The Shadow State 49 Skull & Bones Finale Pt. 2
1:32:44 · recorded 2025-08-01 · ▶ watch on Rumble
Transcript
0:19
A summary of Operation Gladio meets Secret Societies with Warhamster Brady, part two. Hang on a second. I got a motorcycle going outside my window. Probably picked that one up. A little bit. Sorry about that. That was not planned. That's fine. Happy Friday. Happy Friday. We are going to try to sum up Skull and Bones today, part two of our grand finale.
0:50
Well, I'll tell you, I could go for another two, three weeks if we had to. But it's time to move on to other fun stuff. So let's get this thing done. Okay. I am going to share my screen. So if everybody remembers, we started this whole series asking the question. It's just a regular fraternal organization. It's just really good networking opportunities. There's a little bit more to it.
1:21
If you were the kind of people that wanted to accumulate massive amounts of wealth and basically dominate the entire world, trade, exploit resources, cheap labor, control global events, would you be doing anything differently? And what you would do, of course, is you would want to put your people in key positions. Oh, I don't know, throughout the Senate, Congress, State Department, CIA, military.
1:50
executive branch, judicial branch, corporations, institutions, NGOs, and that's exactly what Skull and Bones has done throughout the years. There's some places they just keep showing up more often than not, and it absolutely blows away any statistical probability that just this one college, this one secret society that's 15 members of the EEOC, founded in 1833.
2:17
that we know of there's been something like around 2200 stolen bonesmen in the strangest places uh can you bring my screen up i don't see it as an option go down yep there it is you got it right there okay so last week we pointed out that there had been three presidents of the united states taft bush and bush with about 19 u.s senators
2:48
33 Congress critters, all kinds of people over at this Department of State, including up to Secretary of State, and about 18 U.S. ambassadors. And as we all know, the embassy, the American embassy abroad, you're going to find a combination of State Department employees and CIA agents opposing the State Department employees. Depending where you are, the ratio is usually 50% the wrong way.
3:20
Tara said your sound is a little muffled, Brady. I don't know if you can... You know what? I don't know why that is. It's not picking up my mic on the list here. Maybe if I unplug the mic. Is this any better? It sounds better. Okay. There's something going on with my microphone. I'll just dump it for now. Okay. So, what we are going to do today is show you some more examples of this. I'm going to stop the share for now.
3:55
i don't need it for this part uh how about we want to make the state government governments as well we've had 14 stolen bones alumni of their state as governors yes 14. connecticut shows up five times and uh we've had a few rhode island ones as well all kinds of bonesmen and state assemblies i'm not going to bother listing them um let's talk about the judiciary how about
4:35
13 federal judges. Wow. Three chief justices of the Supreme Court. And, of course, one of those federal judges is our good buddy, James Bozberg, the most powerful man in America. All kinds of state judges. I mean, think about the odds that they could win. We've had, I think, what is it, 14 Supreme Court chief justices in history? Wow. Yeah.
5:10
All kinds of lawyers and founders of big law firms. All right, where else do we want to influence? Oh, we mentioned early on that there's all kinds of clergymen. A lot of these, most of the Northeast, Eastern Seaboard, early settlers were Puritans. And so throughout the prose, we'll find people that are congregational ministers or congregationalists.
5:42
A lot of it's influential. I wonder how much of that ties into all these international ministries and missionaries. Because they're everywhere. Yeah. You think our intel agencies use the missions at all in foreign countries? Yeah, just a bit. Yeah, we've documented quite a few of them. Yeah, my favorite example is our favorite story in Hawaii.
6:21
All right, if you want to take over the world, you think it would be a good idea to have kind of your finger on the pulse of the media. We've had 14 people, bonesmen, that were either founders of a major periodical or editor-in-chief or that position. That includes Henry Luce, co-founder of Time Life, the founder of the Chicago Tribune, Fortune Magazine, The New Yorker, National Review, so Buddy Buckley.
6:56
Let's see, we've got some WAPO colonists, the New York Times colonists, all Bonesmen. And of course, the war pig, Robert Kagan himself. That's a lot. And there's probably even more that didn't make our list. Of course, you'd also want to influence academia. I found 23 Bonesmen that are professors. Most of all of them are Ivy League schools. They've got Yale, Yale, Yale, Cornell.
7:31
More Cornell. There's a Berkeley. There's a Harvard. Yale and Harvard. Everything from... Oh, here's one of my favorites. I'll get to him later. There's more Harvard. So just, yeah, the Ivy League is made up of bonesmen. And why is that important? Who sets the agenda for what is going to be taught at the colleges? It's the people who fund it. And these are the endowments that are behind. They're basically financed by these same East Coast bluebloods.
8:06
Correct me if I'm wrong, but the little bit of research that I've done into this is that the president sets on the endowment for the university. So I know they have like a board of directors, but the president is always included in that. Yeah, quite often I think that's the case. We see a lot of that play out in public with Trump's battle with Harvard's endowment. That's still ongoing. Okay. What else do we have?
8:40
We've had nine college presidents. Pretty good. We've had bonesmen all over foundations. We've gone through the Carnegie Institute. We've gone through Rockefeller Foundation. There's bonesmen running in and out. It's like a revolving door of bonesmen, especially the Carnegie Institution for War, Carnegie Endowment for War. All right. Talk about the businesses, business leaders.
9:12
I'm just going to go through some of the businesses that have Bonesman either founded them or are the chairman or president. You can see the same industry pop up over and over. Yeah, Submarine Company, Lower East Coast Railway, Northern Trust, Southern Railway, A.C. Morgan, another railroad executive, Brown Brothers Harriman. It's Percy Rockefeller. He's Brown Brothers Harriman, Standard Oil, Remington Arms, McCormick Reaper.
9:46
Morgan Stanley again. Brown Brothers Harriman. A lot of the bones have been worked with Brown Brothers Harriman. Why is that significant? Because they financed the Nazis. Who the bones have been then helped get out of the country with Operation Paperclip. Yeah. Okay, what other industries do we have? Oh yeah, we've got some dresser industries. Most people don't know what dresser industries is, but later a company called Halliburton.
10:19
a war profiteer off the Iraq war. And it just so happens the original CEO of Dress Around the Dress is the guy that, well, basically he's the godfather of H. George H. W. Bush, one of his best friends. Got that in a mallet. So a little bit of a connection to Halliburton and the Iraq war there. Well, and I just did a show with Alpha, $140 billion since,
10:50
2002 in contracts. Say that again. $140 billion with a B in contracts. A large chunk of that went to Halliburton. The president of Halliburton was sitting, who was he again? Oh, Cheney. Cheney's going to come up again today.
11:22
We can't have that out there without talking about how government contracting process works. I mean, the government pays probably twice as much as they should for just about anything they do. And it's a major, you know, it's that old Thomas Sewell quote about, you know, you're paying fine stuff with other people's money. You don't care about the cost or the quality. And so how do we mark everything up?
11:46
Well, what we found out, and I know this is true just from personal experience and working in the Department of Defense, how this whole contracting process works is who writes the requirements. And what we found in the Iraq war, when we got to the stage where we were going to basically turn over the military success to the coalition provisional government,
12:16
The guy that was writing the requirement for the largest contract to date at that point was from MI6 in the coalition government. And when it was submitted to the State Department because it was going to support the coalition government, a British company won it.
12:40
that had only been in existence for 18 months and solely because of the way the contract was written. Yeah, it's a pretty corrupt process. It really is. It's up and down government. You see that at the municipal level, the state level. But when you're talking about doing it on the international stage, now that's big bucks. Let's see, what else do we have here? Oh, yeah. We've got a chairman of the manufacturer's Hanover Trust Company. A lot of trust companies.
13:14
We got a couple of people that were part of founding Pan American Airways. Now, why is that important? Because Pan American Airways was Air America before Air America was Air America. They are like lockstep with the CIA and before that. All right. We had a few more big companies. We had the Heinz Company. Obviously, Heinz II was a Bonesman. John Kerry Bonesman would actually marry into the Heinz family.
13:44
We've got the U.S. Trust Corporation again. Donaldson, Lufkin, Jeanette, DLJ, big broker-dealer. Federal Express, which is a fun one. A company called Black Enterprise. I think it was founded by the first black woman. We had Lampert, who founded the NFL Investor Agency, and he's the chairman of the failed Sears Holding Company. And then, of course, we have our good buddy, Stephen Sportsman, who we featured.
14:17
the founder of blackstone anything happening around blackstone these days just a dead body was she was she with the nfl i don't think so okay so that's that's a pretty good start for having your finger on just about everything right yes how about two u.s attorney general attorneys general taft and everts and i'm surprised it's only two me too yeah
14:53
We've had bonesmen in all kinds of government agencies. Private secretaries to a president, treasury secretaries, postmaster generals, U.S. solicitor generals. What else do we have? Governor of the Philippines. Oh, yeah. The bonesmen produced the first and the second chief of the U.S. Forestry Service. That's interesting. What time frame was that?
15:23
it's like right at the foundation i think it's 1930s or so i mean we talked about it on the previous show yeah but um and i think you had a pretty good theory of why that is uh what else do we have more philippines another treasury secretary oh chairman of the first chairman of the new york federal reserve and for those who don't know they say there's nine federal reserve banks but there's really only one the new york feds you know it matters that's what yeah that's where the money moves so you think about this a lot of bonesmen are involved
15:57
Well, a lot of the robber barons are involved with the founding of the Federal Reserve. And the Bonesman becomes the very first chair of the New York Fed. So we have another New York Fed director. New York City president of the bar. Another president of the New York Fed. Librarian of Congress. Some U.S. attorney. National Center for Atmospheric Research.
16:30
the Securities Exchange Commission, the Export-Import Bank. We've got a few of those. Another chairman of the FDC, a director of the National Institute of Mental Health. Of mental health? Yes. That's very interesting. Yeah, it's got the name of Calgary. We talked about it before. You want me to pull some up? No, I just, again, you know, with MKUltra and stuff like that.
16:59
it just is amazing where they're all at. Yeah. They're everywhere. I mean, it's, I'm just giving you all these names to see the numbers is overwhelming. You said, this has got to be more than just a handshake. Yes. All right. So let's get to the really fun stuff today. I think these last two points are really going to hammer at home. You want to control the world, global commerce, all that stuff like that. You probably ought to have some of your people in the intelligence agencies. Wouldn't you think?
17:29
Yes. Just navigating my screen real quick. Go ahead. Any thoughts so far? The point to be made about the significance in the intelligence, because I have to say this every opportunity, the intelligence apparatus does not work for the country that it's associated with.
18:09
It works for everybody he just talked about, the railroad barons, the bankers, the major trusts. They protect their interests, not ours. Yeah, a lot of the intel agencies, they get their orders. Originally, I think the first orders were coming from the Council of Foreign Relations, which is embedded with that in major corporations, international corporations. And, of course, a lot of bone has been a part of that. You've seen some other organizations.
18:37
probably in the marking orders uh think tanks like the hoover institute i say the atlantic council um definitely the trilateral commission um and these are the strength these are the strangleholds of all where the information goes and what countries are going to need to be taken out what leaders right right all right so let's share this script it should come up there we go okay cia and intelligence i think we've had any bonesmen from there
19:12
We've talked about Charles Whitehouse before. That is Senator Sheldon Whitehouse's father. He was the Skull and Bones class of 1947. Goes directly to the CIA from 47 to 56. And he worked in places like Congo, Turkey, Belgium, Cambodia. Anything interesting happen in those countries in those years? The Congo.
19:44
Well, when was he there? From 47 to 56. So that's when it was still under the control of Belgium. And that's when they were mining the uranium for the nuclear weapon that was dropped on Japan. So just a little bit. And obviously it shows that he's the ambassador to Thailand.
20:12
And the interesting time frame of when he was in Thailand is it's the transition from the opium production into Afghanistan. So they would have been tying up loose ends there. And obviously all of the rest of them, Belgium is a part of NATO, obviously, NATO headquarters eventually. And the former president,
20:41
belgium colonies in africa all loaded with resources so he's a resource controller yeah very much so um he's got an interesting story he's left he was in the ale uh joined the marines for world war ii he was a marine dive bomber pilot who got seven distinguished losses in 21 air medals he goes back to yale becomes a bone when he's a class of william buckley joins the cia
21:20
And by the way, that's when we were setting up the opium. Oh, yeah. So he moves to the State Department of 56 and he sat on the Congo, the State Department's Congo desk officer in 1959. He was also over in Vietnam in 72. We talked about that. We're going through the, yeah, we talked about that.
21:43
Okay, so that's Mr. Charles Whitehouse. Next up, we're going to talk about Evan Galbraith. Let me put him in the right spot so everyone can see him. There we go. There we go. Okay, Mr. Evan Galbraith, Stone Golem's class of 1950. He was the U.S. U.N. attache to the CIA from 1953 to 1997. What else do we need to know about him? Department of Defense advisor to NATO? Yep.
22:24
Which runs Operation Gladio. Uh-huh. And 53 to 57 is a critical time, too. If you look at the different things that were going on as it relates to Operation Gladio, very, very important time for him to be inside the CIA. Yeah, very much so. He's one of those Forrest Gump shows up in some amazing places. He'd go on to become the ambassador to France.
23:00
et cetera, et cetera. But he's definitely a primetime spook, I would say. Is there anything else? No. That's good for him. Okay. One of my favorites. F. Truby Davison. Bowling Bones, class of 1918. We did a feature on him earlier. He established what was called the First Yale Air Unit. And basically, a bunch of, a lot of Bones, a group of like a dozen Yalees,
23:36
all flying aficionados amateur pilots got in contact with the uh pentagon do we have a pentagon whatever the uh secretary defense secretary of war said hey yeah said we'd like to uh you know volunteer to be part of the united states air defense like homeland pilots and they actually got it to go through a lot of these guys which is where he got in there and he was a world war one aviator that's why i got a picture of him in his plane
24:08
Give me one second. Can you imagine flying an open cockpit plane like that? I obviously have read a lot of history about open cockpit. So just a quick aside. During the time they were flying open cockpit, they were trying to perfect how to do in-flight refueling.
24:35
And the aviation fuel that they used back in the day would burn your skin. And there's a lot of the most famous like Lieutenant Chanute and Lieutenant Grissom that were all involved in that. And they have horror stories of the nozzle coming off and spraying jet fuel all over them.
25:02
yeah it was a very hazardous job indeed gotta give you guys a little bit of credit that's not easy that's not an easy tour of duty uh so he uh aviator um goes back to columbia law gets involved in the new york state legislature and then they get named as the assistant secretary of war for air in 1926 to 1933 which is interesting you know he was quickly
25:36
He worked as a lawyer, and now he gets called back to a pretty important choke point position in the military. Yes. He goes to direct private practice. He becomes a trustee of Yale University, and then he becomes the first director of personnel for the CIA. That's a big gatekeeper job. That's the guy that vets all of the businessmen that they turned into CIA officers.
26:08
Yep, very much so. So I think he fits in our spook category. Yeah. Last side note I have on him is that he was the president of the American Museum of Natural History. We've talked about how these people use philanthropies and charitable organizations, not only for social networking, but also for a lot of business and other type of deal making. So a lot of these things like
26:39
metropolitan operas and stuff like that, you're going to see these people on their boards of directors or what have you. Well, and interestingly enough, the museum on the culture part of the culture war, he would be crafting what people remember of history. Yeah, that's an important point. I think we talked about that before, but thanks for bringing that back up. All right. Let's see how we have another line here for Davidson.
27:12
Because he's down in the next category where we talk about the military connections. All right. William Howard Paft III. He's not a bonesman. He did go to Yale, but I'm bringing him up because he has his father, grandfather, great-grandfather. Well, we're all bonesmen. His great-grandfather is one of the founders of Skull and Bones. His grandfather is William Howard Paft. How they missed this guy being a bonesman, I don't know. But you tell me if you want from this list. So, 1949.
27:47
He worked for the Marshall Plan in Dublin, Ireland. And, of course, the Marshall Plan was seed money for Operation Gladio. He had a lot of CIA operations, but it's specifically Gladio. A lot of the money that went to Marshall Plan got siphoned off in Greece and Italy. So that's this guy. He's there. He works from the CIA directly and the Department of Defense as a liaison from 1951 to 1953. Then he goes, of course, to the State Department.
28:19
And he's in place like Mozambique where he was there right at the start of the Portuguese colonial war started. Well, let me just also say that the time that he was the CIA liaison to the department of defense was in preparation for the overthrow of Iran. And I found out that the department of defense was training.
28:50
stay-behind units in southern Iran as part of the prep for the coup of Mossadegh, and he would have been the liaison working to get the MAG, the military advisory group, into southern Iraq to set up the stay-behind units with the tribes down there. Yeah, the kind of place you'd want to have a policeman, someone who can be trusted. Yeah. All right, our next guy's fun.
29:21
This is Louis A. Lapham, Bow and Bones class of 1931. He was a World War II executive general in the command of the San Francisco Port. Why is that important? Tell us. Well, ports are where things come in and out. They may or may not want other people knowing about them. Correct. Yeah. All right.
29:54
He, in 1945, hang on, I'm going to pull up some more notes on him real quick. Oh, yeah, he also went to high school at the Hotchkiss School, one of our grooming schools. Okay, then he became, in 1945, the president of the Pacific American Steamship Association, and he was the last president of the American Hawaiian Steamship Company. Steamships played a great part of our story early on. Shipping's been a big part of the shenanigans we did all throughout the Caribbean and South America.
30:37
He would then leave and go into Bankers Trust, one of the various important positions. Bankers Trust is one of the big management trust companies in a lot of our deeper dives into some of the EIS. Yeah, they come up a lot. Let's see, what else do we have on hand? Yeah, Bankers Trust would end up merging with Allen Brown and Sons, who are actually well-related to the Brown Brothers Harriman.
31:10
But of course, why is he important here? Because he was the general counsel for the CIA from 1976 to 1979. What was going on 76 to 79 when Jimmy Carter had conducted his Halloween massacre and fired the entire covert operations branch of the CIA and they were setting up
31:41
the Jimmy Carter coup called the Revolution in Iran, where the CIA people were working behind the scenes with the Ayatollah in order to hold on to the prisoners, the hostages, which preponderantly were CIA assets and agents that were supposedly
32:09
taken kidnapped out of the embassy and um bush was working with the um ayatollah to hold on to them so reagan could win and they could sabotage carter's re-election indeed i'll take that even further what's going on right there 1975 was the church committee which exposed the cia's dirty laundry for the world to see
32:35
Yes. Bush was brought in to clean that up, and he brings Lapham in with him, his fellow bone. This is right when, right before the CIA had to start using NGOs and other things like NED, National Drama for Democracy, to start doing their covert operations around the world. And Bush set up the Safari Club in Kenya.
33:03
with Adan Shikogi to house all of those fired covert operators and give them employment to maintain covert operations outside of the CIA during that time as well. Yeah, I'd say Lapham's kind of an important guy in our history that doesn't get talked about too much. Yes. They're setting the groundwork up for what would become two years later the beginnings of Iran-Contra.
33:34
Yeah. All right. So Bush did his job well. All of them. He had a lot of jobs. Next guy we're going to talk about is our old friend William F. Buckley, Jr., Mr. Conservative himself, right? Yeah. Romansman class of 1950 served at Fort Banning in World War II. He always stayed stateside. But what's going on at Fort Banning? Fort Binning, you mean, right?
34:09
I think it's Banning. If I got the spelling wrong, I don't know. I think it's Fort Benning because Fort Benning is where the School of Americas was ran out of. Let me just double check. I'll get it later. Yeah. He gets out of college. He goes straight to the CIA where he worked directly under E. Howard Hunt. Yep. Who's E. Howard Hunt? Oh, I don't know. He was at the Bay of Pigs. He was in Dallas when Kennedy was shot.
34:41
And he also happened to be the guy who led the Watergate break-in. Yeah. Among other things, he was everywhere. He was in Operation Condor. He was over in Vietnam. He shows up. He's like the, what do you call them when they show up everywhere? Forrest Gump. He is the Forrest Gump of the CIA. Yeah. And Buckley works directly for him. Buckley would then leave the National Review, the supposed,
35:12
you know, new conservative movement going on. It's being led by a bone. This is where the neocons come from. This guy is the thought leader of the neocon movement. We did a full feature on the family. He's got brothers and other relatives that are bones. And if I'm not mistaken, E. Howard Hunt's kids, Buckley is their godfather because they were together in Mexico. Interesting. Yeah.
35:44
All right, enough on Buckley. One of my all-time favorites, this guy by the name of William Sloan Coffin. I'll get them all on screen. Here we go. That's the best I can do. Funny looking guy, right? He looks like Bozo the Clown. He's a bonesman, class of 1949. His father was the president of the Metropolitan Museum of Art. So he came from the highbrow family.
36:26
His uncle was known when he talked about Henry Sloan Coffin, who was in the class of 1897, and he'd become the president of the Union Theological Seminary, which is at Columbia University. We've been concentrating on Yale and CIA connections, and we're going to have to do a show or two on Columbia, because that's one huge resource we've got for the CIA. Yeah, it was. And it just recently made the news. I think you saw it. I put a tweet out yesterday about that.
36:57
Yeah. The founder of the OSS is from Columbia. A lot of the early people they got weren't just businessmen. They got a lot of academics. A lot of them were. Yes. So that's William Sloan Coffin, his father, his uncle. He's good buddies with George H.W. Bush. They both went to high school at the Phillips Academy.
37:26
He applies to the OSS in 1943 and gets denied by, this is a direct quote, by not having Gaelic speakers, G-A-L-I-C. They didn't think he was handsome enough to be a spy. Well, it's hard having Bozo for a spy. All right. Oops. Interestingly, his brother-in-law, this guy by the name of Frank Lindsay, was the head of the Office of Policy Coordination for the Pentagon.
38:01
And for those of you who don't know, that's the conduit of the CIA into the Pentagon. And so a few years later, he gets into the CIA case officer. And what's he do there? He serves as West Germany recruiting Soviet Russian refugees. All of the anti-communists that will end up in the World Anti-Communist League. Sure. That's what this guy's doing. It goes home.
38:32
He goes back to Yale Seminary, Yale Divinity School, and he ends up running Riverside Church and also the United Church of Christ. And he becomes a very, very, I would say, wow, a solitizer. And isn't Riverside the Riverside in California? No, the church is not named after that. Okay. Yeah. Okay. But that's William Sloan Coffin.
39:00
You know, once you're in the CIA, you never leave the CIA. Yeah. What is a what do we call these guys like evangelicals? Right. Yeah. Could they be useful as a tool? Well, when you're wanting to push things like eventually the 501C3 and so that you can control churches, they would absolutely be instrumental to have a few of your CIA assets in leadership positions.
39:34
large churches. Oh, and especially if you want to run human trafficking. Indeed. There was a question in the chat about whether he wrote any spy novels, and I may have that. No, I don't. Sorry about that. My notes are not perfect. The other comment I saw earlier was from
40:06
Tara asked, where did Cheney originate? Somebody answered, they came to this country in 1640. That's true. We're going to mention that here in a second. So we'll get back to that topic as it pertains. All right, our next Intel-related guy, someone we talked about last week a little bit, one David Boren. Richard here is the president of the University of Oklahoma. Sullivan Bones, class of 1963, is a Rhodes Scholar.
40:39
Why is that important? Because Rhodes Scholars and others in society, we send people over there to learn the British way of doing things. Primarily the MI6 way of doing things. Yeah. You become the chairman, when he becomes a senator, he's the chairman of the Select Committee on Intelligence, 1987-1993. Why is that an important date? Holy crap. Because this is in the aftermath of Iran-Contra.
41:11
leading into the Iraq war. Yeah. And it's also right when the investigation into Iran-Contra is going on and you're catching the part of the PCCI investigation. Yeah. At the head of the Senate, the biggest deep state part of the entire U.S. government is the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence.
41:40
Yeah, that's very interesting. So he was the gatekeeper to make sure only what they wanted to happen with the Iran-Contra happened, and then to make sure that the beginning of the Iraq War won, the only intelligence that was saw is what they wanted.
42:09
Spidey in chat says, the Riverside Church is the Rockefeller founded church in Manhattan. I thought it was New York, but the Rockefeller founded stuff missed that one. So thank you very much. That's good info. Rockefeller, of course, has their tendrils all over every bit of the story. Interesting note, Dr. Warren, he was a mentor to CIA Director George Tenet, and they were having breakfast together in Manhattan on the morning of 9-11.
42:40
To watch the fireworks. Apparently. I hope they got a good view. He'd be brought back to be the co-chair of Obama's Intelligence Advisory Board. President's Intelligence Advisory Board is a rather new thing, but look at who sat on this original board. It's kind of a who's who of each state. Well, and what's important about that is all of the stuff that was going on.
43:12
with obama and the drone usage um all of that stuff so he would have been overseeing all of that yeah and there's quite a few color revolutions going on uh during the obama uh arab spring and he's on the advisory board as we're doing all that shenanigans yeah so i'd say he makes our hall of fame yeah and of course our last intelligence related bonesman of course is
43:44
George H.W. Bush, we've talked about ad nauseum, so I'll go through him pretty quick, but he's kind of the granddaddy of a lot of this stuff as well. Bonesman class of 48, Bones Academy, goes out and founds the Dapata Corporation. They have no oil experience whatsoever. Founds an oil company, Dapata, that operates in Central and South America. And does it have any connection to any CIA operation that you're aware of?
44:14
A lot because of their dealings with the oil rigs in the Gulf and their use of them for the Bay of Pigs, both logistically as far as supply hubs. What they were doing is they were shipping weapons onto oil rigs, the mobile oil rigs. He had a whole thing with mobile oil rigs.
44:43
um take those weapons um and um attack cuba also there is documentation that i've come across where they were actually doing paramilitary training on the oil rigs out of sight of everybody yeah and like i said we did a whole we've done a couple features on the bush family so we're not going to go we're not going to re-litigate that entire thing but that's a big point yeah
45:09
he gets done doing that and somehow he's qualified to become the u.s ambassador to the united nations from 1973 what's his qualification then he becomes the chair of the republican national committee in 73 74 to clean up the mess of watergate he's a fixer he was four days on to china in 1974. this is a big deal the bush the bush has been members to any business that wanted oh china had just been opened up with 71.
46:08
I'm saying that he was working the entire time because we have evidence that he was in the CIA when he had all of those jobs.
46:18
to going back to the um late 1950s yeah i think it's indisputable um you just don't get the director of the cia with no without no relationship to the organization and no intelligence work at all apparently officially well i also found out um that bush and this is not reported anywhere it when the office of public safety
46:44
was closed in 1974 because it was all discovered, thanks to the Church Commission and the Pike Commission, that the Office of Public Safety was running all of the kidnapping, torture, and disappearing of Operation Condor, as you note on there, that the Office of Public Safety was shut down. However,
47:08
Running simultaneous with the Office of Public Safety was a company called PSSI, which was Public Safety Something International. And that company, when it merged with the Nell Brown and Root, which is a precursor to the KBR Brown and Root, Kellogg Brown and Root now, the president at the time that was picking up.
47:37
pssi the torture kidnapping and disappearing group was none other than president george h.w bush so it was an off the books ppsi was an off the books way of paying what i refer to now as mercenaries under the office of public safety which was the cia front under usa id and when byron ingalls who was
48:10
guy that was running it decides he wants to retire. It's handed off to Vanell Brown and Root, and this guy was the president of it. So literally a torture, kidnapping, and assassination group. So he had plenty of experience to be the CIA director. Just not publicly. Just not publicly. So I put a couple other notes on him when he was Reagan's VP. He was given an awful lot of authority.
48:43
My VP has gotten more probably involved in international diplomacy than any VP in history. A couple of the initiatives that he spearheaded, one was the deregulation of the banking system. Deregulation of what you cut out? Deregulation of the banking system, which is a real fun coincidence because it led directly into the savings and loan scandal of the 1980s, which his pushes were all over. Correct. He's the guy who deregulated the banks. He calls his brothers.
49:14
cousins say hey get involved in these snls do you want to make money and they did and the last thing of course is the former director of the cia to be in charge of tackling international drug smuggling yeah um probably the biggest note to me while he was vp is that he ran the iran contra
49:39
out of his office felix rodriguez a cuban exile that is an assassin he was in el salvador he was the guy in the room when they murdered shea cavera he was in vietnam everywhere
49:55
He was reporting to Donald Gregg, who was Bush's national security advisor. So Donald Gregg was basically his operations guy for Iran-Contra, and Felix Rodriguez was his assistant. Yeah. I mean, we've talked about Iran-Contra quite a bit, but it might even be bigger than we've let on. I mean, it is a big deal. All right, we're going to finish up our military bones.
50:25
And I wanted to do this last because when you start to need all the connections of skull and bone to the brass of our military, anytime there's any kind of a conflict throughout the war, we already know they're in intelligence. We've already seen them in diplomacy. How widespread their fingerprint is in the military, I think it's going to make the closing argument a lot more of an organization. Fair enough? Yeah. All right. Let's do it. Okay. Military. All right.
50:58
one of the co-founders of skull and bones was williamton william huntington russell co-founder class of 1833 he was a major general in connecticut militia in 1863 during the war of northern aggression um i gotta get my lincoln dig in every once in a while he gets uh named the board of visitors by the secretary of war in 1863 board of visitors deal back then uh
51:30
He was running a prep school, and he had long foreseen that the Civil War was going to happen. He was a Lincoln supporter. He trained all of his boys that went to his school to be militarily right. He taught them how to shoot, everything like that. So he was always involved in that. And he's one of the founders of the Republican Party that put Lincoln into power when the war started. So that was Mr. William Huntington Russell. Also started the Russell Trust, which finances everything throughout this country.
52:03
He's got a big military connection. Next one, of course, is Alfonso Taft, the other co-founder of Stone Bones. He was the Secretary of War under Grant in 1876. And those were the Indian War. Under him was the Black Hills War. And right when he left, his mother, Big Horn, happened. So he was an Indian War pig, actually. He was really pushing it hard. He'd become the U.S. Attorney General.
52:33
1877 became the ambassador to Austria-Hungary and then to Russia. We talked about that last week. Of course, he is the patriarch of the Taft family of bonesmen. And we've obviously the president Taft and a few others. But obviously he has been intimately tied to the military. Next we have a auto Stanford ferry. In the picture, he's a senator from Connecticut. He was a bonesman in the class of 1844.
53:08
In 1847, he became a lieutenant colonel in the 12th Regiment of Connecticut Militia. He was in Congress in 1859-51. And there he was on what's called the Committee of 33. Have we talked about the Committee of 33? I don't remember. Give me a second. That's one of the steering committees. They were trying really hard to avoid trying to keep the South from seceding. They failed. So he then...
53:52
He was a Civil War era commander. Then Perry becomes a Brigadier General in the Union Army, and he notoriously fought against Stonewall Jackson at the Battle of Cedar Mountain. These bones can get around, right? Yeah. Next guy we have is a John Donnell Smith.
54:29
Here's a lieutenant of him. He's a first lieutenant following the battle of Chancellorsville. He was a class of 1847. He was a botanist. Notice that blue symbol doesn't look very blue? Yeah, it looks very Confederate-ish. He's the captain of the Confederate Army. The guy was from Louisiana, I believe. And we've got to take a look. We talked about Thomas Croft before. There he is, wearing his Union uniform.
55:09
picture of him as the U.S. Ambassador to Bolivia. He's class of 57. He also joined the Freemasons in 1857. There was Skull and Bones and Freemasons. We haven't seen a lot of that before, at least in the blue of. In 1861, Latham appoints him as a Lieutenant Colonel in the 4th Kentucky Mounted Infantry. He became a Colonel in 1863 and had a famous battle with famous Southern General Mason Bedford Ford.
55:45
He became a Brigadier General. I think that's supposed to be the same thing. That doesn't sound right. Maybe it's 27. I might get it wrong. It's still very early. And he would lead a cavalry campaign in the Atlanta campaign. You know, the one where they burned it to the ground? Yeah. Women and children included? Yes. That one. This guy was on a horse watching that happen.
56:12
And he would command the district of Southwest Georgia in 1945. That's a military district. After the war, basically the South lived for a number of years under military occupation. It wasn't just shake hands and go home. But isn't that what we did to the Philippines and Puerto Rico and Cuba and all of our assessed territories? Sounds rather imperial to me, doesn't it? Yeah, a little bit. All right.
56:44
More military, we've got to go to our buddy, old William Howard Taft, himself. Of course, he's the 27th President of the United States, class of 1878. He was Teddy Roosevelt's Secretary of War from 1904 to 1908 before becoming President. Anything going on in 1904 to 1908? Oh, I think we were doing some activity in Latin America, weren't we? Just a bit. Why don't we ask the ladies and gentlemen to talk about that? Yeah.
57:15
At the time, Major Butler, when they were stealing Panama from Colombia? Uh-huh. That's Mr. Taft, great president. Lost to Woodrow Wilson, unfortunately. He worked against the war in something called the League of the Forced East, which was later replaced by the League of Nations with different ideals. And he was Chief Justice of the Supreme Court later on in 1924, and he ended up being buried at Arlington Cemetery.
57:46
Which is interesting for a guy who didn't serve, who's a Secretary of War. How'd he become Secretary of War? How'd he what? How'd he become Secretary of War? What are his credentials? Son of the founder of the Skull and Bones, maybe? It's his last name. Yeah. Of course, we have your good buddy, Henry Stimson. I've got a lot to write here, so I'm going to make sure everyone can read it.
58:28
Okay. He is scones in the class of 1888. Of course, he went to private learning school, Phillips Andover. 1906, he became the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York, and he prosecuted antitrust cases. Antitrust cases. Yes, thank you. I was going to say, you forgot the air quotes. If people don't know, antitrust cases need air quotes because...
59:01
Talk about Teddy Roosevelt busting the trust, and he did no such thing. They just basically reorganized the modern day corporation. At the same time, they figured out how do we get away from regulation and taxation. They went out and created the tax refundation as well. That's why we have the corporate structure we do today. Great job busting the trusts. And let me add the other two parts. The other two parts of the modern day corporation, because
59:31
Prior to this, and you can just take Rockefeller, the railroads, all of those, they basically used their monopolies, which they all had, to control labor and the trade. So in addition to the quote-unquote antitrust, they created trade associations.
59:58
So the trade associations were under the control of the same oligarchs. The labor unions were under the control of the oligarchs, as we've seen, because the mafia would just come visit them if not put their own people in it. And so this was a stealth way of them to look like they...
1:00:24
had separated the ownership from the trade associations from the workers when in fact there was no separation from them at all it was just a veneer yeah the trusts are of course owned by the gilded age robber barons and we've seen the gilded age robber barons throughout skull and bones so why would you not want to bones been prosecuting the cases against the buddies yeah
1:00:53
All right, so then he gets named Secretary of War by Taft in 1911 to 1913. He resigned when Wilson got in. He becomes a colonel in the Army in World War I. You go from being the Secretary of War to a colonel in the Army. Talk about a demonstration. He would become a founding member of the Council of Foreign Relations, who gives the orders to the CIA. The New York Times describes him as the group's quintessential member.
1:01:26
But not only is he one of the founders of the CIA, he used to be quintessential on the FBI. He's the quintessential member. Then he gets sent by Kulik to Nicaragua to negotiate the end of their civil war. And he writes famously, they were not fitted for the responsibilities that go with independence and self-government. This was a racist comment. Well, to me, it's not even, I don't even look at these as race.
1:01:58
This is a elite view of the world that comes out of the Fabian Society. If you are not white, you are not fit to, or if you are not from their establishment, I didn't mean to say white. If you are not from their establishment, they look down on anybody, even poor white people. They look down on anyone that was not from the elite.
1:02:28
And they oftentimes said comments like this. When I've been looking at Operation Gladio and the setups for all of the coups that happened all over the world, person after person after person after person that is from this elitist group, that's what they said about the entire continent of Africa. And that's what they said about the entire Latin America group. That is their view.
1:02:58
that they're heathens because they're not one of them and they have no ability to be in charge of their own destination. So they need this elite group to guide them. And that's the entire principle behind one world government because we're all too stupid. Yeah, great, great points. Chat's saying I might vote.
1:03:23
coming in and out. I'm getting some static and feedback. Yeah, if you faced directly to the thing, when you turn your head, the volume goes a little weird. I'm going to see if I can real quick get it to pick up my microphone. Maybe it'll be better. Rumble's not seeing it, unfortunately. We're going to have to put up with what I got. My apologies. Okay. Where were we? Okay.
1:03:54
He gets sent by Coolidge to Nicaragua. Yeah, we went through that one. We're at the governor one, the governor general. 27 to 29. Then secretary of state from 29 to 33. And then FDR appoints him secretary of war from 1940 to 45, 10 days before the Pearl Harbor attack. Yeah, he knew. And he also had direct, he's secretary of war for all of World War II. And of course he had direct control over the atom bomb project.
1:04:30
Well, and understand that World War II bombing campaign that saved all of their buddies' investments in World War II would have been under his stewardship. Yeah. Okay, next guy we're going to look at is Hugh Aiken Dane. I don't have a picture of him because I guess he wasn't that important. But I brought him up for a reason.
1:05:02
He was an alumni of the law firm we talked about before, Cadwalter, Wickersham, and Taft. Very important law firm. Cadwalter was the assistant secretary of state under Ulysses Grant. Bookersham was a U.S. attorney general under Taft, attorney general. And Henry Waters Taft was a Bonesman classmate to the Navy and also president of the Council on Foreign Relations.
1:05:36
That's the law firm this guy works for, okay? He would marry the sister of Knight Drexler Chaney, Jr., who was a bonesmith classmate of Baines. And, of course, this guy is his cousin to Dick Chaney through their ancestors who were blue blood and immigrated to America in the 17th century. So that's the Chaney connection. Wow. That's huge. Yeah.
1:06:09
World War I, he serves in Adjutant General's Office and is the Counsel on Traders of War Mission and Liquidation Commission on War Department. So he's one of the big members. And after the war, he serves on the Reparation Committee Commission under the Treaty of Versailles, the Treaty of Saint-Germain. And he's a judge. And one of his big judgments was the guy.
1:06:41
Belgium versus Austria on the treasure of the Order of the Golden Fleece. Had to do the reparations. The other one is Standard Oil, Rockefeller Company, had to pay reparations because 21 of their oil tankers were owned by a German subsidiary of Standard Oil. And he's the judge who can pay those reparations. Kind of an interesting career, huh? Uh-huh. All right.
1:07:12
Next guy we have is our F. Kirby Davison, who we talked about in the CIA part. I'm not going to repeat ourselves. He was the Secretary of War for AIR. And we get Arthur Lamb Gates. That's him on the left. Why is he important? He is a bonesman, class of 1918. In World War I, he flew for the 1st Yale Unit, founded by a fellow bonesman.
1:07:49
He would end up getting a Navy Distinguished Service Medal, Great Britain's Distinguished Flying Cross, France's Trojan Day Cross of War, and he got the French Legion of Honor. So apparently, very well decorated, and for his troubles, he becomes the Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Air in 1941-45, working alongside him to his own little brother. And he was actually in charge of naval aviation efforts in World War II.
1:08:21
Again, making sure you avoid all of the U.S. investment in Germany on the target list. Indeed. That should have been on the target list that never made it on the target list. Yeah. He becomes briefly the undersecretary of the Navy from June of 45 to September of 45. Very brief. So wait a minute. Wait a minute. I think this is kind of a foot stomper here. You've got the air.
1:08:52
the department of war guy for air and you have the navy air guy and they're both associated with bonesmen making sure that none of their investments in world war ii crap okay all right i told you these military connections i think it's the uh icing on the cake we've been trying to bake my gosh because i'm reading a book right now about the bombing campaign and the
1:09:22
of like IG Farben and all of those. IG Farben was in a seven story building. It was like the biggest target and they didn't touch it. Yeah. I actually had pictures of that. It's interesting. That's crazy. Yeah. Now we know why. Okay. So he goes into the private sector afterwards. Of course he does. And he's the director of pretty big companies. You got the New York Trust Company.
1:09:53
Union Pacific Railroad, Bonesman Central, Time Magazine. CIA Central. Boeing. Wow. Safeway and, of course, Abercrombie & Fish. And a little footnote, she would marry Alice Truby Davison, whose sister was F. Truby Davison, who we just saw right here. Holy moly. Keep it in the family, right? Yep. Okay.
1:10:27
Our next Bonesman is a guy that you know and love, Robert Lovett. Yeah. Okay, what do we know about Robert? Bonesman class of 1918. He was one of the six wise men that crafted the Cold War. He would marry an SSL, Quarterly Brown, the daughter of James Brown, probably the Brown Brothers Harriman family. Is he in the family again? Yeah. He also flew in the first year.
1:11:02
Kind of important on campus activity, don't you think? Yeah. You become a World War I lieutenant commander, a partner at Brown Brothers Harrington in 1926. In 1940, you were the vice president for Air Affairs under Bonesman Henry Stimson. I mean, is this just one that you have to handle? Yeah. I got some more on the level here. Let me just grab it. His dad was the president of the Railroad.
1:11:46
So, Truman refuses his resignation, and they ask him to chair what's called the Lovett Committee. The Lovett Committee advised the government on the post-World War II organization of intelligence activities and led directly to the creation of the PIA. That is Lovett. He goes back to work for Brown Brothers Chairman, only to be recalled by George Marshall, who helped implement the Vandenberg Resolution.
1:12:21
and which led to the establishment of NATO. So this guy's helped create the CIA and NATO. And they're going to use it extensively to protect their investments. And Marshall was in bad health. Lovett did most of the heavy lifting, implementing the Marshall Plan, which, shall we repeat, was funneling money to Operation Gladio. Correct. That's Robert Lovett.
1:12:56
Gets back in the investment business and then gets recalled again by Marshall to become the deputy secretary of defense. By 1951, he's the U.S. secretary of defense, directing the Korean War and arguing for a bigger military at all times. Goes back to Brown Brothers Harriman. Until 1956, Eisenhower persuades him to join the President of Intelligence's ID Board, which of course he does. And again, Eisenhower did several coups.
1:13:32
And the Mossadegh, Guatemala, the Congo, and this guy's right in the middle of it. Yep. Quite a career for Mr. Lovett, would you not say? Yeah. And so just kind of to foot stomp, this guy laid the entire foundation for Operation Gladio. Yeah. And the Cold War itself. And the book was written by...
1:14:05
The Wise Men, Six Plans for the World They Made, was written by Walter Isaacson and Evan Thomas, and those six were names we've heard before. And also, just to kind of foot stomp the Cold War, the first probably five years, no, probably ten years, every bit of the intelligence was a lie.
1:14:32
We didn't have a bomber or a missile deficit. The creation of the Cold War itself, the idea of a Cold War, was based on the fact that Russia was any minute going to come over the Volga Gap and wipe out Europe when they had 50 million people dead and no industry to do it. The entire thing was a lie, and this guy was part of crafting that lie. Indeed.
1:15:02
I want to hammer home the Weisman angle of this, though. Like I said, this is a book about who basically formed the post-World War II world, the Cold War. There's six of them. There's a Charles, who was the ambassador of the USSR and part of the Porcelain Club. There was George Kennan, who we've talked about. And then you have four people. W.A. Will Harriman, Robert Leavitt, and John J. McCoy. Yeah.
1:15:32
what this book is saying is that the skull and bones when they made up the skull and bones designed everything we went through was yes and it was their exploitation of the world via coups of operation gladio that they set up yeah i mean i think that's one of the most damning facts we've come up with you know yes they laid the foundation for operation gladio implemented and then used it
1:16:04
For their own benefit. We could stop right there, but I've got a few more. So what the heck. Here we have a David. He's assistant secretary of the Navy for air. He is of 1920. And of course his mother was a niece of president. And he would later manage Robert Taft's presidential campaign. Robert Taft ran for president as a Republican. And I think so.
1:16:38
Of course, he went to elite grooming school in St. Paul's. And he's a member of the 1st Yale Unit. This guy was the U.S. Navy's only ace of World War I. He had six victories. The very first naval aviator to become an ace. The ace is shooting down the enemy aircraft. Yeah. Six to be an ace or five? Five. Yeah, this guy got six. He did a little extra.
1:17:09
And if you do homework on this guy, there's some really interesting stories about his well-documented flying career. He would become the assistant secretary of the Navy in 1929-1932 and then a director of Pan Am Air Ferries. So, of course. So he's assistant secretary of the Navy while another bonesman is the secretary of war. And then he goes straight to Pan Am and, yeah. And, of course, he married a Japanese.
1:17:40
Hale Harkness, whose grandfather was one of J.D. Rockefeller's closest business partners when they founded Standard Oil. Just to tie that, close that out again. See any patterns yet? Yep. All in the family. All right. Let's talk about Charles Spofford. That's this gentleman right here. Okay. What do we know about him? Bonesman class of 1924. He's an Army Brigadier General in World War II.
1:18:15
where he gets, check this out, a Purple Heart, Distinguished Service Medal, Legion of Honor, again, the Croix de Guerre, and the Order of the British Empire. That's impressive. Yeah. After that, he becomes the Assistant Chief of Staff of the Military Government of the Mediterranean Theater in 1944. What's going on in 1944? Isn't that when we took back?
1:18:51
what's this isn't that when we took back what that's pretty much when we made our big push back into germany that was uh yeah yeah all right he became the u.s to nato basically at the onset of uh he's there yeah setting up um gladio forum on the inside he was a uh lawyer at the firm of davis polk and ordwell that's important and also president of the metropolitan
1:19:24
opera so he is high society i brought up the law firm because this is a key challenge jp morgan they would uh help create general electric robert cleveland was actually a member of the firm more recently this firm clients during the brand new year 2009 included the treasury bank of new york aig freddie mac lehman brothers and city group
1:20:01
And the fact that they were the law firm of General Electric, you find General Electric in everything. The Bolshevik Revolution, the original members electrifying Russia afterwards, you find them in all of the coups. They have interest throughout all of Latin America, Africa. They were all over, the people that were involved in that company.
1:20:30
Yeah, there's a few other interesting, yeah, yeah. Some more really fun alumni of the law firm, just to show you how powerful they are. Kirsten Gillibrand, three chairman of the SEC, current chairman of the Federal Reserve, Jerome Powell, one secretary-treasurer, got the name of Ogden Livingston Mills, and Eli Whitney DeVoy. Robert Harrison became the CEO of the Global Initiative.
1:21:06
And of course, Andrew Yang. That's quite a lineup. Yeah. So that is Mr. Charles Spofford. Quite a career. All right. Back to one of our other favorites, Mr. McGeorge Bundy. Pictured here is the fifth National Security Advisor. He is classed up in 1940. His name was Odin. Of course, he went to the Grogan School. In World War II, he was an underdog.
1:22:06
Yes. But do you have when he became the dean of Harvard? I can get that here real quickly. I got it.
1:22:21
Yeah, go ahead. At 34 years old, the youngest dean of Harvard ever. Outstanding. So in 49, he joins the Council of Foreign Relations as a Marshall Plan analyst on the covert side. And he worked on that subcommittee with Eisenhower, Allen Dulles, CIA's Richard Ripple Jr., and George Kennan. Setting up Operation Gladio.
1:22:55
He becomes the national security advisor. He was in charge of the Vietnam escalation. Yeah. He was actually kind of behind the whole Gulf of Tonkin issue and drafting the resolution to commit military forces afterwards. So they set up the false flag so they could go into Vietnam to secure the opium to supply Operation Gladio. Yeah.
1:23:27
Yeah, guys, I really am sorry about the echo. Rumble's not letting me use my mic, so I'm going straight off the laptop, and we're doing the best I can. So I apologize. I don't know if I can get it edited out, but we're doing the best we can. All right. He would then become the chair of the 303 committee. Did we talk about that? I've talked about it a lot, but go ahead. Well, no. If you've got the information ahead, I won't pull up my notes. Well, the 303 committee is –
1:24:01
Basically, it was the mechanism to coordinate covert operations. Very good. He'd leave that and become the president of the Ford Foundation because, of course, he did. I'm making the assumption that all of this, he never got out of Intel. No, of course not. You never do. Yeah, because every single thing he did,
1:24:33
had tentacles to the CIA. Yeah, and that's where the Ford Foundation comes in. Yes. Then, of course, he testifies to the Court Committee and lies his ass off. Yes, he did. And then he would then be employed by none other than the Carnegie Corporation until he died in 1996 from a heart attack. Which, again, is used for CIA front money. Yes. Okay. Two more.
1:25:05
And I just want to add, I have in my notes that his oldest son, William Bundy, works in the CIA and State Department. And his other son, Harvey Bundy, was a Yale graduate, was in intelligence during Vietnam, and was associated with the CIA.
1:25:32
Yeah, we did a whole show on the Bundys. They're all over the place. Yeah. What else do I have on Bundy? That would be something else. Yeah, we forgot about Harvey Hollywood Bundy, who was a special assistant to Secretary of War Stimson. Yeah. Yeah. Keeping it in the family. Yeah. Grandson of Solomon Bundy. And, of course, they're related to the Auchincloth's family. Yep. Which is Jackie Kennedy's family. There you go.
1:26:05
All right. Townsend, oops, the second. Didn't get a picture of him off Wikipedia, but I did find this when he's on C-SPAN. All right. He is the class of 1944, captain of the football team, was a U.S. Marine lieutenant, where he fought at Iwo Jima and the occupation of Japan. 47 of 48, he becomes the assistant chairman of the House Armed Service Committee and his family's staff aide.
1:26:38
slash gatekeeper forestal marshall and love it that's crazy yeah goes to the private sector becomes an author um and 64 comes back to the deputy secretary for international affairs which is intelligence well international affairs in the department of defense basically is the liaison
1:27:11
for like they they basically are in charge of military cells so they do all of the um negotiations or the forcing of weapon systems on countries in order to um uh get them under control very good all right our final military military attached bonesman got the name of john chafee
1:27:42
son is sitting in public right now he was a united states senator from rhode island until 1999. holmesman class of 1947 from the rhode island political dynasty they've had the five governors of rhode island in this family where i'll be visiting starting tomorrow uh he's a world war ii marine corps fought at guadalcanal and okinawa then he rejoins in 51 war and was a rifle company commander really saying this
1:28:15
in the press. He was an amazing soldier. He was a House of Representatives in 1962. He becomes the governor of Rhode Island. In 1969, he became Secretary of the Navy under Nixon. What's going on in 1969? The Vietnam War. Oh, yeah. Then he becomes a U.S. Senator where he sits on the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, the Senate Bank Committee, the Senate Committee on Environment.
1:28:48
What's going on with the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence in my time period besides the end of the Cold War and everything that happened after that? Well, that would be from 76 to 99 was when all of these fake banks popped up like BCCI and Nugent Hand. And he obviously, given the crossover between intelligence and banking, was a key gatekeeper there. Okay, so let's...
1:29:20
Give it a wrap. After 30-something weeks going through Skull and Bones, our original question is, is this just a control networking club? Or have we made the point that they may be just a bit more? They are 100% a controlling mechanism behind the scenes to orchestrate events. Yeah, they don't rule the world, but they sure do guide it. Ladies and gentlemen.
1:29:53
Skull and bones. Well done. And again, I just want to compliment you. Having that graft is fantastic because it puts in a picture the amount of control that these people have had. Yeah. I'll have more for our next. I'm going to start using the neuroboard for all of these going forward if I have the time to put them together. Yeah. Well, definitely for a summary.
1:30:24
Because, yeah, because that's that's critical to making the point. Well, we're on to some other secret societies going forward. Next week, we're going to do a quick hiatus. I've got some juicy stuff on UBS, Union Bank of Switzerland, and it ties into some of the other banks we've looked at. This one in particular, like next week. And you are going to see some fun. I can't wait.
1:30:55
Because I think one of the most fascinating parts of Gladio is the banking. The Deutsche Bank, the HSBC, and as we've said, BCCI, New Japan, the whole savings and loan thing, it just keeps coming up. So I think this will be a good thing to kind of delve into so people can kind of wrap their hands around.
1:31:22
just how important the baking segment is to making this entire wheel turn. Yeah, and all wars are banker wars. Yeah, there you go. All right. Well, I'm very humbled to be part of this with you because I think the two of us together brings a view.
1:31:52
uh, with your banking experience, my military experience and the operation Gladio that no one's ever looked at this the way you and I do. Well, it's been a pleasure. I mean, you're being my cohost on this, uh, does more, it's a multiplying effect. And, uh, and I really do enjoy, I mean, we just, we don't even need the video. We just get on the phone and have this exact same conversation. And we didn't have many times.
1:32:22
and i want to thank the audience you guys have been great a lot of good encouragement outstanding questions and uh we'll have more for you coming soon yeah thanks everybody for being here cheers
Entities here
Skull and Bones25World War II15George H.W. Bush14William Howard Taft12Operation Gladio12United States10McGeorge Bundy9Brown Brothers Harriman7Alice Truby Davison7Cold War7Robert Lovett7William F. Buckley7Lou Lapham6Henry Stimson6Charles White6American Civil War6Church Committee6CIA6Yale University6Iran-Contra affair6U.S. State Department6United States Department of Defense5Iran5Russia4Vietnam4New York City4Harvard University4NATO4Iran-Iraq War4USAID4Belgium4Congo4Charles Spofford4CFR4Federal Reserve4Davis Polk4Vietnam War3George C. Marshall3Halliburton3William Sloan Coffin3
Claims made here
E. Howard Hunt member_of
Operation Condor host_asserted
▶ 34:41
“And he also happened to be the guy who led the Watergate break-in. Yeah. Among other things, he was everywhere. He was in Operation Condor. He was over in Vietnam. He shows up. He's like the, what do …”
William F. Buckley member_of
Australian National Review documented
▶ 34:41
“And he also happened to be the guy who led the Watergate break-in. Yeah. Among other things, he was everywhere. He was in Operation Condor. He was over in Vietnam. He shows up. He's like the, what do …”
E. Howard Hunt carried_out_attack
Watergate scandal documented
▶ 34:41
“And he also happened to be the guy who led the Watergate break-in. Yeah. Among other things, he was everywhere. He was in Operation Condor. He was over in Vietnam. He shows up. He's like the, what do …”
William F. Buckley member_of
Skull and Bones host_asserted
▶ 35:12
“you know, new conservative movement going on. It's being led by a bone. This is where the neocons come from. This guy is the thought leader of the neocon movement. We did a full feature on the family.…”
William Sloan Coffin member_of
Skull and Bones host_asserted
▶ 35:44
“All right, enough on Buckley. One of my all-time favorites, this guy by the name of William Sloan Coffin. I'll get them all on screen. Here we go. That's the best I can do. Funny looking guy, right? H…”
Unification Theology Seminary member_of
Columbia University documented
▶ 36:26
“His uncle was known when he talked about Henry Sloan Coffin, who was in the class of 1897, and he'd become the president of the Union Theological Seminary, which is at Columbia University. We've been …”
Henry Sloane Coffin headed
Unification Theology Seminary documented
▶ 36:26
“His uncle was known when he talked about Henry Sloan Coffin, who was in the class of 1897, and he'd become the president of the Union Theological Seminary, which is at Columbia University. We've been …”
Franklin A. Lindsay headed
Office of Policy Coordination host_asserted
▶ 37:26
“He applies to the OSS in 1943 and gets denied by, this is a direct quote, by not having Gaelic speakers, G-A-L-I-C. They didn't think he was handsome enough to be a spy. Well, it's hard having Bozo fo…”
William Sloan Coffin recruited
World Anti-Communist League host_asserted
▶ 38:01
“And for those of you who don't know, that's the conduit of the CIA into the Pentagon. And so a few years later, he gets into the CIA case officer. And what's he do there? He serves as West Germany rec…”
William Sloan Coffin headed
Riverside Church documented
▶ 38:32
“He goes back to Yale Seminary, Yale Divinity School, and he ends up running Riverside Church and also the United Church of Christ. And he becomes a very, very, I would say, wow, a solitizer. And isn't…”
William Sloan Coffin headed
United Church of Christ documented
▶ 38:32
“He goes back to Yale Seminary, Yale Divinity School, and he ends up running Riverside Church and also the United Church of Christ. And he becomes a very, very, I would say, wow, a solitizer. And isn't…”
David Boren member_of
Skull and Bones host_asserted
▶ 40:06
“Tara asked, where did Cheney originate? Somebody answered, they came to this country in 1640. That's true. We're going to mention that here in a second. So we'll get back to that topic as it pertains.…”
David Boren member_of
Rhodes Scholarship documented
▶ 40:06
“Tara asked, where did Cheney originate? Somebody answered, they came to this country in 1640. That's true. We're going to mention that here in a second. So we'll get back to that topic as it pertains.…”
David Boren headed
University of Oklahoma documented
▶ 40:06
“Tara asked, where did Cheney originate? Somebody answered, they came to this country in 1640. That's true. We're going to mention that here in a second. So we'll get back to that topic as it pertains.…”
David Boren headed
Church Committee documented
▶ 40:39
“Why is that important? Because Rhodes Scholars and others in society, we send people over there to learn the British way of doing things. Primarily the MI6 way of doing things. Yeah. You become the ch…”
Dr. Warren trained
George Tenet host_asserted
▶ 42:09
“Spidey in chat says, the Riverside Church is the Rockefeller founded church in Manhattan. I thought it was New York, but the Rockefeller founded stuff missed that one. So thank you very much. That's g…”
George H.W. Bush founded
Arco host_asserted
▶ 43:44
“George H.W. Bush, we've talked about ad nauseum, so I'll go through him pretty quick, but he's kind of the granddaddy of a lot of this stuff as well. Bonesman class of 48, Bones Academy, goes out and …”
George H.W. Bush member_of
Skull and Bones host_asserted
▶ 43:44
“George H.W. Bush, we've talked about ad nauseum, so I'll go through him pretty quick, but he's kind of the granddaddy of a lot of this stuff as well. Bonesman class of 48, Bones Academy, goes out and …”
Arco supplied_arms_to
Bay of Pigs Invasion host_asserted
▶ 44:14
“A lot because of their dealings with the oil rigs in the Gulf and their use of them for the Bay of Pigs, both logistically as far as supply hubs. What they were doing is they were shipping weapons ont…”
George H.W. Bush headed
Republican National Committee documented
▶ 45:09
“he gets done doing that and somehow he's qualified to become the u.s ambassador to the united nations from 1973 what's his qualification then he becomes the chair of the republican national committee …”
George H.W. Bush appointed
United Nations documented
▶ 45:09
“he gets done doing that and somehow he's qualified to become the u.s ambassador to the united nations from 1973 what's his qualification then he becomes the chair of the republican national committee …”
USAID carried_out_attack
Operation Condor host_asserted
▶ 46:44
“was closed in 1974 because it was all discovered, thanks to the Church Commission and the Pike Commission, that the Office of Public Safety was running all of the kidnapping, torture, and disappearing…”
Pujo Committee exposed
USAID documented
▶ 46:44
“was closed in 1974 because it was all discovered, thanks to the Church Commission and the Pike Commission, that the Office of Public Safety was running all of the kidnapping, torture, and disappearing…”
Church Committee exposed
USAID documented
▶ 46:44
“was closed in 1974 because it was all discovered, thanks to the Church Commission and the Pike Commission, that the Office of Public Safety was running all of the kidnapping, torture, and disappearing…”
Systems International front_for
USAID host_asserted
▶ 47:08
“Running simultaneous with the Office of Public Safety was a company called PSSI, which was Public Safety Something International. And that company, when it merged with the Nell Brown and Root, which i…”
Systems International member_of
Brown and Root host_asserted
▶ 47:08
“Running simultaneous with the Office of Public Safety was a company called PSSI, which was Public Safety Something International. And that company, when it merged with the Nell Brown and Root, which i…”
George H.W. Bush headed
Systems International host_asserted
▶ 47:37
“pssi the torture kidnapping and disappearing group was none other than president george h.w bush so it was an off the books ppsi was an off the books way of paying what i refer to now as mercenaries u…”
Felix Rodriguez assassinated
Óscar Romero host_asserted
▶ 49:39
“out of his office felix rodriguez a cuban exile that is an assassin he was in el salvador he was the guy in the room when they murdered shea cavera he was in vietnam everywhere…”
William Huntington Russell member_of
Connecticut Militia documented
▶ 50:58
“one of the co-founders of skull and bones was williamton william huntington russell co-founder class of 1833 he was a major general in connecticut militia in 1863 during the war of northern aggression…”
William Huntington Russell member_of
Skull and Bones documented
▶ 50:58
“one of the co-founders of skull and bones was williamton william huntington russell co-founder class of 1833 he was a major general in connecticut militia in 1863 during the war of northern aggression…”
William Huntington Russell founded
Russell Trust Association documented
▶ 51:30
“He was running a prep school, and he had long foreseen that the Civil War was going to happen. He was a Lincoln supporter. He trained all of his boys that went to his school to be militarily right. He…”
William Huntington Russell founded
Republican Party documented
▶ 51:30
“He was running a prep school, and he had long foreseen that the Civil War was going to happen. He was a Lincoln supporter. He trained all of his boys that went to his school to be militarily right. He…”
Alfonso Taft member_of
Skull and Bones documented
▶ 52:03
“He's got a big military connection. Next one, of course, is Alfonso Taft, the other co-founder of Stone Bones. He was the Secretary of War under Grant in 1876. And those were the Indian War. Under him…”
Alfonso Taft appointed
Ulysses S. Grant documented
▶ 52:03
“He's got a big military connection. Next one, of course, is Alfonso Taft, the other co-founder of Stone Bones. He was the Secretary of War under Grant in 1876. And those were the Indian War. Under him…”
Alfonso Taft appointed
Russia documented
▶ 52:33
“1877 became the ambassador to Austria-Hungary and then to Russia. We talked about that last week. Of course, he is the patriarch of the Taft family of bonesmen. And we've obviously the president Taft …”
Alfonso Taft appointed
Austria-Hungary documented
▶ 52:33
“1877 became the ambassador to Austria-Hungary and then to Russia. We talked about that last week. Of course, he is the patriarch of the Taft family of bonesmen. And we've obviously the president Taft …”
Robert Lovett member_of
Skull and Bones host_asserted
▶ 1:10:27
“Our next Bonesman is a guy that you know and love, Robert Lovett. Yeah. Okay, what do we know about Robert? Bonesman class of 1918. He was one of the six wise men that crafted the Cold War. He would m…”
Robert Lovett member_of
Brown Brothers Harriman host_asserted
▶ 1:11:02
“Kind of important on campus activity, don't you think? Yeah. You become a World War I lieutenant commander, a partner at Brown Brothers Harrington in 1926. In 1940, you were the vice president for Air…”
Robert Lovett appointed
Lovett Committee host_asserted
▶ 1:11:46
“So, Truman refuses his resignation, and they ask him to chair what's called the Lovett Committee. The Lovett Committee advised the government on the post-World War II organization of intelligence acti…”
George C. Marshall appointed
Robert Lovett host_asserted
▶ 1:11:46
“So, Truman refuses his resignation, and they ask him to chair what's called the Lovett Committee. The Lovett Committee advised the government on the post-World War II organization of intelligence acti…”
George C. Marshall implemented
Vandenberg Resolution host_asserted
▶ 1:11:46
“So, Truman refuses his resignation, and they ask him to chair what's called the Lovett Committee. The Lovett Committee advised the government on the post-World War II organization of intelligence acti…”
Lovett Committee founded
CIA host_asserted
▶ 1:11:46
“So, Truman refuses his resignation, and they ask him to chair what's called the Lovett Committee. The Lovett Committee advised the government on the post-World War II organization of intelligence acti…”
Vandenberg Resolution founded
NATO host_asserted
▶ 1:12:21
“and which led to the establishment of NATO. So this guy's helped create the CIA and NATO. And they're going to use it extensively to protect their investments. And Marshall was in bad health. Lovett d…”
Robert Lovett implemented
Marshall Plan host_asserted
▶ 1:12:21
“and which led to the establishment of NATO. So this guy's helped create the CIA and NATO. And they're going to use it extensively to protect their investments. And Marshall was in bad health. Lovett d…”
Marshall Plan financed_via
Operation Gladio host_asserted
▶ 1:12:21
“and which led to the establishment of NATO. So this guy's helped create the CIA and NATO. And they're going to use it extensively to protect their investments. And Marshall was in bad health. Lovett d…”
Dwight D. Eisenhower carried_out_attack
Guatemala host_asserted
▶ 1:12:56
“Gets back in the investment business and then gets recalled again by Marshall to become the deputy secretary of defense. By 1951, he's the U.S. secretary of defense, directing the Korean War and argui…”
Dwight D. Eisenhower carried_out_attack
Congo host_asserted
▶ 1:12:56
“Gets back in the investment business and then gets recalled again by Marshall to become the deputy secretary of defense. By 1951, he's the U.S. secretary of defense, directing the Korean War and argui…”
Dwight D. Eisenhower appointed
Robert Lovett host_asserted
▶ 1:12:56
“Gets back in the investment business and then gets recalled again by Marshall to become the deputy secretary of defense. By 1951, he's the U.S. secretary of defense, directing the Korean War and argui…”
Dwight D. Eisenhower carried_out_attack
Iran host_asserted
▶ 1:12:56
“Gets back in the investment business and then gets recalled again by Marshall to become the deputy secretary of defense. By 1951, he's the U.S. secretary of defense, directing the Korean War and argui…”
Robert Lovett founded
Operation Gladio host_asserted
▶ 1:13:32
“And the Mossadegh, Guatemala, the Congo, and this guy's right in the middle of it. Yep. Quite a career for Mr. Lovett, would you not say? Yeah. And so just kind of to foot stomp, this guy laid the ent…”
George F. Kennan member_of
The Wise Men: Six Friends and the World They Made book_quoted
▶ 1:15:02
“I want to hammer home the Weisman angle of this, though. Like I said, this is a book about who basically formed the post-World War II world, the Cold War. There's six of them. There's a Charles, who w…”
Averell Harriman member_of
The Wise Men: Six Friends and the World They Made book_quoted
▶ 1:15:02
“I want to hammer home the Weisman angle of this, though. Like I said, this is a book about who basically formed the post-World War II world, the Cold War. There's six of them. There's a Charles, who w…”
Robert Lovett member_of
The Wise Men: Six Friends and the World They Made book_quoted
▶ 1:15:02
“I want to hammer home the Weisman angle of this, though. Like I said, this is a book about who basically formed the post-World War II world, the Cold War. There's six of them. There's a Charles, who w…”
John J. McCloy member_of
The Wise Men: Six Friends and the World They Made book_quoted
▶ 1:15:02
“I want to hammer home the Weisman angle of this, though. Like I said, this is a book about who basically formed the post-World War II world, the Cold War. There's six of them. There's a Charles, who w…”
Skull and Bones founded
Operation Gladio host_asserted
▶ 1:15:32
“what this book is saying is that the skull and bones when they made up the skull and bones designed everything we went through was yes and it was their exploitation of the world via coups of operation…”
Hale Harkness member_of
Skull and Bones host_asserted
▶ 1:16:04
“For their own benefit. We could stop right there, but I've got a few more. So what the heck. Here we have a David. He's assistant secretary of the Navy for air. He is of 1920. And of course his mother…”
Hale Harkness appointed
Pan American World Airways host_asserted
▶ 1:17:09
“And if you do homework on this guy, there's some really interesting stories about his well-documented flying career. He would become the assistant secretary of the Navy in 1929-1932 and then a directo…”
Charles Spofford member_of
Skull and Bones host_asserted
▶ 1:17:40
“Hale Harkness, whose grandfather was one of J.D. Rockefeller's closest business partners when they founded Standard Oil. Just to tie that, close that out again. See any patterns yet? Yep. All in the f…”
Hale Harkness member_of
Standard Oil host_asserted
▶ 1:17:40
“Hale Harkness, whose grandfather was one of J.D. Rockefeller's closest business partners when they founded Standard Oil. Just to tie that, close that out again. See any patterns yet? Yep. All in the f…”
Charles Spofford member_of
Davis Polk host_asserted
▶ 1:18:51
“what's this isn't that when we took back what that's pretty much when we made our big push back into germany that was uh yeah yeah all right he became the u.s to nato basically at the onset of uh he's…”
General Electric carried_out_attack
Russia host_asserted
▶ 1:20:01
“And the fact that they were the law firm of General Electric, you find General Electric in everything. The Bolshevik Revolution, the original members electrifying Russia afterwards, you find them in a…”
Davis Polk funded
General Electric host_asserted
▶ 1:20:01
“And the fact that they were the law firm of General Electric, you find General Electric in everything. The Bolshevik Revolution, the original members electrifying Russia afterwards, you find them in a…”
McGeorge Bundy member_of
Skull and Bones host_asserted
▶ 1:21:06
“And of course, Andrew Yang. That's quite a lineup. Yeah. So that is Mr. Charles Spofford. Quite a career. All right. Back to one of our other favorites, Mr. McGeorge Bundy. Pictured here is the fifth …”
McGeorge Bundy member_of
CFR host_asserted
▶ 1:22:21
“Yeah, go ahead. At 34 years old, the youngest dean of Harvard ever. Outstanding. So in 49, he joins the Council of Foreign Relations as a Marshall Plan analyst on the covert side. And he worked on tha…”
McGeorge Bundy appointed
Harvard University host_asserted
▶ 1:22:21
“Yeah, go ahead. At 34 years old, the youngest dean of Harvard ever. Outstanding. So in 49, he joins the Council of Foreign Relations as a Marshall Plan analyst on the covert side. And he worked on tha…”
McGeorge Bundy founded
Operation Gladio host_asserted
▶ 1:22:21
“Yeah, go ahead. At 34 years old, the youngest dean of Harvard ever. Outstanding. So in 49, he joins the Council of Foreign Relations as a Marshall Plan analyst on the covert side. And he worked on tha…”
McGeorge Bundy carried_out_attack
Vietnam host_asserted
▶ 1:22:55
“He becomes the national security advisor. He was in charge of the Vietnam escalation. Yeah. He was actually kind of behind the whole Gulf of Tonkin issue and drafting the resolution to commit military…”
McGeorge Bundy founded
Gulf of Tonkin Resolution host_asserted
▶ 1:22:55
“He becomes the national security advisor. He was in charge of the Vietnam escalation. Yeah. He was actually kind of behind the whole Gulf of Tonkin issue and drafting the resolution to commit military…”
McGeorge Bundy appointed
Ford Foundation host_asserted
▶ 1:24:01
“Basically, it was the mechanism to coordinate covert operations. Very good. He'd leave that and become the president of the Ford Foundation because, of course, he did. I'm making the assumption that a…”
McGeorge Bundy appointed
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace host_asserted
▶ 1:24:33
“had tentacles to the CIA. Yeah, and that's where the Ford Foundation comes in. Yes. Then, of course, he testifies to the Court Committee and lies his ass off. Yes, he did. And then he would then be em…”
William P. Bundy member_of
CIA host_asserted
▶ 1:25:05
“And I just want to add, I have in my notes that his oldest son, William Bundy, works in the CIA and State Department. And his other son, Harvey Bundy, was a Yale graduate, was in intelligence during V…”
Harvey Hollister Bundy member_of
Yale University host_asserted
▶ 1:25:05
“And I just want to add, I have in my notes that his oldest son, William Bundy, works in the CIA and State Department. And his other son, Harvey Bundy, was a Yale graduate, was in intelligence during V…”
Harvey Hollister Bundy member_of
CIA host_asserted
▶ 1:25:05
“And I just want to add, I have in my notes that his oldest son, William Bundy, works in the CIA and State Department. And his other son, Harvey Bundy, was a Yale graduate, was in intelligence during V…”
Harvey Hollister Bundy appointed
Henry Stimson host_asserted
▶ 1:25:32
“Yeah, we did a whole show on the Bundys. They're all over the place. Yeah. What else do I have on Bundy? That would be something else. Yeah, we forgot about Harvey Hollywood Bundy, who was a special a…”
John Chafee member_of
Skull and Bones host_asserted
▶ 1:27:42
“son is sitting in public right now he was a united states senator from rhode island until 1999. holmesman class of 1947 from the rhode island political dynasty they've had the five governors of rhode …”
Richard Nixon appointed
John Chafee host_asserted
▶ 1:28:15
“in the press. He was an amazing soldier. He was a House of Representatives in 1962. He becomes the governor of Rhode Island. In 1969, he became Secretary of the Navy under Nixon. What's going on in 19…”
John Chafee member_of
Church Committee host_asserted
▶ 1:28:15
“in the press. He was an amazing soldier. He was a House of Representatives in 1962. He becomes the governor of Rhode Island. In 1969, he became Secretary of the Navy under Nixon. What's going on in 19…”
John Chafee member_of
Senate Committee on Environment host_asserted
▶ 1:28:15
“in the press. He was an amazing soldier. He was a House of Representatives in 1962. He becomes the governor of Rhode Island. In 1969, he became Secretary of the Navy under Nixon. What's going on in 19…”
John Chafee member_of
House Banking Committee host_asserted
▶ 1:28:15
“in the press. He was an amazing soldier. He was a House of Representatives in 1962. He becomes the governor of Rhode Island. In 1969, he became Secretary of the Navy under Nixon. What's going on in 19…”
Church Committee exposed
BCCI host_asserted
▶ 1:28:48
“What's going on with the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence in my time period besides the end of the Cold War and everything that happened after that? Well, that would be from 76 to 99 was when a…”
Church Committee exposed
Nugan Hand Bank host_asserted
▶ 1:28:48
“What's going on with the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence in my time period besides the end of the Cold War and everything that happened after that? Well, that would be from 76 to 99 was when a…”