The Colonel’s Corner Strange Tales of the Parapolitical Part 11
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Transcript
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Okay, if everybody could repost the space out. For those of you who stuck with me last night, that was probably the hardest show based on my voice that I've ever done. It was crazy. But I do want to share something with you. One of the people in the chat yesterday during our four o'clock,
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told me about this stuff that is a homeopathic medicine, for lack of a better word, that treats flu-like symptoms like allergies and stuff. It's ocilococinum. I don't know if I pronounced that right.
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I'm not a doctor. Can you spell it? Yeah, it's O-S-C-I-L-L-O-C-O-C-C-I-N-U-M. I'm telling you, this came first thing this morning. I took some. It's tiny little beads. And you put them under your tongue and let them dissolve. And like within an hour, all of the inflammation of my sinus area was gone.
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there's still drainage going on, but the irritation of my throat was gone. I was like, holy shit. And then of course, you know what happened? My husband comes out and he looks at that box and he goes, oh yeah, I've had that before. Oh, that's hysterical. Like, how about you share that shit with me? So anyway, he's taking it as a precaution, but
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That's amazing crap. That's all I got to say. Not a doctor, not recommending you take medicine I don't know about, but God bless you, whoever it was that said that yesterday. Because we've got a very, very important show coming up tonight on the Alpha Warrior show to talk about the Office of Public Safety. And that show is going to knock people's socks off.
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Because we've talked about the Office of Public Safety. I mean, if you go back in some of our linked four o'clock shows when we were doing our Around the World tour, we would laugh because they taught people how to torture and kill people. Not that we were laughing at that part, but the name of it, the Office of Public Safety. They do this every single time. And they call something exactly the opposite of what it is.
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Like while they're trying to set up a fascist dictatorship, they're calling it a democracy. And the Office of Public Safety is probably the most flagrant one because they, no kidding, were in charge of training national police to set up death squads to kill domestic people. Oh, and by the way, I got a real big newsflash because you're going to find people in our own government, in our own agencies.
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That we're doing the exact same thing domestically. So you're not going to want to miss that show. All right. Part 11 of Strange Tales of the Parapolitical. This area begins with talking about the concept of counterinsurgency doctrine and the fact that a lot of it was taken from French military people that had been.
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working in Indochina, namely Vietnam, that of course ended in defeat. They studied how they were defeated under a lessons learned kind of thing, talking about revolutionary guerrilla warfare tactics that had been deployed successfully by Mao Zedong and, of course, Ho Chi Minh. The French officers concluded that the
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Revolutionary strategies consisted of a potent combination of guerrilla and psychological warfare. The principal objective was that they were going to conquer a population rather than a physical territory. Now, this is kind of bullshit, actually, especially in the review of what happened in Vietnam.
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the people there were Vietnamese. They had always been Vietnamese. They were one country. They weren't two countries. There weren't a free Vietnamese and a communist Vietnamese. There were Vietnamese and there were Vietnamese nationalists. And they were not conquered by a psychological operation. As a matter of fact, if anything, it was the
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pride of the Vietnamese that did not want an oppressor there. And the whole thing with Mao originated to some degree with the fact that especially Chiang Kai-shek warlords were supporting the UK poisoning the Chinese people with opium. So a lot of this is just kind of...
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Let's justify it with the use of communist rhetoric when, in fact, that's not necessarily where it comes from. This is what they wanted to do. And we know from the late 1800s that they had all of the psychological warfare experts working with them to devise these techniques. And where did the Bolshevik Revolution came from that created communism? Them too.
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It's kind of a roundabout way of patting themselves on the back because they all were given birth by the same people. But here's what they say the three specific techniques were. Parallel hierarchies. Create through a series of clandestine networks, Gladio, that offered an alternative to the existing government institutions. Number two, action propaganda.
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including mass propaganda that targets groups and thought reform directed against particular individuals. Three, terrorism, whether selective or indiscriminate, to intimidate the local population and ease its psychological separation from the present regime. In other words, when they want to do a regime change, they are going to target innocent civilians.
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to try to separate you from the regime that they want to overthrow. Having identified these techniques supposedly from the communists, which these guys created themselves, this led to the adoption of a guerrilla warfare revolutionary doctrine that was later known as the counterinsurgency doctrine by the French military and used during the Algerian conflict.
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There's much overlap between the guerrilla revolutionary tactic and the strategy of tension because the same people created it. So there was a journalist and an Italian intelligence asset. Imagine that, an Italian intelligence asset who's posing as a journalist. His name was Guido Giannettini.
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and we talked about him before, who was generally credited with the key visionary behind strategy of tension. Since the early 1960s, Giannettini had been in contact with French terrorists involved in OAS, which was basically the Gladio unit in France. That's the one that kept trying to kill Charles de Gaulle. And they put an emphasis on parallel hierarchies.
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and the political use of terror. With all that in mind, he goes into the use of three private military companies and one private intelligence company that participated in the strategy of tension as it related to Operation Gladio that carried out false flag operations with the insistence of Western security services to further the strategy of tension.
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The first one that he talks about is DynCorp. DynCorp is one of the earliest modern American private military companies. It traces its origins back to two California corporations founded when? In 1946, right after World War II? Huh. The first company, Land Air Inc. The second one, California Eastern Airways. The latter one, the Airways one, was set up by a small group returning.
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as World War II pilots that got into the air cargo business. In 1951, they merged and became California Eastern Aviation. That same year, Land Air, Inc. procured its first contract field team from the Air Force Logistics Command to provide mission support and depot-level repair to U.S. military aircraft and weapons systems around the world.
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And what's so important about that is that prior to that, all of the maintenance that was done on military aircraft was done inside the military. They didn't contract that out. This was the first contract. These contract field team contracts would form the backbone of DynCorp's business for decades to come.
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At this point, it is important to emphasize that DynCorp was principally used by the military to service aircraft and some other limited mission supports. DynCorp did not begin to emerge as a security behemoth that we all know today until the 90s. By this time, DynCorp had transformed itself from an aviation services company into a
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basically the elephant in the room with contracts from everything from mowing grass, you know, the stuff that airmen used to have to do, building computer networks, and even developing vaccines for the National Institute of Health. Their information technology work for the federal government is shrouded in mystery. What is known is that almost half of its earnings come from the IT side of its work. The CIA, FBI, and NSA.
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and other numerous intelligence agencies all use DynCorp in the IT field. The State Department, the Justice Department, the SEC, the CDC have also made DynCorp its IT expert. One of the most high-profile projects was the Trilogy program where DynCorp was tasked by the FBI with updating its computer network.
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It is not DynCorp's IT work, however, that earned its notoriety. There are controversial uses of DynCorp personnel in military roles that have raised eyebrows. The most well-known of these functions are guard services provided in unstable regions. DynCorp famously provided the original security detail for Afghan President Hamid Karzai.
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This detail grew out of a State Department contract that DynCorp got to provide security for U.S. officials in Jerusalem and Bosnia, and somehow they ended up in Afghanistan. DynCorp was later tasked with providing security for the Iraq Coalition Provisional Authority chief, Paul Brimmer. This company set subcontracts out routinely.
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to what was formerly known as Blackwater. Ironically, the Brimmer detail would help establish Blackwater as a chief rival to DynCorp. Rival in kind of the friendly sense. DynCorp's guard services are not the source of the PMC's notoriety. However, but persistent allegations in the U.S. national security establishment has
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surfaced around the national security apparatus employing DynCorp for covert operations. Its first foray into this was in Latin America as far back as 1992. There were three DynCorp employees that were assassinated in Peru that were supposedly doing anti-drug missions when everybody else said they were actually doing drug missions.
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DynCorp paramilitary operations in Latin America received a significant boost in 1999 with the launch of Plan Colombia. It was initiated by Bill Clinton. Plan Colombia was a U.S.-backed foreign aid military and diplomatic mission that was touted to combat drug cartels. But what it actually did was the exact opposite. And we've talked about this when we talked about Colombia.
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in one of our previous shows that basically this money was used to attack the people inside of Columbia that wanted their farmland back and didn't want to grow drugs. So instead of actually helping those people who were the heroes, the people on the right side of the issue, they attacked them, they labeled them as communist, terrorist, whatever you want to call them, and attacked them. And they used...
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South Com's military and the U.S. aid and every other program that they could to fund the attack on the actual rebels, the good people. DynCorp was tapped to fill the void. It is even possible Plan Colombia was intended to formalize DynCorp's efforts in Colombia.
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A 2003 article published in Wired alleges that DynCorp had been active in Colombia for over 20 years because they helped the CIA set the network up. DynCorp was long denied a combat role in Colombia. Officially, they denied they had a combat role. Officially, they said that their mission was to fly missions to eradicate the opium.
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Well, they suck at that job. U.S. Representative Jan Skowakowski, a Democrat from Illinois, had indicated that there were, in fact, combat missions that they were flying. And they supposedly had an objective of stamping out the quote-unquote guerrillas in the oil-rich nation. And that really boils down to exactly why the International Syndicate was involved in it to begin with, was oil.
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But the fact that they could grow opium there was kind of like a twofer. Peter Singer, a foreign policy fellow at Brookings Institute, wrote Corporate Warriors and said that DynCorp's mission went well beyond spraying, excuse me, plants. He charged that DynCorp contractors were routinely used in counterinsurgency operations against the Colombian rebel groups.
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DynCorp personnel were being used in missions typically reserved for U.S. special operations forces. The combat missions were not the only controversy for the company. Unsurprisingly, there are indications that at least some of the contractors employed were engaged in drug trafficking themselves because that's what their actual mission was. So this is also true in their mission in Ecuador.
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In September of 2001, a group of peasants from Ecuador filed a lawsuit against DynCorp, alleging that the herbicides used by the company in Colombia were drifting over the border into Ecuador and destroying their crops, as well as killing their livestock. And it also killed children. As of 2017, the courts have rejected all of these.
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It wasn't just DynCorp that was involved in Colombia operations. There were also others. During the 1990s, DynCorp had been contracted in Bosnia as part of the international peacekeeping operations there. The withdrawal of the Serbian forces from Kosovo, that's what they were supposed to be doing. In Bosnia, it was hired to provide monitors to the International Police Task Force,
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Speaking of public safety, training their local police. And basically, there were all kinds of allegations. They were having sex with children there. There's a whistleblower in the UK. Her name was Catherine Bolivac. That was a monitor.
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for the International Peacekeeping Operations. She had been hired by DynCorp in 1991, or excuse me, 99. And as part of her work, she worked with the UN Human Rights Office. She uncovered that many of the DynCorp employees were having sex with slaves, minors, and they were sex trafficking women in the area.
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She basically told the company she thought the company would be appalled and they basically fired her, told her to shut up, ignored her. She later won a whistleblower lawsuit in the UK against DynCorp. In 2011, she published her expose entitled The Whistleblower, Sex Trafficking, Military Contractors and One Woman's Fight for Justice in 2011.
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It was later turned into a movie. Even more serious allegations were made by Ben Johnston, a Texan hired by DynCorp to service helicopters in their hangar in Comanche Base Camp, which was then one of two U.S. military bases in Bosnia and Herzegovina.
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Johnston alleged that his director, supervisor, and fellow employees at the hangar were purchasing weapons and trafficking girls between the ages of 12 and 15 to Serbian mafia dons. His supervisor went so far as to videotape himself raping two young women. Johnston's allegations spurred an investigation by the Army Criminal Investigation Division, whose findings supported Johnston's allegation, but due to the legal waters of private military
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The army investigation was turned over to DynCorp and DynCorp fired many of the people that were involved to include the guy who whistleblowed. The Texan later filed a racketeering influence and corruption organization complaint, a RICO lawsuit against DynCorp. And then DynCorp settled with him without going to trial.
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All of these rape victims and DynCorp was never held to account and turned around and fired the guy that let him know. Nor was Bosnia the only instance that DynCorp employees were being linked to pedophilia and sex trafficking. In Colombia, a videotape emerged showing DynCorp contractors sexually violating underage girls. In Afghanistan, the company was accused of providing party favors for what was called a Baka Bazi.
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And that is basically an Afghan tradition of raping men, raping little boys. And supposedly DynCorp was encouraging that and giving favors for that to occur. In 2009, DynCorp apparently staged a Bakabazi in one of the provinces for an Afghan police recruits.
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The company had been tasked with training. Reportedly, DynCorp provided drugs for the little boys in the party. DynCorp took steps to bolster the ethic practices, but none within the company has faced charges after it was brought to their attention. Yeah, that's a real ethics problem. That's a fucking criminal problem. And this, by the way, all of this information has been out in the public for decades.
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And Congress has never done a damn thing about it. The FBI has never done a thing about it. The Department of Justice has never done a thing about it. They've known it, all of them. Both parties is part of this. For nearly two decades, DynCorp contractors have been repeatedly linked to drug and arms trafficking, pedophilia and sex trafficking.
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All of this come amidst the backdrop of corporations linked to highly secretive IT efforts and covert operations. Now, isn't that an interesting connection that you have pedophilia, you have sex trafficking, and these guys fucking control the IT networks of some of the most significant. Oh, so like they could plant pedophilia information on people's computers.
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that are connected to these systems and they're involved in covert operations yeah nothing fishy about that at all there should never be another penny spent um on dying corp ever again as far as um people's uh taxpayer dollars ever they should never not one penny um
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While DynCorp has never been linked to any blatant acts of terrorism, like other contractors, they have greatly contributed to the destabilization, i.e. strategy of tension. The fact that they have sprayed herbicides around people's farms and killed people doing it should be very bothersome to everyone. Long-term health effects, whatever. And, of course, all of that can be...
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construed as acts of terror because it's basically using a biological weapon in order to facilitate people to stay away. And that's basically what these things are being used as. And they don't care what the fallout is. The next one that he talks about is Blackwater. It was formerly known as Blackwater. As we know, it's changed its name.
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This is no doubt due to the fact that it was a large, let's see, while DynCorp had at times displayed Republican leanings, there is no question that they had made many inroads in Democrats' area as well. Planned Columbia and peacekeeping efforts in Bosnia were both green-lighted under the Clinton administration.
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generally split its political donations in both parties. Blackwater, however, came out strongly in favor of the Republican Party, mainly because of his family, because his dad, Edgar Prince, was a longtime Christian right Republican Party, according to the author.
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He also helped fund the Family Research Council, which was James Dobson's focus on the family initiative. Elsa Prentz, his mother, was also a backer of the Council of National Policy, a highly secretive think tank envisioned. Basically, it's touted as the Christian right version of the CFR.
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And then obviously we have Betsy, Prince, Eric, Stuart, DeVos family, the owners of Amway and the owners of the Orlando Magic, hence the Amway Arena, and the whole Amway company behind that.
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Financial contributions has been crucial to efforts like Citizens United rulings. Eventually, Betsy DeVos would become the U.S. Secretary of Education under Trump. Beyond Prince and his family, there are other links between Blackwater and other guerrilla warfare strategy of tension efforts. Prince allegedly recruited heavily among veterans of the Chilean Special Operation Forces.
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some of whom had been trained by Pinochet and the School of Americas. He basically hired a whole bunch of the people that were doing the terror regime in Chile as contractors for Blackwater, just like the CIA hired the Cuban exiles as contractors for their Operation Gladio. The Chilean military regime
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looked close to various elements of what was called Black International for support. That was a company as well. One institution which answered the call was Agenter Press. And remember, Agenter Press is Portugal's Operation Gladio cell. And it was a worldwide effort to do Operation Gladio. Agenter Press made
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significant use out of the French OAS, their Operation Gladio people as well. What's more, the military officers from Chile who had been personally trained by OAS as well. So it's kind of like keeping it all in the family. As far as strategy of tension is concerned, the DINA, which is their Chilean secret service or security service, whatever you want to call it, that worked for Pinochet.
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actively recruited Italian fascist terrorists from their Gladio program as well. So Chile was all open. It was like, give me some Portugal guys, give me some French guys, give me some Italian guys. And that is how we tied Operation Condor to Operation Gladio, because they used all the same people. In addition to the Chileans, Prince also had a lot of dealings with executive outcome, which we talked about.
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yesterday or the day before. In 2010, while still Blackwater's chairman of the board, Prince helped a private military company known as Saracen International. It would later become Sterling Corporate Services. When contracts in Somalia to train troops
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to guard the nation leaders and battle their supposed pirates and Islamic militants. Some reports indicate the prince himself was the one bankrolling Saracen. The reader will recall that Saracen was one of the early executive outcomes, stay-behind companies that provided security in Africa after the executive outcome had departed.
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It had begun as a subsidiary of Strategic Resources Corporation, which was also owned by Executive Outcomes. So basically, it's just a bunch of shell companies. It's all the same people. Prior to hooking up with Prince, Saracen had put a bid in again to the World Wildlife Fund for military-style protection of its game reserves in the Congo.
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This was reportedly a part of the World Wildlife Fund's effort to protect quote-unquote rhinos. We know that's not what it was doing. So, at the time Saracen was in league with Prince, it was managed by Lapras L-A-F-R-A-S L-U-I-T
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I-N-G-H, who was a veteran of Executive Outcomes' Angola campaign. Lewatin would later become a key figure at Executive Outcomes. Prior to joining this whole racket, he had served in the South African Special Forces, which, of course, was used in order to attack Angola by the U.S. So.
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There you have it. In addition to all of this, Prince also appears to have worked in some or looked into organized crime for potential assets. One such instance of this was a guy by the name of Enrique or Ricky Prado, P-R-A-D-O, who was a Cuban-American. Prado had served in the Air Force from 71 to 73.
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And after he left the service, he became a fireman in the Miami-Dade County. He also was a part of Trans World Detective Agency. This detective agency was controlled by Alberto San Pedro, long believed to be part of the international drug trafficking network the CIA had set up in Miami.
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Despite working for a significant Cuban-American drug lord in the 70s, Prado was officially recruited into the CIA, like those are two separate things, during the early 1980s, though he allegedly still continued to perform assassinations for San Pedro after joining the agency because they're the same thing. Initially, he was dispatched to Central America where he assisted the Contras.
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Because they're the same thing. By the mid-1990s, he had become a senior manager inside of the CIA's Bin Laden station. By 1998, he became chief of the operations of the Counterterrorist Center, serving under Kofor Black, who would later join Blackwater himself. And the Counterterrorist Center is where Brennan worked as well. Prado himself would join Blackwater sometime between 2004 and 2005.
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Prior to leaving the CIA, Prado was tasked with establishing a targeted assassination unit. Reportedly, this unit was never used as the CIA shifted to drones. Right. Come on. But also, part of this effort was transferred to Blackwater under the auspices of Prado. So basically, Prado was working inside of Blackwater.
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As a CIA, and you can mince words if you want, because there's no such thing as a former CIA agent. So CIA one day, Blackwater the next day, doing the same job. And we're supposed to believe that's not connected. Curiously, this network allegedly comprised exclusively of foreign nationals who were trained at one of Prince's properties in Virginia.
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which is also known as, let's see, so Blackwater's known use of Chilean and South African forces who served in authoritarian regimes was doing the training. In addition to these potential death squads, Blackwater also assisted the CIA in joint JSOC, Joint Special Operations Command, which is Fort Bragg.
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in staging their respective drone strikes in Pakistan. Specifically, Blackwater personnel appear to have been deeply involved in planning these assassinations. They also performed snatch-and-grab operations, which ended up getting people to then take to the Black sites for torture. Beyond targeted assassinations, they were engaged in a campaign of terror.
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to destabilize many of the areas that they were in. They committed indiscriminate violence against civilians. And some of this violence that was perpetrated by Blackwater, quote unquote, guards has been well established. And I'm just going to give you a few that he says. May 2nd, 2006, an Iraqi ambulance driver approached an area struck by a roadside bomb.
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was killed by a hail of uncontrolled small arms fire from a Blackwater guard. February 4, 2007, journalist Hana al-Ahmadi was killed by a Blackwater guard near the foreign ministry. February 7, 2007, a Blackwater sniper atop a building shot and killed three Iraqi guards detailed to state-funded media network. The Blackwater personnel allegedly
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had been fired upon, but the eyewitnesses said that was not true. And he goes through a whole bunch of these. This is really difficult as far as I'm concerned. A lot of times there's conflicting. This is a war zone. There's two sides to every one of these. But when you compile list after list after list and you find out that.
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It would be one thing if this company had a perfect record, if this company had been on the up and up and had done only hired the most respected professional people. They didn't do that.
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They specifically went into countries that were controlled by dictators who had national police forces that had been guilty of assassination, torture and murder, kidnapping. And those are the people that they employed and then deployed to these locations. So if you know that those are their skill sets, when somebody presents you with this information, it is viewed completely different.
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Then if you were using military people and I'm not saying military people are 100 percent on the up and up that they've not committed war crimes because some of them have. But it's a matter of proportion of believability. If you have commissioned officers and you have NCOs that have sworn an oath and are governed by the rules of engagement and the rules, the laws of armed conflict, they stand to lose a lot as opposed to having.
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um contractors and frankly this is the reason why the cia the state department the department of defense uses these contractors because they want this shit to happen they just don't want it pinned on them and these are got they're paid very very well they're not they're paid like a million times more than what the enlisted people in the military are paid because some of them eventually if push came to shove may actually have to go to jail for committing war crimes but the the general um
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takeaway has always been, no, they never get tried. They never get convicted. The worst that happens to them is the company fires them and goes, oh, my bad, we didn't know. When they, in fact, didn't know, they hired them specifically for those skills. So take that for whatever you want. And then given all of these things, when you see the Blackwater people that were killed and then
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drug in the streets. It puts that in completely different context. Was it used for propaganda? Was it not? I don't know. But I'm saying once you understand who these people use and what they are doing and what their purpose is there, it literally changes the way you see everything that is put on your television. So in the original form, the strategy of tension sought to use terrorism committed by
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Both sides framing it as a left and right issue to reinforce or set up security force nation states, i.e. fascism. In Iraq, this does not appear to have been the case. Indeed, the actions of Blackwater and other private military companies arguably undermined the efforts of the U.S. military and the Iraqi government to restore order. But that is in and of itself a strategy of tension.
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Because they used the instability in Iraq. They didn't want it not to be unstable because they were doing things in Iran and they were doing things in Syria from Iraq where they allowed Iraq to set up a functioning government and become a nation state again. They wouldn't have been able to use them as a staging ground. So it's exactly that. This guy just doesn't see it because he doesn't understand the bigger picture. Okay. One.
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Last one real quick. And this one is Aegis. A-E-G-I-S. The Brits have long been well respected for their private military companies as well. And one of their most infamous people is a Lieutenant Colonel Tim Spicer. Spicer spent 20 years in the British Army.
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He's often described as a veteran of the Special Air Services, or SAS, their most elite special forces. By his own admission, he was actually rejected by the SAS, according to him. You don't know whether to believe him or not. But he did take combat service courses that would have normally been reserved just for that unit. He spent the bulk of his career in the Scots Guard.
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seen combat several times. He was in the Falklands. He also, let's see, was in the Iraq War and in Bosnia. During the early 1990s, Spicer got his first taste of controversy with his Scott guards had been deployed to Ireland as part of the Troubles. On September 4th, 1992, two of the guardsmen under Spicer's charge murdered a civilian by shooting them in the back.
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Spicer would vigorously defend their action, even testifying on their behalf. After being convicted of murder, both of his guardsmen were released from prison in 1998. Spicer later argued for their reinstatement back into the Scott Guard. Upon retiring from the armed forces in 1995, Spicer began discussions for what would become his first private military company. It was known as Sandline International.
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and it was founded during the following year. Amusingly, the early PR push for Sandline featured one of the earliest uses of the term private military company while it worked to rebrand mercenaries as contractors. In theory, this more corporatized terminology would add legitimacy to the effort. Again, those PR companies comes in handy when you're trying to do covert operations.
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Spicer received early backing from a guy by the name of Simon Mann and another helper, Tony Buckingham. They were SAS men who had helped launch Executive Outcome. Mann had originally offered Spicer a role in Executive Outcomes, but he had declined. Over the years, there had been much question as to the extent of overlap between the two.
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Some sources allege that they were actually linked and that EO founder Eben, E-E-B-E-N, Barlow, had downplayed the ties to make them appear as two separate units. Sandline subcontracted EO executive outcomes for at least one operation that the author found about, and that was in Papua New Guinea.
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The London branch of the Executive Outcomes had been registered with an organization called Branch Heritage Group in 1993. When Sandline was launched in 1996, it was also owned by the same group. Like it's two apples on the same tree. So, that's a little weird. Spicer's tenure at Sandline was a brief but highly eventful one. First,
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He was involved in the Papua New Guinea debacle in which Spicer's client was overthrown after the nation's military learned of Sandline's involvement. Whoops. Effectively, Spicer and his merry band had toppled the government they had been hired to protect. That's hilarious. Spicer himself was arrested by the military and brought before an inquiry. He successfully sued the nation for funds owed after he was released.
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Spicer's efforts to support, let's see, effort in PNG were supported by Tony Buckingham, who appeared to have been running the same type of scheme with executive outcomes in Africa. And the PNG's negotiations with Sandline, Buckingham opened up talks with Pacific Island nations.
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buying interest in the mines and Sandline would soon then liberate the mines. That's kind of, that's actually a very interesting. So now we've combined the international syndicate with the operation Gladio under one company. So we're going to own the mine and conduct the covert operations to take over the mine. Brilliant. Said no one ever.
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Spicer moved on to Sierra Leone, where he became ensnared in what became Arms for Africa scandal. Executive Outcome had departed the nation in January, and the regime of Ahmed Tahan Kabbah, K-A-B-B-A-H, that they had helped install was soon displaced by another coup. Before being deposed, Kabbah had promised fugitive financier
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Rakesh Saxena, who was an Indian national that had been recently active in Thailand, a generous mineral concession in his nation. Saxena was under house arrest in Canada as a result of his role in triggering what would become known as the 1997 Asian financial crisis. He had also been a business associate.
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of Adon Khashoggi. When Saxena began talks with Caba, the bulk of his funds were frozen because he was a criminal. Getting his hands on the Sierra Leone mineral resources was going to give him cash. Despite his hardship, Saxena was prepared to donate $10 million to Caba to pad the deal. Saxena was
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only able to produce 1.5 million of the promised 10, but Spicer decided these funds were more than sufficient for him to start work. Initially, things went well, using many of the tactics as executive outcomes had used. Working on behalf of another company called Lifeline, who would provide intelligence gathering and training to assist Sandline. Sandline trained and equipped
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Kamajar units loyal to Kaba and received assistance from a Nigerian force as part of a UN mission. Sandline's plan was a success with a counter coup driving the rebel forces from the capital. It was in the aftermath that things blew up. In this instance, Spicer was accused of procuring 30 tons of Bulgarian arms for Ahmed Taba, the president-in-exile.
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despite Sierra Leone being under a UN arms embargo. To bypass the embargo, he arranged for the arms to be transferred to Nigeria first, and then they were going to pass them to Kaba's government. Spicer had secured approval for these efforts from the UK Foreign Office to do it, which, of course, they later denied. Sandline was able to prove their charges and ensured the scandal would...
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have implications for the Tony Blair prime minister. Spicer left Sandline in 1999. The next few years were austere after a series of lackluster security firms. Spicer founded Aegis, A-E-G-I-S, Defense Services in 2002, which just so happened to coincide with the second Iraqi war. That's weird.
50:16
He just got a contract for doing consulting with Disney Cruise Lines. What? You mean the one that goes by Epstein Island and does snorkeling there? That's really weird. In September 2003, Spicer met with the Circle, a powerful network in Europe, part of the Bilderberg Network. And the reader will recall that the Circle complex has ties.
50:44
to all of Britain's higher-ups, as well as the Netherlands and everybody else all over Germany. So, Colonel David Sterling again, we have the circle and all of their contacts being in bed with this Spicer guy. A year after his meeting with the circle, Aegis was awarded a massive...
51:14
$293 million security contract for what was called the Coalition Provisional Authorities Program Management Office, which was going to coordinate and oversee activity movements on private military companies enlisted to work in Iraq. In other words, they're going to be the lead contract on all of the other contractors.
51:40
It was at this time the largest security contract that had ever been awarded as part of that occupation. Overnight, they went from nothing to everything as a result on the global war on terror. That contract had taken us from a small organization to a big one, Spicer said. Needless to say, many industry insiders were baffled how a man with Spicer's track record who failed at everything.
52:09
ended up with this contract. Prior to 9-11, Spicer had been held in such esteem by the U.S. government that he was once chained to a chair while officials sorted out his purpose of even being in the United States. To further complicate matters, Spicer was investigated for involvement in a thing called the Wonka.
52:41
W-O-N-G-A, sponsored by his former business partner, Simon Mann, that was going on when he was awarded the IRAC contract. No doubt Spicer's contact with the Circle, as well as his friends at the Coalition Provisional Authority, helped. Ageson's bid, at the time he got the, or he made the bid, Spicer's longtime friend and mentor,
53:11
General Tony Hunter Choke, so it's Hunter-C-H-O-A-T, headed the security for the project management office and is credited for aiding Spicer to get the contract. Hunter Choke served in the British SAS for over 20 years. His military career began with the French Foreign Legion.
53:41
reportedly served with numerous Germans and SS troops because he was actually part of the Algerian fight to keep it a slave colony. He also participated in some of the efforts to overthrow Charles de Gaulle. So he has quite the checkered past and just the perfect person to be working on something like this. So he also said
54:08
Many of his friends ended up in the Operation Gladio OAS for France as part of their assassination squads. Given this background, the presence of Hunter Choke in the Coalition Provisional Authority and working with Spicer makes all of this look very Operation Gladio-ish. In 2005, several videos were posted online by former Aegis.
54:37
employees that displayed private security contractors randomly firing at civilian vehicles on an Iraqi highway. While in subsequent investigation, the U.S. Army criminal investigations determined that no crimes had been committed, even though they had a video of it. Of course, it wasn't just Aegis'
55:02
employees who randomly fired at civilian vehicles. As noted above, Blackwater contractors did it as well. Let's see. The Aegis was officially tasked with coordinating and overseeing all private contractors that were deployed to Iraq. So you've got a criminal organization overseeing the private military companies that all
55:30
once they were reviewed after allegations made of them doing bad things, were found they didn't do any bad things. Imagine that. I'm shocked. So at the time, the whole operation was being ran by the former Lieutenant Colonel Tim Spicer. So let's see. Who, again, had close ties to the Circle. And so he kind of sums up that whole period.
56:04
So we're going to stop there because tomorrow we're going to go to SAIC. And that's one of my favorites because I know several people that worked for SAIC over the years. They were in when we were in the part of the Pentagon that was being renovated. We got moved downtown and we were in the building next door to SAIC. And SAIC had a lot of people working there that used to work with me.
56:32
that it retired and went to work for SAIC. So it's a very interesting story. So I'm going to keep that for its own day. So we're going to open this up. And remember, I've only got till about 530 because it's Wednesday, family dinner day. Go ahead, SR71. Thank you, Colonel. And thank everyone for attending today. It just blows my mind how many PMCs we just went through.
57:03
I counted at least four or five. I'm sure there's more. So I asked Brock a question about how many PMCs currently exist today. And Brock says he can't nail down a number. But as of 2025, the figure often tossed around is over 150 PMCs active worldwide, operating in more than 50 countries.
57:32
I would say that's an underestimate. Yeah, I'd say that's an underestimate, but yeah, it's a shit ton. Yeah, that's crazy. Bridget, go ahead. If there was ever a day when it just so happened, God just so orchestrated this to come out, you to be reading this chapter today, you know that Eric Prince with Blackwater, the very one that you were just talking about, has come out and
58:05
and Dynacorp both have thrown their hat in to help, quote, export the illegal aliens from our country. And they said that they would bring in their own private military to do so and use military bases as holding facilities. So we're going to let the people who've already been found guilty of human traffic, human traffic some more.
58:36
Exactly. And that, well, they're throwing, they're, they're actively trying to get the government's attention, which tells me that the government says no freaking way. And, and they're ignoring them. So now they're taking to social media to try and make their case. And I'm like, if people just don't.
58:57
Get a fucking clue. I'm sorry. I've seen that, but I didn't want to comment on it until after we had our thing. I'm going to tear them up when we're done. Well, girl, I look forward to it. I love it when you do that. Yeah, I'm going to tear them up because it is ridiculous when you look into the records that they've literally been found guilty of human trafficking and pedophilia.
59:27
And those are the guys volunteering to haul people around. Of course they would. They would want to be in control of it because they're probably some of their contractors that are getting exported. And this way they can control. And it just, it just went through me when I saw it. I just like leapt out of my skin. Yep. Anybody else? Let me look over here on.
1:00:03
Oh. Colonel, I'm just blown away. Oh, sorry. Colonel, I've got a comment to make, if I may. Sure. Since I have no idea how to put my hand up on my phone, I'll just blurt it out. I may not be able to make this show tomorrow, but I do have some experience with SAIC. As you know, they were mostly based out of San Diego, where I lived. Yeah. Where I had my first Wall Street job. Right down in downtown La Jolla on Prospect Street, we had the top floor of a building. My firm did.
1:00:33
And the floor below us was all SAIC. And so we would, you know, obviously bump into them all the time. Very prime real estate. This is not cheap rent. Well, a few years later, SAIC decides to go public. And they had a very high valuation. And their employees, who'd been there at least 10 or more years, made between $3 and $10 million. And I helped a number of them out with liquidating their shares. So it is an incredibly profitable company.
1:01:04
And they're everywhere. They are everywhere. Yeah. And by the way, most of their former their original back when they went public were intelligence assets and retired military. Yeah. The people I knew most definitely fit that description. Yeah. Yeah. So nothing like jumping on board a private military company.
1:01:36
Then taking it public, getting your millions and then let it, you know, sell on into the future. A good way of paying people back for doing jobs that they were recruited to do. Stellar, did you have something else you wanted to say?
1:01:56
I just wanted to be blown away again because all of this stuff and I had heard of SAIC and had not known about what you guys just talked about. And it makes so much more sense. This stuff was all over the place, just interfaces, how they were able to do this stuff, you know, and launder and reward their, I mean, taking this thing and making it public. And it's like any more slap in the face than they can do already. It's insane.
1:02:26
I agree. So Silk Purse said that Mark Thatcher, who we've come across, he was an arms dealer, Margaret Thatcher's son, was involved in the Wonga failed coup with Simon Mann. But Simon Mann went to jail and Thatcher didn't. Does that surprise anybody? No. OK, so, yeah, Mager Sarge said that.
1:02:57
I already said we're not going to have a space tomorrow, so that was my bad. We're not going to do SAIC tomorrow. Let's see. SR has his hand up. Okay. Hold on. I'm not going to be able to do one on Friday either because the Strawberry Festival. So I don't know, Mager Sarge. I have it on for tomorrow.
1:03:33
But I don't have it on for Friday. So I think I'll be able to squeeze it in tomorrow. But definitely on Friday, we're not doing one. Carrie, go ahead. Yeah, Tucker had Eric Prince on not that long ago. He was like trying to sell some new cell phone service that I was like, oh my God, dude, are you insane? And Tucker was like,
1:04:05
he said Eric Prince is his best friend. Anyway, um, wasn't, I have a question. Wasn't Eric Prince or, um, Blackwater convicted and of, of like, I don't know exactly what, but also then someone let them out of prison, commuted their sentence or something. Am I mistaken?
1:04:34
I don't know. I haven't looked any of that up. I know that they were they were indicted for some incidences that happened in Iraq. But let's see. I'll look it up and put it in the bill. OK. Recall that. Thanks. Sure.
1:05:04
Yeah, for the one that I was just talking about where 17 people were killed and 20 injured, they were charged. And let's see, four employees were charged and tried and convicted in federal court. One of them murdered, the other three of manslaughter. And all four convicted were pardoned by Donald Trump. So there you go. SR-71.
1:05:34
I was just sitting here and thinking about something and all of these PMCs, and it just occurred to me what I find, I guess, a little disheartening, and probably I hate to be correct in this, but given what's been going on over the last few decades with wars everywhere that we've been along with our allies,
1:06:07
I can now understand why the number of PMCs. We have grown up in a warmongering society. And it just is sad. So I would tell you that I think the PMCs are Operation Gladio in a business model. Right. If you think about it.
1:06:36
I agree on that point, but I mean, what do all our troops do when they leave? When they finally get out of the military or something else comes along where they have to get out of the military, what do they do? And my concern is, where do they go? They go to the PMCs. We see that specifically in the higher echelon. Well, I mean, the higher echelons only have a certain amount of...
1:07:07
Right. You do see a lot of the enlisted people go like my cousin by marriage was a army tank driver. And he went for like four years under a contract to train Iraqi army how to drive tank. And, you know, in a.
1:07:36
similar non-Operation Gladio perspective, that's a legitimate thing. If you have a contractor that has a specialty of Abram tank drivers and they can offer worldwide training to any military that's going to be getting them, should that be a mission that the U.S. military sends trainers over there when they're part of a military cell?
1:08:05
First of all, you can't buy U.S. military equipment unless you go through the U.S. military. There's military sales. It's an entire industry and specialty at the Pentagon. And we have these acquisition officers in all of the embassies around the world. So this is like a big deal. Now, the way it should be done is if you are going to buy military equipment from the United States.
1:08:35
excuse me, you agree that you're going to have military trainers initially to give you the handoff. And in most cases, those military training comes to the United States and goes through our tech schools to learn how to drive the tanks. That's the way it was done in the 70s. That's the way it was done in the 80s. They came here. We had foreigners in aircraft maintenance at Chanute Air Force Base when I was a tech school instructor all the time. As a matter of fact,
1:09:04
Being a female instructor and instructing Middle East people became problematic in many different ways. And it was hilarious to me. But anyway, that's a thing to turn around and grow the military industrial complex. First of all, as you saw, it's always the toe in the door. The toe in the door is going to be, oh, we're going to provide maintenance on this trainer.
1:09:31
At AETC, because we don't want to waste warfighting maintenance people to come down here and just do maintenance on this little old trainer. Right. OK, so now we've got a contractor in the door in aircraft ops doing maintenance on our training aircraft. Well, then that same company greases palms and now they're not just doing maintenance on trainers. They're doing maintenance on. Oh, well, all of our strategic air refueling.
1:09:59
basically is all stationed here in the United States. Then they do an air bridge over, but they always come home at night, right? So there's really no deployment for aircraft maintenance on those. So let's get a contract for them. And you see that it just keeps rolling over time. And then now that they've got all of the, a lot of the maintenance, not all of it, contracted out here in the States, now I can transition that into a military industrial complex.
1:10:28
add on to these private military companies. And now I can extend their capability over to these countries. And oh, by the way, now that I can get them into all of these countries under the guise of these Air Force and Army support contracts. Well, how about if I put some spies in there? And how about if I put some intelligence people in there? And then I'm in every freaking country and I'm doing all of this other stuff. And then.
1:10:57
We're going to talk about the private intelligence companies that go along with the private military companies. And once you understand how this thing has morphed into this giant monstrosity and how the intelligence, primarily the CIA, but all NATO aligned countries do this exact same thing. Because you're going to find Mirage from France. You're going to find equipment from Sweden. You're going to find equipment.
1:11:27
They all do this. And they're doing it to countries that have no ability to withstand the onslaught of these attacks when they occur. And they do it to monopolize third world countries so they can rape all of their resources and control these countries. It has been this growing mushroom of fungus around the world.
1:11:56
And we're just exposing what it looks like on the underneath. Miles, go ahead. Colonel, your voice is getting better. That's good. If you had to pick one individual that pushed the agenda of the international syndicate, what more than any other person, do you have an individual that you would choose? No.
1:12:24
I think one that served throughout many of the different administrations from a consistency standpoint would be somebody like Henry Kissinger. But he's just a worker bee. You know, he was there for consistency in messaging. He's not like he's like a worker bee. The International Syndicate is, you know, made up of the Rockefellers, the Rothschilds and their bosses.
1:12:54
But the people that work in the CFR, the Bilderbergs, the World Wildlife Fund, and the Circle, all of those coordinating bodies, there are a few people that more than others encompasses that entire, like you can find some of them that have like,
1:13:21
20 different organizations that they were either a board member of, a director of, and all of them organizing this effort. And Kissinger is certainly one of them. But Brzezinski was another one. Yeah, there's a few. Carrie? Yeah, I saw your video this morning about you found the hornet's nest. The bridge? Yeah. That was pretty interesting, wasn't it?
1:14:01
You found it. You found it. I didn't find it. Actually, Mr. Cartwright sent me that. The guy that wrote The Richie Boy, that's what I was saying yesterday in our show. I did not find that. He sent that to me and said if we were going to talk about the Office of Public Safety and some of these other topics that I needed to understand.
1:14:32
how this organization worked behind the scenes. And because I've already done a very long thread on the Warburg family, it kind of made sense when I started looking into this because the people that are behind this Atlantic bridge on the German side, like the Warburg family, and then on the American side, like John McCloy,
1:15:01
They just show up in everything. And so I was like, holy crap. And then, of course, like I said yesterday, it just made Crypto AG make more sense to me because I wondered when I exposed Crypto AG, I don't know, a year ago, why would you pick Germany? If you're going to create a spyware ability, why Germany? The guy was actually Swedish that created the technology.
1:15:31
and gave it to NSA where they could create a backdoor. And then they set him up in business, the CIA did, in Switzerland. So again, you had other opportunities of someone that you could share. And I mean, obviously, UK would have been a logical partner in this, but they picked Germany. And something in the back of my head always bugged me about that.
1:15:57
Yeah, I know Alan Dulles had a great relationship with Reinhard Galen, and I kind of left it at that because of Operation Gladio. It kind of makes sense that if Galen and Dulles is running Operation Gladio worldwide, that they would both have access to all of the embassy cables around the world. And I kind of just left it at that. You know, that was kind of my rationalization.
1:16:21
But when I saw this yesterday morning and he sent this to me, I was like, oh, son of a bitch. So basically, this organization, the Atlantic Bridge, is the real WEF behind the scenes. So the WEF, they have this, you know, it's like a, that's what I keep saying. Everything that we see is a hologram.
1:16:45
They parade all of the media into the WEF. They parade all these people up on a stage. They have all of these nice conversations. But the real shit behind the scenes is this Atlantic Bridge. And these guys are no kidding. If you look at who they produced, who their actual, and for those of you who don't know.
1:17:09
The WEF Young Leaders Program that everybody likes to jump on going, oh my God, you know, Tulsi Gabbard was a young leader. No, she was not. The WEF Young Leaders Program is bullshit. What they do is, again, it's a hologram. They come up with people that they send an email to that's kind of like the Nigerian Prince email.
1:17:32
Right. It's like, hey, we're this great organization and we do great things. And if you want to join, it's like twenty five thousand dollars and we'll be like your baby daddy for getting into politics and all this other crap. But it is it's not like someone applied to it and got selected. It's like fishing. They're just throwing a line out there trying to get people into it.
1:18:01
The young leaders program in the Atlantic Bridge is exactly the opposite. They have for 60 positions on average, they get over 500 applicants every year. They pick 30 Americans and 30 Germans. And you have people like Chuck Schumer as a graduate of this thing. You have like literally everybody in Germany has graduated from this.
1:18:27
You are going to be the U.S. ambassador to Germany. You have to have been in this program. The president of the German Marshall Fund, which is a CIA cutout. And, of course, you know, they have an award named after the CIA chief, George Bush. So it was just it was crazy. Angela Merkel, Henry Kissinger, all of these people are part of this organization.
1:18:54
And then you realize once you start seeing who's all involved in it, that this was the real powerhouse, not the WEF. But it does look a lot like the WEF. Miles, go ahead. You know, to the audience, we're super lucky at this time that we have these history nerds. I was nerding out with Gordon yesterday when he was on the Book of Trump doing a show by himself. I don't, Colonel.
1:19:25
Do you ever talk to Gordon about what I think is really important right now about what's happening in the Middle East and who the power brokers are? But we're just lucky. I've been following Gordon since he was doing shows with Ron Partain. So if you don't know who some of these people are, you should follow them.
1:19:46
So we're lucky to have you, Colonel. Thank you. Thank you. Yeah, I mean, I've been on Gordon's show. I just did a show this morning with Gordon on Badlands Media, and we hit on some of those topics. He's been a good friend of mine for many years, and he is an outstanding researcher. So I'm glad you're following him. He's a good guy, too. Ghost of Base Patrick Henry. And Warhamster and I both have been on his show several times. When they do like a regional show.
1:20:15
him and Matt have me on to talk about the Gladio aspect of it, because oftentimes these regional areas are in chaos because of Operation Gladio coups and the fallout from them. And so they literally go hand in hand. And yes, he is a great historian. Okay.
1:20:49
Anybody else? As is Warhamster. If you guys are not following him, you definitely need to. Southern, go ahead. I have a question. I stumbled across the Atlantic Bridge because I've always looked at World Economic Forum as like a marketing arm. Hi, come see us. Give us money. And we're out here to solve your economic problems. But, you know, going through the history with David Rockefeller and his Henry Kissinger, you know,
1:21:20
was an alkali of David Rockefeller. Who do we have that today? Who is Kissinger right now in the government? Are you asking me that? Yeah. I don't think we have anybody that's like, I mean, we have people that they consider themselves Kissinger-like, but I don't. I mean, you could ask Bolton. He'll think he's Kissinger-like. Right. That's what I'm saying. He's a joke.
1:21:54
He has a joke. But that's kind of, I think Kissinger was a criminal. 100%. Oh, no, no, no. We have lots of those kind of criminal people. Yes, but he had such an effect on shaping global politics and our relationships and everything. Do we have another one like that right now?
1:22:23
That kind of power that he held. He's a terrifying person. I'm glad he's gone. God bless him. But I just, I look around, I just see a lot of cardboard figures. Yeah, I mean, I don't think we have people of that statesmanship refined.
1:22:55
I would have to be able to like look through some of the more recent because there's people like Richard Pearl. A lot of people in that line of work are not known at the level of which because basically everything that they did overtly has transitioned into covertly.
1:23:23
So you have all of these people still doing these things, but you don't know their names. Yeah. I think Norm Eisen thinks he's that guy, but he's a cardboard as well. But he does sit in a nice chair for control. But he's a weak, weak man. You have people like John Kerry that have been throughout all of these different roles.
1:23:50
And been very useful to them. So, you know, he's not without influence, unfortunately. Yeah. Yeah. Matter of fact, when he ran for president, when he lost Ohio, when George Soros said, OK, I'm not going to support somebody running for president. I'm going to go win all the local elections because he didn't see the financial win. But as we move forward.
1:24:19
with more of this becoming daylight and what Trump and Elon are trying to do, do we have a reasonable expectation if we can keep Republicans in power for at least the next 12 years, we can clean this out enough? Oh, absolutely. What you have to do is chop off their funding. When you chop off their funding, which is happening right now,
1:24:47
A lot of the other stuff downstream is going to happen. But honestly, you have to be able to control their drug network, their weapons and the human trafficking. Yeah. And it all starts with the money. Well, and that's something I saw was done very smartly, cutting all the funds off for 90 days for USAID.
1:25:12
And now you've got 62 NGOs in Brussels begging for money, and Source is not happy. So that's a good sign. That's a good sign. But it's just like we don't realize that we were the ants. We were the ants, and we are the ants. There is so much that's happened at so many different levels, just even the Trilateral Commission.
1:25:39
We're negotiating contracts. David Rockefeller made sure he had the right people on both sides of the contract. It's just unbelievable the control that's been in our country. But who's at the top of all this? What do you call it? You said something the other day about international counsel or something. No, the international syndicate. It's a crime syndicate. Okay, and that is basically the top of the food chain? So the way I define it is that
1:26:08
There are organizations like the Rockefellers, the Carter B's, the four child, the Rothschilds. All of those people are like the first of two layers. Those people, because they're active role in.
1:26:30
orchestrating regime changes and W.R. Grace and the corporations that they control, Standard Oil. You see behind a lot of them, PepsiCo. Yep. Back in the day, it was Steve Jobs, which was a shock to me. Robert Woods. Wow. That's right. I remember you saying that before. Yes. Lots of them. OK, so that's the layer, the first tier.
1:26:58
The second tier of that organization are like the old, old families, like the Wallenbergs, the Mordecis, all of the old money that hire the Rothschilds as their bankers or the Rockefellers as their.
1:27:16
And then they actually own stock in all of these companies as well. They control the central banks and all this other stuff. So I don't spend my time, because that obviously is not my expertise, of trying to dissect who's all in the international syndicate. What I pride myself in doing is when I find them, I name them. I don't use terms.
1:27:40
that are nebulous. I want them named. I want people to understand that there are actual faces behind regime changes and the murder of tens of billions of people all over the world. I think that's critically important to making change. But I try to focus on the actual Operation Gladio tactics.
1:28:04
uh strategies as it relates to just that you know global operation because that is my expertise it's what i'm trained um in perhaps yes okay my next question we've had this brief conversation before about i think we need to leave nato i think it's just a terrorist organization basically do you see that happening
1:28:31
I've said it many times. We have to leave NATO. I think this transition in managing Ukraine and keeping Europe not at the table, I think Trump is sending that signal. Well, I think if they put one boot on the ground in Ukraine, it will be the impetus to leave NATO. Because we are not going to be a party to World War III. Do you think they realize that? Because seven leaders showed up to talk to...
1:29:01
And now he's saying, I was told I could just keep the money. I didn't have to repay the money. He's an idiot. I'm sorry. I know it. Okay. Okay. All right, guys. Thank you so much, Colonel. Miles, then SR-71, then we got to go. All right. Real quick. Talking about a hologram. We know it looks real, but it's not. So this new CR that they're working at.
1:29:31
I don't understand, and maybe Stella can help out on this, how are they creating this money? Because it's not real. It's a hologram. It's really confusing to me trying to figure out how they're manufacturing all this money that they're talking about. Where's it coming from? That's a Warhamster one, but they just make it out of thin air. They've been doing that for over 70 years now. Yeah, they just print it.
1:30:02
That's a story for another day. As far as 71, go ahead. Thank you, Colonel, and 100% on leaving NATO. I did see an article in The Hill today that the Trump administration on Sunday told USAID staffers it would be firing 1,600 employees and placing all but a fraction of employees on administrative leave.
1:30:33
there's going to be a group of roughly 4,200 people left. Yeah, there should be zero. 4,200 people that are being placed on administrative leave with 1,600 being fired at the moment. Cool. Hopefully they're all good. Yeah. Actually, they're in their offices today cleaning out their desk at USAID. Cool. All right, guys, thank you for being here. I honestly...
1:31:04
appreciate this more than you guys could know. No, no, no. We appreciate you. You're helping us learn so we can help save our country and take care of our children. Amen. So thank you, Colonel. I can never thank you enough. You have no idea. Absolutely. Thank you so much. Absolutely. You guys take care. And I do believe we will have a show tomorrow at four. Just kind of stay with me. My daughter's coming in from Austin tonight.
1:31:35
And I will be with Alpha talking about the Office of Public Safety tonight at 930. So God bless. See you guys later. Saving the world one day.
Entities here
DynCorp25Tim Spicer21Blackwater17Operation Gladio15Sandline International13Executive Outcomes10Iran9Colombia8Aegis Defense Services7Erik Prince7Henry Kissinger7Ahmed Tejan Kabbah6USAID6West Germany6Atlantic Bridge5Enrique Prado5World Economic Forum5Bosnia5SAIC5Chile4NATO4Le Cercle4Cuba3Papua New Guinea3Tony Hocknull3Rakesh Saxena3Sierra Leone3British Special Air Service3Coalition Provisional Authority3United States3Ben Johnston3Plan Colombia3Vietnam3Rothschild family3Catherine Bolvig3Simon Mann3David Rockefeller3Afghanistan3Scots Guards3France2
Claims made here
Ho Chi Minh carried_out_attack
Vietnam host_asserted
▶ 3:59
“working in Indochina, namely Vietnam, that of course ended in defeat. They studied how they were defeated under a lessons learned kind of thing, talking about revolutionary guerrilla warfare tactics t…”
Mao Zedong carried_out_attack
Vietnam host_asserted
▶ 3:59
“working in Indochina, namely Vietnam, that of course ended in defeat. They studied how they were defeated under a lessons learned kind of thing, talking about revolutionary guerrilla warfare tactics t…”
DynCorp founded
Land Air Inc. host_asserted
▶ 9:20
“The first one that he talks about is DynCorp. DynCorp is one of the earliest modern American private military companies. It traces its origins back to two California corporations founded when? In 1946…”
DynCorp founded
California Eastern Airways host_asserted
▶ 9:20
“The first one that he talks about is DynCorp. DynCorp is one of the earliest modern American private military companies. It traces its origins back to two California corporations founded when? In 1946…”
Land Air Inc. funded
Air Force Logistics Command host_asserted
▶ 9:50
“as World War II pilots that got into the air cargo business. In 1951, they merged and became California Eastern Aviation. That same year, Land Air, Inc. procured its first contract field team from the…”
DynCorp supplied_arms_to
Hamid Karzai host_asserted
▶ 12:14
“It is not DynCorp's IT work, however, that earned its notoriety. There are controversial uses of DynCorp personnel in military roles that have raised eyebrows. The most well-known of these functions a…”
DynCorp supplied_arms_to
Paul Bremer host_asserted
▶ 12:42
“This detail grew out of a State Department contract that DynCorp got to provide security for U.S. officials in Jerusalem and Bosnia, and somehow they ended up in Afghanistan. DynCorp was later tasked …”
Bill Clinton funded
Plan Colombia host_asserted
▶ 14:11
“DynCorp paramilitary operations in Latin America received a significant boost in 1999 with the launch of Plan Colombia. It was initiated by Bill Clinton. Plan Colombia was a U.S.-backed foreign aid mi…”
DynCorp carried_out_attack
Colombia host_asserted
▶ 15:08
“South Com's military and the U.S. aid and every other program that they could to fund the attack on the actual rebels, the good people. DynCorp was tapped to fill the void. It is even possible Plan Co…”
Catherine Bolvig exposed
DynCorp host_asserted
▶ 19:05
“for the International Peacekeeping Operations. She had been hired by DynCorp in 1991, or excuse me, 99. And as part of her work, she worked with the UN Human Rights Office. She uncovered that many of …”
Ben Johnston exposed
DynCorp host_asserted
▶ 20:23
“Johnston alleged that his director, supervisor, and fellow employees at the hangar were purchasing weapons and trafficking girls between the ages of 12 and 15 to Serbian mafia dons. His supervisor wen…”
Erik Prince recruited
Chilean Special Operation Forces host_asserted
▶ 27:08
“Financial contributions has been crucial to efforts like Citizens United rulings. Eventually, Betsy DeVos would become the U.S. Secretary of Education under Trump. Beyond Prince and his family, there …”
Augusto Pinochet trained
Chilean Special Operation Forces host_asserted
▶ 27:37
“some of whom had been trained by Pinochet and the School of Americas. He basically hired a whole bunch of the people that were doing the terror regime in Chile as contractors for Blackwater, just like…”
Aginter Press member_of
Operation Gladio host_asserted
▶ 28:08
“looked close to various elements of what was called Black International for support. That was a company as well. One institution which answered the call was Agenter Press. And remember, Agenter Press …”
Dirección de Inteligencia Nacional recruited
Operation Gladio host_asserted
▶ 29:08
“actively recruited Italian fascist terrorists from their Gladio program as well. So Chile was all open. It was like, give me some Portugal guys, give me some French guys, give me some Italian guys. An…”
Erik Prince funded
Sandline International host_asserted
▶ 30:09
“to guard the nation leaders and battle their supposed pirates and Islamic militants. Some reports indicate the prince himself was the one bankrolling Saracen. The reader will recall that Saracen was o…”
Sandline International member_of
Executive Outcomes host_asserted
▶ 30:09
“to guard the nation leaders and battle their supposed pirates and Islamic militants. Some reports indicate the prince himself was the one bankrolling Saracen. The reader will recall that Saracen was o…”
Sandline International member_of
Strategic Resources Corporation host_asserted
▶ 30:39
“It had begun as a subsidiary of Strategic Resources Corporation, which was also owned by Executive Outcomes. So basically, it's just a bunch of shell companies. It's all the same people. Prior to hook…”
Lafra Singh member_of
South African Special Forces host_asserted
▶ 31:40
“I-N-G-H, who was a veteran of Executive Outcomes' Angola campaign. Lewatin would later become a key figure at Executive Outcomes. Prior to joining this whole racket, he had served in the South African…”
Alberto San Pedro headed
Trans World Detective Agency host_asserted
▶ 32:42
“And after he left the service, he became a fireman in the Miami-Dade County. He also was a part of Trans World Detective Agency. This detective agency was controlled by Alberto San Pedro, long believe…”
Enrique Prado member_of
Trans World Detective Agency host_asserted
▶ 32:42
“And after he left the service, he became a fireman in the Miami-Dade County. He also was a part of Trans World Detective Agency. This detective agency was controlled by Alberto San Pedro, long believe…”
Enrique Prado assassinated
Alberto San Pedro host_asserted
▶ 33:08
“Despite working for a significant Cuban-American drug lord in the 70s, Prado was officially recruited into the CIA, like those are two separate things, during the early 1980s, though he allegedly stil…”
Enrique Prado member_of
National Counterterrorism Center host_asserted
▶ 33:37
“Because they're the same thing. By the mid-1990s, he had become a senior manager inside of the CIA's Bin Laden station. By 1998, he became chief of the operations of the Counterterrorist Center, servi…”
Enrique Prado member_of
Blackwater host_asserted
▶ 33:37
“Because they're the same thing. By the mid-1990s, he had become a senior manager inside of the CIA's Bin Laden station. By 1998, he became chief of the operations of the Counterterrorist Center, servi…”
Blackwater carried_out_attack
Hana al-Ahmadi documented
▶ 36:40
“was killed by a hail of uncontrolled small arms fire from a Blackwater guard. February 4, 2007, journalist Hana al-Ahmadi was killed by a Blackwater guard near the foreign ministry. February 7, 2007, …”
Tim Spicer member_of
Scots Guards documented
▶ 41:55
“He's often described as a veteran of the Special Air Services, or SAS, their most elite special forces. By his own admission, he was actually rejected by the SAS, according to him. You don't know whet…”
Tim Spicer spied_on
The Troubles documented
▶ 42:23
“seen combat several times. He was in the Falklands. He also, let's see, was in the Iraq War and in Bosnia. During the early 1990s, Spicer got his first taste of controversy with his Scott guards had b…”
Tim Spicer founded
Sandline International documented
▶ 42:49
“Spicer would vigorously defend their action, even testifying on their behalf. After being convicted of murder, both of his guardsmen were released from prison in 1998. Spicer later argued for their re…”
Simon Mann founded
Executive Outcomes documented
▶ 43:48
“Spicer received early backing from a guy by the name of Simon Mann and another helper, Tony Buckingham. They were SAS men who had helped launch Executive Outcome. Mann had originally offered Spicer a …”
Sandline International front_for
Branch Energy documented
▶ 44:44
“The London branch of the Executive Outcomes had been registered with an organization called Branch Heritage Group in 1993. When Sandline was launched in 1996, it was also owned by the same group. Like…”
Tim Spicer overthrew
Papua New Guinea documented
▶ 45:15
“He was involved in the Papua New Guinea debacle in which Spicer's client was overthrown after the nation's military learned of Sandline's involvement. Whoops. Effectively, Spicer and his merry band ha…”
Executive Outcomes installed
Ahmed Tejan Kabbah documented
▶ 46:47
“Spicer moved on to Sierra Leone, where he became ensnared in what became Arms for Africa scandal. Executive Outcome had departed the nation in January, and the regime of Ahmed Tahan Kabbah, K-A-B-B-A-…”
Rakesh Saxena financed_via
Ahmed Tejan Kabbah documented
▶ 47:46
“of Adon Khashoggi. When Saxena began talks with Caba, the bulk of his funds were frozen because he was a criminal. Getting his hands on the Sierra Leone mineral resources was going to give him cash. D…”
Tim Spicer supplied_arms_to
Ahmed Tejan Kabbah documented
▶ 48:44
“Kamajar units loyal to Kaba and received assistance from a Nigerian force as part of a UN mission. Sandline's plan was a success with a counter coup driving the rebel forces from the capital. It was i…”
Tim Spicer founded
Aegis Defense Services documented
▶ 49:43
“have implications for the Tony Blair prime minister. Spicer left Sandline in 1999. The next few years were austere after a series of lackluster security firms. Spicer founded Aegis, A-E-G-I-S, Defense…”
Aegis Defense Services funded
Coalition Provisional Authority documented
▶ 51:14
“$293 million security contract for what was called the Coalition Provisional Authorities Program Management Office, which was going to coordinate and oversee activity movements on private military com…”
Tony Hocknull member_of
French Foreign Legion host_asserted
▶ 53:11
“General Tony Hunter Choke, so it's Hunter-C-H-O-A-T, headed the security for the project management office and is credited for aiding Spicer to get the contract. Hunter Choke served in the British SAS…”
Tony Hocknull attempted_coup_against
Charles de Gaulle host_asserted
▶ 53:41
“reportedly served with numerous Germans and SS troops because he was actually part of the Algerian fight to keep it a slave colony. He also participated in some of the efforts to overthrow Charles de …”
Mark Thatcher carried_out_attack
Wonga Coup caller_asserted
▶ 1:02:26
“I agree. So Silk Purse said that Mark Thatcher, who we've come across, he was an arms dealer, Margaret Thatcher's son, was involved in the Wonga failed coup with Simon Mann. But Simon Mann went to jai…”
Donald Trump pardoned
Blackwater documented
▶ 1:05:04
“Yeah, for the one that I was just talking about where 17 people were killed and 20 injured, they were charged. And let's see, four employees were charged and tried and convicted in federal court. One …”
Zbigniew Brzezinski member_of
Atlantic Bridge host_asserted
▶ 1:13:21
“20 different organizations that they were either a board member of, a director of, and all of them organizing this effort. And Kissinger is certainly one of them. But Brzezinski was another one. Yeah,…”
Henry Kissinger member_of
Atlantic Bridge host_asserted
▶ 1:13:21
“20 different organizations that they were either a board member of, a director of, and all of them organizing this effort. And Kissinger is certainly one of them. But Brzezinski was another one. Yeah,…”
Warburg family member_of
Atlantic Bridge host_asserted
▶ 1:14:32
“how this organization worked behind the scenes. And because I've already done a very long thread on the Warburg family, it kind of made sense when I started looking into this because the people that a…”
John J. McCloy member_of
Atlantic Bridge host_asserted
▶ 1:14:32
“how this organization worked behind the scenes. And because I've already done a very long thread on the Warburg family, it kind of made sense when I started looking into this because the people that a…”
Allen Dulles member_of
Operation Gladio host_asserted
▶ 1:15:57
“Yeah, I know Alan Dulles had a great relationship with Reinhard Galen, and I kind of left it at that because of Operation Gladio. It kind of makes sense that if Galen and Dulles is running Operation G…”
Reinhard Gehlen member_of
Operation Gladio host_asserted
▶ 1:15:57
“Yeah, I know Alan Dulles had a great relationship with Reinhard Galen, and I kind of left it at that because of Operation Gladio. It kind of makes sense that if Galen and Dulles is running Operation G…”
Atlantic Bridge front_for
World Economic Forum host_asserted
▶ 1:16:21
“But when I saw this yesterday morning and he sent this to me, I was like, oh, son of a bitch. So basically, this organization, the Atlantic Bridge, is the real WEF behind the scenes. So the WEF, they …”
Charles Schumer member_of
Atlantic Bridge host_asserted
▶ 1:18:01
“The young leaders program in the Atlantic Bridge is exactly the opposite. They have for 60 positions on average, they get over 500 applicants every year. They pick 30 Americans and 30 Germans. And you…”
Angela Merkel member_of
Atlantic Bridge host_asserted
▶ 1:18:27
“You are going to be the U.S. ambassador to Germany. You have to have been in this program. The president of the German Marshall Fund, which is a CIA cutout. And, of course, you know, they have an awar…”
David Rockefeller member_of
Atlantic Bridge host_asserted
▶ 1:20:49
“Anybody else? As is Warhamster. If you guys are not following him, you definitely need to. Southern, go ahead. I have a question. I stumbled across the Atlantic Bridge because I've always looked at Wo…”
Rockefeller member_of
Atlantic Bridge host_asserted
▶ 1:26:08
“There are organizations like the Rockefellers, the Carter B's, the four child, the Rothschilds. All of those people are like the first of two layers. Those people, because they're active role in.…”
Rothschild family member_of
Atlantic Bridge host_asserted
▶ 1:26:08
“There are organizations like the Rockefellers, the Carter B's, the four child, the Rothschilds. All of those people are like the first of two layers. Those people, because they're active role in.…”
Standard Oil member_of
Atlantic Bridge host_asserted
▶ 1:26:30
“orchestrating regime changes and W.R. Grace and the corporations that they control, Standard Oil. You see behind a lot of them, PepsiCo. Yep. Back in the day, it was Steve Jobs, which was a shock to m…”
PepsiCo member_of
Atlantic Bridge host_asserted
▶ 1:26:30
“orchestrating regime changes and W.R. Grace and the corporations that they control, Standard Oil. You see behind a lot of them, PepsiCo. Yep. Back in the day, it was Steve Jobs, which was a shock to m…”
Gray and Company member_of
Atlantic Bridge host_asserted
▶ 1:26:30
“orchestrating regime changes and W.R. Grace and the corporations that they control, Standard Oil. You see behind a lot of them, PepsiCo. Yep. Back in the day, it was Steve Jobs, which was a shock to m…”
Wallenberg family member_of
Atlantic Bridge host_asserted
▶ 1:26:58
“The second tier of that organization are like the old, old families, like the Wallenbergs, the Mordecis, all of the old money that hire the Rothschilds as their bankers or the Rockefellers as their.…”