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The Colonel’s Corner Transnational Anti Communism&Cold War #1

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0:00 Hi, Bridget. Hi, everyone. We're just reposting the space and sending DMs. If you guys don't mind, can you please repost the space? Colonel Towner's open in Bridget, too. Yay. Hey, Stella. Good to have you back. Stella in the house. Stella in the house. I did my post and I bailed out of the room. I took my own power. All right. I am going to.
0:46 Hold on a second. I'm trying to arrange a couple of things here out in my studio so I can get all of this stuff close enough so everybody can hear over here on Rumble. I'm going to go ahead and get Rumble going. And I'm trying to keep my phone on a charger, which it's not wanting to cooperate with. Okay.
1:20 And once we get live on Rumble and we get a few more people in, we will get started. So I've been busy for the last few hours. Anything exciting happen? We're tariffing China over 100%. I think that's awesome. And they're ditching the dollar, which is even better. They are like slitting their own throat. Are they not, Stella?
1:55 Yeah, but you have to get rid of all of that dirty money. And what better way than that? You know, so I think it's a good thing, you know, because equal level playing ground and China's money or their finance. Well, they're whatever they're the Chinese one is crashing big time. Two days worth. That's awesome.
2:15 Because they keep holding those bonds or whatever, those notes as like, hey, we've got this. You've got to bend to the knee. And we're saying, screw you. Thank you, Trump. So go ahead, Bridget. I was just going to say, did he not, and correct me if I'm wrong, because I could be misremembering. During his first term, did he not constantly go on and on about how China inflated its own and manipulated its own currency?
2:45 And to me, this is fixing that. Yeah. Absolutely. Cousin, it's in the house. Sorry, I didn't mean to interrupt. What I want to alert you to, Bridget and Stellar, since you're co-hosting today, is, and I'm going to talk about this for a minute, some of the back channel stuff that's going on.
3:12 And why it's important. If you guys would not mind, if you watch, I was told that there's bots that come in here with the look of an anime emblem where their picture is. And so if you guys wouldn't mind keeping a lookout for that, when certain people come in that they want to sabotage the space.
3:39 They send in those anime looking things. So no one that comes in here normally has that. So just go ahead and keep them out to keep the room clean. So obviously we talked a little bit yesterday and I made a post about the drama and I want to explain to everybody why this is important. I think people.
4:08 are still way too naive about what we're doing. What we're doing is something very, very important. And I want to fill you in some additional information. So go ahead and give Cousin It a speaker, Bridget, because she obviously was part of this as well.
4:40 As you guys know, Cousin It doesn't follow most people. She doesn't tolerate any crap. And if you provide crap, she blocks you. Those are all things that she is free to do that didn't lessen her contributions to our research. She was behind the scenes constantly doing research morning, noon, and night.
5:09 My allegiance in this endeavor is to Cousin It and her choices. Same way with Bridget. Love you too. The three of us do not always agree on things. Long ago, it was decided that I was going to kind of lead this effort. And when I felt the need that we needed to band together, we had a conversation.
5:37 And they could either agree or disagree. Generally, we all agreed for the sake of the message that on certain things that we were going to, when we're presenting things, cohesively work together, which did not preclude any of the three of us to make any post they wanted to on their own. This is not grade school, okay? So that was kind of our rules of engagement on how we went about this.
6:06 And there have been people that have come at us trying to, in really weird ways, this has been a learning experience for all of us, to get us involved in things that we're not going to get involved in. To say things that we're not going to say. Because all of those efforts was to sideline the importance of what we're doing. We will not engage in that bullshit.
6:37 I have noticed that there is a, and you guys know that my adulthood has always been spent predominantly around men, both in the Air Force, my construction business afterwards. I temporarily, for my husband, owned an electrical business. All men, okay? I'm a tomboy at heart. I don't have a lot of feminine qualities. I do paint my nails. I do my hair.
7:06 And that's about it. I did splurge a little bit on jewelry too. However, when it comes to interactions with people, as you guys know, I don't talk like a woman and I don't normally act. I don't get into the emotional drama that a lot of women do. So having said all of that, early on, there were women that were put into our circle.
7:37 that profess to support us. And in supporting us, like slobberingly so support us. The kind where you kind of like the dog humping your leg, you just want to like get off me kind of support. And anytime you see that, and believe me, the higher in rank I got, the more of those people tried to...
8:06 switch their way into your sphere of influence. So I know them. I can spot them a mile away. And so can Cousin It. Cousin It's very good at that. And so as we spotted them, Cousin It immediately blocked them. When Cousin It shared co-hosting duties a lot, they couldn't come into our space. And then you get these whiny-ass crybaby DMs about,
8:35 I can't get in your space. Okay, but you don't add anything to the space anyway. And every time you come into the space, we noticed a million bots came in with you. And by bots, I mean these things that crash the space, like repeatedly crash the space. We were having problems. As you guys know, we were having problems with the volume. Nobody could hear. All kinds of shit was going on in our space.
9:03 When those people are in our space. So thanks to Cousin It blocking them, they weren't able to come in our space anymore. And behind the scenes, we got these DMs. Oh, I don't know what's going on. Well, recently, Charlie Sue came in and started doing the same shit. Well, it wasn't too long after I followed Charlie Sue because she was.
9:34 sharing our information. She invited me into that podcast DM group. So we got more eyes on Operation Gladio that she didn't come around the back end and go, why did you block this particular person? In other words, they're in it together. Otherwise, she would have never known that I had blocked that other person if they weren't talking behind the scenes. We're not retarded, okay?
10:03 I've been around the block a time or two. So I'm like, I didn't block them. I can't. I'm a little challenged. I'm a little challenged. I want to stand on record. Okay. So what things that cousin it noticed about this person, the original one, and they're all female, by the way, the original one started taking some very suggestive photos of themselves and putting them.
10:34 in their ex thing. And immediately... That would have been me. That was me. I noticed it. Because I was like, what the hell? Okay. All right. Well, Cousin Hitch is the one that fixated on it as far as she couldn't believe that they were doing it. The hell I did. You did. I remember. I just said her air conditioner was up way too high. So, yeah. Okay. Repeatedly. So, anyway.
11:01 What I believe is going on is a discrediting of females in general. Now, we see that in the broader picture of this movement in the DEI where you put dumb females in roles of responsibility, especially black dumb females. And I don't know whether they're actually dumb or they're just acting dumb, like the plagiarists that they had as the...
11:28 college president. This is all done to discredit us. They're not promoting women of quality in order to give us some reparations for having been frowned upon or passed over or anything else. They're promoting retards in order to make all of us look bad. The same thing with women's sports. They're doing this to destroy
11:57 our culture and women in general, okay? If you can't figure that out, I'm telling you that's what's going on. So these women come in and then they, and I don't mean like literally pornographically expose themselves, but they put revealing pictures online to increase their sphere of influence. They don't add anything to a space.
12:26 They don't know anything that they don't take from someone else, which we caught Bridget and Cousin It caught them doing. And then they try to bully you into playing by their rules. Probably the worst thing that you could ever do is try to bully me into doing anything because that's not going to work. As a matter of fact, it's going to totally piss me off, as it did.
12:56 The lady, I forget her name, I probably shouldn't use her name anyway, DMed me yesterday that this other person, Charlie Sue, was basically doing the same thing. She even had screenshotted a picture of her that she put in one of the other spaces that she was in, in the chat. That was very revealing. And so again, and her...
13:22 It added an insult to me when she says, well, if you don't have Cousin It unblock me, I'm going to have to keep you from posting in this thing that I created, which I don't give a shit about. And then I'm not going to be able to support you. Well, I don't need that kind of support. I don't want people out there.
13:44 if that's the kind of support that they're adding. I want intellects. I want people that are smarter than me on particular subjects to be in my chat, to be in this group, because all of you guys know specific areas very, very well, much better than I do in some cases. But collectively, we're all able to walk through all of this information together because we work together and none of it has to do with putting suggestive pictures.
14:13 On the internet. That shit just ain't going to play here. So. You will stay permanently blocked. If that's your avenue. And we have. Some of the most amazing followers. And when I talk about. All of this being a team. It really is a team effort. This has become a group team. And just like a team. When there are disruptors. That are there for the only purpose of.
14:43 creating drama, strategy of tension, anybody, it's time to remove them. Yeah, we're just not going to play with that. Did you want to add anything, Cousin It, before we move on? Yeah, I did real quick. I don't want anybody to take it personally that I don't follow back people. And as long as my name has been thrown into this mix, I spend a lot of time on the foreign channels trying to sort out
15:17 outside of U.S. mainstream media what's actually going on. And I don't have time, and I know that sounds so rude and so terrible, and please don't take it personally. I don't follow a lot of people back because it's hard for me to keep up with the ex as it is. I usually just do hit and runs.
15:41 and I try not to engage in too much unless I see something truly stupid. So please don't take it personally. I appreciate everybody supporting the Colonel and Bridget and myself and SR and Illini, and I see Froggy in the house, Stellar. You know, everybody's working so hard. Let's not be junior high.
16:08 You know, it's not necessary to everybody follow back everybody else. We know that we all love each other and we appreciate each other's support and work. But understand that in my case, I have a hard time engaging anyway. So thank you very much. I will bow out. All right. Stellar, go ahead.
16:28 I was just going to say, we're watching like within your spaces and how these bots attack. And I mean, I still remember the first time when you tried to go inside or when we were doing the first, you know, the first episodes of Gladio in the pond and stuff like that. And just how many times did that space crash? Because the information that you're...
16:48 teaching us and showing us where we're able to connect the dots. Like with me, it was the financial thing. And then that one day in your space and you were talking about dates and everything. I'm like, oh my gosh, this whole thing is all about the whole thing. I mean, it's just intense. And the information and the history that you're unwinding is so factual and so on target.
17:09 And it's you know, and they just don't want that going out. And it's a shame. And yes, the bots are always really strong. And you can always tell them also because they've had their accounts for five or 10 years and they only have about two or three people following them as well. So I've been keeping an eye out. All right. So as usual, we are going to present our lesson and then we'll open up the mics for everybody to comment. OK.
17:35 So I told you guys yesterday when we were doing our Around the World book tour of the book collection that I had come across this book. This book is Transnational Anti-Communism and the Cold War, Agents, Activities, and Networks. Now, it's a series of essays written by several different people. So what I want to do is, and again,
18:05 It talks about the unions and some other aspects that we've not really hit very hard that I think is definitely, since we are defunding things like National Endowment for Democracy right now, that it's something that you need to understand. And also the fact, the point that this guy hits home.
18:32 or these people hit home, is that all of these organizations are transnational, which means that they go across countries' boundaries. And the important aspect of that is mirrored in Gladio, because we've well established that it is also a transnational organization.
18:54 And we've obviously established quite well that the terror networks that they use, although we may call it Gladio in Italy and gray wolves in Turkey, they're transnational. The Turkish gray wolves have deployed all over the world.
19:11 The Moonies that were trained to be paramilitary have deployed all over the world. The Taiwanese terrorists deployed all over the world. The Cuban exiles deployed all over the world. These are all transnational terrorist organizations. And then recently, you know, the whole Kyle Serfman thing about 764. It's a transnational. I just posted a translated version of what one of our Swedish.
19:41 friends had posted in Sweden. And I took his and translated and then copied and pasted into a series of posts because it's very important to understand the transnational aspect of this if we're going to actually take it down. So in the introduction to this book, it starts off talking about something that we're
20:07 very well aware of, the World League for Freedom and Democracy and the Asian-specific League for Freedom and Democracy. We knew them originally as the World Anti-Communist League and the Asian People Anti-Communist League, which he gets to in a minute. But he's talking about a meeting that they held in January 2013. Again,
20:33 People think this is something that happened, you know, in the 90s or the 80s or whatever. It is still existing and they're still meeting. They just periodically change their names. And it says more than 400 delegates were at that meeting from over 100 countries. World Freedom Day celebrations.
20:56 And they had an International Development Committee meeting in which they had new chapters join, both in Thailand and Nigeria, sent a representative as well. And in the mission statement, I'm going to quote, international non-governmental organizations dedicated to the aim of uniting the freedom and democracy, which means slavery.
21:26 and fascism, just so that I can translate for you. Loving people of the entire globe without distinction to race, nationality, location, occupation, religion, party, or sex in a joint endeavor to pursue freedom and democracy, what they actually mean is slavery and fascism, for all mankind and to preserve world peace, which means we will never have peace. I have to translate for you.
21:57 It goes on to say that it is the largest scale transnational anti-communist network that has continued from the post-Cold War era, originating as what we know the Asian Pacific Anti-Communist League in 1954. It expanded beyond the Asia region in 1966 and became the World Anti-Communist League. And if you guys recall, this was created.
22:26 by Chiang Kai-shek, the drug lord, Sigmund Rhee, the CIA-installed guy in South Korea, and the two war criminals in Japan. That's who started this. Oh, and Reverend Moon from the Unification Church, the Moonies, created the Asian People Anti-Communist League, and it was supported by the China lobby that was basically a CIA front.
22:52 So, then it morphed into the World Anti-Communist League, where they started setting up the Eastern European portion of the immigrant population, where Stetsco was, and all of those, the Croatian people, they all joined the Nazi versions of them. And then it moves into a thing called CAL, C-A-L, in Latin America, and it just continued to grow and grow and grow.
23:21 what it tended itself to be was anti-communist, when in fact it was a worldwide international fascist movement. And all parading around attacking China and the Soviet Union at the same time. So it says that it morphed into global politics. That's the reason it didn't morph into it. That's the whole purpose of it. It also included...
23:52 Other secret societies like Mont Pelerin, P-E-L-E-R-I-N Society, La Circle, and Circle is spelled C-E-R-C-L-E, and also Bible smuggling operations. It included groups called the Assembly of Captive European Nations, A-C-E-N, referred to as SN.
24:20 And the U.S. created a thing called Captive Nations Week. That was a declaration in Congress that was set up basically to give the Soviet Union a black eye because they referred to the captive nations as those nations that was basically given to Russia or the Soviet Union at the end of World War II. And we've covered that.
24:54 the quote-unquote World War II ending was a major effort in the strategy of tension overall. In other words, they set boundaries, created fake countries, all to create a perpetual war from that period on, which we have been in a perpetual war from the end of World War II to today.
25:20 We have never not been at a war. There's been some conflict, whether it was regional or bigger than regional, like the Iraqi war or Afghanistan, that has perpetuated through this entire time. That was done on purpose through organizations like this. And what you're going to glean out of this book is behind the scenes of how they kept the pot stirred.
25:49 and the extent to which they went to to do that. So he goes on and says that they adopted this anti-communist label that he referred to as a flexible label. It says communist doctrine has been opposed from many directions, labeled evil, labeled a disease, and basically used to justify violence.
26:23 economic strong-arming and elimination of individual rights all in the name of trying to combat communism, you implement fascism as a way of combating communism. It goes on to say that all of the different movements had
26:45 different motivations for doing that. For example, a lot of the Christian churches said, well, communism is atheist, so we have to stand against it.
26:59 Many things like that. But everybody had an angle. You know, the businesses were against it because the state owned everything and it didn't support capitalism or none of these businesses were involved in capitalism. They went around the world subjugating entire populations to work for them as slaves. It had nothing to do with capitalism. It also, he says in the introduction, had a lot to do with the CIA.
27:27 Behind many of these different movements. So that's kind of the overview of it. And there's a couple of points. And I'm going to show you in this book, because I think it's illustrative of where he has the several of these authors have a tendency to say.
27:54 Well, there was no direct evidence, but then lists like three things that is the evidence. And so you have to be very on your toes when you read these things to read all of the stuff to include the footnotes, because they will make assessments that are not supported by their own facts, which I find hilarious. And I'll point a few of those out. He also mentions George Kennan.
28:21 which comes up repeatedly because he was one of the first people to begin the Cold War rhetoric to a large extent. And it says Kennan's memo led directly to the first such public-private organization in 1949 called the National Committee for a Free Europe.
28:48 Goated on by Kennan, the CIA, under the initial guidance of its pioneers, Frank Wisner and Alan Dulles, rapidly developed what was referred to as the mighty Wurlitzer of patrons and partnerships that enabled it to disseminate news, views, opinions throughout the world. Parts of this extensive CIA sphere of influence have been thoroughly covered, but gaps still remain.
29:15 The extensive reach of the CIA has inevitably led to suspicions of agency involvement in all anti-communist activities, because they basically were. It says a good example was the CIA money being pivotal to the financing of the first Bilderberg meeting.
29:38 It also says NATO was seen by many as a potential central pole around which to organize psychological warfare on a transatlantic level, which of course we know they did via Operation Gladio. He also points out that Article 2 of the North Atlantic Treaty, NATO functioned more as an inspiration for private organizations to fill in the space themselves.
30:05 but of course it became the facilitator. He also talked about the fact that there was a organization called the EIA that had to, let's see, and it was created in, I'm trying to see where, it linked state and non-state actors.
30:36 that created a dedicated campaign to span Europe and the United States, coordinating propaganda through brochures and press reviews. Oh, here it is. Entente International Anticommuniste. It was set up in Geneva. So it's Entente, E-N-T-E-N-T-E, internationality, however you say that in the French or Switzerland.
31:06 EIA. So it says that until in existence until 1950, the EIA linked the state and non-state actors and coordinating propaganda through monthly press reviews that supposedly was exposing Soviet presence in Western Europe.
31:37 Aiming for the fall of the Soviet communist regime and the destruction of the third international, the Comintern, the EIA was never able to gain a foothold in the United States, where anti-communist organizations didn't necessarily want to affiliate with foreign-based partners. While the EIA's religious committee, called ProDeo,
32:04 which existed from 1933 to 1939, would also fail to unite Catholics, Protestants, and exiled Orthodox groups during the initial phases of the Soviet Union. The Protestant Moral Rearmament, which was another movement established in 1939 in Oxford, England, would gather more support on a faith-based grounds.
32:33 after the World War II. So we're going to throw everything we have to include the kitchen sink at this effort. Now, there's also an organization, and I don't know how to pronounce this, it's French, called PAIX. Then the second word is ET, and then Liberty.
33:01 however you say that in French, I'm just going to call it the Liberty effort, was set up as well as a company or an organization, I should say it wasn't a company, called Interdoc. I-N-T-E-R-D-O-C. We're going to hear a lot about them in this book. Interdoc. And Bilderberg. All of these organizations, these three, are talked about a lot in this book. The Liberty group.
33:32 Interdoc in the Bilderbergs. And it talks about, in the introduction, about how NATO interfaced with all three of those organizations in order to set up this anti-communist transnational effort. It goes on to say that the desire for a spiritual NATO or a Marshall Plan for the mind
34:02 became one of their coalescing goals as they set up this transnational anti-communist effort. I would call it more like brainwashing or propaganda. It talks about how another organization dealing with the Catholic Church that was referred to by these initials, CIDCC.
34:34 And it's in French, the name of it. It's Catholic Committee International Defense, Civilization, and then whatever that last C is. I don't know. But you can tell by the words that it has to do with defense, international, and a committee, and civilization. And it is under the Catholic Church. And it talks about this setting up.
35:02 of a thing called the Congress for Cultural Freedom. Now, the Congress for Cultural Freedom is a CIA front, by the way, and we've come across that repeatedly. It's almost as common as the Institute of Peace when it comes to Operation Gladio. It was a way for them to destroy people's culture in order to implement fascism. Again, it's always a play on words.
35:30 He goes on and points out that the first covers in the book, the first section covers the 40s and 50s when the Soviet Union reactivated its network of fronts from the Muesenberg period in Central and Eastern Europe's immigrant population. And then there was responses to that.
36:00 by the CIA MI6 and West German Galen organization, which morphed into the West German's intelligence function called the BND. And of course we know, and this guy obviously don't know, that the Galen CIA group, the effort to collaborate
36:31 was set up before the end of World War II. So no, the Soviet Union didn't do it first. They had already planned to do the anti-communist, and you'll see in here there's some proof to that, effort to attack the Soviet Union in this anti-communist effort well before the end of World War II. And we've established that in other books that we've went through as well. Okay, so.
37:03 He goes into a little bit of why it's important to recognize that it's a transnational effort. I think we already were well along in our education process that we don't need to dwell too much on that. But one point I do want to make.
37:27 It says transnational became a key moniker through which to appreciate a wider array of agents of social change. Using organizations such as the Red Cross, anti-slavery movements, feminist movements, culture was attacked. And all of those efforts were used as a way to assimilate people into a concerted.
37:57 driven effort, even if it meant destroying the cultures that their independent countries had. So they're coalescing around and we're all going to die if the Soviet Union isn't held in check. And while we're focusing on the fact that we're all going to die because of this communist threat, they're destroying our culture and we're not even paying attention to it. Kind of is the point that he's making.
38:31 Okay. Then he goes into a little bit about how the whole thing is set up. So we're just going to jump back in to chapter one. It starts off talking about a magazine that, I mean, I went back and read some of these articles in Ramparts, R-A-M-P-A-R-T-S, a wonderful truth telling magazine.
38:54 That was published on the West Coast. Obviously, the Transnational Network eventually made it go bankrupt because it was printing too much truth. But in this case, we're in February 1967, and 67 obviously is a very pivotal year for a lot of things. That's the USS Liberty. That's the whole...
39:22 year before we go into the 68 election. Lots of turmoil going on. West Coast magazine Ramparts revealed that the CIA was secretly funding the ostensibly independent American student organization, the U.S. National Student Association, via an array of pass-through foundations. The New York Times, which previously had sat on stories about this, finally began printing information about it.
39:51 and a covert effort during the Cold War battle to quote-unquote wins hearts and minds. Rampart's revelation with a series of articles exposing concealed the CIA subsidies to various private citizens groups, many with overseas affiliates. And again,
40:13 These are the same U.S. National Student Associations that were tethered to the National Weather Underground and some of the other terrorist acts that were going on at the time, which ties all of that domestic terrorism to Operation Gladio efforts as well. It says that consequences for the Congress for Cultural Freedom, CCF,
40:39 The CIA's Paris-based front group called Cultural Cold War. The story that was exposed showed recipients of secret U.S. government grants in 1967, and it started with an organization called the American Society of African Culture. A group of African Americans engaged in cultural exchange.
41:07 with African communities, and on the African continent. This AMSAC is called American Society of African Culture, AMSAC. AMSAC's origins was a program and a CIA front. The U.S. government's attempt to turn transnational citizen networks into weapons of anti-communist political warfare, which you and I would call that propaganda.
41:39 or a strategy of tension. The CIA's effort to capture this transnational African network for the Cold War purposes had many of the foremost Black intellectuals and artists of the day participating in it. The activities of AMSAC African Americans were dogged with problems. The appropriation of the organization's resources
42:10 resources and projects were always tinged with CIA involvement. AMSAC's origins. The French African intellectuals living in Paris called an international conference in 1956. And I got to stop right there because you guys have to understand who are the African intellectuals living in Paris?
42:38 Now, you know that there's a slew of African countries that are former French colonies. So the only Africans in France, a part of that colonial network, were people that went to France on behest of the French government.
42:58 So, you know, we've established this kind of template where these Western countries go into these third world countries and they accumulate what is commonly referred to as an elite group, right? And like when we were looking at it in Cuba, the elite group were the people that they installed as the sugar plantation.
43:26 It was the person that ran the bus company for William Polly. It was the people that ran the airline that William Polly owned. So they groom and educate an elite group to oversee a plantation in the form of a country. And those elite groups of people are educated in the home country of the colonial masters.
43:55 basically make them fat, dumb, and happy, and then they do whatever the colonizer wants them to do when they're in country. And so you have to keep in mind who these people are that we're talking about. So the French African intellectuals living in Paris calls this conference. It's called the Congress of Negro Writers and Artists. The group gathered around a journal called Presence Africa.
44:25 It was dedicated to a principle, and I don't know how you say this word, so I'm just going to spell it, N-E-G-R-I-T-U-D-E. It was defined as a movement started by a single Singeli poet politician by the name of Leopold Singar, S-E-N-G-H-O-R.
44:55 It was started in the 1930s to celebrate African cultural heritage, France style. So it also was basically a variant of a French pan-African movement, but strictly under French control. And they basically were trying to create the fact that there was some common,
45:28 brotherhood of all of these people so that they could kind of gain an authority over the people that had been left behind in these former colonial countries or soon to be former colonial countries. They weren't all free in the 50s. The U.S. government was interested in this development for several reasons. Mainly, the communist movement, quote unquote,
45:57 had a history of front activities in Africa, which this is this guy's comment, which I find laughable. At that point, the communists did not have a lot of fronts in Africa. Do you know who had a lot of fronts in Africa? The West. As a matter of fact, not only did they have fronts, they actually were still colonies of the West. And in 1951, a group called Civil Rights Congress,
46:27 While some people had alleged that it was communist controlled, it actually was not communist controlled. It was not controlled by the West. But we have to call it communist control. It petitioned the UN alleging that countries were engaged in a campaign of genocide against their black citizens and those countries that were engaged in the genocide.
46:57 would have been the French colonial masters. So you can understand why the French colonial masters wanted to call this particular group communist inspired because they were ratting out the West. So there's a lot of stuff going on at this time is the moral of that story. And as we have grown accustomed to, that anything that promoted the individual rights of Africans was labeled...
47:27 so that the French and the British and the Portugal and Belgium could continue their colonial exploitation. So there was a global struggle of black people against white domination in African countries.
47:50 So there was a growing awareness of these race problems, and the U.S. was petrified that that was going to spark unrest in the U.S. So, and again, it's all blamed on the communists. Finally, the European colonialism began turning over quote-unquote freedom to the African colonies, which we know they didn't really do that. They just used the post-World War II.
48:21 like the IMF and the World Bank to continue to control them. But anyway, on with the story. They were trying to capture the allegiance of the same people that they had ruled over in the case of the Congo, 350 years, without allowing them to have any influence by the quote-unquote communists. So there was also...
48:51 an Asian African Congress that happened in 1955 in Indonesia. Another Senegal-born editor described this as basically the follow-on to the original Paris one. To ensure that Congress did not succumb to communist influence, the U.S. government officials weighed up
49:20 the possibility of enlisting the assistance of America's own black citizenry. So, world-famous singer and actor Paul Robeson, and writer and founding father of Pan-Americanism, W.E.B. Du Bois, was recruited for this effort.
49:50 There was another major African-American figure in residence in Paris and a friend of the group by the name of Richard Wright, W-R-I-G-H-T. He was authored of one of the greatest works in the 20th century called Native Son. He was sympathetic with African cultural nationalism, yet at the same time, a convinced anti-communist.
50:21 he was going to be used. Let's see. There was another classic that was printed called The God That Failed. He had also received money from the Congress of Cultural Freedom, which is CIA. And part of the reason why he was receiving that money is so he could attend these conferences, basically as like their eyes on what was going on.
50:53 both the one in Asia and the one in Paris. So his mission there was to spot any quote-unquote communist influence in them. Thanks in part to Wright's effort, a delegation did come from the U.S., consisting mainly of leading African-American educators, among them president of Lincoln University, Horace Mann Bond.
51:23 and a professor of government from New York City's college, John A. Davis. These men were interested in African culture, but did not share Robeson and Dubois' politics of anti-colonialism. Rather, they were liberal, but they were all, quote-unquote, anti-communist. So Wright was not entirely acting on his own.
51:55 And since 1954, John Davis had helped run the American Information Committee on Race and Caste, a New York-based organization whose mission involved investigating foreign attitudes towards Americans' race problem and laying foundations for an international body promoting cultural exchange between the U.S. and post-colonial world.
52:22 The committee underwrote the expenses of a five-man U.S. delegation traveling to Paris with funds ostensibly coming from prominent New York philanthropists. These included people like Bethel M. Webster, and you spell Bethel a little weird, B-E-T-H-U-E-L, who earlier in the decade had helped set up America Fund for Free Jurists.
52:50 which later was revealed to be another CIA front company funneling funds to an organization called the International Commission of Jurists. The American Information Committee on Race and Caste was subsequently renamed Council on Race and Caste in World Affairs, or CORAK, C-O-R-A-K, excuse me, A-C.
53:15 After it was noted that the word information had very unpleasant connotations, meaning basically propaganda. In 1967, Korak was also identified as another CIA front. Surprise, surprise! The five African Americans were regarded with considerable suspicion by everybody else at the Congress, in part because of a message from W.
53:42 E.B. DuBose reading out during the first session of the Congress. DuBose was unable to attend in person after he had been refused a U.S. passport. Here's part of his message, quote, any American Negro traveling abroad today must either not care about Negroes or say that the State Department wishes him to say, unquote.
54:08 So he basically outed the entire contingent, saying that if they got a passport or a visa to travel, that they were on the payroll of the CIA. According to African-American novelist James Baldwin, in Paris covering the conference for the Congress for Cultural Freedom magazine encounter, again, the CIA op.
54:30 DeBose intervention, quote, very nearly destroyed whatever effectiveness the American delegation then sitting in the hall might have hoped to have had, unquote. Well, everybody already knew that they were CIA stooges. So it says African-Americans suspected a hidden communist hand in the proceedings of the Congress, especially when the speakers were warmly applauded for making anti-American statements. Now, again.
54:58 This has nothing to do with them being communists. It has everything to do with them knowing what we have already been doing around the world because this is post us already cooing governments post-World War II. It goes on to say that some of the African colonies of France and Haitian delegates commented on
55:31 how light-colored skin the Africans, Americans from America were, and basically was using that as another reason saying that they were basically not of them. Despite these divisions, the Congress succeeded in creating a permanent international body devoted to promoting African culture. It was called the SAC, S-A-C.
56:02 Society African Culture, with headquarters in Paris and local affiliates in Africa and countries in the African diaspora, meaning immigrant populations. Now, keep in mind that it was set up in Paris and NATO is in Paris. NATO running Operation Gladia is in Paris with all of these immigrant populations.
56:32 The natural tension persisted, and in January 1957, a guy by the name of Diop, D-I-O-P, his first name is A-L-I-O-U-N-E, wrote John Davis informing him that the international members were being sought for the SAC Executive Council.
57:00 and that the individuals he had in mind to represent the U.S. were none other than Paul Robeson and W.E.B. DuBose. Davis, who had begun to organize the American delegation into the SAC affiliate, was appalled at that suggestion and insisted instead that you needed two less controversial people because those people weren't going to be allowed to travel anywhere because they didn't represent the U.S.
57:30 should we say, the CIA. So he recommended Duke Ellington, the musician, and future Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall, which really doesn't say anything good about either one of them, actually. Back down and peaceful relations were restored, but then another row was ignited after the SAC requested money from CORAC to supplement their
58:01 And Davis responded by proposing an appointment of an American to the board if they were going to receive U.S. funding. This time it was DIOP who protested and Davis basically withdrew that stipulation. So basically the CIA is funding this through the Congress for Cultural Freedom.
58:30 out of their New York City office. So hopefully y'all are following that. The American Society of African Culture was formally launched in June of 1957. It began operations that November. And initially, AMSAC was entirely financially dependent on CORAC. In other words, the CIA.
59:00 And this was being set up exactly like the National Student Association. And they had another organization called the Foundation for Youth and Student Affairs, which acted as a conduit for the CIA to fund these things. The same Midtown territory occupied
59:25 by a CIA front organization called the American Committee for Cultural Freedom was used not only by that organization, but also the National Student Association. You know, basically they're all hanging out in the same building. All of the legal paperwork was set up by that Bethel Webster's law firm. CORAC subsidies were limited to operational costs and was...
59:55 funneled through the CIA fronts. But there was also another thing that was outed a long time afterwards called the Colt and Cleveland Dodge Foundation, which also money laundered money for the CIA into contributions to things like this. That fact was established several years after this. But again, more CIA funding from other conduits. The CIA money was spent
1:00:24 partly on domestic issues, which again, they're not allowed to do, but they do anyway through these front organizations. And they were basically producing propaganda, pamphlets, reports, all kinds of stuff like that. And basically, starting with a three-day planning meeting in June of 1958, AMSAC sponsored a series of annual conferences featuring a glittery array of black internet,
1:00:56 intellectuals, artists, and performers. The 1959 conference, staged like many other engagements of the cultural Cold War in New York City's Waldorf Astoria Hotel, was addressed by Massachusetts Senator John F. Kennedy. There were also high-profile one-off events in New York and
1:01:20 There was a 1959 winter conference called The Negro Writer and His Relationship to His Roots, which had Langston Hughes, who is a poet, and there were also regional and regular lectures given at AMSEC's Manhattan office. The Society produced a number of publications and a six-page monthly newsletter that was translated into French.
1:01:49 but written in English. One of the special editions was called Africa Seen by American Negroes. That's the name of the article. Finally, AMSAC provided various cultural services to Africans visiting the U.S., including an information bureau, student exchange grants, and English language education for U.N. delegates. Now, basically, let me translate that to you since we have
1:02:18 a plethora of research to know exactly what they're doing here. This is how the CIA recruits agents to go back and spy on their country. They sponsor these quote-unquote grants and have people come to the United States for an education and then they recruit them to go back and spy on their home country.
1:02:38 whether they're knowingly spying or not, because they befriend them. Some, they actually get to be actual spies on the payroll of the CIA. Others, they just use. They use as a conduit when the CIA fronts travel to that area, knowing that they've been educated in America and they speak English. Then they call them up and they go, oh, hey, you know, you don't know me, but I knew you back then. We kind of met.
1:03:07 That's basically how this whole thing operates. And that's the reason why they spend their money to do that. These information bureaus are used basically to spy on the people. And then the English language education for the UN is the same way. It's your foot in the door in order to be able to recruit them and turn them to spy on their countries. AMSAC rolled out a program of activities on the African continent as well.
1:03:36 One of them was called Negro Culture in Africa and the Americas. It was held in Nigeria in December 1961, at the same time of Nigerians' independence celebration. Again, this is the opportunity for you to go in with the CIA and get a feel for what's going on, who are the strong leaders, who's the nationalists, who's...
1:04:03 whatever, who you can corrupt. Among the American artists performing at the event, before an audience of 5,000 people in King George's Stadium, were U.S. jazz musicians Lionel Hampton and Nina Simone. Shortly after the festival closed, AMSAC opened a West African cultural center in the downtown capital, which turned into...
1:04:33 a CIA station. Weirdly enough, we have suffered, this is a quote, we have suffered enough from the cultural oppression of Europe, Diop wrote John Davis, to hope that our black brothers of America will not give rebirth to cultural colonialism, unquote, which of course is exactly what was going on.
1:05:02 Harvard University's Martin Kilson told Davis in April 1962, African students at Harvard did not like AMSAC's assertive features. In other words, they were on to AMSAC. They were exerting a huge amount of pressure onto the students coming over.
1:05:36 to participate in CIA activities. Despite the misgivings about the imbalance between AMSAC's domestic and foreign programs, they sent eminent African Americans to Africa, especially after the black nationalist leader Malcolm X visited the continent in 1964.
1:05:58 making a series of statements that were highly critical of U.S. and their race relations and foreign policy. So they had to go clean up his mess. In 1965, AMSAC funded a five-week African tour of a civil rights leader, i.e. an approved CIA asset, James Farmer. Although Farmer was not a racial moderate, he was a pioneer in a thing called non-violent.
1:06:27 form of civil disobedience. That's going to matter later. Used by the civil rights movement in a campaign against U.S. apartheid. He rejected Malcolm's message of black retaliation and separatism. The purpose of his tour was to articulate a message that was given to him by the director of the U.S. Information Agency.
1:06:57 which is the propaganda front for the CIA. African-American Carl Rowan, who looked forward to Farmer, quote, voicing the true aspirations of most Negro Americans as compared to what had been said in Africa by such spokesman as Malcolm X, unquote. In other words, you heard from an independent voice. Now you're going to hear from the CIA.
1:07:25 After the tour concluded, AMSAC's leadership declared they were extremely well satisfied with his success. And they had already began discussing of funding another trip. And their guest speaker for that next trip was going to be Martin Luther King Jr. How much did members of AMSAC know about the CIA's role in their funding?
1:07:58 The majority of the organization exposed as a CIA front in 1967. AMSAC denied all knowledge of knowing there was any link to it. However, there were records kept at Howard University, which became very interesting. The papers that were there seemed originally not to have any smoking gun.
1:08:29 However, there was a memorandum written by Boston University sociologist Adelaide Cromwell Hill to other members of AMSAC's executive council just after the New York Times expose in February 1967. This is a quote. First of all, the possibility of CIA involvement is not new information to me. Unquote.
1:08:58 basically acknowledging that they know it. This is also a quote. I remember the exact time and place almost eight years ago, eight years ago, like 1959, when such a possibility was confided in me. Several years later, further and more detailed confirmation was given to me by someone else. Around the edges were frequent innuendos and asides. None of this was documented, understandably so, unquote.
1:09:28 Hill's claim that knowledge of the CIA relationship was widespread in AMSEC circle is supported by oral testimony from one of the organization's administrative officers, managing director Yvonne Walker. Interviewed years later, Walker recalled attending a meeting with John Davis and two CIA officers who required her to swear an oath.
1:09:57 of secrecy before disclosing covert associations with the society to include the National Student Association. Thereafter, she and AMSEC officers would meet with CIA case officers in hotel rooms, usually in New York, but also in Washington, D.C. We were kept fully informed by Dr. Davis on everything that was going on, Walker said. In short,
1:10:25 Clear evidence exists that AMSAC was in fact a CIA front. This coincides with Ramhart's revelations that that in fact was true. So that then goes to James Farmer's tour with the society that he had and then the proposed one that was going to happen the year after that with MLK.
1:10:54 This, combined with the widespread state of knowledge about CIA subsidies, helped explain the lack of internal recriminations inside of AMSAC in February 1967 when this was exposed, like no one was held accountable, which we're completely used to now.
1:11:20 organizations like the Congress for Cultural Freedom was also engulfed in its own exposure of having been outed as a CIA front as well. So it ends up, it says, however, John Davis was unable to find other funding. And so basically the entire organization, once the CIA was cut off from funding them, that they basically went belly up because
1:11:52 They had no other way of funding them. And then he gives somewhat of an overview. But that's chapter number one. Chapter number two is going to get into the union and trade associations, which we will cover tomorrow. But that's crazy. We can go ahead and open it up for questions.
1:12:23 Great book. And I found some links that I posted below for anybody who wants to dig further. And a lot of them are even CIA documents that back up exactly what she's reading. So it's just, you know, crazy. And a lot of the let me let me look here real quick. This guy had in order to write all of that.
1:12:51 because that's like the first essay. These are all done in essays as opposed to like a normal book where it's just chapter after chapter. He has 34 footnotes, which do include CIA documents as that. So that kind of coincides with the research that he did as well. And thank you for doing that, Bridget. And I know SR's probably doing it as well. SR, go ahead. Thank you, Colonel. What did I find?
1:13:26 A twist in history about all of this is the CIA was using this to pit us all against each other. Yes. But what came out of this was a civil rights movement of the United Nations. It just blows my mind. Which is basically kind of what they did with the BLM movement, right?
1:13:55 It's all about the strategy of tension. So if you understand how this works, there are, and we've learned this by looking into these organizations. When I looked into the Office of Public Safety, National Endowment for Democracy, USAID, they fund what is referred to as survey teams. Remember when we did Jamaica?
1:14:20 The survey guy that went down there with a couple other, they were quote unquote college students, all on USAID dime, meaning CIA dime. They did a quote unquote survey in Jamaica. And the survey is to find friction, to identify minority groups that have a beef with their government.
1:14:50 This is a psychological operation. They not only give them hand, they go house to house. They talk to these people. They go to wherever younger people hang out. They are looking for leaders that are disgruntled that they can co-opt into leading revolutions. And when they get their information, they bring it back to CIA headquarters. They analyze it and they decide which.
1:15:20 factions, they're going to pit against each other. This is a very articulated, meticulous effort to destroy entire countries to include our own. When those friction points are identified, they are then magnified with billions of dollars that's poured into these countries in order to foment revolutions, overthrow the government.
1:15:49 and put in a dictator. It is a very well documented, and they will use anything. They will use transgender as they have here. They will use race as they have here. They will use, when you're all the same race, they use tribal friction points. So yes, very well. I guess what really, excuse me, Colonel, but I guess what really torched me off about all of this is,
1:16:20 Even after the civil rights movement and this nation was heading in the right direction, they put a president in place that brought all of this crap back. Yes. And it just, oh, it pisses me off. Resegregated everything. Absolutely. Because they have to have a strategy of tension in order to control us.
1:16:45 That's why what we're talking about is so important. If we all banded together, they couldn't do it to us. That's why this message is so important. I was going to say, because everything that you've talked about, like growing up here in Las Vegas, they separated us. They had us in like little pods, like with a school. So like in elementary school, we were in our normal area, but then like the lower income, they would bus.
1:17:17 Because we were segregated, the city was. So they would bus into the suburbs. And then when it was time for us to go into sixth grade, they would put us into, they called them sixth grade centers. So they've been doing it to us forever without us even realizing that they've been trying to keep us separated. Does that make sense? Yeah. It really makes you rethink about the whole school choice.
1:17:47 And even how the whole thing has just been set up since the very inception, you know? Well, so the whole school is a completely different issue. And I'll just say this. Having grown up during desegregation in the 60s here in Florida, where supposedly it was like the worst thing in the world, there was no violence. It wasn't bad at all.
1:18:14 I ended up there were in my neighborhood, we got rezoned to a primarily black school. There were like maybe 50 kids that were white that ended up going to that school at the beginning of the school year. Three of them was me and my two sisters. We were.
1:18:34 Treated like rock stars there. Didn't please us in the least. The girls that sat behind me liked combing. I had really long hair. They loved combing my hair. And again, everybody wanted us on their teams. When you're out in the schoolyard, it was like you were a celebrity. There was nothing negative about it. And so that's the environment that I grew up in. Our neighborhood was desegregated. We had people of...
1:19:04 all race there because my dad was a truck driver. We didn't have any money. We were lower income people and we lived in lower income neighborhoods. And so I thought the whole thing was kind of like no big deal until when I joined the military and I was in Southern Indiana on the 10 year anniversary of
1:19:31 desegregation there at a friend's house. And I was watching them turn over school buses with kids in them and trying to light them on fire. So that, and I realized Kentucky's considered the South, but Southern Indiana was happening there too. And I, again,
1:19:53 You know, it's always you grow up and you're like, oh, the South is the racist and all of that other stuff. I found more racism in the Midwest than I did anywhere else living all over the world. It was phenomenal as far as craziness as it related to that. So here's what I would say about the whole school choice. The desegregation was never meant to actually do any benefit.
1:20:20 to Americans. What it did, as Stellar just mentioned with the busing, is it took parents out of their schools, their kids' schools. So in the case of where we lived, we had an elementary school that was less than a mile from our house. We were no longer allowed to go there, which my mom was the PTA president. She was like the homeroom mother. We weren't allowed to go there anymore.
1:20:47 We had to go to a primarily black school that was like 10 miles from our house. Well, do you know what happened? We only had one car. And when my dad was home, my mom couldn't help at the school. And that was meant to ship kids all over the towns instead of neighborhood schools where moms primarily.
1:21:08 were actively involved in their kids' school life. And because a lot of, especially the lower income kids, didn't have an extra car, you immediately separated parents from involvement in the schools. That was the fundamental reason that they did what they did with the schools. And that broke this...
1:21:30 hierarchy that we had of accountability over our public schools and that is the beginning of the crazy shit that happened in our schools from then on so that was the real purpose and again that this um we were just talking about the um cultural um quote unquote cultural freedom which means enslavement um that's what it was meant to do it was to destroy people's
1:21:58 vultures and to imprison you. And you have to take control of the education system if you're going to do that. And that's what that entire initiative was about, in my opinion. Miles, go ahead. Good evening, Colonel. I think it goes back a lot further. You have to remember that the elites, even in D.C. and the North, they're racist. So they were looking at what was going on in slavery.
1:22:30 And across the world. And they used it in their playbook because they had to make sure that the slaves didn't unite and actually take over. Now, when you get after the when the Fed came in, there was a group of elite black people that had a lot of money, mostly West Indians. And they wanted to be part of the elite.
1:22:58 And they said, no, no, no. You can be the guardians of the elite. Those are called the boulets. And I think that they've been involved in a lot of stuff. George Floyd was a boulet. LeBron James is a boulet. Kobe Bryant was a boulet. So when you talk about how Hollywood and the CIA is involved in the music business, they were always using these people as useful idiots.
1:23:27 And I don't really want to go into that too much. There's a book called The Reluctant Entrepreneur, and that talks about how the strategy of tension after the Civil War kept the American slaves not to be entrepreneurs, to keep them in slavery. You might want to read that book. I don't think it has anything to do with Gladio, but it's really a good study of what the American blacks had to go through after slavery.
1:23:56 And just so you know, Colonel, my experience in 1963 in Huntsville, Alabama, at an integrated Catholic school was completely different than yours. That's a whole new space on that one. So I've read a lot about the Boulay Society, and it is a very interesting dynamic. I agree with you. Stella, go ahead. I was going to say that.
1:24:30 When they do these zonings and stuff like that, so like Las Vegas, third largest school district in the country. They will not break it apart because of the tax incentives and because of the busing. They make so much money off the busing. It's insane. When I used to live in Arizona, I lived in Phoenix. I lived in a place. It was over by Camelback Mountain. Now I can't even think what it was. But when they moved, they made their own school district.
1:24:59 And the politicians did the zoning based on like the tax income and how it was spread out. So they used part of like the Camelback Mountain area, Paradise Valley, excuse me, the true Paradise Valley, not what everybody thinks is.
1:25:15 because they're custom homes that are on minimum one-acre lots and stuff, and they're super, super huge. But anyway, they integrated part of the – they split up the Arcadia School District and the Phoenix Unified, and then they put in this other one, Creighton, and had part of the richest areas in Phoenix or in the Valley that were zoned for it, but none of the kids would go to the –
1:25:40 None of their kids went to public school anyway. They all went to private. But it was because of the tax money. And I think that a lot of how, you know, like I remember seeing the map of Africa and how, you know, like the different.
1:25:51 colonialists, how they split it apart based on, you know, the different countries like the Danish or the British or the French empires or whatever. And it was all based, it seems like, on what the resources were. So I don't know if that's part. I mean, it seems like the school districts and how the United States school district system was pretty jacked up, kind of like how they did the other stuff. I don't know if that's true or not, but it just seems like it. It's very jacked up. I agree with that.
1:26:24 Yeah. Anyway. Anybody else have anything else they want to add? Good to see Froggy in the house. He needs to start opening Monday evenings again so we can still have our fixes with you guys. Golfing. I know. He must be really, really busy, which is good. We're going through a boom here in Las Vegas. I'm trying to get to my microphone. My apologies.
1:27:00 It's good to hear you guys. Are you going to start opening up the pond on Monday afternoons again? Yeah. I'm coaxing you because, you know, a lot of people are asking me. I'll schedule it in advance and it'll be open Monday at five o'clock. Can you hear me? Yeah. Okay. Yeah, it'll definitely be open at five o'clock. And yes, I've been seriously busy, but busy in a really great way. Oh, that's awesome. Yeah.
1:27:33 But, yeah, I need to get back on here. I'm seeing all this fun that people are doing, and I guess, you know what, it's time to have some fun with them. They won't leave me alone anyway, so might as well jump back in and give them what they can't handle. Yep. We need you on the playing field, Frog. It's a lot of fun. I miss all you guys. I really do. Miles, go ahead. So I'm going to give you guys a little teaser because I'm going to have to write this down because it is part of history.
1:28:05 Nobody knows about this. So my father was working at Brown Engineering in Huntsville, Alabama, and they had contracts with the Redstone Arsenal. So my mom was raised Catholic, and there's two Catholic schools, one downtown. It was all white. This is 1963, guys. There was another one in the black community, and it was integrated, and it was mostly Army brats that went there. I don't know why they decided that.
1:28:35 My sister and I should go there. So my dad started an integrated Boy Scout troop. And when the Jamboree came, it was going to be at the Redstone Arsenal. And he definitely had connections at the Arsenal, at the Army base, because of the kids and their parents. They supplied all the equipment. We went through a weekend of hell when all the other Boy Scout troops found out what was going on.
1:29:06 I don't know if there was in the South at the time, in 1963, an integrated Boy Scout troop that my father was leading. And ramifications from that incident, the Ku Klux Klan came after us. And that's why I'm living in Minnesota. We just bought a house. And he moved the family away from the threat.
1:29:33 because the FBI came in and gave protection to the president of the company and the vice president of Brown Engineering, but not the marketing director, which was my father. So I've had a little different experience, and I've got to write this all down before I forget about it, because it was a very unique experience of the day. Thanks, Colonel. Sure. Anybody else?
1:30:05 So we are going to track through this book. This book will go quickly. It is a small book, but it is packed with information. And so we're going to move on to the labor and the union part in the next couple of days. So I'm really looking forward to that. And I know all along we'll have a lot to say about that. All right. So you guys take care.
1:30:32 I will see you tomorrow. Thanks for being here. Thank you, Colonel.

Entities here

American Society of African Culture17John W. Davis10W.E.B. Du Bois6Congress for Cultural Freedom6Operation Gladio6United Mexican American Students5Council on Race and Caste in World Affairs4James Farmer4Entente Internationale Anticommuniste4National Student Association4Richard Wright4Malcolm X3Soviet Union3Paul Robeson3World Anti-Communist League3Alioune Diop3George F. Kennan3USAID3Interdoc2Alabama2Unification Church2Bethuel M. Webster2American Information Committee on Race and Caste2North Atlantic Treaty Organization2The New York Times2Jamaica2Catholic Committee International Defense, Civilization, and Culture2Yvonne Walker2Ramparts2Brown Engineering2Redstone Arsenal2BND2Bilderberg Group2Encounter1Duke Ellington1Thurgood Marshall1Foundation for Youth and Student Affairs1American Committee for Cultural Freedom1Colt and Cleveland Dodge Foundation1Langston Hughes1

Claims made here

Operation Gladio front_for Grey Wolves host_asserted ▶ 18:54
“And we've obviously established quite well that the terror networks that they use, although we may call it Gladio in Italy and gray wolves in Turkey, they're transnational. The Turkish gray wolves hav…”
World Anti-Communist League founded Chiang Kai-shek book_quoted ▶ 22:26
“by Chiang Kai-shek, the drug lord, Sigmund Rhee, the CIA-installed guy in South Korea, and the two war criminals in Japan. That's who started this. Oh, and Reverend Moon from the Unification Church, t…”
World Anti-Communist League founded Syngman Rhee book_quoted ▶ 22:26
“by Chiang Kai-shek, the drug lord, Sigmund Rhee, the CIA-installed guy in South Korea, and the two war criminals in Japan. That's who started this. Oh, and Reverend Moon from the Unification Church, t…”
World Anti-Communist League founded Sun Myung Moon book_quoted ▶ 22:26
“by Chiang Kai-shek, the drug lord, Sigmund Rhee, the CIA-installed guy in South Korea, and the two war criminals in Japan. That's who started this. Oh, and Reverend Moon from the Unification Church, t…”
George F. Kennan founded National Committee for a Free Europe book_quoted ▶ 28:21
“which comes up repeatedly because he was one of the first people to begin the Cold War rhetoric to a large extent. And it says Kennan's memo led directly to the first such public-private organization …”
North Atlantic Treaty Organization carried_out_attack Operation Gladio host_asserted ▶ 29:38
“It also says NATO was seen by many as a potential central pole around which to organize psychological warfare on a transatlantic level, which of course we know they did via Operation Gladio. He also p…”
Entente Internationale Anticommuniste founded Pro Deo Network book_quoted ▶ 31:37
“Aiming for the fall of the Soviet communist regime and the destruction of the third international, the Comintern, the EIA was never able to gain a foothold in the United States, where anti-communist o…”
Richard Wright member_of Congress for Cultural Freedom book_quoted ▶ 50:21
“he was going to be used. Let's see. There was another classic that was printed called The God That Failed. He had also received money from the Congress of Cultural Freedom, which is CIA. And part of t…”
John W. Davis headed American Information Committee on Race and Caste book_quoted ▶ 51:55
“And since 1954, John Davis had helped run the American Information Committee on Race and Caste, a New York-based organization whose mission involved investigating foreign attitudes towards Americans' …”
American Information Committee on Race and Caste succeeded Council on Race and Caste in World Affairs book_quoted ▶ 52:50
“which later was revealed to be another CIA front company funneling funds to an organization called the International Commission of Jurists. The American Information Committee on Race and Caste was sub…”
Council on Race and Caste in World Affairs funded American Society of African Culture book_quoted ▶ 58:30
“out of their New York City office. So hopefully y'all are following that. The American Society of African Culture was formally launched in June of 1957. It began operations that November. And initiall…”
American Society of African Culture funded James Farmer book_quoted ▶ 1:05:58
“making a series of statements that were highly critical of U.S. and their race relations and foreign policy. So they had to go clean up his mess. In 1965, AMSAC funded a five-week African tour of a ci…”
Carl Rowan headed United States Information Agency book_quoted ▶ 1:06:27
“form of civil disobedience. That's going to matter later. Used by the civil rights movement in a campaign against U.S. apartheid. He rejected Malcolm's message of black retaliation and separatism. The…”
Yvonne Walker member_of United Mexican American Students book_quoted ▶ 1:09:28
“Hill's claim that knowledge of the CIA relationship was widespread in AMSEC circle is supported by oral testimony from one of the organization's administrative officers, managing director Yvonne Walke…”
USAID funded National Endowment for Democracy guest_asserted ▶ 1:13:55
“It's all about the strategy of tension. So if you understand how this works, there are, and we've learned this by looking into these organizations. When I looked into the Office of Public Safety, Nati…”
Alabama Ku Klux Klan carried_out_attack Brown Engineering host_asserted ▶ 1:29:06
“I don't know if there was in the South at the time, in 1963, an integrated Boy Scout troop that my father was leading. And ramifications from that incident, the Ku Klux Klan came after us. And that's …”