The Colonels Corner The Splendid Blond Beast Part 14 Final
1:33:29 · ▶ watch on Rumble
Transcript
0:00
How are you, SR-71? I haven't seen you in forever. Hello, Colonel. I'm doing fine. Everything is working out and we're back in business. What else can I say? Awesome. Awesome. Glad to have you back. You have definitely been missed. Well, thank you so much. Sorry about all of that. Oh, no. Hey, we all have real lives. And I'm looking forward to your trip.
0:33
I'm looking forward to my trip. Although, okay, we're live over on Rumble. Although, life is never dull. Holy crap. So, before we get to the book, I have several things I want to say to you guys. First of all,
1:01
I want to tell you how much I love every one of you guys. You are an amazing group of people. Recently, I see Bridget there. I was hoping Illini would be in here, too. God bless him. Recently, the person who's like old time. I don't know how to.
1:33
actually say the person's name, it's A-U-L-D, and then there's a whole bunch of letters, had tagged several people in a post that I made. One of those people was Steve Baker. Steve Baker is a reporter for The Blaze that got caught up in January 6th. And the person tagged him.
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believing that he would understand the and want to know about Operation Gladio. I see Alpha. God bless you, Alpha. I wish I could reach through the phone and hug you right now. But anyway, so Steve Baker, as Illini can attest to, spent 45 minutes.
2:29
explaining to everyone that was tagging him and responding to him why he needed to understand Operation Gladio as it relates to January 6th. He spent the 45 minutes instead telling us how he didn't have time to do that. So God bless him. Understand he doesn't understand what it is and he's busy. So it was surprising to me when I woke up this morning and found a
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post in my dms from a guy and i want to make sure i get his name right um uh let's see um just keith he's a reporter also from the blaze his name's keith malinak m-a-l-i-n-a-k and he mentions and i thought it was weird when he mentioned it um
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that said, hey, I see you talking about Operation Gladio and Ben's ripping you off. I'm sorry to hear that. I'm completely unfamiliar with Gladio. Any chance that you'd be available to discuss this on Thursday afternoon on one of my live streams? I'm very intrigued. And I said, I'd love to. I love the blaze. I even sent him a picture of meeting Glenn Beck when he was here in Tampa for the Christmas sweater. He went around and did a whole series, blah, blah, blah. So didn't hear back from him.
3:57
which is not unusual because I have gotten lots of requests from lots of people only to be completely ghosted after they asked me if I am interested in appearing on one of their shows. And so I don't know. Maybe he's just busy right now. It just happened this morning. We can give him the benefit of the doubt. However,
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about, I don't know how long it's been. I lose complete track of time. You guys know that when we began our series and I first saw Mike Benz appear anywhere and realized that he was talking about the CIA and NATO, that he needed to understand Operation Gladio. And I reached out to him. He didn't ever respond, but he did respond eventually. And he even followed me.
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only to unfollow me and block me when I began telling too much truth about the things that he selectively decided that he wanted to talk about. At least that's the reason why I think he blocked me because I just tell truth with references. So I can't think of another reason unless they're inconvenient truths. So, and you guys have seen me make shit posts about it because it's just dumb.
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And so I get this text from this guy and he specifically mentions Mike Benz. Mike Benz, other than the one post that Illini just found and reposted, God bless him, has never responded to a single thing I've said. Basically just ignored it until today. And I'm hoping for the sake of Keith.
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That it's just a coincidence that he mentions Mike Benz in my DMs. And all of a sudden, Mike Benz lashes out about me blocking him. I just blocked him like two weeks ago. He blocked me months ago.
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And now I've got all of these people in my feed going, oh, my God, answer the question. OK, you retard. He didn't ask me a question. He's just making a bunch of accusations and basically telling me that nothing about the information that I put out is of any consequence at all. Now, you guys know that the information that I put out, most of you have never heard. Most of you have never heard. And many of you follow my bins and still have never heard it.
6:48
From anyone else but me. So that's the reason why the show was a little late. I had to call Alpha. I had to talk myself back down off the ceiling. And obviously he was there for that. And I mean, people that you would think are normal people are like.
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Oh, you must just be like this Marine pilots like you must be like all the colonels that were shitty colonels in the Marines. I never met a shitty colonel in the Marine. I know they probably have them. All of the Marines colonels that I ever worked with were like shit hot. But OK, sucks to be you. Hey, Colonel, I've I've pinned to the nest your receipts here. You've got Mike.
7:43
This is the tweet where he asks you publicly for resources on Operation Gladio. And now he shows up a year later. Look, this doesn't feel like the Kyle Serafin thing where Kyle ultimately basically stuck his foot in it and everybody called him out for it. It seems like Mike can probably excuse himself by saying he forgot.
8:10
I hope we can patch this up in some way. But he exposed himself last year by asking you for the book.
8:23
People don't have to rely on he said, she said, you know, on the private DMs or who blocked who or any of this petty interpersonal nonsense. They just have to rely on Mike Benz's tweet where he asks her, hey, do you have any good books on Operation Gladio? And at the very least, at the very least, Colonel can hang her hat on that. And just so you know what.
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you're seeking out an eminently reasonable position to think that he got the book from you. Yeah. Yeah. So whatever. But God bless you, Illini. I mean, obviously I can't search on his shit cause I can't even see it. But yeah, it's, it's just very interesting. The, the gatekeepers and that theme just keeps coming up again and again.
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And besides that, if you have all of these followers, why do you have to demean me who don't? I don't have any of those followers. Why do you find it necessary to disparage someone who is uncovering truths and spending their retirement sharing that information? Why do you need to do that? That is a despicable, despicable thing to do.
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There would be no reason in the world to not say, yeah, she puts out good information, too. Y'all should follow her. Nope. Nope. Can't do that. Because the inconvenient thing for people like Mike Benz is I call out both sides of every conversation. I don't describe things that are destroying not only our country, but the world.
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as a blob. It's not a blob. There are companies that are behind the purposeful destruction of not just our country, but over 90 countries. And that's the successful coups. There's hundreds of countries that they've destabilized around the world. Well, over a hundred anyway. So there would be no reason other than to drive a wedge.
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into the truth movement. And that division is what motivates these people. Otherwise, you would do exactly what I did when I first heard him talking about NATO. All he talked about was the cyber, the stifling of speech. That was kind of his main lane. But he was talking about NATO and the CIA.
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All I was doing to his post was adding more information. But that information was inconvenient. And that's the reason why he blocked me. I was naming names. I named companies like Crypto AG. Again, inconvenient information. So I just wanted to explain why I was late to our show and let you know.
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That if just Keith is legitimate and he is really interested in Operation Gladio and not just trying to get information, what you guys did in contacting Steve Baker, who hopefully Keith is legitimate and he just handed it off to Keith to pursue and that will come to fruition. But I'm done.
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When I first got asked by Clayton Morris to come on Redacted and then he reneged on that, I chose because I was very cautious about expectations not to tell you guys that I even had received the invite. And I would let it play out behind the scenes. And then if it worked out, then I would let you guys know. I'm done with that. I'm done with all of them.
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Because what's very interesting about this is you guys remember, I know Alpha didn't take a mic, but you remember the girl that was exposing, she goes by B, the 764, and how she discovered that there were people going behind her back and making sure that big name platforms didn't give her.
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And I'm not making that accusation, but I do find it strange that several people have reached out and each and every one of them ends up not following through. So except for my buddy Alpha and Nino Rodriguez, who, of course, I owe Alpha all the credit for that one as well, because that is and actually even J.J. Carroll. I mean, he had me on. But again, I owe Alpha that as well.
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So it's just a very interesting dynamic that is going on. There does seem to be, and I don't mind even, there's a lot of people in our community that will not repost anything that I say. They don't comment on anything I say. And they know that by doing that, and I called them out to their face, by the way, they know by doing that, that they,
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they elevate your voice if they do it. There's exceptions to that, like Awaken Outlaw. He posts stuff that I say. But I'm just, I find the whole thing's just very interesting that, you know, Alpha obviously reposts and comments on stuff. Brian Cates, Dwayne Cates does. But it is very interesting that even in our kernel of the corner of the universe,
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And you guys are not aware of the fact that I participate in some things like Zoom calls with other patriots that even in those Zoom calls, the people that are in it, the majority of them all have podcasts, which is why I'm in it. And they don't invite other people that are in those Zoom calls on their shows. Now, about half of them do.
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But others don't. And I just have found that to be a very interesting dynamic in this new world that I've been thrust into. And as I promised you guys from the very beginning, this is a collective journey of all of us. I credit you guys with finding probably more than half of the information that I have.
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garnered over the course of time. As a matter of fact, our Friday show this week is going to be from one of you, some material that you guys sent me in a DM. The whole show is going to be dedicated to that material and it's going to blow your mind. And that has been the case throughout this entire journey. So I feel like we have a cohesive family here.
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And obviously we're doing it because we want to share it with other people. But it is what it is. So we are going to finish up our book today. There's not a lot left. And then we'll have open mic time at the end. So kind of just in summary of this book, what we have learned, The Splendid Blonde Beast is.
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all of the communication behind the Nuremberg trials and the closing of World War II. And basically, I think it's fair assessment to say that sometimes consistent with the president and then sometimes inconsistent with the president, the State Department and other people that were in the OSS, like Alan Dulles,
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And people that had positions like John McCloy basically conducted foreign affairs and foreign policy in a very protective hive that had, again, sometimes.
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the approval of the president, but then sometimes not. And sometimes they went diabolically opposite of what the president was actually saying. Now, we know that wink, wink behind the scenes that the president can say something to a foreign audience and then come back and through either non-action or a wink of an eye.
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have the foreign affairs people do something completely different. And I'm not going to say which of those things are true, but what we can say unequivocally with State Department cables as proof that the State Department did not carry out any of the written agreements throughout World War II in any shape or form, whether it was Potsdam or any other agreement.
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that was made on the War Crimes Commission. They sabotaged Mr. Pell, who had been sent over to London. They basically took his funding away. They did literally everything they could to sabotage not just the investigations into who had committed crimes, but the actual proceedings of the...
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the court itself. And the whole process of denazification, how it was going to be done with the Potsdam Agreement, every part of that was sabotaged. And there has been since declassified State Department cables that verify that. And I don't know about you guys, but...
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Just a little bit that I had known about Nuremberg and where all of the lawyers came from. A lot of them came from the Dallas, Texas area, weirdly enough. And then some of the people that we know were not tried, the ones that were tried and then found not guilty. And the other than the ones that actually were hanged.
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You had an entire slew of people that had been given the death penalty. But John McCloy then changes the death penalty to life in prison and then commutes all of their sentences. So they were basically let go. We know that NATO's foundation, which is critical to Operation Gladio.
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had embedded in it many of the former Nazis and that we've studied all of the rat lines of the Nazis and how they were basically dispersed and people think that it was just to like Argentina and you know the United States which is absolutely not true they were in Japan they were in Korea they were in
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all of the countries in Latin America. We found them through our Latin America tour of Operation Gladio and Operation Condor to be in just about every one of them. We found the Colony Dignity in Chile and how that was like a frequent guest stop among the Nazi population, both from Germany and from the Nazis that had resettled in South America in the different countries. So you're going to find them throughout.
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We found them in Africa. We found them in the Middle East. They were working on the missile program in Egypt. And so there and it lends itself to the whole thought of that fascist international that we talked about way back when, when we were talking about the third way and finding out of scores any in Madrid, Spain. And so all of that comes into play with.
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the Operation Gladio aspect of it, which is why I was reading this book to begin with, to get a little bit more detail into what the, and that's going to be the subject of Friday's show, because it goes back even further than this. And there was a whole nother name and operation, a part of Gladio that has to do with this. So anyway, Friday's show is going to be a killer.
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All right. So let's go ahead and finish up this book because, again, naming names. We left off with a part about the the effect and the threat that the the allies were building up against the Soviets.
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And already making the case that there was this threat to Western civilization from the Soviet Union, even though they had just lost 25 million people, were devastated. And a significant part of their Eastern industrial base had been destroyed by the Nazis during World War II. So they were in no position at all to actually be a threat. And we have State Department cables where people were saying, yeah, they're not a threat.
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They're not going to be a threat for the next 10 years. It'll take them that long to reconstitute any type of a war capability. But that's not what was said during the ending of World War II and in the immediate aftermath, which is why we were given the excuse that we needed to have NATO to thwart the Iron Curtain and all of that other stuff. When in fact, NATO was never actually used to thwart the Soviet Union. It was used to orchestrate terrorism among its members.
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All right. So Brown's lobbying trip to Germany was underwritten mainly. And again, keep in mind that this is the impetus for all of this. We established with Draper, William Draper and General Lucius Clay, how they're basically.
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creating the environment for the industrialists in America to come into Germany and further their expansion that they had started prior to World War II in the aftermath of World War I. There's all of these intricate international deals with John Foster Dulles working at Sullivan and Cromwell and Alan Dulles, who set the stage for World War II.
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The piranhas are going to come into the aftermath of World War II and eat up even more of the industrial base in Germany. So there was a lobbying trip to Germany that was underwritten by who? General Electric, Philip Reed. Now, that's very interesting because General Electric is the same company that went into the aftermath of the Bolshevik Revolution.
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in Russia and set up the electrification of the entire Soviet Union. So another war where General Electric rushes in at the end of the war to expand their capability. And it says that Philip Reed was one of the most important influential U.S. corporate leaders of post-war U.S.-German issues. In addition to his role in Brown's project, Reed
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and the business organizations that he led was a series of similar conferences throughout 1946 and 1947. The typical U.S. delegations included the Chairman of the Executive Committee of the National Association of Manufacturers, the Chairman of the U.S. National Foreign Trade Council, and senior executives from none other than National City Bank of New York and Chase Bank.
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Rockefeller, and J.P. Morgan. On other occasions, Reed traveled as a representative of General Electric. And on others, he traveled as the International Chamber of Commerce representative. So he was wearing a whole bunch of hats. And he became the personal envoy of none other than Secretary of Commerce, Avril Harriman. You know, of Brown Brothers Harriman? Yeah, that guy.
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So this is the international syndicate. This is the vultures that swoop in on the dead body. Like Brown's book, Reid's report to Harriman lamb blasted the denazification and cartel policy the U.S. had approved at Potsdam because, you know, we can't get rid of those Nazis and we can't get rid of the cartels because there's monopolies and we're not allowed to have them in the United States.
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The U.S. policy was harmful and unnecessary, he said, and it interfered with Germany's economic recovery. Because German's economic recovery was their economic recovery. Reed's company was not an entirely disinterested party. General Electric was among the most important U.S. investors in Germany. They owned over 25% of its German counterpart, the electrical giant AEG. They owned factories.
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and smaller companies. At the time, Reed was lobbying the U.S. government against antitrust policies in Germany because they love the cartels. GE was facing no fewer than 13 criminal antitrust prosecutions in U.S. courts for price-fixing, gouging, consumer and U.S. government monopolies under the Sherman Act violations.
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What you can't do here, we want you to make sure we're able to do in Germany. So set that up and fix it. Okay. At the time, Morgenthau, Pell.
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and James Martin and other reformers saw things, the arguments of, saw things, as they saw things, the arguments of GE and Johns Manville had become the dominant point of view of Western policy circles and in the media. They had become the standard fare in all U.S. newspapers within a year of the occupation.
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Martin commented, even though in reality only two steps had been undertaken to implement U.S. antitrust efforts in Germany by the time Brown's denunciation of the program appeared. The seizure of plans and assets of IG Farben and the appointment of a trustee to administer the wholesaling of firms in the U.S. zone.
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The Allies and Germany's both knew that German manufacturing, including war production, had survived the war surprisingly intact because their own people are the ones that devised the bombing campaigns. Despite the massive, let's see, Senator.
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Kilgore publicized a congressional study based mainly on U.S. strategic bombing survey data that concluded Germany's production of armored cars, fighter bombers, and several categories of strategic supplies had generally increased under U.S. and British bombing. And in the cases of expanding eightfold over 1942 figures, the air attacks had tripled some things, but not.
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They're vital manufacturing because that's where the U.S. investment was. Hilgore stressed that a distinct drift towards post-war accommodations with German business had already set in. There is a natural inclination on the part of many of U.S. administrators to take over in order to get things running again. And there's a natural inclination on the part of many Germans to lay back and let them do it.
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In the desire for efficiencies, our military administrators may keep in positions of power literal Nazis as plant managers. In Italy, Kilgore said, I heard certain American army officers deplore the fact that Italian partisans had killed many of the fascist plant leaders, which made more difficult the reorganization of their production capacity.
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Nothing like a good old fascist to run a place. In Germany, there had been no such partisan revolt. The Nazi industrialist hierarchies remained intact. Now, keep in mind, this is an important point. The partisans, which is an interesting word to use, the anti-fascist in Italy are going to eventually be referred to as communist.
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and accused of being in the Red Brigade because they were not interested in joining NATO. So just keep that in the back of your mind. The reports of Brown and Reed were in reality briefs for the European recovery program called the Marshall Plan. They illustrate the extent to which an enormously popular and respected program became entangled in the revival of German businessmen who had participated.
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in death labor camps and other Nazi crimes. Particularly important in this effort was a thing called the Committee for the Marshall Plan, which was founded in September 1947. Why is that important? Because that is the date that all of the Department of Defense was set up, the CIA was set up, and the Department of the Air Force was set up. That was done that same time.
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It labeled itself a citizens organization, but was in reality funded and administered by the same economic foreign policy elite that had been discussed so far, like the GEs and the Morgans and the Rockefellers. Its initial sponsors included Avril Harriman and Robert Lovett, who will be remembered from the Brown Brothers Harriman Bank. Another sponsor, Alan Dulles.
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Dean Atkinson, Winthrop Aldridge, chairman of Chase Bank, Philip Reed of GE, and other similar people, most of whom had been active in U.S. German finance since the early 1920s and had basically all became, and this is a classic.
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Labor was represented by hardline anti-communist active in CIA-sponsored penetration of European trade unions such as James Carey and David Bubinski. D-U-B-I-N-S-K-Y. So immediately.
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they begin infiltrating labor unions because they have to defeat them because they've lost now their death camp laborers. So they can't have labor unions giving people fair wages. So the CIA immediately upon creation, because it's all of the same people that was in the OSS, are going to infiltrate labor unions in Europe to ensure that their investments
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have the stability and they're not going to have to be answering labor demands. The Marshall Plan lobby operated in a distinguished propaganda committee, as AT&T executive Arthur Page described it.
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Its goal was never described as a revitalization of German business elite, but rather as saving Europe and providing American jobs through implementation of the Marshall Plan. But whatever you think of the plan, the restoration of much of the pre-war German corporate elite was an integral part of the package. General Clay used the case of Deutsche Bank director Hermann Abs, A-B-S, to explain the concept.
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Quote, we were never able to make Herman Abs the financial minister of Germany as we would have. Unquote. Clay remembered the same interview from earlier because of the German and American public's refusal to accept a man who had been deeply compromised by Hitler and the Nazi party.
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But not to worry, Clay continued, quote, we were able to finally put him in charge of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, which was somewhat outside of government, unquote, and which was instrumental in handing out the funds of the Marshall Plan. So I have to stop here. The Marshall Plan was the initial funder of Operation Gladio. That comes right out of Paul Williams' book.
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The Marshall Plan was money laundering to start Operation Gladio. And the guy they put in charge of dispersing the money is a Nazi. Just want to make sure I emphasize that point. Okay. Sponsors of the Committee for the Marshall Plan were simultaneously at the cutting edge of renewed efforts to invest in the German industry.
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If you have been trying unsuccessfully to get into Germany to reestablish a business contact, don't be discouraged, Businessweek said. You can expect a program for revising business in Western Germany to be pushed by everyone in the U.S. government. Republican backing was assured when John Foster Dulles, Republican spokesman, recently called for the revival of business in Germany and Western Europe.
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The price. Because it's your tax dollars, not his. German goods are already trickling into the U.S. market, anticipating some consumer resistance. The military government authorities have shrewdly kept customs requirements by marking them made in Germany U.S. zone. So, in other words, they tricked you into buying German goods, regardless of where they made.
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were made inside of Germany by saying that they were made in the U.S. zone. So they're free of Nazis because we've already went through the denazification. No problem. So that was when large-scale arrivals of German goods began. Washington is likely to release a press barrage explaining that German exports help pay for the occupation of Germany. Shortly after its founding, the Committee of the Marshall Plan,
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paced a full-place advertisement in all of the most influential U.S. papers, sent thousands of personally addressed telegrams signed by the former Secretary of War, Henry Stimson, to businessmen asking for donations and political support to make the mass mailing to hundreds of thousands of American opinion leaders in upper strata of business, media, labor, and social organizations. This group chartered
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Marshall Plan clubs in dozens of cities, open business offices in New York and Washington, and initiated a series of heavily publicized meetings between President Truman and business leaders designed to convey the impression that there was large-scale support for the Marshall Plan. As Congressman Charles Plumlee, a Republican from Vermont, put it,
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There was never been so much propaganda in the whole history of the country as the Marshall Plan. The campaign created an overwhelming conviction among American people and members of Congress that we must have the Marshall Plan right now. The claim of overwhelming support was in fact overblown.
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Public opinion polls of the period indicated that about 65% of the U.S. population opposed the Marshall Plan. Even so, the Marshall Plan passed Congress in a large margin. The plan's sponsors used the relatively broad popular support of propaganda to justify their votes. These factors, insiders' opposition to reform, the passive resistance of German business, allied suspicion of indigenous
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Antifa radicals, the sheer magnitude of the task of denazification, the self-mobilization of U.S. and international business elites, and often paranoid geopolitical competition with the Soviet Union combined all together to basically stop denazification and any reform of German businesses. So they all walked free.
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And the last chapter here talks about basically the end of, well, let's just go through it. There was a second international trial, Nuremberg, that became the focus of German finance and industry during the Third Reich. It was called the Industrialist Trials as a nickname. And basically, you had people like
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Herman Abbs and Slatt that was put on trial. But at the end of the day, nothing happened. Also, they were referred to also as the subsequent proceedings. It was organized under General Telford Taylor.
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His group brought 12 cases against 182 defendants. These were the famous trials that judged murder squads, concentration camp doctors, business executives from Krupp and IG Farben, Nazi judges, and similar defendants. The U.S. Military Commission tried additional 950 war crime defendants, though the figure
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Includes cases from the Far East in addition to Europe. The majority of cases tried involved German civilians. They were basically symbolic measures, as Taylor later commented, and were designed to teach the German a lesson. The record of Nazi crimes compiled by Taylor's team remains to this day the single most important source of information and documentation assembled. But these proceedings were not.
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and were never intended to be an effective prosecution of the power structure of Nazi Germany. The subsequent proceedings were, in many respects, a rearguard action by the hardline anti-Nazi wing of the U.S. government that was already in retreat. Washington hobbled together the prosecutions, but severely limited their budget, and some U.S. agencies in Berlin stopped cooperating.
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Taylor's three U.S. trials of industrialists lasted slightly more than a year altogether, resulting in 19 convictions and 14 acquittal. The U.S. judges tend to be hostile to any of the prosecution, particularly Frederick Flick's case. The court was apparently unable to feel that offenses by industrialists fell into a severe category.
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When committed by a common man, you know, because if you're not in the military committing a war atrocity, then you're fine. Flick's successful defense depended directly on the social dynamics of international law of genocide. Flick, best of all, best.
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beat all of the slave labor and plunder charges because three prominent U.S. judges concluded that the director and owner of a corporation should not be held accountable for slavery and looting by the company unless the prosecution could prove that he personally ordered each and every crime, which is simply ridiculous. In other words, another sham. Okay, in the end, neither Treasury nor the state
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Department of State factions of wartime U.S. government fully achieved the goals that was sought originally by the treaty agreement. This ended up obviously affecting long-term U.S. and Soviet relations because they basically broke every promise.
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Herbert Pell's arch rival, Green Hackworth, ended up as president of the International Court of Justice at The Hague. So, for those of you who haven't been with us the entire time, Green Hackworth was the single belly button at the State Department legal office that sabotaged the basis of Nuremberg to make it not effective in any way to prosecute war crimes.
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And he ends up in charge of the International Court of Justice at The Hague. It's like a slap in the face. The Secretary of Defense, Dylan Reeds, and James Forrestal oversaw much of the birth of the post-war military-industrial complex and a dramatic shift of U.S. relations against the Soviet Union. And, of course, you know what happened to Forrestal.
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He supposedly committed suicide by jumping out of a window while he was being attended to in a medical facility because of a nervous breakdown. Many lawyers and economists from Henry Morgenthau's team at Treasury went on to serve a year or two in the U.S. occupation government in Germany, some of them on Telford Taylor's war crimes prosecution staff. Some found themselves
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tarred by Senator McCarthy during the witch hunt for, or the hunt for communists. Morgenthau's aide, Henry Dexter White, let's see, went on to serve as, oh, sorry, Secretary Morgenthau went on to serve as a chairman of the United Jewish Appeal and chairman of the board of the American Financial and Development Corporation for Israel.
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Herbert Pell attempted to reverse U.S. policy in Germany after he left the government. But after a few years, he returned to a life of travel and he died in 1961. His son, Claiborne Pell, whose wedding Herbert Hoover attended, he was fired, went on to become a prominent U.S. senator.
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and chair the House Senate Foreign Relations Committee. Claiborne Pell is the one that created the Pell Grants, just FYI. German economic elite and corporations that had been active under Hitler were all continued. And basically, there are to this day unresolved war crime charges against prominent German business leaders that were brought before the War Crimes Commission.
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It against people in the Netherlands, France, Poland and Yugoslavia. And let's see. I'm just making sure that I've covered all of this. Oh, the harsher assessment of the Dulles brothers role that did find their way into print often carried ideological baggage or included.
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Just enough errors so that the Dulles' could sidestep or discredit the charges. That's another tactic of media. The Soviet-backed ComInform in the late 1940s, the successor for the ComIntern, published a broadside against the Dulles' financial and political role in Germany as one element of the Soviet Union's post-war publicity offensive against U.S. policy in Europe.
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The statement continued that the flood of capital into Germany during the 1920s had in the end helped build the industrial infrastructure of Hitler's state. And that is true because Antony Sutton documents that extensively. And that Alan Dulles, John Foster Dulles and the law firm of Sullivan and Cromwell had been instrumental in that process, all of which is true. All of that.
46:49
The ComInform then went on to claim that Alan Dulles was the director of the J. Henry Schroeder interest in London, Cologne, and Hamburg, that the German Steel Trust played the leading part in the Schroeder Bank affairs, and that Sullivan and Cromwell was closely connected with Standard Oil, which they were, Chase Bank, which they were, and with the Rockefeller's interest in general, which they were.
47:19
This came out in the immediate aftermath. I mean, the Soviets had all of this information. They knew exactly who they were working with and they knew exactly when Alan Dulles and John Foster Dulles was put in the State Department and the CIA because they already had the track record through the 20s and 30s of everything that they had done. So they knew what the new.
47:44
position of the United States was going to be by the naming of people in the cabinet of Eisenhower. By the time these charges aired, which was first printed in the United States in 1948, although they had been verbally spoken before that, almost any comment from a communist source was discredited immediately. So, you know, it's all true, but it's coming from a communist.
48:14
Don't pay attention to it. In this particular case, the facts were that J. Henry Schroeder Bank of London did indeed join the Rockefeller and Dillon Reed during the 1920s to invest millions of dollars in German steel trust, which in turn used the capital to build new factories that produced military equipment. Alan Dulles had actually been a director.
48:38
between 1937 and 1943 of the New York subsidiary of the Schroeder Bank. The London Bank did have banking and business ties with Schroeder Family Owned Bank in Germany, and they had been a major backer of the SS. But the German Schroeder Bank was incorporated and financially, supposedly financially separated from the London Bank.
49:10
The various Schroeder banks often cooperated in international investments, so that separation was only for paper purposes. Meanwhile, Solomon and Cromwell partners most certainly shared with the Rockefellers many investments, political causes, and social clubs. The law firm, as such, had not been attorneys of record for Standard Oil, but they were intimately involved.
49:41
And they were also involved in the United Fruit, which was the Rockefellers as well. The Dulles brothers used these, quote unquote, discrepancies in some of the articles to basically say the entire thing was untrue. Then they would say that whoever wrote those things were guilty of basically misinformation.
50:06
So it says when the liberal New York Post raised questions about John Foster Dulles during a hard fought senatorial campaign, he wrote in reply to the Post article was totally misleading and merely paraphrasing smear lines that had come from communists. And that's where they ended up. Everything that was talked about because the only person that would print.
50:32
Actual factual information was the Soviet Union and then it comes from a communist. So you see how that's kind of like a circle of logic there for them. The U.N. War Crimes Commission staggered on for about another 18 months after Hackworth and the State Department decided to shut it down. The British wanted to close it immediately. The U.S. preferred to let the budget peter out.
50:57
Then you had General Lucius Clay acting in coordination with the Secretary of War and State Departments announced in the summer of 1947 that all requests for U.S. assistance to transfer or prosecute any war criminals had to be filed by October 1st of that year and all evidence necessary had to be submitted by December. And basically, they ended up
51:23
And again, these governments in Poland and Yugoslavia and Czechoslovakia are in ruins. So they have no way of submitting all of the documentation necessary. So basically, the end result is the entire thing was set up to fail on purpose to ensure that the people that they wanted left.
51:49
was going to be left for them to be able to use in their anti-communist next phase of operations, of which we're very familiar with, because that's what gave birth to Operation Gladio. And so that, in a nutshell, is the book. There is a little bit of additional information that talks about...
52:14
In the concluding chapter, he doesn't add any new information. He basically just kind of summarizes what we've already come to know. So that's it. We can open it up. You know, J.P. Morgan was also the original J.P. Morgan, I believe, was the one that was instrumental in defunding the original Tesla, Nikola Tesla operations.
52:47
At Wardenclyffe. Well. So. Yeah. Just shows you how evil. The evil fruit from the evil tree. The evil root. You know. SR 71 go. Thank you Colonel. And thank everybody for attending Spaces Today. And Rumble as usual. This book. Is really interesting. I did. Post in. The pill. Some of the.
53:23
that were actually charged and convicted of these crimes, only to come to find out none of them received a death sentence. All of them got anywhere between 1.5 years to seven years, which were commuted. By John McCloy. By John McCloy. Yes, ma'am. Every one of them. It's just.
53:53
Unbelievable. And the trials were closed shortly thereafter in 1948. Those those trials were done. There was no going back. It just blows my mind. It is very, very interesting. John McCoy is one of those people that most people have never heard of in history that had a.
54:22
Huge, huge, devastating effect long term on America. And most people have no idea who he is. Of course, he came from and we learned about him in War Hamster Secret Society show with me because he obviously, like all of these people, was a Wall Street lawyer.
54:53
He was associated with two, but one of which was Coldwater, Wickersham and Taft. And of course, Taft, there was we did a whole show on the Taft skull and bones connection. And so you can immediately see the connection that these people have and that.
55:20
John McCloy, despite knowing all about IG Farben and their contributions to World War II, commuted, as you point out, all of these peoples. And he was instrumental in the land lease deal, which was another money laundering operation. So, yeah. Anyway.
55:49
He was part of the OSS during World War II, just so that you know. So he's intel. And he even got involved in some of the issues that dealt with the Japanese aftermath as well. So, yeah, crazy, crazy, crazy. John McCoy commuted.
56:20
I forgot. Sorry. His big. Sorry. OK, so y'all know that the whole prediction of World War, that there was going to be three world wars and that many people speculate that World War Three actually started in the immediate aftermath of World War Two. It was just a covert war as opposed to an overt war and that it had all of the branches of political, economic and military being paramilitary arms to it.
56:50
And the economic aspect of that war was fought by the IMF and World Bank. And where does McCoy go after World War II? Oh, just to the World Bank. He becomes the president. Sorry for the interruption, but John McCoy commuted 89 of those trials. Yep. Out of the whole deal. I mean, you're right. He was significant.
57:19
player in all of this. And where does he go back? I had never heard of him until you mentioned him. And where does he go back to? Chase Manhattan Bank. And he doesn't just go back to the bank or he doesn't get hired just to any position. He's the chairman. Oh, and then he moves on to become the chairman of none other than the Ford Foundation, which is basically a CIA front and called out. And oh, by the way.
57:47
He becomes a trustee at the Rockefeller Foundation. And both of those organizations are basically CIA fronts and fund many of these covert operations through donations out of the foundation to CIA front companies that then perpetrate the covert war. He also served from 1954 to 1970 as the chairman.
58:15
of the Council on Foreign Relations, he took David Rockefeller's position when David Rockefeller stepped down. So do not tell me that this man is not instrumental. He was an advisor to JFK, LBJ, Richard Nixon, Jimmy Carter, and Ronald Reagan. So he is one of those people that people won't name in these operations that was basically
58:47
the shadow government. Oh, and then he rears his head on the Warren commission too. He was instrumental in the Warren commission with Alan Dulles. So he is one of the evil guys. He's probably in the top 10 of the evil guys. So. And Lyman Lemonsker. Lyman Lemonsker is in my top three. Yeah. Absolutely. Well.
59:27
The Dulles family. Yeah. I mean, they're in the top 10, but Lyman Lemonsker is probably in my top three. Just because the SOB wore a military uniform and he was a disgrace to the military, to America. He was bona fide traitor to the principles of our Constitution. So does anybody have anything else on the subject at hand?
1:00:01
Because if you don't, I want to move on since we're talking about traitors and principles to the Constitution and mention something that probably is controversial, but I don't care. You guys have seen me posting and responses that I'm getting to the fact that setting up savings accounts for babies is unconstitutional.
1:00:32
I want everybody just to keep this in the back of your head. If we're ever going to fix America, we have to have principles. We have to have principles of which everything filters through. If you don't have principles, then you're subject to any whim. And setting up another area.
1:01:00
The whole thing that we're fighting right now is the overstepping of our federal government into unconstitutional areas. And just because the Trump administration says they want to do something that on the face sounds nice, doesn't mean it's constitutional and doesn't mean it's a role that the federal government ought to have. I don't care how you fund it.
1:01:29
If it's not constitutionally called out as a job that the federal government should be doing, our constitution doesn't allow it. And you guys have to come to grips with that. You can't, every nice thing that comes along, the whole reason that we're 35, 36, whatever the number is, trillion dollars in debt is because we wanted to do a lot of nice things.
1:01:57
Nice things is not in the Constitution. Nowhere are you going to find, oh, that feels good. Oh, that's a nice thing to do. That's not the federal government's role. You have a state government. If your state government and the people in the state wants to do something like that, that's different because it's not a federal power.
1:02:20
Should be only that which is called out in the Constitution. You guys can't compromise on that. Or you're no better than the Democrat who wants to feed the entire freaking world. Everybody on X calls out the quote unquote Democrats with all of their feel good programs. Well, baby savings accounts is a feel good program. It doesn't matter that a Republican.
1:02:50
is talking about it, it still oversteps the bounds of the federal government. I'm just asking you guys, you can have your own obvious personal opinions, but I'm asking you to base it on principles. Base it on the constitution of what we're going to allow our federal 37 trillion. SR corrected me. Oh my God. Okay. That makes it even worse.
1:03:17
It doesn't matter where the money comes from. So, again, I made the analogy that if you're $100,000 in debt and you win a $10,000 lottery, you have a responsibility to your family to lessen your debt, not create some feel-good program. It just isn't what the federal government is supposed to do.
1:03:46
So that's all I'm asking you guys is to keep your principles in mind. Keep the Constitution in mind when you're advocating for something. And if you you don't know, but what this is dangled out there as have you guys got your principles in line? And if you cannot call out both sides of the aisle.
1:04:14
When it comes to feel-good programs, we're kind of wasting our time. We have to be able to principally support the Constitution at the federal level and then deal with things. That's our whole federal system. That's what it's all about. Bridget, go ahead. Then we'll go to Illini. USAID was created.
1:04:47
as a feel-good program. Yes, it was. You remember the... Okay, we talk about climbing under our desks during the drill, et cetera, et cetera. Right. The psychological operation I will never forget are the little babies with the big bellies covered with flies. At about the same time, they were rolling out USAID to feed the children. This...
1:05:18
really has the same feeling. And even if it is created with the right intention, I see in every way that this can be manipulated, just like USAID. Yeah, and I mean, it's almost to the, you know, the lockbox of the Social Security that really started out as an indigenous widow program.
1:05:43
For women who lost their husband and had no way to survive. And we see what happened to them. So anytime you open a door and you stick your toe in the crack of that door, that door will be busted wide open. You cannot allow the federal government any power that is not vested to it in the Constitution. You're absolutely right, Bridget.
1:06:12
Illini, go ahead. So let me give you some pushback. You have a point, but let me give you a pragmatic problem with all of this. It's normally the Supreme Court that reads and interprets the Constitution, at least historically. And in order to get something declared unconstitutional, you have to bring a case. And in order to bring a case, you have to have standing.
1:06:44
It seems like it would be difficult to go into the Supreme Court and say that you have standing and that you're negatively affected by, you know, other people getting scholarships.
1:06:59
for for their kids this is something that the supreme court is going to say nope you don't have standing and maybe maybe this just highlights your point even more and and and upsets everybody for the for the well everybody who opposes it even more but how do we actually enforce it is the question so it so first of all you guys realize that thanks to
1:07:27
the evilness of this system. We no longer base rulings at the Supreme Court on the Constitution. We base it on precedent. And that was a crack in the door that allowed things that are clearly unconstitutional to stand because it's precedent. That's how we ended up with the whole education piece of
1:07:54
bullcrap. That's how we ended up with 50 years of federally funded abortions. And so when you establish a precedent and then the legal decisions become based on precedent, that's when your foot is in the door, not a toe. And so I think you just made my point even more as opposed to pushing back on it.
1:08:22
We should not allow our federal government to do anything initially at all that is not the role of the federal government, because you can't have a federal government that tells you that they are going back to the constitutional interpretation of what the federal government and we're going to close all of these different organizations while at the same time they are opening other doors.
1:08:51
regardless of where the funding comes from, we should base our opinions on principle. That's all I'm asking. Otherwise, we end up right back where we were. Absolutely. Because the savings accounts then don't just go to babies. They will go to somebody else. And then you get a Democrat president and we're going to be giving savings accounts to illegal alien babies and blah, blah, blah.
1:09:19
You cannot open any new doors until all of the trash that they've already bastardized our country with gets cleaned up. And they pay out the debt as far as I'm concerned. So anyway, anybody else have any comments? Read the comments on Rumble. The comments on Rumble.
1:09:49
Go Lafayette says, I am jumping up and down saying, yay, Colonel. Touchdown. Go home run. Yay, Colonel. Okay. Just giving her a voice. Love it. Yeah. So, and Shelly says, yes, because the nice things always have bad outcomes for people. Doesn't matter what side you're on. These effers don't have principles. I'm just saying.
1:10:19
We should base everything that we allow our federal government to do based on the Constitution first and principles on our position. We have to learn how to discern between what feels good and what is constitutional in a constitutional republic.
1:10:48
or you basically have thrown your constitutional republic out the door. And I'm in this fight to restore the constitutional republic, not to implement feel-good programs that open new doors. That's just my... Go ahead, SR71. Thank you, Colonel. As I recall, at one point, didn't...
1:11:22
Congress have some kind of resolution that stated they were going to review all laws as to whether or not they were constitutional? And then they dropped that requirement? In theory, Congress should never pass an unconstitutional law. How do you do that?
1:11:48
But we know they do because laws get struck down by the Supreme Court, as as as Illini was just saying. And we know that, as he just articulated, getting a case before the Supreme Court is one of the highest hurdles in our government. So you cannot rely on the Supreme Court.
1:12:14
As we saw with the abortion, that was an abomination that should have never been passed. Not only was it passed, it stood for 50 years. So you you have to at the groundswell level of your representative and your federal senator, make sure that your voices are heard and the fact that you do not want unprincipled, unconstitutional.
1:12:45
laws passed. And that's the whole basis of our federalized constitutional republic. So I'm just asking you guys to consider that when you form your opinions on whether something is good or not.
1:13:06
And that I'm not even talking about, as one person pointed out, that they're talking about using money that is like basically frozen assets from, you know, international quote unquote criminals. Well, I have a whole problem with that line of thinking, too. So if the CIA, in the case of the Congo, goes in and installs Mubato.
1:13:34
And he's basically a criminal. And he takes some of his assets that he criminally has gotten from people like John McCoy at the World Bank in a loan, which we covered, that was $10 billion. And that $10 billion was not used in the Congo to help those people at all. Mubato put a lot of it in his personal accounts and used a lot of that money.
1:14:03
as a money laundering operation back into covert operations through the CIA and other organizations. And then the money that he puts in New York, which may have been part of the whole World Bank scam for them to, quote unquote, freeze it and then use it to fund something. To me, that's akin to blood money.
1:14:30
You are taking money that has been laundered through different organizations. And because Mubato was a criminal, but he was installed as a criminal by the CIA. And then he puts money in.
1:14:49
to banking systems in the United States, then the United States comes along and freezes that money and then says, oh, look at all this newfound money. Oh, and we're going to put a bunch of that money that we just found with $37 trillion in debt into baby feel-good programs as a savings account. I just, I can't make that make sense. Sorry. Go ahead, SR71. No, I'm with you 100%, Colonel. I can't make that make sense either.
1:15:19
And the way I see it is that if these are the things people want, they're not in the Constitution. You want them. You got a state. You got a community. That's where it should be. Not internationally or nationally, so to speak. I don't advocate.
1:15:47
anything other than what's in the constitution and what they what our federal government is responsible for other than that it there shouldn't be there shouldn't even be an epa if you ask me correct but it's there correct um and um so go lafayette says as a law school graduate i can tell you lawyers are not taught the constitution in law schools and i have heard that from
1:16:19
a lot of people. One of my best friends who was an Intel officer on active duty. Also when he got off active duty, went to law school and said exactly the same thing. Yeah. So, and Donnie vision, thank you for reminding everybody to hit the thumbs up button over on rumble. We really do appreciate that. So he, Oh, also somebody mentioned that there's a thing called the 10th amendment center.
1:16:47
that has a number of videos about judicial, congressional, and executive overreach and intentional misapplication of powers of the government. That's awesome. That's from Awaken Questioner. So definitely recommend you guys go check that out because that is a very interesting resource for basically kind of revalidating.
1:17:14
what the Constitution is all about. And of course, if you guys, I know most of everybody in here follows Warhamster. Warhamster is not a lawyer, but he and a friend of his do constitutional study podcast and goes over in detail some of the
1:17:40
They cover everything. They're very educational. And I highly recommend that as a resource as well. But again, I'm just concerned that we've got to get away from these feel good programs at the federal government level. It is not their job. OK. Anybody else? Colonel. Yeah. I behind you 100 percent on.
1:18:18
on, uh, not funding the unconstitutional things and, uh, on the, all the nice things being unconstitutional, you know, can't, can't support them unless, uh, you know, unless it's, it's something that the federal government should be doing according to the constitution. But I'll going back to one of the nice things that we funded, you know, at the end of world war two, um, I, back in the years ago, I had some friends who were proud Southerners and they
1:18:47
said that one of the things they were proud of was that at the end of World War II, the Americans had learned their lesson about the idea of a harsh peace from the American Civil War or from World War I, and that they said that all of the major movers and shakers that had conceived of the Marshall Plan and put it through
1:19:17
uh, or, or I guess, or set it up were, you cut out were what? Oh, they were, um, the big movers and shakers in conceiving of the Marshall plan and setting it up were either sons or grandsons of Confederate generals. So, um, uh, and I'm, I haven't researched that to make, to know that that's true, but I mean, they, they definitely had a list that, that were, and, uh,
1:19:48
I'm thinking about that now and how the, you know, you said the Marshall Plan was used to pay for Operation Gladio. And I'm just connecting that back to Matt Ehret and his research on how the British kind of set up the Civil War by, you know, running Masonic lodges in the South that were pro-slavery and running Masonic lodges in Massachusetts that were.
1:20:16
Pro abolition and managed that, you know, they managed to split up the country that way. But I just wondered if those descendants of Confederate officers who set up the Marshall Plan, if they were a member of some of those. Well, first of all, we'd have to go back and confirm that that's in fact true. Yeah. And that is. So I don't know if a large part of the.
1:20:45
audience understands that the one of the most fascinating this this whole journey has been fascinating to me. But one of the tidbits that I did learn was from my reading that the cotton industry of which the South was very well known for and the I didn't even know South Carolina had a rice industry until.
1:21:14
I'm driving through there and find all of these rice plantation. And then doing research, you find out that the western coast of Africa also had rice industries. And one of the main slave shipping points in Africa was rounding up, which was, by the way, a European colony at the time.
1:21:40
where these rice industries or plantations were in Africa and shipping them over to create rice plantations around the South Carolina Delta area because they had very similar climates. And then you start looking into the cotton industry and a large segment of our cotton production was taken on ships by British to India.
1:22:06
was very well known for textile mills and stuff like that. And the Tata family was like the largest production of textiles and cloth for the British. And it's very well known that the British was a big instigator of the Civil War and that they wanted the South.
1:22:33
So did the French, because a lot of this involved them through the continent of Africa as well, wanted the slave production, which is not unlike what we find in Gladio in the use of the African colony. Even after they supposedly decolonialized them, they want slave labor. And so both the French and the British were on the side of the South. And it was not until.
1:23:03
Tsar Nicholas said that or one of the whoever the Russian czar was at the time that he said that he was going to deploy and did deploy ships off the coast of the east and west coasts of the United States that the British and the French were not going to interfere with the Civil War.
1:23:27
Which, again, that's not something that's taught in our history classes, you know, because Russia's bad. And so everything that you just said is very well documented. That's just a little bit more flavor to it. But that is a well-known fact that, well, not maybe that well-known, but it is a fact.
1:23:49
that the British and the French did not want to have to pay more for cotton. The price that they wanted to pay was with slave labor, which made cotton a lot cheaper in the United States. And so they definitely interfered in the Civil War. They wanted to interfere a lot more and was stopped by the deployment of the Russian fleet.
1:24:16
So that they were not able to interfere as much as they wanted to. And that's that's why a large purchaser of the production of cotton was purchased for textile production in India, which at the time was a colony of the British and then shipped on to Britain for consumer goods. So, yeah.
1:24:44
It was Alexander II, I believe. But the British had planted cotton in Egypt, which they were running at the time. Cotton crops came in during the Civil War, and that lessened their enthusiasm for going ahead and backing the South. So that allegedly helped them because they could ship it from Egypt directly to India. And that's where the Giza cotton comes from. Exactly. Yeah.
1:25:13
Yeah. Another British basically protectorate, which is what Egypt was. Yeah, it's just history is fascinating. And also, once you understand these patterns of everything has to do with the economics of the matter and that all of these wars are driven by the international syndicate collectively wanting cheap.
1:25:43
which is why they sabotage every union. They co-opt the unions to work on their behalf. And any legitimate union is accused of being a communist and taken down to the extent where they'll overthrow entire governments as a result of that, just to ensure their access to cheap labor. So there you have it. OK, so we finished our book.
1:26:17
I'm going to go ahead and call it now. We are not going to have a show tomorrow. I will be on the missing link tonight at nine o'clock. I forgot to mention that yesterday. That's a Canadian podcaster. I've been on about every three months. I go on and we just kind of update what's going on and things that has changed. So I'll be on his show tonight. I will send you guys a link to it when it's available. And I will be on.
1:26:44
That's a fun show. That's a fun show. If anybody had missed it, it's a fun show to watch and see these guys really get their eyes open. Yeah. Yeah. Very entertaining host. I love going on that show. And then I'll be on the Alpha Warrior show tomorrow at 930. But we are not going to have a four o'clock show tomorrow and we are not going to have one on Thursday. I will be back on Friday.
1:27:15
And I will be using, I want to say it's Make R Sarge who DM'd me this piece. It just blew my mind on Friday. So Friday is going to be a do not miss show because we are going to go from pre-World War II on a new facet of Operation Gladio that I was not even aware of through to Marine General Jim Jones.
1:27:44
And again, for those guys, for any of you new guys, I actually was deployed with Colonel Jim Jones in northern Iraq. He was our new commander there. And I flew on a helicopter with him to work every day and on the way back every day. And based on the protocol of how the seating charts work on helicopters, because it's a protocol thing.
1:28:13
I usually sat next to him on those helicopter flights. And if you guys have not been part of the history of me telling the story of my deployment to Iraq, I was the aide to a two-star army general there. For the most part, the only female for deployed into Northern Iraq during my six months there and the only Air Force person. We did have an occasional civil engineer.
1:28:45
combat civil engineer team that came in and did some renovations. They're the ones that came in and put toilet seats on the latrines. And General Garner about lost his shit because, you know, only the Air Force would bring toilet seats for latrines. But having been a female, I told General Garner that if he wanted to take the toilet seats off the men's latrine, how about it? But I wanted mine left.
1:29:13
Because I was the only one that used it. So anyway, Jim Jones at the time was a completely different person than when I was stationed at the Pentagon with him as well. Him and General Garner was at the Pentagon at the same time with me. I saw them both one morning in the POAC, which is the Pentagon Officers Athletic Center. And I just about died. I mean, it was like an old homecoming for me.
1:29:43
And I love General Garner to death. What a nice guy. He's from a very small town just south of my hometown. And General Jones is from a well-connected family. He spent a lot of time in France, fluent French speaker, as were a lot of the Kurdish people in northern Iraq at the time. So huge asset.
1:30:12
I actually went to his commandant. He was the Marine Corps commandant. I went to his change of command. Had never been to anything like that. It was an amazing experience. But General Jones definitely is one of those generals that changed over time. He was not the same person that I knew as a colonel. And he was a three-star as a military assistant to the SecDef.
1:30:38
My ex-husband was in the SecDef suite with him and so obviously got to attend different functions there with him and a completely different guy, completely different guy. So I found it interesting that he shows up in this story that we're going to go over on Friday. And it kind of just put a bunch of pieces together with me.
1:31:05
Will you post the Missing Link show on Rumble? Missing Link, I will send you the post. Yes, Craig. Or I will send you the link to it. I'm not sure. Is he on Rumble, Bridget? I don't remember. I think he is. I think he brought. I think he is, but I can't remember. We'll send you the link to his show. I'll post it as soon as we're done.
1:31:33
Anyway, it's just funny how doing this research, you see what a small circle of these people's names just keep coming up. And interesting how my career intersected with so many of them that and I was completely ignorant of all of it. But it does make this journey very personal for me as a result of that.
1:31:58
Because in many places, you actually are there and have seen things that now make total sense that you just took as part of an everyday course of normal business back in the day. But now you see things completely different with your Gladio glasses on. So Colonel worked with Kool-Aid Jimmy Jones. Yes, I did. Yeah. But anyway.
1:32:26
Um, thanks everybody for being here. I appreciate it. Um, and thank you for letting me fill you guys in on all of the drama that goes on on X every day. Um, at the beginning of the show, if you guys missed the beginning of the show, you definitely want to go back and listen to it. Um, and, um, I see a line. I went ahead and dropped out. God bless him. He is always there. Has my six every single day. Um, SR 71 and Bridget as well. I see stellar.
1:32:56
You guys are totally awesome. You definitely have made this journey for me much more fun, even on the days that are chaotic. I appreciate you being here. So I will see you hopefully in the audience of Missing Link tomorrow night on Apple Warrior Show.
1:33:18
where we're going to go over another one of the international syndicate members. And then on Friday for a blockbuster show at four. So see you then everybody.
Entities here
West Germany16Operation Gladio15Allen Dulles14Marshall Plan14Mike Pence10United States10World War II9John J. McCloy9Philip Reed8United Kingdom8General Electric7Soviet Union7American Civil War7Jim Jones6Industrialist Trials5Telford Taylor5NATO5Rockefeller5Lucius Clay5Senator Kilgore4U.S. State Department4Keith Malinak4Mobutu Sese Seko4Sullivan & Cromwell4Chase Manhattan Bank4Steve Baker3J. Henry Schroeder Bank3USAID3Dulles family3Averell Harriman3Henry Morgenthau Jr.3Potsdam Conference3IG Farben3Hermann Abs3India3Congo3France3Jay Garner3Standard Oil2Italy2
Claims made here
Steve Baker member_of
The Blaze host_asserted
▶ 1:33
“actually say the person's name, it's A-U-L-D, and then there's a whole bunch of letters, had tagged several people in a post that I made. One of those people was Steve Baker. Steve Baker is a reporter…”
Keith Malinak member_of
The Blaze host_asserted
▶ 3:00
“post in my dms from a guy and i want to make sure i get his name right um uh let's see um just keith he's a reporter also from the blaze his name's keith malinak m-a-l-i-n-a-k and he mentions and i th…”
Mike Pence exposed
Operation Gladio host_asserted
▶ 8:10
“I hope we can patch this up in some way. But he exposed himself last year by asking you for the book.…”
U.S. State Department sabotaged
Denazification documented
▶ 17:55
“that was made on the War Crimes Commission. They sabotaged Mr. Pell, who had been sent over to London. They basically took his funding away. They did literally everything they could to sabotage not ju…”
U.S. State Department sabotaged
William Bell documented
▶ 17:55
“that was made on the War Crimes Commission. They sabotaged Mr. Pell, who had been sent over to London. They basically took his funding away. They did literally everything they could to sabotage not ju…”
NATO funded
Operation Gladio host_asserted
▶ 19:05
“You had an entire slew of people that had been given the death penalty. But John McCloy then changes the death penalty to life in prison and then commutes all of their sentences. So they were basicall…”
NATO carried_out_attack
Operation Gladio host_asserted
▶ 22:08
“They're not going to be a threat for the next 10 years. It'll take them that long to reconstitute any type of a war capability. But that's not what was said during the ending of World War II and in th…”
Philip Reed member_of
General Electric book_quoted
▶ 24:45
“Rockefeller, and J.P. Morgan. On other occasions, Reed traveled as a representative of General Electric. And on others, he traveled as the International Chamber of Commerce representative. So he was w…”
Philip Reed member_of
Bank of International Commerce book_quoted
▶ 24:45
“Rockefeller, and J.P. Morgan. On other occasions, Reed traveled as a representative of General Electric. And on others, he traveled as the International Chamber of Commerce representative. So he was w…”
Philip Reed appointed
Averell Harriman book_quoted
▶ 24:45
“Rockefeller, and J.P. Morgan. On other occasions, Reed traveled as a representative of General Electric. And on others, he traveled as the International Chamber of Commerce representative. So he was w…”
Lucius Clay appointed
Hermann Abs book_quoted
▶ 33:43
“But not to worry, Clay continued, quote, we were able to finally put him in charge of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, which was somewhat outside of government, unquote, and which was instrumen…”
Hermann Abs headed
Reconstruction Finance Corporation book_quoted
▶ 33:43
“But not to worry, Clay continued, quote, we were able to finally put him in charge of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, which was somewhat outside of government, unquote, and which was instrumen…”
Reconstruction Finance Corporation financed_via
Marshall Plan book_quoted
▶ 33:43
“But not to worry, Clay continued, quote, we were able to finally put him in charge of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, which was somewhat outside of government, unquote, and which was instrumen…”
Marshall Plan funded
Operation Gladio book_quoted
▶ 33:43
“But not to worry, Clay continued, quote, we were able to finally put him in charge of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, which was somewhat outside of government, unquote, and which was instrumen…”
Marshall Plan financed_via
Operation Gladio host_asserted
▶ 34:12
“The Marshall Plan was money laundering to start Operation Gladio. And the guy they put in charge of dispersing the money is a Nazi. Just want to make sure I emphasize that point. Okay. Sponsors of the…”
Telford Taylor headed
Industrialist Trials documented
▶ 38:59
“Herman Abbs and Slatt that was put on trial. But at the end of the day, nothing happened. Also, they were referred to also as the subsequent proceedings. It was organized under General Telford Taylor.…”
Telford Taylor tried
Friedrich Flick documented
▶ 40:51
“Taylor's three U.S. trials of industrialists lasted slightly more than a year altogether, resulting in 19 convictions and 14 acquittal. The U.S. judges tend to be hostile to any of the prosecution, pa…”
Green Hackworth headed
International Court of Justice documented
▶ 42:36
“Herbert Pell's arch rival, Green Hackworth, ended up as president of the International Court of Justice at The Hague. So, for those of you who haven't been with us the entire time, Green Hackworth was…”
Henry Morgenthau Jr. headed
United Jewish Appeal documented
▶ 44:03
“tarred by Senator McCarthy during the witch hunt for, or the hunt for communists. Morgenthau's aide, Henry Dexter White, let's see, went on to serve as, oh, sorry, Secretary Morgenthau went on to serv…”
Henry Morgenthau Jr. headed
American Financial and Development Corporation for Israel documented
▶ 44:03
“tarred by Senator McCarthy during the witch hunt for, or the hunt for communists. Morgenthau's aide, Henry Dexter White, let's see, went on to serve as, oh, sorry, Secretary Morgenthau went on to serv…”
Claiborne Pell succeeded
Herbert Pell documented
▶ 44:33
“Herbert Pell attempted to reverse U.S. policy in Germany after he left the government. But after a few years, he returned to a life of travel and he died in 1961. His son, Claiborne Pell, whose weddin…”
Allen Dulles member_of
Sullivan & Cromwell documented
▶ 46:22
“The statement continued that the flood of capital into Germany during the 1920s had in the end helped build the industrial infrastructure of Hitler's state. And that is true because Antony Sutton docu…”
Sullivan & Cromwell front_for
Chase Manhattan Bank book_quoted
▶ 46:49
“The ComInform then went on to claim that Alan Dulles was the director of the J. Henry Schroeder interest in London, Cologne, and Hamburg, that the German Steel Trust played the leading part in the Sch…”
Sullivan & Cromwell front_for
Standard Oil book_quoted
▶ 46:49
“The ComInform then went on to claim that Alan Dulles was the director of the J. Henry Schroeder interest in London, Cologne, and Hamburg, that the German Steel Trust played the leading part in the Sch…”
Sullivan & Cromwell front_for
Rockefeller book_quoted
▶ 46:49
“The ComInform then went on to claim that Alan Dulles was the director of the J. Henry Schroeder interest in London, Cologne, and Hamburg, that the German Steel Trust played the leading part in the Sch…”
Dylan Reeds financed_via
German Steel Trust documented
▶ 48:14
“Don't pay attention to it. In this particular case, the facts were that J. Henry Schroeder Bank of London did indeed join the Rockefeller and Dillon Reed during the 1920s to invest millions of dollars…”
Sullivan & Cromwell financed_via
German Steel Trust documented
▶ 48:14
“Don't pay attention to it. In this particular case, the facts were that J. Henry Schroeder Bank of London did indeed join the Rockefeller and Dillon Reed during the 1920s to invest millions of dollars…”
J. Henry Schroeder Bank financed_via
German Steel Trust documented
▶ 48:14
“Don't pay attention to it. In this particular case, the facts were that J. Henry Schroeder Bank of London did indeed join the Rockefeller and Dillon Reed during the 1920s to invest millions of dollars…”
Rockefeller financed_via
German Steel Trust documented
▶ 48:14
“Don't pay attention to it. In this particular case, the facts were that J. Henry Schroeder Bank of London did indeed join the Rockefeller and Dillon Reed during the 1920s to invest millions of dollars…”
Allen Dulles headed
J. Henry Schroeder Bank documented
▶ 48:38
“between 1937 and 1943 of the New York subsidiary of the Schroeder Bank. The London Bank did have banking and business ties with Schroeder Family Owned Bank in Germany, and they had been a major backer…”
JPMorgan Chase funded
Nikola Tesla host_asserted
▶ 52:14
“In the concluding chapter, he doesn't add any new information. He basically just kind of summarizes what we've already come to know. So that's it. We can open it up. You know, J.P. Morgan was also the…”
John J. McCloy pardoned
Friedrich Flick host_asserted
▶ 55:20
“John McCloy, despite knowing all about IG Farben and their contributions to World War II, commuted, as you point out, all of these peoples. And he was instrumental in the land lease deal, which was an…”
John J. McCloy headed
Bank for International Settlements documented
▶ 56:50
“And the economic aspect of that war was fought by the IMF and World Bank. And where does McCoy go after World War II? Oh, just to the World Bank. He becomes the president. Sorry for the interruption, …”
John J. McCloy headed
Ford Foundation documented
▶ 57:19
“player in all of this. And where does he go back? I had never heard of him until you mentioned him. And where does he go back to? Chase Manhattan Bank. And he doesn't just go back to the bank or he do…”
John J. McCloy headed
Chase Manhattan Bank documented
▶ 57:19
“player in all of this. And where does he go back? I had never heard of him until you mentioned him. And where does he go back to? Chase Manhattan Bank. And he doesn't just go back to the bank or he do…”
John J. McCloy member_of
Rockefeller Foundation documented
▶ 57:47
“He becomes a trustee at the Rockefeller Foundation. And both of those organizations are basically CIA fronts and fund many of these covert operations through donations out of the foundation to CIA fro…”
John J. McCloy headed
CFR documented
▶ 57:47
“He becomes a trustee at the Rockefeller Foundation. And both of those organizations are basically CIA fronts and fund many of these covert operations through donations out of the foundation to CIA fro…”
John J. McCloy succeeded
David Rockefeller documented
▶ 58:15
“of the Council on Foreign Relations, he took David Rockefeller's position when David Rockefeller stepped down. So do not tell me that this man is not instrumental. He was an advisor to JFK, LBJ, Richa…”
John J. McCloy member_of
Warren Commission documented
▶ 58:47
“the shadow government. Oh, and then he rears his head on the Warren commission too. He was instrumental in the Warren commission with Alan Dulles. So he is one of the evil guys. He's probably in the t…”
Allen Dulles member_of
Warren Commission documented
▶ 58:47
“the shadow government. Oh, and then he rears his head on the Warren commission too. He was instrumental in the Warren commission with Alan Dulles. So he is one of the evil guys. He's probably in the t…”
Bank for International Settlements provided_bridge_financing_for
Mobutu Sese Seko host_asserted
▶ 1:13:34
“And he's basically a criminal. And he takes some of his assets that he criminally has gotten from people like John McCoy at the World Bank in a loan, which we covered, that was $10 billion. And that $…”
Marshall Plan funded
Operation Gladio host_asserted
▶ 1:19:48
“I'm thinking about that now and how the, you know, you said the Marshall Plan was used to pay for Operation Gladio. And I'm just connecting that back to Matt Ehret and his research on how the British …”
United Kingdom targeted_for_regime_change
American Civil War host_asserted
▶ 1:22:06
“was very well known for textile mills and stuff like that. And the Tata family was like the largest production of textiles and cloth for the British. And it's very well known that the British was a bi…”
France targeted_for_regime_change
American Civil War host_asserted
▶ 1:22:33
“So did the French, because a lot of this involved them through the continent of Africa as well, wanted the slave production, which is not unlike what we find in Gladio in the use of the African colony…”
Soviet Union carried_out_attack
United Kingdom host_asserted
▶ 1:23:03
“Tsar Nicholas said that or one of the whoever the Russian czar was at the time that he said that he was going to deploy and did deploy ships off the coast of the east and west coasts of the United Sta…”
Jim Jones member_of
United States Marine Corps documented
▶ 1:30:12
“I actually went to his commandant. He was the Marine Corps commandant. I went to his change of command. Had never been to anything like that. It was an amazing experience. But General Jones definitely…”