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The Colonel’s Corner - Strange Tales of the Parapolitical Part 8

1:40:06

Transcript

0:00 Oh, my gosh. They freaking suck. Bridget's in here now. Hey, everybody, let's try and do this again. If you guys don't mind, let's repost and say part two. Yeah. So I heard you right at the very end, Stellar. Yeah, you were banding really, really bad. And then all of a sudden it just crashed. Okay. So is this better? Can you guys? Yes. Now it sounds great.
0:31 Perfect. Thank you. All right. Take two. So this part of the book is called The Sith, S-I-T-H, Lord. And it's going to talk about an Italian occultist and philosopher, Giglio Cesare Andrea Giulia's Ebola, E-V-O-L-A. Now, Ebola.
1:04 was talked about by Stephen Bannon at one point. And we're not sure exactly what the relationship was there. But Ebola has had a relationship with many people in academic circles and elite circles for a very long time. And the author goes on to talk about
1:33 the influence that Ebola had on Romania and their fascist paramilitary entity called the Iron Guard. And I mentioned that that's very, very important because the Iron Guard was part of the World Anti-Communist League underpinnings. So if you guys remember the...
1:57 Three basic, there was much more, but three basic elements of it was Romania, Croatia, and Ukraine. So very important correlation there that they looked to Ebola for inspiration, and you're going to find out why.
2:22 Ebola's influence had spread to Nick Griffin and other key figures of the British National Front, which later became the British National Party. Also, Alexander Dugin in Russia was influenced by Ebola. And his Eurasian movement had received much support from the Russia security services.
2:51 The Greek fascist Golden Dawn Party also were big fans of Ebola. And there's a full length examination of Ebola's life and ideas. But this guy doesn't obviously want to take the time to spend a good chunk of the book about it because you can go look that up on your own.
3:20 focus is the relationship that Ebola had with the elements of the Nazi party, both the SD portion and the intelligence portion housed in the SS, which of course would have been Reinhard Galen and Otto Skorzeny. The SD was the chief agency task was setting up the escape routes called the rat lines post-World War II.
3:48 That becomes important because, of course, Otto Skorzeny played a huge role, not only in setting up the stay-behind units prior to the end of the war, but also was part of the rat lines. Some of the personnel of both of the units, SS and SD, were incorporated into Bloodstone and Gladio. Ebola's ties to the SD may have began as early as the mid-1930s.
4:16 During this time, one of Ebola's chief Italian patrons was Roberto Farinacola. I'm going to spell that F-A-R-I-N-A-C-L-A. And, excuse me. Yeah, he was the past secretary general of the fascist party and a member of a thing called the Fascist Grand Council, which is extremely interesting.
4:49 During this time, Farinacci routinely fed information to Colonel Eugene Dallman, D-O-L-L-M-A-N, the SD's top asset in Italy. Dallman would later go on to play a crucial role in Operation Sunrise, in which Allen Dulles negotiated the surrender of the German forces in northern Italy.
5:22 along with elements of the SS. Dolman would be involved in Skorzeny's network for some time. It would appear that Evola had befriended Dolman at some point with his association with Vernacci. There has been speculation that Evola was working for the SD during the later 1930s when he was actively courting
5:50 Ellenade, and the Iron Guard in Romania. It wasn't until the final years of the war, however, that Evola's relationship with the SD appears to have blossomed. After Mussolini fell from power in 1943, Evola fled to Germany with the assistance of the SD. In Berlin, he worked for the SD Italian section. After a brief return to Italy in September 1943, he again returned to the service of the SD.
6:20 and 44 in Vienna. Now, what I find very interesting about this is this fleeing to Germany, because you know who else fled to Germany around this exact same time, is the Mafi that had been the quote-unquote Muslim cleric in Jerusalem. So I'm wondering why there was almost kind of like a circling of the wagons at that particular time.
6:50 I wonder what was really going on. From this point until the end of the war, Ebola's activities are shrouded in mystery. Many accounts insist that Ebola performed vital liaison services for the SS in an effort to create the European Army for defense of the continent from the advancing Soviet Union. Ebola attempted to rally fascist leaders in Central Europe to the cause. However, historian Kevin Coogan,
7:21 C-O-O-G-A-N, alleges that Evola himself claimed to have been involved in intellectual research during the final months of the war. During this time in Vienna, Evola had provided with a host of arcane books from the Mount Seven is part of the Nazi element.
7:51 from the security office of Hitler's forces. There's some dispute as to whether Evola was conducting this research on behalf of the SD or some other aspect of the Nazi forces. It was largely... So he's trying to make a distinction about this Mount Seven and...
8:24 the SD versus the SS. I think he spends a lot of time doing this for not a big bang for the buck, because at the end of the day, they all end up being part of the entire fascist element of which we know the only segregation that occurred throughout the Nazi front
8:53 was who was going to Nuremberg and who wasn't. That was the first cut. The second cut was of those going to Nuremberg, who was going to hang or be hung, hanged, and who was going to at least go through a show trial only to be allowed to walk free like Otto Skorzeny. That's about the only difference in all of this.
9:25 This Mount Seven portion of the Nazi apparatus was a creation of an SD asset by the name of Franz Alfred Six, like the number six, S-I-X. We've come across him a couple of times as well. Six is remembered for his contributions to the Holocaust because he's the guy that commanded the mobile.
9:53 killing units like the mobile ovens during the invasion into Russia. On behalf of the SD, he had established a thing called the WANSE, W-A-N-N-S-E-E Institute, which was a think tank that produced the SS's most sophisticated intelligence on the Soviet Union. It also
10:19 was the setting for an announcement of the final solution in 1942. It is also interesting to note that in the post-war years, Six would go on to work for Reinhard Galen in the BND. He spent time in this organization, both in the immediate aftermath of the war and again in the 1950s, after he had been released from prison for war crimes. During the first go-round,
10:49 with Galen's organization. Six was a key liaison between Galen and various Eastern European groups who had supported the Nazi regime. These included the Ukrainians that had been trained by Otto Skorzeny and later used in Bloodstone. Ebola was provided assistance from this element of the SD in the form of longtime asset Warner
11:20 and I don't know how you say his last name, it's G-O-E-T-T-S-C-H, Goetz, who had played the role in the assassination of Rudolf Formis, F-O-R-M-I-S, a radio operator involved in Otto Strasser's Black Front. Later, he played a key role in organizing an intelligence service for the Germans in the Balkans.
11:50 This occurred during the 1930s when Evola was courting the Iron Guard in Romania, potentially on behalf of the German SD. In 1943, Goetz asked to be transferred to the subordinate element of the SD, Mount 7, where he engaged in his own studies.
12:17 When it comes to the Third Reich and occultism, scholarly accounts have tended to focus on... I don't know how to pronounce this one either. A-H-N-E-N-E-R-B-E. A-N-E-R-B-E. And for good reason. This bizarre SS-backed think tank, nominally geared towards ancestral research, would delve into a host of arcane occultic topics.
12:47 during its 10-year run. What is important as far as the SS research into the occult is concerned is that by the early 1940s, the anatomy does not appear to have been the only game in town. There were other research projects, such as a research library for the RHSA as an ideological research and evaluation center.
13:18 it appears that it had been chiefly concerned with occultism. It had its origins in another area of the Nazi regime known as Zentral Abtylan II. Originally, that had been part of the SD as well, and it was primarily concerned with the research on Catholicism, Jewry, and Freemasonry.
13:49 After frequently butting heads with the Gestapo, they reconstructed a bizarre research library that seems to have specialized in rare works of the occult. One of them housed a Freemasonry museum that was even urged by Himmler himself to begin researching witchcraft.
14:17 What seems clear here is the final months of the war, researchers like Ebola and Goltz were deeply involved in researching concerning Freemasonry, secret societies, and mystical orders. This was at a time when the research of the Reich were stretched beyond limits and the Red Army was knocking at the door, which seems a little weird.
14:44 On the surface, it seems especially baffling, but in his classic called Dreamer of the Day, the great Kevin Coogan provides a compelling explanation. Coogan argues, in effect, that Ebola and possibly others were engaged in hammering out the ideal framework for a kind of invisible college to lord over
15:14 the SS, and all covert operations. Coogan describes the scheme as an attempt to create, not even making this up, a pan-European network modeled after the knightly orders of the Knights Templar and the Knights of Malta. He envisioned a black order in order to operate in the secrecies of
15:45 Kind of like the sovereign within a sovereign concept. As outlandish and incredible as it seems, Ebola was reportedly used by the SS to help establish a pan-European army in the last months of the war. Warner Goetz, who reportedly helped Ebola with his research while deeply involved in his own study of Freemasonry, was a long time...
16:14 Nazi man who had helped organize the Nazi underground in the Balkans. And Franz Albert VI would work with this same underground on behalf of the Galen organization in the aftermath of the war. It was noted above some members of this network were probably recruited into Operation Bloodstone and
16:41 which was basically another Gladio style stay behind unit. We just kind of call them all the same thing. Based on evidence, this researcher, talking about the guy, the author of this book, is inclined to believe that Evola was recruited into the Nazi stay behind efforts during the final months of the war. Specifically, he was tasked with formalizing a warrior mythos that could guide the underground.
17:10 after the Reich was gone. He says if he's correct, then there's a strong sense that Ebola's work overlapped with that of Otto Skorzeny, and it most assuredly did, who appears to have been playing a lead role for the SS and the Galen organization.
17:35 The guy writing this book says he is still trying to determine if Skorzeny and Ebola ever actually met. There are at least three potential links between them. One was already discussed with Eugene Dolman, who befriended Ebola while he was in Italy and who later worked for Otto Skorzeny in Operation Gladio.
18:00 As for the other two, the first under consideration goes back to the early 30s, when Ebola first began to make inroads into the Nazi party. He found early support from the Herren Club, which is the Gentleman's Club, a powerful political group composed of leading industrialists and ultra-conservative politicians that had facilitated the Nazis' rise to power.
18:30 We would refer to them as the International Syndicate because they are the same people that funded Hitler. Luminaries include Fritz Thyssen, Friedrich Flick, F-L-I-C-K, and Franz von Poppen, P-A-P-E-N, who was the German chancellor from 32 to 34. For our purpose, the most noteworthy is...
19:01 Heimler Schlotz. I don't know if that's how you pronounce the name, but it's the German banker that comes up in every single one of these stories. His first name is H-J-A-L-M-A-R. His last name is S-C-H-A-C-H-T. Of course, he was referred to for many years as Hitler's banker. He also became the minister of economics for the government.
19:31 when the Nazis were in power. Slott is widely credited with the German miracle that enabled Hitler to rearm in the intervening years when supposedly they were so strapped they couldn't make the reparation payments. In the aftermath of the war, the OSS founder, Wild Bill Donovan, and future CIA director, Alan Dulles, both would intervene to save him from Nuremberg.
20:02 By the early 1950s, he would have become a key business partner of Skorzeny's after Skorzeny set up his operation in Madrid, Spain. He also went to work for Safendis Network as part of that partnership. It was widely reported that Skorzeny also married his niece, Countess Elise Luzet.
20:32 in the years following the war. But that's actually disputed. What they actually believe is that she wasn't like a blood niece. It was more like in the South here where we refer to people as aunt and uncles that are not necessarily aunt and uncles, but they're like as close as your parents, sisters and brothers to your family overall. And so.
21:02 She did refer to him as her uncle, but there's not been anyone that I've read, and I've read about this relationship multiple times in multiple books, that actually emphatically say, yes, there's a blood relative and it occurred with this person's sister and brother type thing. No one's ever been able to do that. So as far as the potential ties between Ebola and Skorzeny goes,
21:29 This is by far the most tenuous. While Evola received early support from the Gentleman's Club, the author of this book was unable to confirm if Slott himself had a personal interest in Evola or his philosophy. It seems most likely that if there were links between Evola and Skorzeny, it would have come from Dolman during World War II.
22:00 Prince Borghese, the Black Prince from Italy, had commanded Italy's fearsome Decima Flotilella MAS. While the showing of the Italian military on the whole was quite pathetic, the XMAS, literally X-MAS, was something completely different.
22:25 Borghese and his frogmen were generally considered the pioneers of the now-famous SEAL teams and Navy commando units. Borghese, like so many figures discussed in this essay, was a pioneer in what was referred to as special operations. After southern Italy fell to the Allies, the XMAS was transferred into the feared anti-partisan force in the north of the country.
22:54 Borghese and his men were under the direct command of Carl Wolff, W-O-L-F-F, who later spearheaded Operation Sunshine with Eugene Dahlman. The X-MUS would later also be used against the Allied forces in the South, as well as U.S. Army Rangers. They would also establish a spy network in Switzerland that worked closely with the Nazis.
23:21 But beyond this, Borghese and his men were also used to infiltrate stay-behind networks into allied occupied Italy. That would engage in espionage and sabotage, and these units were specially feared. This researcher had been unable to determine if Borghese's stay-behind efforts were linked to Skorzeny's similar efforts in the final months of the war. We've not only established that link.
23:52 They're very proud of it. But there's no question that both men collaborated on several projects during the war. As was noted above, Borghese and Skorzeny would continue their relationships in the post-war years where Borghese received refuge in Madrid with the assistance of Skorzeny in the aftermath of his failed coup in 1970.
24:19 Delachey had followed Borghese as one of his chief patrons to Spain as well. During the 1950s, Borghese appears to have extended his patronage to Evola as well. The Black Prince would write an introduction to Men Among Ruins, a pivotal article, book, whatever you want to call it, in fascist circles.
24:48 Timing of all of this suggests that they were all working together because they were. In 1952, Ebola's former SD patron, Eugene Dolman, would go to work for Otto Skorzeny in Madrid as well. During the same years, Skorzeny entered into his long-term partnership with the Nazi German banker, Slot.
25:13 And then in 1953, Evola would publish one of his major works with a glowing introduction from Borghese. It would appear that even if Evola was not involved with Skorzeny's stay-behind efforts, which he was, he was enlisted early in order to be involved in the overall operation.
25:37 Further support for this notion is provided by Evola's post-war activities. For all sakes and purposes, he became the godfather of the paramilitary right in Italy during the Cold War. His first forays into such circles was his support for an organization referred to as FAR. Farsi, Diazoni, and then basically the Italian word for revolutionary.
26:05 So it's basically fascist revolution. Let's see, it was charged with plotting to overthrow the Italian state in 1951. Evola was imprisoned along with the members of his group, FAR, on the basis of him being the spiritual father of the organization. Evola only served six months in prison and upon his release, he largely picked up where he left off.
26:37 Grudgingly adopting a mildly pro-U.S. stance going forward, his acolytes would come to include virtually every major Italian fascist terrorist during the Cold War. That included Paola, Siga Norelli, Franco Frida, Clemente Gaziani, Mario Tutti, Claudio Muti,
27:05 Adriani Rumelati and the Vigero brothers and a bunch of others. Basically all the ones that we've covered during our Italian expose. The one that's most important is Delice and Pino Rauti. R-A-U-T-I. Rauti is the one that created the new order. The Ordani.
27:36 Nuovo. He, in particular, Rauti, R-A-U-T-I, was very heavily influenced by Ebola. Given the extensive influence over the Italian paramilitary, basically Operation Gladio Forces, there's much, let's see, there's a lot of conversation to be had about Ebola.
28:06 and his influence on the strategy of tension as it played out in Italy. Both Delice and Routy as Ebola acolytes were present in the Parco de Principle conference that we talked about yesterday, with Routy making a significant contribution to the agenda that was presented. In the immediate aftermath, groups founded by Delice and Routy
28:36 would be at the forefront of the terror campaigns that began being waged under the strategy of tension. It would be a mistake to attribute the entire strategy of tension to Ebola, because of course we know where it came from. But given the fact that this guy's a Satanist and a cultist and everything else, it's very interesting that he is playing a pivotal role in all of this.
29:04 Not for us, but just in general as a note. There's little question that Evola's mystification of heroic violence provided justification for the terror waged as part of the strategy of tension. His concept of spiritual warfare was widely embraced by the neo-fascist terrorists that participated not only in Operation Gladio, but in the strategy of tension overall.
29:36 As such, Ebola was not the overriding architect of the strategy of tension, but it was at least in some people's areas seen through an Ebola prism. Okay, so now the guy kind of is going to bring the thing full circle. So he says that
30:06 It's possible that Evola had an influence on the dignity colony down in Chile, or that his followers had assisted in importing the strategy of tension to Chile's Penashe troops, which of course they did because it's one and the same thing. We know, for instance, that two Evola supporters, Prince Borghese and Delashe, made a pilgrimage to Chile.
30:54 A Chilean diplomat and occultist who became a major proponent of esoteric Hitlerism during the 1970s. Serrano would look up to Ebola as a major influence, despite the rather
31:10 the rather eccentric direction Serrano's life took later on, he was a highly respectable figure in the 1970s. His 1965 work, C.G. Hung, J-U-N-G, and Herman Hess, A Record of Two Friendships, that was the name of his book, had a moderate success in English. He had corresponded regularly with Hung,
31:39 Between 1957 and 61, he displayed some influence over the famed Swiss psychologist going forward. Serrano joined the Chilean diplomatic corps in 1953. He continued to serve into the 70s. He was posted to India and eventually became the Chilean ambassador there in 1962. He would go on to serve as ambassador in Yugoslavia.
32:08 62 to 64, and Austria, 64 to 70. It would seem that during Sorrento's time in Austria, he became very well acquainted with the Nazi underground. During this time, he befriended Leon Degrelli, D-E-G-R-E-L-L-E. And keep in mind, I just have to say this, Austria, because it comes up,
32:38 repeatedly, is where Otto Skorzeny and much of the network that was allowed to survive post-World War II in the Nazi underground, weirdly enough, comes out of Austria. And if they were not from Austria, they spent a lot of time in Austria. I find that fascinating.
33:09 So, we've got Leon Degrelli, Hans-Jurek Rudel, R-U-D-E-L, and Otto Skorzeny himself. He personally met with Ebola as well. It will be recalled that Skorzeny, as well as Rudel, were all guests of the colony as well. Is Sorrento's evidence of an Ebola influence over the colony? It is highly, highly...
33:35 according to the author here, but Skorzeny would have almost surely been aware of Ebola, which he was, and I've learned that from other books. The given connection that both Skorzeny and the colony had to the BND, which of course is the German CIA, the potential exists.
33:58 that Ebola's ideology and methods were transmitted to the colony via this Nazi underground and possibly Sorrento himself. Certainly, Chile had Sorrento's efforts, appears to have been one of the largest collections of Ebola disciples outside of Europe and Russia. An Ebola connection would help.
34:23 the sophisticated brainwashing techniques that had been employed at the colony. Evola had described as being a powerful MKUltra-like thought control techniques that he had perfected and used to manipulate his quote-unquote followers. There is some speculation that Evola's techniques were later picked up by fascists and used as quote-unquote black magic or
34:51 to control large teenage followers. This would be in keeping with what Paul Schrafer had used to control the people that followed him down there and the ones that he recruited at the colony. Peter Lavenda, who visited the colony during the late 1970s, reported rumors of some type of an occult religion being practiced there.
35:20 It now bears repeating that all of this, according to the author, is speculative, but about half of what he just summarized has actually been proven in other books. As noted, both Chile and the colony dignity also had links to fanatical Catholicism cult known as Opus Dei, and the Opus Dei followers are also renowned for their control.
35:49 over their followers. It would then be a logical assumption that there was influence by Ebola over the colony and that there was some type of what you and I would just commonly refer to as an MKUltra type experiment going on there as well. And what's interesting about that is if you go back and you look at the timing of all of these
36:18 research experiments into mind control it's quite possible they were using these pockets of people all over the world to formulate some tried and true methods so that when you get to the you know 1960s where they set up the peace corps and then fast forward another 10 years and you set up the 20 years
36:49 You set up the National Endowment for Democracy and many of these other youth focused efforts to create the Antipas, the Nine Angles and all of these foot soldiers, all focusing on the youth that these mind control.
37:16 And I'm not talking really about the LSD part of it. I'm talking about more of a very subtle brainwashing with trigger words and stuff like that to control behavior. Like, you know, if you have them, and I'm just, the way you go through basic training, if you want people to adhere as a group, you know, you cut all their hair off, you make them all wear the same thing.
37:45 And so you start basically psychologically training them to think of themselves as a group and no longer as an individual. Now, obviously, in the case of the military, you could say that's a good thing because they have to survive as a unit in warfare. But if you're doing that, using those exact same principles in a civilian population, when the civilian population doesn't even know that you're doing that to them.
38:14 It's very, very problematic. Very problematic. And that's basically what they're describing here. So just wanted you guys to have that name, Ebola, because it's come up, I believe, in one other book, but it is not a very well known. And I had not saw it in the context in which he brilliantly.
38:42 Although he says it's kind of not proven and speculative, but if you look at all of the people that were basically Evola disciples and they're all in and around the colony, I don't think you could say that there's much space between the two. And he did a good job of presenting that. Okay, let's see. One little additional section.
39:12 uh he jumps over into basically somewhat of a new topic in the private security um which of course because we're talking about operation gladio and it goes hand in hand with the um private military and that type of thing because really that's what operation gladio is it's a private military um under the auspices of
39:42 You know, it was billed as an anti-communist thing. But they're all in service to the intel apparatus. So he starts with the aftermath of 9-11 and the creation of the quote unquote global war on terror and saying that, of course, not only did you have a psychological trauma inducing.
40:08 Operation 9-11, but it immediately gave rise to the increased security state and the increased demand over private intelligence and private military companies. For many Americans, the deployment of all of these new version of privateers, which, you know, you go back to privateers, they looked an awful lot like pirates back in the day.
40:35 and you see a fundamental shift in the way the United States is going to wage war. In actuality, the global war on terror brought to light a process that had been going on for quite some time, again, all the way back to the days of the pirates. For the history of the U.S., they have looked to the private sector to perform intelligence functions. In the Civil War, the infamous Pinkerton National Detective Agency,
41:06 first rose to prominence when it was enlisted to protect the president-elect, Abraham Lincoln, as he traveled across country by train. Allegedly, a plot had been uncovered to assassinate Lincoln then, though there was no conclusive evidence it actually existed. Maybe it was a false flag. Regardless, the Pinkertons were soon enlisted by General George McKay.
41:35 McClellan to provide intelligence for his army. When McClellan became the Union general, the Pinkertons took over much of the intelligence functions for the Union army, in addition to forming an early version of the Secret Service to protect Lincoln. Pinkerton, the founder, Alan Pinkerton, the founder of the agency, personally oversaw the former and it proved to be a disaster.
42:03 He consistently overestimated the Confederacy troop strength, contributing to McClellan's hesitancy to engage his opponents. Huh. That's interesting. Wonder if that was on purpose. It always is. Pinkerton's loyalty. Well, and you know, it's funny that you say that because keep in mind, as we have uncovered historical new truths, we find out that the.
42:37 All of Europe, all of Europe wants the South to win. They want to perpetuate slavery because they have an entire continent of slavery. And much to people's chagrin of how they want to say that it was the blacks selling the blacks into slavery, that's the most bullshit thing I've ever heard of now that we all know the real history of this. It wasn't the blacks selling the blacks into slavery.
43:06 There wasn't a single piece of Africa that was under the control of a black man. Not one. They were all European colonies under the control of the Europeans. And if we knew our fucking history, we would have never allowed that argument to have like one inch of sunlight in it because it's bullshit. Okay. So having said that.
43:38 Obviously, the Europeans don't give a shit about slavery. They love it. They've been involved in it for hundreds of years on the continent of Africa. And they owned the shipping companies that took the slaves back and forth. They were making bank on every aspect of slavery. So did they pay tribes?
44:04 To bring people to them? Absolutely. But that's no different than what we've been doing with Operation Gladio in paying entire governments like in Nicaragua or Guatemala or Honduras, you know, you name any of them. We paid those people to offer their citizens up to U.S. and Western oligarchs as slaves. Okay, so.
44:32 Don't get all excited that we're not involved in that because we certainly are. It's been going on for a long time. That's my only point. And we proved with not Algeria. What's the other one? Not Angola. It's just north of Angola. The colony that we created there to.
45:00 Liberia, where we basically took over that country to repatriate the slaves back and make them quote unquote free. And all they did was go and set up their own government there and enslave the indigenous Liberians. So again, slavery begets slavery begets slavery. It's a thing.
45:27 And you need to understand the history to understand how complicated it is and why nobody gets reparations. Sorry, we've all been enslaved here. So having said all of that, you have the North and the South issues, whatever, you know, however you want to look at that. The slave trade in the South, the slavery industrials in the South.
45:54 The Europeans want to continue that because they're buying all of that shit. They're buying the cotton dirt cheap because it's all created by slaves. And they are putting it on a ship that they own, taking it to the country of India, which they own. And they've got slaves there that's making the cotton into material and then moving it into the...
46:21 European theater, primarily the UK. And so they definitely want to perpetuate this thing. So I find it interesting that you could fake an attempted assassination on Lincoln at one point, and then you've got your guys in charge of Lincoln. So you're going to keep him alive as long as you want him alive. And then you have supposedly them being used by the North.
46:50 and telling McClellan literally wrong intelligence, not unlike the CIA does right now, in order to make him hesitant to not attack, giving the South the advantage. So that's not actually all that far-fetched when you go back and actually know history. It's actually quite amazing.
47:15 So, Alan Pinkerton resigned his post in protest towards the end of 1862 after McClellan was relieved of command following the Battle of Antietam. Afterwards, the Union Intelligence Service would be taken over by military officer Lafayette Baker. Probably somebody knew that he was cheating.
47:41 In 1865, the Intelligence Service became the modern Secret Service, firmly under the control of the U.S. government. Pinkertons would continue to work for the Union during the Civil War, probably as spies, however, being dispatched to New Orleans during the military occupation of Louisiana. Maybe that's why Louisiana is so corrupt. On the whole, the Civil War was a great boon for the Pinkertons. I bet it was.
48:10 Just like the international syndicate today, everybody gets rich off of war, except for the poor damn bastards that have to fight it. Alan Pinkerton himself had been struggling prior to the conflict, but somehow got rich off of war. Imagine that. He had also been given contacts among business communities that would be invaluable after the war. So he really...
48:39 made out like a bandit. As his efforts heading a wartime intelligence network was so disastrous that nearly a century later, an in-house agency history felt the need to apologize for the founder's shortcomings as a spy. Well, I don't think he was necessarily there to be a spy for the wrong, maybe a spy for the wrong people. Indeed, the combination of war profiteering and general incompetence displayed
49:09 by Allard Pinkerton would set a precedence that we're still observing today because that basically defines the CIA. All right. So we're going to stop right there. I don't think there's a better place to stop. But anyway, we're going to stop right there and we will open it up for comments. Adam had his hand up earlier.
49:41 I don't know if he wanted to, if he still had his. It was kind of a moot point, honestly, because Colonel did point something out, you know, prevalent in regards to like, you know, yeah, they were sending these people in Africa to go capture their own people, but who was doing it and who was instructing it and who was paying them for it. So, yeah, 100 percent. But I was going to bring up.
50:06 Of course, Mansa Musa, who was, like, you know, was a king in Africa, and he owned slaves, and, you know, he was a slaver himself. He was a black dude. But, yeah, I thought it was kind of a moot point because it was prior to the colonization in America. So, yeah. Slavery's been a thing since the beginning of time. Beginning of man, yeah. Slavery and prostitution, you know? Yeah.
50:34 The oldest professions. And I'm sure that the prostitutes were also slaves. Good point. Touche there, Stellar. You're rocking today. I do have to say there was one case of a black person selling other black people into slavery. That would have been Oprah.
50:58 I would say also the Arabs are probably historically the biggest slave owners, I believe. Correct me if I'm wrong, Colonel. Of course. I don't know. I don't know how you could say that. I'm part Arab myself, so I don't mind saying it. No, no. But I'm saying that the Europeans enslaved the entire continent of Africa. That's a shit ton of people. Yeah, look at Rome.
51:26 I mean, that's what they did is they captured these places and they turned them into slaves. And that's why this is not a pissing contest to see who had the most. This really is a conversation to have about the institution of slavery and how it's bad no matter who's doing it and no matter who's enslaved. It's always wrong. And I think that's kind of what.
51:56 needs to be said um and every culture um every ethnic group whatever has participated in this because it began at the beginning of time so that's why you cannot do this reparations thing um you can't do any of that garbage um that all goes out the window um there needs to be
52:23 and a collective agreement that it's wrong and we just don't do it. Miles, go ahead. Hi, Colonel. If you want to get a European perspective and more knowledge about this topic, and you know what I'm probably going to say, Patrick Gunnels is going back over Pressuregate series again. So if you just want to like do some housework and walk around and listen to the series, really.
52:53 kind of set you up for kind of what they were doing in the U.S. I don't know if you'd agree with that, but I found that very knowledgeable as far as the perspective of the bankers and what was going on back then. Well, since I've done enough reading on my own, I'm going to thank you, but I probably won't do that. But I just will share with you guys, since we're all family, I love
53:19 Patrick Gunnels. I see him at GART meetings and stuff, but I cannot listen to him read. He reads Brian Cates' articles a lot. And I know some people that drama, the voice inflection that he does, I know some people really enjoy that. I don't. It's like fingers on a chalkboard to me or fingernails on a chalkboard for me. So I cannot listen to him. I can have a conversation with him for 10 hours.
53:49 I can't listen to him. Okay. Well, Colonel, when you watch the show, he does post it. So you can turn the sound down and read it if you want. I'm good. But thank you. If anybody else wants to enjoy that, I highly recommend it. Miss, who is that? Miss Lou, go ahead. Hey, Colonel, stellar and great space. Listen, to your point, voice is everything.
54:21 But back to the multicultural slavery across time and the globe. When I think of all the major structures from the Chinese wall to the Egyptian pyramids to, you know, and the Sphinx. In fact, I recently saw a movie on that. To, you know, the Taj Mahal. Let's go down the Russian, you know, the great structures in Russia. And you could go on and on. These were all built by slaves.
54:52 I, so, yeah. You know, that it wasn't like, okay, the Kings and the, you know, we're going to go out there and cut up this big stone and we're going to put them in. No, it was all done by slavery and they didn't get paychecks at the end of the day. So, you know, it just, it's amazing when you said, you know, because you go across all these cultures. I've been to India. I've been to, it just, you look at this stuff and you go, oh my God.
55:17 Who really built this stuff? And now today it's technology that's being built by slaves. You know, the precious minerals that go into chips and everything in Africa. All slavery. It's not just diamonds. Anyway, thank you so much for everything that you do, Colonel, because you are the connect the dot girl more than anybody I've ever seen. And I'm going to hound you to the day I die about Benghazi. Okay. Noted.
55:49 Go ahead, Carrie. Bye. Bye. Carrie? Hi. Hi. So I just wanted to add something. I studied art. So the first city was Mesopotamia, the first big cities. And that is what we frame out as like Iraq, but it was really...
56:22 More Persians. Anyway, they had indentured servants. So it wasn't slavery. They could buy their way out. So that's really different. And that's our first cities. And a lot of things come from our first cities, like laws and science.
56:51 That history has been blocked and primarily by Germans that fell in love with Greece and just started the world with Greece. And, you know, the Alexandria library was burned, blah, blah. I don't want to go on and on, but there are different ways that humans have lived. That's true. We've lived very differently. Adam, go ahead.
57:21 Yeah, I wanted to bring up the tariffs in regards to this matter. It's something I've, you know, as a person that comes from the Libertarian Party, after being disenfranchised by both parties, you know, I've had this thing like, you know, libertarians are against tariffs. But I've come around personally to understand when we're not being treated fairly on the world stage that we should use leverage.
57:50 as the biggest consumers in the world. And that's what Trump's doing. That's why I agree with tariffs. But I would go further and say any country that is utilizing slavery for their products, we would put a, you know, I'm all for free market capitalism and free trade, but I would say that we wouldn't accept their products.
58:18 If you want to do business in the free world, then you cannot be utilizing slave labor if you want to do business with us. And that's what I would further go with the tariffs in regards to that, just to ban outright. But I understand that we have to build some labs and things like that and start producing medicines here and so on and so forth to be able to do that, to have that leverage.
58:47 But I think that's the direction that we should go if we want to obliterate slavery from the world is, hey, if you want to do business in the free world, well, then you have to have a free society. And otherwise, we're not doing business with you. But it doesn't align with our morals. And I'll yield with that. So, Adam, you realize that it's the U.S. and Western companies.
59:17 In those countries that have the mining concessions that are creating the slave labor. And if a country actually tries to create a union to demand these concessions, pay higher wages, they overthrow the government. Right. Do you understand that? Hold on. You're saying that.
59:45 I understand that the people incentivizing this are here. They're not incentivizing it. They're doing it. And they're not allowing it to be corrupted. So I'll just give you an example. The United Fruit, which is now Chiquita Bananas, they went down and they bought off all of the people in multiple countries. And we'll just take Nicaragua, for example. They bought all of the corrupt.
1:00:15 They bought senators. And any local person who tried to organize labor and get paid more than 87 cents a day or whatever it was, in Chile in the 70s, they were making like $200 a month digging in a copper mine. And who had the copper mine concession? A U.S. company that now goes by the name of Freeport that's headquartered in...
1:00:39 And when they tried to organize to demand more money, the National Endowment for Democracy and the CIA went down there and overthrew the government. In the case of Nicaragua, they did elect a guy that was willing to stand up to United Fruit and reappropriate all of their farmland back to the indigenous people.
1:01:05 He got called a communist for doing that. And the CIA and all of the companies to include United Fruit, but also the railroads, went down there and funded the Contras, as did the Reagan administration, and told us they were freedom fighters when they were actually fighting the very people that wanted to unionize and have better wages. And when United Fruit wouldn't do that, the president...
1:01:34 kicked him out of the country and said, here's your money for your farmland. We don't want you here anymore. And they basically tried to overthrow his government repeatedly. So saying that you don't want to trade with anybody that engages in slavery means you need to look in-house and have the companies that are creating the slave labor.
1:02:03 Through mining and whatever else. Oh my God, it's huge. Monsanto and all of the palm oil plantations all over the world. They have stolen people's land and enslaved them. So all you have to do is look internal to the United States to stop the slavery in large part. But it's also all of Europe as well. So, yeah.
1:02:32 Can I ask you a question in regards to Ukraine and what Trump proposed? Like, I don't want any of their minerals, like resources. I personally, that's my stance. But I think he was playing a Trump card on them just to get that force their hand to the peace table. With that, he just put such an outlandish thing because, you know, like 50 percent of your mineral resources and all that stuff would be owned by America.
1:02:59 And I think that's, you know, the whole BlackRock plan, you know, allow this stuff to, you know, get demolished, go in there, rebuild it. They've got the contracts, they're making the money, so on and so forth. But I think he's playing it in a way that, like, it's something they wouldn't accept so that he could put something on the table that's reasonable for them and Russia to accept.
1:03:24 you know, get some peace going on there. But that is a typical technique that he uses in negotiations. That's the art of the deal. I was thinking when people, you know, people were saying 50 percent, I'm like, we don't want that. We want to make America great again. I'd like them to, you know, have their resources and, you know, do whatever with their own resources and trade.
1:03:48 But, yeah, 100 percent. I thought I thought myself that he's using just the Trump card and the art of the deal there. It will be interesting to see how that plays out. That's for sure. Tim, go ahead. Hey, Colonel. Hey, Adam, God bless you. But that that was a perfect example of of Gladio, the glass lighting, your position, your original position was was sound.
1:04:21 And reasonable, but the depth of the psychop that we're subjected to, I'm beginning to think is incomprehensible. You know, Colonel Towner turned it around. I mean, a perfect explanation, but you're a sharp guy. I've listened to you talk. This is just classic. It's like whatever you, and again, I'm going through the same thing. I'm having trouble distinguishing reality from Gladio.
1:04:51 And it's applying to everything. But that's all I had to say. I just popped in my head when he was talking. Thanks. Thank you, Tim. Yeah. I was going to add, I think our reality is Gladio is what we're starting to find out. Well, it goes back to my comment about our life has been a hologram.
1:05:12 You can reach out and nothing you touch in your life is real. Not the shit on your television, not the shit on your radio, not the shit in school, not the crap at work. Nothing's real. None of that's real. It operates to keep us in a lulled state of compliance when, in fact, what's on the actual other side of the hologram, if you actually stuck your hand through the hologram, is
1:05:41 an iron cage that we've been in. We've been imprisoned to, and indoctrinated into giving our wealth away. So cousin Nick, go ahead. Hey, a wonderful good afternoon. Same to you. So I don't know who is just speaking about Ukraine. Cause I'm off. I'm trying to do like a bunch of things here. But one of the things that folks aren't.
1:06:16 paying attention to. Ukraine doesn't own shit. Period. End of story. Ukraine has sold off all of their assets, all of their farmland for 10 cents on the dollar. What they haven't sold off, including the rare earth minerals, are now inside of Russian territory. Those people voted to be part of the Russian government.
1:06:41 They are no longer part of Ukraine. And Ukraine isn't going to get those territories back. So Trump knows that Ukraine doesn't own any of it. That's why Zelensky won't sign anything. He can't. He's already sold off the properties. For example.
1:07:00 There are a couple of lithium mines that a company out of Australia owns. And off the top of my head, I don't even know which one. I couldn't tell you who they are off the top of my head. But Australia owns two lithium mines in Ukraine. They've already sold them to them. So are you saying Russia, have they given them, they sold the concession to them to mine them? I, yeah. Okay. So, you know, I'm not sure the exact verbiage.
1:07:29 But they can't give away something they don't own. So there's no 50% of anything there anymore. Ukraine's already given away all of their crap. And again, one of the companies in Australia, and again, I can't remember the name, bought two, or at least two, bought two, whatever the proper verbiage is, right? One of those is actually in Russian territory.
1:07:58 That was one of the places out of the Donbass that they took right away. So Australia doesn't even have a leg to stand on anymore because Russia is not going to honor their contracts. So whatever contracts were in the western part of Ukraine are null and void anyway because Russia is not going to honor them. It's not their contract.
1:08:21 So now you've got what's left in Ukraine, which isn't anything because there's already been, you know, all over the news, at least the Russian news. Right. With the list that goes on for pages and pages and pages of everything that Ukraine has sold off for like 10 cents off on the dollar. It's been like one big auction over there. Even the ports in Odessa, they don't run their port city anymore.
1:08:48 And that's the only port city that they have left. And they don't even run it anymore. None of their warehouses, none of their manufacturing, none of their farmland, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera. Trump has to know this. And if he didn't before he was saying, well, we're going to take 50%, he certainly knows it now because Lavrov was sitting right across the table and saying, by the way, not only do you not own any of this stuff.
1:09:15 But your businesses in Russia have lost 300 billion dollars. So he definitely knows it. He definitely knows it. And I think he's making those points so that it has to be reported on all of the things that you just talked about. Oh, absolutely. Yeah. But I also want to make sure everybody understands the historical relevance of this, because.
1:09:44 In the late 1980s, going into 1991, when we were told that the Soviet Union collapsed, this is exactly what Browder and Safra was doing inside of Russia. They were privatizing, quote-unquote, privatizing everything in order to be able to make all of them rich and steal all of Russia's resources.
1:10:11 It was Putin that put a stop to all of that shit. Well, exactly. You are seeing what happened back then. So the same people that were very much aware of what was going on and stopped it in Russia from these same kleptomaniacs is going to put a stop to it and make them hold the bag in Ukraine. Oh, that's going to be something. Particularly all of them. Which makes sense.
1:10:44 Particularly all those mines. Yeah. What do you think of like, you know, remember those oligarchs, the mayor's wife that paid off like Biden's son or whatever? I think all of those things, the oligarchs that had their stuff seized and things. Remember all of those? Yeah. You know, what's funny is the Russian news. I mean, they're they're staying relatively current. And I haven't looked into the mayor of Moscow and the whole swapping of diamonds.
1:11:15 And the whole thing. I mean, I know it existed and I know why it existed. But I honestly think that they were selling shit that they didn't own. I don't know if that had like a whole lot. I think she was like the friend of a friend that was getting them into Ukraine. I don't because I have not seen like a whole lot of influence with the Bidens inside of Russia. Well, OK, so in clarifying that.
1:11:42 they're not going to necessarily talk about that either, because that would be terribly embarrassing. And Putin's not stupid. So if any of these people were actually selling out Russia, these people go to prison. I mean, they just do. They had one mayor that was embezzling or something like that. They caught him embezzling. And he's like in hard labor for like three years. And they don't wait like six years for trial. It's like, no, you go to trial.
1:12:12 Here's the evidence. And your ass is in prison for six years. So I haven't seen anything, but I haven't necessarily been looking for that either, Stella. Okay. Guru, go ahead. Okay. So, yeah, good afternoon, people. How are you? Just getting into my day over here. I've got meetings to go into soon. But just on that lithium, European Lithium, an Australian company, has agreed to purchase Ukrainian company Petro Consulting.
1:12:40 to obtain special permits for lithium mining and processing in Ukraine. Now, that's according to the Australian stock market, right, opposed from them. To close the deal, Petro Consulting needs to unblock special permits for lithium mining and processing at two fields, Shevroresky and Dobro, through the courts. According to the reach of the agreement milestone, okay, millstone.
1:13:04 that owns Petro Consulting will invest 20 million in European lithium with 2.5 invested immediately and 15 upon closing the deal. So there's shit going on in the background, guys. But, yeah, the statements made were obviously Millstone, who owns Petro Consulting, is, yeah, in the deal in Ukraine. I just wanted to add that, Colonel. Thank you. Thank you. And that's the name of it. I'm just going to say thank you as well. It's the Mill something, right? That's them.
1:13:34 He's articulating the fact that they had basically what has been referred to in all of these books as the concession to do the mining. It's basically saying that you're going to bring all of the hardware, all of the equipment to basically harvest. And there's usually a percentage given to the government and then of the profits.
1:14:01 and a percentage given to the concession. And this was one of the big things that we've learned throughout Operation Gladio. One of the things that you were never allowed to do was change the percentage. So if you were like in the Middle East, where we learned that with the overthrow of Mossadegh in Iran, where he was getting like...
1:14:27 Iran was getting 14% and the UK was taking 86% of the profits. And everybody knew that was not fair. And Mossadegh wanted it fixed. And he offered the UK 50-50. And the UK said no. Well, the UK ended up with 50 because the US, in coming in and cooing, Mossadegh took the rest of their profit.
1:14:55 And so they could have just the U.K. could have just said yes to Mosaddegh and Iran would have been with a government and the same amount of money. But that wasn't the point. The point was you are not allowed to be a nationalist. You're not allowed to control your own destiny. You have to be on the receiving end of a giant kick in the ass and under the thumb of NATO. That's the whole purpose of this drill.
1:15:25 And so anybody that or a NATO-aligned country. So all of this is very important and kind of the reason why we went to the effort to educate everybody of how these things work. And so remember the one guy in Italy that ran the government's natural gas and oil went to Libya.
1:15:52 to renegotiate their concession because they were a major importer of Libyan oil. And he wanted to give them 50-50. Well, they blew his ass out of the air. They blew his airplane up on his way home. That was an Operation Gladio event.
1:16:12 And they said, oh, well, it was just mechanical failure. And then 10 years later, they dig up his body and realize that his gold ring had explosive material embedded in it. And that's how they changed the determination that he was murdered. This all matters. Let's see. All along, go ahead. Yeah, Colonel, just on some of your recent mentioning of the...
1:16:43 union activities manipulated by CIA in foreign countries such as Chile. I think that the dispute between Walter Reuther of the UAW versus George Meany, who was like complete CIA man as far as unions, but not just domestically, it really played an impact on the CIA's international
1:17:12 manipulation of unions like through a field and and some of you know the things that you and the gang have mentioned over here um and so i think that when we look at the assassination of uaw president walter reuther and remember that it was he was united with rfk and mlk in the 1968 rfk campaign it really reminds us of just how profound
1:17:40 you know, a campaign that was, especially if you look under the hood, which is really what the CIA is concerned about. I mean, they care about megaphones, but they're, they're concerned about if, if it's going to activate populations, whether it be in a foreign country or inside this one. And so I think that this is why, you know, I mean, the Democrats right now that in 2025 are, you know, there's, they're basically the Lincoln project.
1:18:11 and the CIA, and the question of why more people are not doing something about that to reclaim the public airwaves that are just given to these corporate interests like Barney Frank, Signature Bank, and all of the other corporate interests that Democrats and CIA have become, why we are not weaponizing this and just taking this. It's not billionaires' airwaves. We're calling them the public airwaves.
1:18:39 Why do we just fuck, you know, pardon my French, why do we just give them to Nike and Chase? It's not right morally. I think I'm rubbing off on you all along. God bless you. Miss Lou, go ahead. Regarding Ukraine and Victoria Nuland and her CIA insert called Zelensky, I think that Trump is also aware because Americans are hyper aware.
1:19:11 that we are close to 300 billion in arrears on an unaudited expense chain through that country. Now, if you remember, we know about the precious minerals. And yes, Donbass is controlled by Russia. Russia's going to control that. That's why they went after Donbass first. Okay. You know, I mean, Putin talked to Tucker about, you know, the whole historical aspect of Russia and Ukraine. And it is. It's the bloodlens. It's been...
1:19:39 Territory that's been fought over for centuries, really. But the thing is, is it's more than just the medals. I think, remember when Victoria Nuland was asked about the biolabs that are in Ukraine? Remember when she was asked and she said, no, no, no, there are no bioweapon labs in Ukraine. And then she had to back it down. There's research labs. There's research labs. Yeah, yeah, research labs, right.
1:20:09 Well, Russia was well aware of that from the beginning, too. And somewhere I read, I cannot verify this, nor can I confirm a source, so it's just coming out of my mouth. You may know of it. Russia was concerned that they were creating bioweapons specifically targeting the DNA of Russians. They were doing that in the Georgia lab, and that's very well documented. Yeah, okay.
1:20:36 This is, I think, you know, Trump offering Zelensky. By the way, Zelensky said, yeah, sure, you can come in, knowing he didn't own anything to do with the precious metals now. Zelensky, you know, the crook. Oh, he told Trump, yeah, sure, come on in. We'll do a deal with precious metals. There ain't going to be any deal done with Zelensky. He's going to be gone. I wonder how much longer he's even going to be on the planet, truthfully.
1:21:00 But I'll tell you, Putin and Trump are the ones who are going to sit down and work this out to a way where, like you said, the negotiations of the metals, all of it. And that's what we can look forward to because there's nobody better than that than our guy. And Putin is no stupid in the room. He knows damn well that Trump is a good negotiator.
1:21:24 will negotiate with him because I think he's tired of a million Russians being dead over this nonsense. And by the way, Lindsey Graham needs to go. Whoever's in Kentucky needs to get him gone. Well, that's South Carolina, not Kentucky. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. You're thinking of Mitch McConnell. Yeah, I've got McConnell. I've got brain dead McConnell. So many of them. I know that, you know, I know. But but but, you know, Mitch, I mean.
1:21:50 Lindsay tried to get in another five-year plan to fund Ukraine. I mean, it's just, we know where his money's coming from. I just wish it would come out in the, you know, out in the papers, not our, you know, not the legacy, but in our world, exactly how much he's been taking. That's coming. Right. Thank you. Thank you for the money. Sure. Miles, go ahead. Colonel, for 20 years, I was in one of the top commodities, and that was coffee. Now, when you were talking about Chiquita,
1:22:20 In your readings and research now, I didn't have Gladio glasses on when I was in that industry, but I did learn a lot about it. And in those 20 years span, I did see some movement for just the average worker and especially in Colombia. I know that Starbucks bought up everything in Brazil and they set the market, the market price.
1:22:46 But did you see anything as far as nefarious actors around the world with coffee? Oh, there's so much. There's so much. So did you know where the original coffee tree is from? Yes, I do. Of course I do. Where? It's the dancing goats. Where is the original coffee tree from? I'm pretty sure it's from Turkey. No, it's from Yemen.
1:23:14 Or Yemen, in that area, yeah. Yemen had the coffee trees. But do you know about the dancing goats? Let me finish. Okay. Yemen had the original coffee trees. And when the UK basically took over Aden as a port for their steam-powered ships.
1:23:35 They went out into the surrounding area, discovered coffee and basically snuck trees out of there and then distributed them all around the world in their colonies in order to take the business away from Yemen to make Yemen weaker in order for them to be able to control it. And another thing about the coffee industry as a whole, the control, the way they control the coffee industry is the coffee.
1:24:04 was a liberator for Latin America because a family can farm coffee in a very profitable, equitable way. And Chiquita Banana, United Fruit, American Fruit, and many others, the whole way they broke countries down there was scarfing up all of the family-owned coffee plantation.
1:24:32 farms by corrupt government officials. That is the land they took. They took the coffee land and destroyed it. And then they put coffee plantations, not farms, plantations in other locations after they had broke the backs of the private farmers by buying up all of their land and corrupt land deals and putting bananas in where
1:25:00 very affluent middle class had existed in many of these other Latin American countries. And in addition to that, they were bringing in coffee from unapproved sources into Miami and New Orleans, and they were repackaging that coffee in the United States and selling it at significantly increased prices, which...
1:25:30 Because I guess the black market for it, obviously like the black market for everything else, was pennies on the dollar. And so they were using the exiled Cubans in Miami in a repackaging operation to make that look like it came from other places so they could get high-end dollar for specialty coffee. But it basically had been confiscated.
1:26:00 in many of the Latin American. So they were basically robbing them and then bringing them into the United States illegally in some of these ships that was like a front for the CIA. That was just another money-making opportunity for them. Well, I know there's a lot of fraud in the business, and I was shocked about that, especially down in New Orleans.
1:26:25 As far as, you know, actually in New Orleans. Yeah. The current crop, past crops. And but, you know, what about tea? We also dealt with tea. And I'm sure that they manipulated that, too, because that's it. That's another huge commodity around the world. I think that's the number two drink that people drink is tea. You got water and then tea. Yeah, I've not come across tea too often.
1:26:56 copy comes up all the time well the tea is interesting because you only have three varieties of a tea tree and you know you've got salon and but um when we were um gonna go to like one of these producers because they're organic they take everything away from you they have their own school they have their own hospital and it takes years to be trained how to pick the leaves i didn't
1:27:22 I don't want to go into too much of it, but it's pretty extensive. And they do, these companies treat their workers well. Cool. Cousin Nick, you had your hand up. Are you still there? Yeah, barely. Somebody had mentioned the death toll in Russia. And it's nowhere near a million. I just want to make that clear. That is Western propaganda.
1:27:55 The Ukrainian deaths, unfortunately, I mean, I don't wish evil on these people, Nazis or otherwise. They are close to a million. It is the Ukrainians. They are up to like seven, eight hundred thousand dead. So but Russia is not. It's about ten to one. I mean, it's still a substantial amount, but it is not a million. That is that is Western propaganda. That's all. Thank you. That was me, cousin. Thank you. I stand corrected. I meant the war.
1:28:24 I'm in over a million in the war. I'm sorry to specify Russians, but I want to. Oh, no, no. I want to tell you a quick colonel. I hate the CIA even more for their intervention in coffee because that is I don't drink water. I don't drink tea. I don't drink anything but coffee. So they can just lay off the coffee. Yeah, it's been a tough road to hoe for a lot of the people down there, but because basically they took their livelihood away.
1:28:55 Okay, I don't see any more hands. If somebody else has anything, Carrie, go ahead. Yeah, I had my hand up. I don't know what happened. I just wanted to say I saw a presser, I think with Waltz, and he was saying that they talked to Alinsky about their aluminum plant that is damaged.
1:29:26 And they offered him to buy aluminum solely from Ukraine, which I'm not sure people understand the magnitude of that, but it's a pretty big deal. And he was like, meh. And the other thing I wanted to say was what you're doing, Colonel, is massively important because as far as I'm concerned,
1:29:57 The war tactic is to disappear the history, the real history. And you're not allowing that to happen. And I just want to thank you. You're welcome. And I am not going to allow that to happen. You're absolutely right. So anyway. Oh, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait. I got my raw milk. Thank you very much. I was able to find it. Wow.
1:30:30 Congratulations. Thank you. I'm excited. I blame you, by the way. Thank you. I'll take credit for that. At least you didn't throw it away because it was bumpy like Alpha. Oh, my God. I know. I was into that. And I'm like, what? What? What did you do? No, actually, you know, it's really funny because this dairy has the non homogenized pasteurized and they have the raw milk.
1:30:57 And I've been getting the non homogenized and that's the chunky. There's no doubt. It's definitely chunky and I love it. And when I, when they finally started carrying the raw milk at the place that carries the other stuff, I was so excited. I got it. And there's no chunks. So even like, depending on when I buy mine, they, the cream will have been separated, which if you just pour it out without shaking it.
1:31:26 it's going to be clumpy because it's on the top. But like I told Alpha, what I do is I pour about a cup of it out, chunks and all. I shake it really hard. I pour a second cup, drink that cup, put the other stuff back in there. So now I've got some room in the gallon in order for it all to be able to be shaken up. And that's always worked for me.
1:31:54 What's funny to me is when I was growing up, my neighbor, they had dairy cows, and I grew up over at their house, basically. She was my best friend. We rode horses every day. But they literally had a working farm. They had chickens, pigs, cows, horses, everything, rabbits. And the mom always strained their milk because she made butter.
1:32:23 And so I always thought real milk tasted like crap because all we were getting was basically butter skimmed milk, not real milk with the cream still in it. And it wasn't until I moved away and actually my first duty station up in Illinois, there was a farm stand not very far from the first apartment I had. And I tasted that. And I remember calling my girlfriend going, Belinda, you have no idea what your mom had been doing to us. She's been robbing us.
1:32:53 Okay. So that's funny. That's funny. So I never tasted real raw milk with all of the cream still left in it. Yeah. I mean, this has all the cream in it, but it just isn't as, it isn't clumpy. So I don't know. Yeah. So my ex-husband grew up on a dairy farm when the, when they, the truck came twice a day, cause they had like, you know, I don't know, a thousand.
1:33:20 It was like 400 acre farm. It was huge farm. They had the big holding tank that agitated it. So you literally, and it refrigerated it, obviously. You could go out there, which I did all the time when I was there, and take your glass and turn the spigot on and take the milk right out of there because it kept it constantly agitated.
1:33:45 So it was never clumpy or anything, obviously, because it has like an auger in there that is constantly moving the milk around. And that helps all of it stay refrigerated because the refrigerant in that tank was on the outside. So that auger kept it moving around, kind of like an ice cream maker set up. That's what it looked like on the inside.
1:34:07 And so you could literally just take the milk right out of the tank. And if you were to get that milk, that milk goes immediately to the plant and that they sold their milk to a.
1:34:22 whatever, I don't know what you call it, the distribution center actually packaged their milk and sold it in the local area. And so if you were to get their milk that afternoon after it had been put in those jugs, it's going to be completely still mixed up. So that makes perfect sense. It probably indicates that you're getting much fresher milk that hasn't had the time to be able to separate from those augured holding tanks because
1:34:50 Anybody that has an actual functioning dairy nowadays have those things. Well, I'm really excited about it. It's really cool. It's delicious. Yeah, me too. Me too. It only took like six months of wine in for them to finally carry it. And, right, this is how popular it is, people. Not only did they finally get it in there.
1:35:17 But somebody has pre-ordered five gallons every week. So how cool is that? Everybody is finally giving the middle finger. And I can't even drink. I always thought I was lactose intolerant. And I couldn't drink milk ever since I moved away. Because when I was a kid, we had a dairy where it would come in the glass bottles on the porch.
1:35:45 And that was like Christmas because when it was cold out, the cream on the top would freeze. So it'd be like ice cream. But anyway, and I always drank milk. And then when I moved away from that area and couldn't get that milk anymore, I couldn't drink milk anymore. And I thought, well, you know, they always gave you the bullshit line. Oh, you're just lactose intolerant. It's like, no, no, I'm drinking this milk and not having a problem. So there you go. So many people say that all along.
1:36:17 Yeah, Colonel, the banter regarding coffee and its relationship to workers and labor and the international syndicate, especially in Latin America, reminded me of this truly stunning article written by, he's a guy at Loyola University in New Orleans. So he's like, and it's an article about INCA, the Information Council on the Americas.
1:36:46 which, as you remember, it was one of the group that aided and really, to some degree, handled the New Orleans frame of Lee Harvey Oswald. And it's something that is linked up to the international trademark, which existed, as you know, in Montreal, Dallas, New Orleans. And some writers, very kind of correctly in my view,
1:37:16 have suggested that this is kind of like the Rockefellers and the International Syndicate sort of pre-building sort of venues of internationalism. And also the World Trade Center in New York, by the way. You probably have read some of this as a way to sort of gradually grind down the sovereignty of the American citizens and give it to the internationalists.
1:37:43 This article kind of describes this pre-existing really kind of an industrial intelligence organization that is very easily turned into a means of framing Lee Harvey Oswald.
1:38:14 Intelligence Ties in Central America, which is where we know that Sullivan and Cromwell comes right out of that shit. But it's an amazing article, and there's amazing surprises in it as well. I just think people will really like it. Oh, good. I see you posted it. Thank you for posting that. I'll definitely take a read. Okey-doke. Thank you. Thanks. Great show. Thank you. All right, guys. We're going to sign off. We're trying to set up a space this weekend. I don't have...
1:38:44 a day or time with, hold on, let me see. I'll tell you. It's a group of people, but there's one guy that generally does the hosting. Let me find the Coyote of Wall Street. And he's supposed to get back with me on when he wants to do it.
1:39:09 I've been in a few of his spaces talking in general terms about this kind of stuff. So anyway, if that gets worked out and it's this weekend, I will let you guys all know. Other than that, I'm going to be working on a couple of projects and hosting a few threads that I've been working on behind the scenes. So you guys have a nice weekend. You'll see me off and on throughout the weekend.
1:39:38 Bridget doesn't give me a day off. So anyway, all right. And I try not to be too big a slave driver. And I spoke with golfing and he said he may have one open on Sunday. So I'll keep you guys posted and you guys keep us posted if you guys do. Will do. All right. Thanks, everybody. And otherwise, we will see you on Monday at four o'clock. Have a nice weekend, everybody.

Entities here

Julius Evola25Ukraine17Soviet Union16Otto Skorzeny15Operation Gladio13SS (Schutzstaffel)12SD (Sicherheitsdienst)11Donald Trump10United States8Julio Valerio Borghese8Sergio Serrano7Eugene Dolman7Colonia Dignidad6George B. McClellan5Strategy of tension5Pinkerton National Detective Agency5United Fruit Company5Hjalmar Schacht5Vladimir Putin5Reinhard Gehlen5Nicaragua4Warner Goetz4Pino Rauti4Franz Alfred Six4Alfredo Covelli4New Orleans3Allan Pinkerton3Iron Guard3Petro Consulting3Australia3American Civil War3Yemen3Mount Seven3Decima Flottiglia MAS3Operation Bloodstone3Abraham Lincoln3Iran2BND2Libya2Ratline2

Claims made here

Julius Evola influenced Iron Guard book_quoted ▶ 1:33
“the influence that Ebola had on Romania and their fascist paramilitary entity called the Iron Guard. And I mentioned that that's very, very important because the Iron Guard was part of the World Anti-…”
SD (Sicherheitsdienst) carried_out_attack Ratline book_quoted ▶ 3:20
“focus is the relationship that Ebola had with the elements of the Nazi party, both the SD portion and the intelligence portion housed in the SS, which of course would have been Reinhard Galen and Otto…”
Otto Skorzeny carried_out_attack Ratline book_quoted ▶ 3:48
“That becomes important because, of course, Otto Skorzeny played a huge role, not only in setting up the stay-behind units prior to the end of the war, but also was part of the rat lines. Some of the p…”
Julius Evola recruited SD (Sicherheitsdienst) speculative ▶ 5:22
“along with elements of the SS. Dolman would be involved in Skorzeny's network for some time. It would appear that Evola had befriended Dolman at some point with his association with Vernacci. There ha…”
SD (Sicherheitsdienst) recruited Julius Evola book_quoted ▶ 5:50
“Ellenade, and the Iron Guard in Romania. It wasn't until the final years of the war, however, that Evola's relationship with the SD appears to have blossomed. After Mussolini fell from power in 1943, …”
Julius Evola spied_on SS (Schutzstaffel) book_quoted ▶ 6:50
“I wonder what was really going on. From this point until the end of the war, Ebola's activities are shrouded in mystery. Many accounts insist that Ebola performed vital liaison services for the SS in …”
Franz Alfred Six founded Wannsee Institute book_quoted ▶ 9:53
“killing units like the mobile ovens during the invasion into Russia. On behalf of the SD, he had established a thing called the WANSE, W-A-N-N-S-E-E Institute, which was a think tank that produced the…”
Franz Alfred Six member_of BND book_quoted ▶ 10:19
“was the setting for an announcement of the final solution in 1942. It is also interesting to note that in the post-war years, Six would go on to work for Reinhard Galen in the BND. He spent time in th…”
Warner Goetz assassinated Rudolf Formis book_quoted ▶ 11:20
“and I don't know how you say his last name, it's G-O-E-T-T-S-C-H, Goetz, who had played the role in the assassination of Rudolf Formis, F-O-R-M-I-S, a radio operator involved in Otto Strasser's Black …”
Julius Evola recruited Operation Bloodstone book_quoted ▶ 16:41
“which was basically another Gladio style stay behind unit. We just kind of call them all the same thing. Based on evidence, this researcher, talking about the guy, the author of this book, is inclined…”
Eugene Dolman recruited Otto Skorzeny book_quoted ▶ 17:35
“The guy writing this book says he is still trying to determine if Skorzeny and Ebola ever actually met. There are at least three potential links between them. One was already discussed with Eugene Dol…”
William J. Donovan pardoned Hjalmar Schacht book_quoted ▶ 19:31
“when the Nazis were in power. Slott is widely credited with the German miracle that enabled Hitler to rearm in the intervening years when supposedly they were so strapped they couldn't make the repara…”
Otto Skorzeny recruited Hjalmar Schacht book_quoted ▶ 20:02
“By the early 1950s, he would have become a key business partner of Skorzeny's after Skorzeny set up his operation in Madrid, Spain. He also went to work for Safendis Network as part of that partnershi…”
Julio Valerio Borghese headed Decima Flottiglia MAS book_quoted ▶ 22:00
“Prince Borghese, the Black Prince from Italy, had commanded Italy's fearsome Decima Flotilella MAS. While the showing of the Italian military on the whole was quite pathetic, the XMAS, literally X-MAS…”
Karl Wolff headed Decima Flottiglia MAS book_quoted ▶ 22:54
“Borghese and his men were under the direct command of Carl Wolff, W-O-L-F-F, who later spearheaded Operation Sunshine with Eugene Dahlman. The X-MUS would later also be used against the Allied forces …”
Julio Valerio Borghese recruited Operation Gladio book_quoted ▶ 23:21
“But beyond this, Borghese and his men were also used to infiltrate stay-behind networks into allied occupied Italy. That would engage in espionage and sabotage, and these units were specially feared. …”
Otto Skorzeny recruited Julio Valerio Borghese book_quoted ▶ 23:52
“They're very proud of it. But there's no question that both men collaborated on several projects during the war. As was noted above, Borghese and Skorzeny would continue their relationships in the pos…”
Julio Valerio Borghese recruited Julius Evola book_quoted ▶ 24:19
“Delachey had followed Borghese as one of his chief patrons to Spain as well. During the 1950s, Borghese appears to have extended his patronage to Evola as well. The Black Prince would write an introdu…”
Eugene Dolman recruited Otto Skorzeny book_quoted ▶ 24:48
“Timing of all of this suggests that they were all working together because they were. In 1952, Ebola's former SD patron, Eugene Dolman, would go to work for Otto Skorzeny in Madrid as well. During the…”
Julius Evola influenced Fascist Revolutionary Action book_quoted ▶ 26:05
“So it's basically fascist revolution. Let's see, it was charged with plotting to overthrow the Italian state in 1951. Evola was imprisoned along with the members of his group, FAR, on the basis of him…”
Pino Rauti founded Ordine Nuovo book_quoted ▶ 27:05
“Adriani Rumelati and the Vigero brothers and a bunch of others. Basically all the ones that we've covered during our Italian expose. The one that's most important is Delice and Pino Rauti. R-A-U-T-I. …”
Julius Evola influenced Pino Rauti book_quoted ▶ 27:36
“Nuovo. He, in particular, Rauti, R-A-U-T-I, was very heavily influenced by Ebola. Given the extensive influence over the Italian paramilitary, basically Operation Gladio Forces, there's much, let's se…”
Julius Evola influenced Strategy of tension book_quoted ▶ 29:04
“Not for us, but just in general as a note. There's little question that Evola's mystification of heroic violence provided justification for the terror waged as part of the strategy of tension. His con…”
Julio Valerio Borghese influenced Colonia Dignidad book_quoted ▶ 30:06
“It's possible that Evola had an influence on the dignity colony down in Chile, or that his followers had assisted in importing the strategy of tension to Chile's Penashe troops, which of course they d…”
Julius Evola influenced Sergio Serrano book_quoted ▶ 30:54
“A Chilean diplomat and occultist who became a major proponent of esoteric Hitlerism during the 1970s. Serrano would look up to Ebola as a major influence, despite the rather…”
Sergio Serrano recruited Leon Degrelle book_quoted ▶ 32:08
“62 to 64, and Austria, 64 to 70. It would seem that during Sorrento's time in Austria, he became very well acquainted with the Nazi underground. During this time, he befriended Leon Degrelli, D-E-G-R-…”
Julius Evola influenced Colonia Dignidad speculative ▶ 35:49
“over their followers. It would then be a logical assumption that there was influence by Ebola over the colony and that there was some type of what you and I would just commonly refer to as an MKUltra …”
Pinkerton National Detective Agency recruited George B. McClellan documented ▶ 41:06
“first rose to prominence when it was enlisted to protect the president-elect, Abraham Lincoln, as he traveled across country by train. Allegedly, a plot had been uncovered to assassinate Lincoln then,…”
Pinkerton National Detective Agency founded Allan Pinkerton documented ▶ 41:35
“McClellan to provide intelligence for his army. When McClellan became the Union general, the Pinkertons took over much of the intelligence functions for the Union army, in addition to forming an early…”
Allan Pinkerton overbilled_or_diverted George B. McClellan host_asserted ▶ 42:03
“He consistently overestimated the Confederacy troop strength, contributing to McClellan's hesitancy to engage his opponents. Huh. That's interesting. Wonder if that was on purpose. It always is. Pinke…”
United States paid Nicaragua host_asserted ▶ 44:04
“To bring people to them? Absolutely. But that's no different than what we've been doing with Operation Gladio in paying entire governments like in Nicaragua or Guatemala or Honduras, you know, you nam…”
United States paid Guatemala host_asserted ▶ 44:04
“To bring people to them? Absolutely. But that's no different than what we've been doing with Operation Gladio in paying entire governments like in Nicaragua or Guatemala or Honduras, you know, you nam…”
United States paid Honduras host_asserted ▶ 44:04
“To bring people to them? Absolutely. But that's no different than what we've been doing with Operation Gladio in paying entire governments like in Nicaragua or Guatemala or Honduras, you know, you nam…”
United States installed Liberia host_asserted ▶ 45:00
“Liberia, where we basically took over that country to repatriate the slaves back and make them quote unquote free. And all they did was go and set up their own government there and enslave the indigen…”
Allan Pinkerton removed_from_power Inter-Services Intelligence documented ▶ 47:15
“So, Alan Pinkerton resigned his post in protest towards the end of 1862 after McClellan was relieved of command following the Battle of Antietam. Afterwards, the Union Intelligence Service would be ta…”
Lafayette Baker succeeded Allan Pinkerton documented ▶ 47:15
“So, Alan Pinkerton resigned his post in protest towards the end of 1862 after McClellan was relieved of command following the Battle of Antietam. Afterwards, the Union Intelligence Service would be ta…”
Inter-Services Intelligence succeeded Secret Service documented ▶ 47:41
“In 1865, the Intelligence Service became the modern Secret Service, firmly under the control of the U.S. government. Pinkertons would continue to work for the Union during the Civil War, probably as s…”
National Endowment for Democracy overthrew Chile host_asserted ▶ 1:00:39
“And when they tried to organize to demand more money, the National Endowment for Democracy and the CIA went down there and overthrew the government. In the case of Nicaragua, they did elect a guy that…”
Ronald Reagan funded Contras documented ▶ 1:01:05
“He got called a communist for doing that. And the CIA and all of the companies to include United Fruit, but also the railroads, went down there and funded the Contras, as did the Reagan administration…”
United Fruit Company funded Contras documented ▶ 1:01:05
“He got called a communist for doing that. And the CIA and all of the companies to include United Fruit, but also the railroads, went down there and funded the Contras, as did the Reagan administration…”
United Fruit Company attempted_coup_against Nicaragua host_asserted ▶ 1:01:34
“kicked him out of the country and said, here's your money for your farmland. We don't want you here anymore. And they basically tried to overthrow his government repeatedly. So saying that you don't w…”
Australia secretly_owned Ukraine caller_asserted ▶ 1:07:00
“There are a couple of lithium mines that a company out of Australia owns. And off the top of my head, I don't even know which one. I couldn't tell you who they are off the top of my head. But Australi…”
Bill Browder financed_via Soviet Union host_asserted ▶ 1:09:44
“In the late 1980s, going into 1991, when we were told that the Soviet Union collapsed, this is exactly what Browder and Safra was doing inside of Russia. They were privatizing, quote-unquote, privatiz…”
Joseph Safra financed_via Soviet Union host_asserted ▶ 1:09:44
“In the late 1980s, going into 1991, when we were told that the Soviet Union collapsed, this is exactly what Browder and Safra was doing inside of Russia. They were privatizing, quote-unquote, privatiz…”
Vladimir Putin removed_from_power Bill Browder host_asserted ▶ 1:10:11
“It was Putin that put a stop to all of that shit. Well, exactly. You are seeing what happened back then. So the same people that were very much aware of what was going on and stopped it in Russia from…”
European Lithium funded Petro Consulting documented ▶ 1:12:12
“Here's the evidence. And your ass is in prison for six years. So I haven't seen anything, but I haven't necessarily been looking for that either, Stella. Okay. Guru, go ahead. Okay. So, yeah, good aft…”
Millstone secretly_owned Petro Consulting host_asserted ▶ 1:13:04
“that owns Petro Consulting will invest 20 million in European lithium with 2.5 invested immediately and 15 upon closing the deal. So there's shit going on in the background, guys. But, yeah, the state…”
United States overthrew Mohammad Mosaddegh host_asserted ▶ 1:14:27
“Iran was getting 14% and the UK was taking 86% of the profits. And everybody knew that was not fair. And Mossadegh wanted it fixed. And he offered the UK 50-50. And the UK said no. Well, the UK ended …”
Operation Gladio assassinated Italy host_asserted ▶ 1:15:52
“to renegotiate their concession because they were a major importer of Libyan oil. And he wanted to give them 50-50. Well, they blew his ass out of the air. They blew his airplane up on his way home. T…”
Victoria Nuland installed Volodymyr Zelensky guest_asserted ▶ 1:18:39
“Why do we just fuck, you know, pardon my French, why do we just give them to Nike and Chase? It's not right morally. I think I'm rubbing off on you all along. God bless you. Miss Lou, go ahead. Regard…”
Soviet Union targeted_for_regime_change Donbass guest_asserted ▶ 1:19:11
“that we are close to 300 billion in arrears on an unaudited expense chain through that country. Now, if you remember, we know about the precious minerals. And yes, Donbass is controlled by Russia. Rus…”
Information Council of the Americas framed Lee Harvey Oswald guest_asserted ▶ 1:36:46
“which, as you remember, it was one of the group that aided and really, to some degree, handled the New Orleans frame of Lee Harvey Oswald. And it's something that is linked up to the international tra…”