GLADIOARCHIVEAND BEYOND
sign in

The Colonel's Corner The Invisible Government by Dan Smoot Part 6 II

1:20:23 · ▶ watch on Rumble

▶ Rumble @ here

Transcript

0:00 I don't know what's wrong with my computer. I think it's still playing over on Rumble, but not playing here. I'll flip over and look. All right. It is playing on Rumble, Colonel. Okay. All right. So basically what I'm going to do since yesterday got totally hosed up, I'm just going to hunt.
0:52 I have to say, that is the best video. I know. It just turned out so much better than I ever, ever expected. Every time I watch it, I'm just like... Okay, let's get this going over here. You guys will notice I have a little bandage on my shoulder here. I had to go to the dermatology. Always the same thing.
1:48 But I'm fine. Nothing to worry about. So where we started and then had to stop yesterday because God decided we needed some rain here. And he sent like five inches in about two hours. Like my pool was at the top of the pool. Way up above the tile.
2:21 It was a deluge of rain, which we desperately needed, so it's fine. Okay, I'm not going to go through all of the stuff that I went through. If you are interested, I left that short video from yesterday up, but I will name the ones under the media because it's stuff we've talked about a lot. I just highlighted some of the overlapping names.
2:50 The book went through Free Europe Committee, the National Association of the Advancement of Colored People, and pointed out that all of these same nefarious people from the CFR are on the board of all of these organizations. The American Committee on Africa was another one loaded up with CFR members.
3:15 the World Population Emergency Campaign, you know, Stop Having Baby Campaign, the eugenics element of it, loaded up with CFR members. And generally the same ones overlapping. The School of International Service, which of course is in Washington, D.C., and that's where all of the CIA guys go posing as foreign diplomats, as well as foreign diplomats.
3:44 CFR, CFR, CFR, Institute of International Education. Again, this one was interesting to me only because of how old it was. It was set up in 1919 by Elihu Root and Stephen Dugan, both CFR members. So it tells you everything you need to know about the committees. And what's interesting about this is generally you don't have someone
4:11 who looks at these things from that light. So if you go to the webpage and look up the institution without going to the bios of all of the people, and even sometimes then they're not as detailed as you need them to be to see what the overlapping influence is. And so having a book like this is very important to be able to do that. And again, I'm gonna call out the fact that at the end of this book,
4:41 this book will definitely stay in my office because he does a great job in the appendix of putting the like 1960 Atlantic Union Committee membership, which was basically all of the globalists. And he has several appendixes that show the overlapping members of different entities. And he doesn't just put like,
5:09 The members, he puts the directors, people that have emeritus status, which indicates former chairmanship. And he also includes honorary directors. And in some of the cases, he breaks it down by which policy subgroup that they sat in or sat on, like the monetary one, security policy, economic policy.
5:38 And because the Fabians like to use the economic arena, it's always really important to see who the CFR members are on these economic policies. Because learning how they do this is part of the major research piece that allows you to be more effective in the research. So chapter 10 on 145.
6:06 talks about communications media. And in this area, he basically weaves in, as he has done in the other chapters, the influential CFR members. And he asserted that the objective of the invisible government is to convert America into a socialist nation and then make it a unit of one world.
6:36 socialist system. The managers of these different groups basically don't admit that's their agenda. And this has been kind of a sticking point. You're not going to find these people labeled as Fabians. You have to look at what they did, what policies they support, and what organizations they join. They label themselves as liberals.
7:10 And that's not the classic definition of a liberal. And they also say that the old negative kind of government we used to have was inadequate for the challenges ahead. The liberals' positive foreign policy is said to be necessary for world peace and for the meeting of America's responsibility in the world. We don't have any responsibility in the world.
7:43 We have a responsibility to Americans. Their positive domestic policies are said to be necessary for the continued improvement and progress of our systems. But the positive foreign policies for peace has dragged us into continuous international conflict since post-World War II. I don't know what's wrong with my throat. This just started.
8:18 They also want to use our wealth and basically transfer it to, quote unquote, buy peace. They want us to surrender our freedom and national independence and become an all out province of a socialist one world system. Liberals pop.
8:43 positive domestic policies always bring the federal government into a role of subsidizing and controlling economic activities, i.e. socialism. That's all of their solutions is bigger government. The CFR has made significant progress in advancing this agenda through the use of clever propaganda. However much power the CFR combined,
9:14 may have inside the agencies of government that is via propaganda. And they use those organizations to educate, in parentheses, air quotes, the public to accept their ideas. The CFR needs to reach mass audience of Americans.
9:44 who do not belong to or attend any of its meetings or read its propaganda, but believe the propaganda that they're exposed to. Not the propaganda that they talk about. That's probably the wrong word. Because in these meetings, they actually tell you what they're going to do. Then they translate those goals into propaganda to convince you that what they want to do is for your own good.
10:14 In the 1957 annual report for the Committee of Economic Development, one of their biggest propaganda machines, Gardner Cowles, then chairman of that committee, did a bit of boasting about how successful they were. The value of the CED research and recommendation is directly related to its ability to communicate them. The organization's goal, role,
10:40 is an agency that can influence private and public economic policies and decisions, can be effective only to the extent that the CED gets its ideas across to people. During the year in 1957, he brags about the information division, i.e. the propaganda arm, and how much
11:04 radio TV, how much print they had in newspapers, magazines, blah, blah, blah. He only gave a hint of the total extent to which their mass communication had been basically controlled propaganda perpetrated by the CFR. The author said that he doubted that anyone really knows the full extent. His research revealed that a few CFR members who have
11:37 controlling interest in publishing and broadcasting had membership in the CFR. His list of the CFR members was not complete, but I mentioned several of them and I'll mention them again. Herbert Agar was the editor of the Louisville Courier-Journal. They've come up repeatedly as being in bed with the CIA.
12:08 Hanson Baldwin was the military affairs editor for the New York Times. Joseph Barnes was editor-in-chief of Simon & Schuster. And remember, several of our books have talked about the difficulty in getting their books published, like Pete Bruton. And Simon & Schuster was pivotal in that they would not produce things that were negative to the CIA.
12:39 Elliot Bell at McGraw Hill. He is also the publisher and editor of Businessweek. John Brown, the editor of the Sunday Review of Literature, because they have to have a tag team. Cass Canfield, chairman of the editorial board at Harper and Brothers. Norman Cousins, editor-in-chief of the
13:14 Saturday Review of Literature. Let me see. Philip Graham of the Washington Post and Times Herald. We come across him all the time. Walter Lippman, Ascended Columnist. Henry Luce, Publisher of Time Live, Fortune Sports Illustrated. Malcolm Muir, Chairman of the Board and Editor-in-Chief of Newsweek. William Paley, CBS. Ogden Reed.
13:46 New York Herald Tribune, and Whitelaw Read, also at the New York Tribune, Herald Tribune. Elmo Roper, he ran polling. David Sarnoff, chairman of the board of RCA, NBC, Victor, the Book of the Month Club guy, Truman.
14:30 Author Hayes Sulzberger, New York Times. C.L. Sulzberger, also of the New York Times. So that just kind of gives you a flavor of how the CFR controls the media. His last chapter, Interlocking Untouchables. Members of Congress are not aware of the far-reaching power of the tax-exempt organizations. I don't believe that. They ran investigations.
15:06 I strongly disagree. They're unaware. The CFR liked the CFR, but the power of the council is somewhat indicated by the fact that no committee of Congress has yet to be powerful enough to investigate it or the foundations. And again, that's not true. I guess he's never heard of the Reese Commission or committee. They actually did investigate it, and they investigated it in the 1950s.
15:34 And it was a scathing report of the fact that most of those foundations were serving as money laundering vehicles for the CIA and other nefarious things. Congressman E.E. Cox introduced a resolution asking for a committee to conduct an investigation.
16:03 He named the Rockefeller Foundation, whose funds had been used to finance individuals and organizations whose business it had been to get communism into private and public schools in the country and to talk down America. He also cited the Guggenheim Foundation, whose money was used to spread radicalism throughout the country. He listed the Carnegie Corporation and the Rosenwald Fund, saying,
16:32 There are disquieting evidence that at least a few of the foundations have permitted themselves to be infiltrated by men and women who are disloyal to the American way of life. They should be investigated and exposed publicly and legislation should be framed to correct that. Now, I love the way that he says they've been infiltrated. No, they were set up for that purpose. They weren't.
17:03 infiltrated. So he goes on, at the end of this, he does mention the Reese commission, but his takeaway was basically that nothing was done. And then he calls out a few of them and I just wanted to run through them. Ford Foundation, assets at the time this book was written. And again, remember how old this book is.
17:40 This book was written in 1962. They had in 1962, the Ford Foundation, $3 billion. The trustees of the Ford Foundation at the time, Eugene Black, CFR, John Cowles, CFR, Donald David, CFR, Mark Etheridge, CFR, the Fords.
18:10 Of course, Ford II. The Fords actually left the Ford Foundation and stopped affiliating with it because it said it didn't reflect the families where they wanted to go. Rowan Gaither, CFR. Lawrence Gould, CFR. Henry Held, CFR. John McCloy, CFR. And several other CFR members. Then he calls out the Fund for the Republic.
18:42 that was located in Santa Barbara, California. It was a subsidiary of the Ford Foundation because if you're gonna money launder, you have to have tiers of that so they can lose track of the money. It had almost $7 million as of 1957. And it had multiple CFR members like Paul Hoffman, Elmo Roper, George Schuster.
19:12 Charles Cole, Meyer Kressbaum, Herbert Lehman of the Lehman brother family, Henry Van Dusen, blah, blah, blah. Then he calls out the Rockefeller Foundation because no list would be complete without the Rockefeller Foundation. Located in New York with almost a billion dollars as of 1958. And of course.
19:46 Almost every member, Dean Rusk, John D. Rockefeller, Charles Bowles, Richard Bradfield, Detlev Brunk, John Dickey, Lewis Douglas, Arthur Houghton, Robert Lovett. Another guy we come across a lot. Of the 20.
20:17 members of the board at the time, 12 of them with CFR. And then the Rockefeller Brothers Fund, half of them were, and that included basically all of the Rockefellers were members of the CFR. The Carnegie Corporation, which turns into the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, they're separate, but they work collectively together.
20:50 located in New York, the Carnegie Corporation Fund had about $300 million in it. And at the time, the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace had about $25 million in it. And the Carnegie Corporation of New York, of the 16 members that was listed at the time, 10 of them were CFR members.
21:22 And for the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, it had 26 officers and 18 of them were CFR members. So again, you see the gross overlap and many of these names occur repeatedly. Then the Carnegie had another one. They actually had four during this time.
21:52 The Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching. And that one worked hand in hand with the Rockefeller Foundation subsidiary for teaching as well, for education as well. And of the teaching one, 26 people was on the committee and 15 of them were CFR members.
22:19 The Carnegie Institute of Washington, located in D.C., had $80 million, and about half of their members were CFR members. Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, I found them in a lot of CIA money laundering projects. It had $175 million in, let's see, 1958.
22:51 Of the 16 officers, 12 were CFR members. And that's interesting because when you look at who these people are, General Lucius Clay jumps out, Lawrence Rockefeller. So again, there's lots of overlap on here. The Commonwealth Fund of New York was located in New York City. It had $120 million.
23:22 And people like Malcolm Aldridge, Leo Welch, and Harold Hoskin, William Stevenson were all on there. And six of the 10 committee members were CFR. And then 20th Century Fund, I've come across that one, a whole lot involved in the CIA. They had...
23:51 about $18 million as of 1958. Adolph Burrell, Francis Biddle. These again are all names that we've talked about. Arthur Burns, J. Robert Oppenheimer, Arthur Schlesinger. Of their 20 officers, 13 were CFR members. And then he spends a little bit of time
24:26 talking about what people could do about this. And I'm going to share a couple of things that he said. I mean, obviously we're decades past this and not a lot got done, but he thought that at the time that
24:50 There needed to be a grassroots effort, much like the Tea Party actually, that demanded the Congress change the IRS codes that took the federal tax exemption away from these people that were proven to be basically in bed with the CIA and funding socialism in the United States. He also said that they should not be able to fund
25:23 any philosophy that was contrary to the constitution. And that's kind of just like no brainers as far as I'm concerned. So that basically, other than going through the appendix, which I'm not going to do, he published in the updated version, because this book, as I said, was published in the early 1960s originally.
25:50 And updated in the reprint, which happened like around 1980, a 1979 CFR membership list with the officers and directors. And again, the names just scream at you with people like the Rockefellers and a lot of the media. And, you know, they had honorary officer John J. McCoy.
26:19 Just all of the big government talked about the membership list. You find George H.W. Bush on it. It is very interesting just to kind of look at where they were then, the positions that they had, the company that they kept, and what happened afterwards. Like Kissinger's in here.
26:48 Brzezinski's in here, all of those people that played a huge role after this period of time in the very nefarious things and all sitting in the CFR. So again, I think if you guys do any research, if you can find an electronic version of this or buy this to keep it on your desk, it would help.
27:18 kind of cross-reference so you can get an idea of the affiliations of these people. And he's got a great index in the back. So it cross-references the different entities that we've went through in this book. So you don't have to go through the whole book to try to find their names. Anyway, that pretty much closes that book up.
27:46 And I'm trying to decide we will be at a vacation location tomorrow for our four o'clock show, whether I want to start that new book or whether we'll just do an open mic show. I don't know what I'm going to do. But that's it. And I'll open the floor to anything that you guys want to talk about. Okay, I got to ask, where are you vacating? We're going to Anna Maria Island.
28:21 I'm so jealous. I know. My husband has a really good friend that owns a house down there. And they've asked us repeatedly to come down there. And generally, we've got so much going on, namely my husband's car shows on the weekend. But this weekend, while he does have car shows, he's gotten tired of and he guilted him into it. That's kind of the best way to do it.
28:48 He took my husband to dinner on Friday and was like, you have, last Friday. And he says, you have to come down to the beach. And John's definitely a water guy. So it doesn't take a lot of arm twisting to get him to go to the beach. And we've not been to the beach, but like once this whole year. So it worked and we're going. So. Well, awesome. And your car in here, your car show is up here. Yeah, that's not my car show.
29:22 As a matter of fact, if you remember, when we went to the Hot Rod Power Tour a couple of years ago, it started in Atlanta and it went to, I think it ended up at Bristol, but it went through Rockingham and a whole bunch of the NASCAR circuits in the Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina area.
29:50 The very first day we were there, so we went up in the RV and we had the car in the trailer and John unloads the car. He's going to go drive it. I'm staying at the RV so we could do our shows. And the very first day, so I went to the Atlanta leg of the show with him and we had that golf cart weirdo that was working at the show.
30:19 roll his golf cart into our car and scratch the back of it. I remember that. Yes. So that was the Hot Rod Power Tour. So this year is the 100th anniversary of Route 66. And John really, really wants to go. And he may go. He found a... I have to tell you the story. But anyway, I'll get to that next. So he definitely wants to go.
30:49 But we have this dilemma of neither one of us likes to stay in hotels. We like to take our RV, but then you can't. He can't drive the car because I'm not driving the RV.
31:01 And the whole purpose of going is for him to drive the car. So I'm not driving the car and he drive the RV. So we have these little first world problems when it comes to doing these kind of car shows away, especially the ones that are like drivable car shows. And so, like I said, we've done a few of them, but logistically it's a nightmare. And so...
31:29 I wanted to go to this one because they were stopping at Rantoul, which is Chanute Air Force Base, my first duty station. And then it's going right by Bridget's house. And I was like, that would be the perfect one to go to. But then the majority of it's in Illinois and I didn't really want to go. And then last night he was on Facebook because he knows several of the people that went. And one of the guys posted they stole like seven cars last night.
31:59 In Julia, Illinois. Out of the parking lot of the hotel they stayed in. Holy crap. There was 15,000 came by today. And one of the guy's cars, only one's been found. And the only reason they found it is because the son of a bitch wrecked it. It was like a $90,000. Holy crap. Yeah, it was like a $90,000 Corvette. So, I'm just saying. How many of them did you see? How many got stolen? Like seven. That's crazy.
32:31 Out of the parking lot of the hotel. And you would think. That if you're going to do something like that. Especially in Illinois. You'd have security. Because it was one of the same. So for you guys that don't know. When they have these events. You register ahead of time. And they block hotels rooms. So they all stay basically in the same hotels. But anyway. It was crazy. And so now I'm.
33:03 justified in saying I didn't want to go. Got to thank JP Pritzker on that one. Yeah, because I'm telling you, John would be very aggressive if anything happened to a family member. He'd be about 10 times more aggressive if anything happened to his car. I can just tell you that right up front. That is definitely his baby.
33:31 When you have a car like that, you don't even want people touching it, let alone taking it. And of course, those older cars, it's really easy to be able to hotwire those cars. Obviously, that's a little bit more problematic with some of the newer cars, but evidently they figured out. Yeah, and no GPS. Well, we do have an Apple tag that's hidden in it. We take those precautions.
34:02 Even around our local car shows, we take those precautions because generally... Good thing. Yeah, because when you're at a car show, a lot of them are in downtown areas and you leave your car open and you go eat in one of the local restaurants because that's kind of the whole reason why places host these car shows is because they want to increase business. A lot of them here in Central Florida are in downtown.
34:29 areas so they can support their local businesses and they all stay open later and blah, blah, blah. So you definitely have to take precautions. But yeah, crazy, crazy, crazy. But anyway, so maybe we'll be up there this fall and do a Route 66 event with a few people. So what I was going to tell you is
35:00 John has a group of people that he does kind of correlates the car shows, which ones will generally like they'll have cars and breakfast events that he, you know, kind of coordinates Thursday or Friday where they're going to go on Saturday and Sunday. And so it's a very eclectic group of people.
35:26 a very eclectic group of people. And so he was going to one a few weekends ago and ask him who among, I've met them all, who among his friends was going with them on this particular car show. I'd been to the car show before. It's a big car show, but it's in the next county over in Hillsborough County. And he's like, I won't use their names, but one of them,
35:56 Couldn't get what they refer to as a kitchen pass because his wife wanted him to do something. And then another one had another issue. And then he says, and so-and-so can't leave the county. And I was like, what? He can't leave the county? Well, he's on probation. And I'm like, okay, I don't want to know. So anyway, never a dull moment. That's hysterical. I know. I'm like, can't leave.
36:28 It can't be for a car show. But yeah, anyway. Go ahead, SR. I don't have a hand over here. I don't know what's wrong with mine. Thank you, Colonel. And thank everyone for attending on Rumble in Huron Spaces. And yeah, we missed the show yesterday, but you're back and that's good. Yeah. Anyway, I did post some information about Carnegie Foundation in our.
36:58 so people get an idea of what's really going on. Yeah. And I also have a question. You had mentioned something about an affidavit two days ago. Yeah. Did I miss it? No. I'm having Warhamster use his little handy-dandy AI, whatever that thing is, to bring the text.
37:29 it's a PDF into a text document. So I can transfer that into an article because what I want to do, I'm going to like, I normally do where I put the text in and then in brackets, I'm going to put the comments in. Because obviously from the time this affidavit was written several years ago, like several decades ago,
37:58 we, our collective body of researchers, know a lot more about the points that he's making in there. And so I want to work on that this weekend. Warhamster said he'd be able to get to it before tomorrow. So I can work on it this weekend. And so hopefully post it and then...
38:21 what I may do because it logically flows right in because it talks about Permadex. It logically flows right into the shows that I've been doing on Alpha Warrior's show. I will probably do it as a presentation on his show. But that last show, the show we did on Wednesday night, was that last night? That was like crazy shit. That's probably one of the
38:50 best shows that we've ever done that took so many pieces. And I can't believe it's been a hundred shows. That's just mind blowing. But all of the information that we were presenting as we were finding it, I obviously put a lot of stuff in threads and all that other stuff. I used to do a lot more threads on X.
39:16 all of that research that we've done, and then the highlights every week was done on Alpha's show, just kind of as a way of saying thank you for getting, he has a much larger audience than mine, obviously. And so that's kind of the philosophy that I've used throughout this multi-year project. And so every week of the week before's research that I did,
39:46 we would present it. And so that it is the best representative collection of kind of our journey through all of this. And to be at this point where we're at now in the middle of all of the most recent JFK files coming out and having put all of these pieces together to come across the material that I used for
40:15 last night's show, that was able to tie in so many pieces of all of the research that we've done and connect all of those dots was amazing for me. Because now it is so much easier to read through material and see like 10 steps deep of every piece of material that's being laid out.
40:43 I also found a very interesting document, but we didn't have time to get to it last night, that actually showed the lineage. And I'll have to find it. I have the tab still open. That Oswald's wife had some very interesting connections to some of the...
41:11 secondary and tertiary level royalty. And the speculation in the article, and I mean, they tried to make this point that he was basically set up with her to bring her to the United States because several of her relatives were already here in the white Russian population.
41:38 To what extent that's true, I don't know. I didn't do a genealogical check on it, but it does show a whole chain of events of who her parents were, who their parents were, who their parents were. I just don't have any way of validating any of that. So anyway, it's coming. Thank you. I appreciate that. Now I got something to look forward to.
42:16 Always. Yeah. And I'll try to get a couple more of our propaganda shows up this weekend so we can knock that out. I find those fascinating as well on the premium side of it. So anybody else, anybody have any comments about the new recommendation of who's going to be the DNI? Did you guys see that?
42:53 I saw it, Colonel. I haven't done any digging into it. And I don't know this person well enough to make any comment about what's really going on. I think it's hilarious seeing your partner at Sullivan and Cromwell. I just find that totally amazing. And I also find it amazing that he served as a personal lawyer for Reid Hoffman, the guy that's in the middle of funding all of this shit. I find that fascinating.
43:26 Because we all know there's nobody on the planet that knows more about intelligence gathering and operations than Sullivan and Cromwell, historically and currently. So I mean, I find it. And I think that that nomination would require a lot of people.
43:56 to question if they think he's one of theirs um they have to wonder then does trump not know that he's one of them or has he made a deal and he's actually going to be working on behalf of trump and that has to have a lot of circuits lit up today um i don't know how you pronounce your name write them
44:31 Hello there. Yeah, I was amazed. This usually when I'm on, I get on on the web and it's always the sound drops out and it won't reset. They got to log out, log back in. So I just never took the chance to get on and start talking. But it's like it hasn't screwed up for like a whole half hour here. But I'd risk it. And wow. Solomon and Cromwell.
45:01 The Dulles boys. That law firm has a long history, huh? Well, and that's kind of obviously the interesting part of that. I'm wondering if we looked back, is this the first time since Alan Dulles, that a Sullivan and Cromwell senior attorney has the, I mean, obviously he's not CIA director, but he's kind of the step above it. It's probably the first time that that person's ever been the DNI.
45:31 From Sullivan and Cromwell. But I do find that very interesting. I had no idea this guy was from Sullivan and Cromwell. I just noticed that somebody had been nominated about 20, 30 minutes ago. Yeah. God, there's so much noise out on X. Everybody is like slop posting this, repeating that. It's an all day job just to stay up with what really went on. Yep. I agree. Renee, go ahead.
46:02 Hey, good afternoon, everybody. Hey, you just brought up Reid Hoffman, and that reminded me of something I've been wanting to share. A month or so ago, there was someone, a woman, she's American but British, and I thought, oh, this lady has to be a Rhodes Scholar, but she was not. She was something called Marshall Scholarship. I don't know if you encountered that, but it looks like a parallel thing to Rhodes Scholar.
46:32 And Reid Hoffman was also one of those. So just thought I would share that with you. Because it kind of looked, Marshall Scholarship kind of looks like a similar Rhodes Scholar thing. So I've heard of them. And if I'm not mistaken, this is done after.
46:56 Let's see. Yeah, it even says right on the wiki thing. I was going to say it's just like the Fulbright Scholarship, which is one of those grooming tools. And it says right on the first paragraph, it says the Marshall Scholarship is a postgraduate scholarship for intellectually distinguished young Americans to study at any university in the UK.
47:22 It is considered among the most prestigious scholarships for U.S. citizens, along with the Fulbright Scholarship. And it is another one of those bridges. And it is named after the Secretary of State, George Marshall, who is the one that came up with the Marshall Plan, which was used to fund Operation Gladio. So you can kind of get the whole picture there.
47:52 a part of the grooming process. Because I've come across this before on some people that it says there are over 1,900 alumni. Many of the alumni have had distinctions like the Supreme Court, Congress, cabinet members, state governors, CEOs of LinkedIn, Dolby Labs, Time Magazine, and CNN.
48:21 getting a drift here. Oh, and they're deans of universities like Yale, Stanford, Harvard. Yeah. So you can kind of get an idea of exactly who they're producing. That's crazy. So it goes through, let's see the history of it.
48:49 It'd be interesting looking over this now that I know a lot more about the Rhodes Scholarship and the Fabians to look back at my notes on this when I came across it the first time. So let's see. I was just going to look down here to see if they had. In 2019, the Marshall Scholarship.
49:17 hosted the Marshall Forum with the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. And it says they had 17 speakers, the governor of the Bank of England, Mark Carney, and NSA General Nakasone, U.S. Ambassadors Carla Hills, William Burns. Yeah, it's a bunch of nefarious shit is what it is.
49:47 It also has, let's see, in, oh, look at that. Isn't that convenient? It had, these are some of the agendas of their previous forums that they hosted. And market, global markets and monetary policies, arts and creativity, global peace and security, the rule of law, global health, peace, growth and prosperity.
50:17 Scientific Innovation, The Legacy of the Marshall Plan. And then if you look at all the people that are on there, they like to have a lot of their scholars come speak in their new jobs. Like William Burns, it says was a 1978 scholar. And yes.
50:47 Reid Hoffman was a 1990 scholar. Stephen Breyer was a 59 scholar. Neil Gorsuch was a 1992 scholar. Madeleine Albright. And then they have a whole list. Oh, crap. They have a whole list of people that were notable. A lot of ambassadors, which...
51:19 for us, is not surprising at all, right? A lot of them go to Oxford, like I'd say way more than half. The other destination seems to be the University of Cambridge. But if we go back in time, they started doing it in 1955.
51:48 And I'm just looking through here real quickly to, it'd be interesting to try to put a profile together of all these people and what they went on to do here in the United States. Because obviously Burns ended up as the CIA director and the ambassador to Russia. A lot of them end up in state government, state senators, governors.
52:17 and attorney generals. Oh, here's one guy. Oh, God. I don't recognize his name, but it's funny because you go across there. Oh, he graduated from Harvard. His name's Thomas Crothers. And he picks the London School of Economics, which of course is the home of Fabian. And he goes on to be a vice president of Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
52:45 That's kind of like the quintessential combination there. Mark Whitaker was at CNN and NBC and Newsweek. So it definitely fits the mold of the stuff that we've discovered here. Ann Applebaum. Oh, look at that. Oh, and of course she went to the London School of Economics too.
53:16 Yeah, that's the girl who I was digging into when I found the Marshall Scholarship and Reid Hoffman. That's the girl's name, Applebaum. Yeah. Oh, my gosh. You are not going to believe who's on this list. Patrick Byrne. OMG. Okay, that's hilarious. That's absolutely hilarious. Sorry. Oh, my gosh.
53:52 Okay. A lot of professors, a lot of these people bring that shit back here and then teach it to our kids. That's absolutely hilarious. Let me see if we can find anybody else in here. That'll give me a chuckle. Probably nobody liked that one. Oh, damn. That better not be. No, that's the wrong one. We had a general.
54:32 by the last name of Jumper. And I'm like, that can't be him. It's not. This guy is a chemist. So, yeah. All right. But what's interesting about this is it gives things that are similar programs to, and I love that they do this to the Marshall. And it lists the Fulbright, it lists Rhodes Scholars.
55:06 It lists the Jardine Scholarship. I've come across that one a couple of times. And the Harry S. Truman Scholarship and the Churchill Scholarship, all of those being like this. And oftentimes, they kind of let the cat out of the bag when they do that kind of thing because it allows you to be able to go and compare them. Ryden, go ahead. Yeah, I totally forgot. I have to keep repeating it to myself.
55:36 Touching on new topics, but a couple of days, a day or two ago, Congolese rice pops up out of, out of nowhere with the Hoover Institute and starts pushing stuff. And it occurred to me, it's like, I used to have, well, I guess I still do have a fair amount of respect for her, but you know, is, is she one of these elite class went to the right schools type? Yeah. I, I used to have a lot of respect for,
56:06 She actually is the director at the Hoover Institute. It's so disappointing. I've read her biography. I mean, she has a very impressive story. But, you know, obviously did some very nefarious things.
56:32 had some, like she was the national security advisor, which for those of us who've done this research, you know, that's the belly button into the White House for all covert operations. And she was the NSA director on 9-11. And now that I know all the stuff that we know, that's very, very nefarious to me. And it also indicates to me that she knows.
57:02 all about the fact she was there until, I want to say 2005, because I think she moved over to be the Secretary of State after that, that she knew all about the lies about the yellow cake, uranium, and all of that other shit. And because you don't sit in that position and not know. So, yeah. But, you know, they get tapped for these things and they feel like,
57:38 In order to meet the expectation, you just go along with that shit. So very disappointing. Very, very disappointing. If I may, Colonel, Madeline Albright reminds me of Kissinger in the way she went about doing things. The other thing I might note, right, I hope I didn't butcher that, but Bridget was having problems.
58:12 way back with connection issues. And we finally came to the conclusion that somebody mentioned, you might want to reboot your router if you haven't done so in a long time. So you might want to try that. Thank you, Colonel. Sure. Our resident IT guy. I don't think so. I want to direct five gigabit fiber. It's going right into my system. I don't use a router. Oh, there you go.
58:45 My PC is also Linux, not Windows. Even better. Okay. All right. Well, if we don't have, oh, Renee, go ahead. Yeah, one final other thing I just wanted to share. You brought up Sullivan and Cromwell. Recently, I was talking about kind of digging into Scotland Yard being connected to the Americas and, you know, the police, the terror.
59:19 networks, blah, blah, blah. So I was going back on that subject and I found a guy whose name is Harlan Stone, Harlan Frisk Stone. He was an attorney and a judge and a this and a that. But anyway, he was under FDR and FDR and there was another guy. Well,
59:48 There was another guy by the name of Harry Hopkins, Wild Bill Donovan, and this guy, Stone, all kind of collaborated for that international stretch of fighting the wars, funding England, blah, blah, blah. But the Stone guy was the man who was pushing for Hoover to renovate the police.
1:00:15 No, sorry, the FBI and the police, whatever, in the United States. And he said, we want to model it after Scotland Yard. So he was really a pusher of the whole Scotland Yard regime and rebirthing the United States and the intelligence and the police over here to be like Scotland Yard. But sure enough, he worked for Sullivan and Cromwell as well.
1:00:41 So sorry for that long rant, but yeah, there was a connection there. I just wanted to share because also the part of that circle of FDR and Wild Bill Donovan and this Stone guy, that Harry Hopkins is a very interesting one as well. He kind of reminded me of Colonel House with Wilson because
1:01:08 He was FDR's like best, he kind of best confident guy. And he was over in the UK a lot. He had a really...
1:01:18 an alliance and friendship with Stalin, friendship with Churchill. But anyway, a lot of strange characters, you know, interesting characters around FDR and that whole, the New Deal thing, et cetera, et cetera. So it reminds me, it all connects, you know, the Fabian, the this, the that, they're all in cahoots and that's all. Thank you. Sure. It's a small world that just keeps coming up over and over again.
1:01:47 All of these players behind the scene that people's, you've never heard of. That's kind of the fascinating point of all of this. So I did not know that Madeleine Albright was the chairman of the DNI under the National Endowment for Democracy. I'm not surprised at all.
1:02:19 But that is very interesting. Rydom, go ahead. Yeah, I was going to take the opportunity, since it seemed to be a bit of a lull, to push my own boogeyman, good old Ed Bernays. Okay. Now, he wrote back in the, I don't know, was it 1910s, 11s? I think he wrote his first book, I think, was Engineering of Consent.
1:02:53 but uh the thing that strikes me the most is just reading through his propaganda book the first couple pages he talks in glowing terms about the invisible government of uh experts that influence everybody and it's i mean it was all put in 1928 pre-media terms but uh you know influence the influencers and and now we're getting to the point where they're just influencing the ais they influence us and all sorts of weird stuff like that but i keep
1:03:23 I have this, this certainty somewhere that in between, cause he was involved with world war one with the, the, the propaganda for world war one. And then he kind of dropped off the map as far as documented connections to the intelligence community. But, you know, you also have, you know, you want to play conspiracy theorist here. We've got what the, the fed being created in, what was it? 1913. Yeah. And, and then we had,
1:03:55 Oh, God, all sorts of stuff like that. And I can see where these banker people, the theoretical deep state at the time, as it were, that brought about the Fed and all that, might have looked at Ed and gone, we need this guy. Yeah, Alan Dulles loved him. Oh, yeah. I mean, I'm sure the CIA probably had copies of his books on every shelf there.
1:04:23 There's no apparent documented connection. Actually, there is. In a couple of the books that I've read of the Guatemalan coup that they did in 1954, he was an advisor on it. Oh, yeah. I mean, he had already been working for UFC, United Fruit. And United Fruit had, at least the way I've heard it anyway, was they had managed to get a hold of...
1:04:54 huge swaths of real estate down in South America by essentially eminent domain type of stuff. Well, we're getting upset. So United fruit had him organize a campaign to, to, you know, get set up with the coup. And I imagine at this time, yes, your uncle CIA probably got in there somewhere. No, the CIA ran the coup. Oh, um, Bernays actually gave them the propaganda campaign to run the coup.
1:05:24 I would actually kind of go with the theory that UFC talked the CIA into doing the coup. Well, you don't talk the CIA into anything. The CIA actually works for those guys. They take their orders from them. You don't talk them into them. So there's just a phone call. It's just like the Chilean coup. When ITT, Freeport Mining, and PepsiCo went to Nixon and said, hey, we need you to get rid of Salvador Allende.
1:05:53 They just salute smartly and do it. And if the president doesn't go along, they just call the CIA direct. The CIA doesn't work for the president. They work for these oligarchs. I've said that for a very long time. It's quite clear that that's exactly what happens. And whatever channel they use to do that, the CIA just conducts the operation to get rid of the president that was elected.
1:06:22 Bernays actually gave them the propaganda campaign to run the coup. I would actually kind of go with the theory that UFC talked the CIA into doing the coup. Well, you don't talk the CIA into anything. The CIA actually works for those guys.
1:06:40 They take their orders from them. You don't talk them into them. So there's just a phone call. It's just like the Chilean coup. When ITT, Freeport Mining, and PepsiCo went to Nixon and said, hey, we need you to get rid of Salvador Allende. They just salute smartly and do it. And if the president doesn't go along, they just call the CIA direct. The CIA doesn't work for the president.
1:07:03 They work for these oligarchs. I've said that for a very long time. It's quite clear that that's exactly what happens. And whatever channel they use to do that, the CIA just conducts the operation to get rid of the president that was elected to do exactly what he's doing. They just get rid of him. And there's multiple examples of that.
1:07:36 You know, obviously they started out the year before in Iran and did exactly that. After the UK tried it and failed and got kicked out of the country, BP just called Standard Oil and says, now do I have a record of the phone call? No, but we had no vested interest in Iran at all. We didn't have any oil interest there. We had nothing.
1:07:59 And so BP just contacts Standard Oil and they make a deal. Hey, we'll give you 30% of the concession if you tell the CIA to go overthrow Mosaddegh. And that's exactly what happened. There was no reason for BP to give Standard Oil anything. They had the concession. They now had their Shah in charge. So you have to assume that the deal was made.
1:08:28 That if you can get the CIA to go overthrow him because we fucked it up, then we'll give you a cut of the concession because they had no interest in Iran at all. And they ended up in the aftermath immediately getting a 30% cut of the British concession. So there's lots of examples like that. But yeah, so that's at least one we know for sure that he was involved in.
1:09:06 But he trained his disciples as well. And the CIA was notorious for hiring people that had Bernays-like capability. Lansdale was another one. He was a PR executive. They're all into the propaganda marketing of...
1:09:27 how to sell the American people that overthrowing a foreign government is for democracy, even though you install a military dictator in charge of it. That's quite a propaganda feat, but they've been able to do it repeatedly. So anyway, all right, anything else? Colonel, may I please add one more note of what I was just talking about and share? It's something I forgot, but I think it's important. Sure.
1:10:06 Regarding that timeline with FDR and Stone and Hopkins and Wild Bill Donovan, interestingly enough, that is when Joseph Kennedy was ambassador to the UK. And they were, the whole lot of them were squeezing him out. And apparently JFK.
1:10:35 went over there a few times or more than a few. And he actually wrote his university thesis on that experience and his own opinion of why he, I think it was called something like why England slept or why London slept, something like that. But it seems like a significant time between his dad, his father.
1:11:03 Joseph and his stance on not meddling in international problems and war and how it kind of shaped a different direction for JFK. But I think it's a significant beginning or a little story that we don't really hear much about. So that's all. Just wanted to share that extra nugget. Well, you know, JFK went to the London School of Economics, right?
1:11:30 Ah, no, I did not. Thank you for sharing. Uh-huh. Okay. Yes. Yes. And the guy that was in charge of the London School of Economics that was his professor was Harold Lasky, the Fabian. The plot thickens. Yes, it does.
1:11:56 Yeah. Insider views are always good to be on the inside of things, just like our current president, to have that whole history of inside knowledge. Yeah. Harold Lasky was the chairman of the British Labour Party, which was the lot, stock and barrel Fabian political party. And that was JFK's.
1:12:24 I don't know if you'd call him a mentor, but it was his professor while he was there. Yeah. SR, go ahead. Thank you, Colonel. Something else got me moving along the same lines here and hit something that got to me concerning Iran. What I really wanted to know is here in the United States, the way oil developed and how it turned into the way it is.
1:12:57 We actually had wildcatters, wildcat independents here in the U.S. at one time. Nowhere in the Middle East did you have that happen. It was all done by corporate. Because they didn't know how to do it. There was no technology or any capability for wildcatters to do it. The U.S. corporations went over there and said they'd do it for them.
1:13:32 And they did. And it makes sense. It makes sense if those guys... Well, understand that all of the current map over there was set up at the end of World War I and II. And so, as a matter of fact, in most of those cases, the royal families owed their being the royal family.
1:14:04 to the US and the UK. So they were beholding to them. The Saad family was only one of several major tribes. It was outside forces that decided they were going to reign as the royal family in Saudi Arabia when they drew the current state of Saudi Arabia. The same is true in Iran as it stood.
1:14:34 post-World War I and World War II, because that was Persia. The same is true in Iraq, in Jordan. Jordan's a made-up country. It didn't even exist. They just designated, same thing with Syria, they just designated one of the tribal families as, you know, like they just took a, whatever you call those things, one of their little scepters and put,
1:15:04 tapped on two shoulders and said, you're now the king of this new created bullshit made up country. And so they owe the whole fact that they're sitting on all of this potential wealth of oil in the ground to those people. So of course they couldn't say, hey, you can't come in here and drill for oil because their whole being.
1:15:31 is a result of those people. And so those people approach him and say, hey, now that I made you the king and I gave you all of the equipment and funding to be able to thwart all of your tribal competitors, we want to come get the concession for your oil. And they just like divvied it up. Saudi Arabia went to Standard Oil and Iran went to BP. That's it. Crazy history.
1:16:06 It is, Colonel. It really is. Lots of backroom deals. And you know that they had sent geology teams all over the world. They had a very good idea. As soon as you could fly, the Rockefellers had tons of aircraft flying all over the world doing geology studies. Where is the oil? Where is the gold? Where is the silver? They knew.
1:16:43 There was one guy that was working for the Dutch in Indonesia. And I was reading a story about a book about that guy. And he was one of the best scouts for precious metals. He could look at the way mountains were formed and know with a high probability of certainty whether or not.
1:17:12 they had a significant enough amount of precious metal in them to make it worth their while. Now, he was wrong a couple of times. He was almost never wrong. And he was the guy that in the 1930s found the mountain full of gold that was literally pure gold in Indonesia. He had a knack for, however it is they do that, for doing it.
1:17:40 That's why I found it fascinating that George DeMorganshield, that was his specialty, geology, and his specifically was related to oil and whatever. Like in the Rockefeller book, Thy Will Be Done, it talks about them using the aircraft to go through South America.
1:18:06 And there was particular things that you could look for as far as habitation to know whether or not oil was likely present around certain waterways. Certain plants grew more prolifically in those areas and other ones did not. And so that's what they did. They had...
1:18:33 hundreds of planes flying all over looking for this stuff. And that's how they planned what country they needed to take over next if the government wouldn't work with them. It was all based on those resources. So anyway, sorry, you're going to get me in trouble. Yeah, I like that new word, homophabian. That's going to be my new favorite word as we go through the Fabian.
1:19:14 Donnie vision. Yep. That's my new word. Absolutely. All right. That's going to do us for today. And I will let you guys know what the format's going to be tomorrow. Sometime during the morning. And I think I, I really want to start this book. So I think we're going to start the book. Cause I want you guys to be as mad as I am.
1:19:42 I'm just kidding. It does make your blood boil though. I'll caution you ahead of time. But anyway, all right, you guys take care. Have a nice evening. I'll see you tomorrow at noon with Warhamster. We're gonna talk about the London School of Economics and then at four o'clock for our normal show. And I will be on Lieutenant Colonel Steve's round table tonight. I think that starts at seven.
1:20:11 on his show. And I will, they're supposed to send me a link. I'll repost it when they do. So you guys have fun. I'll talk to you tomorrow.

Entities here

CFR25CIA12Carnegie Endowment for International Peace8Edward Bernays8Sullivan & Cromwell6Marshall Scholarship5Rockefeller Foundation5Condoleezza Rice4Reid Hoffman4Ford Foundation4John F. Kennedy4London School of Economics4Harlan Fiske Stone4William J. Donovan3Standard Oil3Harry Hopkins3Joseph Kennedy Sr.3Madeleine Albright3Economic Development Corps3United Fruit Company3William J. Burns3John J. McCloy2The New York Times2Harold Laski2Fund for the Republic2Vietnam2Reese Commission2Anne Applebaum2Salvador Allende2Rockefeller2Richard Nixon2Mitford family2Elmo Roper2Hoover Institution2Freeport-McMoRan2PepsiCo2Time Inc.2Sunday Review of Literature2Lucius Clay1William Stephenson1

Claims made here

CFR member_of NAACP book_quoted ▶ 2:50
“The book went through Free Europe Committee, the National Association of the Advancement of Colored People, and pointed out that all of these same nefarious people from the CFR are on the board of all…”
CFR member_of National Committee for a Free Europe book_quoted ▶ 2:50
“The book went through Free Europe Committee, the National Association of the Advancement of Colored People, and pointed out that all of these same nefarious people from the CFR are on the board of all…”
CFR member_of American Committee on Africa book_quoted ▶ 2:50
“The book went through Free Europe Committee, the National Association of the Advancement of Colored People, and pointed out that all of these same nefarious people from the CFR are on the board of all…”
CFR member_of World Population Emergency Campaign book_quoted ▶ 3:15
“the World Population Emergency Campaign, you know, Stop Having Baby Campaign, the eugenics element of it, loaded up with CFR members. And generally the same ones overlapping. The School of Internation…”
Stephen Dugan founded Royal Institute of International Affairs book_quoted ▶ 3:44
“CFR, CFR, CFR, Institute of International Education. Again, this one was interesting to me only because of how old it was. It was set up in 1919 by Elihu Root and Stephen Dugan, both CFR members. So i…”
Elihu Root member_of CFR book_quoted ▶ 3:44
“CFR, CFR, CFR, Institute of International Education. Again, this one was interesting to me only because of how old it was. It was set up in 1919 by Elihu Root and Stephen Dugan, both CFR members. So i…”
Elihu Root founded Royal Institute of International Affairs book_quoted ▶ 3:44
“CFR, CFR, CFR, Institute of International Education. Again, this one was interesting to me only because of how old it was. It was set up in 1919 by Elihu Root and Stephen Dugan, both CFR members. So i…”
Stephen Dugan member_of CFR book_quoted ▶ 3:44
“CFR, CFR, CFR, Institute of International Education. Again, this one was interesting to me only because of how old it was. It was set up in 1919 by Elihu Root and Stephen Dugan, both CFR members. So i…”
Gardner Cowles headed Economic Development Corps book_quoted ▶ 10:14
“In the 1957 annual report for the Committee of Economic Development, one of their biggest propaganda machines, Gardner Cowles, then chairman of that committee, did a bit of boasting about how successf…”
Herbert Agar member_of CFR book_quoted ▶ 11:37
“controlling interest in publishing and broadcasting had membership in the CFR. His list of the CFR members was not complete, but I mentioned several of them and I'll mention them again. Herbert Agar w…”
Herbert Agar headed Louisville Courier Journal book_quoted ▶ 11:37
“controlling interest in publishing and broadcasting had membership in the CFR. His list of the CFR members was not complete, but I mentioned several of them and I'll mention them again. Herbert Agar w…”
Joseph Barnes member_of CFR book_quoted ▶ 12:08
“Hanson Baldwin was the military affairs editor for the New York Times. Joseph Barnes was editor-in-chief of Simon & Schuster. And remember, several of our books have talked about the difficulty in get…”
Joseph Barnes headed Simon & Schuster book_quoted ▶ 12:08
“Hanson Baldwin was the military affairs editor for the New York Times. Joseph Barnes was editor-in-chief of Simon & Schuster. And remember, several of our books have talked about the difficulty in get…”
Hanson Baldwin headed The New York Times book_quoted ▶ 12:08
“Hanson Baldwin was the military affairs editor for the New York Times. Joseph Barnes was editor-in-chief of Simon & Schuster. And remember, several of our books have talked about the difficulty in get…”
Hanson Baldwin member_of CFR book_quoted ▶ 12:08
“Hanson Baldwin was the military affairs editor for the New York Times. Joseph Barnes was editor-in-chief of Simon & Schuster. And remember, several of our books have talked about the difficulty in get…”
Richard M. Bissell Jr. member_of CFR book_quoted ▶ 12:39
“Elliot Bell at McGraw Hill. He is also the publisher and editor of Businessweek. John Brown, the editor of the Sunday Review of Literature, because they have to have a tag team. Cass Canfield, chairma…”
Cass Canfield headed Harper & Brothers book_quoted ▶ 12:39
“Elliot Bell at McGraw Hill. He is also the publisher and editor of Businessweek. John Brown, the editor of the Sunday Review of Literature, because they have to have a tag team. Cass Canfield, chairma…”
Norman Cousins member_of CFR book_quoted ▶ 12:39
“Elliot Bell at McGraw Hill. He is also the publisher and editor of Businessweek. John Brown, the editor of the Sunday Review of Literature, because they have to have a tag team. Cass Canfield, chairma…”
Norman Cousins headed Sunday Review of Literature book_quoted ▶ 12:39
“Elliot Bell at McGraw Hill. He is also the publisher and editor of Businessweek. John Brown, the editor of the Sunday Review of Literature, because they have to have a tag team. Cass Canfield, chairma…”
Richard M. Bissell Jr. headed Sunday Review of Literature book_quoted ▶ 12:39
“Elliot Bell at McGraw Hill. He is also the publisher and editor of Businessweek. John Brown, the editor of the Sunday Review of Literature, because they have to have a tag team. Cass Canfield, chairma…”
Cass Canfield member_of CFR book_quoted ▶ 12:39
“Elliot Bell at McGraw Hill. He is also the publisher and editor of Businessweek. John Brown, the editor of the Sunday Review of Literature, because they have to have a tag team. Cass Canfield, chairma…”
Elliot Bell member_of CFR book_quoted ▶ 12:39
“Elliot Bell at McGraw Hill. He is also the publisher and editor of Businessweek. John Brown, the editor of the Sunday Review of Literature, because they have to have a tag team. Cass Canfield, chairma…”
Elliot Bell headed McGraw-Hill book_quoted ▶ 12:39
“Elliot Bell at McGraw Hill. He is also the publisher and editor of Businessweek. John Brown, the editor of the Sunday Review of Literature, because they have to have a tag team. Cass Canfield, chairma…”
Elliot Bell headed Businessweek book_quoted ▶ 12:39
“Elliot Bell at McGraw Hill. He is also the publisher and editor of Businessweek. John Brown, the editor of the Sunday Review of Literature, because they have to have a tag team. Cass Canfield, chairma…”
William Pawley member_of CFR book_quoted ▶ 13:14
“Saturday Review of Literature. Let me see. Philip Graham of the Washington Post and Times Herald. We come across him all the time. Walter Lippman, Ascended Columnist. Henry Luce, Publisher of Time Liv…”
Philip Graham member_of CFR book_quoted ▶ 13:14
“Saturday Review of Literature. Let me see. Philip Graham of the Washington Post and Times Herald. We come across him all the time. Walter Lippman, Ascended Columnist. Henry Luce, Publisher of Time Liv…”
Philip Graham headed The Washington Post book_quoted ▶ 13:14
“Saturday Review of Literature. Let me see. Philip Graham of the Washington Post and Times Herald. We come across him all the time. Walter Lippman, Ascended Columnist. Henry Luce, Publisher of Time Liv…”
Philip Graham headed Washington Times book_quoted ▶ 13:14
“Saturday Review of Literature. Let me see. Philip Graham of the Washington Post and Times Herald. We come across him all the time. Walter Lippman, Ascended Columnist. Henry Luce, Publisher of Time Liv…”
Walter Lippmann member_of CFR book_quoted ▶ 13:14
“Saturday Review of Literature. Let me see. Philip Graham of the Washington Post and Times Herald. We come across him all the time. Walter Lippman, Ascended Columnist. Henry Luce, Publisher of Time Liv…”
Henry Luce member_of CFR book_quoted ▶ 13:14
“Saturday Review of Literature. Let me see. Philip Graham of the Washington Post and Times Herald. We come across him all the time. Walter Lippman, Ascended Columnist. Henry Luce, Publisher of Time Liv…”
Henry Luce headed Time Inc. book_quoted ▶ 13:14
“Saturday Review of Literature. Let me see. Philip Graham of the Washington Post and Times Herald. We come across him all the time. Walter Lippman, Ascended Columnist. Henry Luce, Publisher of Time Liv…”
Henry Luce headed Fortune magazine book_quoted ▶ 13:14
“Saturday Review of Literature. Let me see. Philip Graham of the Washington Post and Times Herald. We come across him all the time. Walter Lippman, Ascended Columnist. Henry Luce, Publisher of Time Liv…”
Malcolm X member_of CFR book_quoted ▶ 13:14
“Saturday Review of Literature. Let me see. Philip Graham of the Washington Post and Times Herald. We come across him all the time. Walter Lippman, Ascended Columnist. Henry Luce, Publisher of Time Liv…”
Malcolm X headed Newsweek book_quoted ▶ 13:14
“Saturday Review of Literature. Let me see. Philip Graham of the Washington Post and Times Herald. We come across him all the time. Walter Lippman, Ascended Columnist. Henry Luce, Publisher of Time Liv…”
Ogden Reid member_of CFR book_quoted ▶ 13:14
“Saturday Review of Literature. Let me see. Philip Graham of the Washington Post and Times Herald. We come across him all the time. Walter Lippman, Ascended Columnist. Henry Luce, Publisher of Time Liv…”
Ogden Reid headed New York Herald Tribune book_quoted ▶ 13:14
“Saturday Review of Literature. Let me see. Philip Graham of the Washington Post and Times Herald. We come across him all the time. Walter Lippman, Ascended Columnist. Henry Luce, Publisher of Time Liv…”
Whitelaw Reid member_of CFR book_quoted ▶ 13:46
“New York Herald Tribune, and Whitelaw Read, also at the New York Tribune, Herald Tribune. Elmo Roper, he ran polling. David Sarnoff, chairman of the board of RCA, NBC, Victor, the Book of the Month Cl…”
Whitelaw Reid headed New York Herald Tribune book_quoted ▶ 13:46
“New York Herald Tribune, and Whitelaw Read, also at the New York Tribune, Herald Tribune. Elmo Roper, he ran polling. David Sarnoff, chairman of the board of RCA, NBC, Victor, the Book of the Month Cl…”
Elmo Roper member_of CFR book_quoted ▶ 13:46
“New York Herald Tribune, and Whitelaw Read, also at the New York Tribune, Herald Tribune. Elmo Roper, he ran polling. David Sarnoff, chairman of the board of RCA, NBC, Victor, the Book of the Month Cl…”
David Sarnoff headed The Book of the Month Club book_quoted ▶ 13:46
“New York Herald Tribune, and Whitelaw Read, also at the New York Tribune, Herald Tribune. Elmo Roper, he ran polling. David Sarnoff, chairman of the board of RCA, NBC, Victor, the Book of the Month Cl…”
David Sarnoff member_of CFR book_quoted ▶ 13:46
“New York Herald Tribune, and Whitelaw Read, also at the New York Tribune, Herald Tribune. Elmo Roper, he ran polling. David Sarnoff, chairman of the board of RCA, NBC, Victor, the Book of the Month Cl…”
Arthur Ochs Sulzberger headed The New York Times book_quoted ▶ 14:30
“Author Hayes Sulzberger, New York Times. C.L. Sulzberger, also of the New York Times. So that just kind of gives you a flavor of how the CFR controls the media. His last chapter, Interlocking Untoucha…”
C.L. Sulzberger member_of CFR book_quoted ▶ 14:30
“Author Hayes Sulzberger, New York Times. C.L. Sulzberger, also of the New York Times. So that just kind of gives you a flavor of how the CFR controls the media. His last chapter, Interlocking Untoucha…”
C.L. Sulzberger headed The New York Times book_quoted ▶ 14:30
“Author Hayes Sulzberger, New York Times. C.L. Sulzberger, also of the New York Times. So that just kind of gives you a flavor of how the CFR controls the media. His last chapter, Interlocking Untoucha…”
Arthur Ochs Sulzberger member_of CFR book_quoted ▶ 14:30
“Author Hayes Sulzberger, New York Times. C.L. Sulzberger, also of the New York Times. So that just kind of gives you a flavor of how the CFR controls the media. His last chapter, Interlocking Untoucha…”
Reese Commission exposed Guggenheim Foundation book_quoted ▶ 16:03
“He named the Rockefeller Foundation, whose funds had been used to finance individuals and organizations whose business it had been to get communism into private and public schools in the country and t…”
Reese Commission exposed Rockefeller Foundation book_quoted ▶ 16:03
“He named the Rockefeller Foundation, whose funds had been used to finance individuals and organizations whose business it had been to get communism into private and public schools in the country and t…”
Reese Commission exposed Carnegie Endowment for International Peace book_quoted ▶ 16:32
“There are disquieting evidence that at least a few of the foundations have permitted themselves to be infiltrated by men and women who are disloyal to the American way of life. They should be investig…”
Reese Commission exposed Rosenwald Fund book_quoted ▶ 16:32
“There are disquieting evidence that at least a few of the foundations have permitted themselves to be infiltrated by men and women who are disloyal to the American way of life. They should be investig…”
Mark Etheridge member_of CFR book_quoted ▶ 17:40
“This book was written in 1962. They had in 1962, the Ford Foundation, $3 billion. The trustees of the Ford Foundation at the time, Eugene Black, CFR, John Cowles, CFR, Donald David, CFR, Mark Etheridg…”
Eugene Black member_of CFR book_quoted ▶ 17:40
“This book was written in 1962. They had in 1962, the Ford Foundation, $3 billion. The trustees of the Ford Foundation at the time, Eugene Black, CFR, John Cowles, CFR, Donald David, CFR, Mark Etheridg…”
Eugene Black member_of Ford Foundation book_quoted ▶ 17:40
“This book was written in 1962. They had in 1962, the Ford Foundation, $3 billion. The trustees of the Ford Foundation at the time, Eugene Black, CFR, John Cowles, CFR, Donald David, CFR, Mark Etheridg…”
John Cowles member_of CFR book_quoted ▶ 17:40
“This book was written in 1962. They had in 1962, the Ford Foundation, $3 billion. The trustees of the Ford Foundation at the time, Eugene Black, CFR, John Cowles, CFR, Donald David, CFR, Mark Etheridg…”
John Cowles member_of Ford Foundation book_quoted ▶ 17:40
“This book was written in 1962. They had in 1962, the Ford Foundation, $3 billion. The trustees of the Ford Foundation at the time, Eugene Black, CFR, John Cowles, CFR, Donald David, CFR, Mark Etheridg…”
Donald David member_of CFR book_quoted ▶ 17:40
“This book was written in 1962. They had in 1962, the Ford Foundation, $3 billion. The trustees of the Ford Foundation at the time, Eugene Black, CFR, John Cowles, CFR, Donald David, CFR, Mark Etheridg…”
Donald David member_of Ford Foundation book_quoted ▶ 17:40
“This book was written in 1962. They had in 1962, the Ford Foundation, $3 billion. The trustees of the Ford Foundation at the time, Eugene Black, CFR, John Cowles, CFR, Donald David, CFR, Mark Etheridg…”
Mark Etheridge member_of Ford Foundation book_quoted ▶ 17:40
“This book was written in 1962. They had in 1962, the Ford Foundation, $3 billion. The trustees of the Ford Foundation at the time, Eugene Black, CFR, John Cowles, CFR, Donald David, CFR, Mark Etheridg…”
Rowan Gaither member_of Ford Foundation book_quoted ▶ 17:40
“This book was written in 1962. They had in 1962, the Ford Foundation, $3 billion. The trustees of the Ford Foundation at the time, Eugene Black, CFR, John Cowles, CFR, Donald David, CFR, Mark Etheridg…”
Lawrence Gordon member_of Ford Foundation book_quoted ▶ 17:40
“This book was written in 1962. They had in 1962, the Ford Foundation, $3 billion. The trustees of the Ford Foundation at the time, Eugene Black, CFR, John Cowles, CFR, Donald David, CFR, Mark Etheridg…”
Henry Held member_of Ford Foundation book_quoted ▶ 17:40
“This book was written in 1962. They had in 1962, the Ford Foundation, $3 billion. The trustees of the Ford Foundation at the time, Eugene Black, CFR, John Cowles, CFR, Donald David, CFR, Mark Etheridg…”
John J. McCloy member_of Ford Foundation book_quoted ▶ 17:40
“This book was written in 1962. They had in 1962, the Ford Foundation, $3 billion. The trustees of the Ford Foundation at the time, Eugene Black, CFR, John Cowles, CFR, Donald David, CFR, Mark Etheridg…”
Mitford family member_of Ford Foundation book_quoted ▶ 18:10
“Of course, Ford II. The Fords actually left the Ford Foundation and stopped affiliating with it because it said it didn't reflect the families where they wanted to go. Rowan Gaither, CFR. Lawrence Gou…”
Rowan Gaither member_of CFR book_quoted ▶ 18:10
“Of course, Ford II. The Fords actually left the Ford Foundation and stopped affiliating with it because it said it didn't reflect the families where they wanted to go. Rowan Gaither, CFR. Lawrence Gou…”
Lawrence Gordon member_of CFR book_quoted ▶ 18:10
“Of course, Ford II. The Fords actually left the Ford Foundation and stopped affiliating with it because it said it didn't reflect the families where they wanted to go. Rowan Gaither, CFR. Lawrence Gou…”
John J. McCloy member_of CFR book_quoted ▶ 18:10
“Of course, Ford II. The Fords actually left the Ford Foundation and stopped affiliating with it because it said it didn't reflect the families where they wanted to go. Rowan Gaither, CFR. Lawrence Gou…”
Meyer Kressbaum member_of Fund for the Republic book_quoted ▶ 18:42
“that was located in Santa Barbara, California. It was a subsidiary of the Ford Foundation because if you're gonna money launder, you have to have tiers of that so they can lose track of the money. It …”
Paul Hoffman member_of Fund for the Republic book_quoted ▶ 18:42
“that was located in Santa Barbara, California. It was a subsidiary of the Ford Foundation because if you're gonna money launder, you have to have tiers of that so they can lose track of the money. It …”
Elmo Roper member_of Fund for the Republic book_quoted ▶ 18:42
“that was located in Santa Barbara, California. It was a subsidiary of the Ford Foundation because if you're gonna money launder, you have to have tiers of that so they can lose track of the money. It …”
George Schuster member_of Fund for the Republic book_quoted ▶ 18:42
“that was located in Santa Barbara, California. It was a subsidiary of the Ford Foundation because if you're gonna money launder, you have to have tiers of that so they can lose track of the money. It …”
Charles Cole member_of Fund for the Republic book_quoted ▶ 18:42
“that was located in Santa Barbara, California. It was a subsidiary of the Ford Foundation because if you're gonna money launder, you have to have tiers of that so they can lose track of the money. It …”
Paul Hoffman member_of CFR book_quoted ▶ 18:42
“that was located in Santa Barbara, California. It was a subsidiary of the Ford Foundation because if you're gonna money launder, you have to have tiers of that so they can lose track of the money. It …”
Fund for the Republic front_for Ford Foundation book_quoted ▶ 18:42
“that was located in Santa Barbara, California. It was a subsidiary of the Ford Foundation because if you're gonna money launder, you have to have tiers of that so they can lose track of the money. It …”
George C. Marshall funded Operation Gladio host_asserted ▶ 47:22
“It is considered among the most prestigious scholarships for U.S. citizens, along with the Fulbright Scholarship. And it is another one of those bridges. And it is named after the Secretary of State, …”
William J. Burns member_of Marshall Scholarship host_asserted ▶ 50:17
“Scientific Innovation, The Legacy of the Marshall Plan. And then if you look at all the people that are on there, they like to have a lot of their scholars come speak in their new jobs. Like William B…”
Madeleine Albright member_of Marshall Scholarship host_asserted ▶ 50:47
“Reid Hoffman was a 1990 scholar. Stephen Breyer was a 59 scholar. Neil Gorsuch was a 1992 scholar. Madeleine Albright. And then they have a whole list. Oh, crap. They have a whole list of people that …”
Neil Gorsuch member_of Marshall Scholarship host_asserted ▶ 50:47
“Reid Hoffman was a 1990 scholar. Stephen Breyer was a 59 scholar. Neil Gorsuch was a 1992 scholar. Madeleine Albright. And then they have a whole list. Oh, crap. They have a whole list of people that …”
Reid Hoffman member_of Marshall Scholarship host_asserted ▶ 50:47
“Reid Hoffman was a 1990 scholar. Stephen Breyer was a 59 scholar. Neil Gorsuch was a 1992 scholar. Madeleine Albright. And then they have a whole list. Oh, crap. They have a whole list of people that …”
Stephen Breyer member_of Marshall Scholarship host_asserted ▶ 50:47
“Reid Hoffman was a 1990 scholar. Stephen Breyer was a 59 scholar. Neil Gorsuch was a 1992 scholar. Madeleine Albright. And then they have a whole list. Oh, crap. They have a whole list of people that …”
Thomas Crothers member_of London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 52:17
“and attorney generals. Oh, here's one guy. Oh, God. I don't recognize his name, but it's funny because you go across there. Oh, he graduated from Harvard. His name's Thomas Crothers. And he picks the …”
Thomas Crothers member_of Carnegie Endowment for International Peace host_asserted ▶ 52:17
“and attorney generals. Oh, here's one guy. Oh, God. I don't recognize his name, but it's funny because you go across there. Oh, he graduated from Harvard. His name's Thomas Crothers. And he picks the …”
Anne Applebaum member_of London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 52:45
“That's kind of like the quintessential combination there. Mark Whitaker was at CNN and NBC and Newsweek. So it definitely fits the mold of the stuff that we've discovered here. Ann Applebaum. Oh, look…”
Condoleezza Rice member_of Hoover Institution host_asserted ▶ 56:06
“She actually is the director at the Hoover Institute. It's so disappointing. I've read her biography. I mean, she has a very impressive story. But, you know, obviously did some very nefarious things.…”
Harlan Fiske Stone member_of Sullivan & Cromwell host_asserted ▶ 1:00:15
“No, sorry, the FBI and the police, whatever, in the United States. And he said, we want to model it after Scotland Yard. So he was really a pusher of the whole Scotland Yard regime and rebirthing the …”
Edward Bernays member_of United Fruit Company host_asserted ▶ 1:04:23
“There's no apparent documented connection. Actually, there is. In a couple of the books that I've read of the Guatemalan coup that they did in 1954, he was an advisor on it. Oh, yeah. I mean, he had a…”
Edward Bernays trained CIA host_asserted ▶ 1:04:54
“huge swaths of real estate down in South America by essentially eminent domain type of stuff. Well, we're getting upset. So United fruit had him organize a campaign to, to, you know, get set up with t…”
United Fruit Company funded Edward Bernays host_asserted ▶ 1:04:54
“huge swaths of real estate down in South America by essentially eminent domain type of stuff. Well, we're getting upset. So United fruit had him organize a campaign to, to, you know, get set up with t…”
Richard Nixon ordered_assassination_of Salvador Allende host_asserted ▶ 1:05:24
“I would actually kind of go with the theory that UFC talked the CIA into doing the coup. Well, you don't talk the CIA into anything. The CIA actually works for those guys. They take their orders from …”
PepsiCo ordered_assassination_of Salvador Allende host_asserted ▶ 1:05:24
“I would actually kind of go with the theory that UFC talked the CIA into doing the coup. Well, you don't talk the CIA into anything. The CIA actually works for those guys. They take their orders from …”
Freeport-McMoRan ordered_assassination_of Salvador Allende host_asserted ▶ 1:05:24
“I would actually kind of go with the theory that UFC talked the CIA into doing the coup. Well, you don't talk the CIA into anything. The CIA actually works for those guys. They take their orders from …”
CIA carried_out_attack Salvador Allende host_asserted ▶ 1:05:53
“They just salute smartly and do it. And if the president doesn't go along, they just call the CIA direct. The CIA doesn't work for the president. They work for these oligarchs. I've said that for a ve…”
CIA overthrew Mohammad Mosaddegh host_asserted ▶ 1:07:59
“And so BP just contacts Standard Oil and they make a deal. Hey, we'll give you 30% of the concession if you tell the CIA to go overthrow Mosaddegh. And that's exactly what happened. There was no reaso…”
Standard Oil ordered_assassination_of Mohammad Mosaddegh host_asserted ▶ 1:07:59
“And so BP just contacts Standard Oil and they make a deal. Hey, we'll give you 30% of the concession if you tell the CIA to go overthrow Mosaddegh. And that's exactly what happened. There was no reaso…”
Edward Lansdale member_of CIA host_asserted ▶ 1:09:06
“But he trained his disciples as well. And the CIA was notorious for hiring people that had Bernays-like capability. Lansdale was another one. He was a PR executive. They're all into the propaganda mar…”
John F. Kennedy member_of London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 1:11:03
“Joseph and his stance on not meddling in international problems and war and how it kind of shaped a different direction for JFK. But I think it's a significant beginning or a little story that we don'…”
Harold Laski headed London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 1:11:30
“Ah, no, I did not. Thank you for sharing. Uh-huh. Okay. Yes. Yes. And the guy that was in charge of the London School of Economics that was his professor was Harold Lasky, the Fabian. The plot thicken…”
Harold Laski headed British Labour Party host_asserted ▶ 1:11:56
“Yeah. Insider views are always good to be on the inside of things, just like our current president, to have that whole history of inside knowledge. Yeah. Harold Lasky was the chairman of the British L…”
Standard Oil funded Saudi Arabia host_asserted ▶ 1:15:31
“is a result of those people. And so those people approach him and say, hey, now that I made you the king and I gave you all of the equipment and funding to be able to thwart all of your tribal competi…”
Rockefeller Foundation funded South Africa book_quoted ▶ 1:17:40
“That's why I found it fascinating that George DeMorganshield, that was his specialty, geology, and his specifically was related to oil and whatever. Like in the Rockefeller book, Thy Will Be Done, it …”
George de Mohrenschildt member_of Rockefeller Foundation host_asserted ▶ 1:17:40
“That's why I found it fascinating that George DeMorganshield, that was his specialty, geology, and his specifically was related to oil and whatever. Like in the Rockefeller book, Thy Will Be Done, it …”