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The Colonel's Corner The Invisible Government by Dan Smoot Part 5

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0:05 Okay, let's get this party started. I gotta share with you guys something. I have been working part-time on this chart that you guys will remember that's been around for a while. We found at the back of William Bloom's book, Killing Hope, this circle chart.
0:28 that has the CIA in the middle. And it looks like a pie chart. And each of the pies, there's 14 of them now, because I've typed every single organization on there. And it started with a whole bunch of foundations in the first iteration coming out from the center. And then the entity that those foundations and funds and blah, blah, blah, was laundering money from the CIA through.
0:57 to the recipient, which is on the outside of the chart. And then on the very outside, it kind of grouped them functionally, like education, labor, blah, blah, blah, foreign policy. And I had made an effort to basically take that chart because the quality of the print is not very good because it's an old book. And I wanted to get it into,
1:26 the ether and put it into AI and all that other stuff. So I've been diligently working on this. It's multiple pages in a Word document. And so as I'm researching all of the different funds, most of them we've come across in our research. And so I was just doing like little blurbs, not long in-depth things. And so I wanted to share with you something.
1:57 I'll put it at the end of the, I'm going to post all of this information because it's old. It was from the 50s and 60s and how the CIA started this whole thing. All you really have to do is understand the mechanism because it's currently still being done with modern day.
2:19 We already know that through USAID and all of those things. So you could just replace some of the names of the trusts and foundations and you'd get an updated version of the same chart. But so I got all the information. I put it in Grok. I researched the different foundations, created a little blurb about every one of them. And so at the end of it, I asked Grok.
2:48 I said, so of all of these organizations and the exposures like Rampart Magazine, Expose in 1967, multiple New York Times articles that was writing about how the CIA was doing all this money laundering. I said, was anybody held accountable? Well, of course, we already know the answer to that. It was no. And then it says,
3:16 No firings, no prosecutions, no punishments. Nobody was held accountable at the CIA, which of course we know. But he says, yes, there was something done about it. President Johnson, because he was president when this all got revealed, he immediately appointed, I love his optimism, he immediately appointed a committee. It was called the Katzenbach Committee because
3:44 Nicholas Katzenbach, who we've come across multiple times, and he's as dirty as they get, he's an undersecretary of state. And the committee he was in charge of also had the health and education and welfare secretary, John Garner, and the CIA director. So these three guys are going to be responsible for investigating basically themselves.
4:14 Because all of this money was laundered to organizations in foreign countries through the State Department and into educational and labor entities in the United States with the full knowledge of the Health and Education and Welfare Secretary and done by the CIA. So those are the three guys in charge of doing it.
4:43 They were also in charge of the quote unquote investigation into doing it themselves. So they were basically investigating themselves. And so he provided this very optimistic thing about how they promised they'll never do it again, blah, blah, blah. And so my response is, so Johnson put the guys doing it in charge of cleaning it up. And Grok's response is classic. Yes, your observation is accurate.
5:12 and was noted at the time. President Johnson's response was essentially an internal high-level cleanup crew made up by the very same senior officials who had been directly involved in the programs. And I just laughed my butt off. And I'm like, okay, so we're on the same sheet of music. Oh my gosh.
5:38 If there's anything that's indicative of everything that we have discovered, it's that classic one-liner from Grok. Yes, they're the cleanup crew. Okay, got it. As long as we're on the same sheet of music. Usually I have to go back and forth with Grok because he's very optimistic. Almost to the point of being retarded when it comes to...
6:06 just normal assessment of things like that. So he must be learning. All right, let's get to our story today. That committee down in the pill, by the way. Oh, thank you. Oh my gosh. It was so funny. Okay.
6:30 And I will try to get that out after the show. I have to do a couple of formatting fixes to it to be able to transfer it over to a post. I don't know if I'll do it in an article. It probably will format better in an article because of the way I had to do it on my MacBook. But anyway, we'll figure it out. I just want to get the information out there in the arena of conversation. Okay, we're on chapter eight.
7:01 page 121, it's four and eight. And when I first read this chapter, it is very interesting and kind of is contrary to a lot of the things that we think, which is why I think it's important because I want you guys to know we have certain opinions about people that may or may not be true because we didn't live during that time as far as.
7:29 being adults. Some of us actually were babies at the time. And I think it's interesting to see all sides of what is in the realm of possibility. And I think this is going to be eye-opening for some. Okay, so the setting is the spring of 1961. There's a New York lawyer who gets a phone call. His name is Theodore Tannenwald.
7:59 T-A-N-N-E-N-W-A-L-D. Tannenwald picks up the phone and the person on the other end says, this is President Kennedy. And the guy goes, the hell you say? I guess that makes me the prime minister of England. But what can I do for you? And he's like, no, nobody's pulling your leg. This is the president. I want to talk to you about coming down here to Washington and help me.
8:29 create a long-term foreign aid legislation. And so one week later, he was in Washington, D.C. He began writing what became the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961. He was also a member of the CFR, as many of Kennedy's cabinet were. So Tannenwald had also written other foreign aid bills.
9:07 for Harry Truman to include Eisenhower's administration, where he was the assistant director of the Mutual Security Program, which was used to fund some very nefarious things. So he put a task force together and began drafting it. President Kennedy appointed
9:36 tannenwald coordinator in charge of presenting the bill to the committees in the house and senate three cabinet officers and the chairman of the joint chiefs of staff took their orders from tannenwald who according to the new york times became the administration's composer orchestrator conductor of one of the most important legislative acts the new york times wrote a very glowing
10:09 article on him to include this, quote, Mr. Tannenwald has been a kind of special White House ambassador to Capitol Hill while the legislative committee struggled with the controversial proposal to bypass the approving process to get the president authority to borrow $8.8 billion for development lending in the next five years. He was the man in the ante room.
10:39 empowered to answer questions in the name of the president, unquote. In July of 61, Kennedy completed Tannenwald's foreign aid orchestra. On July 10th, in ceremonies at the White House, he formally announced the creation of the newest foreign aid organization. It was called the Citizens Committee for International Development. A man by the name of Warren Lee Pearson
11:08 was to be the chairman. They appointed in an entire array, some 22 people to be in charge of it. I'm going to go through a couple. William Benton, who was chairman of the board for Encyclopedia Britannica and a member of the Atlantic Union Committee. Everett Case, president of Colgate University.
11:43 obviously was editor and publisher of Forbes magazine. Albert Greenfield, chairman of the board for Bankers Security Corporation in Philadelphia. General Alfred Greenfield, who was president of the American Red Cross and a member of the Atlantic Union Committee.
12:12 Murray Lincoln, chairman of Nationwide Insurance Company. Sol Linowitz, chairman of Xerox. George Meany, president of AFL-CIO. I know that's one of all along's favorite people. William Paley, who was CBS's chairman of the board. Warren Pearson, chairman of the board for TWA. Ross Pritchard.
12:45 professor of political science in Memphis. And let's see. Oh, can't forget this one. David Sarnoff, chairman of RCA, Radio Corporation of America. Oh, and we find Thomas Watson again, president of IBM. And let's see. Zellerbach, who was president and director of Crown Zellerbach Corporation. If you guys remember.
13:16 We've talked about him before. So of those 22 people, 12 of them, including the chairman, were CFR members. Heads of the Ford and Rockefeller Foundation attended the White House luncheon when the committee was formed. Vice President Johnson, Secretary of State Dean Rusk were all there as well. The president urged each and all of them and their foundations to get behind this.
13:48 Within a week after the luncheon, the president and his aides were talking about a grave crisis in Berlin and about the foreign aid that was necessary in order to fix it. On July 25th, when congressional debates over the foreign aid bill were at their critical stage, Kennedy spoke to the nation on radio and television, warning the people about the Berlin crisis.
14:18 and how dangerous it was. Immediate additional support for the foreign aid bill came from some very interesting people, where people on both sides of the aisle united. On August 27th, an AP release announced that House Leader John McCormick, a Democrat from Massachusetts, was attempting to enlist.
14:47 the cooperations of 2,400 city mayors to support the foreign aid bill. McCormick sent the city officials an official statement with his views and attached the proposed legislation. The State Department officials scheduled speaking tours throughout the entire country. The CFR organizations, to include the Council on World Affairs, began doing the same.
15:19 Anyone with sense had to wonder how the giving of American tax money to governments all over, and this was not just to quote unquote democracies, it was all kinds of governments all over, how that was going to benefit Americans. But they were definitely telling you it was going to. By the end of August, the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 had passed both houses.
15:52 And the Berlin crisis moved from the front page, never to be seen again. Thus, in 1961, as always, the foreign aid bill was a special project of our invisible government, the CFR. There was a great tax-supported propaganda machine that had been turned on to include the fear psychology to get the bill passed.
16:23 Public Law 87195 authorized $10 billion in foreign aid. $3 billion was appropriated for the 1962 fiscal year. And $7 billion was borrowed. And there was an authorization to extend this program for five years. The law does require the president to obtain annual appropriations for the treasury borrowing.
16:53 but permits him to make commitments to lend this money before any appropriation is ever made by Congress. It was reported in the press that Congress had denied the president the long-term borrowing authority that he requested, but that was not true. On August 29th, the president said the compromise is wholly satisfactory because he basically had the authority to do what he wanted.
17:23 Former Vice President Richard Nixon, also a member of the CFR, was very happy about this bill. On August 29th, Nixon on ABC Radio said that he favored this long-range foreign aid planning, financed through multi-year authorizations, and then annually appropriated. Nelson Rockefeller, Republican governor of New York, announced that he was really, really in favor of it.
17:50 Former Eisenhower was excited about it. He made a statement as well. Senator Fulbright was head over heels joyful about it. All in all, it is improbable that Congress ever passed another bill more destructive of American constitutional principles, more harmful to our nation's political, economic, morally, militarily, and more helpful to this.
18:23 one world government than that bill drafted by and implemented by and supported by the CFR. That's not to say that we didn't have foreign aid before that because we know that we had the Agency for International Development long before we even had what was then officially adopted as USAID. The 1961 foreign aid bill prohibited direct aid to Cuba.
18:56 but authorized contributions to the UN agencies that was funding aid to Cuba. At a time when the American economy was suffering and there was a flight of U.S. industry to foreign countries, the 1961 foreign aid bill offered subsidies and investment guarantees to American firms moving our jobs overseas. And we know they love that.
19:29 Because they have the political, economic, and military capability, thanks to the CIA, to thwart any unionization internationally, which they consistently did, to keep wages low in the foreign countries that they were exporting our jobs to. And did I mention that the union people were on the...
19:58 Committee to draft the bill? Yes, yes, I did. And they knew exactly what they were doing to the American workers because they're all in the same bed together. Chapter nine, the Institute for American Strategy. There are some men in the CFR who condemn the consequences of CFR policies, but who never mentioned the CFR as being responsible for those policies. Frank Barnett is such a man.
20:28 Mr. Barnett, a member of the CFR, is research director for the Richardson Foundation and also program director for the Institute of American Strategy, which was financed by Richardson's Foundation. The Institute for American Strategy holds two-day regional strategy seminars in cities throughout the United States. Participants in the seminars were carefully selected civic
20:58 and community leaders. The announced official purpose of the seminar is, quote, to inform influential private American citizens of the dangers which confronts the U.S. in the realm of world politics. They have been conceived as a means of arousing and informed and articulate patriotism which can provide the basis for the sustained and intensive effort.
21:28 which alone can counter the skillful propaganda and ruthless conquest so successfully practiced by the Soviet Union and their allies. Not the U.S.'s, just the Soviets. Mr. Barnett is a featured speaker at these seminars. He speaks very effectively, arousing his audience to the awareness of the Soviet menace.
21:58 It's lurking around every corner. He makes his audience squirm with anxiety that any minute the Soviet Union is going to destroy us all. But when it comes to suggesting what can be done about this horrible situation he paints, he seems only to recommend that more and more people listen to more and more speakers like him and get more and more afraid and mad at the Soviet Union.
22:30 Because they're to blame for everything wrong in America. Mr. Barnett never criticizes any of the internationalist policies that not only created the Soviet Union, but all of the other woes suffering in America. He is like every other internationalist and takes for granted that America can no longer defend herself without all of these international allies around.
23:01 We basically have to get into all of these agreements and treaties because we just can't go it alone anymore. And therefore, we have to use our foreign aid to buy that friendship. It's literally like giving your kid money to go to school and paying for his friends. He does imply that our present network of permanent entanglements isn't necessarily doing what we want it to.
23:31 But he never hints that we should abandon any of them. We just need more of them. Mr. Barnett would just like us to conduct our internationalist policy in such a way to avoid future disasters, which never seems to happen. Because those disasters are created to give Mr. Barnett a job. Mr. Barnett's recommendations on how to fight communism on the domestic front also lacks any teeth.
24:08 to the strategy seminar that was arranged by the Institute for American Strategy and sponsored by the Fulton County Medical Society in Atlanta, Georgia in June of 1961, Mr. Barnett urged all citizens to inform themselves about the communist threat and become educated on its aims so that we can all be capable of combating communist propaganda. Not his propaganda, just focus on that other propaganda.
24:39 Mr. Barnett said citizens are silly who concern themselves with trying to find communists and fellow travelers that are located in America. In a speech that he gave at War College in July of 1961, he denounced crackpots who hunt pinkos in local colleges. He said the theory that internal subversion
25:09 is the chief changer to the U.S. is ridiculous and ultimately harmful because it has great popular appeal. Belief in this theory, Mr. Barnett said, makes people mistakenly feel like they don't have to think about strengthening NATO or improving foreign aid management or volunteering for the Peace Corps. You have to get involved in all that stuff over there. There's no problem here. It's all over there.
25:40 Mr. Barnett, who was very persuasive as an expert on fighting communism, apparently doesn't know that the real work of any conspiracy would actually focus in both areas if it even exists. And never once during any of his briefings did he mention that he's a member of the CFR. Don't.
26:14 Look there. It is also interesting to note the principal book offered for sale at his seminars is called American Strategy for the Nuclear Age. The first chapter is called Basic Aims of the U.S. Foreign Policy. It is a reprint of the CFR's report from 1959. And that just happened to have been attended.
26:45 The meeting where this tract was produced by Adolph Burrell, Arthur Dean, Thomas Finletter, William Foster, W. Averill Harriman, Henry Luce, you know, all of our favorite cast of characters. Moving on. The Commission on National Goals.
27:13 On December 6, 1960, President Eisenhower presented to President Kennedy-elect a report on a presidential commission on national goals. A group of distinguished Americans, whom Eisenhower had appointed 11 months earlier, produced this report. The national purpose of this nation should be exactly what it was 125 years ago, but we need to redefine that.
27:43 It basically was focusing on all the latest gadgets like bombs and airplanes and intercontinental ballistic missiles. The modern developments in science should make us more focused on our principles. If foreign enemies can now destroy our nation by pressing a button, it seems obvious that our total defense efforts should be devoted at protecting our nation from such an attack.
28:13 not spending our wealth overseas. That should be obvious. It is also obvious that the President's Commission on National Goals was not really trying to discover our national purpose. The national purpose was the label for a propaganda effort intended to help perpetuate government policies, which were dragging America into international arrangements. The report
28:43 is a rehash of major provisions of the 1960 Democrat and Republican Party platforms. It also is interesting on who participated in this project. You had Erwin Canham, editor-in-chief of the Christian Science Monitor, James Conant, former president of Harvard, Colgate Darden,
29:14 former president of the University of Virginia and former governor of Virginia. Crawford Greenwald, president of DuPont. Yeah, we definitely want him defining that. General Greenthird, the president of the Red Cross. He just keeps coming up. He was very active. Learned Hand, a retired judge of the U.S. Appeals Court. Clark Kerr, president of the University of California.
29:48 Killian, chairman of MIT. George Meany, again. Frank Pace, former member of the Truman cabinet. And Henry Wriston, president of the American Assembly and a former president of Brown University. Of the 11, seven are CFR members. The National Planning Association is another one that was established in 1934.
30:21 Their purpose was to bring together leaders from agriculture, business, labor, and professions to pool their expertise and foresight in developing workable plans for our nation's future. That purpose came from one of their booklets, which also says every year since the MPA was organized in 1934, its reports have strongly influenced our national economy.
30:52 our economic policy, and business decisions. Here, we also have an entire laundry list of CFR members. I'm not going to go through all of their names, but there's quite a few of them, like almost all of them, to include the Secretary-Treasurer of the CIO, James Carey, L.S. Buckmaster, who was in charge of United Rubber,
31:26 Albert Hayes, International President of International Associations of Machinists, and Walter Reuther, again, almost all of them CFR members. So all of these people that's doing all of these planning things are planning the CFR's agenda. And this is exactly what Warhamster and I have been talking about is how these
31:55 and we know the CFR is basically a derivative of the Royal International Institute of Affairs from the UK, how they permeate every level of government and they all have the same agenda, which is not a constitutional republic. And this guy did such a good job of coming up with all of these organizations in the 1960s. This has not been unknown.
32:24 for a very long time. Another one was the American Civil Liberties Union, ACLU. In 1920, the American Civil Liberties Union was founded by Felix Frankfurter, a member of the CFR. William Foster, then head of the U.S. Communist Party. Elizabeth Gurley Flynn, who also was a top Communist Party official. Dr. Harry Ward of the Union Theop...
32:53 Theological Seminary, which, according to him, was also a communist frontier organization, and Roger Baldwin. Patrick Malin, a member of the CFR, had been director of the ACLU since 1952. Other CFR members who was known to be officials in the ACLU were William Butler, Richard Childs, Norman Cousins, Palmer Hoyt.
33:24 J. Robert Oppenheimer, Elmo Roper, and Arthur Schlesinger Jr. Moving on. We're just going to go through several of these. National Conference of Christians and Jews. The late Charles Evans Hughes, a CFR member, and S. Parks Cadman, former president of the federal, now national, Council of Churches.
33:55 founded the National Conference of Christians and Jews in 1928. In June of 1950, at the suggestion of Paul Hoffman, the National Conference of Christians and Jews founded the World Brotherhood at UNESCO's house in Paris, France. The officers of the World Brotherhood, that sounds so communist, doesn't it? World Brotherhood. And isn't it interesting?
34:26 Who the officers were? Konrad Adenauer? Yes, yes, Konrad Adenauer. And where do we know that name? Konrad Adenauer was the first West German chancellor who hired Reinhard Galen, the Nazi, as his chief of intelligence in the newly created BND. He is also one of these very nefarious players and married a Zenzer.
34:55 who was related to John McCloy's wife, who is also from that family. Among the others was William Benton, Arthur Compton, Paul Henry Spack, Herbert Lehman, John McCloy. Imagine that, John McCloy and Adenauer on the same thing, they're related. That's so cozy. George Meany, Madame Pandit,
35:29 Eleanor Roosevelt, Miss Fabian herself, and Adelaide Stevenson. In August of 1958, World Brotherhood held a seminar in Bern, Switzerland, Alan Dulles' favorite hangout. All of the officers listed above attended and prepared working papers. Here is a summary of conclusions reached by the World Brotherhood meeting. That was contained in an article by author.
35:59 Kroc in the New York Times on November 21st, 1958. Quote, we must recognize that the communist countries are here to stay and we cannot be wished away by propaganda. All is not bad in communist countries. Western nations could learn from communist experiments. We should study ways to make changes in both systems, communist and western, in order to bring them nearer together.
36:29 We should try to eliminate the stereotype attitudes about and suspicion of communism. We must assume the communist side is not worse than, but merely different than ours. Unquote. Wow. Wow. That's quite an opinion. In May of 1960, the World Brotherhood held a conference on world tensions in Chicago. Lester Pearson.
37:03 who was recognized as a socialist and internationalist from Canada, presided at the conference. And the following members of the CFR was on hand. William Benton, Ralph Bruchet, Marquis Childs, Harlan Cleveland, Norman Cousins, Adelaide Stevenson, among them. Adelaide Stevenson really likes these kind of socialist.
37:34 International forums, doesn't he? The National Conference of Christians and Jews World Brotherhood 1960 meeting on world tensions at Chicago concluded that the communists are interested in more trade, but not interested in political subversion. And they recommended, one, a $3 billion a year increase in U.S. foreign aid to poor countries. Two, repeal of the Connolly Reservation. And three,
38:04 closer relationships between all U.S. and communist countries. Adelaide Stevenson told the group that Khrushchev is merely a tough and realistic politician, nothing to worry about. In 1961, World Brotherhood, Inc. changed its name to Conference on World Tensions. Moving on, American Assemblies. In 1950, when president of Columbia University,
38:36 Dwight D. Eisenhower. Isn't it interesting that he was president of Columbia, the same school that was really, really targeted by the Fabians in the United States? I find that fascinating. Founded the American Assembly, sometimes calling itself the Arden House Group, A-R-D-E-N, taking that name from its headquarters and meeting place, kind of like Bilderberg's.
39:08 The assembly holds a series of meetings at Arden House in New York City every six months. They do roundtables and they meet throughout the country. The 19th meeting of the Arden House group, which ended May 7th, 1961, was typical of the others in that it was planned and conducted by members of the CFR and concluded with recommendations concerning American policy. And it followed.
39:39 would not be in the best interest of the United States. In 1961, Arden House meeting dealt with the problem of disarmament. Henry Wriston, the president of the American Assembly and director of CFR, presided over three major discussion areas. Each group, in turn, was under the chairmanship of a member of the council, Raymond Sautag.
40:05 S-O-N-T-A-G, of the University of California, Milton Katz, the Director of the International Legal Studies at Harvard, and Philip Mosley, Director of Studies for the CFR. John McCloy, as President Kennedy's Director of Disarmament, sent three subordinates to participate in this group. Edmund Gillian, Deputy Director of Disarmament,
40:33 Shepard Stone, a Ford Foundation representative, were both members of the CFR. Two of their major recommendations under the American Assembly meeting was, one, that the U.S. avoid weapons and measures which might be provocative to the Soviets and which might reduce the likelihood of disarmament agreements.
41:01 do any renovation to anything that's actually effective and would be worthy of production in a wartime because it might provoke the Soviet Union. So avoid all of that. Number two was that the U.S. strengthened its conventional military forces for participation in limited wars. So wars are fine as long as you don't intend to win them.
41:30 And definitely don't do anything else with the nuclear weapons. Stay away from them. What the hell? We, he goes on, we cannot match the communist nations in manpower. So we just need to concentrate on conventional military forces, which is an oxymoron. If you ever go to war with a communist nation who outpowers you in manpower, how the hell do you think you're going to compete with them with conventional forces?
42:03 They outnumber you. Good God. Oh my Lord. All right, we're gonna move on because this one's getting me pissed off. All right, Americans for Democratic Action, which you can guarantee has nothing to do with democratic anything. The ADA was founded in 1947 at a meeting at the Old Willard Hotel in Washington, DC. Members of the CFR dominated this meeting.
42:33 Here are the members of the CFR that were at the meeting and top officials of the Americans for Democratic Action.
43:04 Arthur Schlesinger again. This guy's very busy. Here are some of the policies that they advocated for in 1961. Abolish the House Committee on Un-American Activities. Don't look at treason and spies in the United States. That needs to stay off limits. They needed congressional investigations.
43:34 of the John Birch Society. Wait a minute. We're supposed to not look at the communists, but look at John Birch Society? Yes, that's what they're advocating. And total disarmament under UN control. Get rid of all your weapons. They advocated that we recognize mainland China. They also wanted admission of mainland China into the UN.
44:06 And kicking out Taiwan. Federal aid to all public schools. We have to control all of the public schools. Drastic overhaul of our immigration laws to permit more immigration. Urban renewal and planning for all cities. Basically take over all of the cities. Wow.
44:35 In an article written in the Los Angeles Times in September 18th, 1961, it says this. The ADA members are, as an organization, strikingly like the British Fabian Socialist. 1961, the LA Times is calling out the ADA saying they're Fabian Socialist. They go on. The Fabians stood for non-Marxian.
45:10 evolutionary socialism to be achieved not by class war, but by the ballot. The ADA is not an organization for subversive violence like Marxist-Leninist communism. The socialism they want to bring about would be quite as total industrially as that in Russia, but they would accomplish it by legislation, not by shooting.
45:39 And of course, by infiltrating every executive branch of the government. That's from the freaking LA Times. Holy shit. Okay, I told you we were onto something. Next one, Sane Nuclear Policy, Inc. Sane Nuclear Policy. They love their oxymorons, don't they? All right, in 1955.
46:12 Bertrand Russell, Mr. Fabian himself, and the late Albert Einstein. Do you know he was notorious for supporting not just socialist fronts, but communist fronts. Held a meeting in London attended by both communists and socialists from all over the world.
46:39 In a fanfare of publicity, Russell and Einstein demanded international cooperation among atomic scientists. Taking his inspiration from a meeting, Cyrus Eaton, a wealthy American industrialist, notorious for his consistent pro-communist sympathies, in 1956 held the first Pugwash Conference, which was a gathering of pro-Soviet propagandists called scientists.
47:10 That was made up of mainland China, Soviet Union, and Western countries. Another Pugwash Conference was held in 1957. And from these conferences, the idea for sane nuclear policies was developed.
47:31 Nuclear Policies was founded in November 1957 with a headquarters in New York City and with Bertrand Russell of England and a Swedish socialist called Gunnar Myrdal, M-Y-R-D-A-L. They were sponsors. Officers of this sane nuclear policy are largely second level affiliates of the CFR.
48:01 with some primary CFR members. Some of the previous and current, at the time this book was written, officers that were also CFR, Harry Bullis, Henry Canby, Norman Cousins, Clark Eichelberger, Lewis Mumford, Earl Osborne, Elmo Roper, James Shotwell, and
48:30 James Warburg. Other national officers who were not CFR members is Steve Allen, Harry Bonafante, Walt Kelly, MLK, Bruno Walters, Normus Thomas, and Linus Pauling. A typical activity of this organization was public rallies at Madison Square Gardens. They featured speechers to speak.
48:59 Speeches by Eleanor Roosevelt, Walter Reuther, Norman Thomas, Israel Goldstein, G. Menon Williams, all speakers were supporting either total or mostly disarmament and strengthening the UN as a way to maintain world peace that we all must submit to the UN and they'll just manage everything.
49:30 Commenting on a rally at Madison Square Garden, Senator James Eastland, Senate Internal Security Subcommittee Chairman, said this. The communists publicized the meeting well in advance through their own and sympathetic periodicals. The affair in Madison Garden was sponsored by the Committee for a Sane Nuclear Policy. Chief organizer of the garden meeting, however, was Henry Abrams of New York, who is a veteran member.
50:00 Of the communist party. It is to the credit. Of the officers of the organization. That when Abrams record of communist connections. Was brought to the attention. Abrams was. Immediately discharged. Like oh crap. You figured that out. Now we got to get rid of. And got rid of them. They did. So we've got a few more. I'm going to go ahead. And call this a day. We'll do the last.
50:32 several of them and then we're going to move into the media um versions um tomorrow so anyway open it up okay colonel we'll open it up thank you all for taking it in spaces and and on rumble all of this here is nothing more than stacking the house that's what we're seeing going on here they're stacking the house
51:11 In some cases, they're getting caught. There was some opposition to the to the act in the government, but not enough to really pull it down. It just I don't quite understand how at that time we would be looking at setting up foreign aid, which is basically what we're doing.
51:40 After World War II, saying we really got to get back involved in this stuff. You would think the American people had had enough of it and would say no. And I think we did, but it didn't matter. It didn't matter. Thank you, Colonel. Sure. All along, go ahead. Yeah, Colonel. This is a, you know, really interesting period, like 1961, you know, because we see, you're seeing all these folks, you know.
52:15 You're you faded out. We can't hear you. Sorry. Yeah. OK, you've seen all these folks who seem to be in the same. No, you keep fading in and out. I don't know if you can get somewhere else where you can get a better signal. Megan, go ahead. Colonel, again, thank you for another blood pressure raising episode of your series. I just find it very interesting.
52:52 Not so much the political figures, but the background noise of our elite class, business owners, wealthy folks that will advocate for something that in the end will eat them alive. It just blows my mind how many of these rich people will get behind this stuff that either never had to live under.
53:20 communism or fascism in its truest form or they just you know the uh okay um idle hands are the devil's play things and when you get that rich that's what they're doing they just they got nothing better to do than just mess with everybody but mega nuke i think um what what um
53:47 The end of the day status that they're achieving is more a Mussolini totalitarian state where they all stay rich. They're all in charge. They still are going to live the life of Riley. This world government is going to be a Praetorian guard to keep all of us enslaved. And by the way, billions of us die in the process. But they don't ever anticipate being captured by the system.
54:16 The system is going to operate for them. I understand that. And you are correct. But history says that that is not how it ever works out. Out of those select few, a very select few actually make it. And that's why I just can't wrap my brain around how they would go for that.
54:40 Anyway, you make a valid point. Yeah, their system, if you look at the corrupt oligarch government in Russia that then turned into basically the mafia part of Russia after the wall came down. Now, can they turn their back on any one of them? Absolutely. Is there tension among themselves? Absolutely. But the system protected.
55:06 the hierarchy. And the same thing in Mussolini's Italy. The oligarchs were not affected at all by Mussolini's tyranny. The people that had to work on behalf of the oligarchs were the ones that were affected. So Warhamster, go ahead. Howdy. I was thinking when you were talking about that world brotherhood and where they're proposing
55:38 that the West needs to work closer with the communists. It's a tacit admission that we were no longer a constitutional republic, but rather a form of socialism we know as fascism. And as you go through all the names, all the corporate people on the board, and through the big government internationalists, this is basically two different versions of all looking for one world government domination. And because the West incorporated some...
56:08 vestiges of capitalism, we're going to be far more wealthy. But it's the veneer of a free market. And as you point out, and everyone else pointed out quite clearly, it's the oligarchs, the ones who run the multinational corporations that are controlling our foreign policy. We are, post-World War II, a fascist nation. The fascists did not lose World War II. In fact, they won. They just relocated to America. Yes. And that was a tacit admission by the World Brotherhood? Yes.
56:35 that, hey, you know, we don't have to have a nuclear war. We don't want that. You know, there's other ways we can kill off 95% of the population later. But, you know, it was just really glaring when they made that tacit admission. They weren't even trying to hide it anymore. Yeah, and I thought it was so interesting that the LA Times of all entities recognized it as British socialist babyism. It just was, I was floored by that.
57:02 Yeah, it was a great chapter. I enjoyed today's lesson, stuff like that. The other thing that popped out for me is, you know, there's a reason we started out this journey with Skull and Bones. They were popping up every five minutes you're popping off another Bonesman. They were all over the place. I knew you would enjoy that. Yeah, they just have permeated all of this. All along, go ahead. Yeah, Colonel.
57:34 trying to articulate um this period 1961 is so interesting because you see groups that later you know seem to be opposites they're all seem to be in the same boat i mean for just to simplify i think we can distinguish between like what i would call you know pure elitist like adlai stevenson and eleanor roosevelt who are who are role players right i mean eleanor roosevelt it seems paradoxical to call her an elitist because you know
58:03 She was in the New Deal. And yet look at her function in the New Deal. It was like when push came to shove, she was a pacifier of groups that were wanted, you know, to unify the working class across racial lines. You know, she was used to calm down, you know, to, quote, calm down, unquote, you know, African-Americans who wanted a more, you know, a New Deal without Jim Crow. Right. Right. And so.
58:33 Basically, you have on the one hand the elitist like Adlai Stevenson. It's no accident that he's chosen as the Democratic nominee in what we think of as the highest point of, quote, McCarthyism. And again, we know that that's a false construct, McCarthyism, because it's really the State Department that started it before McCarthy. But yet he was a guy who was really going to kind of like not fight too hard.
59:02 He was not going to he was not going to threaten to create, you know, an activated CIO part of that AFL CIO coalition. And and the CIO had been basically punked, as it were, you know, since 1947. You know, AFL was still boss, just which is the way that the elites wanted it. And if you try to if as soon as the CIO starts flexing, that's when we see, you know, Walter Reuther, you know.
59:32 going to the March on Washington and making civil rights a labor issue, too. And, you know, that today is completely forgotten by our AP U.S. history mind managers of our education professionals. But I'll tell you what, the CIA sure notices stuff like that. Right. And regardless of AP U.S. history and the college board. And by the way, I mean, that might be worth a little dig.
1:00:00 Into our illustrious betters of the college board and the history of that. And because that has tremendous impact. And I'm sure we we see some very interesting, you know, names and, you know, educational policies brought up with that, you know, versus, you know, whereas. But on the other hand, I wish I would look at folks like Walter Reuther and, you know, basically the the folks who got shot and.
1:00:27 They were pushing the envelope in ways that the elitists of, you know, yes, the CFR elitists didn't want them to. And that's very significant to notice that continuity and and kind of where it becomes divided, starting with from 1963 to 1968 and how that was resolved through state violence. Right. And also, I mean, I.
1:00:56 I might get some pushback on this and that's fine. But regarding the United Nations, I mean, I think that there's a degree to which some people could one could make an argument that until the until the assassination of Dag Hammarskjold and possibly the guy after him, you know, there was there was still a kind of what I might call lingering like for freedoms aspect to the United Nations.
1:01:27 And again, this is highly debatable. And I don't expect anybody here to agree with with me on this. But and whereas by, you know, later, the U.N. is pumped and, you know, yeah, a tool for manipulation of the of the internationalists. And, you know, that doesn't mean you got cut off unless when you get when you get folks activated at the base, taking it seriously.
1:02:02 That can become a political reality also when you get an activated base taking the rhetoric seriously. And that can challenge the initial intention of the elitist who were simply using it as a kind of rhetorical device. So, yeah, there's that, too. But anyway, interesting show as usual. OK, thank you. I understand.
1:02:29 The point that not everybody that's involved in these international bodies are part of the problem. But anytime that sovereign countries relinquish sovereignty to a body above that, it's problematic in the long term because those bodies can always be co-opted for nefarious things. And that is not to say that...
1:02:58 certain people that are serving in those bodies even understand. But it is clear both the League of Nations and the UN, when you go back and look at the Fabian writings, was designed not to be a good thing. And again, that doesn't mean that the organization and everybody in it
1:03:25 is part of the problem. And that's kind of where we get in all of these organizations. The infiltration of these organizations and their intended purpose, their unstated intended purpose, oftentimes goes unnoticed for decades. But they're never going to relinquish their attempted control.
1:03:52 of co-opting them towards their ends. And how you get around that is up for discussion. But you obviously have to have forums that, in my opinion, need to be temporary based on whatever the issue is, where the sovereign countries being sovereign.
1:04:15 can address certain issues. But any standing body that is made up of bureaucrats will always be bureaucracy. And bureaucracy in and of itself is never a good thing and should always be limited. Warhamster, go ahead. You had to really touch on the point we've been making about egalitarianism. A vast majority of these useful idiots
1:04:45 actually think they're doing good for the world. The problem is, in their mind, they've been trained to think, oh, we've got to do this for the greater good for the most amount of people. And they never think of the consequences. They're absolutely perfect tools to create these entities, use bureaucracies and stuff like that. And now that they get unlimited government funding and access to all kinds of power in different countries around the world, it takes on a life of its own. And the puppet masters, the people behind the curtain.
1:05:13 They know exactly what the big picture is, and they're just using that to their advantage. But it's only the inner circle that really understands that. The rest of them are absolutely useless idiots, and they actually feel like they're doing good. That's why they get so emotional when their ideas get confronted because it's their entire worldview is that they are the do-gooders, and if you disagree, you are the evil capitalist. And they don't understand that they are the puppets of the actual elites that they claim to be fighting against.
1:05:43 I call it the blind list of egalitarianism. And they just miss fundamental truths. And we haven't talked about it for weeks, but you're just hammering home the exact same point. Yes. Well said. SR, go ahead. Fair point, Warhamster. And I just want to comment on your previous statement there, Colonel, and say a prime example today for those of you that have been following would be the EU.
1:06:12 If you take a look at what the EU has done, you have several sovereign nations that have ceded their sovereignty. Yeah. Period. End of story. Thank you, Colonel. Yeah. Renee, go ahead. Everyone. Yeah. So I'm trying I'm kind of pulling the dots together and have a question. So was with the Fabians was.
1:06:41 democracy and creating these forums, was democracy kind of like the gateway of collectivism to lead towards socialism? Yes, that's the use of their term, democracy. Okay, thank you. Yeah, because it's just overabundant where they're throwing around the democracy word.
1:07:07 And so have you come across you and Warhamster in your research so far where you find that moment where they're like, hey, I got an idea. Let's use this collectivism thing that will lead everybody into the fire. Well, that's the whole purpose of the Fabian Society. Yeah, I mean, that is. And there's even...
1:07:36 In the Fabian Highway book, they actually talk about what words. They're very, very conscientious of which words they use. And when they first came to the United States, they started using the word nationalist. And it was basically a wolf in sheep's clothing. And then they started deciding that
1:08:03 That was not the appropriate word to use in America, that democracy was a better word that they could co-opt inside America because of its implicit meaning here and the fact that they had chosen the Democratic Party to target for infiltration. They had tried setting up.
1:08:27 an independent party. It didn't work here like it did in the UK with the Labour Party. So they made a conscious decision to target the Democratic Party. Yeah, I was just going to add, Colonel, that Democratic socialism is one of the foundational principles. A lot of these early 1800s, these philosophies that we went over and stuff like that, we're always hinting at that. Their definitions, they were a little fast.
1:08:58 loose with. They understood how to sell it. They needed to be able to sell their idea so they could have the appearance of having the support of 50.1% of the people. That was always their goal. With that, they'd have control of the government and they'd nudge everything in their direction. Again, you've got to remember, these people think in 100-year increments. That's really important. They don't mind taking some setbacks from time to time because every time they get back in power, they move the ball further down the field. Correct.
1:09:27 That's the incrementalism. And I notice, I don't know, L. Sid Barrett over on YouTube mentioned the Labour Party. Yes, the Labour Party was created by the Fabians. And they chose that particular terminology on purpose as well. Because one of their first targets in the UK was workers and the unions.
1:09:56 And they felt that the term labor party so that they could project their quote unquote caring of labor was very, very important. They didn't give a shit about labor. But that is the sheep's clothing that they decided to don themselves with. I'm sorry, I didn't. Was you going to say something more hamster? Yeah, I was. I was just going to point out that.
1:10:28 As we talked about last week, you know, George Bernard Shaw, after discovering Karl Marx and reading Das Kapital, he joined what's called the Social Democratic Federation two years prior to becoming a Fabian. Yeah. So that was all part of it ahead of time. But, you know, again, the egalitarians, helping the poor was fundamental to a lot of their theories here. We've got to help the poor. We've got to give everybody equity. And that's the flaw in their theories. They don't understand human nature.
1:10:54 We're not ever going to be equal, and equity doesn't exist. What you have to do is have equal rights, period. And you protect those rights, we're all going to rise and fall at our own event. But they can't accept that. They're trying to manufacture the outcomes. And, yeah, they want to help the poor. That's what these egalitarians want. That's how they sleep at night. Everything they're doing is for a higher purpose because they see that society, they're going to right all the wrongs of society in inequality.
1:11:22 And it's a fundamentally flawed way of addressing life and a complete misunderstanding of human nature. And I'm not even convinced they want to help the poor. I know you say that. And I know they say that too. Because at the end of the day, nothing they do ever actually helps the poor. They want redistribution of income. And that has been proven not to help anybody.
1:11:53 But that's kind of like parsing that particular point. Either way, I agree with your assessment of the outcome. It doesn't work. Whether some of them actually want to help the poor or not, your point's valid. Yeah. You're kind of setting the seeds for a theme that we're going to start introducing here. And I'm really going to hammer home when we get to the Rockefellers.
1:12:19 One of the things they need to do is to be able to care about all these lost causes. They're trying to build a coalition. Yes. Yes. Of different, of disparate needs and stuff like that. The bigger their intent gets, the harder it is to fulfill. Yes. That's what you're setting, you're laying the seeds for that. And that's a point we're going to really be developing over the next few months. So good job. All along, go ahead. Yeah. Colonel, I think that.
1:12:50 I know I'm the type of fellow that will get on a site and start talking about assassinations and, you know, a little probably many might consider more than in good taste. But I think that, you know, as we look at, you know, the disparate people who were in the Council of Foreign Relations, these groups that you outlined earlier today, I mean.
1:13:17 If you really look at the political assassinations of this 1963 to 1970 period, it's basically the folks who wanted to actually move this big block in the direction of a Jim Crow with – I'm sorry, a New Deal without Jim Crow, who actually wanted to create –
1:13:44 political coalitions involving an activated CIO, they're the ones who are assassinated. It's not the AFL types. It's not the George Meany's. It's not the Eleanor and her elegant sensitivities about civil rights while meanwhile immediately helping the elites cover up the major assassinations along with George Meany. They're not the ones assassinated. So the entire illusion that we're all describing here.
1:14:11 And how they they claim to want this, but they're actually doing the exact opposite in creating the in favoring the elite control in their socialists and Nemo. Where is that better shown and articulated than in the major political assassinations? Because it's like they're not simply individuals. They're, you know, they're mouthpieces that were heard by an entire country. And the cover up is utterly system, you know, systemic.
1:14:41 across the board from the new york times to the fake left and it's like what does the fake left in terms of by which i mean in contemporary alternative media it's like i'm sorry june 5th the rfk assassination oh that campaign with the most activated you know cio based working class that was multi-racial like they pretend to want right um and it ended in three not a single
1:15:06 effing word about that rfk assassination right by our mcleftis and so it's like these assassinations are essentially they're they need to be unexplored they the entire system covers it up because once you look at that right the entire baby and socialist myth is gone right so it's not about four dead people it's about why we continue to teach these 100 percent
1:15:34 elite billionaire George Soros and Rockefeller-funded elections from every school from New York to California right now. Right. I agree with you 100%. The proof is in who gets taken out and who gets to stay.
1:15:53 I do have to comment on Shelley the Kiwi over on Rumble. Helen Clark is president of Chatham House, sits on the board of the WHO, the Elders Club, the Madrid Gabi, all of them. And to top it off, she gives us Jacinda Ardern when she was head of the Labour Party of New Zealand. Touche.
1:16:19 Shelly. It is part of the quote unquote commonwealth and indicative of exactly what we were just talking about. Well done. Okay. Anybody else? Last words. Okay. I'm going to sign off of here, grab something to eat, and I will be doing a premium
1:16:49 show later on continuing our Propaganda Due series that I had discovered and I'm using as the five hours of premium that I'm required to do on Rumble. So if you're free, join me later. It'll probably be around seven. Warhamster, go ahead. Yeah, I just wanted to give a quick promo to a show we're doing tomorrow morning.
1:17:18 that I'll have up on my channel by early afternoon. We're doing a California election post-mortem and a preview on a couple of upcoming Supreme Court decisions regarding election integrity. And this is something, if you care about elections, you're not going to want to miss. I've got some pretty cool stuff coming tomorrow. Cool. All right. What time is that? Do you think you're going to have it up? I should have it up by noon Eastern, maybe one of the latest. Okay. Sounds good.
1:17:45 All right. Yes, Bridget, reminding me, hit the thumbs up over on Rumble, YouTube, whatever it is. And I appreciate it. All right, guys. Thanks for being here and all of the contributions. I really appreciate it. I'll see you either later on tonight or tomorrow. And tomorrow, we will be finishing this book.
1:18:10 There's just a little bit left. And to give you a preview, it's the communications in media and the chapter 11's interlocking untouchables, which is very interesting because it gives you kind of an overview of some of the foundations that we will later.
1:18:30 cover on Warhamster and I's show. It really just goes through the interlocking people that are part of it and how they line up with the CFR. Just a bunch of names. We won't cover all of them, but kind of just a tease for when we get to the foundations on our other show. And then he closes with some recommendations, which we'll briefly go through, but we'll definitely be finished with the book tomorrow.
1:19:00 and then we'll be moving on. So thanks everybody for being here. Take care.

Entities here

CFR19John F. Kennedy11Frank Barnett10Foreign Assistance Act of 196110Fabian Society8World Brotherhood8Theodore Tannenwald7Americans for Democratic Action7SANE Nuclear Policy5United Nations5Adlai Stevenson II5American Assembly5Lyndon B. Johnson4Walter Reuther4George Meany4Eleanor Dulles4Katzenbach Committee3Dwight D. Eisenhower3John J. McCloy3Norman Cousins3Institute for American Strategy3Bertrand Russell3National Conference of Christians and Jews3National Park Commission3Madison Square Garden3William Bell3Henry Wriston2Warren Lee Pearson2National Planning Association2Albert Greenfield2Nicholas Katzenbach2Rockefeller2Department of Health, Education, and Welfare2Konrad Adenauer2William Z. Foster2U.S. State Department2USAID2Norman Thomas2Columbia University2Albert Einstein2

Claims made here

Lyndon B. Johnson appointed Katzenbach Committee host_asserted ▶ 3:16
“No firings, no prosecutions, no punishments. Nobody was held accountable at the CIA, which of course we know. But he says, yes, there was something done about it. President Johnson, because he was pre…”
John Gardner member_of Katzenbach Committee host_asserted ▶ 3:44
“Nicholas Katzenbach, who we've come across multiple times, and he's as dirty as they get, he's an undersecretary of state. And the committee he was in charge of also had the health and education and w…”
Nicholas Katzenbach headed Katzenbach Committee host_asserted ▶ 3:44
“Nicholas Katzenbach, who we've come across multiple times, and he's as dirty as they get, he's an undersecretary of state. And the committee he was in charge of also had the health and education and w…”
Theodore Tannenwald member_of CFR host_asserted ▶ 8:29
“create a long-term foreign aid legislation. And so one week later, he was in Washington, D.C. He began writing what became the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961. He was also a member of the CFR, as many …”
John F. Kennedy appointed Theodore Tannenwald host_asserted ▶ 9:36
“tannenwald coordinator in charge of presenting the bill to the committees in the house and senate three cabinet officers and the chairman of the joint chiefs of staff took their orders from tannenwald…”
Warren Lee Pearson headed Citizens Committee for International Development host_asserted ▶ 10:39
“empowered to answer questions in the name of the president, unquote. In July of 61, Kennedy completed Tannenwald's foreign aid orchestra. On July 10th, in ceremonies at the White House, he formally an…”
John F. Kennedy appointed Warren Lee Pearson host_asserted ▶ 11:08
“was to be the chairman. They appointed in an entire array, some 22 people to be in charge of it. I'm going to go through a couple. William Benton, who was chairman of the board for Encyclopedia Britan…”
William Bell member_of Citizens Committee for International Development host_asserted ▶ 11:08
“was to be the chairman. They appointed in an entire array, some 22 people to be in charge of it. I'm going to go through a couple. William Benton, who was chairman of the board for Encyclopedia Britan…”
Everett Case member_of Citizens Committee for International Development host_asserted ▶ 11:08
“was to be the chairman. They appointed in an entire array, some 22 people to be in charge of it. I'm going to go through a couple. William Benton, who was chairman of the board for Encyclopedia Britan…”
Albert Greenfield member_of Citizens Committee for International Development host_asserted ▶ 11:43
“obviously was editor and publisher of Forbes magazine. Albert Greenfield, chairman of the board for Bankers Security Corporation in Philadelphia. General Alfred Greenfield, who was president of the Am…”
Murray Lincoln member_of Citizens Committee for International Development host_asserted ▶ 12:12
“Murray Lincoln, chairman of Nationwide Insurance Company. Sol Linowitz, chairman of Xerox. George Meany, president of AFL-CIO. I know that's one of all along's favorite people. William Paley, who was …”
Sol Linowitz member_of Citizens Committee for International Development host_asserted ▶ 12:12
“Murray Lincoln, chairman of Nationwide Insurance Company. Sol Linowitz, chairman of Xerox. George Meany, president of AFL-CIO. I know that's one of all along's favorite people. William Paley, who was …”
George Meany member_of Citizens Committee for International Development host_asserted ▶ 12:12
“Murray Lincoln, chairman of Nationwide Insurance Company. Sol Linowitz, chairman of Xerox. George Meany, president of AFL-CIO. I know that's one of all along's favorite people. William Paley, who was …”
William Pawley member_of Citizens Committee for International Development host_asserted ▶ 12:12
“Murray Lincoln, chairman of Nationwide Insurance Company. Sol Linowitz, chairman of Xerox. George Meany, president of AFL-CIO. I know that's one of all along's favorite people. William Paley, who was …”
Ross Pritchard member_of Citizens Committee for International Development host_asserted ▶ 12:45
“professor of political science in Memphis. And let's see. Oh, can't forget this one. David Sarnoff, chairman of RCA, Radio Corporation of America. Oh, and we find Thomas Watson again, president of IBM…”
David Sarnoff member_of Citizens Committee for International Development host_asserted ▶ 12:45
“professor of political science in Memphis. And let's see. Oh, can't forget this one. David Sarnoff, chairman of RCA, Radio Corporation of America. Oh, and we find Thomas Watson again, president of IBM…”
Thomas J. Watson Jr. member_of Citizens Committee for International Development host_asserted ▶ 12:45
“professor of political science in Memphis. And let's see. Oh, can't forget this one. David Sarnoff, chairman of RCA, Radio Corporation of America. Oh, and we find Thomas Watson again, president of IBM…”
Zellerbach member_of Citizens Committee for International Development host_asserted ▶ 12:45
“professor of political science in Memphis. And let's see. Oh, can't forget this one. David Sarnoff, chairman of RCA, Radio Corporation of America. Oh, and we find Thomas Watson again, president of IBM…”
CFR member_of Citizens Committee for International Development host_asserted ▶ 13:16
“We've talked about him before. So of those 22 people, 12 of them, including the chairman, were CFR members. Heads of the Ford and Rockefeller Foundation attended the White House luncheon when the comm…”
Smith Richardson Foundation funded Institute for American Strategy host_asserted ▶ 20:28
“Mr. Barnett, a member of the CFR, is research director for the Richardson Foundation and also program director for the Institute of American Strategy, which was financed by Richardson's Foundation. Th…”
Frank Barnett member_of CFR host_asserted ▶ 20:28
“Mr. Barnett, a member of the CFR, is research director for the Richardson Foundation and also program director for the Institute of American Strategy, which was financed by Richardson's Foundation. Th…”
Dwight D. Eisenhower appointed National Park Commission host_asserted ▶ 27:13
“On December 6, 1960, President Eisenhower presented to President Kennedy-elect a report on a presidential commission on national goals. A group of distinguished Americans, whom Eisenhower had appointe…”
Erwin Canham member_of National Park Commission host_asserted ▶ 28:43
“is a rehash of major provisions of the 1960 Democrat and Republican Party platforms. It also is interesting on who participated in this project. You had Erwin Canham, editor-in-chief of the Christian …”
James Conant member_of National Park Commission host_asserted ▶ 28:43
“is a rehash of major provisions of the 1960 Democrat and Republican Party platforms. It also is interesting on who participated in this project. You had Erwin Canham, editor-in-chief of the Christian …”
Colgate Darden member_of National Park Commission host_asserted ▶ 29:14
“former president of the University of Virginia and former governor of Virginia. Crawford Greenwald, president of DuPont. Yeah, we definitely want him defining that. General Greenthird, the president o…”
Crawford Greenewalt member_of National Park Commission host_asserted ▶ 29:14
“former president of the University of Virginia and former governor of Virginia. Crawford Greenwald, president of DuPont. Yeah, we definitely want him defining that. General Greenthird, the president o…”
Learned Hand member_of National Park Commission host_asserted ▶ 29:14
“former president of the University of Virginia and former governor of Virginia. Crawford Greenwald, president of DuPont. Yeah, we definitely want him defining that. General Greenthird, the president o…”
Clark Kerr member_of National Park Commission host_asserted ▶ 29:14
“former president of the University of Virginia and former governor of Virginia. Crawford Greenwald, president of DuPont. Yeah, we definitely want him defining that. General Greenthird, the president o…”
Tom Killoran member_of National Park Commission host_asserted ▶ 29:48
“Killian, chairman of MIT. George Meany, again. Frank Pace, former member of the Truman cabinet. And Henry Wriston, president of the American Assembly and a former president of Brown University. Of the…”
George Meany member_of National Park Commission host_asserted ▶ 29:48
“Killian, chairman of MIT. George Meany, again. Frank Pace, former member of the Truman cabinet. And Henry Wriston, president of the American Assembly and a former president of Brown University. Of the…”
Frank Pace member_of National Park Commission host_asserted ▶ 29:48
“Killian, chairman of MIT. George Meany, again. Frank Pace, former member of the Truman cabinet. And Henry Wriston, president of the American Assembly and a former president of Brown University. Of the…”
Henry Wriston member_of National Park Commission host_asserted ▶ 29:48
“Killian, chairman of MIT. George Meany, again. Frank Pace, former member of the Truman cabinet. And Henry Wriston, president of the American Assembly and a former president of Brown University. Of the…”
CFR member_of National Park Commission host_asserted ▶ 29:48
“Killian, chairman of MIT. George Meany, again. Frank Pace, former member of the Truman cabinet. And Henry Wriston, president of the American Assembly and a former president of Brown University. Of the…”
James Carey member_of National Planning Association host_asserted ▶ 30:52
“our economic policy, and business decisions. Here, we also have an entire laundry list of CFR members. I'm not going to go through all of their names, but there's quite a few of them, like almost all …”
L.S. Buckmaster member_of National Planning Association host_asserted ▶ 30:52
“our economic policy, and business decisions. Here, we also have an entire laundry list of CFR members. I'm not going to go through all of their names, but there's quite a few of them, like almost all …”
Albert Hayes member_of National Planning Association host_asserted ▶ 31:26
“Albert Hayes, International President of International Associations of Machinists, and Walter Reuther, again, almost all of them CFR members. So all of these people that's doing all of these planning …”
Walter Reuther member_of National Planning Association host_asserted ▶ 31:26
“Albert Hayes, International President of International Associations of Machinists, and Walter Reuther, again, almost all of them CFR members. So all of these people that's doing all of these planning …”
Felix Frankfurter founded American Civil Liberties Union host_asserted ▶ 32:24
“for a very long time. Another one was the American Civil Liberties Union, ACLU. In 1920, the American Civil Liberties Union was founded by Felix Frankfurter, a member of the CFR. William Foster, then …”
William Z. Foster founded American Civil Liberties Union host_asserted ▶ 32:24
“for a very long time. Another one was the American Civil Liberties Union, ACLU. In 1920, the American Civil Liberties Union was founded by Felix Frankfurter, a member of the CFR. William Foster, then …”
Elizabeth Gurley Flynn founded American Civil Liberties Union host_asserted ▶ 32:24
“for a very long time. Another one was the American Civil Liberties Union, ACLU. In 1920, the American Civil Liberties Union was founded by Felix Frankfurter, a member of the CFR. William Foster, then …”
Harry Ward founded American Civil Liberties Union host_asserted ▶ 32:24
“for a very long time. Another one was the American Civil Liberties Union, ACLU. In 1920, the American Civil Liberties Union was founded by Felix Frankfurter, a member of the CFR. William Foster, then …”
William Butler member_of American Civil Liberties Union host_asserted ▶ 32:53
“Theological Seminary, which, according to him, was also a communist frontier organization, and Roger Baldwin. Patrick Malin, a member of the CFR, had been director of the ACLU since 1952. Other CFR me…”
Roger Baldwin founded American Civil Liberties Union host_asserted ▶ 32:53
“Theological Seminary, which, according to him, was also a communist frontier organization, and Roger Baldwin. Patrick Malin, a member of the CFR, had been director of the ACLU since 1952. Other CFR me…”
Patrick Malin headed American Civil Liberties Union host_asserted ▶ 32:53
“Theological Seminary, which, according to him, was also a communist frontier organization, and Roger Baldwin. Patrick Malin, a member of the CFR, had been director of the ACLU since 1952. Other CFR me…”
J. Robert Oppenheimer member_of American Civil Liberties Union host_asserted ▶ 33:24
“J. Robert Oppenheimer, Elmo Roper, and Arthur Schlesinger Jr. Moving on. We're just going to go through several of these. National Conference of Christians and Jews. The late Charles Evans Hughes, a C…”
Arthur Schlesinger Jr. member_of American Civil Liberties Union host_asserted ▶ 33:24
“J. Robert Oppenheimer, Elmo Roper, and Arthur Schlesinger Jr. Moving on. We're just going to go through several of these. National Conference of Christians and Jews. The late Charles Evans Hughes, a C…”
Charles Evans Hughes founded National Conference of Christians and Jews host_asserted ▶ 33:24
“J. Robert Oppenheimer, Elmo Roper, and Arthur Schlesinger Jr. Moving on. We're just going to go through several of these. National Conference of Christians and Jews. The late Charles Evans Hughes, a C…”
S. Parks Cadman founded National Conference of Christians and Jews host_asserted ▶ 33:24
“J. Robert Oppenheimer, Elmo Roper, and Arthur Schlesinger Jr. Moving on. We're just going to go through several of these. National Conference of Christians and Jews. The late Charles Evans Hughes, a C…”
National Conference of Christians and Jews founded World Brotherhood host_asserted ▶ 33:55
“founded the National Conference of Christians and Jews in 1928. In June of 1950, at the suggestion of Paul Hoffman, the National Conference of Christians and Jews founded the World Brotherhood at UNES…”
Konrad Adenauer appointed Reinhard Gehlen host_asserted ▶ 34:26
“Who the officers were? Konrad Adenauer? Yes, yes, Konrad Adenauer. And where do we know that name? Konrad Adenauer was the first West German chancellor who hired Reinhard Galen, the Nazi, as his chief…”
Konrad Adenauer member_of World Brotherhood host_asserted ▶ 34:26
“Who the officers were? Konrad Adenauer? Yes, yes, Konrad Adenauer. And where do we know that name? Konrad Adenauer was the first West German chancellor who hired Reinhard Galen, the Nazi, as his chief…”
William Bell member_of World Brotherhood host_asserted ▶ 34:55
“who was related to John McCloy's wife, who is also from that family. Among the others was William Benton, Arthur Compton, Paul Henry Spack, Herbert Lehman, John McCloy. Imagine that, John McCloy and A…”
Raymond Kroc funded World Brotherhood host_asserted ▶ 35:59
“Kroc in the New York Times on November 21st, 1958. Quote, we must recognize that the communist countries are here to stay and we cannot be wished away by propaganda. All is not bad in communist countr…”
Lester Pearson presided World Brotherhood host_asserted ▶ 37:03
“who was recognized as a socialist and internationalist from Canada, presided at the conference. And the following members of the CFR was on hand. William Benton, Ralph Bruchet, Marquis Childs, Harlan …”
National Conference of Christians and Jews held World Brotherhood host_asserted ▶ 37:34
“International forums, doesn't he? The National Conference of Christians and Jews World Brotherhood 1960 meeting on world tensions at Chicago concluded that the communists are interested in more trade,…”
Adlai Stevenson II spoke_at World Brotherhood host_asserted ▶ 38:04
“closer relationships between all U.S. and communist countries. Adelaide Stevenson told the group that Khrushchev is merely a tough and realistic politician, nothing to worry about. In 1961, World Brot…”
Dwight D. Eisenhower founded American Assembly host_asserted ▶ 38:36
“Dwight D. Eisenhower. Isn't it interesting that he was president of Columbia, the same school that was really, really targeted by the Fabians in the United States? I find that fascinating. Founded the…”
John J. McCloy appointed Edmund Gullion host_asserted ▶ 40:05
“S-O-N-T-A-G, of the University of California, Milton Katz, the Director of the International Legal Studies at Harvard, and Philip Mosley, Director of Studies for the CFR. John McCloy, as President Ken…”
Americans for Democratic Action advocated House Un-American Activities Committee host_asserted ▶ 43:04
“Arthur Schlesinger again. This guy's very busy. Here are some of the policies that they advocated for in 1961. Abolish the House Committee on Un-American Activities. Don't look at treason and spies in…”
Americans for Democratic Action advocated John Birch Society host_asserted ▶ 43:04
“Arthur Schlesinger again. This guy's very busy. Here are some of the policies that they advocated for in 1961. Abolish the House Committee on Un-American Activities. Don't look at treason and spies in…”
Americans for Democratic Action advocated United Nations host_asserted ▶ 43:34
“of the John Birch Society. Wait a minute. We're supposed to not look at the communists, but look at John Birch Society? Yes, that's what they're advocating. And total disarmament under UN control. Get…”
Americans for Democratic Action similar_to Fabian Society host_asserted ▶ 44:35
“In an article written in the Los Angeles Times in September 18th, 1961, it says this. The ADA members are, as an organization, strikingly like the British Fabian Socialist. 1961, the LA Times is calli…”
Bertrand Russell held Pugwash Conference host_asserted ▶ 46:39
“In a fanfare of publicity, Russell and Einstein demanded international cooperation among atomic scientists. Taking his inspiration from a meeting, Cyrus Eaton, a wealthy American industrialist, notori…”
Albert Einstein held Pugwash Conference host_asserted ▶ 46:39
“In a fanfare of publicity, Russell and Einstein demanded international cooperation among atomic scientists. Taking his inspiration from a meeting, Cyrus Eaton, a wealthy American industrialist, notori…”
Cyrus Eaton held Pugwash Conference host_asserted ▶ 46:39
“In a fanfare of publicity, Russell and Einstein demanded international cooperation among atomic scientists. Taking his inspiration from a meeting, Cyrus Eaton, a wealthy American industrialist, notori…”
Pugwash Conference led_to SANE Nuclear Policy host_asserted ▶ 47:10
“That was made up of mainland China, Soviet Union, and Western countries. Another Pugwash Conference was held in 1957. And from these conferences, the idea for sane nuclear policies was developed.…”
Gunnar Myrdal sponsored SANE Nuclear Policy host_asserted ▶ 47:31
“Nuclear Policies was founded in November 1957 with a headquarters in New York City and with Bertrand Russell of England and a Swedish socialist called Gunnar Myrdal, M-Y-R-D-A-L. They were sponsors. O…”
Bertrand Russell sponsored SANE Nuclear Policy host_asserted ▶ 47:31
“Nuclear Policies was founded in November 1957 with a headquarters in New York City and with Bertrand Russell of England and a Swedish socialist called Gunnar Myrdal, M-Y-R-D-A-L. They were sponsors. O…”
SANE Nuclear Policy held Madison Square Garden host_asserted ▶ 48:30
“James Warburg. Other national officers who were not CFR members is Steve Allen, Harry Bonafante, Walt Kelly, MLK, Bruno Walters, Normus Thomas, and Linus Pauling. A typical activity of this organizati…”
Israel Goldstein spoke_at Madison Square Garden host_asserted ▶ 48:59
“Speeches by Eleanor Roosevelt, Walter Reuther, Norman Thomas, Israel Goldstein, G. Menon Williams, all speakers were supporting either total or mostly disarmament and strengthening the UN as a way to …”
G. Menon Williams spoke_at Madison Square Garden host_asserted ▶ 48:59
“Speeches by Eleanor Roosevelt, Walter Reuther, Norman Thomas, Israel Goldstein, G. Menon Williams, all speakers were supporting either total or mostly disarmament and strengthening the UN as a way to …”
Eleanor Dulles spoke_at Madison Square Garden host_asserted ▶ 48:59
“Speeches by Eleanor Roosevelt, Walter Reuther, Norman Thomas, Israel Goldstein, G. Menon Williams, all speakers were supporting either total or mostly disarmament and strengthening the UN as a way to …”
Walter Reuther spoke_at Madison Square Garden host_asserted ▶ 48:59
“Speeches by Eleanor Roosevelt, Walter Reuther, Norman Thomas, Israel Goldstein, G. Menon Williams, all speakers were supporting either total or mostly disarmament and strengthening the UN as a way to …”
Norman Thomas spoke_at Madison Square Garden host_asserted ▶ 48:59
“Speeches by Eleanor Roosevelt, Walter Reuther, Norman Thomas, Israel Goldstein, G. Menon Williams, all speakers were supporting either total or mostly disarmament and strengthening the UN as a way to …”
Henry Abrams organized Madison Square Garden host_asserted ▶ 49:30
“Commenting on a rally at Madison Square Garden, Senator James Eastland, Senate Internal Security Subcommittee Chairman, said this. The communists publicized the meeting well in advance through their o…”
Henry Abrams member_of Belgian Communist Party host_asserted ▶ 49:30
“Commenting on a rally at Madison Square Garden, Senator James Eastland, Senate Internal Security Subcommittee Chairman, said this. The communists publicized the meeting well in advance through their o…”
James Eastland commented_on Madison Square Garden host_asserted ▶ 49:30
“Commenting on a rally at Madison Square Garden, Senator James Eastland, Senate Internal Security Subcommittee Chairman, said this. The communists publicized the meeting well in advance through their o…”
SANE Nuclear Policy removed_from_power Henry Abrams host_asserted ▶ 50:00
“Of the communist party. It is to the credit. Of the officers of the organization. That when Abrams record of communist connections. Was brought to the attention. Abrams was. Immediately discharged. Li…”
Fabian Society targeted Democratic Party host_asserted ▶ 1:08:03
“That was not the appropriate word to use in America, that democracy was a better word that they could co-opt inside America because of its implicit meaning here and the fact that they had chosen the D…”
Fabian Society founded Labour Party (UK) host_asserted ▶ 1:09:27
“That's the incrementalism. And I notice, I don't know, L. Sid Barrett over on YouTube mentioned the Labour Party. Yes, the Labour Party was created by the Fabians. And they chose that particular termi…”
George Bernard Shaw member_of Social Democratic Federation host_asserted ▶ 1:10:28
“As we talked about last week, you know, George Bernard Shaw, after discovering Karl Marx and reading Das Kapital, he joined what's called the Social Democratic Federation two years prior to becoming a…”
George Bernard Shaw member_of Fabian Society host_asserted ▶ 1:10:28
“As we talked about last week, you know, George Bernard Shaw, after discovering Karl Marx and reading Das Kapital, he joined what's called the Social Democratic Federation two years prior to becoming a…”
George Soros funded CFR host_asserted ▶ 1:15:34
“elite billionaire George Soros and Rockefeller-funded elections from every school from New York to California right now. Right. I agree with you 100%. The proof is in who gets taken out and who gets t…”
Rockefeller funded CFR host_asserted ▶ 1:15:34
“elite billionaire George Soros and Rockefeller-funded elections from every school from New York to California right now. Right. I agree with you 100%. The proof is in who gets taken out and who gets t…”
Helen Clark headed Royal Institute of International Affairs caller_asserted ▶ 1:15:53
“I do have to comment on Shelley the Kiwi over on Rumble. Helen Clark is president of Chatham House, sits on the board of the WHO, the Elders Club, the Madrid Gabi, all of them. And to top it off, she …”
Helen Clark member_of The Elders caller_asserted ▶ 1:15:53
“I do have to comment on Shelley the Kiwi over on Rumble. Helen Clark is president of Chatham House, sits on the board of the WHO, the Elders Club, the Madrid Gabi, all of them. And to top it off, she …”
Jacinda Ardern headed Labour Party (New Zealand) caller_asserted ▶ 1:15:53
“I do have to comment on Shelley the Kiwi over on Rumble. Helen Clark is president of Chatham House, sits on the board of the WHO, the Elders Club, the Madrid Gabi, all of them. And to top it off, she …”