The Colonel’s Corner Transnational AntiCommunism&Cold War Part 11
53:50 · ▶ watch on Rumble
Transcript
0:00
Okay. Are you back, Bridget? Yes, ma'am. All right. Take two. Yep. That's crazy. All right. So just so that it's all captured on this one recording, the bottom line up front is there's a whole bunch of people that did get together and create a curriculum called Sovietology.
0:29
They don't know any more about the Soviet Union than you and I do. And it leaves you at the end with more perplexed than we started off with. But I want to show you how they did it. Because I think it's instructive as to how they create propaganda. And it's years in the making. And it's by people who you wouldn't think would be doing it.
0:59
So, I mean, now we do, but you wouldn't have at the time. So this one starts out with an entity called the Institute for Eastern Europe. And right off the bat, every time I now see the word institute, I'm automatically thinking it's CIA funded or it has something to do with some propaganda if it's not directly funded by the CIA.
1:31
Because they love using that word. Okay. It was created at the University of Freiburg, F-R-I-B-O-U-R-G, in 1958. It was linked up with Radio Geneva, which, again, has something to do with the CIA.
2:02
um there was a guy by the name of father brockenski b-o-c-h-e-n-s-k-i he was born in 1902 he died in 1995 he was the leader of the institute of eastern europe so yes he was a religious figure um from the catholic church so basically
2:34
there were several Catholic philosophers that wore the robes. And there was a division at the time as to how to handle the Soviet Union. And they decided that they were going to create this Institute for Eastern Europe.
3:04
which is abbreviated because it's a Swiss words, IEO. So they're going to set this thing up. They're going to do it at that university, at the Swiss university, Freiburg, Borg. And it's going to be done as part of a joint kind of religiously focused, but
3:31
also more in like foreign diplomacy. And there's a huge connection to the people who are originally part of this organization to a Polish Dominican order that obviously had been set up in Poland. And it was supported for six years by U.S. funding.
4:03
And it's described as philanthropic foundations. More about that later. So there were people from all over and from all disciplines that came to study this made-up Sovietology. As it evolved, there became a tension between the desire to know and understand the motivations behind
4:34
the Marxist-Leninist ideology that they didn't feel there was enough information about. And they felt you needed to do that in order to be able to dismantle it and label it as dangerous to humanity. So in order to legitimize their denouncing it, you had to be able to explain it.
5:03
And then you could attack it as part of the knowledge base that you had gathered. So Father Joseph Brodinsky was the focal point of the IEO and the Cold War and how to set this whole thing up. So let's talk a little bit about him. Who was he? He had.
5:37
been born to a very wealthy family in Krakow. And he had spent his youth during the Polish-Russian war. So he's not a neutral person, obviously. Has a very, what's the word?
6:08
He has his own opinion of the Soviet Union because of that experience. And he also was very interested in anarchism. He joined several youth movements while he was in Poland. So even at a young age, he was very involved. In 1926, he claimed he was agnostic.
6:40
However, after having made that known, he goes to the theology college and gets a degree. He originally kind of dismissed this as a interest in philosophy and got the degree, not because he had a religious bent, but because he wanted to understand it as well.
7:10
to use it as a tool later. Who knows? There were two philosophies in Poland at the time. One was called commonism, T-H-O-M-I-S-M. And it basically was part of a revitalization among Catholic intellectuals. And by affiliating with that, he got to
7:46
circulate among what was called the Krakow Circle, which had a whole bunch of intellectuals in order to broaden his horizon. He concentrated on modernizing communism through logic. In 1930, he took on the task of moving to Switzerland.
8:15
and joining that University of Freiburg. And he also began affiliating with the Angelicum of Rome, which he ended up as a chaplain of the Polish army in Britain during the Second World War. So he first began writing about anti-communism.
8:45
under a pseudonym called Joseph Michie, M-I-C-H-E. And he began reading Bertrand Russell, which anybody that's looked back at the Fabian Society knows who Bertrand Russell is. Alfred North Whitehead, he held them up in esteem. And all of that time,
9:17
basically formed his intellectual views about anti-communism. So he gets named as a professor of contemporary philosophy in 1945 at the Freiburg University. And there is a whole slew of Polish exiles living in Switzerland. So he begins.
9:46
associating with all of them and he also starts talking to several of the military people that eventually the Polish military that ends up in Switzerland and several of them begin attending school there at the university and so he's constantly having conversations with them and
10:13
He begins this effort to create a community, if you will, that is strongly anti-communist. Now, keep in mind, we're during the same time frame where Switzerland is setting up their anti-communist stay-behind units, too, during this entire time. Okay, so he creates a relationship with
10:43
A guy by the name of Joseph Galina, who was the director of the document center for the Catholic Church in Rome. And so he's spending a lot of time traveling back and forth between Switzerland and the Catholic Church, which, of course, is very interesting since we know what the role of the Catholic Church was in Operation Gladiator. His Polish.
11:13
immigrant community was financed by the Vatican Church. So Golina, the director of the document center, is acting as an intermediary between some of the Polish people and an entity called Radio Free Europe, which of course we know is the CIA.
11:45
And so he has all of these hallmarks, not saying it's a smoking gun, of being in the circles of Operation Gladio. And he rediscovered, and again, he was a chaplain in the military during World War II for the British. Nothing to see here. Okay.
12:17
So he begins questioning the Bolshevikism and he starts adding that into his philosophy classes. And let's see, he starts hanging out with a bunch of people. Oh, here's some of the names of his classes. Christian Happiness, the Catholic Church in France, Science, Faith and Marxism.
12:50
communism and egotism. So those are some of his quote unquote philosophy classes. And because he's there and because they all know he's Polish, there's a lot of Polish people that ends up taking his classes. And he, let's see, he helps a guy by the name of Bolshaw Pioski.
13:24
write something called The Important Issues. And together, the two of them form a group called, I don't even know how to pronounce this. It's Z-N-A-K. And that is kind of the nut that the tree grew from. So they begin collaborating and talking and discussing about communist government and its relationship with the...
13:53
Catholic Church. So the Polish community in Switzerland and his little clique that he's putting together begin formulating, posturing commentary, probably the best way to say it, on how to address the
14:21
in the form of an anti-communist agenda. And he also establishes links with prominent Jesuits, both in Austria and Poland and Switzerland. So his relationship with, let's see, who is that guy? I can't find his first name. His last name is Wetter.
14:51
W-E-T-T-E-R. He brings him in because he's part of Germany. And he brings him to the attention of Conrad Adenauer in West Germany. So now they're kind of looping in all the rest of them. So there's a counterpart in Germany to what he's doing. And they're going to study.
15:20
all of the readings of Engels, Lenin, and Stalin. And they basically begin working on getting themselves credentialed as the world's leading experts on those men. So they start working with, and he actually takes trips, to the Catholic University of Notre Dame in Indiana.
15:49
He also visits all the Catholic Church in South Africa, which is kind of weird. They're not a hotbed for communists, but whatever. They are a hotbed for Operation Gladio. So he starts generating material that talks about there being a tension between the East and West. He starts writing about all of this suspicion.
16:17
of things that the Soviet Union may be doing, but he has no proof that they're actually doing it. There's a reference book that gets written in 1958 that was basically considered a handbook on global communism. It became a reference book that was done with the collaboration of Gerhard Niemeyer at the University of Notre Dame.
16:47
So now they have their first publication basically illustrating that they're the experts on the subject. Switzerland offered obviously a great place to do this because everything that comes out of Switzerland is generally considered neutral, even though the people there are not necessarily neutral at all. But again, it gives you a propaganda element.
17:18
To say that it is coming from a university in a neutral country and therefore should be looked at with more legitimacy. Because, you know, everybody in Switzerland is neutral, including the guy that's been in the military as a chaplain and grew up in Poland during the time when they were at war with Russia. All right. So he now is viewed by the world as an analytical.
17:46
Because all of this, according to him, is science based, even though he's a philosophy professor. And it supposedly set him apart from some of the other more squishy philosophers. But we haven't had he has no credibility as a quote unquote scientist. But in many of his published writings, he.
18:16
talks around, uses, is the better word, uses, quote unquote, scientific methods for philosophical conversations. And by doing that, it's a good way to cover opinions as facts. So, one of his French counterparts, by the name of Bernard Jay,
18:45
published a document called Soviet Philosophy and the West in 1969. And again, what he's trying to do is get more and more people to pick up his published material. Bruckenski bypassed criticisms and remained completely convinced of the validity.
19:19
of an unqualified fight against communism. Despite processing an impulsive and lively personality, he was known for adopting a very domineering attitude towards others. He was a bull in a china shop, is a better way of saying that. In the mid-1960s, he taught Soviet philosophy within the framework of the university, having never been in the Soviet Union.
19:50
He goes on to address the World Youth Festival in Helsinki in 1962. And in an official capacity, he was responding to an invitation from historian Jacques Fremont, who was himself on good terms with the Rockefeller Foundation and regularly gave classes at a thing called the Graduate Institute of International Studies, a key location in.
20:22
Brozinski's Swiss network is Peter Sager, who was in Bern. Fully behind Sager's effort to accumulate and analyze communist theory and practice, he wrote a report for the attention of the Federal Council and spoke in glowing terms of Sager and backed all of his research. Both Brozinski and Sager shared the view that communist system constituted a terrible danger to humanity.
20:52
Brzezinski's thinking might have been, let's see, however dogmatic Brzezinski's thinking was towards communism. It was not lacking intentions. First, there was a relationship between the scholar and the political cause. His quote-unquote scientific approach masked the political nature of his entire effort. The context of the Cold War transformed,
21:23
his discipline into an ideological weapon. The Dominican clearly positioned himself within the camp of radical scholarly anti-communism, despite proclaiming to be a purely scientific approach to his research. A second tension lay in the obstinate method
21:51
by which Brzezinski dissected Marxist thought, it was on the borderline of fascination. Brzezinski took it seriously by adopting a principle that there were philosophers in the USSR and therefore they had to be analyzed and he was in the best position to do that because he's built himself as the world expert on it.
22:20
The government of Canton of Freiburg endorsed the creation of the IEO at its session in May of 1958, and they labeled it as the primary objective of scientific study and elaboration of problems concerning Eastern Europe, except for there was no science attached to it. To justify its existence, the IEO played heavily on the possibilities offered.
22:51
by having this written down in the context of the 1950s at the expense of any scientific consideration. The IEO was in effect authorized to bestow diplomas in Sovietology without them having to go to the dean. They basically delegated the authority for him to certify anybody he wanted with a degree.
23:20
and Sovietology based on whatever criteria he set up. It kind of paints a real thin veneer on propaganda, if you ask me. The idea for the Institute seems to have come initially from Bakuninsky, and he had already made contact with private backers. And you're never, ever going to guess who the private backers were. The Rockefeller Foundation. Yeah.
23:51
Yeah, them. In October 1957, Charles Fawes, director of the Rockefeller Foundation's Human Science Division, Human Science Division, is funding Soviet, anti-Soviet, anti-communist propaganda. He traveled to Europe and said he considered Bratinsky to be the, quote, leading European scholar on current trends.
24:25
in dialectical materialism in the Soviet Union and satellite countries, unquote. See, if you just use big words, it makes you sound smart and it makes them sound legitimate. The American Foundation signed up to the initial provision of a guaranteed stipends for three years on the condition that Brzezinski was in charge and doing the work.
24:54
So it wasn't just to the university to do this because it was a good thing to do. It was directly to this guy to create the propaganda. The objective of the Rockefeller Foundation was considered to be threefold. To build an international network for the study of Eastern Europe by linking the IEO with International Institute of Social History in Amsterdam and an institute in Berlin.
25:22
to maintain contact with researchers in satellite countries, and to nurture young scholars. Nurture meaning propagandize. Less than two years after the launch of IEO, some 90 students had taken courses there. Bardinsky surrounded himself with a limited number of young PhD students to add credibility and to form the basis of a new
25:52
This was generally divided up by region. Each research student studied a particular region and was creating a bibliography of philosophical activities in each of the countries. The students who were carefully selected to extend his influence as an international expert, the Polish researcher
26:22
Zabensky Jordan went on to work at Radio Free Europe. That's one of his graduate students. Another one from Czechoslovakia was from a rich Catholic family, became a professor at Notre Dame and then moved to Munich and taught there. A guy from Germany.
26:52
basically went on to work in the government of Germany. And let's see, they collectively wrote a document called Studies in Soviet Thought. Okay, the second phase of the IEO development required more funding. And it just so happened that was three years later when the Rockefeller grant needed to be renewed.
27:27
So not only did they renew it, but they went to Roderick Chisholm at Brown University and asked for more money from there. And basically, let's see down here, it says in the sense that the request from the Rockefeller Foundation, they understood, quote, for various reasons.
27:57
I would prefer not to use. So they started getting a little antsy about the words Sovietology because they were getting a lot of feedback that it was a made up word, that it wasn't like a legitimate area of study. So they basically said that they'd prefer them not to call it that.
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And that's when, as far as this work goes, anti-communism came into vogue as it was relating to this. And the Rockefeller Foundation renewed their grant for another three years. Up to his departure in 1972, the IEO evolved.
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in a paradoxical manner. On one hand, it increased its activities in terms of research, expertise, and education. From 1966 onward, the financial resources from overseas that had been coming in from the United States and the West German Ministry of Interior was getting less and less. Despite his appointment as rector of the university there,
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In 1964 to 66, Bakinski was unable to reverse this funding deficit. Let's see. What's the other part? OK, so he becomes he moves to a school in Cologne and.
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Starts working at the Institute of Automation, which was educating Eastern European quote unquote experts. So basically he's doing the same thing there that he had done in Switzerland. The Institute of Automation was directed by Ernst Peter Billiter, who was named professor of statistics in 1958. And was the former.
30:22
Bursar at the Rockefeller Foundation. You just can't make this shit up. So they basically began folding in the information technology aspects of gathering information, i.e. intelligence, into his curriculum. And it says,
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Billinter had intended to turn his own institute into a research center that concentrated on anti-communist infiltration in Western Europe. How apropos. The IEO, therefore, maintained a broad curriculum which included Slavic languages, which was a mandatory requirement there.
31:22
Some contacts with non-dissident philosophers from the communist bloc were also sought, you know, to try to give us some. You got to actually talk to a communist every once in a while if you're going to be the expert on communism. And so they did. They arranged a few meetings with, quote,
31:51
Let's see, Bokinski's departure in 1972, the Institute had low resources and basically kind of lost its appeal for the being the expert, if you will, on the Soviet and Marxism. But I think if this organization is doing what I actually think it was doing, which was.
32:25
stuff related to Operation Gladio, it does make sense that in the early to mid-70s, as all of the CIA shenanigans is getting aired out in Congress, that there would be a lack of funding of anything associated with the peripheral, if you will. Because by that time,
32:53
They had already demonized the Soviet Union well enough that they didn't need to continue spending money to do that under the pretense. And they had all their structure set up at that point, both for Gladio and for the CIA inside of Europe with the Radio Free Europe and all of that other stuff that they didn't need to keep hammering the.
33:20
that the devil is standing next door so it does make sense he served his useful purpose as what I'm going to refer to as a propagandist and the one we're going to cover next which will not be tomorrow well if I can get the earlier show if I can get one done at noon we will cover the female version of him
33:49
And she's quite interesting as well. But he was not alone in doing what he did. So we'll just leave it at that. All right. That covers that. We lost Bridget. Let me bring her back up. Definitely under attack. That's crazy. Okay. I was booted shortly after you started. Oh, well.
34:30
It looks like Rumble is running smoothly today without the critters in it. Knock on wood. Yeah. All right. Stellar, I don't know if you can come up to speak. I threw you the mic if you want it. SR71, what have you been up to? Thank you, Colonel. And thank everybody for attending and those on Rumble as well and hanging with us. I know it's a tough job, but it's got to be done.
35:05
Thank you so much. Other than that, I was listening to, of course, our favorite podcast with our favorite stream with Warhamster. Got interrupted because I had to come here, but we're good. We're good. I just can't miss these particular history lessons. Just can't do that. But given that, and I'm looking at all of this stuff that's going on at this time.
35:36
We're developing an educational system to really brainwash the public like crazy. And now I understand where Brzezinski came from. And the funny part is, is I'm looking at this and saying, what the hell happened to his daughter? You know, she doesn't seem to have a clue about any of this stuff he was doing or why he was doing it. And here she is on TV as a political pundit. It just blows my mind.
36:09
Thank you, Colonel. Sure. Yeah, I'm going to say she does, and I'm going to say that she's part of it, that she's being paid to be there as part of the PSYOPs. That's just my opinion, because this stuff runs in families. They don't leave it for whatever reason. There's a few that do. They stick out like a sore thumb, and they're usually attacked constantly.
36:38
So that really gives me the indication of who is a legitimate. I've walked away from it because they are attacked, if not killed. And she's not any of those things. So I don't believe she's left the profession. My opinion. Anybody else? I don't see any hands. I don't know if you guys. Miles, go ahead. Hi, Colonel. I'm just.
37:11
connecting some dots when I was listening to you going back to Switzerland, you know, putting on the persona that we're neutral and that we're not going to do anything bad. We're not going to run any kind of operations on Europe. But then when you connect it to the Vatican and their little secret societies that they have, before USAID was around,
37:39
Going back a ways, they had to have money to run their operations. Just think of all the money the Vatican had back in those days from all their little followers. I don't know if I'm thinking correctly on connecting these dots, but it makes sense that if you want to get involved in this, you have to search out certain people.
38:09
to align yourself with to run these operations. Thanks. So to me, they were not using Vatican money from followers. They were using Vatican money from the drug operations to do most, if not all of this. But yeah, I agree with, it is a combination of everything. And that's why I love wearing my Gladio glasses when I read now.
38:39
Because you pick up all of those nuances where before we would have just said, oh, it's the Vatican. You know, it's a church. It can't be doing stuff political or it can't be doing stuff illegally. And now we all know different. And you read things and connections are so much easier to make all along. Hi, Colonel. I just want to note that I did not hear a single word.
39:09
Of the tip of the stuff you're reading just now, not one single word. And I tried to get on about 15 times. So somebody is getting enthusiastic. And again, I'm only speculating. It sounds like you're dealing with Switzerland there. You know, there's some important wires that cross there that are, you know, affect the entire international political order. So this is, you know, to use that metaphor that I it's very arterial and not capillary material.
39:40
It seems to be worth greater. I know that that gets greater censorship. I see how they do it. I call it triple moating. But it might not be a coincidence that, you know, you're dealing with such arterial material that affects the core of NATO and the core of all the entire U.S. and European Cold War relationship, basically. It affects everything. So it's dangerous. And it doesn't surprise me that it's the most censored period.
40:09
Do I have proof that that is the cause of it? No, I do not. So it's interesting that you say that because I feel the same way. You have these kind of gut instincts. I feel totally stupid saying that our small little history lesson every day is being attacked. It just sounds ludicrous to me.
40:39
There's no other explanation for what has gone on with not only just my account, but our spaces as well. And yeah, it does seem like totally crazy. But at the end of the day, if you go back and you look at some of our spaces, they're very widely watched.
41:06
by, you know, there may not be a lot of people in here, but you can go back and look at statistics later. There's a lot of people watching them. And I find that very interesting. Miles, go ahead. Well, what you're speaking of, I'm very familiar with. So back in the Periscope days, we were just like, you know, having a little show, talking about politics, talking about Trump.
41:35
We ran into the same situations. You're banding, Miles. I can't hear you. All right. Can you hear me better now? Hello? I can hear you. Is it better? I can hear. I had already just put him down to bring him back up. Let's all along go, and then we'll call Miles back up again. All along, go ahead. Yeah. Well.
42:08
It's weird mentioning what countries did you talk about? I'm sorry. I just missed the whole show. I don't mean to interrupt. Well, if you obviously once we're done, you can go back and actually listen to the material. We were talking about Switzerland and them setting up a basically funded by the Rockefellers, a institute there that created a.
42:36
a degree-granting program in Sovietology and took it upon themselves to make themselves the world-leading experts and wrote all of this material about all of this quote-unquote scientific information about what it was like to live in the Soviet Union and what Marxist and all of that other stuff was about, and none of them had actually ever been there.
43:03
Um, so it was very easy to see that the, it was a propaganda effort basically to set up a course, create material. Um, the guy had traveled to, um, the University of Notre Dame. Um, one of the guys that set up the, uh, peer equivalent in Germany had actually worked for the Rockefeller Foundation. So again, reading that with your Gladio glasses on, it's very easy to see what it was.
43:36
SR-71, or excuse me, let's go to Miles and then SR-71. Is it better now? Yes. Okay. So what I was saying to what you were talking about, when Trump got elected, we were just talking about politics on Periscope and we were getting attacked constantly. And I think it's different now. They're operational techniques, but back then they would send in like trolls are.
44:05
groups of people and they would try to say that we were doing something that we weren't supposed to do. And it could have been all different kinds of things. And they put like 40 or 50 of these, you know, liberals or whoever they were, they were just agents and they would report us constantly. So, you know, we lost our accounts. We had to start a new account. So it's been going on for a long time and we used to call it being over the target.
44:35
You're going to take flack when you're over the target. Yep, I agree. SR-71? Thank you, Colonel. My personal opinion out of all of this, Colonel, is you're saying what everybody else refuses to say. They beat around the bush, they give you bits and pieces, and they don't tell you the whole story. You present the whole story, and because you do that,
45:06
That's why we're a target. Thank you, Colonel. Sir, wait till tonight. If Alpha is having his show tonight, I know his daughter just got married. But if we have a show tonight, it's going to be like a blow up show all along. Go ahead. Yeah, Colonel, I just want to say that we often think about the.
45:33
relationship between a small group versus the the rest of the media ecology or everyone thing that everyone else in the united states hears or doesn't hear and often like because you're mentioning you're saying how absurd it would fit be to think that your relatively small show i say relatively small show um would be like worth
46:01
targeting by the U.S. government. But sometimes, you know, what is permitted in a periphery is called the controlled opposition, right? And so if you are in a position to begin to challenge in an actual free market of ideas, the official opposition party, that's something that they're going to notice.
46:26
And that maybe 40,000 followers is not as small as you might think, because when something is challenged and it's a genuine debate, the population could recognize that. And the CIA knows that. That's a good point. Annie, go ahead. Hi, y'all. Thanks for letting me speak. It's funny because I was just reading or just watching something on Truthstream with Joe and Scott.
46:57
They do a lot of really good interviews. They're interviewing this gal who is a Hollywood script reader, and she breaks down the Q movie in a three-part movie-type series in each character and how they play their roles and how they have people watching us on social media, the ones who are part of the movie because we're not the audience.
47:25
We're a part of it because we get it. They slap us down when we're getting ahead of the game before everybody else. It's kind of like breaking the spoilers, you know? They don't want certain people to know certain things yet because it might freak them out.
47:50
We're getting too way ahead of ourselves and ahead of the audience. So it's kind of funny. I put it down in there. There's a 16 minute one where she breaks it down real quick on a radio talk show. And then there's the one that's like an hour or better that she just goes right through it with Joe and Scott. It's really good. Check it out if you want. It's kind of fun. Thank you.
48:17
I have been told this behind the scenes a couple of different times that that the information that we're putting out is well ahead of the curve. And OK, I'm still going to do it. I don't know if there is. I don't know. But we found it. We're talking about it. And we're going to keep talking about it.
48:48
That's the bottom line. So, anybody else? Yeah, we keep slapping everybody around going, come on, wake up, wake up. Annie, I can't hear you. Oh, sorry. It's like we're slapping our friends and family. We can bring her back up, Bridget, but she was banding real bad. Okay, Annie, you should be back up. Try again. Can you hear me now? Yes.
49:21
Oh, yeah. It's just like we're slapping our friends and our relatives around saying, come on, wake up, wake up, wake up. But we're going too fast for them. So we're getting throttled. Yeah, I guess. All right. And attacked and thrown out. Yeah. Hey, Stellar. Oh, my gosh. I thought that it wasn't going to let me undo my microphone. You guys are really getting attacked. It's insane.
49:56
Too much truth. And this cold, this war thing, hopefully will be coming to an end as more and more of these things come out. Thank you so much for sharing everything and all your truth and knowledge. Totally appreciate you. Thank you. Totally appreciate Bridget. Totally appreciate SR71. Totally appreciate Cousinet and Warhamster and everyone who's put so many hours.
50:24
The people that are in here every day, Miles, I always say your name wrong, so please excuse me, all along. And the one that I always keep calling Illinois. Illini. Thank you, Illini. I always screw his name up too, but crazy stuff going on. And I think we're getting close. Yep. Wow.
50:51
We are just going to keep running at the same steady space, doing the research and putting the information out. So, again, let me just plug the show tonight. If we have it, I will get in contact with Alpha to confirm that and then put something out. It is going to be a barn burner. It is.
51:22
Again, I tell you guys this all the time. I come across something and I start looking into it and it turns into like, I've got four pages of notes and I haven't even actually got to the meat of the topic. There were several companies that I needed to look into and there's so much shit.
51:50
about the companies that I'm having to set the stage for one particular company in order to tell the story I want to tell. So I'm thinking it's probably going to end up being a multi-segment because I have to lay the groundwork for you guys to know how deep this rabbit hole goes. And I came across this analogy.
52:20
I don't know if it's part of the stuff that's already out there, but you're going to recognize quite a bit of it. And I'm just going to leave it at that because I don't want to ruin the show. But there's going to be several mic drop moments there, a little bit for everybody. Annie, go ahead.
52:46
Yeah, you were talking about some of those who may have broken away. Well, one for sure is Nathan Reynolds. Have you heard of him? No. Yeah, he broke away from the Reynolds Tobacco and Reynolds Rep segment of the family's bloodlines. And he tells all kinds of stuff. You can find him on any of the social medias. And he also has a thing called the Lennon Railroad. They do nothing but...
53:15
But natural farming and everything, milling and the clothing, they only wear linen. Because they know what people are doing to the stuff that we eat and wear and everything. Yeah. But he's really good. He is so good at, you know, telling us stuff. Thank you. Cool. All right. So I'm going to jump out of here a little early today. I appreciate you guys being here. And I will see you tonight and then again tomorrow.
53:47
Take care. Thank you
Entities here
Joseph Brodowski15Switzerland11Rockefeller Foundation11Poland10Institute for Eastern Europe10Soviet Union8Catholic Church7Operation Gladio6University of Freiburg5West Germany4Catholic University of Notre Dame3Radio Free Europe3United States3United Kingdom2Krakow2Joseph Galina2Ernst Peter Billiter2Institute of Automation2Wetter2World War II2Dominican Order1Indiana1Radio Geneva1Bolshaw Pioski1Znak1Bernard Jay1Jacques Fremont1Graduate Institute of International Studies1Zabensky Jordan1Charles Fawes1Roderick Chisholm1Amsterdam1Polish-Russian War1The Important Issues1Soviet Philosophy and the West1Studies in Soviet Thought1Krakow Circle1Angelicum of Rome1Human Science Division1University of Notre Dame1
Claims made here
Institute for Eastern Europe founded
University of Freiburg host_asserted
▶ 1:31
“Because they love using that word. Okay. It was created at the University of Freiburg, F-R-I-B-O-U-R-G, in 1958. It was linked up with Radio Geneva, which, again, has something to do with the CIA.…”
Institute for Eastern Europe linked_up_with
Radio Geneva host_asserted
▶ 1:31
“Because they love using that word. Okay. It was created at the University of Freiburg, F-R-I-B-O-U-R-G, in 1958. It was linked up with Radio Geneva, which, again, has something to do with the CIA.…”
Joseph Brodowski headed
Institute for Eastern Europe host_asserted
▶ 2:02
“um there was a guy by the name of father brockenski b-o-c-h-e-n-s-k-i he was born in 1902 he died in 1995 he was the leader of the institute of eastern europe so yes he was a religious figure um from …”
Joseph Brodowski member_of
Dominican Order host_asserted
▶ 3:31
“also more in like foreign diplomacy. And there's a huge connection to the people who are originally part of this organization to a Polish Dominican order that obviously had been set up in Poland. And …”
Institute for Eastern Europe funded
United States host_asserted
▶ 3:31
“also more in like foreign diplomacy. And there's a huge connection to the people who are originally part of this organization to a Polish Dominican order that obviously had been set up in Poland. And …”
Joseph Brodowski member_of
Krakow Circle host_asserted
▶ 7:46
“circulate among what was called the Krakow Circle, which had a whole bunch of intellectuals in order to broaden his horizon. He concentrated on modernizing communism through logic. In 1930, he took on…”
Joseph Brodowski member_of
Angelicum of Rome host_asserted
▶ 8:15
“and joining that University of Freiburg. And he also began affiliating with the Angelicum of Rome, which he ended up as a chaplain of the Polish army in Britain during the Second World War. So he firs…”
Joseph Brodowski appointed
Catholic Church host_asserted
▶ 8:15
“and joining that University of Freiburg. And he also began affiliating with the Angelicum of Rome, which he ended up as a chaplain of the Polish army in Britain during the Second World War. So he firs…”
Joseph Brodowski appointed
University of Freiburg host_asserted
▶ 9:17
“basically formed his intellectual views about anti-communism. So he gets named as a professor of contemporary philosophy in 1945 at the Freiburg University. And there is a whole slew of Polish exiles …”
Joseph Brodowski recruited
Joseph Galina host_asserted
▶ 10:43
“A guy by the name of Joseph Galina, who was the director of the document center for the Catholic Church in Rome. And so he's spending a lot of time traveling back and forth between Switzerland and the…”
Joseph Galina acted_as_intermediary_for
Radio Free Europe host_asserted
▶ 11:13
“immigrant community was financed by the Vatican Church. So Golina, the director of the document center, is acting as an intermediary between some of the Polish people and an entity called Radio Free E…”
Joseph Brodowski recruited
Bolshaw Pioski host_asserted
▶ 13:24
“write something called The Important Issues. And together, the two of them form a group called, I don't even know how to pronounce this. It's Z-N-A-K. And that is kind of the nut that the tree grew fr…”
Joseph Brodowski recruited
Wetter host_asserted
▶ 14:51
“W-E-T-T-E-R. He brings him in because he's part of Germany. And he brings him to the attention of Conrad Adenauer in West Germany. So now they're kind of looping in all the rest of them. So there's a …”
Joseph Brodowski visited
Catholic University of Notre Dame host_asserted
▶ 15:20
“all of the readings of Engels, Lenin, and Stalin. And they basically begin working on getting themselves credentialed as the world's leading experts on those men. So they start working with, and he ac…”
Joseph Brodowski collaborated_with
Gerhard Meyer host_asserted
▶ 16:17
“of things that the Soviet Union may be doing, but he has no proof that they're actually doing it. There's a reference book that gets written in 1958 that was basically considered a handbook on global …”
Bernard Jay published
Soviet Philosophy and the West host_asserted
▶ 18:45
“published a document called Soviet Philosophy and the West in 1969. And again, what he's trying to do is get more and more people to pick up his published material. Bruckenski bypassed criticisms and …”
Joseph Brodowski responded_to_invitation_from
Jacques Fremont host_asserted
▶ 19:50
“He goes on to address the World Youth Festival in Helsinki in 1962. And in an official capacity, he was responding to an invitation from historian Jacques Fremont, who was himself on good terms with t…”
Joseph Brodowski addressed
World Youth Festival host_asserted
▶ 19:50
“He goes on to address the World Youth Festival in Helsinki in 1962. And in an official capacity, he was responding to an invitation from historian Jacques Fremont, who was himself on good terms with t…”
Jacques Fremont taught_at
Graduate Institute of International Studies host_asserted
▶ 19:50
“He goes on to address the World Youth Festival in Helsinki in 1962. And in an official capacity, he was responding to an invitation from historian Jacques Fremont, who was himself on good terms with t…”
Joseph Brodowski supported
Peter Sager host_asserted
▶ 20:22
“Brozinski's Swiss network is Peter Sager, who was in Bern. Fully behind Sager's effort to accumulate and analyze communist theory and practice, he wrote a report for the attention of the Federal Counc…”
Peter Sager located_in
Bern host_asserted
▶ 20:22
“Brozinski's Swiss network is Peter Sager, who was in Bern. Fully behind Sager's effort to accumulate and analyze communist theory and practice, he wrote a report for the attention of the Federal Counc…”
Charles Fawes headed
Human Science Division host_asserted
▶ 23:51
“Yeah, them. In October 1957, Charles Fawes, director of the Rockefeller Foundation's Human Science Division, Human Science Division, is funding Soviet, anti-Soviet, anti-communist propaganda. He trave…”
Institute for Eastern Europe funded
Rockefeller Foundation host_asserted
▶ 24:25
“in dialectical materialism in the Soviet Union and satellite countries, unquote. See, if you just use big words, it makes you sound smart and it makes them sound legitimate. The American Foundation si…”
Institute for Eastern Europe linked_with
Institute of Social History host_asserted
▶ 24:54
“So it wasn't just to the university to do this because it was a good thing to do. It was directly to this guy to create the propaganda. The objective of the Rockefeller Foundation was considered to be…”
Zabensky Jordan worked_at
Radio Free Europe host_asserted
▶ 26:22
“Zabensky Jordan went on to work at Radio Free Europe. That's one of his graduate students. Another one from Czechoslovakia was from a rich Catholic family, became a professor at Notre Dame and then mo…”
Zabensky Jordan student_of
Joseph Brodowski host_asserted
▶ 26:22
“Zabensky Jordan went on to work at Radio Free Europe. That's one of his graduate students. Another one from Czechoslovakia was from a rich Catholic family, became a professor at Notre Dame and then mo…”
Institute for Eastern Europe funded
Brown University host_asserted
▶ 27:27
“So not only did they renew it, but they went to Roderick Chisholm at Brown University and asked for more money from there. And basically, let's see down here, it says in the sense that the request fro…”
Joseph Brodowski departed_from
Institute for Eastern Europe host_asserted
▶ 28:25
“And that's when, as far as this work goes, anti-communism came into vogue as it was relating to this. And the Rockefeller Foundation renewed their grant for another three years. Up to his departure in…”
Joseph Brodowski appointed
University of Freiburg host_asserted
▶ 28:54
“in a paradoxical manner. On one hand, it increased its activities in terms of research, expertise, and education. From 1966 onward, the financial resources from overseas that had been coming in from t…”
Institute for Eastern Europe funded
Thai Ministry of Interior host_asserted
▶ 28:54
“in a paradoxical manner. On one hand, it increased its activities in terms of research, expertise, and education. From 1966 onward, the financial resources from overseas that had been coming in from t…”
Joseph Brodowski worked_at
Institute of Automation host_asserted
▶ 29:52
“Starts working at the Institute of Automation, which was educating Eastern European quote unquote experts. So basically he's doing the same thing there that he had done in Switzerland. The Institute o…”
Ernst Peter Billiter headed
Institute of Automation host_asserted
▶ 29:52
“Starts working at the Institute of Automation, which was educating Eastern European quote unquote experts. So basically he's doing the same thing there that he had done in Switzerland. The Institute o…”
Ernst Peter Billiter worked_at
Rockefeller Foundation host_asserted
▶ 30:22
“Bursar at the Rockefeller Foundation. You just can't make this shit up. So they basically began folding in the information technology aspects of gathering information, i.e. intelligence, into his curr…”
Rockefeller Foundation funded
Switzerland host_asserted
▶ 42:08
“It's weird mentioning what countries did you talk about? I'm sorry. I just missed the whole show. I don't mean to interrupt. Well, if you obviously once we're done, you can go back and actually listen…”
Rockefeller Foundation funded
University of Notre Dame host_asserted
▶ 43:03
“Um, so it was very easy to see that the, it was a propaganda effort basically to set up a course, create material. Um, the guy had traveled to, um, the University of Notre Dame. Um, one of the guys th…”
Nathan Reynolds member_of
Reynolds family caller_asserted
▶ 52:46
“Yeah, you were talking about some of those who may have broken away. Well, one for sure is Nathan Reynolds. Have you heard of him? No. Yeah, he broke away from the Reynolds Tobacco and Reynolds Rep se…”