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The Shadow State 59 Spooks & Infectious Disease

1:03:15 · recorded 2025-11-06 · ▶ watch on Rumble

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Transcript

0:16 Welcome to another edition of Operation Gladio Meets Secret Society with Warhamster Brady. How are you today, Brady? I am wonderful. Thanks again for having me on. It's been a while. It feels like. There are so many things going on. Yeah, you've been traveling and, well, lots of good things. And I'm supposed to be traveling, but I'm too busy to do so. What do you want to talk about today?
0:44 I think we're going to talk about scrolling key, aren't we? Yeah. For new listeners, we'll do a quick overview of why we're doing this. And we started with this theory that we understand that secret societies are more than just a fraternal organization or a networking group. And some of them are more nefarious than others. And we started with Skull and Bones, which I think is the granddaddy of the secret societies, at least on campus.
1:14 And we just were able to see connection after connection after connection and how they put their people in the key places in business, in academia, in any of the institutions, politics, the judiciary, diplomacy, and intelligence. And the patterns over and over again, because they exert that power to basically run America's foreign policy. And they do it on the behalf of multi...
1:42 multinational corporations. And that's where we get, that's where it connects with Operation Gladio because almost all, and I would say maybe almost, maybe all of these regime change and foreign interference operations, it comes from the same sources and it's done for the multinational corporations. Pretty accurate summary? Yes. So we went all the way through Skull and Bones and then we decided, you know, there's another, there's a couple other secret societies on Yale's campus that are pretty interesting.
2:12 And we jumped into scrolling key. And the early days of scrolling key was really differentiated itself because their focus was on academic achievement. And you could see that for the first few decades. But as will happen with the elites, power often corrupts. And the scrolling keys people started interacting with our skull and bones people. And the same blue blood families have the same, they all come from the same grooming high schools.
2:39 boarding schools and then they go to the same ivy league schools and join the same secret societies and it's gotten to the point where you can't really tell that much of a difference in the 20th century between scroll and key and skull and bones i think i still find skull and bones to be the more nefarious and especially when it comes to intelligence but we're going to see some real beauties today so they're going to do their job so with no further ado shall we jump in absolutely i'll share my screen okay this is our scrolling key
3:15 Mirror board. See the scroll, see the key. There's their tomb. We've been going through the decades, 1850s, 1870s. We just completed the 1910s, and we left off with, or almost completed it, with one of our favorite villains, a guy by the name of Dean Acheson. He's pretty notorious. And we also finished up with William C. Bullitt. Both of these guys are big-time spooks and diplomats. Yes.
3:45 Guy I want to start with today is class of 1919. Guy by the name of John Franklin Enders. Born in 1897 in West Hartford, Connecticut, another Yankee. Okay, what do we know about him? He's class of 1919, born in Connecticut. Here's a little familiar pattern. His father was the CEO of Hartford National Bank. When he passed away, he left a...
4:18 John Enders, $19 million, which was a lot of money back then. Banking connection again, right? Yes. See if this kind of matches the pattern. He attended something called the Noah Webster School and then graduated from St. Paul's School in Concord, New Hampshire. The grooming school, one of them. Yes, which is only 30 minutes away from where I'm sitting. And there's a lot of these people with the St. Paul's. What's interesting is that Noah Webster School.
4:50 Noah Webster's house is two blocks away from where I'm sitting. Pretty funny, huh? Small world? Small world. Yeah, I walked by it on my way to the local museum, which is Strawberry Bank. It's a historic museum from historic Portsmouth. You've been to Strawberry Bank, right? I have. I was just fascinated by the name Strawberry Bank. All right. So then he starts his life at Yale. World War I breaks out.
5:23 And he joins the U.S. Army Air Corps in 1918 as a flight instructor. And isn't this another pattern? Remember all of the other Squirrel and Keys that's been into aviation? Oh, yeah, and Skull and Bones. It was an actual unit, an aviation unit that they tried to, yeah. Yeah. I thought you might pick up on that. Yep. It doesn't get too well, too much decorated. I think he was just an instructor, didn't see much combat. Comes back to Yale and gets tapped for Squirrel and Key.
5:56 Graduates with his $19 million intact. And he gets involved in real estate, tried some other businesses. Then he decides, I want to get into medicine. So he goes to Harvard and gets a PhD with a focus, wait for it, on infectious diseases. Okay. You see where this is going? Yes. Joins the faculty at Children's Hospital in Boston. Ooh. Want to find it.
6:29 Yeah, one of the highest reputation hospitals in the world. Infectious diseases in children. Okay. Yes. Okay. All right, you're picking up what I'm putting down. Yeah. He becomes known as the father of modern vaccines. Holy shit. That's this guy. In 1949 with a couple other guys.
6:59 They reported a successful in vitro culture of an animal virus. That's the polio virus. In 54, those three would get the Nobel Prize in Physiology and Medicine. Scott Bennett and Jonas Salk. You've heard of Jonas Salk, right? Yes. Did I say he cured polio? Yeah. He applies their technique to produce a polio vaccine that can be applied. Salk goes out on a national radio show and announces the success of his field trials in 1954.
7:34 And he took all the credit. Didn't give any credit. Salk gave no credit to the three guys who actually invented it. This is where we get something called the Salk Institute of La Jolla. For those who don't know, La Jolla is really my back door. Where the Salk Institute is literally two exits off the freeway from my parents' house. It also sits right next to UCSD.
8:08 Also, the Scripps Institute of Oceanography. It's over a cliff on La Jolla. And to get the land for those three institutes was all in the early 60s. UCSD was interesting because one of the main drivers of that was a professor named Herbert Marcuse. And if you don't know, Herbert Marcuse is pretty much the guy who, well, first of all, he came over to Columbia University from the Frankfurt School in 1934. He was one of nine college professors.
8:40 So many from the Frankfurt School. Yeah, and Marcuse is one of the worst. He was a full-on communist, and that's what he's teaching on campus. He was literally the figurehead, the guy who started the entire 60s hippie movement, commie hippie California movement. That all comes from UCSD, Herbert Marcuse. They're building this land in La Jolla. It's a big land grant. I guess Scripps came in and actually bought the best.
9:12 oceanfront property that's the scripps institute i'll talk more about that in a second but it was interesting when they were building these things especially the university and the salk institute because in la jolla you couldn't sell you couldn't sell property to anyone jewish in the 1960s so that was a huge fight they finally got around that to some degree so right below up the cliffs that ucsd sits on goes straight down to the ocean winding road and there's a gate for the last couple hundred yards
9:45 Below that is Black's Beach, which is the nudist beach. And it's also right off the shore is something called Scripps Canyon, named after the Scripps Institute. It's some of the best scuba diving anywhere in California. And not very many people get to dive there because there's a gate. And only people who live or work for the university or one of these institutes gets a key to the gate. Anyone else has to carry a tank down a whole lot of steps and then back up, and no one wants to do that.
10:15 Because it's like a 200-yard straight uphill hike. And if you wanted to do it from La Jolla Beach, you'd have to walk like a mile with your scuba tanks. No one does it, or very few people do it. But I happen to know somebody, part of my little group of divers that had the key. So we used to get a dive right there where all this stuff's going on. So this really is my backyard. All right. The Salk Institute. Funded by, originally, the March of Dimes. And that's something we need to look into, March of Dimes.
10:53 They've got an interesting shade. I didn't get a chance to go deep into them yet. They're also funded by the NIH, the National Institute of Health. Yeah, that's Tony Fauci's NIH. And of course, the government of California was paying for it. You had some private organizations funding the Salt Institute. There's a Paris-based company called Ipsen. There's a Howard Hughes Medical Institute. And there's something called the White, W-A-I-T-T Family Foundation. I don't think there's anything nefarious about them. Well, Howard Hughes there is. He's tied to the CIA at the hip.
11:25 Yeah. Okay. There you go. Like I said, the institution itself does not appear. I didn't find it in any of the usual places. Yeah. I've done a lot of research into Howard Hughes and he is in bed with the CIA. Yeah. Real quick. Did the polio vaccine really work? Not really. When it came out, polio was already in really sharp decline because of things called sanitation and hygiene. We learned more about nutrition and gut health.
11:58 A lot of scientists are going to say chlorinated water also helped stop the spread of polio. But the real big one, and this is interesting, for years, they would treat polio patients with what's called the iron lung. And this was a problem. Polio causes paralysis. And what they thought they'd do is they'd put you in an iron lung and use pressure to help you breathe. But it actually did everything wrong. There is an Australian nun.
12:33 Our nurse, named Elizabeth Kenny, also known as Sister Kenny, she tried something dramatically different. Instead of immobilizing patients, she promoted movement. She'd use hot compresses to relieve muscles, spasms, and pain. She encourages exercise and therapy to rebuild strength. Thousands of polio victims started recovering movement and avoided lifelong disability. And she gets ridiculed by the medical establishment before her methods are finally accepted. Where have we seen that happen over and over again?
13:04 When disappear, COVID, put them in a basically state of immobilization, lock them in a room when the exact opposite will cure them. I don't know. I'm just pulling that off the top of my head. Yeah, I figured you might see that. Put them on a ventilator. Oh, and who controls, who really created our modern medical system and runs all the schools? Rockefeller. Uh-huh.
13:35 Little connection there? A little bit. All right. So those people who say that the polio vaccine didn't really cure polio, they've got a good argument. Yes. You're going to love this. In 2017, the Salk Institute trustees elected a new chairman of the board. Got the name of Daniel C. Lewis. Have you heard of him? No. Not that I know of.
14:14 Well, his former job was as the president of Booz Allen Hamilton. Okay, CIA. Explain who Booz Allen Hamilton is and why would... Go ahead. Well, Booz Allen Hamilton, a lot of my friends went to work for them, not realizing how nefarious they actually are. They're one of the biggest... I mean, they're the Halliburton equivalent. They're the Rand equivalent. They are...
14:47 I don't even know what the percentage is, but it's a high percentage the last time I looked. All of their funding comes from the U.S. government, and they are contracted routinely by the Department of Defense, the CIA, and the State Department. They are the world's second biggest military contractor. This guy is the president, or this new guy. So you've got a guy who worked in the Defense and Intelligence Agency in 2017, becomes the head.
15:17 of one of the country's biggest infectious diseases research centers. Right before COVID. Bingo. That's a mic drop to me. Yes. Okay, back to our friend John Enders. He got ticked off at Salk for not getting credit. So in 54, they hit my guy by the name of Thomas Peebles. They isolated something called measles virus.
15:47 He'd always been disappointed by Salk's technique for polio vaccines, so he developed himself the measles vaccine. In 1960, he begins trials on the measles vaccine on 1,500 mentally retarded children in New York City and 4,000 children in Nigeria. A little problematic there. Little. I mean, the ethics are just off the charts. And that's at the time, just to remind the audience, for those of you who are not alive,
16:25 when they institutionalized mentally retarded children. So these are like captive audiences. The same was true in Nigeria because they were basically feeding off the U.S. government, quote unquote, aid. So they basically owned the government over there. 1963, the measles vaccine is rolled out by a couple of companies we know and love, Pfizer and Merck.
16:56 Both companies have ties to the Rockefellers. Yep. Hmm. You know, we're going to do foundations here in a couple of weeks and we'll be starting pretty early on with the Rockefeller Foundation. We'll get to the Gates Foundation. But all these foundations sure have an awful lot of interest in vaccinations. Yes. They also have a long history of being proponents of population control. I think that's just a coincidence. I don't know. I'm going to say no.
17:29 So this guy's a character. I mean, we just tied the whole bioweapon thing into our whole story. We hadn't done that before. Yeah. All right. So that's the end of that decade. So let's move on to the next decade. All going back to Yale and their secret societies. Uh-huh. Okay. First guy we're going to talk about is Brewster, Benjamin Brewster Jennings. If you remember that Brewster name, he was, Brewster was one of the main.
18:02 Spies for General George Washington when we did that show last month. That's the same Brewster family that came over almost on the Mayflower. That's interesting. This guy is old, old money. Class of 1920, born 1898 in New York City. His father was Oliver Gold Jennings. That sounds familiar. It's because we detailed him in Skull and Bones because he was a bonesman. He was the one buying the Standard Oil, right?
18:37 Say it again? Yeah. I'll just give the overview on him. Friendly reminder, though, the Gold School of Law, I believe Boesberg went to there temporarily. Gold Jennings was an American financier who was the heir to Standard Oil. His aunt was the wife of William A. Rockefeller Jr., co-founder of Standard Oil. You're going to hear that a lot today, so just get used to it. What about Oliver Gold Jennings?
19:14 He served on the boards of Bethlehem Steel, U.S. Industrial Alcohol Company, pharma distributor McKesson and Robbins, Kingsport Press Natural Fuel Gas. Remember all those connections there? Yeah. So basically, he's one of the international syndicate. Yeah. And of course, his sister, Emma.
19:44 Brewster Jennings was the wife of Hugh Deadly Auchincloss. Yeah. Of course. So that's the family this guy comes from. So why do we care about Benjamin? It actually went by B.B. Jennings. His paternal grandfather was a guy by the name of Oliver Burr Jennings, and his maternal grandfather, Benjamin Brewster, were involved with John Davis Rockefeller and were partners in Standard Oil. Yep. So he's descended from two of Rockefeller's officers.
20:17 Think he's connected? Yes, he's part of the international syndicate. Those two guys have an interesting story, his two grandfathers. They had moved west during the gold rush, and they weren't miners. They were the smart ones. They created a dry goods company, basically supplying all the mining camps, and they made a fortune outfitting prospectors. Jennings would then marry, that's his grandfather, the sister of William Rockefeller's wife.
20:50 So we're getting pretty incestuous here. Skinny tree. I like that expression. Benjamin Brewster is raised in Fairfield, Connecticut. Want to hear about his high school? Sure. St. Paul School in Concord, New Hampshire. Of course. He enrolls in World War I and enlists in the U.S. Navy on a submarine chaser. That's kind of a cool job.
21:26 He actually got awarded a Navy Cross. I'm starting to doubt the validity of a lot of these military awards because they seem to go to people that are sons of famous people and not necessarily the grunts. Especially in the Navy, by the way. Is it worse there? Well, they have a royalty. It's something that the same is true with the Army. Not the Marines.
21:56 um you really had to earn your stripes in um the marine corps but there's dynasties of general generational um corruption in the army but i even setting the army aside i've never seen it more so than the navy everybody knows who's related to who in the navy and they get all their little salads on their shoulder on their chest yes metal salad
22:28 All right. After graduation, he comes back, finishes school, takes a job as a clerk in the Marine Division of what's called SACONI. And that stands for Standard Oil Company of New York. So they had broken up Standard Oil into about five different companies. It's not really a breakup. I was going to say, you didn't use air quotes. Yeah, we never busted the trusts. Teddy Roosevelt did nothing of the short.
22:59 Standard Oil just stuck with trees, basically, but five different companies run by five Rockefellers or really close friends. In essence, they went from being a monopoly to a cartel. Correct. And that's the definition. Yes, it is. Remember, cartels exist for two reasons. One is to maximize profits, but most importantly is number two, and that's to eliminate competition. And the best way they do that is through regulatory capture and the politicians pass laws.
23:29 that they can work through because they got they're already established they got lawyers and um other companies new people entrance to the field can't deal with the regulation and i would i would firmly commit to or submit to you that the reason that cartel fits on that um as far as that label is because drug cartels are the exact same thing
23:58 They have a letter of marquee called the law. Drug cartels operate like pirates used to. They're the exact same thing. Yeah. It's a very old business model. It goes back to the British East India Company. Yeah. All right. So Brewster's off to a roaring start to his life, isn't he? Yeah. Lots of connections. Yeah. Some of his relatives would be hard not to.
24:26 So he works his way up. He's on the board of directors of Ciccone when it merges with something that was known as vacuum oil, created Ciccone Vacuum. It's a pretty big oil company and refiner. He's on the Marine Division because they're just now starting offshore drilling. So that's where that's all about. World War II, he leaves the company for a while to become the assistant director of tanker operations in the U.S. Maritime Commission.
24:54 And, of course, he would be one of the first recipients of the newly created Navy's Distinguished Public Service Award. Of course he was. After the war, he comes back to the company. In 1955, the company changed its name to what's called Saccone Mobile. And in 1966, it would become what is now known as Mobile Oil Company. This guy sat on a lot of boards. That's about all there is to him, but, I mean, there's more.
25:29 His bio doesn't jump off the page. He just lived a very wealthy, influential life. But you can see where there might be some connections. Anybody involved in the oil industry understands that they are very closely tied. Anybody who's drilling overseas, there's a military connection. I'm sorry, excuse me, intelligence connection. And also, I recognize, I'm just looking at his bio, that he was associated as a trustee with Avalon Foundation. And since we're going to cover foundations,
26:01 That's a derivative of the Mellon Foundation of the Carnegie Mellon Empire. Nice catch. I didn't get that one. We'll get there. Let's get to our next guy. Okay. Seymour Knox II is in front of a portrait of Knox Seymour III, Seymour IV, and in front of a portrait of Seymour H. Knox I. Why is that important? Well, senior...
26:33 seymour h knox the first was the founder of fw woolworth but knox ii is interesting because he um grew up in a place called buffalo new york where we find all kinds of fun connections right yeah for those of you who don't know that's where wild bill donovan is from and there was a very elite buffalo new york was the like a mini new york city
27:06 with gilded age riches everywhere. They had a train station there that would rival Grand Central, both in New York and in Washington, D.C. It's an amazingly corrupt city back in the day. Yeah. We weren't even looking for buffalo when we started our research.
27:34 And it just kept popping up. Okay, there's a pattern here. Yes. Guess where he went to high school. Tell me where. Started at the Nichols School in Buffalo and then graduated from one of our favorites, the Hotchkiss School. Oh, goodness gracious. So Seymour was really not notable. He basically sat on a lot of boards of directors, including chairman of Woolworth. He was the chairman of the University of Buffalo Governing Council.
28:07 So, very old Buffalo money. And now his sons are the principal owners of the Buffalo Sabres hockey team. Oh, that's interesting. Yeah, but he's worth mentioning, but there's no real nefarious thing to him, but he knows the people who are nefarious, that's for sure. Let's skip to Richardson Dilworth. I just brought him up because, you know, he's like the longtime mayor of Philadelphia, and we know how corrupt the Philadelphia City Hall has been.
28:43 This guy's claim to fame is he was the one who built the high-rise public housing that would later be condemned as breeding grounds for poverty and crime. So that's why Philadelphia became a slumlord. So he is one of the creators of the urban machine. Very much so. And part of the Philadelphia Democrat machine, which exists in every major city in America now. Yeah.
29:14 And with Mondami winning in New York, and people are going to leave, New York will go bankrupt. And they're going to try to do rent controls, which means none of these high-rise public housing units are going to be upkept because there's no profit in it. And New York's going to fall apart. More people are going to leave. The good people are going to leave. Major corporations are going to leave. They're going to lose their tax base. Trump's going to try to stop the federal funding. New York will go bankrupt.
29:45 I think it's inevitable. And I think we should just start building the wall around the city now, just like Escape from New York. Get it over with. Build a wall. Yes, because I don't want them in Florida. Yeah, but this political madness that Mandami represents, it's going to spread to other cities. They've got the model now. Just pump immigrants in there and make sure they can vote and you can win every election. Well, if you go back to Chicago's history.
30:17 with Cabrini Green and all of those public housing, every single one of them was a disaster and it destroyed Chicago. Yeah, I don't know how New York City is ever going to recover from this. They're going to want a federal bailout, but they won't be able to. Right now, they carry about, I think it's $40 billion in debt, municipal bonds. That's just New York City itself. You're not going to find investors.
30:47 willing to lend you money at 5% when your finances go to hell, which they're about to. And that means if they have to borrow money, it's going to cost them 10 or 15%. And that's just ruinous. That ain't straight. You cannot survive on that without a tax base. So that's why I brought up Dilworth because these blue city mayors have been bad for a long time. Oh, no, another funny one for him. Him and his wife were on board the Andrea Doria in 1956 when it sank. What?
31:20 How many of these people, bones men or scrolling keys have been on the famous shipwrecks? Wow. That's interesting. And his wife and he actually, they got, they both survived. They got on the very last lifeboat and got picked up. So if you guys don't remember the Andrea Doria, uh, at a collision with, uh, I want to say it's a, um, Swedish ship off the coast of Maine in 1956. MS Stockholm. That's the one. Is that right? Is it Sweden? Is that correct? That one is. And it was off.
31:54 Nantucket, Massachusetts, it said. Okay, got it. All right, that's enough about Dale Worthy. We could go into all his corruption in Chicago, but that's not really on our topic. Let's look at a guy by the James Stillman Rockefeller, class of 1924. When we go to the foundation, we've talked about Rockefellers a lot throughout the series because they're connected to everything. I'm not going to do full family tree on the Rockefellers right now.
32:25 because that would take us five hours, but we are going to go to depth of the Rockefellers when we go into foundations. So if everybody, if I can take a rain check on the deep dive into the family, that'd be great. Yeah. Yeah. Rockefeller controlling the game by Jacob Nordengard, who is European guy. Who's done amazing research on the Rockefeller foundation from day one. And I will have this book read by the time we get through that episode. So that'll be a really good source. All right.
33:02 Let's talk about James Stillman a little bit, though, because he's a pretty neat guy. Born in 1902 in Manhattan, his father was William Goodsell Rockefeller. His maternal grandfather was a guy by the name of James Stillman. Is that familiar? Yeah. Stillman, we need to talk about. He was the chairman of, at the time, called National City Bank. It's now Citicorp. By 1894, National City Bank was the largest American bank.
33:42 They're the first to open foreign branches. In 1902, they were able to send money to almost any city in the world within 24 hours. They were the first real international bank that could do that. For those who don't know, Citibank's been bailed out by the government like six or seven times because of their political connections. The most recent time they got bailed out was during the 2009 financial crisis. I was working at Citibank at the time. Citibank stock got split in a one for ten split.
34:16 which means they went from $50 a share to $5 a share. And all of my stock options were at about $45 per share. So they all expired use worthless. So thank you very much, Citibank. It cost me a lot of money. So I'm not a Citibank fan. That international banking thing is interesting because, you know, people, I don't know if everybody knows this, but they own Banamex, which is Mexico's largest bank. Who makes most of the money in Mexico these days? Besides the cartels? No, the cartels. How do you think they launder their money?
34:54 Through banks? Through Banamex. And then they get it to America. Yeah, because Citibank's in the middle of a lot of that. Yep. And this guy, James, I'm sorry, this guy, James Stillman, who James Stillman Rockefeller is named after, was basically the pioneer of that. But it gets better. So he's got alliances with some people you know, the Rockefellers, Kuhn Loeb, Edward Henry Harriman.
35:26 Jacob Schiff, there's all his business partners. Between that group of people, they controlled almost all of the railroads by Texas. And that's an important data point because Stillman was a big backer of a guy by the name of Porfirio Diaz when he overthrew the Mexican government in the revolution of Tostepec. Mexico had restored their republic from 1867 to 1876. They tried to go back to their constitution. There's a lot of corruption.
36:01 They weren't playing real nice with the United States or our businesses, which means what? They're going to get overthrown. Yes. And this is how it was done. And Stillman was a financer. Diaz would get installed and would spend the next 35 years as the dictator of Mexico as Mexico's being modernized and the class distinctions are growing wider. And when you mean modernized, you mean Americanized. Electricity, that kind of stuff. But yeah.
36:31 Yeah, but it's all with American companies investing in it. So they own the infrastructure just like every other country they overthrow. Oh, yeah. And this is right on the open. The other people who backed this revolution, someone by the name of J.P. Morgan. Yeah. Manhattan Bank, which would merge with Chase Manhattan. Yeah. How about Remington Arms Company? They're using Texas gun runners to arm this. The insurrection. Yeah, exactly. Oh, and this guy, Diaz.
37:06 He's operating freely from Brownsville, Texas and New Orleans. So they go there, do a raid on Mexico and then go back across the American border and totally safe. And Secretary of State Hamilton Fish refused the extradition requests because the American government was all for this revolution. It was very exposed at the time. The reason these Texas railroad guys wanted to fund him, they made a trade in exchange for future charters. Every single time. Uh-huh.
37:40 So I thought this guy's grandfather was worth mentioning. Absolutely. James Rockefeller would go to the Taft School in Waterton, Connecticut for high school boarding school. Oh, good grief. We talked about the Taft School before. I went through their list today. And there really aren't that many notable names that fit our list from the Taft School. But it's still one of those. So you see this picture of him. He's wearing his crew shirt and a cover of Time magazine.
38:14 Well, that's because he's the captain of the Yale crew team that won the Olympic medal in rowing in 1924 in Paris. And on that team was going to be the next guy we feature. We got the name of Dr. Benjamin Spock. Oh my goodness. Yeah. So professionally, what did this guy do? Stillman. He spent six years with Brown Brothers and Company. Another connection.
38:46 He would join his grandfather's bank, National City Bank, in 1930. He would become the president in 1952 and the chairman in 1959. He married a woman by the name of Nancy Carnegie in 1925. Of course he did. He would end up retiring in 1967, and he died in 2004 at the age of 102 years old. And at the time, he was America's oldest living Olympic champion.
39:19 And earliest living cover subject of Time Magazine. Time Magazine, of course, was founded by Henry Luce of Skull and Bones. And a front for the CIA. Yeah. Again, we'll do more Rockefeller stuff in the future, but I thought this guy was fun to mention because he's right in our timeline. Wow. Told you today would be a fun day. And it does say that he was in the Airborne Group in World War II as well. All right. Let's get to our next guy.
39:56 Dr. Benjamin Spock. Cool. Known as Dr. Spock. He's not a Vulcan. Born in 1903 in New Haven, Connecticut. His father was the general counsel for the New Haven Railroad because of course he was. Yes. You notice how all these people that run our country and our foundations have so many railroad ties and banking. Remember how I keep talking about how the Republican Party in 1860, the number one platform on there.
40:32 on their election plank was federally funded internal improvements. That's code word for tax dollars to give you land grants and to finance your railroad as you build west. And that's how the robber barons made more money than God. It was on the back of the taxpayer. And that's exactly who these people are. They're the railroad and banking robber barons. They were the sponsors of the Republican Party and they got 40 years of single party rule and they took advantage of it.
41:01 They've been running our world ever since. All right. So back to Dr. Spock. Well, he went to high school at a place called the Phillips Andover Academy. Because of course he did. Every single one of these guys went to a grooming school. Every single one of them. Spock then goes to Yale Medicine for two years. And then he switches to Columbia. Becomes a world-renowned pediatrician. And his book.
41:37 The famous book was Baby and Child Care, written in 1946. It sold over 50 million copies by the time of his death in 98. And totally destroyed parenting. We're going to get to that. I agree with you. He's the first pediatrician to study psychoanalysis because your children need to be psychoanalyzed. A lot of people criticized his research because he relied on a lot of anecdotal evidence rather than real serious academic research.
42:11 Right. But he got his book out there. He was propagandizing us. Yeah, he's the guy who led generations of parents to become, and this is a quote, more flexible and affectionate with their children. He propagated permissiveness and an expectation of an instant gratification. We talk about these trophy, these kids, these participation trophy kids. Yeah. That all comes from Dr. Benjamin Spock. I mean, just destroyed parenting, wouldn't you say?
42:50 So he self-described a late-life conversion to socialism. He's an activist in New York. I'm sorry, in something called the New Left. That was a big group in the 60s. He's been part of the anti-Vietnam War movements in the 60s and 70s. He actually ran for president of the United States as the People's Party nominee in 1972. He campaigned on something called the maximum wage, legalized abortion.
43:24 And withdrawing all troops from foreign countries. And I like that last point because we talk about the 60s liberals. They are a lot different than the modern day, air quote, liberal. They actually got some things correct. They had some ethics. So what's maximum wage? That's where you put a wage cap. Once you make, say, over a million dollars, you can't earn anymore. And that's the way they're going to try to equalize everyone's income. We know how well that works.
43:56 What's my incentive to keep working if I've already made a million? Legalized abortion because, of course, population control. Yep. He marries a woman named Jane Chaney Spock in 1927. I do not know if there's any relation to Dick Chaney. She was an activist as well. She was part of a group called Americans for Democratic Action, the ACLU, and the National Committee for a Sane Nuclear Policy.
44:35 She remarried, sorry, they divorced in 1976. And Dr. Spock remarries a woman named Mary Morgan also in 1976. So he didn't wait long. Mary Morgan was 40 years younger than him. He was 73 years old. What's that? Go ahead. Yeah, he was 73 years old and she was 33. And she marries this guy for his money right the second after he'd gotten his divorce.
45:13 She was real big into health and nutrition. A lot of naturopathic type nutrition and stuff like that. He always said she made him feel like he was young again. They spent many years living on their sailboats off the British Virgin Island in Maine. Spock would continue rowing his whole life. He was really pretty athletic. Until 1998, he dies in a house that he was renting.
45:45 In La Jolla, California. All right. How are we doing on time? Pretty good. 12.5. Yep. Yeah. Let's talk about our next scrolling key alumni. You know that name? Huntington. I can't read it. Huntington Denton. Nicknamed Ting Sheldon. Yes. Ting is a derivative. I know you know this name.
46:21 Ting is, I guess, an abbreviation of Huntington, but that was his name. Born in 1903 in Greenwich, Connecticut, came from a patrician New York family, and his father was an educated Yale lawyer. Sheldon would marry a woman by the name of Magda Merck in 1928. Yeah, that's the youngest daughter of George Merck, founder of the drug company. Interesting that these drug companies are getting involved in our story more and more, huh? So wait a minute.
46:56 The CIA married the drug company? He's not in the CIA yet. Okay. They actually divorced in 1936. He'd get married three times in his life. He gets involved in banking. We'll get there for sure. Okay. He gets involved in Wall Street banking during the Roaring Twenties boom. World War II. He became an Army military aviator. Of course he did.
47:34 But he served four years in the European theater as an intelligence staff officer. So do those two facts contradict themselves or no? No. Go ahead. Please elaborate on that. Well, every element, like if you're in the air component, you're still going to have your intelligence capability. Yeah.
48:07 And what this guy was, was a SIGINT analyst, signals intelligence. And we're just now learning something called photo interpretation. He's the pioneer. You take these aerial photographs and you got to piece them together. And he's very good at it. In fact, he's so good at it that they bring him over to the CIA in 1951. And he immediately becomes something called the director of something called the Office of Current Intelligence. That's the OCI. He built it.
48:35 So just so that you guys know, during World War II, how critical this was for the international syndicate is they used these photographs to do BDA, bomb damage assessments. And of course, we know they selectively selected their targets so that they didn't actually bomb partnerships that the Western, the allies.
49:02 had investments in. So this guy would have been a critical piece of how close you could bomb something and not actually do damage to it. And he's the guy that's giving them the current intel as to the feedback loop on the bomb damage assessment. And that's the same thing that he did for the CIA was doing, and this is at the same time they're trying to create the U2 program, which
49:32 is a follow-on to the reconnaissance aspect of being able to assess um current environment via photography yeah absolutely and i'm just going to mention that exact same thing with the youtube um that's a big part of what he did he would be the director of the oci until 1961 so 10 years he became just a cornerstone of cia operations of this intelligence oci is coming up with
50:04 He was responsible for producing time-sensitive reports on global crises. And during his stewardship, what was going on geopolitically? You had the Korean War, the U-2 spy plane inception, Sputniks in 56. We had to get information on that. Cuban Missile Crisis buildup. During the Cuban Missile, Sheldon is in. Oh, yeah. Yeah. That's when he is basically running the department that gathers the intel. Yeah.
50:37 the part of the CIA that was actually legitimate in the National Security Act of 1947 before they decided to give them the ability to do covert operations as well. One of his other big things was he was always emphasizing these one-page daily digests of the threats, and his work for that was indispensable to our leadership. There's a guy by the name of Richard Lehman. Yeah, the same Lehman family. That was his number two.
51:09 And he basically had Lehman create what's called the President's Intelligence Checklist, which is the precursor to the PDB, the Presidential Daily Briefs, which we're going to be hearing a lot more about in the news, I think, next year. You know why? Why? Because we now have documented evidence that Obama told the intelligence community to change their PDB because it said that Russia did not interfere with the 2016 election. He told them to go back and change it.
51:41 And that's where Brennan came back and forced the Steele dossier into the intelligence. So they had a PDB that said one thing, and they wouldn't give it to presidential nominee, president-elect Donald Trump. Had they done that, had they not done this, an awful lot of Trump's first term would have been different. Correct. So that is going to be in the news, we hope. So Sheldon really is a pioneer. When he got to OCI, they had maybe a dozen staff, and now they've got hundreds.
52:15 And he builds the precursor to the modern fusion centers. And now it's the most powerful intelligence agency in the world, thanks to him. So he steps down in 61. His health's starting to fail a little bit. I want to read something else for you real quick. Okay, this is from a website. One of my favorite sources is called Wiki Spooks. And it says at the top, Huntington Denton Ting Sheldon was a U.S. spook.
52:51 The same bio, but I just want to read three or four paragraphs. This is by Richard Lehman, and we've talked about his brother Robert Lehman before. I would like to talk a bit about Huntington Ting Sheldon, because he was a great man. He had been in Air Force intelligence in England during the war and then went off into private life again, where he was not a great success. He came back in 1951 or 1952 to be the second director of the OCI, and he really was the man who built the place.
53:23 He built an empire while he was at it because OCI had its own security, its own courier service, its own print shop, and a lot of other things that were all justified by the fact that communications intelligence needed special handling. That's your national security excuse right there. And so he really had a self-contained operation. What could possibly go wrong, Colonel? Everything. This enabled him over the few years after that to build a powerful organization.
53:55 completely ruthless in how he did it. People he didn't like were brushed aside one way or another so that he built a core of people who were basically what he wanted for his shop, which were versatile generalists. He didn't mind having people around who were specialists, but his interests were in the generalists, because in his mind, they were a core of people who could do anything. Knight McMahon, his deputy, tried to sort of cushion him because he was not the easiest man in the world.
54:30 It was a good combination. This is all under the watch of Alan Dulles, of course. Right. It was a good combination, and the office found its soul during those years. The thing about it was, if anything happened, people always showed up. They were committed to their jobs and could be counted on in the middle of the night to come in and do whatever was required. At the same time, they bitched all the time. It was built in, but while bitching, they were there. Just to finish Sheldon's story, when Ray Klein took over the Directorate of Intelligence,
55:05 D.I. in early 1962, right after Dulles left, he wanted OCI to be under his control. And he booted Sheldon aside or pushed Sheldon aside, I should say. But Ting stayed on for several years as the agency's signals intelligence officer and also as the agency's officer for overhead stuff and chairman of the watch committee. You've been over the watch committee at all? No, not in any doubt.
55:35 Amazing amount of overlap with the Council of Foreign Relations. Yes. Then finally he retired and went downhill fairly fast. He lost his eyesight and all kinds of things. And I'll leave it there. So the watch committee, in my definition, would be kind of like an ops center for the CFR. Yeah, just compartmentalized. Yeah. So he's a pretty darn important figure that ought to be a household name.
56:09 And I bet because he'd love with the CIA where they are on spying now. His third marriage is to an author named Alice B. Sheldon. She was a renowned science fiction author who wrote under the pseudonym James Tipty Jr. Apparently women authors wouldn't sell very well in sci-fi. They actually met when she was briefly working for the CIA in photo interpretation. So she worked for him.
56:45 Yeah. They're found dead in 1987 with a murder-suicide. And she shot him and then shot herself. And they went into her writings, and apparently there was a murder pact, suicide pact, or whatever you want to call that. But that was the end of Mr. I forget his name all of a sudden. We were just talking about him. Mr. Denton Ting Sheldon. That's all I've got for today. We have a few more fun ones coming up.
57:22 Next week. And I think that we can probably wrap up scrolling key. No promises though. So you want to sum everything up? Is the Colonel frozen? She might be. Well, I will give a quick summary of what we talked about today. More and more connections. All tied to intelligence. A lot of it tied to the biotech world. Sorry, infectious diseases. We've got a guy, you know, from intelligence now running the Salk Institute. And we're all starting to get.
57:57 you know, a bunch of new, more news coming out about Fauci. Um, welcome back. Yeah. My star links messed up because it's very, I just gave a brief summary. Um, you know, it's funny. I didn't mention as, um, Dr. Robert Redford is Redford. Yeah. It was on, uh, the war room today. And, um, you said some interesting things. One thing I didn't like is he said, uh, Dr. Deborah Bursch was, was, was a good and honest. I never liked her, but that story hasn't come out yet. Um,
58:28 Nothing Redford said. He confirmed absolutely without a doubt that he can prove that there is both such a thing as long COVID and the vax injury. And that spike protein really does get to you. But it's important. I mean, you've got the connection, right, when I brought that up. You get an ex-spook comes over to run an infectious disease lab. To me, that was the big mic drop moment of the day. Yes, I agree. But it's still the same story over and over again. Same families, same grooming schools. They get themselves into the...
58:59 Positions of influence. They enrich themselves and conduct foreign policy on behalf of multinational corporations. And they keep it all inside the family. I'm surprised all the intermarriages, they don't look like mutants by now. Well, they act like mutants. You know, you start going through the epitomology of that entire New World Order global reset depopulation. Part of it is you've got to become gods to replace God. And that's why they call that a satanic.
59:35 um viewpoint that this is in writing and when we get the foundations we'll talk more about that but you know they think they are something different than human well and when i first started doing this within the first six months i ran across several of them being into gnosticism and you know the borderline overlap of um satanism and stuff like that and one of the things that was most eye-catching to me is there's
1:00:04 Many of them that actually believe in reincarnation. And when you die, you're reborn into a higher being. And each time you die, you become closer to God like yourself. So that you ascend into your own God-like figure because they don't believe in actual God. And they believe that there's no, and that's why they can justify.
1:00:30 they're killing mass killing of millions and millions of people is because they're helping them they're just helping them get to the next life so that they can achieve their godlike and i was blown away by that yeah and it leads to technocracy this whole idea of blending melding you know human humanity with computers they basically are trying to build a matrix we know that's happening you know it's like elon musk always said wouldn't you rather have a good guy do that instead of a bad guy
1:00:57 And I'm reading a fascinating article about that right now. I'll share with you another time after I get done with the article. But yeah, the technocrats had to go into hiding after World War II. They're back. Those are the bureaucrats that are running. They're the experts that we're supposed to trust. And they do have this depopulation agenda. That's at their forefront. And, you know, we start talking about Freemasons. You know, one of the things about Freemasons is you have to believe in a higher being. So that wouldn't seem to match with...
1:01:26 the story you just told about them not believing in God, but I've always said that most Freemasons are basically good people. They hid a secret society within the secret society, and that's where they get the Masonic connection to some of these groups. The Masonic model is exactly what Skull and Bones, they tried to copy after it. But you're going to find there's nothing nefarious about most Freemasons. There's some sections of it that are worth talking about, though.
1:01:56 They may claim to worship a higher being, but they don't. And it's also funny that most of these people started out as Puritans and definitely Protestant East Coast seaboard stuff, you know, generations back. And it looks like it started to change in the 1850s when we started getting the writings of people like Karl Marx came across. And, you know, it's funny how these Fabian ideas took hold over here. Yes. Dollar princesses. All right. You want to give me closing thoughts? That's all I got today. No, I'm,
1:02:28 I'm good. I just want to thank you for your time and educating everyone about, um, scrolling key. It's awesome. Yeah, this was a fun, fun one. You know, it's not, we didn't have any real, I guess, superheroes of the super antiheroes, but you certainly had some players and connections. So yes, a lot of quite a bit. Yeah. Okay.
1:02:55 So thanks for being here with us, everyone. And we'll be back next week with another edition. Cheers, everyone. Thank you.

Entities here

Huntington Denton Sheldon14Skull and Bones13Benjamin Spock9James Rockefeller8Emma Brewster Jennings7Office of Current Intelligence6Salk Institute5Standard Oil5John Franklin Enders5Mexico4La Jolla4Rockefeller4World War II4Jonas Salk3Porfirio Diaz3Scripps Institution of Oceanography3Seymour H. Knox I3U.S. Navy3University of California, San Diego3Oliver Gould Jennings3Buffalo3National Asset Bank3Richardson Dilworth2Allen Dulles2Sinking of the Andrea Doria2Freemasons2Booz Allen Hamilton2Daniel C. Lewis2F.W. Woolworth Company2Columbia University2Time-Life2St. Paul's School2Howard Hughes2Herbert Marcuse2Maine2William Rockefeller2Anthony Fauci2Elizabeth I2Merck & Co.2Ford Foundation2

Claims made here

Dean Acheson member_of Skull and Bones host_asserted ▶ 3:15
“Mirror board. See the scroll, see the key. There's their tomb. We've been going through the decades, 1850s, 1870s. We just completed the 1910s, and we left off with, or almost completed it, with one o…”
William Bullitt member_of Skull and Bones host_asserted ▶ 3:15
“Mirror board. See the scroll, see the key. There's their tomb. We've been going through the decades, 1850s, 1870s. We just completed the 1910s, and we left off with, or almost completed it, with one o…”
John Franklin Enders member_of Skull and Bones host_asserted ▶ 5:23
“And he joins the U.S. Army Air Corps in 1918 as a flight instructor. And isn't this another pattern? Remember all of the other Squirrel and Keys that's been into aviation? Oh, yeah, and Skull and Bone…”
John Franklin Enders member_of U.S. Army Air Corps documented ▶ 5:23
“And he joins the U.S. Army Air Corps in 1918 as a flight instructor. And isn't this another pattern? Remember all of the other Squirrel and Keys that's been into aviation? Oh, yeah, and Skull and Bone…”
John Franklin Enders member_of Harvard University documented ▶ 5:56
“Graduates with his $19 million intact. And he gets involved in real estate, tried some other businesses. Then he decides, I want to get into medicine. So he goes to Harvard and gets a PhD with a focus…”
John Franklin Enders member_of Children's Hospital Boston documented ▶ 5:56
“Graduates with his $19 million intact. And he gets involved in real estate, tried some other businesses. Then he decides, I want to get into medicine. So he goes to Harvard and gets a PhD with a focus…”
John Franklin Enders funded Salk Institute host_asserted ▶ 10:15
“Because it's like a 200-yard straight uphill hike. And if you wanted to do it from La Jolla Beach, you'd have to walk like a mile with your scuba tanks. No one does it, or very few people do it. But I…”
March of Dimes funded Salk Institute host_asserted ▶ 10:15
“Because it's like a 200-yard straight uphill hike. And if you wanted to do it from La Jolla Beach, you'd have to walk like a mile with your scuba tanks. No one does it, or very few people do it. But I…”
National Institute of Health funded Salk Institute host_asserted ▶ 10:53
“They've got an interesting shade. I didn't get a chance to go deep into them yet. They're also funded by the NIH, the National Institute of Health. Yeah, that's Tony Fauci's NIH. And of course, the go…”
Ipsen funded Salk Institute host_asserted ▶ 10:53
“They've got an interesting shade. I didn't get a chance to go deep into them yet. They're also funded by the NIH, the National Institute of Health. Yeah, that's Tony Fauci's NIH. And of course, the go…”
Howard Hughes Medical Institute funded Salk Institute host_asserted ▶ 10:53
“They've got an interesting shade. I didn't get a chance to go deep into them yet. They're also funded by the NIH, the National Institute of Health. Yeah, that's Tony Fauci's NIH. And of course, the go…”
Bezos Family Foundation funded Salk Institute host_asserted ▶ 10:53
“They've got an interesting shade. I didn't get a chance to go deep into them yet. They're also funded by the NIH, the National Institute of Health. Yeah, that's Tony Fauci's NIH. And of course, the go…”
Daniel C. Lewis headed Salk Institute documented ▶ 13:35
“Little connection there? A little bit. All right. So those people who say that the polio vaccine didn't really cure polio, they've got a good argument. Yes. You're going to love this. In 2017, the Sal…”
Daniel C. Lewis headed Booz Allen Hamilton documented ▶ 14:14
“Well, his former job was as the president of Booz Allen Hamilton. Okay, CIA. Explain who Booz Allen Hamilton is and why would... Go ahead. Well, Booz Allen Hamilton, a lot of my friends went to work f…”
John Franklin Enders funded Thomas Peebles host_asserted ▶ 15:17
“of one of the country's biggest infectious diseases research centers. Right before COVID. Bingo. That's a mic drop to me. Yes. Okay, back to our friend John Enders. He got ticked off at Salk for not g…”
Pfizer member_of Rockefeller host_asserted ▶ 16:56
“Both companies have ties to the Rockefellers. Yep. Hmm. You know, we're going to do foundations here in a couple of weeks and we'll be starting pretty early on with the Rockefeller Foundation. We'll g…”
Merck & Co. member_of Rockefeller host_asserted ▶ 16:56
“Both companies have ties to the Rockefellers. Yep. Hmm. You know, we're going to do foundations here in a couple of weeks and we'll be starting pretty early on with the Rockefeller Foundation. We'll g…”
Emma Brewster Jennings member_of Skull and Bones host_asserted ▶ 18:02
“Spies for General George Washington when we did that show last month. That's the same Brewster family that came over almost on the Mayflower. That's interesting. This guy is old, old money. Class of 1…”
Oliver Gould Jennings member_of Skull and Bones host_asserted ▶ 18:02
“Spies for General George Washington when we did that show last month. That's the same Brewster family that came over almost on the Mayflower. That's interesting. This guy is old, old money. Class of 1…”
Oliver Gould Jennings member_of Standard Oil host_asserted ▶ 18:37
“Say it again? Yeah. I'll just give the overview on him. Friendly reminder, though, the Gold School of Law, I believe Boesberg went to there temporarily. Gold Jennings was an American financier who was…”
Oliver Gould Jennings member_of Bethlehem Steel documented ▶ 19:14
“He served on the boards of Bethlehem Steel, U.S. Industrial Alcohol Company, pharma distributor McKesson and Robbins, Kingsport Press Natural Fuel Gas. Remember all those connections there? Yeah. So b…”
Oliver Gould Jennings member_of U.S. Industrial Alcohol Company documented ▶ 19:14
“He served on the boards of Bethlehem Steel, U.S. Industrial Alcohol Company, pharma distributor McKesson and Robbins, Kingsport Press Natural Fuel Gas. Remember all those connections there? Yeah. So b…”
Oliver Gould Jennings member_of McKesson documented ▶ 19:14
“He served on the boards of Bethlehem Steel, U.S. Industrial Alcohol Company, pharma distributor McKesson and Robbins, Kingsport Press Natural Fuel Gas. Remember all those connections there? Yeah. So b…”
Oliver Gould Jennings member_of Kingsport Press Natural Fuel Gas documented ▶ 19:14
“He served on the boards of Bethlehem Steel, U.S. Industrial Alcohol Company, pharma distributor McKesson and Robbins, Kingsport Press Natural Fuel Gas. Remember all those connections there? Yeah. So b…”
Emma Brewster Jennings member_of Standard Oil Company of New York documented ▶ 22:28
“All right. After graduation, he comes back, finishes school, takes a job as a clerk in the Marine Division of what's called SACONI. And that stands for Standard Oil Company of New York. So they had br…”
Emma Brewster Jennings member_of Federal Maritime Commission documented ▶ 24:26
“So he works his way up. He's on the board of directors of Ciccone when it merges with something that was known as vacuum oil, created Ciccone Vacuum. It's a pretty big oil company and refiner. He's on…”
Emma Brewster Jennings member_of Socony-Vacuum Oil Company documented ▶ 24:26
“So he works his way up. He's on the board of directors of Ciccone when it merges with something that was known as vacuum oil, created Ciccone Vacuum. It's a pretty big oil company and refiner. He's on…”
Emma Brewster Jennings member_of Mobil documented ▶ 24:54
“And, of course, he would be one of the first recipients of the newly created Navy's Distinguished Public Service Award. Of course he was. After the war, he comes back to the company. In 1955, the comp…”
Emma Brewster Jennings member_of Ford Foundation documented ▶ 25:29
“His bio doesn't jump off the page. He just lived a very wealthy, influential life. But you can see where there might be some connections. Anybody involved in the oil industry understands that they are…”
Seymour H. Knox I founded F.W. Woolworth Company documented ▶ 26:33
“seymour h knox the first was the founder of fw woolworth but knox ii is interesting because he um grew up in a place called buffalo new york where we find all kinds of fun connections right yeah for t…”
Seymour H. Knox I headed F.W. Woolworth Company documented ▶ 27:34
“And it just kept popping up. Okay, there's a pattern here. Yes. Guess where he went to high school. Tell me where. Started at the Nichols School in Buffalo and then graduated from one of our favorites…”
Seymour H. Knox I headed University at Buffalo documented ▶ 27:34
“And it just kept popping up. Okay, there's a pattern here. Yes. Guess where he went to high school. Tell me where. Started at the Nichols School in Buffalo and then graduated from one of our favorites…”
Richardson Dilworth carried_out_attack Philadelphia host_asserted ▶ 28:43
“This guy's claim to fame is he was the one who built the high-rise public housing that would later be condemned as breeding grounds for poverty and crime. So that's why Philadelphia became a slumlord.…”
Richardson Dilworth member_of Sinking of the Andrea Doria documented ▶ 30:47
“willing to lend you money at 5% when your finances go to hell, which they're about to. And that means if they have to borrow money, it's going to cost them 10 or 15%. And that's just ruinous. That ain…”
James Rockefeller member_of Skull and Bones host_asserted ▶ 31:20
“How many of these people, bones men or scrolling keys have been on the famous shipwrecks? Wow. That's interesting. And his wife and he actually, they got, they both survived. They got on the very last…”
James Rockefeller survived Sinking of the Andrea Doria host_asserted ▶ 31:20
“How many of these people, bones men or scrolling keys have been on the famous shipwrecks? Wow. That's interesting. And his wife and he actually, they got, they both survived. They got on the very last…”
James Rockefeller headed National Asset Bank host_asserted ▶ 33:02
“Let's talk about James Stillman a little bit, though, because he's a pretty neat guy. Born in 1902 in Manhattan, his father was William Goodsell Rockefeller. His maternal grandfather was a guy by the …”
Porfirio Diaz overthrew Mexico host_asserted ▶ 35:26
“Jacob Schiff, there's all his business partners. Between that group of people, they controlled almost all of the railroads by Texas. And that's an important data point because Stillman was a big backe…”
James Rockefeller financed_via Porfirio Diaz host_asserted ▶ 35:26
“Jacob Schiff, there's all his business partners. Between that group of people, they controlled almost all of the railroads by Texas. And that's an important data point because Stillman was a big backe…”
Remington Arms Company supplied_arms_to Porfirio Diaz host_asserted ▶ 36:31
“Yeah, but it's all with American companies investing in it. So they own the infrastructure just like every other country they overthrow. Oh, yeah. And this is right on the open. The other people who b…”
J.P. Morgan financed_via Porfirio Diaz host_asserted ▶ 36:31
“Yeah, but it's all with American companies investing in it. So they own the infrastructure just like every other country they overthrow. Oh, yeah. And this is right on the open. The other people who b…”
Porfirio Diaz operated_from Brownsville host_asserted ▶ 37:06
“He's operating freely from Brownsville, Texas and New Orleans. So they go there, do a raid on Mexico and then go back across the American border and totally safe. And Secretary of State Hamilton Fish …”
Porfirio Diaz operated_from New Orleans host_asserted ▶ 37:06
“He's operating freely from Brownsville, Texas and New Orleans. So they go there, do a raid on Mexico and then go back across the American border and totally safe. And Secretary of State Hamilton Fish …”
Hamilton Fish III covered_up Porfirio Diaz host_asserted ▶ 37:06
“He's operating freely from Brownsville, Texas and New Orleans. So they go there, do a raid on Mexico and then go back across the American border and totally safe. And Secretary of State Hamilton Fish …”
James Rockefeller member_of Taft School host_asserted ▶ 37:40
“So I thought this guy's grandfather was worth mentioning. Absolutely. James Rockefeller would go to the Taft School in Waterton, Connecticut for high school boarding school. Oh, good grief. We talked …”
James Rockefeller member_of Paget, Brown and Company host_asserted ▶ 38:14
“Well, that's because he's the captain of the Yale crew team that won the Olympic medal in rowing in 1924 in Paris. And on that team was going to be the next guy we feature. We got the name of Dr. Benj…”
Benjamin Spock member_of Yale University host_asserted ▶ 38:14
“Well, that's because he's the captain of the Yale crew team that won the Olympic medal in rowing in 1924 in Paris. And on that team was going to be the next guy we feature. We got the name of Dr. Benj…”
James Rockefeller member_of Yale University host_asserted ▶ 38:14
“Well, that's because he's the captain of the Yale crew team that won the Olympic medal in rowing in 1924 in Paris. And on that team was going to be the next guy we feature. We got the name of Dr. Benj…”
James Rockefeller married Nancy Carnegie host_asserted ▶ 38:46
“He would join his grandfather's bank, National City Bank, in 1930. He would become the president in 1952 and the chairman in 1959. He married a woman by the name of Nancy Carnegie in 1925. Of course h…”
James Rockefeller member_of National Asset Bank host_asserted ▶ 38:46
“He would join his grandfather's bank, National City Bank, in 1930. He would become the president in 1952 and the chairman in 1959. He married a woman by the name of Nancy Carnegie in 1925. Of course h…”
James Rockefeller headed National Asset Bank host_asserted ▶ 38:46
“He would join his grandfather's bank, National City Bank, in 1930. He would become the president in 1952 and the chairman in 1959. He married a woman by the name of Nancy Carnegie in 1925. Of course h…”
James Rockefeller member_of United Wa State Army host_asserted ▶ 39:19
“And earliest living cover subject of Time Magazine. Time Magazine, of course, was founded by Henry Luce of Skull and Bones. And a front for the CIA. Yeah. Again, we'll do more Rockefeller stuff in the…”
Henry Luce member_of Skull and Bones host_asserted ▶ 39:19
“And earliest living cover subject of Time Magazine. Time Magazine, of course, was founded by Henry Luce of Skull and Bones. And a front for the CIA. Yeah. Again, we'll do more Rockefeller stuff in the…”
Henry Luce founded Time-Life host_asserted ▶ 39:19
“And earliest living cover subject of Time Magazine. Time Magazine, of course, was founded by Henry Luce of Skull and Bones. And a front for the CIA. Yeah. Again, we'll do more Rockefeller stuff in the…”
Benjamin Spock member_of Columbia University host_asserted ▶ 41:01
“They've been running our world ever since. All right. So back to Dr. Spock. Well, he went to high school at a place called the Phillips Andover Academy. Because of course he did. Every single one of t…”
Benjamin Spock member_of Phillips Academy host_asserted ▶ 41:01
“They've been running our world ever since. All right. So back to Dr. Spock. Well, he went to high school at a place called the Phillips Andover Academy. Because of course he did. Every single one of t…”
Benjamin Spock member_of Air Force School of Medicine host_asserted ▶ 41:01
“They've been running our world ever since. All right. So back to Dr. Spock. Well, he went to high school at a place called the Phillips Andover Academy. Because of course he did. Every single one of t…”
Benjamin Spock authored Baby and Child Care host_asserted ▶ 41:37
“The famous book was Baby and Child Care, written in 1946. It sold over 50 million copies by the time of his death in 98. And totally destroyed parenting. We're going to get to that. I agree with you. …”
Benjamin Spock member_of People's Party of Canada host_asserted ▶ 42:50
“So he self-described a late-life conversion to socialism. He's an activist in New York. I'm sorry, in something called the New Left. That was a big group in the 60s. He's been part of the anti-Vietnam…”
Benjamin Spock married Jane Chaney Spock host_asserted ▶ 43:56
“What's my incentive to keep working if I've already made a million? Legalized abortion because, of course, population control. Yep. He marries a woman named Jane Chaney Spock in 1927. I do not know if…”
Jane Chaney Spock member_of Americans for Democratic Action host_asserted ▶ 43:56
“What's my incentive to keep working if I've already made a million? Legalized abortion because, of course, population control. Yep. He marries a woman named Jane Chaney Spock in 1927. I do not know if…”
Jane Chaney Spock member_of National Committee for a Sane Nuclear Policy host_asserted ▶ 43:56
“What's my incentive to keep working if I've already made a million? Legalized abortion because, of course, population control. Yep. He marries a woman named Jane Chaney Spock in 1927. I do not know if…”
Benjamin Spock married Mary Morgan host_asserted ▶ 44:35
“She remarried, sorry, they divorced in 1976. And Dr. Spock remarries a woman named Mary Morgan also in 1976. So he didn't wait long. Mary Morgan was 40 years younger than him. He was 73 years old. Wha…”
Huntington Denton Sheldon married Magda Merck host_asserted ▶ 46:21
“Ting is, I guess, an abbreviation of Huntington, but that was his name. Born in 1903 in Greenwich, Connecticut, came from a patrician New York family, and his father was an educated Yale lawyer. Sheld…”
Magda Merck member_of Merck & Co. host_asserted ▶ 46:21
“Ting is, I guess, an abbreviation of Huntington, but that was his name. Born in 1903 in Greenwich, Connecticut, came from a patrician New York family, and his father was an educated Yale lawyer. Sheld…”
George Merck founded Merck & Co. host_asserted ▶ 46:21
“Ting is, I guess, an abbreviation of Huntington, but that was his name. Born in 1903 in Greenwich, Connecticut, came from a patrician New York family, and his father was an educated Yale lawyer. Sheld…”
Huntington Denton Sheldon member_of United Wa State Army host_asserted ▶ 46:56
“The CIA married the drug company? He's not in the CIA yet. Okay. They actually divorced in 1936. He'd get married three times in his life. He gets involved in banking. We'll get there for sure. Okay. …”
Huntington Denton Sheldon headed Office of Current Intelligence host_asserted ▶ 48:07
“And what this guy was, was a SIGINT analyst, signals intelligence. And we're just now learning something called photo interpretation. He's the pioneer. You take these aerial photographs and you got to…”
Richard Lehman member_of Office of Current Intelligence host_asserted ▶ 50:37
“the part of the CIA that was actually legitimate in the National Security Act of 1947 before they decided to give them the ability to do covert operations as well. One of his other big things was he w…”
Knight McMahon member_of Office of Current Intelligence host_asserted ▶ 53:55
“completely ruthless in how he did it. People he didn't like were brushed aside one way or another so that he built a core of people who were basically what he wanted for his shop, which were versatile…”
Ray Cline headed Directorate of Intelligence host_asserted ▶ 54:30
“It was a good combination. This is all under the watch of Alan Dulles, of course. Right. It was a good combination, and the office found its soul during those years. The thing about it was, if anythin…”
Ray Cline removed_from_power Huntington Denton Sheldon host_asserted ▶ 55:05
“D.I. in early 1962, right after Dulles left, he wanted OCI to be under his control. And he booted Sheldon aside or pushed Sheldon aside, I should say. But Ting stayed on for several years as the agenc…”
Huntington Denton Sheldon member_of CFR host_asserted ▶ 55:35
“Amazing amount of overlap with the Council of Foreign Relations. Yes. Then finally he retired and went downhill fairly fast. He lost his eyesight and all kinds of things. And I'll leave it there. So t…”
Huntington Denton Sheldon married Alice B. Sheldon host_asserted ▶ 56:09
“And I bet because he'd love with the CIA where they are on spying now. His third marriage is to an author named Alice B. Sheldon. She was a renowned science fiction author who wrote under the pseudony…”
Alice B. Sheldon died La Jolla, California host_asserted ▶ 56:45
“Yeah. They're found dead in 1987 with a murder-suicide. And she shot him and then shot herself. And they went into her writings, and apparently there was a murder pact, suicide pact, or whatever you w…”
Huntington Denton Sheldon died La Jolla, California host_asserted ▶ 56:45
“Yeah. They're found dead in 1987 with a murder-suicide. And she shot him and then shot herself. And they went into her writings, and apparently there was a murder pact, suicide pact, or whatever you w…”
Credits

Built from the work of the podcasters whose episodes this archive indexes:

Colonel Towner-Watkins X Rumble
War_Hamster Brady X Rumble