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The Colonel’s Corner Shell Game Part 4

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0:00 Well, I see you got the co-host, but I threw it over to Bridget and she did not. So let me try it again. Thank you, Colonel. Yes, I'm here. I hope you're having a grand afternoon. I am. Absolutely wonderful day. So today will be the last day that we're going to spend on the shell game. I did want to kind of do a summary.
0:33 today of what the actual guts of the accusation. We kind of read Bennett's version or understanding of what was going on. And so I thought I'd take today just to kind of lay out the entire issue that he was involved with, because as you guys can tell from the other three
1:04 lessons that we did it was very personal as far as his presentation of it and he kept referring to the whistleblower of Birkenfeld and so I want to go through who he actually is who Birkenfeld is we talked a little bit about him
1:35 okay excuse me colonel it doesn't look like rumbles started up yet okay i'll get over there in just a second okay let me get over there all right okay so we're gonna do a summary and this will be the last day that we spend on shell game so all right who was bradley birkenfeld he was a former ubs
2:29 private banker. And he is described as someone who invested high wealth people's money in UBS in Switzerland. Okay. And then obviously he became a whistleblower and it's important to understand why he did that.
3:03 So the narrative is that Swiss banks like UBS operated a shell game of offshore companies using secret numbered accounts to hide assets from tax authorities and spouses whenever they wanted to get a divorce and not share their wealth,
3:36 anticipating breaking up this business they didn't want their business partners necessarily to know what all of the resources the people had so it isn't just about a guy hiding his wealth from the IRS they do this for lots of different reasons and obviously this is how intelligence agencies
4:03 hide their money as well to fund all of the nefarious things that we've talked about over the last several years. So it can be a combination of all of those things. Birkenfeld, leading up to his whistleblowing time, was described as a high-rolling lifestyle, spending lots of money, owned fast cars, and dated beautiful women.
4:33 all while managing ultra wealthy Americans' money evading U.S. taxes to the tune of billions and billions of dollars. He brought this to the attention of the DOJ, the IRS, the SEC, and actually testified in Congress.
5:03 It led to over $15 to $30 billion, depending on which documents you read, in recovered back taxes, fines, and penalties. It also resulted in the DOJ not prosecuting UBS, as we've seen they always do. They just fine them. There was a deferred prosecution agreement.
5:30 where UBS agreed to pay $780 million in fines and disclose their client names in exchange for none of them going to jail when all of them should have went to jail because they knowingly were doing this, especially in any Americans that was working there. So how did he get there? How did Birkenfeld end up at UBS? Well, he...
6:04 started off in American finance, working at State Street Bank, which I found really interesting. And the reason he left State Street Bank is because he was a whistleblower. And as a result of him blowing the whistle on their nefarious financial operations, he was blackballed throughout Wall Street.
6:34 He was never going to get a job inside the United States. So he leaves. He goes to Europe and he gets his MBA in Europe. And he joins Credit Suisse, which is another money launderer, in 1996. He then moves over to Barclays. He gets to UBS in 2001. He becomes one of Geneva's top earners.
7:05 by managing offshore assets for Americans. He even recounted one guy smuggling diamonds in toothpaste tubes. He also sponsored US events like horse races and yacht expeditions and boating races. And he did this.
7:37 Because that's what draws in all of the rich people. And then he would use those events to recruit new clients. That's fine and dandy, except for you have to register that you're doing that. And he did it. He goes on to talk about UBS's lax policies, which is his words, that enabled tax evasion, embargo fraud, securities fraud, LIBOR.
8:10 rigging and illegal bonuses. Around the 2004, late 2004, early 2005 timeframe, the U.S. began tightening regulations and an IRS raid of his biggest client, billionaire real estate developer, Igor Olenkov, who had hid $200 million.
8:40 on a conservative side, which was equivalent to hiding $7.2 million in taxes that he should have paid. So it wasn't until they raided one of his clients that the guy got a little moral. And that prompted him because when you start going up the chain, they're going to find him. So he starts documenting.
9:10 all of the inside practices of UBS for lack of a better word, insurance. And UBS then start kind of honing in on him because his client got raided. So they're getting a little nervous. And so he resigned and in 2007 filed his whistleblower complaint.
9:43 He approached the U.S. authorities with his evidence, including client lists and internal documents. Congress miraculously had just passed new whistleblower rewards programs. And it's interesting to also note that originally when he approached
10:14 the DOJ, they had told him, they had promised him, and so had Congress, that he would get immunity for testifying. Well, we know he didn't get immunity because he ends up in jail. I want to stop just a second and go down here and tell you about Igor Olenkov before we leave that subject.
10:45 He was born in Russia and he was born in 1942. So obviously it's still the Soviet Union. And because there's the war on and everything, his family decides to relocate into what at the time was the Soviet sector of Northern Iran. And now...
11:16 After the war, there's obviously an American zone around Tehran. And so his parents goes to that area, which then allows them to move to the United States because they're now outside of the Soviet Union. And he's about 15 when this happens.
11:47 His mom and dad get normal jobs and he ends up paying his way through the University of Southern California. He gets a bachelor's degree in finance and math. He ends up with an MBA. And before he finishes his MBA, he is already investing money into real estate in California.
12:15 He's bought a couple of apartment buildings or whatever. And then he gets a job at Shell Oil. He then moves on to a company that eventually becomes Deloitte. And for those of you guys who've been around here for a while, you know that Deloitte basically functions as a CIA front, which I found incredibly interesting.
12:46 a vice president to Barry Gordy of Motown Records, extending that label from Detroit into Hollywood because he lives in Southern California. So he's working for a company that eventually becomes Deloitte and he's in the music business. So just keep that in mind. In 1973, he created a company called Olin.
13:16 O-L-E-N, Properties Corporation in Newport Beach. He goes on to buy massive amounts of real estate. And by the way, he still owns that company today. He is still alive today. And he becomes the largest privately held real estate company in all of Orange County.
13:44 He had a portfolio of over 8 million square feet of office. It basically got as high as 30 million square feet of real estate. He owned about, depending on which article you read, 12 to 17,000 residential units across California, Florida, and seven other U.S. states.
14:14 So massively wealthy. And this son of a bitch is using Swiss bank accounts to not pay his taxes. So I want that just to sink in. All of these people, and he's largely in what has been over the last couple of decades, a Democrat ran.
14:44 or state and in locales in Southern California that are generally dominated by Democrats. So their vision of taxing the wealth is ridiculous. And he's part and parcel of that. So I just wanted to...
15:10 Throw that out there. I found that incredibly interesting based on everything that we know. So back to Birkenfeld. All right. So after this guy has the dime dropped on him and all of his stuff is raided and they penalize him, not obviously very much, for not paying his back taxes.
15:40 Birkenfeld gets a moral spur in his saddle and decides that he's going to start collecting information to protect himself. He takes that to the DOJ. Supposedly, he's supposed to have immunity. But despite his cooperation, the DOJ turns around and prosecutes him for conspiracy to defraud the U.S.
16:11 claiming he didn't give them enough material. He gave them enough material to levy one of the biggest fines on UBS ever and get them to release their client list. They did this out of retribution to this guy because what they wanted to do is send a message that
16:34 We're going to steer this conversation away from what else was being funded by all this nefarious money. And we're just going to focus on the bank side of it. So we're going to rough you up a little bit. We're going to sentence you to 40 months in jail. He spent 30 months in jail in a minimum security prison. And upon release.
17:02 He gets his big fat check for $104 million, which is his payoff for keeping his mouth shut. So he also sued UBS in court for his bonus that they withheld when he left and got that too. So he wrote a book where he hammers UBS executives.
17:41 primarily Christian Beauvais, B-O-V-A-Y, and U.S. officials for protecting the bank while punishing him, which is true. Olenkov later sued him and UBS, but the case was dismissed because obviously he was guilty. Birkenfeld does not go into
18:10 in any way in his book, in public statements, in his testimony, nor was he ever asked in his testimony because they don't want to disclose that to the American public. Anything about the terrorist funding that comes specifically from Scott Bennett, because Scott Bennett had inside information based on his dealing with
18:36 hunting terrorist in the CENTCOM SOCOM state department arena he was comparing the list of entities that Birkenfeld made public to information that he had that indicated some of the same entities that Birkenfeld with these offshore
19:08 fake companies were also included in terrorist funding. So that's where that overlap comes. What Bennett did was put Birkenfield's list down compared to his list, and he's the one that found the overlap. So let's go back to our summary of what
19:40 Bennett is alleging. According to Bennett, Birkenfeld provided him with extensive documentations, including 19,000 UBS account names, cell phone numbers, hotel records, meeting dates, emails, bank statements, WikiLeaks cables, reports, letters, interviews, and photos. This material allegedly detailed UBS's direct links to terrorist financing.
20:10 Bennett described Birkenfeld's information as a ring of power. Bennett claims that Birkenfeld initially exposed the UBS terror financing connections to the U.S. Department of Justice, intel agencies, and Senator Carl Levin's permanent subcommittee on investigations. But they kept...
20:39 The testimony focused only on tax evasion and money laundering and would not ask any questions about any of the other uses of that money. So Bennett alleges that Birkenfeld $104 million settlement was basically a payoff to keep him quiet.
21:12 Because Bennett had shared with him the terrorist links while they were in prison. But obviously Birkenfeld, who is a very materialistic type of guy, and only has morals when it's to his best interest to have morals. And so Bennett's...
21:40 allegation that it was basically a payoff makes a lot of sense when you take all of that information into perspective. He was going to be set up with a nice nest egg, and he wasn't going to ruffle any feathers. But Bennett claims that CENTCOM, SOCOM, and the National Counterterrorism Center, as well as the DNI at the time, which we've talked about,
22:10 all were aware of what Birkenfeld's financial information meant when you overlay it with the terrorist financing. So that implicates all of the people that we've talked about, Attorney General Eric Holder, because you're not going to basically go through this type of a process at the DOJ without the highest echelons knowing.
22:43 The Assistant Attorney General we talked about the other day, Lanny Brewer, because he had previous ties to UBS as well. So it was in his best interest to keep all of that stuff out of the news. It implicated the current Secretary of State at the time this was all coming out, which was Hillary Clinton, CIA Director Leon Panetta, and the Kevin Downing and Kevin O'Connor that we talked about before.
23:13 Bennett alleges that this was done for politics. And this led up, you know, was in the same timeframe, 2005, 2006, 2007 to the 2008 crisis. And obviously, protecting this information protected CIA terrorist links and their funding. He also,
23:45 that hiding this information and the links to terrorists facilitated much more death of our military as these operations continued on. In some of the writings leading up to Benghazi, Bennett had discovered some of that pieces of that operation and basically predicted something that like obviously
24:19 that specific event, but his prediction was something like that was going to happen because of the weapons transferring and what this money was being used for, which obviously implicates Booz Allen Hamilton. And it also had ties to the Carlisle Group, which we've talked about a lot. So that basically
24:53 kind of summarizes all of the stuff that we talked about in this book. So I'm gonna break there and see if anybody has anything that they want to add or talk about in relationship to this. I did wanna also mention, if any of you guys are readers out there, Birkenfeld's, the name of his book is called Lucifer's Banker.
25:22 which I think is probably an appropriate title for somebody like that. But anyway, that's pretty much it. Anybody have anything? Thank you, Colonel. And thank everybody for jumping in here on Spaces and on Rumble. It just goes to show the depths that they will go to.
25:59 To hide exactly what they're doing. We'll give you the bottom tier, but you ain't getting much more than that. We can follow the trail, but anytime you want to bring higher echelons up into the mix, you're completely shut down. You're either bought off, or as we know, you're not walking anymore. So, I'm still kind of...
26:30 And this is what gets me about the Epstein files. I don't think people really understand what we're looking at here. Yes, the pedophilia is absolutely horrendous. Yes, people should be indicted, charged, and sentenced for that. However, the connections that go higher up are worth gold, a lot of gold. And that's what we really need to get a hold of.
26:59 Thank you. Sure. And basically the releases indicate that Jeffrey Epstein was basically a Birkenfeld as far as the financial piece of this goes. He was the sage of where these investments needed to go. You can see in the correspondence
27:28 people consulting him as far as how you do this, how you set up this trust versus that. And there's so many tentacles to what, he was just a much more seasoned Birkenfeld. He had his fingers in everything. Birkenfeld, obviously.
27:55 kept his constraint to the financial piece of this. But we can, in every avenue in which Epstein operated, we can give you someone that operated in that same footprint at a different time period in all of the information that we've been working on.
28:22 He just was able to take the role and kind of consolidate them. Megan, go ahead. Colonel, another banger. I don't know exactly when you started, but this is a shorty if you started at four o'clock. Anyway, I think I can speak for everyone, not just on this space or this platform, but throughout the world.
28:52 When they're bent out of shape that these people, I mean, get basically a slap on the wrist. What has to happen is our judges and our juries, until those are replaced with real people that don't have an agenda.
29:17 We're never going to. I mean, you get to see the tip of the iceberg every now and again. But that's the only thing that keeps me sane is hoping that somewhere down the road here, both of those two entities will change. And when they do, accountability will truly emerge. So I would go one step further.
29:42 Obviously, you're talking about the judicial side of this, but the real travesty, in my opinion, is the DOJ. And I'm not talking about the current people that are in it, but over the course of the timeframe that we've looked at, now, granted, they go in and out of that, and the judicial system is kind of the repository for
30:11 the slicker lawyers that are walking around because they get appointed eventually for doing all this nefarious shit to judgeships. So the pipeline has to be dealt with and the pipeline is the DOJ. You are not going to get a judgeship without having worked at the DOJ and for all intents and purposes.
30:39 If you look at this particular case, you have the one guy, Birkenfeld, who was told that he can do all of these things. And if he does all of these things, he's going to have immunity. And then they send him to jail anyway. And then they give him his nice little flat paycheck at the end of his prison sentence. And he goes off and keeps his mouth shut for the rest of his life.
31:07 On the other hand, you have Bennett, who obviously was set up. As soon as he started making rumblings, you have to have in each of these cases a corrupt prosecutor in order to have those outcomes. And that's the piece that I see in all of these Gladio things. If you go back to Gary Webb's book and all of those participants in...
31:35 indicting people and then sealing the indictment, which allowed the FBI, the DEA and the CIA to then use those people with that sealed indictment hanging over their head for their nefarious purposes. That requires a prosecutor to be complicit with that operation and how each time when it could not be avoided.
32:03 And they absolutely had to sacrifice a lamb. It's the DOJ and the prosecutors that goes in in pre-filings and puts everything about the CIA off limits. Those are all done before the first day of the court. And the judge is complicit and the prosecutor is complicit. They basically go behind closed doors and say,
32:33 We know that the CIA was involved in this, but we cannot let it come out because of quote unquote national security. And then they basically proceed with a fake trial where you've now hamstrung the guy being prosecuted because the whole reason he did it is because he was an informant for the CIA. But they will readily throw that guy under the bus.
33:00 and let him rot in prison for the rest of his life in some cases because we protected the CIA. Go ahead, Mega. Yeah, this brings into stark focus also. I'm sure you've heard this term plenty of times. Don't hate the player, hate the game. And until we all figure out the game is what is screwed up and the only way to change that is to change the game.
33:32 And until we get some people in there that can actually do that, and I think that's where Trump and his administration is heading, I think the game is about to get changed. And it would be very refreshing, like I said, to see these people, you know, whether it's a guilty person or someone that was working on the dole to get their up and comings, and not only them, but the people driving.
33:58 this whole game so yeah i'll land and and thank you sure um sr go ahead thank you colonel the other thing i'll add is even when they do get these people in front of a hearing eventually what happens is they say well oh no we got to take this behind closed doors and there's no doubt my mind that once they get behind closed doors they're talking about how do we spin this
34:30 How do we mitigate the fallout here versus how do we solve the problem? Versus accountability. Yeah, exactly. Exactly. You know, they're sitting back there talking amongst themselves saying, oh, well, we can't have that. We can't have that. What kind of lie can we tell the public? Yeah. It just, oh, it pisses me off.
34:55 Yeah, and T-Box over on Rumble says, I'll take Maureen Comey for $2,000, Alex. Yeah, me too. Touche. Great comment. Yeah, the whole system is part of a bigger system that is used to ensure that they're not exposed.
35:23 I think that's the takeaway, because obviously they couldn't have gotten away with it this long if they didn't have. And that's why they venue shop, you know, because they own pieces of this infrastructure, i.e. control, and they use it to their advantage. So I think that's crystal clear to everybody.
35:51 I think also as well, Colonel, that if there was any bureaucracy or like our DOJ judicial system, if there was any system that could be completely demolished and rebuilt, it would be the judicial system. Because the more I study this stuff and hear people in spaces and...
36:21 especially people like you, Colonel, it's becoming crystal clear that if you could get that part of our government straightened out and it wouldn't be the end of the world if we burned that one completely to the ground. You can't get the CIA. You can't get our Congress and our Senate. That's that's going to take a lot of time. But the judicial branch.
36:46 could be brought down in one fell swoop with the quickness and the hurry-ups. And if that happened and then got replacements in there that actually, like I was explaining before, I think our country would turn around significantly very fast. Yeah, I agree. I agree. So anybody else got anything? All Along has his hand up. Go ahead, All Along. Yeah, Colonel, I'm not...
37:22 You know, I just got to say that I only caught the very tail end of the show. So this could be off theme, but just as far as like, where is the fundamental problem in terms of like the actual constitution that we teach everyone in public schools at a cost of trillions of dollars, right? Especially when you look at the opportunity cost of what you could have taught about the DMCIA, the actual government, right?
37:51 Right. That's a significant opportunity cost. It's why everything's so messed up right now. But I think the legislative branch is pretty much the dead branch. You know, there was a book actually called The Dead Branch about this thing that we call, which are led by the oratory of Chuck Schumer and before him, Senator Harry Reid. You know, those are.
38:19 Those are some dynamic speakers that the Democrats birthed Trump with, if you know what I'm talking about, Colonel. Yeah. It took a lot of corruption to get, whether you're on one side of the duopoly against both or for the other one, we have to come to a common consensus on the unbelievable level of corruption that is just being fundamentally under-narrated to all of the U.S. population.
38:50 Thanks to the like 100 percent, you know, five corporations controlling 90 percent of U.S. media down from 50 corporations controlling 90 percent in 1983. I'm sorry. I meant to say 50. I'm sorry. In 83, it was 50 corporations controlling 90 percent of media by consumption. And the most recent I've seen it is five.
39:17 corporation mega corporations controlling 90 of media by consumption which you know includes everything including novel lies about this cia genocide in congo that uh black panther's praise that black panther praises the cia for i mean school kids are being taken to to watch cia
39:45 funded apologists for the Congo genocides that CIA created in the guise of a Black Panther, you know, Marvel's Black Panther. School, you know, public taxes are paying kids to go see that. It's that level of systemic corruption. It's an insult that we, you know, that we accept this, you know, degree of corruption and accept these elections, which are just handed to Comcast and Spectrum on a platter, you know.
40:14 And our taxes pay for it all. Well said. Renee, go ahead. Renee? Renee? Well, I can hear you for a second. Okay. How about now? Yeah. Okay, great. Yes, I can hear you. Okay, great. Sorry about that. I was in a hole, I guess. This is regarding the DOJ comments and what Meganuk was saying. And I have a question.
40:55 Does our military court system, is that, could they handle all this corruption and so forth? If you would please address, I mean, where do they stand? Are they above our DOJ or help expand on this? So the military court system is completely separate from civilian court systems.
41:21 We have tried civilians in military court for crimes like treason. Those are very few and far between. You have a whole nother corruption issue on the military side. There's a lot of people that have, it was the JAG Corps in the military. And just for those of you who don't know our court system, so JAGs are lawyers.
41:50 And the military court system is kind of like the civilian court system. You take the judges in the military court system from the JAG Corps. The entire JAG Corps went along with COVID. They are responsible. One of the Vindmans was a lawyer. He brags about throwing somebody out for not taking a COVID shot, which was a blatant illegal order.
42:19 I know there's a lot of people that pin their hope on the military, but the military court system in many cases is just as corrupt as the civilian one. And again, it depends on lawyers that are produced from the same bullshit law schools. So for those of you who don't know, if you go to law school, you have to be a,
42:48 credentialed lawyer, meaning you have to have passed at least some bar, in order to be a lawyer in the military. Now, we have a legal program, just like we do for a lot of the medical fields, where you can apply like I did while I was enlisted in ROTC to go to officer training officers.
43:16 can apply to go to law school, but they still have to, because a friend of mine did, you still have to then, after law school, pass a state bar somewhere in order to then be recategorized as a JAG lawyer, which means you're going through the same indoctrination law school that everybody else went to. So the military is not immune. We are made up of people just
43:46 It's a reflection of our society. So you cannot pin your hopes on the military court system. Now, if what comes to pass is lots of charges of treason and they are held in a military court system, you can be assured that this system is
44:18 For the most part, this is what I will say. There's not near as many tricks as you can do inside a military court system. We don't have all of the, I don't even know how to say it. So, you know, when you're in a civilian court system, there's all the shenanigans, all of the pre-arrangements and all of that stuff. That's not how a military court system works.
44:48 You're charged with one of the UCMJ type crimes. You are tried based on the evidence. And there's not a lot of rigging that goes on. And you can elect to have a jury or you can go before just the panel, which is usually three officers that will then decide what's going on as far as your...
45:18 conviction. So they're not identical at all, but you don't get to just randomly decide to take a civilian case and put it in a military court. It has to be something that's applicable to the UCMJ and certainly treason is one of the only exceptions that I've ever came across. I read two cases.
45:47 that were heard in a military court when the people were civilians. Does that help? Hopefully. Okay. Megan, you go ahead. Yes, thank you. Sure. Yeah, I'm also going to add, and just recent examples come to mind, when the military goes in to take over or assist in a situation,
46:18 the rest of the country goes batshit bonkers. It's not a good look for the military to come in and replace the civilian institutions because that starts to look like Argentina. That starts to look like Venezuela. That starts to look like all these countries around the world where the military is used in lieu of civilians.
46:46 And it just would not work out well. That would probably create the biggest catalyst for a civil war in our society. Now, as a military man myself, I think it would be awesome. But on the other hand, because if you go before a UCMJ court, it's very, very strict and pointed.
47:14 as to what you screwed up on. In a civilian court, there is a broad plethora of things that can come into play. And like I said, it would be fast, it would be efficient, but it would have a very bad look. And I personally, even with my military background, would not want the military presiding over civilian courts. That's just inappropriate as the day is long, in my opinion. The only exception is treason.
47:44 Yes, yes, yes. Treason. Yes. Yes. Anything that violated a UCMJ. Yes, absolutely. Bust their ass with a military court because it's going to not end up well for them. And the prescription or the remedy for the problem is very, very high up on the chain of some stuff we'd like to see happen to some civilian people as well. But I digress. Yeah. Why are you so mad? Go ahead.
48:13 I'm going to piggyback off what Megan said in the optics of the military going in and starting to arrest, prosecute and take over the judicial system would probably cause this country to fall apart. I think that would be a spark that would cause a civil war. And it would be it me having a military background as well. I don't think that would be of.
48:42 That wouldn't be a good look at all. That would put us all the way back to square one when it comes to holding this country together. So I absolutely agree with Megan Newt on that. Yeah. Could you see if things got to the point where you're implementing martial law and that type of thing, then you can come back and readdress that.
49:10 But where we sit today, with the exception of someone being charged with treason, and there's plenty of people that could be charged with treason, given what we know already, I think that's a clear delineation between those two scenarios. It would not be a willy-nilly use of that court system.
49:35 There absolutely, to Megan's point, has to be something done if you're going to have accountability and we can't move forward without it. SR, go ahead. Thank you, Colonel. I agree with everything that's been said here right today concerning a military tribunal. However, there are certain aspects where I would say that it would definitely be required.
50:04 If the person is in the military, and let's start talking about our chiefs of staff and so on and so forth. If they're in the military, I don't care if it's corruption. I don't care if it's treason. I don't care what it is. They should be tried in that manner. Right. Thank you, Colonel. Sure. And just so that we're clear on that, there is a provision for anyone who is drawing retirement pay.
50:33 to be recalled to active duty because you are still in the military. I love it when you're talking to people that have never been around the military and they will say, oh, well, you used to be a colonel. No, no, I still am a colonel. They're still paying me to be a colonel. And along with that means that you have to continue to
51:03 maintain those types of moral and legal standards. And when you don't and you get in trouble, I mean, they recalled a two-star general who was found with child pornography. And he was found guilty in a court-martial and was held accountable on the military side. So you can be tried.
51:32 on the civilian court system and still be recalled to active duty and held accountable on the military side for conduct unbecoming. So we are basically held to a completely different standard as long as you're drawing pay from the US military, which we still are.
51:59 So all of those general officers, and we know there are many that have been involved in this nefarious garbage, H.R. McMaster, Clapper, all of those guys, they can all be recalled to active duty and appropriate steps taken even after or if they were held accountable in a civilian.
52:29 court system. Megan, go ahead. Well, I was just going to add to that, especially here on X, I don't do anything on Facebook or TikTok or any of those other spaces, but I cringe. It just, it, oh my God, when a military service member or a veteran make post on X,
52:58 And I sit there and I'm like, oh, my God, a forehead slap moment. And I'm just like, do you realize Mark Kelly was just the tip of the iceberg? If they wanted to, they could slap the shit out of a whole bunch of people on X. And I would just not saying that freedom of speech, it doesn't rain. But some of the stuff I see on here, it.
53:26 If you got called back, you'd hang from a noose, point blank. And just because you're a veteran or a military member doesn't give you immunity. I would highly remind everyone of that. You can voice your objections and use your First Amendment right, but be careful. That's all I'm going to say. Yeah, especially the people that are saying very horrible things in their uniform.
53:57 It's very, very disturbing. It just depicts a total breakdown of the cohesiveness of the military and the ethical standards that are supposed to be maintained in the military, especially while you're on active duty. Renee, go ahead. I think Sean has their hand up. Okay, Sean, go ahead.
54:28 Hello, Colonel. Thanks for letting me speak. Yeah, I was on one of your spaces a couple of nights ago and I got cut off when I started talking about the people you're talking about who have corrupted the CIA and have started the whole war on terror and all that sort of stuff. I mean, how they've tried to corrupt the military. I don't know if they've been fully successful in that, but I was cut off. But anyway, I was talking about the party culture of the elite.
54:58 that you talk about who have done all this and how they basically are criminals. I mean, it's all coming out in the Epsilon files now, the depths of depravity that these guys go to. But the thing about them is that they don't care about law. They don't care about right or wrong. They are psychopaths. They are amoral. And what they like to do most is party because they're criminals and, you know, fun-loving criminals. They like to party. And they organize these massive parties.
55:28 They align themselves with the criminal drug cartels that they're supposed to be fighting against to create a better society. But they just, they are the same as those guys in South America. They do the same things, just in a more elaborate way. You know?
55:49 I do. They pay people to do it. The people in Latin America or South America are the ones that actually do it, but their paymasters are these oligarchs. Yeah, I agree. Renee, go ahead. Okay, please. Another question regarding accountability and the law.
56:24 How did they bring down the mafia through the wire tracking their funds or how did they do that? So most of that was done with mail fraud and wire fraud. And I just always find that hilarious because, you know, there's lots of laws that says you're not supposed to be doing any of the stuff. I mean, they murdered people, tortured people.
56:55 We're moving drugs all around. But their go-to charge was mail fraud and wire fraud. That's because you can't fudge numbers very easy, especially in this day and age. And that's the one thing that nobody can argue with.
57:17 It isn't a moral dilemma. You either did it or you didn't do it. Well, let me just suggest that it's also because they don't need to out their snitches. Because if you're going to convict somebody of murder, you actually have to have somebody that knows that someone else murdered them. And they have to testify and they never make it to court. Same thing with the drug trafficking and all of the other nefarious things they do. They have to have witnesses. You don't need a witness.
57:49 when you're doing mail fraud and wire fraud, because as you say, the numbers don't lie. Okay. Well, I'm going to say again, thank you, Colonel. I love your spaces. You bring the, I'm shaking right now thinking about all this crap that we've been talking about. And anyway, I'm glad to see we got a warrior out there that's willing to bring up these subjects.
58:26 and put them out in the limelight where they need to be. There is no reason under the sun. If you're in this space, if you're on a kernel space ever, you should have 5 million retweets during the space. This kind of stuff needs to get out. It really does. And hopefully your spaces are growing. I'll never be able to be privy to your stats or anything on this after the show.
58:56 But kudos to you, Colonel. And like I said, coming from an aircraft maintenance background, and you're a fellow patriot like me, it's good to see one of us getting the word out there. And again, thank you, thank you, thank you. Sure. Yeah, it's been an interesting journey. Definitely an interesting journey. Stellar, go ahead.
59:23 Yes, I have to agree with what the last speaker just said. You are a godsend, all of you guys, SR, Bridget, Cousinette, everyone that is part of your research, everyone that has listened to you.
59:39 Everybody, please repost this space. Colonel Tanner and everyone, they are so shadow banned. You know, please repost. Make sure you add a friend. Put some emojis in. You know, because honestly, just like he said, this stuff needs to go out. And she is so shadow banned and so censored. I love you guys. Thanks, Stellar. Yeah, where did Bridget go?
1:00:06 We lost her again. Well, yeah, and you get the badge of honor that she dropped down because your spaces are constantly attacked, too. So, guys, please remember to do that because it's so important that people understand our true history and what shenanigans were all about and the things that are still going on because it makes us understand the current things going on, understanding that the past operations are currently shenanigans. Speaking of which.
1:00:36 So tomorrow we would have started our new book, but if I don't get it done tonight, and I'm still trying to figure out if I can do it tonight, I have a person that I wanna cover. And I think it's going to be very enlightening because as I started going through
1:00:59 some new material. I had this guy's name. We've mentioned it just in passing in the past. Not often. It relates to the Bay of Pigs. But I found a cache of additional information thanks to Yandex and a couple of keywords. And you guys know how I've always
1:01:28 had this kind of sneaking suspicion that, although I don't have an actual document that, and nor will we ever find one, that the Cuban exiles were our Gladio. They were our Gladio. And I don't need a smoking gun piece of paper to say that. They basically did inside the United States exactly what the Gladio units, stay behind units did around the world in their...
1:01:57 respective countries, as well as their deployment forward to do joint operations with other Gladio elements. So with this particular guy, I actually found a CIA document that indicates that kind of cross utilization. And he played a key role in the Bay of Pigs with
1:02:27 Brigade 2506. So I'm going to show you how he was cross-utilized in other known Gladio operations that basically makes that case. So I'm really excited about this. I just found it last night and I finished reading most of it this morning. So if I can get it done tonight, I'll do that. If I do it tonight, it will be around eight o'clock.
1:02:55 Otherwise, we will do it at our normal four o'clock tomorrow. And then we will just delay a day and start our new book the following day. So anyway, it'll be something to look forward to. And I said last night or this morning to my husband, I can't believe that I'm still finding new information about things. It's mind boggling to me.
1:03:23 just how big this thing is. That sixth eye, I'm like, what the hell? I had never come across, well, that's not true. There was a, like one mention of it in a book. And cause I was out going through all of my books. There was like one mention, but it was in.
1:03:46 context of a whole bunch of other things. And to be honest with you, I read the book like two years ago. I wasn't near where I am today as far as this information to understand the repercussions of it. And just to be honest with you, but it was so much bigger and it was like mentioned in one sentence in one book. And it's just, it's huge. So it's another shadow element.
1:04:17 of management. And what I found most fascinating about that one is it was largely funded by the oligarchs directly, not even trying to hide that fact. I mean, they hid it, but they didn't hide the funding lines. They actually talked about it. And I found a lot of literature that documented it, not here, of course, in Europe.
1:04:48 It's crazy. And I mean, it's been a couple of years ago when we talked about LeCircle. But, you know, it was that entity was kind of like the feeder for that six eye that, what's his name? Crozer, however you say his name. Yeah, it's just, and if you guys haven't read that article, go to my ex profile and read that article. It's crazy.
1:05:15 I was trying to decide whether or not to do that on Alpha's show on Wednesday night, just because I want it on the record in that series for people to understand just how many of these shadow organizations are out there. Because we found several of them, like the Safari Club, which of course this was tied into. And it just so happens to coincide with all of this other crap.
1:05:45 that, you know, you get rid of a few, not a few, a whole bunch of your covert. They just go somewhere else and stand up another entity and hang out there until they get another complicit president in. SR, go ahead. Thank you, Colonel. And thank you for that 6i61 article. What I do want to say about that.
1:06:13 is, Colonel, you made it very clear to us in the very beginning of this that you were focused on the United States. That article goes beyond the United States. It goes well beyond what's going on. So I don't fault you for not bringing up 6i a long time ago. Our focus here is to get everybody here in the U.S. on one page.
1:06:39 Because we can't solve the problem without doing that. Yeah. And my point was more to the, I wasn't like faulting myself. My point was more to the fact that as you read these books, there's seemingly innocuous factoids buried in them. And I honestly think that's on purpose. That when you're reading it.
1:07:08 for the context of like, obviously I'm reading these for the context of stay behinds, that there's pieces in there that don't mean anything to you because you don't know what they are. And I already spend, when I go through these books, I've got my laptop sitting beside me and I'm like looking up all of these things, writing in the margins of the books and all of this other stuff.
1:07:36 Even that, so it takes me 10 times longer to get through a book than a normal person reading a book. But even doing that, you're going to miss something. And it was through this search that I was able, and one of the references in the researching that I was doing was a book I've already read. And so I went out and got the book and I didn't have it highlighted, but.
1:08:05 I didn't know what it was and I didn't look it up. And that is very unusual for me when I find something that I've never seen before, but it's just a six and an I. And I just kind of skimmed right over it. And so I just, there's so much to this. And I've told you guys, I had to go back and read Paul Williams' book three times in order to let all of that material sink in.
1:08:31 It's very hard, which is why I love going through the books with you after I've went through them, because it allows me to let the material sink in even more and dividing them up the way we do, primarily a chapter at a time and then talking about them. You guys have always commented about the ability to remember this stuff. That's because of what we do. It seats that information.
1:09:00 deeper in my brain by doing what we're doing. So you guys are all providing a sounding board for me when it comes to presenting this material. Because not only do I go over it twice, once by myself and once with you, then you guys spend like the next day DMing me or posting stuff about it that you find. So it just kind of seats that whole
1:09:30 narrative much firmer for me to be able to then put all of that information together and talk about it in a meaningful way. So we definitely could not do this without all of us, that's for sure. Megan, go ahead. Okay, Colonel. I think me and everyone else in this space and anyone listening in the future have a burning question.
1:09:58 It was overlooked with the quickness and the hurry-ups, trying to ingest all this information. Pray tell, what's the next book? Oh, hold on. I don't have it in here. I'll post it as soon as we get off. I was just making some notes for tomorrow on it. And my husband's not sitting out there right now, so I'll post it as soon as we get off. Okay. And I put the link to that article in the next.
1:10:32 Oh, thank you. I had to say that. I love it when a plane comes together now that I'm on that whole A-team vibe. It is awesome. Yeah, this is just so weird. Anyway, so Bridget and I got our first look at like the first 20 seconds of our video, and you guys are going to absolutely love it.
1:11:03 So they're already working on it. We definitely need more money. I'm sure this is gonna cost us a pretty penny. If you guys can help us, go to that little donate thing on the X thing or on the Rumble thing. I don't know how any of that stuff works. But, or go to Shopify. On my X page, we have the link to the store and buy yourself a Gladio.
1:11:33 coin or a coffee mug or a t-shirt so that we can use that money to get this video. I'm really excited about having a video that we can play and that you guys can share that kind of basically what it's going to do, we kind of took like the top 10 coups out of the 90 and kind of just run through them chronologically to some music. It's very hard hitting.
1:12:02 And I think it'll be something that we can share with people to help raise awareness. And plus, it gives us a cool thing to play at the beginning of our show. Go ahead, SR. Thank you, Colonel. I meant to ask you, do you have TIP enabled on your profile for X? I think I do. Because I can't find it at all.
1:12:30 The tips. I can find the subscribe, but I can't find tips. Well, the tips thing is like a little dollar bill. It shows up on mine. Bridget, can you look? Yes, we're on the app. I don't think, SR, are you going via a web browser? Yes. No, you have to go on the app. Didn't you have to? Okay, that answers my question. Isn't there certain metrics that you have to achieve to get that? I think there is.
1:13:00 But we're already there. Thanks to you guys. Well, jeez. I'm sorry, Colonel. I doubted you whatsoever. I know. As soon as you're able to have subscriptions, which we do, and there's like 32 of them, and I thank you guys from the bottom of my heart because that money is all going to this video. Once you get subscriptions, that tip thing became live.
1:13:25 And I think that's the way people are doing it because I think that goes to Cash App. And that's where the people that have donated so far has donated. So I'm pretty sure that's how that works. But don't quote me on that. I did that a long time ago. Yeah, you guys have been amazing when it comes to this.
1:13:50 Every time you guys repost something or quote post it with those funny GIFs, I see all of that stuff. That brings our whatever it is that X does, which every two weeks they pay us. It's peanuts, but it's money that we didn't have. And so Bridget and I have decided that from the day we decided that we were going to make this video.
1:14:18 until we get it paid for, all of that money is going towards the video. So it doesn't cost you anything. You don't have to have money if you don't have money. But if you don't have money and you don't want to do that, just repost our stuff because that increases the amount that X pays us to do this. So it all helps.
1:14:41 Again, going back to everyone, if you're in this space and you're not retweeting and harding this, you don't even have to put a comment. But if you're not minimum doing that, you're doing the colonel a serious misjustice. True story. All right. So now that we've got all of our promotion out of the way, I hate doing that. We're here for material.
1:15:08 I definitely want to do this video. I want people to have this video that you can share on all of the other social media platforms. We live in a three minute attention span. It's like three minutes and 23 seconds. So it's going to be like the perfect thing that you can post on all of your other social media and get people's attention. So Stellar, go ahead.
1:15:34 You should also have Alpha Warrior because he's genius when it comes to that stuff, and he makes videos that are really awesome. Yeah, I don't want anybody dressed up like an Oriental person trying to sell me beard cream. He is very good at it. I agree. That was hysterical. Oh, my God.
1:15:56 Well, how about using AI? I see people doing AI videos. You could have like an opera with the glasses. You know, it looks like that movie. Stellar. Sorry. Stellar. I've exceeded my capability. I had to get my daughter over here. And oh, by the way, SR, I figured out how to do it. I had to get my daughter over here to show me how to raid people over to other people's sites. Because in order to get.
1:16:23 Keep your premium status on Rumble. You have to do five raids of your shows over to other people's shows a month. I don't know how to raid. I don't even know what the hell that is. So I have to go look at these help videos, which are retarded. And nowhere in the help video, because I used to write tech manuals. I need a step-by-step thing. Who's got their... Bridget, turn your mic off. Sorry. I need...
1:16:52 My brain is written in a TO, a tech order mentality, because that's the way my brain was trained as an airman. Okay, so I need a step-by-step. So just so you guys understand this, on Rumble, from my view, I can see the comments, and then there's these little buttons across the top that indicate where we're streaming to, like we're streaming to YouTube, Locals, and Rumble. This instruction on Rumble,
1:17:22 says to go into your chat. Okay, well, I've got the chat up. It says live chat and put a command forward slash RAID and then cut and paste a link to a live program. And then what it does, when you finish yours, it will RAID all of your audience over to that other live show. Sounds simple enough? Do you think that you could actually use the live chat that you can see here? No.
1:17:51 No, that's not how any of it works. What you have to do is go up and click a green button for Rumble at the very top of your screen. And it brings up a second live chat. And you have to do it over there. That's nowhere in the video. Nowhere in the video.
1:18:13 You're killing me, Colonel. I have the same problem. Oh, my God. It is most frustrating thing on the face of the planet. And you realize they do that for a reason. So I'm just saying. Yeah. For anybody over 50 not to do any of this shit. I know why they do it. So my daughter came over this weekend and we pulled up and did like a dummy video.
1:18:39 And I'm looking at her, we're watching the video and I showed her where the live chat is. And I put the thing and I said, see, it's not working. And she's like, what's these buttons up here? And I'm like, that's where the stream is going. And so she clicked on the rumble thing up there and it brought up that second live chat. And I looked at her and I said, I hate you. What the hell? It's not in the video. It's not in the written instructions.
1:19:06 You're supposed to hit every button possible. That's what we do when we're older. I'm a tech card, trust me. I'm dying, Colonel. Man, my computer has almost been smashed probably 20 freaking times trying to figure that shit out. Okay. So, yeah. Stellar, just for your information, when I start hitting buttons, shit blows up. So I don't just go hitting buttons randomly.
1:19:36 It's your electromagnetic personality. There you go. Yeah. Yeah. So I actually do have one of those. I am the one person, until I started using Apple laptops, there's not a single brand of laptop that I could use that lasted more than a year. For some, that blank screen of whatever death.
1:20:04 I went through probably six different laptops in two years in my last job. I did travel a lot, but they made me put this, I had one of those, I think it was a Panasonic. I don't remember what it was. May have been an HP, but it was like one of those heavy duty, indestructible cases, like a tough book kind of thing. Because they, I don't know, they...
1:20:33 they screw up. They don't like being jostled around or whatever. And they made me on one of the trips, put it in my suitcase. And when I got to work, I pulled it out of my carry-on bag. And I don't know how it happened, but it had this huge dent in the top of it. And so I just asked my secretary to take it back to my calm guy. And he comes in and he says,
1:21:01 how did you do that? And I'm like, I didn't do it. I didn't do it. I put it in my bag. It was perfectly fine. I pulled it out and it looked like that. I didn't do it. So we had lots of fun with me and computers. The same thing happened to me at CENTCOM on the supernet. I could break that supernet like once a week. And we had this really cool Marine guy that was part of the comm squadron that did our directorate.
1:21:27 And every time my NCO called to get him to go look at my computer, he's like, oh, my God. So we eventually started bringing, I want to say treats. That's probably not the right word. What do they call it? Padunk or whatever the Navy term is for goodies.
1:21:48 Um, we had a whole basket of them sitting on my desk. So every time he came in, he had food to eat. So he didn't mind coming and fixing my computer anymore. Um, thank you. Thank you. Yes. That's exactly what it's called. Um, I knew it was one of those. Um, anyway. All right. That's enough of that. So I am definitely computer.
1:22:18 So doing my own videos or any of that other stuff other than hitting record, I'm out, I'm out. I'm lucky I've got this and I do have my little cheat sheet to log in every day. So, all right. So you guys have a nice evening. And if I can get this show done at eight, I will definitely do it. I got a couple other things I need to get done and hopefully we will so we can start a book tomorrow. All right.
1:22:46 Take care, everybody. If I don't see you tonight, I'll definitely see you tomorrow.

Entities here

Brad Birkenfeld25Igor Olenicoff13Scott Bennett12U.S. Department of Justice9United States9Los Angeles5U.S. Congress4Sixth Eye4Jeffrey Epstein4Eastern Soviet Union3Operation Gladio3United States Air Force Special Operations Command2United States Central Command2Brigade 25062Bay of Pigs2South Africa2Detroit1Gary Webb1Le Cercle1Eric Holder1Hollywood1Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations1Tehran1Carl Levin1Lanny Brewer1State Street Bank1Credit Suisse1Barclays1Christian Beauvais1National Counterterrorism Center1Leon Panetta1Lucifer's Banker1Newport Beach1Motown Records1Paul L. Williams1Olin Properties Corporation1Marvel1Black Panther1Geneva1The Broken Branch1

Claims made here

Brad Birkenfeld member_of State Street Bank documented ▶ 6:04
“started off in American finance, working at State Street Bank, which I found really interesting. And the reason he left State Street Bank is because he was a whistleblower. And as a result of him blow…”
Brad Birkenfeld member_of Credit Suisse documented ▶ 6:34
“He was never going to get a job inside the United States. So he leaves. He goes to Europe and he gets his MBA in Europe. And he joins Credit Suisse, which is another money launderer, in 1996. He then …”
Brad Birkenfeld member_of Barclays documented ▶ 6:34
“He was never going to get a job inside the United States. So he leaves. He goes to Europe and he gets his MBA in Europe. And he joins Credit Suisse, which is another money launderer, in 1996. He then …”
Igor Olenicoff member_of Royal Dutch Shell documented ▶ 12:15
“He's bought a couple of apartment buildings or whatever. And then he gets a job at Shell Oil. He then moves on to a company that eventually becomes Deloitte. And for those of you guys who've been arou…”
Igor Olenicoff member_of Deloitte documented ▶ 12:15
“He's bought a couple of apartment buildings or whatever. And then he gets a job at Shell Oil. He then moves on to a company that eventually becomes Deloitte. And for those of you guys who've been arou…”
Igor Olenicoff member_of Motown Records documented ▶ 12:46
“a vice president to Barry Gordy of Motown Records, extending that label from Detroit into Hollywood because he lives in Southern California. So he's working for a company that eventually becomes Deloi…”
Igor Olenicoff founded Olin Properties Corporation documented ▶ 13:16
“O-L-E-N, Properties Corporation in Newport Beach. He goes on to buy massive amounts of real estate. And by the way, he still owns that company today. He is still alive today. And he becomes the larges…”
Brad Birkenfeld wrote Lucifer's Banker documented ▶ 17:02
“He gets his big fat check for $104 million, which is his payoff for keeping his mouth shut. So he also sued UBS in court for his bonus that they withheld when he left and got that too. So he wrote a b…”
U.S. Department of Justice paid Brad Birkenfeld documented ▶ 17:02
“He gets his big fat check for $104 million, which is his payoff for keeping his mouth shut. So he also sued UBS in court for his bonus that they withheld when he left and got that too. So he wrote a b…”
Brigade 2506 front_for Operation Gladio host_asserted ▶ 1:01:28
“had this kind of sneaking suspicion that, although I don't have an actual document that, and nor will we ever find one, that the Cuban exiles were our Gladio. They were our Gladio. And I don't need a …”
Brigade 2506 carried_out_attack Bay of Pigs host_asserted ▶ 1:01:28
“had this kind of sneaking suspicion that, although I don't have an actual document that, and nor will we ever find one, that the Cuban exiles were our Gladio. They were our Gladio. And I don't need a …”
Brigade 2506 member_of Bay of Pigs documented ▶ 1:01:57
“respective countries, as well as their deployment forward to do joint operations with other Gladio elements. So with this particular guy, I actually found a CIA document that indicates that kind of cr…”
Sixth Eye funded Operation Gladio host_asserted ▶ 1:04:17
“of management. And what I found most fascinating about that one is it was largely funded by the oligarchs directly, not even trying to hide that fact. I mean, they hid it, but they didn't hide the fun…”
Le Cercle funded Sixth Eye host_asserted ▶ 1:04:48
“It's crazy. And I mean, it's been a couple of years ago when we talked about LeCircle. But, you know, it was that entity was kind of like the feeder for that six eye that, what's his name? Crozer, how…”
Safari Club front_for Operation Gladio host_asserted ▶ 1:05:15
“I was trying to decide whether or not to do that on Alpha's show on Wednesday night, just because I want it on the record in that series for people to understand just how many of these shadow organiza…”