles down here, the gophers, the ground digging ones, the sea turtles, we're not allowed to kill any turtles down here. I've changed my opinion of turtles since discovering the Fabians. Why are you so mad? Go ahead. Great episode. Very eye-opening. I wanted to get your opinion on the Freddie.
56:04 Mac and the real estate guy being the DNI. Is that fascinating or what? The insight he may already have, right? What's your opinion about it? I do find it interesting that he obviously has investigated many of the congressional people and their duplicity with their mortgages. And the panic,
56:34 is very interesting to watch. It seems like they have all of the right people panicked with this. Almost strangely so. I think it was a wonderful trigger for all the people that have been doing this for decades. And I am excited to see the outcome of this.
57:02 Last Refuge had made a couple of posts about that as well. And about how now the Senate is tying the renewal of the FISA 702 stuff to the fact that this guy's been nominated, that they're going to hold that up. Like getting rid of the FISA?
57:28 Is that a way to get rid of the FISA and get the Democrats on your side to do it? I mean, it's hilarious how all of this just is unfolding in front of us. Colonel, I want to find the opine. Sure. He's a temporary acting, I guess, is DNI. I think we're going to know a lot if we see just how much Tulsi drops in the next four weeks before she leaves on June 30th.
57:55 If that's the case, if she dumps a whole lot of stuff, which I think she's going to, then this guy is basically a fall guy, and Trump knows he can trust him. He's got the personal resources to withstand any level of attacks, and he's just basically there to administrate that stuff. You'll have guys like Ezra Cohen or someone like that who are actually familiar with the intelligence at his right hand the whole time. So his job is to sit there and he's going to take the arrows.
58:25 And I think you can see that by several of the people that come in, do their thing and leave, that this is a conscious decision to share the pain, if you will, among an entire cadre of people that Trump believes he can trust. Now, of course, he has to be designated acting because he's not confirmed.
58:53 It will be very telling to your point whether or not they actually submit his name to the Senate, because that's the first shoe to drop to make it permanent. But I think it's 210 or 270 days he can perform the job, which is almost a year. It's not like it's a short period of time.
59:20 But to your point, I think you're dead on that it is somebody that can long-term withstand the heat of any persecution that comes along with it, which is why I found the beginning of this section of the book so interesting that he basically
59:46 describes exactly what happens. They create a narrative and anybody that goes against their narrative will be called pro-Nazi, subject to public hatred, investigated and condemned. That describes the Democrat Party, which we know to be the Fabian Party in the United States, to a T. That's exactly what they do. So, and unfortunately for Americans,
1:00:17 You have to use people that are independently wealthy that can withstand that withering attack. And luckily we have some with money and that are patriots because they're walking into a buzzsaw and they all did it knowingly. They knew what they were gonna be subjected to and they did it anyway. God bless them. I don't see any more hands.
1:00:52 We're going to call it a day. Thank you guys all for being here. I appreciate it. Oh, go ahead, SR. Yes, Colonel. I just wanted to say I did post a link to the book in the pill and also in Rumble. Okay, thank you. So if anybody wants to follow along with the Colonel, you can do that. It's online for free. Thank you. Yeah, Donny Vision asked what's for dinner. Ironically, we're going to Ford's Garage.
1:01:24 Yeah, just kind of fit right in with the lesson today. Okay, I have to pick restaurants that's between me and the Cates brothers. And that's just like a handful of ones that we can get into and get out of in a relatively short period of time.
1:01:45 which is very hard to do when you're sitting talking with the Cates brothers to begin with. But anyway, we will be doing the Alpha Warrior show tonight at nine o'clock. And tomorrow, everything's normal. Friday, we are not going to have a four o'clock show. We will have the 12 o'clock with War Hamster, East Coast time.
1:02:11 And that's kind of my only update for today. So no show on Friday. You guys take care.

Entities here

United States25Foreign Policy Association21Franklin D. Roosevelt19CFR16Fabian Society13Soviet Union13West Berlin12Greenland9United Kingdom8Dwight D. Eisenhower8West Germany8World War II7Joseph Stalin6Felix Frankfurter6Institute of Pacific Relations5George F. Kennan5Denmark4Philip Mosley4Tehran Conference4Carnegie Endowment for International Peace4Green Hackworth4U.S. State Department4World Affairs Council3Winston Churchill3Alger Hiss3Rockefeller Foundation3European Advisory Commission3Czechoslovakia2Vera Micheles Dean2Woodrow Wilson2U.S. Treasury Department2Sullivan & Cromwell2World Affairs Center2American Legion2Catholic Church2Joseph McCarthy2Cordell Hull2Korean War2Paul Warburg2Great Decisions Program2

Claims made here

CFR funded Greenland book_quoted ▶ 3:35
“and said that Greenland definitely was part of the Monroe Doctrine. And it was written about in the Council on Foreign Relations, a record of 25 years, 1921 to 1946, that was published one January, 19…”
Franklin D. Roosevelt appointed Denmark book_quoted ▶ 5:58
“Shortly after this, one of our members of our group prepared the report was summonsed to the White House for a personal meeting with Roosevelt. Roosevelt was very interested in this. And he summoned t…”
United States supplied_arms_to Soviet Union book_quoted ▶ 9:44
“how the industrialists in the United States was seeding the industrial capacity, not just in Germany, but even after the Bolshevik Revolution in Russia. Instead of putting that effort here and exporti…”
United States supplied_arms_to West Germany book_quoted ▶ 9:44
“how the industrialists in the United States was seeding the industrial capacity, not just in Germany, but even after the Bolshevik Revolution in Russia. Instead of putting that effort here and exporti…”
Anthony Eden member_of Fabian Society host_asserted ▶ 10:47
“He goes on to talk about the, in October of 43, Cordell Hall, Anthony Eden, the foreign minister of Great Britain, who Eden is a Fabian, by the way, and V. Molotov, the Soviet commissar for foreign af…”
Franklin D. Roosevelt ordered_assassination_of West Germany book_quoted ▶ 11:42
“Roosevelt had a conference with his Joint Chiefs of Staff. They discussed this post-war division and occupation. Roosevelt predicted that Germany would collapse suddenly and that there would definitel…”
Dwight D. Eisenhower carried_out_attack West Berlin book_quoted ▶ 14:18
“could have been in Berlin in a few hours. However, Eisenhower halted their forward progress. He let them sit outside of Berlin for several days while the Russians were coming in from the east. To the …”
Dwight D. Eisenhower carried_out_attack Czechoslovakia book_quoted ▶ 14:18
“could have been in Berlin in a few hours. However, Eisenhower halted their forward progress. He let them sit outside of Berlin for several days while the Russians were coming in from the east. To the …”
Dwight D. Eisenhower spied_on Joseph Stalin book_quoted ▶ 17:02
“reporting his decisions and actions to Stalin before Eisenhower's own military superiors knew what was going on. Regardless of what responsibility, General, I don't know what superiors he's talking ab…”
George F. Kennan appointed Franklin D. Roosevelt book_quoted ▶ 17:54
“According to author Kroc of the New York Times, George Kennan, who was a member of the CFR at the time, persuaded Roosevelt to accept the Berlin zoning arrangement. Kennan at the time was the politica…”
CFR member_of European Advisory Commission book_quoted ▶ 17:54
“According to author Kroc of the New York Times, George Kennan, who was a member of the CFR at the time, persuaded Roosevelt to accept the Berlin zoning arrangement. Kennan at the time was the politica…”
George F. Kennan appointed Green Hackworth book_quoted ▶ 17:54
“According to author Kroc of the New York Times, George Kennan, who was a member of the CFR at the time, persuaded Roosevelt to accept the Berlin zoning arrangement. Kennan at the time was the politica…”
George F. Kennan member_of CFR book_quoted ▶ 17:54
“According to author Kroc of the New York Times, George Kennan, who was a member of the CFR at the time, persuaded Roosevelt to accept the Berlin zoning arrangement. Kennan at the time was the politica…”
Philip Mosley appointed Cordell Hull book_quoted ▶ 19:56
“Basically, the incredible zoning agreement that placed Berlin 110 miles within the Soviet zone and reserved no guaranteed access was formulated in the committee group. It's interesting to note that Ph…”
Philip Mosley member_of CFR book_quoted ▶ 19:56
“Basically, the incredible zoning agreement that placed Berlin 110 miles within the Soviet zone and reserved no guaranteed access was formulated in the committee group. It's interesting to note that Ph…”
Philip Mosley succeeded George F. Kennan book_quoted ▶ 20:27
“He succeeded George Kennan as a political advisor to John Winnett of the European Advisory Commission shortly after Kennan had persuaded Roosevelt to accept the Berlin zoning agreement. So basically, …”
Vera Micheles Dean member_of Foreign Policy Association book_quoted ▶ 30:08
“It's crazy. It goes on to say that there was an article written, The Truth About the Foreign Policy Association, that described it as a communist front. And it calls out Vera Michele's dean, who worke…”
American Legion exposed Vera Micheles Dean book_quoted ▶ 30:41
“Until shortly after the American Legion exposed her communist ties, which she then resigned. The American Legion documents said that it was functioning as a communist front.…”
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace funded CFR book_quoted ▶ 31:33
“Council on Foreign Relations was organized in 1919, the year after, and incorporated in 1921. The Rockefeller and Carnegie money was responsible for both the Foreign Policy Association and the CFR. I …”
CFR funded Foreign Policy Association book_quoted ▶ 31:33
“Council on Foreign Relations was organized in 1919, the year after, and incorporated in 1921. The Rockefeller and Carnegie money was responsible for both the Foreign Policy Association and the CFR. I …”
Rockefeller Foundation funded CFR book_quoted ▶ 31:33
“Council on Foreign Relations was organized in 1919, the year after, and incorporated in 1921. The Rockefeller and Carnegie money was responsible for both the Foreign Policy Association and the CFR. I …”
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace funded Foreign Policy Association book_quoted ▶ 31:33
“Council on Foreign Relations was organized in 1919, the year after, and incorporated in 1921. The Rockefeller and Carnegie money was responsible for both the Foreign Policy Association and the CFR. I …”
Rockefeller Foundation funded Foreign Policy Association book_quoted ▶ 31:33
“Council on Foreign Relations was organized in 1919, the year after, and incorporated in 1921. The Rockefeller and Carnegie money was responsible for both the Foreign Policy Association and the CFR. I …”
Felix Frankfurter member_of Fabian Society host_asserted ▶ 32:04
“As early as 1934, said the Foreign Policy Association in conjunction with comparable British groups, meaning the Fabians, was formed largely under the auspices of Felix Frankfurter and Paul Warburg. F…”
Felix Frankfurter member_of CFR book_quoted ▶ 32:32
“And by the way, he goes on to be a Supreme Court justice. And he was a devout communist. It says that Frankfurter and Warburg was promoting a planned socialist economy in the United States to integrat…”
Paul Warburg member_of CFR book_quoted ▶ 32:32
“And by the way, he goes on to be a Supreme Court justice. And he was a devout communist. It says that Frankfurter and Warburg was promoting a planned socialist economy in the United States to integrat…”
CFR funded Institute of Pacific Relations book_quoted ▶ 33:32
“and financed by the exact same foundations that funded the CFR and the Foreign Policy Association. See, this is how the CIA did all this stuff before the CIA. The CIA was just added fluff. This all we…”
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace funded Institute of Pacific Relations book_quoted ▶ 33:32
“and financed by the exact same foundations that funded the CFR and the Foreign Policy Association. See, this is how the CIA did all this stuff before the CIA. The CIA was just added fluff. This all we…”
Rockefeller Foundation funded Institute of Pacific Relations book_quoted ▶ 33:32
“and financed by the exact same foundations that funded the CFR and the Foreign Policy Association. See, this is how the CIA did all this stuff before the CIA. The CIA was just added fluff. This all we…”
Pat McCarran headed Senate Internal Security Subcommittee documented ▶ 35:05
“foundation under education. Along towards the end of World War II, there were rumblings that the powerful IPR might be a communist front. In 1951, the Senate Internal Security Subcommittee, under the …”
Senate Internal Security Subcommittee exposed Institute of Pacific Relations documented ▶ 35:05
“foundation under education. Along towards the end of World War II, there were rumblings that the powerful IPR might be a communist front. In 1951, the Senate Internal Security Subcommittee, under the …”
Communist conquest of China led_to Korean War host_asserted ▶ 35:37
“The McCarran investigation of the IPR was predicated on the assumption that the U.S. diplomacy had never suffered a more disastrous defeat than in its failure to avert the communist conquest of China.…”
Alger Hiss spied_on U.S. State Department book_quoted ▶ 37:07
“and later Soviet spy, was closely tied with the IPR during his long and influential career in the government. Hiss became a trustee of the IPR after his resignation from the State Department. The secr…”
Harry Dexter White headed U.S. Treasury Department book_quoted ▶ 37:35
“Curry, also a member of the CFR, was an administrative assistant to FDR. Harry Dexter White virtually ran the Treasury Department under both Roosevelt and Truman. Both Curry and White were connected t…”
Foreign Policy Association merged_with World Affairs Center book_quoted ▶ 40:55
“throughout the country. In March of 1960, the Foreign Policy Association merged with the World Affairs Center to form one organization called Foreign Policy Association-World Affairs Center. They desc…”
Eustace Seligman member_of Sullivan & Cromwell book_quoted ▶ 42:33
“influential Catholic newspaper in America featured articles by this group and had them on their radio shows all the time. It said the interlock between the CFR and the Foreign Policy Association World…”