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The Shadow State 37 Secret Societies 21; Andover Connections

1:18:07 · recorded 2025-05-02 · ▶ watch on Rumble

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0:17 Roxanne Tamar-Watkins, and I'm here with War Hamster Brady for your weekly dose of Operation Gladio meets Secret Societies, focusing initially on skull and bones. I noticed your backdrop's a little different, Brady. How are you today? Well, I am good, and I am in sunny Tucson, Arizona, about 20 miles outside of the city, out in the desert ranch where my dog is visiting my dogs.
0:44 So you might hear some barking. If the coyotes go by, the dogs will let us know. Since I am traveling, my audio may not be the best, but we'll do the best we can. And let's get to it. All right. Well, we're going to take an interesting turn today. As I was researching the regular Skull and Bones members, I started going to the background of one in particular. And, oh, we just started noticing some patterns. So, you know, before we jump into that.
1:19 I was going to ask you about the Tucker Carlson interview with Catherine Austin Fitz. And people, if you haven't seen that yet, it's really a must watch. She's got a background similar to mine. She's been very successful as a financial advisor and economic issues, very deep researcher. She spent a lot of her career trying to find out who really pulls the puppet strings, who are the paymasters, who calls the shots. And in the later part of the interview, she talks about.
1:50 the Harvard Endowment. And she thinks it's these people behind the Harvard Endowment that are really the decision makers behind, you know, the smoke-filled rooms and everything like that. She goes, you know, if you really know the names, it's probably not the decision makers. And it really runs parallel to what the Colonel and I have been talking about, about how all the players in all the choke point positions of government seem to come from these private boarding schools.
2:17 uh yale university skull and bones harvard law and sometimes the road scholars and so i think that video with sucker and catherine fitz is absolutely must watch but she hits on the exact same themes yeah i have not had a chance to watch it yet she has a website the solaris report s-o-l-a-r-i-s i've been subscribed to that for a long time it's worth reading on a regular basis but you would um i think if you start watching her you'll you'll or even reading her he'll appreciate it quite a bit she's great well i met her
2:50 she was here in my hometown oh no kidding okay yeah i've actually met her um i had an opportunity while she was hold on um i had an opportunity while she was um speaking to talk to her assistant and she is well read in on operation gladio as well yeah i would imagine yeah she's from um from from money up in new england um in fact
3:17 uh when her one of her uncles got uh raided by the fbi that happened to be in portsmouth new hampshire where i live so she's got uh she runs around originally around new england i don't know where she is now but uh it's got an interesting backstory she is in um tennessee and the netherlands she travels back and forth between the two okay yeah it was interesting they had old family money and i guess uh with her starting to be controversial uh
3:46 She kind of had to step away from the family interests, but she's doing just fine on her own. And I am jealous that you got to meet her. Yeah, very exciting. Well, I know the lady in Florida that is trying to create a Florida state bank and basically go create the model that North Dakota has.
4:13 basically have a gold fund as well since we have such a large what governor desantis refers to as a surplus which i refer to as over taxation but um be that what it may um it does uh bode well for the state of florida um for long-term financial reasons to have their own state bank
4:39 um and she was here to address that and we had a lot of politicians from the state of florida in for that meeting and i got an invite because my personal friend is leading that effort very good yeah it's interesting um we did a uh doug and i did a show a little while back talking about trump first flow to the executive order about a u.s sovereign wealth fund and um you know we've gone through all the early executive orders and basically just said okay are these constitutional or are they unconstitutional
5:08 you know not whether they're a good idea or not and the american a u.s national sovereign wealth fund can't be created by the office of the president it had to be it would have to be done through congress at the same time a state bank or state sovereign wealth fund is absolutely constitutional because it is not prohibited in the u.s constitution you just can't mint coin they just cannot mint coin of any any shape or form in texas it was floating the idea of goldback currency a number of years back and that would not have passed the constitutional test
5:38 Anyway, shall we jump into our topic of the day? Jump in. All right. I do not have a picture of this gentleman because, again, I'm traveling. I didn't have quite as much time. But the Skull and Bonesman I was starting with for today's session was a guy by the name of William Dobney Nordhaus. That's spelled N-O-R-D-H-A-U-S. And he was Skull and Bones class of 1963. Have you heard the name?
6:10 No, I'm not. I'll have to look him up. I don't I don't recognize his name. Hold on just a second. Spell his last name again for me. N-O-R-D-H-A-U-S. Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. You know his work. I guarantee it. Yeah. No, I recognize the name. OK. OK, well, he jumped off the page at me because I was going down the alphabet with the list. So why do we care about Mr. Nordhaus?
6:40 well he's born in 1941 albuquerque new mexico his uh father was a uh i guess a german immigrant or his grandfather's german immigrant moved from new mexico he co-founded what's called the sandia peak tramway adjacent to albuquerque which i guess is the third longest span in the world so that's kind of cool now mr dobby nordhaus although being from new mexico he went to high school at the private phillips academy in andover massachusetts
7:13 Okay, tell me the academy. Again, you kind of faded out there. The Phillips Academy in Andover, Massachusetts. Now, it's important. There's another Phillips Academy we'll get to. That's the Phillips Academy in Exeter. That's in New Hampshire. And they were founded by two brothers and cousins, and they're kind of rivals, the two. But the big one, the one we're talking about today, is from Andover. Last few weeks, we've talked about them.
7:43 The Horace Mann School. And see, what was the school we did last week? How do I forget that quickly? Drawing a blank on who we did last week. That's what travel will do for you. All right. Anyway, we've been talking about these private high schools, boarding schools, and how they are grooming factories. The Ivy League. And from the Ivy League, they go on to places like the Rhodes Foundation and all kinds of different corners of government.
8:19 Phillips at Andover is absolutely no exception to that, and we're going to spend some time on it. So this is founded in 1778 during the Revolutionary War of Evil. Most of the Boston schools were closed. Mr. Phillips, who founded it, had a strong Calvinist push, so there was a lot of religious doctrine in this, and a lot of the New England families really liked that, so they would send their kids there. George Washington would visit the campus in 1789 while he was president.
8:46 and eight of his nephews and grandnephews attended andover oh wow yeah john hancock signed its articles of incorporation wow paul revere designs its seal and its motto and the mottos two of them called non-cb which is not for oneself and the other one is finis origini which i believe is the end depends on the beginning the ends the ends the end depends on the beginning
9:16 That's the motto of the school. Suggesting, yeah, you get strong roots, the tree will grow strong, that kind of idea. And of course, it's the rival of the Phillips School of Exeter, founded by two different cousins. So typical private boarding school, limited number of admissions, all the things you'd expect. But let's talk about some of their alumni. This guy's been around since the beginning of our country. Going in alphabetical order again. First one was a Joseph Carter Abbott.
9:52 He was a Union Army general in the Civil War. This one's going to be very familiar to you. William M. Alexander, class of 1887. His grandfather was the same William Patterson Alexander we talked about before, who was a missionary in Hawaii. And of course, they're related to William DeWitt Alexander, who's a skull and bonesman, who was the surveyor of Hawaii. I told you this is going to go back to some old themes.
10:31 Those who haven't heard us before, you want to talk about why Hawaii is so funny? Well, for the reason that Hawaii, in William Bloom's book, Killing Hope, kind of sets the stage for the imperialistic nature of America, where we think that...
10:56 the imperialist all originated from Europe and that the United States was not involved in that at all, except for the fact that we've been involved in it. In William Bloom's book, beginning with Hawaii, in which there were a lot of missionaries sent over to Hawaii that decided being missionaries was not all it was hyped to be, and they began buying up.
11:25 farmland over there in the form of sugar plantations. And when the United States changed the duties on sugar imports, Hawaii was not part of the United States. So a group of them, to include these guys, went together and basically flew to the, not flew, but came to the United States and
11:52 petitioned the Secretary of State to send the Navy over because they were going to depose the recently anointed queen and take over the island. And they were going to make a deal with the United States that they were going to be a protectorate, a territory of the United States. And they did just that. The Secretary of State organized a Marine expedition, a Navy expedition over to
12:21 the island of hawaii sitting off the coast in full visibility as they could and depose the queen in order to take over hawaii so this is one of the very beginnings not that we hadn't done it before but this started a new trend that we're basically going to take over territories and of course hawaii was great for the navy as a stopping point and all of these other things and so be it
12:49 It is kind of a hallmark moment in time of the United States entrance into imperialism. Very much so. And we need to say that Sullivan and Cromwell were over there beforehand setting the groundwork legally. Our favorite law firm. Yeah. So would it shock you if Mr. Alexander, alumni of Andover, owned sugar plantations in Hawaii? I'm sorry?
13:21 Would it shock you to learn that he owned sugar plantations? No. I recognize his name. Yeah. Yeah. So where do you think he went to college? Yale. Yeah, absolutely. Yeah, and it's interesting. The Phillips School of Andover in Massachusetts, that was the feeding tube for Yale. And the Phillips School in Exeter was a feeding route to Harvard. So that's where the rivalry comes in.
13:53 So this guy went to Yale. Later on, he'd be on the San Francisco Chamber of Commerce. And oh, he was on the Board of Trustees for something known as the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. Which was really named the International Committee for War, not Peace. But yeah. No, and it's just we've only had about a dozen other people that worked for that, you know, in the last few weeks. And the last thing he did was interesting was.
14:23 He's on the board of trustees for Stanford University. Checking a few boxes. That's hilarious. Yeah. All right. Next guy we have starts a theme here. You know, we always said if you really want to control society, one of the things you have to control is the media. Yep. So let's keep track of that theme as we go down this list. Jonathan Alter, class of 1975, is a senior editor and columnist at Newsweek. Oh, of course. The CIA front.
14:56 We have Willow Bay, 1981, CNN news anchor. Here's a fun one. Bill Belichick, class of 71, the New England Patriots coach. Oh, my gosh. He's in the news this week because apparently he's got a 24-year-old honey now. He's coaching at the North Carolina, I think. Took a college job, and now he's dating a woman who's young enough to be his great-granddaughter. So good job, Bill. Next one on the list is a John Berman.
15:27 Class of 1990. Oh, he's a senior news anchor at CNN. So that's two CNNs so far out of one high school. Next name we get is Hiram Bingham III, who we've talked about on this show. The Bingham family, one of the oldest blue blood families in New England. And this is the one who's the explorer who rediscovered Machu Picchu. He went to school there. Wow. We've got a David B. Burney, who was also a union general. So this school has now produced two of the union's generals.
16:01 In the Civil War. Here's a fun one. Humphrey Bogart went there. I see a lot of Hollywood, which we know CIA too. So that's very interesting. Yeah, I'm glad you picked up on that because I left Humphrey Bogart in that. They really do. A lot of Hollywood stars come from the same backgrounds. It's not just rags to riches story very often. All right. We're going to spend some time on this next one. Class of 1959 was Paul Bremer.
16:36 Was it Bremer or Bremer? B-R-E-M-E-R. Yeah. Someone we know and love. So why is he important? Well, he was the administrator for the Coalition Provisional Authority of Iraq after a 2003 invasion. Interestingly enough, his father was the president of Christine Dior Perfume. So Paul Bremer went to Andover, then to Yale, was not skull and bones. Then he got his Harvard MBA.
17:09 He then went to school at a place called the Institut des Etudes Politiques de Paris. Remember that name because we're going to have it at the IDPD, whatever. I can't speak French at all, obviously. That's a French number of universities that study poli sci. But, you know, when you start talking about globalism and the Eurocentric politics, this guy would be someone who was educated in that school. So he joins the Foreign Service.
17:39 First is assigned to a place called Kabul, Afghanistan. And then he gets sent to Malawi in the late 60s. So a couple of hot spots of political activity. Then from 1972 to 76, he's the assistant to none other than Henry Kissinger himself. And he was there with Kissinger for the end of the Yom Kippur War in 73. He moves on.
18:11 becomes a special assistant to Secretary of State Alexander Hague under Reagan in 1981. Reagan then appoints him as an ambassador at large for counterterrorism and the coordinator for counterterrorism in 1986. Why is that such an important year for him to be in that position? Because that is the belly button. As a matter of fact, the long post that I just posted today.
18:40 outlines all of the CIA people that are involved in that cell. John Brennan was there. That's the hotspot in the United States for coordinating the CIA's creation of terrorism, not a counterterrorism activity. It coordinates all of that. And there's a guy from one of our private exclusive grooming boarding schools gets put in that position.
19:11 Because why wouldn't he? Okay, then he goes into the private sector temporarily and becomes the director at what's called Kissinger and Associates, a consulting firm that Kissinger did to make his money on the side. 99, he gets appointed chair of the National Commission on Terrorism. 1999, interesting timing. Yeah, right before 9-11. Exactly. I'm glad you bring that up because he was the chairman of Marsh McClanahan's.
19:43 Marsh Crisis Consulting, which is the risk and insurance services firm. And Marsh McClanahan had an office in the World Trade Center, two floors above where the plane hit, where they had 1,700 employees in the North Tower. Now, I'm not saying there's any relation there, but I'm also not saying it. Right. Fair enough. All right. Then he, after surviving 9-11, he gets on the National Academy of Sciences Committee on Science and Technology for Countering Terrorism.
20:19 And they came out with a paper, Making the Nation Safer, the Role of Science and Technology in Countering Terrorism. Which is the massive surveillance effort to control all of us. Yeah. And Bremer's behind that. So he arrives in Iraq in May 2003. And he first became famous for saying, ladies and gentlemen, we got him. When they killed Saddam Hussein. Yeah. And that's a funny internet meme these days. People use it all the time.
20:54 So then he becomes the chief executive authority in Iraq. Of course, did a splendid job. The coalition provisional authority was considered the most powerful foreign post held by any American since MacArthur in Japan. Basically, he could rule by decree. Correct. A couple of his decrees that we've felt the fallout from. One is he banned the Ba'ath Party in all forms. That was Saddam Hussein's political party. And then he dismantled the Iraqi army.
21:27 What were the results of those two things? The total destruction of Iraq. The total void of any kind of order, law or anything. And that's really what we we got, what we got today. Hotbed of all kinds of terrorism simply because Bremer was terrible at his job. Or maybe he was very good at it. Might have been by it might have been by design. Where are we? So United Nations resolution.
21:58 Go ahead. Let me just say this. It's definitely by design because by keeping Iraq in a constant state of turmoil, they were able to try to do regime change in Syria. They were able to destabilize Iran. They were able to destabilize all of the Kurdish populations in the north. It was 100 percent by design. And it also just so everybody knows the context of this.
22:25 part of the Israeli plan of which Frank Luntz and Paul Nitz, I believe, wrote the quote-unquote PR plan in order to sell all of the destabilization efforts to the American people. There was actually a plan, a public relations plan, to sell American on his role.
22:53 in the destabilization of iraq and bremer's running point on all this stuff yeah okay it gets even uglier there united nations resolution 1483 gave bremer oversight on iraqi oil revenue and what they did is they repaired all the wellheads and the pipelines somehow they were stalled repairing the meters so there's no way to keep accounting of where the oil iraqi oil shipments went
23:23 And a lot of people don't think that was a coincidence. Two days before leaving Iraq, Bremer issues an order giving all military and civilian contractors immunity from Iraqi law. And we know the kind of shenanigans that were going on there. In all venues, as far as murder. I mean, they basically implemented a Phoenix-style program on Iraqi civilians. Exactly. And now they all get a get-out-of-jail-free card. He gave them all a pardon.
23:58 And most of his staff leaves with him. So you can't audit anything because they took their records with them. So everything that happened in Iraq, we don't even know the half of it. Right. And you had all of the torture places, Abu Ghraib, all of that stuff that was basically replicated from Vietnam. Yeah. Newt Gingrich gets called him the, what's the quote, the largest single disaster of an American foreign policy in modern times. Yep.
24:27 He gets questioned before Congress in 07 about the $8.8 billion in missing funds. And that money never did turn up, did it? Nope. And he's a supporter of the continued occupation of Afghanistan. And you will be shocked to know that he is a board member of the IRI. No, I would not. But yeah. Yeah. He's the International Republican Institute, basically the Republican side of the CIA. Correct.
24:57 That is the one that for 25 years John McCain ran and did regime change with hundreds of millions of dollars over the course of his tenure. That's Mr. Bremer, alumni of the nice, innocent private boarding school in Andover. All right. Next name on the list. Got by the name of Michael Burlingame, class of 1960. He's a very famous Lincoln historian.
25:31 And if you want the official version of Lincoln, the one that's not true, you go read Burlingame. He'll tell you he grew up in a log cabin and was honest to Abe and saved the Union, none of which is technically true. So I had to put him on there because I can't stand the guy. He's one of those mainstream historians that rewrites history. Another fun name on there, Edgar Rice Burroughs. One of my favorite authors as a kid. He's class of 1894.
26:03 You know, Edgar Rice Burroughs actually deserves another comment because one of the things that he wrote about was the noble savage. And that concept came in with the Fabians in the 20th century. So when you get all these, I don't want to call them tree huggers, these people, you know, all the reparations crew that, you know, the native Indians are always the good ones and everything like that. And they never do anything wrong. That's the noble savage concept that Edgar Rice Burroughs popularized. It's part of the whole Fabian socialist movement. He contributed to it.
26:33 Oh, next three names that went to high school here are George H.W. Bush, his son George W. Bush, and of course Jeb Bush all went to this private high school. Wow. Same school that, wait, Paul Bremer went to? Bush gets into Iraq and Bremer cleans up the mess. Do you think there's any coincidence there? I don't think it's a coincidence at all. Yeah. So now you understand why this school needed some more attention. We talk about secret societies. Wow.
27:11 Here's one. Lincoln Chafee, we've talked about before. Class of 1971, who would become the Rhode Island governor and senator. And he comes from a family of skull and bones men. Yikes. We've got Otis Chandler, class of 46. He was a publisher of the Los Angeles Times. Okay. We have Susan Shearer, 1976, who's an editor at the New York Times. Oh, my gosh. The school's not that big.
27:49 All right. This one is going to be fun. A guy by the name of Shaosan Chao. And I knew I'd seen this name before, so I looked into it. Hold on. Hold on. You blanked out. Say his name again. Shaosan Chao. S-H-O-U-S-O-N. The last name is Chao. C-H-O-W. Okay. He's Andover class of 1881. His father was the comprador of Canton and Hong Kong steamship company.
28:23 This is back in the glory days of the British colonialism in Hong Kong, right during the opium wars, basically. I was going to say, if he owns ships out of Hong Kong, he's in the opium trade. Yeah. So this guy, this kid Shao San, his dad was all part of that. He's the third of a group of Chinese students sponsored by the Qing dynasty government to go to the U.S. in the 1870s. He would then go on to Columbia University, but he got recalled.
28:55 So he becomes president of the China Merchant Steam Navigation Company. Later in his career, he becomes the customs and trade superintendent and counselor for foreign affairs of the country of China from 1907 to 1910. He'd leave the government after the 1911 revolution. In 1918, he founds the Bank of East Asia. Now, why is that interesting? We've talked about the Chinese banks and the opium trade and everything like that. This guy's involved in that.
29:34 In 1926, the guy becomes the first Chinese member of the Executive Council of Hong Kong and gets knighted by England in 1933. So he's a British knight, went to school in the United States. Well, that's what happens to all opium dealers. They become British knights, right? Apparently. During the Japanese occupation of Hong Kong, it says he joins the Chinese Cooperative Council, basically to...
30:07 Those were the people that were working with the Japanese to try to maintain some order, whatever. But he suffered no penalties from the Chinese afterwards. No penalties at all. So he's had a very interesting career. I would say he ended up as a bit of a spy or a counter. I'd say more than a counter spy. But interesting for a guy who just went to this small little private high school in Massachusetts. Holy crap. Yeah.
30:37 Next name we have on here is a guy by the name of George Church, class of 72. He is the professor of genetics at Harvard Medical School. Oh my gosh. Yeah. What do we know about him? He got a degree from Duke in zoology and chemistry in only two years. So he's a genius. Okay, hold on, hold on. So zoology. Now let me just say this, especially since you said he's a geneticist.
31:10 So this is the stuff that Epstein was funding. He was funding an entire medical initiative thanks to his financial backers sitting at Harvard, working at MIT as well. And so this is huge, actually. And it goes back to the Fabian Society. All of those people that were doing the...
31:40 How do you kill a bunch of people? And the interbreeding of people all were from the veterinarian science, zoology sciences, and not human science. This is critical. Yeah, eugenicists. And of course, we know they basically just cloned a woolly mammoth that's been in stink for 10,000 years. They're doing that work. That really does scare the hell out of me. Right. Imagine seeing Jurassic Park and thinking that was a good idea.
32:17 He's on the National Science Foundation Fellowship. He is on the advisory board of the BGI group. And that group is designated a Chinese military company by the U.S. Department of Defense. So he's doing all this research for a company now while working for Harvard that is considered a Chinese military operation. Holy crap. Yeah. Remind me where COVID came from?
32:54 All right. Next name we have here. Worth mentioning, a guy by the name of Raymond Clevenger, class of 55, 1955. He was a judge for the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit. My old buddy, William Sloan Coffin, 1942, went to school there. Sloan Coffin, of course, was from the Coffin family, old New England family, and a member of Skull and Bones. So are you going to... Go ahead. Sorry.
33:26 I was going to say, one of the very first families we talked about were the Coffins. Are you going to talk about Harlan Cleveland? I wasn't. All right. Go ahead. I have to bring him up. Harlan Cleveland, alumni, was the LBJ post-JFK's assassination, which I firmly believe was ran out of NATO. And he was the U.S. ambassador to NATO for LBJ.
33:57 He was also involved in the International Organization of Affairs for the State Department. He was the president of the University of Hawaii. Oh, and look, he's a Rhodes Scholar, an Oxford grad. Checks a few boxes. This is freaking crazy. Okay, go ahead. It's almost like they have a guidance counselor sitting at these schools and saying, okay, these are the things you want. If you want to become the...
34:32 Master spy. Someday these are the different things you have to do, and they all follow the same career path. All right, good catch on that one. Oh, yes. Here's a fun one. John Darnton, class of 1960. He was a Pulitzer Prize foreign correspondent for the New York Times. Oh, my gosh. His father was a New York Times correspondent who was killed off of New Guinea during World War II. So John here, in 1976, he goes abroad to Africa.
35:06 to cover Africa out of Lagos, Nigeria. He gets expelled from there by the military government in 1977, and then he is covered the following. The protests in South Africa, the liberation movement in Rhodesia, the guerrilla fighting in Ethiopia, Somalia, Zaire, and the fall of Idi Amin in Uganda. Okay, so that's CIA, CIA, CIA, CIA. No, but I told you, he's a foreign correspondent for the New York Times.
35:36 He couldn't possibly be CIA. He's the CIA mouth. He's covering all of the CIA coups is what you just said. Exactly. Okay. He's another one of our Forrest Gumps that just shows up in the strangest places. And he got a Pulitzer Prize for all this, by the way. In 79, he's based in Warsaw, Poland, covering Eastern Europe. And he gets a Pulitzer Prize for his coverage of Poland under martial law. Wow.
36:12 He wrote some books, too. And of course, that's at the time when Poland was trying to negotiate the exit from the Soviet Union. Yeah, this is just crazy. This is crazy. With the CIA's help, of course. And of course, the CIA's got its biggest base anywhere in the world. It's now in Poland, which happens to be right next door to Ukraine.
36:43 So no coincidence there. All right, so this guy wrote books. And, well, you're not going to believe what he wrote books about. How about cloning? Oh, my gosh. Life extension. Wrote about artificial intelligence all the way back in 2002. Human consciousness and the Darwin conspiracy. So he's the predictor of the things to come that they're all working on. Apparently.
37:21 All right. He's got a brother named Robert Darden, three years older, class of Andover, class of 1957. He's a historian also. Went to Harvard and was a Rhodes Scholar again. And he's best known as being the president of the American Historical Association. And that is an important position. We always talk about how they rewrite our history and it's not what they say, it's what they leave out. This guy is the president of the one of the biggest.
37:52 uh associations that's doing all that the brother of the cia spy we just discussed who and the the brother was sponsored by the melon fan foundation which is another cia front i find them in funding a whole bunch of the nefarious things yeah and that's why you see the carnegie melon combination on so many different uh things the carnegie family of course yeah holy moly well those are your dartons
38:24 All right. This next name is one of my favorite people of all time. Norman Dodd, class of 1918. We're going to talk about him a lot more when we start talking about the foundations. This is the guy who was the head investigator for the Reese Committee looking into foundations. And if you listen to this guy talk, you can find his interviews. And we're going to spend some time on Norman Dodd. I did not know he went to this school, but apparently he did. He's one of the good guys, though. Wow.
38:59 Next name is a guy by the name of Tim Draper. And everybody in my business knows that name because he's a very famous venture capitalist, founder of Draper Fisher Jerviston or whatever it's called, DFJ. And he's one of the initial investors in the following. Baidu, Hotmail, Skype, Tesla, SpaceX, AngelList, SolarCity, Ring, Twitter, DocuSign, Coinbase.
39:32 Robinhood, Twitch, Ancestry.com. And he lost his shirt in Theranos. And he's also the guy that bought the Bitcoin that the government had seized from the Silk Road seizure. So that is a very famous venture capitalist. Oh, wait, wait a minute. Wait a minute. Go over them again. We got Baidu. Stop me when you want me to. Hotmail. Skype. Tesla. SpaceX. Elon Musk. AngelList.
40:04 SolarCity, Ring, Twitter, DocuSign, Coinbase, Robinhood, Twitch, Ancestry.com, and Theranos. So this guy is an initial investor on everything that they are using today to collect your data, is what you're telling me. Yeah. Got the Ancestry.com.
40:35 you've got the social media you've got the robin hood app investment app yeah he's been in all of that wow skype so they can literally spy on everything docu sign so they know who's buying what okay all right keep going all right that's it for mr draper i'm very wealthy guy i had to put this one in there sam andacott class of 92 just because he's the lead singer for one of my favorite bands the bravery
41:10 Sorry. I have to go off topic when I see something like that. Okay. David Enzor, class of 1969. What's he? Oh, he's a CNN correspondent. Are we up to four CNN now? Oh, my gosh. We have John Murray Forbes, who is a railroad magnate from that Forbes family. Same Forbes family. It's been all over the place. The old Boston Brahman family. He was involved in Burlington Railroads. And he was involved.
41:41 We've talked about this before. Russell & Company, the China trading house. Another Hong Kong connection. We've got a Jeffrey Garten, class of 64. He's now the dean of the Yale School of Management. Which is the other thing that, so just to be clear, I made this point earlier, so I want to make it again. The Yale guy went to either Harvard Law or Harvard School of Management. Mm-hmm. Okay.
42:17 And if we remember, the guy who founded the Yale School of Management was none other than Skull and Bonesman, William H. Donaldson, who we've talked about before. Yes, exactly. Oops. Okay. Next name I have is an A, Bartlett Giamatti, also known as Bart Giamatti, baseball commissioner and the president of Yale University. John Campbell Greenway, 1895. He was an army general, one of the Rough Riders.
42:59 And was described as an intel officer with the Office of Naval Intelligence. Would then go on to become a mining magnate. So early intelligence guy from 1895. And keep in mind that the mining expeditions during this time.
43:18 was what they were using as the intelligence apparatus to go around and scout all of the places that they wanted to have coups and take over so that they could gather all of the resources under their control. Yeah, the very first United States Intelligence Agency was from the Navy. It was to find out the plans of this new weapon of mass destruction known as a battleship. All right, the next name I have on here is...
43:50 is a James Greenway, 1926. He was known as the curator for the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Harvard. And he was a Lieutenant Commander of the U.S. Navy Intelligence Officer with the Office of Naval Intel. So, and let me make this point because this came up in my research. The Office of Navy Intelligence created their own Task Force 157 that went around and mapped all of the harbors everywhere.
44:21 So the entire world. And that's what Edwin Wilson was involved in, who was later put in prison by the CIA. He was a weapons seller to Libya. And so he created a front company for the CIA. And then the CIA wanted someone else running that company. So they imprisoned him, Edwin Wilson.
44:47 This is critically important because they use the Office of Naval Intelligence under the guise of mapping harbors for ports for the Navy. But what they were really doing is figuring out how they could control these ports. And from this one private high school, we've got several connections to ONI, Office of Naval Intelligence. And this guy is also in charge of the Museum of Zoology. And we just talked about this geneticist that started with zoology. So that's, you know, I don't know.
45:20 Something odd. Next name we have is a Roderick Stephen Hall, 1934. He was an OSS agent, murdered by the SS in 1945. This guy's got an interesting story. He was born in Beijing, spent an international life, volunteered for the OSS or for the Army when the war broke out, and gets immediately, because it was international, multiple languages, gets moved to the OSS.
45:49 Stopped behind enemy lines. He was worried about what's called the Brenner Pass. Oh, by the way, he's Yale-educated, of course. But the Germans captured him behind enemy lines when they were trying to keep the Brenner Pass open, and he would end up being murdered while he was interrogated. So he might have died a hero. All right, who else goes to this exclusive high school breeding ground? None other than Brian Henson, the son of the Muppets puppeteer Jim Henson.
46:21 The son of who? Jim Henson from the Muppets. Oh, Jim Henson. Okay. Yes. And Brian now runs the Muppets. And you know they're up to no good. So they're programming our kids. You can't trust those Muppets. Oh, Oliver Wendell Holmes went there in 1825. That's kind of cool. One of the great writers in American history. Chris Hughes, 2002.
46:53 Co-founder of Facebook, which makes perfect sense. Then, of course, we've got Robert Ingersoll, the former U.S. Deputy Secretary of State under both Nixon and Ford, who is a trustee of the Aspen Institute of Humanistic Studies. Of course he is. Yes, which is basically Spook Central, right? Yes. What's also interesting is he was the director of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.
47:26 For those who don't know, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce is the biggest lobbyist group on the Republican side, GOP, and they do not. Their name is they're supposed to be representing all businesses. No, they are the ones who carve out trade deals for the multinational corporations. They do this hand in hand with the intelligence agencies. Chamber of Commerce are not good players. They very much oppose Trump's agenda. And and they have their own slush fund next to the IRI.
47:54 under the National Endowment for Democracy. Yeah. Chamber of Commerce is not a good, they are bad actors, in my opinion. All right. That's Mr. Ingersoll. Next name on here, class of 1979. How about JFK Jr.? His cousin, I believe, Max Kennedy, went there but got expelled. And Patrick Kennedy, the U.S. rep from Rhode Island, also went there. Wow. Keeping it in the family, how about Vanessa Carey, the daughter of John Carey, skull and bones?
48:38 She's up to something interesting. It's worth looking into. She does something called Seed Global Health, which is affiliated with spreading, I think, nursing around the world. They work with the Peace Corps. Oh, yeah. She definitely needs to be looked into because that's not good. Yeah, that's spelled Seed, S-E-E-D, Global Health. So anybody wants to do the dig on that, feel free. I did not have time. Yep. I just wonder where they're doing most of their activities.
49:08 And I bet we could guess without even looking. I bet it overlays Operation Gladio really well. Well, it's a newer organization. Well, they're still doing it. They're still doing overthrows. All right. Next name we have. Oh, of course, we've got some royalty here. How about a Prince Rahim Aga Khan? This is a guy who went there in 1990. This guy's descended from Shia royalty, apparently direct descendant of Muhammad himself. Okay.
49:42 so let me do you have more on khan no i didn't want to go into the details yeah let me remind everybody khan this family was um front and center in the world wildlife fund because they they build themselves as environmental environmentalist philanthropist
50:04 He was one of the major funders of the World Wildlife Fund. He was an original member of the Thousand and One Club. And he also was part of the they they have a whole bunch of hotels like these, quote unquote, eco friendly hotels. And they would put them in places like the Serengeti and run off all of the indigenous people. And then.
50:32 take tour buses through the indigenous camps that they set up with lean-to's and have the indigenous people dance for the tourists that now occupy their old houses or their old homelands. This is that con. And let's see, I think it's like the 50th in the line of descendant, the 50th descendant. But fun stuff. All right, moving on. Someone named Chen Tung Lang Cheng.
51:07 Who would become the Chinese ambassador to the United States. Went to high school at Andover. So they came here to go to school. They go back to China and then come here as the ambassador to China. Yeah. And then their network with all the other muckety mucks who went to this school. Correct. That's how you get back to ordeals done. Class of 1968. I've got a guy by the name of I. Lewis. Scooter Libby. Scooter Libby. Oh, God.
51:39 Chief of Staff to Dick Cheney, who's indicted for the leak of CIA's own Valerie Plame. That's good, Libby. Yeah. Yeah, I guess Trump didn't pardon him. He basically, what's the word? He commuted his sentence, though. So, oh, here's a fun one. A guy by the name of Vance C. McCormick. He would be an All-American quarterback. Went to Yale. No skull and bones that we can tell. Became a publisher.
52:16 It was political. Somehow he became the chairman of the DNC from 1916 to 1919. And I'll remind you, Democrats got wiped out in 1920 in the election. But somehow this guy was the leader of the American delegation at the Treaty of Versailles. And we know some of the other people that were on that delegation, including the Dulles brothers, who go on to follow the CIA. Yep. That's a Vance C. McCormick. And I don't know how he got the job as the leader of the delegation. Probably going to this school.
52:47 Perhaps, because he doesn't have any other credentials that really would suggest that that's a role. He is definitely one of the inside guys. And that's the Treaty of Versailles where they basically carved up the entire world? Yes. Yeah. And, of course, under the worst president ever, Woodrow Wilson. All right. Mr. McCormick. I'm trying to remember, was his name in The Old Boys? Do we see that? We must have seen it a bunch. I said it was familiar.
53:21 I don't have that book in here. All right. I'll look for it next time. I got to do a reread of the book anyway, so I'll look for the name again. Oh, yes, I do. I hear the old boys. Hold on. I'll look it up real quick. Yeah, let us know if you see McCormick. All right. Keep going. I've got a John U. Monroe, M-O-N-R-O, who's the dean of Harvard. I've got a William Henry Moody, 1871, who would become a U.S. Supreme Court justice. Of course, Samuel Morse, class of 1805, the inventor of the Morse code. That's very cool.
53:57 Class of 1997, Massachusetts Congressman Seth Moulton. Well, he is in here. He is in here. He is? He is. Yeah, I knew that's where I see. I thought that's where I'd seen the name. Yeah. Vance McCormick. It says, let's see. They're talking about.
54:20 Secretary of State Lansing and says they talk about Christian Harder, remain cordial and tolerant to the Academians. And there were dinners on Allen's tab as well as lunches at the RIT, which Allen discreetly brought Vance McCormick and his Uncle Robert together with the ever better disposed Seymour.
54:49 Yeah, he definitely is in here. Robert Lansing is the Secretary of State who's also the uncle of the Dulles brothers, one of which would become the next Secretary of State if you want to know how incestuous our foreign policy is. So, yep. Correct. All right, moving on. But again, all of these people are at the Versailles that this seemingly unqualified guy is there as well. Yep. And most of the people in the U.S. delegation are a bunch of academics from the Ivy League.
55:20 Oh, he also ran the war trade board. Vance McCormick did. It says he was the abrasive harvester heir who supervised the DNC. So he's the heir to the international harvester money. Okay. Well, speaking of heirs to money, speaking of heirs, we got a class of 1990, someone by the name of Lachlan Murdoch, son of Rupert Murdoch. Okay.
55:54 So we've got someone named Jim's David Olin, class of 1992, who's now the dean of the Cornell Law School. A lot of deans of Ivy League schools coming out of this one high school, huh? And that means that they control everything. It also probably means they're part of the CIA because the CIA uses all of these particular schools as recruiting ground. Bingo. Oh, my gosh. That's the exact connection I was trying to make. Oh, my gosh.
56:26 You familiar with an acoustical band called Pentatonix? No. One of their singers went to this school, Kevin Olusola. I like Pentatonix. They do a version of the Little Drummer Boy that I play every year. There's a Peter Pelangian, son of a...
56:52 Lebanese real estate investor. He's now a CEO of what's called Intercontinental Real Estate Corporation, which manages over $10 billion in private equity real estate. Very successful company. Which is where the CIA parks their money to clean it. It's entirely possible that that's one of the conduits. Next name I have is one Katie Porter, the California congresswoman who just lost her bid to become a senator through Adam Schiff. She went to this school. Holy moly.
57:25 We have a Henry Riggs Rathbone, 1887, who became an Illinois congressman. But he's interesting because his parents were sitting with Lincoln when Lincoln was shot. Oh, my. Yeah. Funny story. And then he would go on to become a congressman. There is Charles Ruff, class of 1956, and he's known for being the lawyer who defended Clinton during his impeachment. Well, of course he was.
58:00 How about Will Scharf, class of 2004? That Will Scharf, he's the assistant to President Trump. Are we supposed to be hoping that he's one of the good guys? I don't know. They haven't produced a lot of good guys, by the way. Yeah, they just got rid of one today. Or it sounds like they're going to. That probably was announced while we've been on the air. Walls? Yeah. Yeah. All right. I've got a Robert B. Semple Jr., class of 1954.
58:35 Of course, he's an associate editor at the New York Times who got his Pulitzer Prize for writing on environmental issues. Of course. We'll talk about the environmental issues in a bit. We had a Peter Clinton Smith, 64, who's the assistant director general for education at UNESCO. Oh, my gosh. Oh, my gosh. How about famous pediatrician Benjamin Spock?
59:09 Yeah, the Dr. Spock. That does not surprise me. Probably the most influential pediatrician of all time. Yes. In destroying children. Yeah. Robert B. Stearns, 1906, the founder of Bear Stearns, the bankrupt, now bankrupt investment firm. Yeah, talk about destroying children. You know, these people, they go to these schools, these grooming schools, then they go to Ivy League. And what they're learning is all these progressive versions of reality.
59:44 This progressive stuff, it's all about transhumanism. All these things are taught at those schools, quietly and in the dark. But that's how we get people like Dr. Spock. Yeah. Yeah, the next one's a fun name we know and love. Henry Stimson. Yeah. Skull and bones, as well as many other things. We don't need to beat up Stimson anymore. We have a Richard K. Sutherland, class of 1911, who becomes a U.S. Army general after going to Yale. 1937.
1:00:22 He's commanding a battalion of the 15th Industry in a place called Tianjin, China. What's the army doing in Tianjin, China in 1937, Colonel? Not good things. So in 1938, he serves under MacArthur in the Philippines. And they're doing even worse things there. And he's MacArthur's chief of staff for the entire war. And he was there for the surrender of Japan. But does that not also mean he was there?
1:00:56 when they discovered the operation golden lily treasure correct and the non-nuremberg um accountability of all the war criminals that killed all of the pows yeah this guy's there for that all right moving on he would have also been there then um does it say how long he was um with macarthur because he would have been there for the adopting of shankai shek and
1:01:29 potentially even the beginning of the Korean War, which is, you know, another false flag? What I got is he was MacArthur's chief of staff for the entire war. I don't know about after the war. Okay. I didn't get any notes on that. Okay. Next name we have was, of course, Thomas Thatcher, Skull and Bones, Solicitor General of the United States. We have talked about the Thatcher family before. Yeah. I've got an Evan Thomas, who is the assistant managing editor at Newsweek.
1:02:07 Alexander Trowbridge, 1947. He was the Secretary of Commerce under LBJ. Kind of an important position. It seems like there was a few, right? This is at least the second one under LBJ. Yeah. All right, this next name I'm not even going to try to pronounce because it's four names, but this guy grew up to be the King of Bhutan. I'm not even going to attempt the name. It ends in Wangchuk. Okay.
1:02:36 All right. The last name we want to talk about that went to this school, the Phillips Academy in Andover, Massachusetts, is none other than former director of the FBI, Christopher Wray. Oh, holy crap. Well, let's talk about holy crap, Christopher Wray, shall we? Sure. Born in New York City, 1966. Goes to college, of course, at Yale. Graduated in 1989. We do not know if he was skull and bones because remember the bones list ends in 82.
1:03:09 he would have been one of the first ones so we did not know from there he went to yale law joins the government as an assistant u.s attorney in georgia in 1997. spent a couple years out of the government 2016 and 17 working for a private firm known as king and spalding remember that name yes in those two years christopher ray earned 9.2 million in fact his net worth is estimated to be almost 40 million dollars by the wall street journal
1:03:47 Well, let's go back to this firm, King & Spalding. This is the law firm that advises Donald Trump's real estate empire. And their alumni include a lot of revolving door from government to this firm back and forth. How about Sally Yates, who resigned from Trump's DOJ because she wouldn't enforce the travel ban? How about Rod Rosenstein, who is from this firm? Some new people that just joined this firm, just left the Biden administration.
1:04:21 And now work for this firm, same firm that's still managing Donald Trump's real estate empire. And I don't know if Christopher Wray is working for them yet or not, but these three are. How about Lauren Roth, who came from the FDA? Someone named Nima Melanina, Melaninia, who worked at the State Department, but she focused on cybersecurity and artificial intelligence. Now works for this law firm where Christopher Wray comes from. And there's another guy, Brian Magirus, who works, came from the Commerce Department. All back to this firm.
1:04:54 where Christopher Wray worked. And they managed Donald Trump's real estate empire or advised him on it. So, all right. That's about all I have. Can I add one? Yeah, go ahead. The Wrigleys from the Chewing Gum Wrigley family, Philip Wrigley graduated from here. I'm gonna skip right over here. Yeah, they're also, well.
1:05:27 This name rang a bell for me because of Operation Gladio and the fact that I used to go to Catalina Island all the time when I lived in L.A. That was a really cool weekend, kind of take the ferry over type thing. And I learned a lot about the history. There's a lot of history to Catalina Island that's not good. The Wrigley building in Chicago, he spent a lot of time in Chicago. Obviously.
1:05:56 was part of the Cubs, the Chicago Cubs realm. And if you've ever, I've been to Chicago multiple times. I was stationed in Illinois, been through the part that's public that you can walk through in the Wrigley building only because of my infatuation with architecture and stuff like this. But the Wrigleys have a very nefarious background
1:06:27 to some extent um with the chicago chicago mob and then their role um as a quote-unquote getaway for hollywood over on catalina island i i'm just shocked again that he comes from the same school i have spent a uh spent a lot of time in catalina myself in fact that's where i saw my first great white shark on there when i'm diving yeah that's i love it over there
1:06:57 Yeah, it's beautiful. All right, let's wrap up. Let's get back to the star of our show who went to this wonderful school, Mr. Nordhaus. So after he's left the Andover, of course, he goes to Yale. Skull and bones. He got a B.A. and an M.A. from Yale in 1963 and 72. And, of course, he then gets his certificate from, once again, the Institut d'Etudes et Politiques, the French Poli-Sci.
1:07:28 group i mentioned earlier where someone else went so kind of small world this high school's got a pipeline to the french uh nordhaus would then get his phd from mit in 1967 becomes a visiting fellow at cambridge in england in 70 and 71. he's been a faculty member of yale at yale ever since 1967. so that's like longer than i've been alive he's been at yale and he's
1:07:59 in two schools there one is economics and the other is a school of the environment and this is the guy that tries to combine those two different schools he's been on the brookings panel of economic activity since 1972. wow we're going to talk about brookings here in a bit he was in the carter administration's council of economic advisors he would go on to become the chairman of the federal reserve bank of boston in 2014 and 15.
1:08:35 So this is a very serious economist. And he is a major problem because he's written a bunch of books on global warming and climate change. And he tries to just basically combine that with economics. And the problem with it is, is he starts with his foregone conclusion and tries to prove it backwards. That's exactly what this guy's done his whole career. His work is used to justify some of these green policies initiatives all over the world. This is the guy more than anyone else that has designed those policies.
1:09:07 Some of his books. You're going to love these. Managing the Global Commons, The Economics of Climate Change, 1994. How about Warming the World, Economic Models of Global Warming? How about The Climate Casino, Risk Uncertainty in Economics for a Warming World? How about The Spirit of Green, The Economics of Collisions and Contagions in a Crowded World? This guy is nothing but a depopulation Malthusian.
1:09:44 In 1972, with a fellow Yale professor, James Toman, he published Is Growth Obsolete? And he starts creating all these ways of measuring everything from like the carbon tax and, you know, all that stuff. Most of it comes from this guy. I mean, he's cost the world billions and billions of dollars. There's ridiculous nonsense. First of all, this is a galleon. The whole point of the whole global warming scare is the resource grab by the elite. So what they do is they create.
1:10:13 An artificial threat, just like they did with COVID. They make it seem worse. The climate threat, we've got to give more power to the elites. Otherwise, we're all going to die from climate change. And they throw billions of dollars of this. And it's still a giant land grab. Trillions of dollars of money is going to be made from this resource grab these guys are doing. And it's all based on a BS theory. Because carbon is not a problem. Correct. This is the guy justifying it all with economic policies. And yes, he's from Skull and Bones.
1:10:46 And the Andover School. That's just crazy. And so you know he's best friends with John Kerry. Oh, gotta be. Absolutely gotta be. All right, let's finish up and just talk about the Brookings Institute because we're going to spend more time on these institutions. But because this guy is on there, I think we could spend a few minutes on it. This is a think tank that conducts research and education in the social sciences. Okay, hold on.
1:11:21 You forgot your research. Air quotes. My apologies. University of Pennsylvania says it's been they've got something called a go to think tank. And next report, Brookings is ranked number one every year since 2008. So this is the think tanks think tank. It is founded Brookings Institute in 1916 as the Institute for Government Research, the IGR. And its purpose. Listen, you're probably going to get some buzzwords that you love. Three point bullet points of purposes.
1:11:56 Strengthen American democracy. Number two, foster economic and social welfare, security and opportunity for Americans and secure a more open, safe, prosperous and cooperative international system. OK, so let me rephrase that. Hold on. What? Make the first point again. First point is strengthen American democracy, which means destroy the republic. Go ahead.
1:12:28 Foster economic and social welfare security and opportunity for Americans. Which means destroy it. Go ahead. Okay. And four is secure a more open, safe, prosperous and cooperative international system. Which means we're going to implement one world order. Go ahead. Globalism. Yeah. Yeah. Thanks. Thank you for that translation. Sure. I'm getting really good at it.
1:12:52 Yes, you are. The founder was a philanthropist by the name of Robert S. Brookings, lived from 1850 to 1932. He founded three organizations. One was the IGR. The other one was the Institute of Economics, which was funded by none other than the Carnegie Corporation. The Carnegie Corporate. Yeah, I'll say that again. And then, of course, there was the Robert Brookings Graduate School, which is associated with Washington University in St. Louis.
1:13:21 And in 1927, they merged the three of those together to become the Brookings Institute. So Brookings Institute rises to fame pretty quickly. FDR commissions them to help understand the causes of the Great Depression. Remember, this is this great think tank that's into economics. And, you know, the Great Depression never ended under FDR. They actually opposed FDR's National Recovery Administration, said it wouldn't work. War breaks out in Europe.
1:13:57 and the brookings institute starts studying those studies on mobilization they helped draw out the plans for u.s mobilization if we were to enter into the war as if that was ever a question right then after the war they were asked to plan for the european republic recovery program and they were basically the ones who designed the marshall plan rollout and how many operation gladio exactly
1:14:28 And how many skull and bones connections do we have to the Marshall Plan? Just about all of them. Yeah. And again, for those who don't recall, the Marshall Plan, the United States never got out of the Great Depression. The war happened. We militarized industrial production, which, of course, is going to drive your economy, drive up taxes, everything like that. But when the war ended, basically most of the civilized world had been bombed to smithereens.
1:14:55 We had five or six million service members coming back to the States and they weren't going to have jobs. We were going right back into the Great Depression. So instead of letting that happen, the plan was the Marshall Plan, where basically we print a whole lot of money, send it over to Europe so they can rebuild and buy American products. And that's why America prospered post-World War II. Things that caused the Great Depression were never fixed. It's been papered over.
1:15:21 It was basically taking taxpayer dollars that we were going to pay interest on forever and laundering it through the European countries to make the oligarchs in America rich. Yeah. Our multinational corporations benefited. Yeah. That's exactly right. Brookings are the ones who helped implement that. Thanks, guys. Brookings also helped create the whole plan for the United Nations.
1:15:50 They're doing so well in 1952 to get gigantic grants from the Rockefeller and Ford Foundations. CIA and CIA. Exactly. And worse. Rockefeller is behind this whole climate scam thing from day one. That's always been a Rockefeller thing. And I've told that story on the show many times. The Brookings Institute would then create the office of the Congressional Budget Office. And there's a reason for that. Therefore, they get to influence exactly what policies.
1:16:22 get implemented because the CBO tells Congress whether something's good or not. It basically allows them to control the purse. Under Nixon, the Brookings Institute's really sweetheart relationship with the office of the president really soured. And there's a great story where G. Gordon Liddy and his White House plumbers, they were actually going to firebomb the Brookings Institute's headquarters and steal their classified files. And the only reason that plan got canceled was because Nixon would not pay for a fire engine as a getaway vehicle.
1:17:00 Yeah, this is a true story from Watergate. The guys who did Watergate were actually going to go bomb the Brookings Institute and steal their material. And then, of course, what else do you know about the Brookings Institute? One of our favorites, Strobe Talbot, Rhodes Scholar, Bill Clinton's roommate in college, became the president of the Brookings Institute. And under him, the Brookings Institute in the Middle East and India now has offices in Doha, Beijing, and New Delhi.
1:17:31 because it is the globalist organization and not about strengthening american democracy and that is all i have for today well i know they're in cutter too which is obviously a big deal um you know that's where we ended up putting u.s central command's headquarters was in um cutter so um yeah they definitely have a worldwide um presence
1:18:02 Yeah, so you're given all this, you know, obviously this is a globalist institution. They've done all of it out to New World Order from day one.

Entities here

Paul Bremer16Yale University12Brookings Institution12William Dobney Nordhaus10Phillips Academy10Iraq9United States7Hawaii7China6Vance C. McCormick6Christopher Wray5Hong Kong5Donald Trump5John Darnton5Harvard University5William Alexander5Office of Naval Intelligence4Tim Draper4Shouson Chao4Trump administration4Skull and Bones4Richard Sutherland4World War II4Great Depression3Prince Rahim Aga Khan3DocuSign3Robinhood3Marshall Plan3Skype3Ancestry.com3Douglas MacArthur3Europe3George Church3Japan3Benjamin Spock3United Nations3Fabian Society2Afghanistan2Saddam Hussein2Dulles family2

Claims made here

William Dobney Nordhaus member_of Phillips Academy host_asserted ▶ 6:40
“well he's born in 1941 albuquerque new mexico his uh father was a uh i guess a german immigrant or his grandfather's german immigrant moved from new mexico he co-founded what's called the sandia peak …”
George Washington visited Phillips Academy host_asserted ▶ 8:19
“Phillips at Andover is absolutely no exception to that, and we're going to spend some time on it. So this is founded in 1778 during the Revolutionary War of Evil. Most of the Boston schools were close…”
Paul Revere Forbes designed Phillips Academy host_asserted ▶ 8:46
“and eight of his nephews and grandnephews attended andover oh wow yeah john hancock signed its articles of incorporation wow paul revere designs its seal and its motto and the mottos two of them calle…”
John Hancock founded Phillips Academy host_asserted ▶ 8:46
“and eight of his nephews and grandnephews attended andover oh wow yeah john hancock signed its articles of incorporation wow paul revere designs its seal and its motto and the mottos two of them calle…”
Joseph Carter Abbott member_of Phillips Academy host_asserted ▶ 9:16
“That's the motto of the school. Suggesting, yeah, you get strong roots, the tree will grow strong, that kind of idea. And of course, it's the rival of the Phillips School of Exeter, founded by two dif…”
William Alexander member_of Phillips Academy host_asserted ▶ 9:52
“He was a Union Army general in the Civil War. This one's going to be very familiar to you. William M. Alexander, class of 1887. His grandfather was the same William Patterson Alexander we talked about…”
William Alexander secretly_owned Hawaii host_asserted ▶ 12:49
“It is kind of a hallmark moment in time of the United States entrance into imperialism. Very much so. And we need to say that Sullivan and Cromwell were over there beforehand setting the groundwork le…”
William Alexander member_of Yale University host_asserted ▶ 13:21
“Would it shock you to learn that he owned sugar plantations? No. I recognize his name. Yeah. Yeah. So where do you think he went to college? Yale. Yeah, absolutely. Yeah, and it's interesting. The Phi…”
William Alexander member_of Carnegie Endowment for International Peace host_asserted ▶ 13:53
“So this guy went to Yale. Later on, he'd be on the San Francisco Chamber of Commerce. And oh, he was on the Board of Trustees for something known as the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. Whi…”
Jonathan Alter member_of Newsweek host_asserted ▶ 14:23
“He's on the board of trustees for Stanford University. Checking a few boxes. That's hilarious. Yeah. All right. Next guy we have starts a theme here. You know, we always said if you really want to con…”
Jonathan Alter member_of Phillips Academy host_asserted ▶ 14:23
“He's on the board of trustees for Stanford University. Checking a few boxes. That's hilarious. Yeah. All right. Next guy we have starts a theme here. You know, we always said if you really want to con…”
William Alexander member_of Stanford University host_asserted ▶ 14:23
“He's on the board of trustees for Stanford University. Checking a few boxes. That's hilarious. Yeah. All right. Next guy we have starts a theme here. You know, we always said if you really want to con…”
John Berman member_of Phillips Academy host_asserted ▶ 14:56
“We have Willow Bay, 1981, CNN news anchor. Here's a fun one. Bill Belichick, class of 71, the New England Patriots coach. Oh, my gosh. He's in the news this week because apparently he's got a 24-year-…”
Willow Bay member_of Phillips Academy host_asserted ▶ 14:56
“We have Willow Bay, 1981, CNN news anchor. Here's a fun one. Bill Belichick, class of 71, the New England Patriots coach. Oh, my gosh. He's in the news this week because apparently he's got a 24-year-…”
Bill Belichick member_of Phillips Academy host_asserted ▶ 14:56
“We have Willow Bay, 1981, CNN news anchor. Here's a fun one. Bill Belichick, class of 71, the New England Patriots coach. Oh, my gosh. He's in the news this week because apparently he's got a 24-year-…”
David B. Burney member_of Phillips Academy host_asserted ▶ 15:27
“Class of 1990. Oh, he's a senior news anchor at CNN. So that's two CNNs so far out of one high school. Next name we get is Hiram Bingham III, who we've talked about on this show. The Bingham family, o…”
Hiram Bingham member_of Phillips Academy host_asserted ▶ 15:27
“Class of 1990. Oh, he's a senior news anchor at CNN. So that's two CNNs so far out of one high school. Next name we get is Hiram Bingham III, who we've talked about on this show. The Bingham family, o…”
Hiram Bingham member_of Bingham family host_asserted ▶ 15:27
“Class of 1990. Oh, he's a senior news anchor at CNN. So that's two CNNs so far out of one high school. Next name we get is Hiram Bingham III, who we've talked about on this show. The Bingham family, o…”
Paul Bremer member_of Phillips Academy host_asserted ▶ 16:01
“In the Civil War. Here's a fun one. Humphrey Bogart went there. I see a lot of Hollywood, which we know CIA too. So that's very interesting. Yeah, I'm glad you picked up on that because I left Humphre…”
Humphrey Bogart member_of Phillips Academy host_asserted ▶ 16:01
“In the Civil War. Here's a fun one. Humphrey Bogart went there. I see a lot of Hollywood, which we know CIA too. So that's very interesting. Yeah, I'm glad you picked up on that because I left Humphre…”
Paul Bremer member_of Yale University host_asserted ▶ 16:36
“Was it Bremer or Bremer? B-R-E-M-E-R. Yeah. Someone we know and love. So why is he important? Well, he was the administrator for the Coalition Provisional Authority of Iraq after a 2003 invasion. Inte…”
Paul Bremer appointed Coalition Provisional Authority host_asserted ▶ 16:36
“Was it Bremer or Bremer? B-R-E-M-E-R. Yeah. Someone we know and love. So why is he important? Well, he was the administrator for the Coalition Provisional Authority of Iraq after a 2003 invasion. Inte…”
Paul Bremer member_of Institut des Études Politiques de Paris host_asserted ▶ 17:09
“He then went to school at a place called the Institut des Etudes Politiques de Paris. Remember that name because we're going to have it at the IDPD, whatever. I can't speak French at all, obviously. T…”
Paul Bremer member_of Kissinger Associates host_asserted ▶ 19:11
“Because why wouldn't he? Okay, then he goes into the private sector temporarily and becomes the director at what's called Kissinger and Associates, a consulting firm that Kissinger did to make his mon…”
Paul Bremer appointed Presidential Commission on Terrorism host_asserted ▶ 19:11
“Because why wouldn't he? Okay, then he goes into the private sector temporarily and becomes the director at what's called Kissinger and Associates, a consulting firm that Kissinger did to make his mon…”
Paul Bremer member_of Marsh McLennan host_asserted ▶ 19:11
“Because why wouldn't he? Okay, then he goes into the private sector temporarily and becomes the director at what's called Kissinger and Associates, a consulting firm that Kissinger did to make his mon…”
Paul Bremer member_of National Academy of Sciences host_asserted ▶ 19:43
“Marsh Crisis Consulting, which is the risk and insurance services firm. And Marsh McClanahan had an office in the World Trade Center, two floors above where the plane hit, where they had 1,700 employe…”
Paul Bremer removed_from_power Saddam Hussein host_asserted ▶ 20:19
“And they came out with a paper, Making the Nation Safer, the Role of Science and Technology in Countering Terrorism. Which is the massive surveillance effort to control all of us. Yeah. And Bremer's b…”
Paul Bremer removed_from_power Ba'ath Party host_asserted ▶ 20:54
“So then he becomes the chief executive authority in Iraq. Of course, did a splendid job. The coalition provisional authority was considered the most powerful foreign post held by any American since Ma…”
Paul Bremer removed_from_power Iraq host_asserted ▶ 20:54
“So then he becomes the chief executive authority in Iraq. Of course, did a splendid job. The coalition provisional authority was considered the most powerful foreign post held by any American since Ma…”
Paul Bremer targeted_for_regime_change Syria host_asserted ▶ 21:58
“Go ahead. Let me just say this. It's definitely by design because by keeping Iraq in a constant state of turmoil, they were able to try to do regime change in Syria. They were able to destabilize Iran…”
Paul Bremer targeted_for_regime_change Iran host_asserted ▶ 21:58
“Go ahead. Let me just say this. It's definitely by design because by keeping Iraq in a constant state of turmoil, they were able to try to do regime change in Syria. They were able to destabilize Iran…”
Paul Bremer funded Iraq host_asserted ▶ 22:53
“in the destabilization of iraq and bremer's running point on all this stuff yeah okay it gets even uglier there united nations resolution 1483 gave bremer oversight on iraqi oil revenue and what they …”
Paul Bremer pardoned Iraq host_asserted ▶ 23:23
“And a lot of people don't think that was a coincidence. Two days before leaving Iraq, Bremer issues an order giving all military and civilian contractors immunity from Iraqi law. And we know the kind …”
Paul Bremer member_of International Republican Institute host_asserted ▶ 24:27
“He gets questioned before Congress in 07 about the $8.8 billion in missing funds. And that money never did turn up, did it? Nope. And he's a supporter of the continued occupation of Afghanistan. And y…”
Michael Burlingame member_of Phillips Academy host_asserted ▶ 24:57
“That is the one that for 25 years John McCain ran and did regime change with hundreds of millions of dollars over the course of his tenure. That's Mr. Bremer, alumni of the nice, innocent private boar…”
Edgar Rice Burroughs member_of Phillips Academy host_asserted ▶ 25:31
“And if you want the official version of Lincoln, the one that's not true, you go read Burlingame. He'll tell you he grew up in a log cabin and was honest to Abe and saved the Union, none of which is t…”
Jeb Bush member_of Phillips Academy host_asserted ▶ 26:33
“Oh, next three names that went to high school here are George H.W. Bush, his son George W. Bush, and of course Jeb Bush all went to this private high school. Wow. Same school that, wait, Paul Bremer w…”
George H.W. Bush member_of Phillips Academy host_asserted ▶ 26:33
“Oh, next three names that went to high school here are George H.W. Bush, his son George W. Bush, and of course Jeb Bush all went to this private high school. Wow. Same school that, wait, Paul Bremer w…”
Otis Chandler member_of Phillips Academy host_asserted ▶ 27:11
“Here's one. Lincoln Chafee, we've talked about before. Class of 1971, who would become the Rhode Island governor and senator. And he comes from a family of skull and bones men. Yikes. We've got Otis C…”
Otis Chandler headed Los Angeles Times host_asserted ▶ 27:11
“Here's one. Lincoln Chafee, we've talked about before. Class of 1971, who would become the Rhode Island governor and senator. And he comes from a family of skull and bones men. Yikes. We've got Otis C…”
Susan Shearer member_of Phillips Academy host_asserted ▶ 27:11
“Here's one. Lincoln Chafee, we've talked about before. Class of 1971, who would become the Rhode Island governor and senator. And he comes from a family of skull and bones men. Yikes. We've got Otis C…”
Susan Shearer member_of The New York Times host_asserted ▶ 27:11
“Here's one. Lincoln Chafee, we've talked about before. Class of 1971, who would become the Rhode Island governor and senator. And he comes from a family of skull and bones men. Yikes. We've got Otis C…”
Lincoln Chafee member_of Phillips Academy host_asserted ▶ 27:11
“Here's one. Lincoln Chafee, we've talked about before. Class of 1971, who would become the Rhode Island governor and senator. And he comes from a family of skull and bones men. Yikes. We've got Otis C…”
Shouson Chao member_of Phillips Academy host_asserted ▶ 27:49
“All right. This one is going to be fun. A guy by the name of Shaosan Chao. And I knew I'd seen this name before, so I looked into it. Hold on. Hold on. You blanked out. Say his name again. Shaosan Cha…”
Shouson Chao founded Bank of East Asia host_asserted ▶ 28:55
“So he becomes president of the China Merchant Steam Navigation Company. Later in his career, he becomes the customs and trade superintendent and counselor for foreign affairs of the country of China f…”
Shouson Chao headed China Merchants Steam Navigation Company host_asserted ▶ 28:55
“So he becomes president of the China Merchant Steam Navigation Company. Later in his career, he becomes the customs and trade superintendent and counselor for foreign affairs of the country of China f…”
Shouson Chao member_of United Kingdom host_asserted ▶ 29:34
“In 1926, the guy becomes the first Chinese member of the Executive Council of Hong Kong and gets knighted by England in 1933. So he's a British knight, went to school in the United States. Well, that'…”
Shouson Chao member_of Hong Kong host_asserted ▶ 29:34
“In 1926, the guy becomes the first Chinese member of the Executive Council of Hong Kong and gets knighted by England in 1933. So he's a British knight, went to school in the United States. Well, that'…”
George Church member_of Harvard Medical School documented ▶ 30:37
“Next name we have on here is a guy by the name of George Church, class of 72. He is the professor of genetics at Harvard Medical School. Oh my gosh. Yeah. What do we know about him? He got a degree fr…”
Jeffrey Epstein funded George Church host_asserted ▶ 31:10
“So this is the stuff that Epstein was funding. He was funding an entire medical initiative thanks to his financial backers sitting at Harvard, working at MIT as well. And so this is huge, actually. An…”
United States Department of Defense front_for BGI Group documented ▶ 32:17
“He's on the National Science Foundation Fellowship. He is on the advisory board of the BGI group. And that group is designated a Chinese military company by the U.S. Department of Defense. So he's doi…”
George Church member_of BGI Group documented ▶ 32:17
“He's on the National Science Foundation Fellowship. He is on the advisory board of the BGI group. And that group is designated a Chinese military company by the U.S. Department of Defense. So he's doi…”
Harlan Cleveland appointed NATO documented ▶ 33:26
“I was going to say, one of the very first families we talked about were the Coffins. Are you going to talk about Harlan Cleveland? I wasn't. All right. Go ahead. I have to bring him up. Harlan Clevela…”
Harlan Cleveland member_of U.S. State Department documented ▶ 33:57
“He was also involved in the International Organization of Affairs for the State Department. He was the president of the University of Hawaii. Oh, and look, he's a Rhodes Scholar, an Oxford grad. Check…”
Harlan Cleveland headed University of Hawaii documented ▶ 33:57
“He was also involved in the International Organization of Affairs for the State Department. He was the president of the University of Hawaii. Oh, and look, he's a Rhodes Scholar, an Oxford grad. Check…”
John Darnton member_of The New York Times documented ▶ 34:32
“Master spy. Someday these are the different things you have to do, and they all follow the same career path. All right, good catch on that one. Oh, yes. Here's a fun one. John Darnton, class of 1960. …”
Robert Darnton headed American Bar Association documented ▶ 37:21
“All right. He's got a brother named Robert Darden, three years older, class of Andover, class of 1957. He's a historian also. Went to Harvard and was a Rhodes Scholar again. And he's best known as bei…”
Norman Dodd headed Reese Commission documented ▶ 38:24
“All right. This next name is one of my favorite people of all time. Norman Dodd, class of 1918. We're going to talk about him a lot more when we start talking about the foundations. This is the guy wh…”
Tim Draper funded AngelList documented ▶ 38:59
“Next name is a guy by the name of Tim Draper. And everybody in my business knows that name because he's a very famous venture capitalist, founder of Draper Fisher Jerviston or whatever it's called, DF…”
Tim Draper founded Draper Fisher Jerviston documented ▶ 38:59
“Next name is a guy by the name of Tim Draper. And everybody in my business knows that name because he's a very famous venture capitalist, founder of Draper Fisher Jerviston or whatever it's called, DF…”
Tim Draper funded Baidu documented ▶ 38:59
“Next name is a guy by the name of Tim Draper. And everybody in my business knows that name because he's a very famous venture capitalist, founder of Draper Fisher Jerviston or whatever it's called, DF…”
Tim Draper funded Hotmail documented ▶ 38:59
“Next name is a guy by the name of Tim Draper. And everybody in my business knows that name because he's a very famous venture capitalist, founder of Draper Fisher Jerviston or whatever it's called, DF…”
Tim Draper funded Skype documented ▶ 38:59
“Next name is a guy by the name of Tim Draper. And everybody in my business knows that name because he's a very famous venture capitalist, founder of Draper Fisher Jerviston or whatever it's called, DF…”
Tim Draper funded Tesla documented ▶ 38:59
“Next name is a guy by the name of Tim Draper. And everybody in my business knows that name because he's a very famous venture capitalist, founder of Draper Fisher Jerviston or whatever it's called, DF…”
Tim Draper funded SpaceX documented ▶ 38:59
“Next name is a guy by the name of Tim Draper. And everybody in my business knows that name because he's a very famous venture capitalist, founder of Draper Fisher Jerviston or whatever it's called, DF…”
Tim Draper funded SolarCity documented ▶ 38:59
“Next name is a guy by the name of Tim Draper. And everybody in my business knows that name because he's a very famous venture capitalist, founder of Draper Fisher Jerviston or whatever it's called, DF…”
Tim Draper funded Ring documented ▶ 38:59
“Next name is a guy by the name of Tim Draper. And everybody in my business knows that name because he's a very famous venture capitalist, founder of Draper Fisher Jerviston or whatever it's called, DF…”
Tim Draper funded X (social network) documented ▶ 38:59
“Next name is a guy by the name of Tim Draper. And everybody in my business knows that name because he's a very famous venture capitalist, founder of Draper Fisher Jerviston or whatever it's called, DF…”
Tim Draper funded DocuSign documented ▶ 38:59
“Next name is a guy by the name of Tim Draper. And everybody in my business knows that name because he's a very famous venture capitalist, founder of Draper Fisher Jerviston or whatever it's called, DF…”
Tim Draper funded Coinbase documented ▶ 38:59
“Next name is a guy by the name of Tim Draper. And everybody in my business knows that name because he's a very famous venture capitalist, founder of Draper Fisher Jerviston or whatever it's called, DF…”
Tim Draper funded Robinhood documented ▶ 38:59
“Next name is a guy by the name of Tim Draper. And everybody in my business knows that name because he's a very famous venture capitalist, founder of Draper Fisher Jerviston or whatever it's called, DF…”
Tim Draper funded Twitch documented ▶ 38:59
“Next name is a guy by the name of Tim Draper. And everybody in my business knows that name because he's a very famous venture capitalist, founder of Draper Fisher Jerviston or whatever it's called, DF…”
Tim Draper funded Ancestry.com documented ▶ 38:59
“Next name is a guy by the name of Tim Draper. And everybody in my business knows that name because he's a very famous venture capitalist, founder of Draper Fisher Jerviston or whatever it's called, DF…”
Tim Draper funded Theranos documented ▶ 38:59
“Next name is a guy by the name of Tim Draper. And everybody in my business knows that name because he's a very famous venture capitalist, founder of Draper Fisher Jerviston or whatever it's called, DF…”
Tim Draper funded Silk Road documented ▶ 39:32
“Robinhood, Twitch, Ancestry.com. And he lost his shirt in Theranos. And he's also the guy that bought the Bitcoin that the government had seized from the Silk Road seizure. So that is a very famous ve…”
John Murray member_of Burlington Railroads documented ▶ 41:10
“Sorry. I have to go off topic when I see something like that. Okay. David Enzor, class of 1969. What's he? Oh, he's a CNN correspondent. Are we up to four CNN now? Oh, my gosh. We have John Murray For…”
Jeffrey Garten headed Yale School of Management documented ▶ 41:41
“We've talked about this before. Russell & Company, the China trading house. Another Hong Kong connection. We've got a Jeffrey Garten, class of 64. He's now the dean of the Yale School of Management. W…”
John Murray member_of Russell and Company documented ▶ 41:41
“We've talked about this before. Russell & Company, the China trading house. Another Hong Kong connection. We've got a Jeffrey Garten, class of 64. He's now the dean of the Yale School of Management. W…”
A. Bartlett Giamatti headed Yale University documented ▶ 42:17
“And if we remember, the guy who founded the Yale School of Management was none other than Skull and Bonesman, William H. Donaldson, who we've talked about before. Yes, exactly. Oops. Okay. Next name I…”
John Campbell Greenway member_of Rough Riders documented ▶ 42:17
“And if we remember, the guy who founded the Yale School of Management was none other than Skull and Bonesman, William H. Donaldson, who we've talked about before. Yes, exactly. Oops. Okay. Next name I…”
William H. Donaldson founded Yale School of Management documented ▶ 42:17
“And if we remember, the guy who founded the Yale School of Management was none other than Skull and Bonesman, William H. Donaldson, who we've talked about before. Yes, exactly. Oops. Okay. Next name I…”
John Campbell Greenway member_of Office of Naval Intelligence documented ▶ 42:59
“And was described as an intel officer with the Office of Naval Intelligence. Would then go on to become a mining magnate. So early intelligence guy from 1895. And keep in mind that the mining expediti…”
James Greenway member_of Office of Naval Intelligence documented ▶ 43:50
“is a James Greenway, 1926. He was known as the curator for the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Harvard. And he was a Lieutenant Commander of the U.S. Navy Intelligence Officer with the Office of Nava…”
James Greenway headed Museum of Comparative Zoology documented ▶ 43:50
“is a James Greenway, 1926. He was known as the curator for the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Harvard. And he was a Lieutenant Commander of the U.S. Navy Intelligence Officer with the Office of Nava…”
King and Spalding funded Donald Trump host_asserted ▶ 1:03:47
“Well, let's go back to this firm, King & Spalding. This is the law firm that advises Donald Trump's real estate empire. And their alumni include a lot of revolving door from government to this firm ba…”
Sally Yates member_of King and Spalding host_asserted ▶ 1:03:47
“Well, let's go back to this firm, King & Spalding. This is the law firm that advises Donald Trump's real estate empire. And their alumni include a lot of revolving door from government to this firm ba…”
Rod Rosenstein member_of King and Spalding host_asserted ▶ 1:03:47
“Well, let's go back to this firm, King & Spalding. This is the law firm that advises Donald Trump's real estate empire. And their alumni include a lot of revolving door from government to this firm ba…”
Christopher Wray member_of King and Spalding host_asserted ▶ 1:04:21
“And now work for this firm, same firm that's still managing Donald Trump's real estate empire. And I don't know if Christopher Wray is working for them yet or not, but these three are. How about Laure…”
Lauren Roth member_of King and Spalding host_asserted ▶ 1:04:21
“And now work for this firm, same firm that's still managing Donald Trump's real estate empire. And I don't know if Christopher Wray is working for them yet or not, but these three are. How about Laure…”
Nima Melanina member_of King and Spalding host_asserted ▶ 1:04:21
“And now work for this firm, same firm that's still managing Donald Trump's real estate empire. And I don't know if Christopher Wray is working for them yet or not, but these three are. How about Laure…”
Brian Magirus member_of King and Spalding host_asserted ▶ 1:04:21
“And now work for this firm, same firm that's still managing Donald Trump's real estate empire. And I don't know if Christopher Wray is working for them yet or not, but these three are. How about Laure…”
Philip Wrigley member_of Wrigley family host_asserted ▶ 1:04:54
“where Christopher Wray worked. And they managed Donald Trump's real estate empire or advised him on it. So, all right. That's about all I have. Can I add one? Yeah, go ahead. The Wrigleys from the Che…”
Wrigley family member_of Chicago Mob host_asserted ▶ 1:05:56
“was part of the Cubs, the Chicago Cubs realm. And if you've ever, I've been to Chicago multiple times. I was stationed in Illinois, been through the part that's public that you can walk through in the…”
William Dobney Nordhaus member_of Yale University host_asserted ▶ 1:06:57
“Yeah, it's beautiful. All right, let's wrap up. Let's get back to the star of our show who went to this wonderful school, Mr. Nordhaus. So after he's left the Andover, of course, he goes to Yale. Skul…”
William Dobney Nordhaus member_of Institut des Études Politiques de Paris host_asserted ▶ 1:06:57
“Yeah, it's beautiful. All right, let's wrap up. Let's get back to the star of our show who went to this wonderful school, Mr. Nordhaus. So after he's left the Andover, of course, he goes to Yale. Skul…”
William Dobney Nordhaus member_of Skull and Bones host_asserted ▶ 1:06:57
“Yeah, it's beautiful. All right, let's wrap up. Let's get back to the star of our show who went to this wonderful school, Mr. Nordhaus. So after he's left the Andover, of course, he goes to Yale. Skul…”
William Dobney Nordhaus member_of Cambridge University host_asserted ▶ 1:07:28
“group i mentioned earlier where someone else went so kind of small world this high school's got a pipeline to the french uh nordhaus would then get his phd from mit in 1967 becomes a visiting fellow a…”
William Dobney Nordhaus member_of Yale University host_asserted ▶ 1:07:28
“group i mentioned earlier where someone else went so kind of small world this high school's got a pipeline to the french uh nordhaus would then get his phd from mit in 1967 becomes a visiting fellow a…”
William Dobney Nordhaus headed Federal Reserve Bank of New York host_asserted ▶ 1:07:59
“in two schools there one is economics and the other is a school of the environment and this is the guy that tries to combine those two different schools he's been on the brookings panel of economic ac…”
William Dobney Nordhaus member_of Brookings Panel on Economic Activity host_asserted ▶ 1:07:59
“in two schools there one is economics and the other is a school of the environment and this is the guy that tries to combine those two different schools he's been on the brookings panel of economic ac…”
William Dobney Nordhaus member_of Carter Administration host_asserted ▶ 1:07:59
“in two schools there one is economics and the other is a school of the environment and this is the guy that tries to combine those two different schools he's been on the brookings panel of economic ac…”
William Dobney Nordhaus founded The Economics of Climate Change host_asserted ▶ 1:09:07
“Some of his books. You're going to love these. Managing the Global Commons, The Economics of Climate Change, 1994. How about Warming the World, Economic Models of Global Warming? How about The Climate…”
William Dobney Nordhaus founded Warming the World host_asserted ▶ 1:09:07
“Some of his books. You're going to love these. Managing the Global Commons, The Economics of Climate Change, 1994. How about Warming the World, Economic Models of Global Warming? How about The Climate…”
William Dobney Nordhaus founded The Climate Casino host_asserted ▶ 1:09:07
“Some of his books. You're going to love these. Managing the Global Commons, The Economics of Climate Change, 1994. How about Warming the World, Economic Models of Global Warming? How about The Climate…”
William Dobney Nordhaus founded The Spirit of Green host_asserted ▶ 1:09:07
“Some of his books. You're going to love these. Managing the Global Commons, The Economics of Climate Change, 1994. How about Warming the World, Economic Models of Global Warming? How about The Climate…”
William Dobney Nordhaus founded Managing the Global Commons host_asserted ▶ 1:09:07
“Some of his books. You're going to love these. Managing the Global Commons, The Economics of Climate Change, 1994. How about Warming the World, Economic Models of Global Warming? How about The Climate…”
William Dobney Nordhaus founded Is Growth Obsolete? host_asserted ▶ 1:09:44
“In 1972, with a fellow Yale professor, James Toman, he published Is Growth Obsolete? And he starts creating all these ways of measuring everything from like the carbon tax and, you know, all that stuf…”
James Tobin member_of Yale University host_asserted ▶ 1:09:44
“In 1972, with a fellow Yale professor, James Toman, he published Is Growth Obsolete? And he starts creating all these ways of measuring everything from like the carbon tax and, you know, all that stuf…”
William Dobney Nordhaus member_of Phillips Academy host_asserted ▶ 1:10:46
“And the Andover School. That's just crazy. And so you know he's best friends with John Kerry. Oh, gotta be. Absolutely gotta be. All right, let's finish up and just talk about the Brookings Institute …”
Robert S. Brookings founded Institute of Economics in Paris host_asserted ▶ 1:12:52
“Yes, you are. The founder was a philanthropist by the name of Robert S. Brookings, lived from 1850 to 1932. He founded three organizations. One was the IGR. The other one was the Institute of Economic…”
Robert S. Brookings founded Brookings Institution host_asserted ▶ 1:12:52
“Yes, you are. The founder was a philanthropist by the name of Robert S. Brookings, lived from 1850 to 1932. He founded three organizations. One was the IGR. The other one was the Institute of Economic…”
Robert S. Brookings founded Robert Brookings Graduate School host_asserted ▶ 1:12:52
“Yes, you are. The founder was a philanthropist by the name of Robert S. Brookings, lived from 1850 to 1932. He founded three organizations. One was the IGR. The other one was the Institute of Economic…”
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace funded Institute of Economics in Paris host_asserted ▶ 1:12:52
“Yes, you are. The founder was a philanthropist by the name of Robert S. Brookings, lived from 1850 to 1932. He founded three organizations. One was the IGR. The other one was the Institute of Economic…”
Robert Brookings Graduate School member_of University of Washington host_asserted ▶ 1:12:52
“Yes, you are. The founder was a philanthropist by the name of Robert S. Brookings, lived from 1850 to 1932. He founded three organizations. One was the IGR. The other one was the Institute of Economic…”
Robert Brookings Graduate School founded Brookings Institution host_asserted ▶ 1:13:21
“And in 1927, they merged the three of those together to become the Brookings Institute. So Brookings Institute rises to fame pretty quickly. FDR commissions them to help understand the causes of the G…”
Institute of Economics in Paris founded Brookings Institution host_asserted ▶ 1:13:21
“And in 1927, they merged the three of those together to become the Brookings Institute. So Brookings Institute rises to fame pretty quickly. FDR commissions them to help understand the causes of the G…”
Brookings Institution funded Marshall Plan host_asserted ▶ 1:13:57
“and the brookings institute starts studying those studies on mobilization they helped draw out the plans for u.s mobilization if we were to enter into the war as if that was ever a question right then…”
Brookings Institution funded United Nations host_asserted ▶ 1:15:21
“It was basically taking taxpayer dollars that we were going to pay interest on forever and laundering it through the European countries to make the oligarchs in America rich. Yeah. Our multinational c…”
Ford Foundation funded Brookings Institution host_asserted ▶ 1:15:50
“They're doing so well in 1952 to get gigantic grants from the Rockefeller and Ford Foundations. CIA and CIA. Exactly. And worse. Rockefeller is behind this whole climate scam thing from day one. That'…”
Brookings Institution founded Congressional Budget Office host_asserted ▶ 1:15:50
“They're doing so well in 1952 to get gigantic grants from the Rockefeller and Ford Foundations. CIA and CIA. Exactly. And worse. Rockefeller is behind this whole climate scam thing from day one. That'…”
Rockefeller Foundation funded Brookings Institution host_asserted ▶ 1:15:50
“They're doing so well in 1952 to get gigantic grants from the Rockefeller and Ford Foundations. CIA and CIA. Exactly. And worse. Rockefeller is behind this whole climate scam thing from day one. That'…”
Richard Nixon removed_from_power G. Gordon Liddy host_asserted ▶ 1:16:22
“get implemented because the CBO tells Congress whether something's good or not. It basically allows them to control the purse. Under Nixon, the Brookings Institute's really sweetheart relationship wit…”
G. Gordon Liddy attempted_assassination_of Brookings Institution host_asserted ▶ 1:16:22
“get implemented because the CBO tells Congress whether something's good or not. It basically allows them to control the purse. Under Nixon, the Brookings Institute's really sweetheart relationship wit…”
Strobe Talbott headed Brookings Institution host_asserted ▶ 1:17:00
“Yeah, this is a true story from Watergate. The guys who did Watergate were actually going to go bomb the Brookings Institute and steal their material. And then, of course, what else do you know about …”
Brookings Institution member_of Doha host_asserted ▶ 1:17:00
“Yeah, this is a true story from Watergate. The guys who did Watergate were actually going to go bomb the Brookings Institute and steal their material. And then, of course, what else do you know about …”
Brookings Institution member_of Beijing host_asserted ▶ 1:17:00
“Yeah, this is a true story from Watergate. The guys who did Watergate were actually going to go bomb the Brookings Institute and steal their material. And then, of course, what else do you know about …”
Brookings Institution member_of New Delhi host_asserted ▶ 1:17:00
“Yeah, this is a true story from Watergate. The guys who did Watergate were actually going to go bomb the Brookings Institute and steal their material. And then, of course, what else do you know about …”
Credits

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