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The Shadow State 73 London School of Economics

1:22:45 · recorded 2026-06-12 · ▶ watch on Rumble

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0:20 Sam, Tanner Watkins, and Warhamster Brady talking about the Fabian Society. And today we're going to focus on the London School of Economics. How are you doing today, Brady? Doing good. Excited to get a little wonky on economics today. This show is just going to completely fall right into our timeline and just recognize the same old patterns. Are you familiar with GADSAT? I've heard of it. Well, I'm going to show you something real quick.
0:51 kind of popped up and see if I can find it. He recently wrote this book called Suicidal Empathy. Oh, yeah. Look at the cover, right? Free the wolves, wolf and sheep's clothing. So we've been talking about with the Fabians is they've got this egalitarian save the world mentality by any means necessary. Who cares how many rights we have to step on to do it? That's what Gad Saad's book is about.
1:24 um is suicidal empathy that's that's exactly what we've been talking about and uh you know he's let me just i'm gonna play a quick quick quick clip from him if you don't mind to get started you'll understand why oops do you have it up do we have to remove this one and then you put it back up because all i'm seeing is that cover evil society around the corner
2:30 I will have existential glee. And so I think that's why there is that reflex in many of these totalitarian ideologies to erase everything that came before you. Conservative consistently score high. So what he's talking about is unicornia. And basically that's why the left gets so triggered when you challenge their worldviews. And that's what we've seen play out. But Gadsad's a pretty sharp guy. And his interview showed up in our timeline. I thought it was pertinent to what we've been talking about. It definitely is.
3:02 I also, you know what, I want to share one more little quick video for you with you because when I was looking for videos in London School of Economics, there's a debate at the London School of Economics. And he talks about, you know, it does a pretty good way of setting us up. So what we're going to talk about today. Okay. Let me know when that's up. It's up. Job, to try and persuade you, together with my colleague.
3:31 Dr. Harjun Chang, of the truth of this proposition that there is too much maths and too little history in economics as it's currently taught and conceived. Well, let's start off with an obvious question. Why do people study economics? Basically to understand how economies work. And there are two different ways of understanding that. I mean, there's maths.
4:00 and their history, and they stand at opposite poles in terms of epistemology. Let's take maths first. First, two things that maths tries to do, claims to do. First of all, it's concerned with propositions that are necessarily true. That is, it's a branch of logic. But secondly, maths is concerned with propositions that can be proved.
4:32 And economists really endorse maths in the second sense, that is for generating provable propositions. But because the social system to which they apply maths is so complex, too complex to obtain reliable proofs, they're tempted by the first, or what I would call the platonic view of the subject. So what he's talking about there,
5:01 is really, if you look at the founding principles, which we'll get into at the London School of Economics, it's important to note it's not the London School of Economics, it's the London School of Economics and Political Science. Yes. To economists, the real world is often a special case exception scenario. They're trying to use macroeconomics and formulas to describe human behavior, and we are far too complex. The smartest formula for doing this is a free market system.
5:32 where there are billions of decisions made on it every single second about what to buy what not to buy that's how economics should be done and they're trying to micromanage it and trying to calculate a formula for something that cannot be calculated because they want to control economics they don't want economics to be a free market type event because behind all of this is the
6:02 desire to control people. That's exactly right. And that probably teases you up for that opening quote you were going to read because. So this is a quote from Bernard Shaw. Our propaganda is one of permeating. We urge our members to join the liberal and radical associations in their district, or if they prefer it.
6:33 the conservative associations, meaning all sides. We permeate the party organizations and pulled all strings we could lay our hands on with the utmost adroitness and energy. And we succeeded so well that in 1888, we gained the solid advantage of a progressive majority full of ideas that would never have come into their heads.
7:03 Had not the Fabians put them there. Infiltrate. And they play, you know, they're playing both sides of the aisle. Where have we seen that before? We talked about that with skull and bones, how it wasn't, they weren't, they didn't go to one party or the other. They went to both. Correct. And that ties into your strategy of tension. It does. And it also, which we will get to later, ties into that thing called the third way where.
7:35 You control this side, you control this side in the strategy of tension, and you push people into a third way. All to implement their globo, homo, one world government. Now with that, I need to give a shout out to our good friend, Seaweed Sally, who came up with a new term for us. She coined the term homo Fabian. I love it. Me too.
8:03 It's going to permeate. You know, we talked about last week, a lot of these Fabians were into homoeroticism and stuff like that. So it just fits so perfect. It does. Great job, Sweet Sally. Thank you. I've been laughing about that ever since you read it. All right. So let's get into the London School of Economics, founded in 1895 by Fabian socialists, the Webs, Graham Wallace, and of course, George Bernard Shaw were the five main founders.
8:31 And again, it is called the LSE, London School of Economics, but the real name says London School of Economics and Political Science, which is an oxymoron. Politics is the absolute opposite of science. It's funded by an initial 20,000-pound bequest from the estate of a Fabian by the name of Henry Hunt Hutchinson, Triple H, for you wrestling fans out there. Started out in just three classrooms, and it is definitely not in the city of London.
9:06 And it now has grown to look something like this. That is your London School of Economics, everybody. Pretty grandiose building, would you not say? Yes. So it started out really tiny and would grow over time. You've got some early statistics. Yeah. Let me get back up there. So the London School of Economics, after you mentioned the Henry Hunt Hutchinson,
9:46 In 1905 through 1906, there were 181 postgraduates in the whole of England and Wales. 27 of them were at Oxford. 36 of them were at Cambridge. 49 of them at other universities throughout those two locations. And 69 of them stayed on the staff of the London School of Economics.
10:13 Within its first decade, the school had become established as a center of research. And then, of course, to me, the big hitting home was that they established the British Library of Political and Economic Science. Most of the stuff in there was written by the people we've covered in the last several shows that were their philosophical underpinnings.
10:43 but also themselves in the first 15 years that they were established. So it is a self-licking ice cream cone here. Yeah, we're going to see more of that today. So keep that notion in terms. It has grown, obviously, since then. As of 2024, the enrollment was about 13,000 students. The majority are postgraduate students. Over two-thirds of the students are from outside the United Kingdom. So they're taking their ideas, educating people, and then sending them out in the world to spread. It is an incubation.
11:14 for Fabian socialism. Yeah. I saw an article that was dated, um, like two years ago that said, um, 70%, um, because of COVID and stuff like that, shut down a lot of foreigners coming into England. Um, that 70% of their student body, um, during that period of time were foreigners. Yeah. That sounds like that's pretty much still the case around 2024. Yeah. They've, uh, you know, the other major emergency, it's funny is that,
11:46 You know, their campus is a place called Clare Market and Houghton Street in a neighborhood called Westminster, surrounded by a lot of very notable government buildings, et cetera. It is right in the heart of London academic power. During World War II, they actually left London to escape the bombing and took residence at Cambridge. And we'll talk more about the Cambridge connection later.
12:14 I gave you the endowment, sixth largest of any United Kingdom university, and its annual income is about 550 million pounds. So it's pretty legitimate. Let me pull this up on screen, a little more symbolism for you. Their emblem, their coat of arms, the beaver is their mascot. Beavers are known for building dams and working hard. It's supposed to symbolize industriousness and constructiveness.
12:48 It's supposed to symbolize foresight and social habits because they live in communities and plan ahead. That is a Fabian for you, the beaver. It's also supposed to symbolize, oh, the logo, from the first prospectus, this saying, means to understand the causes of things. And that's from Virgil's Georgics. It encapsulated their scientific goal.
13:19 of putting scientific empirical investigation into society's problems they want to quantify everything and then put a mathematical formula to predict and conduct human behavior from their perspectives their special aim the study and investigation of the concrete facts of industrial life remember this is post-industrial revolution where the big causes the wealth disparity gap that came out of the industrial revolution and they were always
13:50 justifying whatever they want to do because they wanted to help the poor. They're trying to fight injustice in their minds. Go ahead. Somebody just said in the comments, Oregon is the beaver steak. And Oregon's probably the most Fabian of all. Sorry. Partially true. To look at the concrete facts of industrial life and the actual working of economic and political relations as they exist or have existed.
14:22 in the united kingdom and in foreign countries their focus was on applied social sciences economics political science and research to inform public policy and promote to promote quote unquote the betterment of society now here's something positive about the london school of economics they have what's called a non-dogmatic approach even though the founders are fabians the school was very open to open inquiry and that allowed diverse thinkers
14:56 like Frederick Hayek to actually teach there for 20 years and thrive alongside socialists. So it was a very healthy academic atmosphere to be around. It was not just you'll be socialist, damn it, or leave. We'll talk more about Hayek much later. Well, it's also important to note that during this period of time that we're talking about, you had the rise of the roundtable movement with the Milners.
15:27 And they were going back to the strategy of tension. They were positioned where supposedly the roundtable movement were on the right side of this movement. And the Fabians obviously were labeled at the time as the new left. And you had these two. And basically, there's a lot of overlap that most people don't realize. And so they were formulating this entire control mechanism as a part of all of this.
15:56 Yeah, at the same time, the same thing's going on in America. You know, you've got these robber barons from the Gilded Age, and they are funding the universities where these Fabian ideas are being injected into our youth. Exact same thing's going on. And most of those robber barons would not be considered left wing. Correct. All right, so the London School of Economics would formally join the University of London in the year 1900. They first started awarding degrees in its own name in 1901. They're giving out...
16:27 um bachelors of sciences and doctors of sciences in economics and of note these were the very first university degrees dedicated to the social sciences you got something on 1905 um yeah unfortunately i didn't put them in that order um go ahead i'll i'll find it all right the london school of economics would not become a university in its own right until um
17:02 until 2022 some interesting thing with british law about mergers and stuff like that but they were always roughly associated with the university of london let's take a look at their uh let's take a look at the london school of economics website okay bear with me i got it right here i love going to their websites they tell us so much about themselves they do all right here's today's london school of economics and political science what's their latest news buy less campaigns don't work
17:46 Social media bans risk excluding children from important opportunities rather than tackling harms, a new report finds. Which means you should let your kids get on social media. Global migration per year has nearly tripled since 2000, you think? Here's one I like. Upcoming events. Oh, the politics of climate change. London School of Economics is all over creating papers about climate change to justify bringing in their one world order. I'd say I would probably...
18:17 Close to half of all the educational work printed material comes from London School of Economics or people that are alumni from there. Mobilizing investment for a sustainable planet. Oh, the artist formerly known as climate change. So that's what they're basically studying this spring. You go to the about page. They got all kinds of departments, accounting, anthropology. Something on climate change here. Geography and environment.
18:55 What's that have to do with economics? Everything. You want to control it all. That's true. There's a few other fun things to see on here. Research centers. So what you see in here is, you know, it really is an institution. It deserves respect. But the self-licking ice cream cone, what they'll do is they'll create a department and then hire people to research what they wanted them to conclude before they ever opened the department.
19:35 And that'll justify a political action which they can implement in the United Kingdom or in the United Nations or anywhere else in the world. And that's why they open their doors to so many people from around the world. Because once they get out of the London School of Economics, you know, that's a really highly regarded degree. And they get themselves into the great bureaucratic positions, whether as a technocrat or a politician or as a business leader. But they've got all these ideas permeating their brain. So it's a wonderful strategy if you want to create your one world government.
20:04 On an evolutionary standpoint, and you just basically change values and human knowledge from within. It's a feeder system. Yeah, it really is. And of course, it feeds into other schools as well, because the London School of Economics degree gets you teaching in the Ivy League. Yeah, and I know we're going to talk about this later on, but as early as 1895, it was already working closely with Oxfords and the Rhodes Scholars.
20:38 to um set up the so they kind of basically like um overlapped each other um there were all kinds of research um overlap um during that time yeah when you start combining politics with academic study you've got a little bit of an issue and then try to call it science now this is the that is a pure technocratic definition and that basically is ruled by experts and
21:06 The first really successful attempt at a technocratic government was known as the Nazis. When the ends justify the means, there is no limit to what you'll do to human beings. Again, we probably should foot stomp the political science piece of this, because within a few years of creating the London School of Economics, they created the Labour Party. The Labour Party was there.
21:37 kind of incubator for melding the London School of Economics into a political force. And, of course, then you have politics, like you were saying, the feeder system all over the world. Politicians in all of world governments are in this feeder system. Yeah, and especially in the United Kingdom. When we start going into the notable alumni of the London School of Economics, you're going to find that basically the entire Labour Party.
22:07 is lse they're all beavers they are all beavers or shall we call them homo fabians yeah just to make a special distinction not all london school of economics people were fabians but the influence is always there and um they founded it for a specific reason so let's talk about where they found it uh how do they teach they teach like a broad rigorous largely mainstream neoclassical economic curriculum that's a complementary sentence and it's probably true
22:38 You actually probably can get a good education there. And if you can avoid the brainwashing, they emphasize quantitative methods, empirical analysis and policy applications. They're in microeconomics, which is stuff like consumer theory, firm behavior, market structures, game theory, behavioral economics, which is a term I got a problem with. They're in macroeconomics, which is more stuff like GDP growth, business cycles, monetary fiscal policy and international trade.
23:09 And then, of course, there's econometrics, which is a new field of study. I have a nephew getting a doctorate in that at Notre Dame right this second. And I'm furious at him for going into that field because the real world will always be an exception to econometrics. They've got these great data, all the numbers in the world, and they work wonderful on a computer and in the economics laboratory. They just don't apply to the real world at all because human beings are unpredictable.
23:39 And we change our minds. You can't tell us what we're going to want to buy a year from now. It doesn't work that way. But the purpose of this is to not only influence the direction, but to what they it goes back to almost to that predictive modeling where they they firmly believe that if they can create these models that.
24:05 predict a particular thing that then they have the propaganda arm from the quote I just read to then push people into line with their given theory. Yeah. And it doesn't matter how powerful artificial intelligence gets. You'll still never be smart enough to predict human behavior. And that's why I love being, I love humanity for that reason. Yeah. Who would want to live these be such a drone.
24:37 And that's what they want. That's what socialism has always been, is to put us into worker drones. We saw it during COVID, too. That was an actual physical manifestation of all these ideas, how they can order society and separate us into classes. Correct. Some of the specialties that develop out of there in different schools, and the terminology is really important. They got a specialty called developmental economics. And what that basically means is,
25:09 Third world development. We're going to apply our philosophies throughout the world, whether you want it or not. And that's how you get these United Nations programs and all these different NGOs running around the world, spitting out Fabian ideas. You know, the best example to for anybody that's interested in this that wants to go look was the Chicago boys that were deployed to Chile after the CIA overthrew the Chilean government.
25:40 And Chicago is a focal point for the Fabians from the very beginning when it came into the United States. It found a foothold in Chicago at the University of Chicago. And who did Kissinger deploy to remake their economy in Chile to be a Western-influenced, Fabian-influenced was the Chicago Boys.
26:06 from Chicago, there was a whole team of economists that went down there to mold that government. It is a classic example of what Brady just said. And we can do an entire show on the University of Chicago economics. We talked about the founding way back when. All right. Some of the other specialties. They got monetary economics. Makes perfect sense. That's basically central banking.
26:36 So you're going to find in almost every central bank in the world, you're going to find the London footprints of London School of Economics. So that includes the U.S. Federal Reserve, and we'll get to that. They have something called public economics. One of the first things they wanted to do with Fabianism was to socialize the municipalities. They wanted basically to...
27:00 be in charge of who delivers your water who picks up your trash all that stuff that had to be socialized it couldn't be a free market system so that became public economics and if you're running for you know you're on city council you're going to get coached by the ngos following fabian and london school of economics teaching about how to run your city and that's why we see this agenda 21 stuff in every county in america now this is climate change bs that came through the same route our public servants our civil servants are completely brainwashed
27:29 into this type of public economics which was one of their initial goals is permeating the government at all levels as well as the political parties blah blah blah um yeah baby and the next one on my list feeds right into that exactly we just said labor economics yep and that's why they invented the concept of um oh what was the word we used last week um beatrice webb invented uh
28:00 collective bargaining thank you that's labor economics which they would then would apply all over the world if they wanted to oh i don't know do a little land and resource grab in a third world country what better way to get some unrest oh does that kind of remind you a little bit about the regime say stuff that cia has been doing i think they work hand in hand and then there's my favorite of course is environmental economics because the planet needs to be you know
28:36 And you can see the Fabian influences, state intervention on public ownership, expert-driven administrations, and collectivism with democratic means. All the theories they're teaching there. Anything you want to add before we go into the notable alumni? Well, I did want to, let's see.
29:09 I got that one. We did the shopping. Yeah, so I did want to just give an example of the permeation of this. In 1931, they basically took this model and implanted it in Canada. They have a corresponding vehicle in New Zealand and Australia because this was a Commonwealth.
29:38 um project and stealthily they planted it here as well but in particular they actually set up a thing called the fabian society of canada it was created by five road scholars and it was dubbed the league of social reconstruction how fabian um and it was the original introduction into canada
30:06 of a pro-eugenics political party called cooperative commonwealth federation in 1932 and that's what eventually led to through gradualism to the maid program where they're now just killing people in canada um so they eventually changed their name to ndp in 1961 but many of their um
30:36 people that were in it, you see the same model into government, into the municipalities, government, and into the colleges, into the political system, and all those different aspects. Yeah, Rob just stole what I was going to say in the, Rob, 83-31. Right after that, Elon Musk's grandfather would become the head of the Technocratic Party of Canada.
31:05 So when Elon was buying Twitter, I did a presentation on that whole proposed sale. I went deep into the family history, stuff like that. Rob also said something interesting. And he says all government employees and pensioners are Fabian by proxy. They must maintain the equity stripping. That is 100 percent correct. That's why all the government employees are voting Democrats. Democrats are Fabians at this point. They weren't always, but they are at this point.
31:33 And they've got a vested interest in cradle to grave, which is something we're going to talk about here. That's part of the philosophy behind the Fabian economics is cradle to grave. Everything. We'll get to that. The same thing with the unions. Yeah. And school teachers. This is a. Yes. And they don't even have to pay for their army because we pay for them. Yes. Our tax dollars to basically steal our country. That's exactly what they've implemented. Yes.
32:02 That's why Washington, D.C. should never have a district court. You'll never get justice there. All right. Oh, we also have someone who said hello from Amsterdam. So good to get some more international representation in here. I can't see who there was, but hey, welcome. I like the Dutch people. All right. Notable alumni. 17 current United Kingdom members of the House of Commons today are from London School of Economics.
32:34 Notable is a gentleman by the name of Ed Miliband. You're familiar with him, of course. He was the former leader of the Labour Party and the Secretary of State for Energy Security and Net Zero. I've talked about Net Zero, Net Zero Banking. Current Prime Minister of Canada was one of the big Net Zero Banking things. The Net Zero Banking Alliance. Zero carbon they're talking about. This goes along with your digital currency.
33:04 they wanted the technocrats in america in the 30s they wanted to use energy as a point of commerce so you know we wouldn't use money the experts would determine who got which amount of energy and that's you know if you didn't behave you'd get less energy if you were favored you'd get more this is the entire concept of net zero and this is milliband london school of economics is practically you know one of the biggest names in england so that's current members of house of commons he's still there you've got 27 current members
33:37 the house of lords that's an awful lot of influence from one economic school in the parliament of the you know one of the right now the seventh biggest economy in the world or they've got back up to number five right around there and what kind of policies are they going to implement you think they're going to implement a brexit oh hell no they want globalism and the good thing to see is it looks like kirk starmer's entire cabinet is deserting him so i don't do british politics i don't know well enough i don't live there but i do know what i
34:13 I'd like to see the Labour Party out of power. Well, let's look at the... We didn't rehearse this ahead of time, but are you going to talk about the end of Barack Obama's 2016 and what it looked like with the London School of Economics? We will get to there. Obama does come up. Okay. Very shortly, to be honest with you. Well, we've got some notable Americans.
34:43 from the London School of Economics. I pulled this off alphabetically and just pulled the ones that jumped off the page of me. First one, of course, is Michael Chertoff, who was the Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security under George W. Bush. 9-11. Yeah. He was also an Attorney General. Yeah, exactly. He was also Attorney General under George H. W. Bush and Bill Clinton. All right, everybody, brace yourself for the next Notable American.
35:16 Seriously, brace yourselves because I'm about to scare you. This was also an alumni of London School of Economics. I know who it's going to be. Rosa Delorio. That's an embarrassment. All right, get her off the screen. Okay. Sorry. Sorry, everybody. Should we take a break and wash our eyes out? My God, that witch. I just see the witch on The Wizard of Oz every time I see her.
35:49 it's an embarrassment uh there's another alumni named leandra english who's the deputy director of liz warren's consumer financial protection bureau basically the shakedown organization london school of economics we have an edward fielner who there's a lot of these uh london school of economics are pretty high up on the think tanks and the institutions so this guy was a president of the heritage foundation think tank
36:28 And these think tanks. You mean they're on both sides of the aisle? Say again? You mean they're on both sides of the aisle? Of course they are. Where have we encountered that? But this is so important because these think tanks are writing these position papers that our politicians, you know, they're not smart enough to think for themselves, go out and implement. And, of course, they get regurgitated by our, you know, docile media. And it becomes considered, you know, settled science. And it's not.
36:58 It's engineered. Not docile. Complicit. Get your terminology correct. Thank you. A little hotter under the collar talk about this than I expected. It's so pervasive. It's in every nook and cranny of society. And it never stops gnawing away. It's got to be ripped apart. Okay, we got Eric Garcetti, former mayor of Los Angeles, London School of Economics, because of course. Bruce Katz, vice president, Brookings Institution.
37:29 Hmm. Vanessa Carey, the daughter of John Carey. I wonder if she's going to get into politics anytime soon. Bill Clinton's favorite, Monica Lewinsky, London School of Economics. Yep. Should I make a joke? Go ahead. Well, she blew her finals. All right. That was funny. Should have worked on that better. But here's another one. Peter Orszag, Georgetown professor.
38:08 And a fellow at Brookings Institution. Why is Georgetown professor so important? Because half the people that go to work for the government internships come from Georgetown. It's right there in D.C. It is also the foreign school for foreign officers and a feeding ground for the CIA. Indeed. John Ossoff, current senator for Georgia in Georgia. And, you know, I got to mention this one, David Rockefeller.
38:38 We could go on for about 12 hours on him, but let's hold that off because we've got a few shows that are going to be dedicated to the Rockefellers. Just know that he not only went to the London School of Economics, but talk about the funding of the London School of Economics, Colonel. The what? The funding, early funding from the Rothschilds and Rockefellers. Yeah, so that was where their initial grant came, was from the Rockefellers and the Rothschilds. Yeah, and there's more to that story than we'll get to.
39:12 Robert Rubin, former U.S. Treasury Secretary and the director of Goldman Sachs. Now, why is that important? Because when he was Treasury Secretary, they created the concept of too big to fail banks, and Goldman Sachs got a bailout, and then he became their director. Oops, a little conflict. And you want to talk about socializing profits? I'm sorry. Privatizing profits and socializing losses? That's a living example of it. Robert Rubin. Bob.
39:45 We've got a Rajiv Shah, who's the administrator under Obama for something known as USAID. CIA. Mm-hmm. Everybody here knows how bad USAID is. All of our followers, I think, know that. We don't have to go into too much detail for that, do we? No. Okay. We've got a Sanford Ungar, who was a former director of Voice of America, CIA. And, of course, he's a Council of Foreign Relations member.
40:20 noticing a pattern they're one in the same Paul Volcker former chair of the federal reserve you wanted to say talk about the end of the Obama uh era 2016 so go ahead and do that now if you don't mind so um the White House chief of staff deputy chief of staff budget director secretary of homeland security all
40:51 had studied at the London School of Economics with the Secretary of State. Well, she wasn't the Secretary of State when he left, but the former, she was a person in his administration. Susan Rice was a Rhodes Scholar at Oxford. So there was a large presence in the White House during Obama of the London School of Economics. Are you done with the...
41:18 people that actually went there that you were going to talk about? I'm done with the Americans. Okay. You know that JFK was there, right? His brother was. He was. I don't have JFK down there. He is. Kennedy, oh, he got selected to go, and then he got sick.
41:49 His mentor, because evidently you get assigned one there, they already had documentation of who was going to be assigned to him. It was Harold Lasky. Who's Harold Lasky, Colonel? Harold Lasky is one of the original really bad guys that was.
42:14 a professor there um and he had served as the chairman of the labor party um which was a derivative of um the fabian society um so yeah he was very much as a matter of fact he he talked a lot about marx um that was one of his favorite subjects when he gave um lectures so there you have it but he never went but his brother joseph did go there um yeah all right i got some more though
42:44 We're just getting started on how influential London School of Economics is on our world. Ursula von der Leyen, the current president of the European Commission, which is the living embodiment of the Fabian dream. Yep. The unicornia, unicornia, unicornia. Cornucopia. Whatever. The utopia of one world government. She's there threatening everybody. So, of course, we've got a bunch of central bankers, everyone from Janet Yellen, Stanley Fisher.
43:14 We've got a Mervyn King, Bank of England. Oh, Apui Ungpakron, the governor of the Central Bank of Thailand. Also, of course, you've got to have Nobel Prize winners. You want to talk about the self-licking ice cream cone? These are economists giving themselves awards so they get better credentials so they can get... 21 Nobel Prize winners. 16 in economics, 2 in literature, and 3 in peace. They created something called the Guy Medal.
43:47 which is a award for statistics. And of course, six people from the London School of Economics have won Guy medals in a field of study that they invented. You'd think it'd be higher. Yeah, I actually had that same thought. I don't know how long the Guy medal's been around, but I'm pretty sure they won't be giving me one. And I'm pretty good at statistics, but no, thank you. I will not be publishing.
44:17 We've got some actors and musicians. Two that jumped off the page were Mick Jagger and somehow Angelina Jolie. That's a head scratcher, isn't it? I'm telling you, these people aren't who they pretend themselves. It's like AOC graduating from Boston, which is a school of economics with an economics degree. They're not who they pretend to be. And then there's others who pretend to be lawyers and probably couldn't pass the high school.
44:50 English test. That's the reaction to some of the people that are actually lawyers and some of their commentary on the recent Carmelo Anthony conviction. Right. I got into an argument. Well, it's not an argument discussion. Somebody was saying, I forget who it was, that one woman, the congressman from Texas, saying it wasn't a deadly weapon. Well, it killed someone. So by definition, that makes it deadly. Yeah. This pen is a deadly weapon if used properly.
45:22 So anyway, I digress. We've had dozens of CEOs of big business, way too many to list. But the big name that screams is, of course, George Soros and his open societies. I mean, if you want to, it's about one degree different than the original Fabian ideologies. George Soros, we are not going to do a deep dive on George Soros today. Everybody knows that he's evil personified and what he's done. But we probably at some point in time in the future can do.
45:55 Real big dig on him. I just think it's all out there. So many people have beaten that path. There's no upside for us doing Soros, but he was London School of Economics. Dozens of economists, of course, and economic historians work from there, which makes a lot of sense. One guy that I do like is Niall Ferguson. Have you read much of him? Yeah. That's pretty good work. I actually enjoy reading him. We've had a lot of judges. So how do you get London School of Economics into the judicial branch?
46:33 It's an interesting leap, huh? No, because the politics piece of it. Thank you. It's what we said at the very beginning. Yeah, that's the piece that keeps getting left out. Well, they even have it on their, you know, hey, say LSE, all over their materials. Yes. And it should say LSEPS. Yes. LSEPS, what's that stand for? LSEPS? Yeah, but the political science is a big part. I'm glad you handled that point home.
47:04 A couple of interesting judges jumped off the page of me. It's a judge named James Hamilton, who you probably ran into because he was on the Watergate Committee. Yeah. Think the Watergate Committee came up with the right conclusions? No. Hmm. I think there's a bigger, broader international aspect to it than just spying on a campaign. Yes. Yeah. Another pretty well-known judge was Anthony Kennedy, who was a Supreme Court justice. All right.
47:40 Let's get to the heads of state. Heads of state, we would include prime ministers, presidents, some VPs, some royalty, anyone who you call a head of state. And I came up with 59 of them. Does that sound about right? About, yeah. I'm doing this alphabetically from the Wikipedia entry. So I'll start with two from Barbados, including the current prime minister, Mia Motley. Sorry, everybody, no pictures on these.
48:13 We've had one from Benin. Why did we talk about Benin recently? I don't know why. It was just on my radar in the last few weeks. I have to look it up. We've had one from Bulgaria, two from Canada, including, of course, Pierre Trudeau, the father of Justin Trudeau, the Cuban communist. Pierre actually probably would be a communist if you asked him. And Canada, which the colonel just mentioned.
48:49 has gone a long ways towards implementing a lot of the homophobian policies. Yep. Two from Colombia, which is interesting because one of them was Juan Manuel Santos, who was their president, I guess, from 2010 to 18. What was going on in Colombia at that point in time with the Sandinistas? A lot.
49:22 He's interesting because that was a large part of the narco trafficking escalation during the time that he was president, too. It's also really nice to see all these elections in the Western Hemisphere have been going towards what appear to be right wing populists. And that's been a lot of dominoes are falling in the right direction away from.
49:53 some of the globalists that have been in there. And I think a lot of that has to do with the ending of USAID. It does not. Quit saying that. I was hoping you weren't going to say that. It has nothing to do with USAID. USAID, during the entire Operation Condor, put right-wing governments in all of Latin America. Sure they did for a while, but the last decade or two, they've been putting in globalists.
50:21 global governments. That's been the movement. They play both sides. They always have. But USAID has never been present and promoted an actual left-wing person that was true socialist. Never. As a matter of fact, even during the last several years from the...
50:46 election of Chavez up until 2019 when they tried to overthrow Maduro. All of their money went into getting rid of the socialist. Who's in power in Brazil right now? That was not a result of USAID. Jason, at least. I mean, our entire CIA and the whole intelligence network was working with them. They were working with our corporations to censor everyone. It's an international puppet that was put in there by the globalists.
51:19 The problem with Bolsonaro was his close proximity to Trump. That was not a true USAID push to put in a leftist. That was all in favor of getting rid of one of Trump's allies. I'm just going to push back on that. I don't. Yeah, we can do that. We'll do that debate another show because it's an interesting conversation.
51:46 And you can find your one Grenada. Okay. Okay. Where was I? I did Columbia. We have one London School of Economics from Costa Rica, one from Denmark. Okay. I have to say this about the Costa Rica one too. When was that guy in? 86 to 90. When were we doing, where was Costa Rica at in 86 to 90? It was the home station of the CIA and the DEA running.
52:18 the contra operation that was all done out of costa rica while that guy was in charge very good no good i'm glad you caught that one because i skipped over it yep all right we've got one from denmark uh the current queen margaret the second she's been queen since 1972. i was going to show you a picture of her but i already scared the audience once and i am not going to we've actually seen that because isn't that the one that um sun
52:48 like committed suicide or something. Something happened to the son and her picture was all over social media. And I was like, oh my gosh. Anyway, go ahead. I shouldn't make fun of older people, but I got one from Dominica, one from Fiji, one from Finland, including the current president, Alexander Stubb, who was also the former prime minister in 2014 to 15. Finland's had been making some noise on the international political stage lately, haven't they?
53:23 Yeah. And they're being run by an alumni of London School of Economics. Interesting. Yes. We've got one from Germany. And it was Heinrich Brüning, Chancellor. Heinrich Brüning, who's the Chancellor from 1930 to 1932. Anything going on in Germany that run then? The rise of Hitler? Yep. The Weimar Republic is about to implode. Runaway inflation. Should we talk about? Yeah, we're going to talk.
54:00 We'll talk about that more next week. I want to say the actual cause of the Great Depression. We'll get into that. So just remember Heinrich Brüning was chancellor in 1930. We've had three London School of Economics alumni from Ghana. You had Nkrumah from 1960 to 66, Lennon from 79 to 81, and John Alta Mills in 2009. Any of those time periods mean anything in the history of Ghana, Colonel?
54:31 So the Konami guy was instrumental for helping the CIA overthrow a whole bunch of governments around that area. Indeed. It's nice to have a friendly president, huh? Yes. We've got a chief minister from Gibraltar. Two London School of Economics alumni have been prime ministers of Greece, including George Papandreou, however you say his name.
55:01 Who was the prime minister from 2009 to 2011? Why is that so important? Great financial crisis. Greek had to get their bailout. And what was the word? I don't know. Greece went broke. But also, if you look into George's history, his dad was critical during the multiple CIA coups in Greece.
55:31 um during the early period like in the light late 1940s and 50s um when they did the overthrow and they had that council of colonels um his um dad was intimately involved in all of that and not as necessarily a bad guy but he was very involved in it george was um um
55:55 obviously born during that time period because it says it was born in 52 um but his family has been involved in greece politics for a very long time i'm going to try to pick up the pace a little bit because i think we're going to be about an hour and a half today is that okay with you yeah okay i'd like to get a measured pace we've got um one from grenada maurice bishop
56:24 We've got one from Guyana, and this guy's interesting. It's Forbes Burnham. Go ahead. Go ahead. Say what you had to say. I just think it's interesting. He was a prime minister for 17 years and then president for six more. Because he was installed by the CIA. He is the guy, when British first gave Guyana their freedom, the guy that was actually elected, Jedi, however you say his name, Jetty,
56:55 He kept getting elected and the CIA and the British MI6 kept going, no, no, he can't be in charge. And so then they dissolved the government. They did that twice and then he still got elected and they overthrew him and they installed Burnham. And Burnham was basically a dictator during that entire first part of his presidency. And they did the exact same thing. They had to hit squads, all of that crap.
57:24 And if everybody wants to know some more history of Guyana, go to my Twitter homepage, and it's my linked post. And it really talks about that. It's a great little dig I did, I think. So go check it out, people. Nice addition to the conversation, Colonel, as always. We've got one from India, one from Israel, who is Mos Charette, who's the prime minister from 1953 to 1955. Nothing exciting happened in Israel during those years, did it, Colonel? No, not at all. Totally boring.
57:55 We got one from Italy, two from Jamaica. Stop me if you want to talk about anything. Okay. Well, Michael Manley is important because that's another CIA deal. So keep going. That's Jamaica? Yeah. Three from Japan, including Takahashi Kurokiyo, who was the prime minister from 1920 to 1922 and in 1932. This is while Japan is industrializing and becoming a first world military power.
58:25 their rise that was under a alumni of the of the um london school of economics i got one from kenya who's jomo kenyatta 1964-78 14 15 years in power think he's a dictator um well he's also very important because he was um his name comes up a lot in cia documents of them launching activity out of kenya well we had one from libya
59:00 One Saif al-Islam Gaddafi. And he was pretty much the figurehead president of Libya. London School of Economics got in a lot of trouble by having a Gaddafi there because they'd received a 1.5 billion pound donation. Sorry, 1.5 million pound donation from Gaddafi's family. And the students at the London School of Economics thinking because they bought what the media told them about Gaddafi had to be killed. And, you know, so they could turn Libya into it.
59:32 Third World Slave Market. They made a big stir and actually forced the resignation over the director of London School of Economics. That's student activism. But that was Gaddafi. One from Malaysia. They had an elected monarch, a guy by the name of Tuanku Jafar. He was an elected monarch for five years. I'm not sure how that works. Three from Mauritius, one from Nepal, one Nigerian.
1:00:10 Probably a prince. One from Panama. Two from Peru. Two from Poland, including one who was the prime minister of the government in exile during the Cold War. One from Sierra Leone. Two from Singapore, including current president Tharman Shanmugrat... Too many syllables. Can't do it. Yeah, I think it's like six syllables. That's way more than I can do. One from St. Lucia, one of my favorite islands.
1:00:46 Two from Taiwan, including the current president, Tsai Ing-wen. That's interesting, because London School of Economics is all part of the one world government movement, and Taiwan is supposed to be fiercely independent. One from Thailand, one from the island of Togo, and we've got two from the United Kingdom, and I want to talk about one of them. Mr. Clement Attlee, who was the prime minister from 1945 to 1951.
1:01:22 He was the head of the Labor Party from 1935 to 1955. And the first, he was the longest serving labor leader. And I think he was the very first prime minister from labor. 1945, the United Kingdom is almost bankrupt. World War II has just devastated it. And Attlee goes out there and promises all kinds of free stuff. He campaigned. He was aiming for full employment. They called a mixed economy.
1:01:55 and a greatly enlarged system of social services. When they say mixed economy, what they mean is private businesses and nationalized government services, which isn't that different than fascism. I mean, it isn't. This is all based on something called the Beverage Report. William Beverage wrote a report in 1942 about social insurance and allied services, which promised rewards for sacrifice. This is during the middle of the war. Well, who's William Beverage?
1:02:32 Well, he had collaborated on 1909 on something called the Poor Laws Minority Report with none other than Fabian founder Beatrice Webb. So here is 33 years later, implementing the same ideas the Fabians were talking about all the way back in 1884, making its way into office post-World War II to rebuild England for the 20th century. Think the Fabians would have won in England?
1:03:03 The Fabians had installed William Beveridge as the director of the London School of Economics in 1919, and he would stay there until 1937. Think about all those people that went to the London School of Economics while this guy was the director. Now, of course, he was the guy who raised all the money from the Rockefeller Foundation, was Beveridge himself. Interestingly, he was never a member of the Labour Party. He was a liberal, but he was certainly influenced by the Fabians.
1:03:38 So what did they teach? What did they implement? The welfare state, which is known as cradle to grave. The government will take care of you. That's one of labor's biggest selling points. Their motto. What did they create? Oh, I don't know. National what is the National Health Services in 1948, which gave them national tax funded health care. They implemented the National Insurance Act of 1946, which expanded Social Security with unemployment benefits, pensions, sickness benefits and family allowances.
1:04:13 They built over a million new homes despite shortages in materials. They would nationalize the coal industry, electricity and gas, railways, inland transport, iron and steel. They nationalized the Bank of England, which used to be private, and they nationalized civil aviation. They implemented a progressive taxation. This is a Fabian to check in every box here. Yes. So now that we've seen it implemented, how did it work? How has it worked?
1:04:46 The golden age of reconstruction in Europe was considered 1950 to 1973, and that's before inflation slowed everyone down again. So the United Kingdom, once the third biggest economy in the world, saw its GDP grow of that period at 2.4%. Other countries in Europe, France was growing at 4%, West Germany at 5%, and Italy at 4.9%. It didn't work. The United Kingdom would keep slipping down the international rankings. Continental Europe,
1:05:24 caught up and then surpassed it. England's made a little bit of comeback. I think they're back up to number five. A lot of that has to do with socialist policies in France and Italy slowing them down. Yes. How about the National Health Services? The waiting list right now is over 7 million people to get their free health care that you can never get. Anyone from England like the NHS?
1:05:53 In summary, all these benefits that they implemented expanded the cost of everything and didn't eliminate poverty in any way, shape or form. We have now witnessed the Fabian dream implemented and played out in real time and it has failed. But they're going to keep trying to implement it on us and say, oh, you just haven't done it right yet. Or we haven't used the right economic theory or your model is incorrect. They're going to keep trying. They'll never stop. And by the way, America is moving more and more in that direction every year.
1:06:28 I mean, Obamacare, you name it. How's the cost of health care going since Obamacare was implemented? Straight up, everyone? Anybody like your Obamacare? Yeah. Social Security is going to run out of money. Medicare is so full of fraud. It's going to run out anyway. The whole idea, as you look across the field, which we've said repeatedly, is to break the system so that they can build back better.
1:06:59 into their socialist utopia, knowing that it doesn't work as well. But that is the whole thing, is to bring the system down. And that's why when you say, how did that work out for the British? It worked out great for the Fabian model to bring it all crashing down. But this, and you can see this, you just went through that extensive list of it being spread around the world.
1:07:28 And that's just one aspect of it. That's not all of the Rhodes Scholars and all of the other people that we've talked about that's all brainwashed into this Fabian mindset. But as it permeates around the world, their whole agenda was to bring everything that's first world down.
1:07:52 while leaving the third world down so that they can eliminate the sovereign borders. And oh, by the way, as they brought these things down, they've opened the borders that allows all of that mixture so that at the end of the day, they have a one world system without sovereign borders. And they have by default did exactly what they wanted to do. And remember, these are the eugenicist people, the one that's all dead.
1:08:23 Just a little reminder. Hey, Rob, I want to make a comment in the chat, Rob. I don't like a private central bank or a public central bank. I don't like central banks. There's a much better way to create money than to have a central banker, and it reduces the chance of government corruption quite a bit once you get it out of there, or private bank corruption as well. So I'm anti-central bank in total.
1:08:52 There was a really famous debate that happened between the London School of Economics and Cambridge. And this is right after the Great Depression had kicked in. And the London School of Economics, Frederick Hayek, was debating Cambridge apostle John Maynard Keynes on which policies should we implement to get out of the Great Depression. We are going to...
1:09:19 um so we have an austrian theory economist versus a keynesian economist one's big spending the other is free market we're actually going to talk about that debate next week and that's going to segue into um when i say cambridge apostle the uh renee on twitter uh had stumbled upon the apostles um this is a secret society from cambridge we're going to go into a little bit of depth for because they this is a can of worms it's fun
1:09:48 And you're going to see the same darn patterns over and over again. So that's next week's show. So we're going to start out with some economic geekery and then get into some secret societies. Anything else you want to add on our London School of Economics? So I want to close with a blurb because Blair, Tony Blair, is a Fabian as well. As was, I don't know if you know this, but.
1:10:20 The London's mayor, Khan. Yeah, Khan. He's a Fabian. He was actually in charge of the Fabian. He was the chair of the Fabian Society at one point. Did not know. I haven't done my modern day Fabian research yet. So one of the things that was called out when he got elected as mayor.
1:10:46 there was a whole big article that was written about him being a Fabian and being a socialist. In that article, it talked about the society published both Tony Blair's seminal pamphlet on the third way and Lionel Jospin's philosophy of the active state. From Tony Blair's
1:11:13 article, pamphlet on the third state. This is a quote or third way. And for those of you who don't know, that is what is the middle ground. So you have the Fabians on one side, you have the Milners on the other side. So you've got the proverbial left and right. And then the middle ground is called the third way. This is a quote. The third way stands for a modernized social democracy.
1:11:39 Passionate in its commitment to social justice and the goals of the center left, it is founded on the values which have guided progressive politics for more than a century. Democracy, liberty, justice, mutual obligation, and internationalism. It draws vitality from using the two great streams of left of center thought, democratic socialism, and liberals.
1:12:07 whose divorce this century did so much to weaken progressive politics across the West. Liberals asserted the primacy of individual liberty in the market economy. Social Democrats promoted social justice and the state as its main agent. That was written in 1998 by Tony Blair. Nice. Okay, I got one more thing to show you. Okay.
1:12:39 I had my AI research bot put together a timeline of notable London School of Economics alumni who moved into power. And what I wanted to show you was you had a few in the teens and the 20s, right? Not too many. 1930s, you got one. Pretty neat graphics, huh? Mm-hmm. Remember in the 30s in the Depression era caused by a bunch of economists and central bankers?
1:13:10 Then we get to the 40s and all of a sudden in the 50s and we have an explosion of London School of Economics and other people that are famous. Wonder what happened. Who won World War II after all? Yeah. And the 60s. And it's not because they just had more students, people. This is infiltration of all of our institutions. And here we are today. Like the graphics? Yeah, I do. That's pretty cool. Yeah, it took...
1:13:53 It took my robot about 20 minutes to do all this. I don't even think that. It took me longer to type out the instructions than it did for it to calculate it. You got to love it. And it'll be ready. I mean, this thing is so close to being live with a full dashboard and interactive. I may even have it for next week. I don't know. Cool. They don't give me the keys to it until it's 100% ready yet. That's hilarious. Yeah, well.
1:14:22 You've got to get your training wheels off first before they let you drive the big car, right? You're going to have to ship one of the trainers down here to me if I'm ever going to get out of the training wheels. I think you're holding your own pretty well. What do you think about our beavers today? We did a show about beavers. They suck, just like the Oregon beavers do. Yeah, but they don't totally suck because they're not completely devoid of purpose.
1:14:55 they distort the purpose it's just an evil purpose yeah but they had but they had hayek and that's that hayek's one of the best options in school yeah you can't have a thousand bad guys and one good guy and say it's a good thing sorry all right i'm going with the odds i'll see the point on that one but it's just so you know to me it's just you think about how much they've infiltrated everything and we the technocrats are already in position they just haven't
1:15:26 hold the trigger on creating their one world government. They're so close. You know, you see them, you look behind every nook and cranny in government, business, they're there. And that's why it's such a big deal to stop this whole climate scare and why that's reversed and why it's a big deal. But London School of Economics is still beating that drum. But I think that had everything to do with COVID. I think COVID was their vehicle to do that. And because of Trump beating Hillary.
1:15:53 they had to speed that up so they didn't get reelected and totally wrecked their system. I honestly believe that. I think COVID was the tool in the shed to take out, to devastate the entire world, and then roll this whole thing out. Yeah, I'm in bed with that. It's a plausible theory. I've been saying that for years. It's been out there. I think Brian Cates might have been one of the first ones to write about that way back in the day. Yeah, that's entirely possible.
1:16:23 Don't tell him. I'm just teasing. I give him credit where it's due. Oh, me too. Then they had to create a Russiagate to stop Trump. And then they gave us COVID to cover up the Russiagate because Trump was almost there. Then they stole the election to cover up for all of that. First of all, they stole the election to give it to Trump. COVID, then the election. Then they did January 6th to cover up the stolen election. And it's just on and on and on. It's all one big cover up for the next. And it's all tied together.
1:16:52 Just worried about what they're going to do once Trump is gone. That's why the midterms are so darn important. Yeah. I wanted to check something out because I had thought originally that one of the first labor prime ministers happened not that long after the London School of Economics. He obviously wasn't.
1:17:21 a London School of Economics graduate, but he was a Labour Party. I think, yeah, I just found it here. MacDonald. MacDonald was the first Labour Party. Fabian says he started serving in 1924. Okay. So just wanted to correct that. But because I thought it was weird that they had a new political party and came to power so quick.
1:17:50 I remember reading that in the Fabian Freeway. That just seems so odd to me because usually it takes decades. You know what I mean? To grow a political party and then actually be put in power. But not if you've been working on it behind the scenes and infiltrating all the levers. But anyway. Very good. So we've got next week's show planned. And I think after that, we'll show how Fabian jumped the Atlantic.
1:18:20 And then we'll start going through 20th century Fabians, both in America and in Europe. And that'll take us a couple of weeks. And then, well, I guess where do we want to put Pilgrim Society? Do we want to do that in two weeks? We probably do it right after this because it's the same principle. It starts in the UK and jumps over. It probably just a show or two, probably go through the prominent ones on the British side and then their corresponding ones on the American side, just to show that.
1:18:49 consistency because what we're developing here is a pattern. These things get hatched in the UK and immediately within generally 12 months deployed into the United States. You know, it's interesting that we've demonstrated how these British institutions combined with the American institutions and they are really the puppet masters behind the world. And then we've got to go out there and deal with everyone and say, no, the Jews are in the world. I know.
1:19:20 there wasn't a darn jewish name mentioned today that i can recall and right you know so it's prime minister that went to the london school of economics that's probably true that's a pretty good bet i i go with the odds on that but you know what we're showing is it's a globalized system and it's not jewish it's not muslim it's not catholic it's everybody the elite it's what i call the shadow state or the international syndicate yeah it is not
1:19:49 limited to any one tribe, people, whatever. They're everywhere. All those alumni all over the world, they owe their allegiance to the London School of Economics, Fabianism, this globalist thing, climate change. That's where their allegiance is, not to one tiny country in the Middle East. Sorry. And these are the people that are pulling the strings all over the world, whether it be United Nations, World Bank, International Monetary Fund, European Union, you name it. These technocrats.
1:20:18 that have been educated in our finest schools are the ones that are in power. And understand, that's why I mentioned that library and these tracks and everything. Every ounce of information that is produced in the agendas by the London School of Economics and the Fabians in general is pushed into this massive network. They flood them with information.
1:20:44 of keeping them updated on what the next agenda is what so to war hamster's point um at the beginning of the green push all of that information they have this network around the world you can look at the starling um network around the earth and imagine those are all fabians and they're all tied together and they transmit to each other both sideways and horizontally and they speak in a code
1:21:14 This language, a lot of that code comes from the London School of Economics, these theories. Yeah. And what's the espouse of the theories? And, you know, you're with a fellow traveler. That's what they do. And this conduit is constantly pushing out this information. And when they land on a new one, whether it's the eugenicist theme or the climate change theme or.
1:21:41 you know, whatever, their talking points are all handed to them through this network. And the think tanks and the universes. Yeah. And it is a different language. And obviously we don't speak it. We understand it because we hear it all around us and you see all this woke stuff. But, you know, they know it. They know themselves. I don't know. What's the thing in the Bible? You will know me by my whatever. They know each other by their words. And it's almost like a secret handshake. It's almost like a giant secret society. Yes.
1:22:12 All right. Well, everybody, thanks for joining us here on another edition of Secret Society's Operation Gladio and Fabian Society London School of Economics. Go Beavers. Go Beavers. Take care, everybody. Cheers, everyone. Thanks for the great chat.

Entities here

Fabian Society26London School of Economics25Labour Party (UK)9USAID5Tony Blair4Friedrich Hayek3Chile3University of Chicago3George Papandreou3William Beveridge3Chicago Boys3Bank of England2Kwame Nkrumah2Brookings Institution2National Health Service establishment2Italy2Cambridge Apostles2Beatrice Webb2David Rockefeller2Henry Hunt Hutchinson2Ed Miliband2Cambridge University2Harold Laski2George Bernard Shaw2George Mason University2Federal Reserve2Rhodes Trust2Round Table movement2The Third Way2France2University of Indonesia2Forbes Burnham2United Kingdom2Clement Attlee2Watergate scandal1Hugo Chavez1George Soros1Joseph Kennedy Sr.1Elon Musk1Paul Volcker1

Claims made here

George Bernard Shaw founded London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 8:03
“It's going to permeate. You know, we talked about last week, a lot of these Fabians were into homoeroticism and stuff like that. So it just fits so perfect. It does. Great job, Sweet Sally. Thank you.…”
Sidney Webb founded London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 8:03
“It's going to permeate. You know, we talked about last week, a lot of these Fabians were into homoeroticism and stuff like that. So it just fits so perfect. It does. Great job, Sweet Sally. Thank you.…”
Graham Wallas founded London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 8:03
“It's going to permeate. You know, we talked about last week, a lot of these Fabians were into homoeroticism and stuff like that. So it just fits so perfect. It does. Great job, Sweet Sally. Thank you.…”
Henry Hunt Hutchinson funded London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 8:31
“And again, it is called the LSE, London School of Economics, but the real name says London School of Economics and Political Science, which is an oxymoron. Politics is the absolute opposite of science…”
Friedrich Hayek member_of London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 14:56
“like Frederick Hayek to actually teach there for 20 years and thrive alongside socialists. So it was a very healthy academic atmosphere to be around. It was not just you'll be socialist, damn it, or l…”
London School of Economics member_of University of Indonesia host_asserted ▶ 15:56
“Yeah, at the same time, the same thing's going on in America. You know, you've got these robber barons from the Gilded Age, and they are funding the universities where these Fabian ideas are being inj…”
London School of Economics founded Labour Party (UK) host_asserted ▶ 21:06
“The first really successful attempt at a technocratic government was known as the Nazis. When the ends justify the means, there is no limit to what you'll do to human beings. Again, we probably should…”
Henry Kissinger recruited Chicago Boys host_asserted ▶ 25:40
“And Chicago is a focal point for the Fabians from the very beginning when it came into the United States. It found a foothold in Chicago at the University of Chicago. And who did Kissinger deploy to r…”
Chicago Boys carried_out_attack Chile host_asserted ▶ 26:06
“from Chicago, there was a whole team of economists that went down there to mold that government. It is a classic example of what Brady just said. And we can do an entire show on the University of Chic…”
Beatrice Webb founded Labour Party (UK) host_asserted ▶ 28:00
“collective bargaining thank you that's labor economics which they would then would apply all over the world if they wanted to oh i don't know do a little land and resource grab in a third world countr…”
Fabian Society founded League of Social Reconstruction host_asserted ▶ 29:38
“um project and stealthily they planted it here as well but in particular they actually set up a thing called the fabian society of canada it was created by five road scholars and it was dubbed the lea…”
League of Social Reconstruction founded Cooperative Commonwealth Federation host_asserted ▶ 30:06
“of a pro-eugenics political party called cooperative commonwealth federation in 1932 and that's what eventually led to through gradualism to the maid program where they're now just killing people in c…”
Elon Musk member_of Technocratic Party of Canada host_asserted ▶ 30:36
“people that were in it, you see the same model into government, into the municipalities, government, and into the colleges, into the political system, and all those different aspects. Yeah, Rob just s…”
Ed Miliband member_of London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 32:34
“Notable is a gentleman by the name of Ed Miliband. You're familiar with him, of course. He was the former leader of the Labour Party and the Secretary of State for Energy Security and Net Zero. I've t…”
Michael Chertoff member_of London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 34:43
“from the London School of Economics. I pulled this off alphabetically and just pulled the ones that jumped off the page of me. First one, of course, is Michael Chertoff, who was the Secretary of the D…”
Rosa Deloro member_of London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 35:16
“Seriously, brace yourselves because I'm about to scare you. This was also an alumni of London School of Economics. I know who it's going to be. Rosa Delorio. That's an embarrassment. All right, get he…”
Leandra English member_of London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 35:49
“it's an embarrassment uh there's another alumni named leandra english who's the deputy director of liz warren's consumer financial protection bureau basically the shakedown organization london school …”
Edward Feulner member_of London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 35:49
“it's an embarrassment uh there's another alumni named leandra english who's the deputy director of liz warren's consumer financial protection bureau basically the shakedown organization london school …”
Bruce Katz member_of London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 36:58
“It's engineered. Not docile. Complicit. Get your terminology correct. Thank you. A little hotter under the collar talk about this than I expected. It's so pervasive. It's in every nook and cranny of s…”
Eric Garcetti member_of London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 36:58
“It's engineered. Not docile. Complicit. Get your terminology correct. Thank you. A little hotter under the collar talk about this than I expected. It's so pervasive. It's in every nook and cranny of s…”
Monica Lewinsky member_of London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 37:29
“Hmm. Vanessa Carey, the daughter of John Carey. I wonder if she's going to get into politics anytime soon. Bill Clinton's favorite, Monica Lewinsky, London School of Economics. Yep. Should I make a jo…”
Peter Orszag member_of London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 37:29
“Hmm. Vanessa Carey, the daughter of John Carey. I wonder if she's going to get into politics anytime soon. Bill Clinton's favorite, Monica Lewinsky, London School of Economics. Yep. Should I make a jo…”
John Ossoff member_of London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 38:08
“And a fellow at Brookings Institution. Why is Georgetown professor so important? Because half the people that go to work for the government internships come from Georgetown. It's right there in D.C. I…”
Rothschild family funded London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 38:38
“We could go on for about 12 hours on him, but let's hold that off because we've got a few shows that are going to be dedicated to the Rockefellers. Just know that he not only went to the London School…”
David Rockefeller member_of London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 38:38
“We could go on for about 12 hours on him, but let's hold that off because we've got a few shows that are going to be dedicated to the Rockefellers. Just know that he not only went to the London School…”
David Rockefeller funded London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 38:38
“We could go on for about 12 hours on him, but let's hold that off because we've got a few shows that are going to be dedicated to the Rockefellers. Just know that he not only went to the London School…”
Robert Rubin member_of London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 39:45
“We've got a Rajiv Shah, who's the administrator under Obama for something known as USAID. CIA. Mm-hmm. Everybody here knows how bad USAID is. All of our followers, I think, know that. We don't have to…”
Rajiv Shah member_of London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 39:45
“We've got a Rajiv Shah, who's the administrator under Obama for something known as USAID. CIA. Mm-hmm. Everybody here knows how bad USAID is. All of our followers, I think, know that. We don't have to…”
Sanford Ungar member_of London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 39:45
“We've got a Rajiv Shah, who's the administrator under Obama for something known as USAID. CIA. Mm-hmm. Everybody here knows how bad USAID is. All of our followers, I think, know that. We don't have to…”
Paul Volcker member_of London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 40:20
“noticing a pattern they're one in the same Paul Volcker former chair of the federal reserve you wanted to say talk about the end of the Obama uh era 2016 so go ahead and do that now if you don't mind …”
Susan Rice member_of London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 40:51
“had studied at the London School of Economics with the Secretary of State. Well, she wasn't the Secretary of State when he left, but the former, she was a person in his administration. Susan Rice was …”
John F. Kennedy member_of London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 41:18
“people that actually went there that you were going to talk about? I'm done with the Americans. Okay. You know that JFK was there, right? His brother was. He was. I don't have JFK down there. He is. K…”
Harold Laski member_of London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 41:49
“His mentor, because evidently you get assigned one there, they already had documentation of who was going to be assigned to him. It was Harold Lasky. Who's Harold Lasky, Colonel? Harold Lasky is one o…”
Harold Laski member_of Labour Party (UK) host_asserted ▶ 42:14
“a professor there um and he had served as the chairman of the labor party um which was a derivative of um the fabian society um so yeah he was very much as a matter of fact he he talked a lot about ma…”
Joseph Kennedy Sr. member_of London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 42:14
“a professor there um and he had served as the chairman of the labor party um which was a derivative of um the fabian society um so yeah he was very much as a matter of fact he he talked a lot about ma…”
Janet Yellen member_of London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 42:44
“We're just getting started on how influential London School of Economics is on our world. Ursula von der Leyen, the current president of the European Commission, which is the living embodiment of the …”
Ursula von der Leyen member_of London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 42:44
“We're just getting started on how influential London School of Economics is on our world. Ursula von der Leyen, the current president of the European Commission, which is the living embodiment of the …”
Stanley Fischer member_of London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 42:44
“We're just getting started on how influential London School of Economics is on our world. Ursula von der Leyen, the current president of the European Commission, which is the living embodiment of the …”
Mervyn King member_of London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 43:14
“We've got a Mervyn King, Bank of England. Oh, Apui Ungpakron, the governor of the Central Bank of Thailand. Also, of course, you've got to have Nobel Prize winners. You want to talk about the self-lic…”
Apai Ungpakorn member_of London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 43:14
“We've got a Mervyn King, Bank of England. Oh, Apui Ungpakron, the governor of the Central Bank of Thailand. Also, of course, you've got to have Nobel Prize winners. You want to talk about the self-lic…”
Angelina Jolie member_of London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 44:17
“We've got some actors and musicians. Two that jumped off the page were Mick Jagger and somehow Angelina Jolie. That's a head scratcher, isn't it? I'm telling you, these people aren't who they pretend …”
Mick Jagger member_of London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 44:17
“We've got some actors and musicians. Two that jumped off the page were Mick Jagger and somehow Angelina Jolie. That's a head scratcher, isn't it? I'm telling you, these people aren't who they pretend …”
George Soros member_of London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 45:22
“So anyway, I digress. We've had dozens of CEOs of big business, way too many to list. But the big name that screams is, of course, George Soros and his open societies. I mean, if you want to, it's abo…”
Niall Ferguson member_of London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 45:55
“Real big dig on him. I just think it's all out there. So many people have beaten that path. There's no upside for us doing Soros, but he was London School of Economics. Dozens of economists, of course…”
James Hamilton member_of London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 47:04
“A couple of interesting judges jumped off the page of me. It's a judge named James Hamilton, who you probably ran into because he was on the Watergate Committee. Yeah. Think the Watergate Committee ca…”
Anthony Kennedy member_of London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 47:04
“A couple of interesting judges jumped off the page of me. It's a judge named James Hamilton, who you probably ran into because he was on the Watergate Committee. Yeah. Think the Watergate Committee ca…”
Mia Mottley member_of London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 47:40
“Let's get to the heads of state. Heads of state, we would include prime ministers, presidents, some VPs, some royalty, anyone who you call a head of state. And I came up with 59 of them. Does that sou…”
Pierre Trudeau member_of London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 48:13
“We've had one from Benin. Why did we talk about Benin recently? I don't know why. It was just on my radar in the last few weeks. I have to look it up. We've had one from Bulgaria, two from Canada, inc…”
Juan Manuel Santos member_of London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 48:49
“has gone a long ways towards implementing a lot of the homophobian policies. Yep. Two from Colombia, which is interesting because one of them was Juan Manuel Santos, who was their president, I guess, …”
USAID installed Juan Manuel Santos host_asserted ▶ 49:53
“some of the globalists that have been in there. And I think a lot of that has to do with the ending of USAID. It does not. Quit saying that. I was hoping you weren't going to say that. It has nothing …”
Margrethe II of Denmark member_of London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 52:18
“the contra operation that was all done out of costa rica while that guy was in charge very good no good i'm glad you caught that one because i skipped over it yep all right we've got one from denmark …”
Alexander Stubb member_of London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 52:48
“like committed suicide or something. Something happened to the son and her picture was all over social media. And I was like, oh my gosh. Anyway, go ahead. I shouldn't make fun of older people, but I …”
Heinrich Brüning member_of London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 53:23
“Yeah. And they're being run by an alumni of London School of Economics. Interesting. Yes. We've got one from Germany. And it was Heinrich Brüning, Chancellor. Heinrich Brüning, who's the Chancellor fr…”
Jerry Rawlings member_of London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 54:00
“We'll talk about that more next week. I want to say the actual cause of the Great Depression. We'll get into that. So just remember Heinrich Brüning was chancellor in 1930. We've had three London Scho…”
Kwame Nkrumah member_of London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 54:00
“We'll talk about that more next week. I want to say the actual cause of the Great Depression. We'll get into that. So just remember Heinrich Brüning was chancellor in 1930. We've had three London Scho…”
John Atta Mills member_of London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 54:00
“We'll talk about that more next week. I want to say the actual cause of the Great Depression. We'll get into that. So just remember Heinrich Brüning was chancellor in 1930. We've had three London Scho…”
George Papandreou member_of London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 54:31
“So the Konami guy was instrumental for helping the CIA overthrow a whole bunch of governments around that area. Indeed. It's nice to have a friendly president, huh? Yes. We've got a chief minister fro…”
Maurice Bishop member_of London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 55:55
“obviously born during that time period because it says it was born in 52 um but his family has been involved in greece politics for a very long time i'm going to try to pick up the pace a little bit b…”
Forbes Burnham member_of London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 56:24
“We've got one from Guyana, and this guy's interesting. It's Forbes Burnham. Go ahead. Go ahead. Say what you had to say. I just think it's interesting. He was a prime minister for 17 years and then pr…”
Moshe Sharett member_of London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 57:24
“And if everybody wants to know some more history of Guyana, go to my Twitter homepage, and it's my linked post. And it really talks about that. It's a great little dig I did, I think. So go check it o…”
Kuroki Kiyotaka member_of London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 57:55
“We got one from Italy, two from Jamaica. Stop me if you want to talk about anything. Okay. Well, Michael Manley is important because that's another CIA deal. So keep going. That's Jamaica? Yeah. Three…”
Michael Townley member_of London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 57:55
“We got one from Italy, two from Jamaica. Stop me if you want to talk about anything. Okay. Well, Michael Manley is important because that's another CIA deal. So keep going. That's Jamaica? Yeah. Three…”
Jomo Kenyatta member_of London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 58:25
“their rise that was under a alumni of the of the um london school of economics i got one from kenya who's jomo kenyatta 1964-78 14 15 years in power think he's a dictator um well he's also very import…”
Saif al-Islam Gaddafi member_of London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 59:00
“One Saif al-Islam Gaddafi. And he was pretty much the figurehead president of Libya. London School of Economics got in a lot of trouble by having a Gaddafi there because they'd received a 1.5 billion …”
Tuanku Ja'afar member_of London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 59:32
“Third World Slave Market. They made a big stir and actually forced the resignation over the director of London School of Economics. That's student activism. But that was Gaddafi. One from Malaysia. Th…”
Tharman Shanmugaratnam member_of London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 1:00:10
“Probably a prince. One from Panama. Two from Peru. Two from Poland, including one who was the prime minister of the government in exile during the Cold War. One from Sierra Leone. Two from Singapore, …”
Tsai Ing-wen member_of London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 1:00:46
“Two from Taiwan, including the current president, Tsai Ing-wen. That's interesting, because London School of Economics is all part of the one world government movement, and Taiwan is supposed to be fi…”
Clement Attlee member_of London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 1:00:46
“Two from Taiwan, including the current president, Tsai Ing-wen. That's interesting, because London School of Economics is all part of the one world government movement, and Taiwan is supposed to be fi…”
Clement Attlee member_of Labour Party (UK) host_asserted ▶ 1:01:22
“He was the head of the Labor Party from 1935 to 1955. And the first, he was the longest serving labor leader. And I think he was the very first prime minister from labor. 1945, the United Kingdom is a…”
William Beveridge member_of London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 1:01:55
“and a greatly enlarged system of social services. When they say mixed economy, what they mean is private businesses and nationalized government services, which isn't that different than fascism. I mea…”
Beatrice Webb member_of Fabian Society host_asserted ▶ 1:02:32
“Well, he had collaborated on 1909 on something called the Poor Laws Minority Report with none other than Fabian founder Beatrice Webb. So here is 33 years later, implementing the same ideas the Fabian…”
Fabian Society installed William Beveridge host_asserted ▶ 1:03:03
“The Fabians had installed William Beveridge as the director of the London School of Economics in 1919, and he would stay there until 1937. Think about all those people that went to the London School o…”
William Beveridge headed London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 1:03:03
“The Fabians had installed William Beveridge as the director of the London School of Economics in 1919, and he would stay there until 1937. Think about all those people that went to the London School o…”
William Beveridge funded London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 1:03:03
“The Fabians had installed William Beveridge as the director of the London School of Economics in 1919, and he would stay there until 1937. Think about all those people that went to the London School o…”
Labour Party (UK) implemented National Health Service establishment host_asserted ▶ 1:03:38
“So what did they teach? What did they implement? The welfare state, which is known as cradle to grave. The government will take care of you. That's one of labor's biggest selling points. Their motto. …”
Labour Party (UK) implemented National Insurance Act host_asserted ▶ 1:03:38
“So what did they teach? What did they implement? The welfare state, which is known as cradle to grave. The government will take care of you. That's one of labor's biggest selling points. Their motto. …”
Labour Party (UK) nationalized Bank of England host_asserted ▶ 1:04:13
“They built over a million new homes despite shortages in materials. They would nationalize the coal industry, electricity and gas, railways, inland transport, iron and steel. They nationalized the Ban…”
Friedrich Hayek member_of London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 1:08:52
“There was a really famous debate that happened between the London School of Economics and Cambridge. And this is right after the Great Depression had kicked in. And the London School of Economics, Fre…”
John Maynard Keynes member_of Cambridge University host_asserted ▶ 1:08:52
“There was a really famous debate that happened between the London School of Economics and Cambridge. And this is right after the Great Depression had kicked in. And the London School of Economics, Fre…”
John Maynard Keynes member_of Cambridge Apostles host_asserted ▶ 1:08:52
“There was a really famous debate that happened between the London School of Economics and Cambridge. And this is right after the Great Depression had kicked in. And the London School of Economics, Fre…”
Tony Blair member_of Fabian Society host_asserted ▶ 1:09:48
“And you're going to see the same darn patterns over and over again. So that's next week's show. So we're going to start out with some economic geekery and then get into some secret societies. Anything…”
Sadiq Khan member_of Fabian Society host_asserted ▶ 1:10:20
“The London's mayor, Khan. Yeah, Khan. He's a Fabian. He was actually in charge of the Fabian. He was the chair of the Fabian Society at one point. Did not know. I haven't done my modern day Fabian res…”
Fabian Society published The Third Way host_asserted ▶ 1:10:46
“there was a whole big article that was written about him being a Fabian and being a socialist. In that article, it talked about the society published both Tony Blair's seminal pamphlet on the third wa…”
Ramsay MacDonald member_of Labour Party (UK) host_asserted ▶ 1:17:21
“a London School of Economics graduate, but he was a Labour Party. I think, yeah, I just found it here. MacDonald. MacDonald was the first Labour Party. Fabian says he started serving in 1924. Okay. So…”
Ramsay MacDonald member_of Fabian Society host_asserted ▶ 1:17:21
“a London School of Economics graduate, but he was a Labour Party. I think, yeah, I just found it here. MacDonald. MacDonald was the first Labour Party. Fabian says he started serving in 1924. Okay. So…”
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