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The Shadow State 75 The Pilgrims Society

1:11:38 · recorded 2026-06-26 · ▶ watch on Rumble

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Transcript

0:19 We're going to talk about the backstory and the beginning of the Pilgrim Society. We will do at least a couple of shows on the Pilgrim Society because it's so important. And throughout this entire journey, we kind of laid the backdrop for where we are today.
0:42 And we're in the early 1900s going forward. And this is one of the pillars of everything that we've talked about. So I'm so excited about the show. Yeah, so much of what we're living through today, the foundations were set in this exact time period, post-industrialization. And these intellectual elites are challenging all of our fundamental beliefs.
1:11 The ideas expressed by the different factions at this point in time, these are the pillars of the whole 20th century, which of course was the bloodiest century in human history and led us to where we are right now in the 21st century, still fighting off some of the ideas that were hatched right around 1900. Yes. And the Pilgrim Society is a big one. Some of these names are so big, we don't even need to introduce them. And we've mentioned a ton of these before.
1:39 as we talked about other secret societies so the overlap and these quote-unquote dinner clubs which we've been talking about you know this is basically how the world is run and you know dark rooms smoke-filled rooms with cigars and cocktails and these are the people these are the masters of the universe and um they have basically they're the architects of everything we deal with today so no further ado the pilgrims society that was a pilgrim society
2:11 uh back in colonial new england but that's not what this is this is pilgrims plural uh big overview it's found in 1902 by a guy named sir sir harry britain and it was described by american secretary of state i'm sorry ambassador to england joseph choate this is his quote he was founded to promote goodwill good fellowship and everlasting peace between the us and great britain
2:48 I think we're going to make the case that it's anything but what Chote just said. The Pilgrim Society is also known as a dinner club. They always hosted dinner to welcome into office each new ambassador, U.S. ambassador to the United Kingdom. And we've talked about how ambassadorships have been given out and how secret societies like Skull and Bones, basically, they get their people in the important ambassadorships.
3:17 You got to be connected. You got to be part of the club to be an ambassador. And the U.S. ambassador to the U.K. is probably the most important position. So some of the names that have been ambassador to the U.K. that we've talked about before when we were going through secret societies, I just got to give you about eight or nine of them. But there's John Hay and, of course, his grand center, John Hay Whitney of the famous Whitney family. Is that connected enough for you? There's Choate himself.
3:49 Charles Dawes, who we've talked about. Andrew Mellon. Joseph Kennedy, ambassador, you know, the scion of the Kennedy family. Ambassador to the United Kingdom, 1938. Anything going on in the United Kingdom in 1938? We're getting ready to go into a war. This is going to be a common theme to that. Of course, we had W. Averill Harriman, who was the ambassador to England in 1946.
4:20 We talked about him because, well, skull and bones. He also was one of the people that founded Brown Brothers Harriman, which of course financed the Nazis in the first place. And we're going to be, he's the guy that's in London as we're setting up Operation Gladio throughout Europe. And the Marshall Plan. And the Marshall Plan, which funded Operation Gladio initially.
4:50 um that that is so pivotal to um having these people in these places because that's the first um cia station chief was set up under his ambassadorship in london which has played a pivotal role ever since there's another one ambassador uk named winthrop w aldrich
5:21 Oh, isn't that Nelson's namesake? Uh-huh. Me and the guy who put together the meeting on Jekyll Island where we founded the Federal Reserve right before World War I. Hmm. Oh, we've got another one of them in our lineup today, too. Another Aldrich or another? No, another Jekyll Island guy. One last name of the ambassador to the UK was a guy by the name of Elliot Richardson. I only bring him up.
5:49 yeah he was the attorney general of massachusetts when my father-in-law actually worked for him um he would end up being ambassador to uk and i hear i've heard great stories about elliot um from my father-in-law and so he's a neat guy all right why would you set up this dinner club in 1902 let's get to the backstory we previously did a show on cecil rhodes in 1877 he writes something called confession of faith
6:21 He wrote about forming a secret society to extend British rule worldwide. And they would use what is called Chatham House rules, where you don't take notes. That's one of the big things at these dark, smoky rooms. You don't record the conversations. You don't take notes. In Confession of Faith, Rhodes wrote that he wanted to recover the U.S. as part of the empire. He wanted to promote English-speaking dominance to bring peace and progress.
6:52 And he said he viewed Oxford's residential college system as ideal environment for this character building and networking that he proposed. We can think of that as an incubator. Yeah, we can. And Rhodes was thinking about this back in the 1870s. Yes. Rhodes would also do something in 1894 that's had a lot of impact. They formed the British South Africa Company in 1894.
7:27 Basically, the idea was to run the Republic of South Africa as a corporation. And Rhodes' vision was for corporations to run the world, not monarchies. They would keep the monarchies around just for political cover. And of course, that leads immediately to the Boer Wars, which both the Colonel and I have talked quite a bit about. It was so influential. We'll talk a little bit more about that here in a second. It was Rhodes that kept floating the idea that...
8:00 we should give these Americans titles because it's really attractive to them. They like their British titles. And we've got people like Sir Bill Gates, Sir Alexander Haig, Sir Caspar Weinberger, Sir Henry Kissinger. These are American citizens getting knighted in England. And of course, just a reminder that Chief Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court, John Roberts, is a British Sir. Interesting, huh? Yeah.
8:29 So Rhodes writes, we need to reorganize the British Empire. Colonial system is broken politically. There's this big move to home rule. So how can we continue to get access to the resources of our colonies without ruling over them? And he's proposing this corporate umbrella. In Rhodes' eighth and final will in 1899, there were several codicils that were added before his death in 1902. The will basically...
8:58 uh provided for scholarships for outstanding young men from british colonies and dominions and the u.s and germany because they considered us part of their commonwealth rhodes always wanted the crown jewel back at this point in time rhodes is you know he's been uh in business with his biggest lender the rothschilds and you know he's obviously he gets invited to every big party you know he is uh rhodes is a who's who in england probably one of the probably
9:29 Several points in time, the richest man in Europe. Depends on how we measure that. By the way, women got allowed into Rhodes Scholarships not until 1977. Was that the Rhodes Scholarship or the Pilgrim Society? This is the Rhodes Scholarship still. Because that's the same year that they came into the Pilgrim Society too. I didn't even catch that. Yeah. The rest of the will would call for full funding of postgraduate study at Oxford.
10:02 Selection was based on four criteria from the will. I don't want to go into detail on that. Emphasis on creating bonds of friendship and understanding among future leaders. In other words, set up a crony network. And the first scholars would arrive at Oxford in 1903 and 1904. We want to pull this guy up. So let me get a screen share. Oops. Here we go. This, ladies and gentlemen, is W.T. Stead. I think he says it.
10:50 He looks like a mad scientist, doesn't he? He does. A little bit of Karl Marx to him. You can take him down whenever you want. Just wanted to show him. Why do we show him? Well, he was a member of the Pilgrim Society, a pretty influential early one. He was a journalist and known as a social reformer. But he's also a very close confidant of Cecil Rhodes. And they would discuss Rhodes' imperial ideas.
11:18 Steed is also one of the executors and trustees in the will. He would edit and publish a book called The Last Will and Testament of Cecil John Rhodes, which publicized Rhodes' entire vision. That came out in, I believe it was 1902, the year Rhodes died. Interesting that Rhodes dies and the Pilgrim Society is founded two months later. I'm sure that's another one of those coincidences. We're going to see a few of those today. Steed would...
11:49 i guess i'm gonna call him steed not stead steed would be removed as the executor um a few years later because he was um in opposition to the boer war and that matters because someone else took over as the executor which we'll get to steve's also known as a pioneer of what's called investigative journalism with air quotes they also called it new journalism and it basically paved the way for the modern tabloid he's described as the most famous journalist in the british empire
12:22 He influenced how the activist press could be used to influence public opinion and government policy. So can I just refer to him as the first propagandist? Yes, you can. Okay. Yeah, he created something called government by journalism. Yep. Where you can basically get public pressure and pressure politicians through the press and actually change, you know, change a lot. It did some good things.
12:53 He pushed the Steed Act, which was named after him, which actually fighting against child trafficking in the city of London and London itself, which raised the age of consent from 13 to 16. So good job, WT. We appreciate that. And then, of course, he would be the guy behind the subject we're going to close on today, which is the Imperial Press Conference of 1909. So that's Rhodes. We're going to skip away from Rhodes for a little bit and we're going to get to the Milner Group. High overview. There's a lot we can talk about.
13:28 The Milner Group, which is basically Arthur Milner, is descendant from Milner's kindergarten. These are the guys that they recruited in the Boer Wars to basically fulfill pretty much Rhodes' vision of making the world England. They would create what they call the Round Table by 1910. And of course, the Round Table is funded by the Rhodes Trust.
13:57 Well, Milner was a trustee of the Rhodes Foundation from 1905 to 1925. All right. Let's get to our timeline. All right. I still have the mad scientist up. Well, let's get rid of him for now. All right. Here's a little display that my research AI tool has put together. And I'm going to zoom this in a bit. All right. So basically we have the time period of.
14:56 The Pilgrim Society. And we're at 1895. It's called The Great Reproachments going on. British and American elite opinion moves from rivalry towards kinship, making an Anglo-American dining society politically useful and socially plausible. But that's not exactly what's going on in 1895. There's more backstory to it. And if anybody goes on to my X feed.
15:31 The pinned tweet is a story of 1895. And what's going on here is England owns Guyana. Gold is found in the border between Guyana and Venezuela in the Uru River Basin. So, of course, England is going to claim the gold deposit and Venezuela is going to claim it. We're being civilized here. It's 1895 and Venezuela.
16:05 hires a former U.S. ambassador to be their lobbyist and appeals to Grover Cleveland Alexander to back them, citing the Monroe Doctrine of 1825. People of the Monroe Doctrine had never been enforced by America. Monroe said, stay out of the Western Hemisphere in 1825. Seventy years later, England and the rest of Europe are still playing their games. And that's about to change. England's still the most powerful navy in the world. Secretary of State Richard Olney gets involved.
16:42 He was called the Iron Secretary, and he had a big showdown, a bluff between England and the United States. It was getting close to war. We would have gotten our butts kicked on the eastern seaboard because of the English Navy, but basically Richard Olney threatens England and says, okay, that's fine. We've got a 3,000-mile border with your colony of Canada. We'll just invade Canada. That's a stalemate. That ends, basically changes the entire British-American relationship.
17:12 with that showdown they basically left us to the western hemisphere they realized they were too big they were too too busy concentrated on the boer wars and um they couldn't fight on two fronts especially with you know the rising german navy trying to compete with them and the french navy is pretty competitive too so that's what changed the american british relationship was that 1895 dispute over venezuela and guyana and that's why i feature that story uh on my ex it's my pin comment you can get all the details of that um
17:43 that's 1895 and historians which is what basically my ai is reading from says that it was a you know this really peaceful nice great rapprochement well yeah i think if you characterize that um the because from the british perspective it was a huge humiliation to them and they kind of regrouped and gave birth
18:15 to the pilgrim society yeah that event triggered everything we're talking about yes yeah and then that leads you know it's the first time we've ever enforced to enforce the mineral doctrine ever it also opened up a new age of american imperialism three years later what happens spanish-american war we take cuba we've annexed hawaii we take on the philippines all that stuff now america has entered we have entered the age of empire
18:43 and all started at 1895 gold discovery in guyana yep which by the way is the fastest growing gdp country in the world two years running all right so that's a great rapprochement and harry britain shows up did i get a picture of harry um hang on i think i know where it is okay they started having informal discussions and here's harry britain can't see him too well is that up on screen still yeah
19:21 Okay, it's weird. On the Rumble channel, it looks like it disappeared. There it is. Yeah, I took it down because I thought you were going to do a separate picture. Ah, gotcha. So who is Harry Britton? Harry Britton. Here's some of the other big names. And just basically, this is pretty much 18 leading up to the founding. Harry Britton's a journalist, politician, and organizer. Born 1873, dies in 1974. Another one of these intellectuals that live to be 100 years old. Because they don't have a real job.
19:56 He was either drinking baby's blood. He, of course, comes from Oxford. Of course. He would become a journalist. He would work for a guy by the name of Sir Arthur Pearson's Papers. He was a big publisher. We talked earlier about how they were going to use the media. So Britain always wanted to foster closer Anglo-American relations. That's why he found the Pilgrim Society and was a chairman for 17 years.
20:26 He would not resign until 1918 due to parliamentary. He was in parliament. He had duties. But he's also the organizer of what I mentioned earlier, the first imperial press conference in 1909. In World War I, he would go around setting up officers clubs, both for the British and the Americans. He would bring American labor leaders to tour the battlefields. And notably, he's a conservative. A lot of these players were considered conservatives.
20:59 Now, we've been talking about the London School of Economics and the Fabian Society, and these are labor, which you'd think it's right-left, and there is some difference. I bring this up because we're going to get into more talk about the difference between fascism, socialism, communism, because the differences aren't very big. And that's one of the major points we're trying to make with this whole series. But you also have to realize that they insert,
21:31 people into the other parties, which is what we see today. Yeah. Do you want to say anything about the free lead to it, or we should go straight to the founding in London? Yeah, let's just go ahead and go to the founding. Okay. Pilgrims of Great Britain is founded 1902 in July, literally two months after Rhodes died. Okay.
22:11 I'll have to say a quick blurb on the founding. We know why they did it, and we know who some of the attendees are. Do you want me to name any of them, or do you just want to go ahead and go through your list? So, I mean, you can name them. We'll talk about each one of them. Well, the bigger names I had are General Joseph Wheeler, which shows that the military was part of this early on. I had a General Brian Mahon, who was a colonel at the time, a Sir Charles Rawls.
22:41 harry britain himself and of course joseph choate the u.s ambassador those are the ones that brought it down because i didn't see this not passing the baton okay so we talked about harry britain um who was later knighted because we all have to have our royal titles um joseph wheeler is a very interesting guy because he's an american he is not british but he was part of the founding
23:11 of the Pilgrim's Society in Britain. And harkening back to what Warhamster just said, he started out as a military officer in the U.S. Army and fought in the Spanish-American War and specifically in the Philippines.
23:41 That kind of, you know, ties up that loop. And also, he was a Confederate soldier. He is one of the few that then goes on to serve in the U.S. Army after the Civil War. He graduated from West Point, and that's why I use the term West Point Mafia.
24:10 He has a very interesting background. He also served in the U.S. House of Representatives. He was elected to office from a town that was actually named after him, eventually Willer, Alabama. It was Cortland, Alabama at the time. And so he also...
24:39 There was one other thing that I wanted to bring up. Let's see. He had some very interesting military exploits along the way. But I found him extremely interesting from the perspective that he not only fought in our Civil War, but in the Spanish-American War.
25:07 serves in the House of Representatives and somehow ends up in a dinner club in Britain. It's a crazy story. We talked earlier about the dollar princesses, the transatlantic. This is the New England elites and England's royalty class are merging and mixing. And that makes perfect sense, which you just said that he's just another.
25:39 side of that story. Yeah. Okay. So let's talk about, um, general Brian Mahon. Um, he's actually, um, Irish, um, but he served in the British army and, um, he has a kind of very interesting background too, because he, um,
26:05 Served in the conflict in Sudan in the late 1800s. He also served in Egypt in the late 1800s. So this is a guy that was fighting all of the British colonial wars at the time. To Warhamster's earlier point, he served in the Second Boer War.
26:32 that of course is very important um because that's the first um uh documented concentration camp that was set up to put all of the elderly people women and children that all ended up dying um and um he also was um a fellow at the royal geographical society and served in cartoon in
27:01 uh 1903 so he's very much um an imperialist he has um served he also went on to serve in the first world war um and um there was um yeah i think that's um all that i have in my notes um but he ends up in the privy council and we know how important that is especially as an irishman yeah
27:26 And Privy Council would be the smoke-filled room that talks directly to the prime minister. And I guess officially it's to the king. Officially to the king. Yeah, that's the crown's advisors, inner circle. Yeah. So I found this guy extremely interesting, Charles Rolls. And yes, he co-founded the company Rolls-Royce.
27:57 So it's Charles Rolls. He went into business. And by the way, Mahan was a flyer. And so was Charles Roll. And he co-founded the Rolls-Royce company with Henry Royce. And he would go on to die in a plane crash.
28:24 a right flyer. So he attended Eaton. Eaton is kind of one of those equivalents to the prep schools that we talked about in our earlier series. And he was educated at Trinity College in Cambridge. And his big claim to fame is he took the royal couple, Prince George V,
28:54 and Queen Mary on their very first car ride. Fun side story. Do we have any other attendees you want to go into detail on? Well, I had two other strap hangers, but they're kind of important. They came along like the year afterwards. One of them was Field Marshal Lord Frederick Roberts.
29:23 just a quick little blurb on him because i know you're gonna like this part he's also an anglo-irish um family and roberts joined the east indies company army um and served in it um he was part of the second anglo-african war um and he too participated in the second boer war
29:52 So you're seeing a theme there. And let's see. He was also educated at Eton. And he participated in the Indian Rebellion of 1857. So he was also in one of the, you know, the British fought in Afghanistan three different times and lost all three times. He was involved in one in the 1850s.
30:22 60s, one of those conflicts. And let's see. I think that's all I have in my notes on him. And then lastly is James Bryce, who was the British ambassador to the US. He joined that first year in existence as well. And do you have anything?
31:01 Vice versa of what Warhamster mentioned earlier. Probably the key ambassadorship to anyone in Britain is the United States, especially during this period. But I would argue it's been consistently that way. But again, because they're trying to recolonize us, it's critically important. And he was the ambassador from 1907 to 1913. What was happening in 1913?
31:30 Oh, forming of the Federal Reserve, 17th Amendment, 16th Amendment. They gave us the income tax and they lead up to World War I. Yes. And so great summary. He also attended Trinity College at Oxford. He was then elected a fellow at Oriole College at Oxford. He eventually joined the bar.
31:56 And for anyone who understands the importance of that, because they have a very complicated system and you have to be invited to join, which he was, of course. He also, interestingly enough, wrote a book in 1888 called The American Commonwealth. And of course, it's all about talking about how.
32:25 There's so many troubles in America. And basically, you get the what I got out of the summary of the book is they very much were advocates of having America part of the greater British Commonwealth, which is kind of the theme of today. So that's it.
32:52 You know what you just described, this meeting of founding of the Pilgrim Society. We've got people from the military, both sides of the Atlantic. We've got people, diplomats, and we've got people from business. You've just heard the colonel describe the birth of the military industrial complex. Yes. That's what it is. And it's always been Anglo-American from day one, which is why we end up fighting England's wars. And that's right there at the founding of the Pilgrim Society.
33:23 That's why when I found out about the Booker Society, I was like, we have to do it. We have to do it. Because it is such a critical linchpin to the next hundred and twenty five years that is still being written today. That's exactly what we said to start the show. This is the period of time where all the foundations were set. All right. Let me share my screen again. And we get the American branch. It launches in January 1903, basically six months later.
33:57 And they meet at the Waldorf Astoria in New York City. Pretty exclusive. And the people there, of course, is diplomat Joseph Choate, Andrew Carnegie, J.P. Morgan, John Jacob Astor. Oh, just a few small names in American, you know, industrial might. Yeah, DuPont's involved, Rockefeller's, Carnegie's. I bring up J.P. Morgan on this again because he's such a huge part of the story. I've talked recently about the panic of 1907.
34:28 And JP Morgan bailed out the Knickerbocker Trust and basically solved some markets. Immediately after that, in response to the panic of 1907, we get Aldrich, Senator Aldrich, Aldrich-Freeland Act, which basically created a six-year version of the Federal Reserve to create a lender of last resort. Fast forward 1913, England's entering war. We've passed the Federal Reserve Act, but it's not in place yet. So they got a one-year extension on the...
35:00 aldridge vreeland act and that's when jp morgan set up the meetings with england for the american lend lease program to basically give food weapons and everything else and supplies to england and jp morgan got a commission on every single trinket we shipped overseas yep and so you ask whether the federal reserve bank world war one all that stuff was a coincidence and these people are meeting in a pilgrim society quasi-secret society with yeah
35:34 Does that need any more explanation? No, but can I mention one other guy? Yeah. Okay. Morris Jessup. He was also one of the founding members of the American branch. And he also just so happened to be a member of the Jekyll Island Club with J.P. Morgan. Coincidence. Yeah.
36:02 he's an and it's interesting because you don't hear his name very often but he also was a very very wealthy banker um he died in 1908 um but he was a huge um philanthropist he gave a lot of money to the american museum of natural history um and um he's basically was brought up in um
36:30 New York City area. He was born in Connecticut. He set up a company. His banking company was called MK Jessup and Company. He organized the United States Christian Committee during the Civil War. He also was one of the founders of the YMCA in New York.
37:00 He became, let's see, after 1960, became the president of the Five Points House of Industry in New York. And basically that served as like a settlement house for banking. He was big into setting up education for all of the immigrants that the oligarchs were promoting into.
37:28 the United States at the time, which they were all a big advocate of. So that's it. So pretty much all of these people in the American branch were white, Anglo-Saxon Protestants from the East Coast. Let's mention that part of it. Henry Potter, he was one of the original founders here too.
37:57 He was a bishop in the Episcopal Church of the United States. So we've got all bases covered now. Just a friendly reminder to people, most of the Ivy League schools were set up as religious seminaries to start with. The big Protestant churches in America have always had a longstanding relationship with the Ivy League schools and therefore all of the social networks that go along with that.
38:26 And that's the thing, I point out that these people are all wasps from the East Coast. Almost all of these people are from Harvard or Yale. They had the shared fraternities, secret societies, all of that. All these people are the who's who. And it's a who's who of society. You can't put on a fancy ball in a Gilded Age without these same people being there. So you're talking about Britain's elite and America's elite are now forming a secret club, which is basically going to turn into a military and industrial complex.
38:55 They've got all of the industrial and banking might behind them. They drew heavily from the industries of finance. Got to have the banks. Diplomacy. We've talked about that. Publishing. Got to be able to have control of the media. And, of course, philanthropy. And we're going to talk a lot more about foundations pretty soon. But we should call that the guise of philanthropy because these fake charities are basically how they hide their generational wealth while the rest of us pay taxes.
39:26 And this is how they create the things like their NGOs, non-government organizations doing things that the government can't be allowed to be seen doing. This is the public-private corruption that we're all fighting against. That's the philanthropy. And these are the people that are going to be the founders of the Pilgrim Society on this side of the pond. And they did the same thing on the British side. Oh, yeah. Yeah. Intellectual elite. Okay, next screen share.
40:02 All right. So we got through the founding in America. Next big event. OK. The society starts. They hosted something called a naval conference and they started bringing in notable cultural figures. Mark Twain being one of them. And of course, the other name picture I have down there is a guy by the name of Ernest Shackleton, who is the guy who led three expeditions exploring the Antarctic. And that's pretty interesting, too, with you.
40:39 understand some of the theory some of the conspiracy theories regarding antarctica secret military bases yeah and at this time and i think it was like the year after the american one started president grover cleveland actually was a member of it as well okay so this is going to take us to 1909 okay 1909 we have the imperial press conference
41:16 and basically exposes the media later the empire the imperial press conference of 1909 was organized by steed and of course this guy um what did we say earlier i forgot the name um choke i believe it was yeah i'm pulling up one more picture sorry my screen share is always a little bit slow at this conference this uh 1909 it was a pilgrim society big press
42:00 conference, journalist from all over the world. Attending is Lillian Scott Troy. Have you heard of Lillian before? I have. It must have been in, I don't remember, maybe one of Carol Quigley's book. Maybe. This book was written by Michael T. McKibben. You can find Michael McKibben on YouTube.
42:30 Pretty sharp guy. He's been doing videos the last few years. He might be a guy we would enjoy talking to. But basically, Lillian Scott Troy's entire story was buried. And she was the one who exposed the Pilgrim Society for the first time. And it started at that conference in 1909. So he writes the book, Lillian Scott Troy. She unmasked the British Pilgrim Society plot to annex America. Pretty blunt.
43:01 So that's Lillian Scott Troy, but we're going to talk a little bit about that because this is really important. So McKibben writes the book. He has some other interesting things to say. Bear with me one second. Coming up. Okay. McKibben says, was Professor Carol Quigley telling the whole story? Bottom line, no. Quigley didn't just leave holes. He carved out massive craters that derailed generations of truth seekers, feeding them half-truths.
43:54 that explained nothing about the real drivers of the 19th and 20th century geopolitics. Instead of tools for building kinder, more harmonious societies without the endless grind of war, his narrative kept people chasing shadows trapped in a system designed to perpetuate division and control. This is McKibben writing this. And he's a historian. He's the guy who uncovered more than anyone the Lillian Scott Troits story, which we'll get to. But going on, he says, sure. Quigley mapped out the round table and the Rhodes-Milner web.
44:25 but he ghosted the Pilgrim Society entirely. The shattering 1902 dinner club that fused Rockefellers, Morgans, Rothschilds, Carnegies, Barclays, Roots, Churchills, and Roosevelts, and the City of London overlords with their Wall Street puppets. So McKibben probably leans more towards the City of London being the center of all power. And I find it's more dispersed. But they're certainly an important player. That's why we did a whole show on them, right? Right.
44:56 A few more paragraphs, it's worth it. This was an oversight. It was deliberate erasure. Conspiracy diggers have screamed about it for decades. The Pilgrims were the velvet-gloved front for every orchestration Quigley danced around, hosting the deals that sold out sovereignty over brandy and cigars. And his biases? Quigley was a fanboy at heart, gushing in interviews that the cabal was very good and that globalist utopia was inevitable.
45:27 His detectors nailed it. He doled out just enough disclosure to play the hero insider, but held back the kill shots that could have dismantled the beast. Hell, rumors persist that McMillan torched the original plates of Tragedy and Hope post-first print to throttle its spread. Yeah, it got rebooted later, but the damage was done. Bottom line, Quigley's classic limited hangout. Sound familiar? Yes.
45:57 Validating the network's skeleton while whitewashing its blood-soaked soul, minimizing the psychopathic schemes, and burying pioneers like Lillian Scott Troy, who called it out first. He handed over a sketch, not the blueprint, likely because he was neck deep in those elite echo chambers or scared to burn his bridges. Wow. That I thought was worth sharing.
46:22 And that's what's interesting about now that we know all of this information going back, because I just recently reread this Quigley book. And you definitely get that feeling when you read it. It's like they're documenting. But that's like Prouty's book about the CIA. It's the exact same thing. They tell you just enough to make it sound like they're credible, but.
46:51 they basically couch it as, oh, we had to do this because of the communist or we had to do this because of whatever. And once you've read enough books, you can tell the real truth tellers for the ones that are spinning a web. Yeah, it's not that what they're saying is a lie. It's what they leave out. It's where the real truth is. Yes. It's always what they failed. And we've had that criticism of several people over the course of our series. Yes. All right. So Lillian Scott Troy goes to this.
47:20 Pilgrim Society Imperial Press Conference. There, apparently, she gains access to secret documents from the Pilgrim Society. It's supposedly, I guess she publishes those plans in 1912. And in that, she would publish it in something called The Leader, which is a weekly San Francisco magazine. Our guy, Steed, was friends with her. He's the one who invited her to this conference.
47:58 And he might have been the source of some of these documents. We don't know. But Steed was always torn between his loyalty to Rhodes Vision and Lillian's tenacity. So I'll get to that in a second. Finally, in 2012, he waivers and gives her permission to publish. This infuriates people like Morgan, Carnegie, and Rothschild. Why? What she published was supposed to be called the 24-point plan.
48:28 of the Pilgrim Society. Thank you. She describes it as a long-term strategy to re-annex or subordinate the United States to British imperial control without using military force, but instead using financial, political, media, and cultural influence. Sound familiar? Yes, because that's the plan the CIA uses for all the other countries. This is where the military-industrial complex comes from.
49:02 Intelligence is part of this. It's a long-term strategy for Imperial Federation or Anglo-American Union under British elite influence. So you can imagine they're trying to suppress her, but she gets better. She calls the Pilgrim Society the Benedict Arnold Peace Society. Yeah. And she writes an article called The R. Andrew Carnegie's Crafty Method.
49:32 This is one year after Carnegie is the Carnegie Foundation for International Peace has been founded. And right there in their mission statement of the Carnegie Foundation for National Peace, he talks about, well, we've got to get rid of governments, one world government. And she's she's calling that out. These are the most powerful men in the world. So she publishes 24 points of these apparently secret files she has access to. Most of her stuff has been destroyed and buried. Really good researchers have dug it out.
50:03 her original work i i haven't seen the original 24 points and my ai says it's one of those um questionable conspiracy theorists type thing but i think there's enough meat on the bone to share it so among those 24 points control of major american media and wire services to shape public opinion in a pro-british british direction i think they've done that leading up to world war one jp morgan's going around the country
50:37 buying up 25 of the major, biggest newspapers on the East Coast, trying to drum up support to join the British in World War I. J.P. Morgan is a Pilgrim Society founder. Next point, financial domination through British banking networks. And that point, she called out J.P. Morgan specifically. I haven't been part of that whole banking network. I can tell you, the London Financial District is very powerful, but Wall Street is the dog, not the tail.
51:15 at least today. May have been different back then, but the real power is in Wall Street. And that's just from sheer financial dominance. They have so much access to so much more capital. Next point, expanding the power of the U.S. presidency in weakening Congress. Why would they want to do that? We've done that through executive orders, haven't we? A little bit. You know, this is something we call, what is it, the term for the executive that's more powerful than it's supposed to be.
51:49 In many ways, we've messed up the Constitution, but that's them playing around. Why would they want to weaken Congress? Well, it's supposed to be the voice of the people. We can't have that, can we? This is actually one of the listed ones. We want to stack the Supreme Court with judges that are sympathetic to the United Kingdom. Well, there's nothing like knighting a Supreme Court justice guy. Yeah. The current Chief Justice, mind you. Yes.
52:24 But we've had a lot of complaints about our legal system, the judicial tyranny. I've talked quite a bit about this. And it is far too much drifted towards the British common law. And we are not supposed to have common law. We are supposed to have a written constitution. And this is kind of incrementally done to us. And I think it's fair to say our law schools have completely adapted this pilgrim ideology. It's really probably where it comes from.
52:57 They also wrote about one of the points was to use titles and honors and social prestige to co-opt American elites and their families. Once again, Dollar Princesses started all that. We had an American industrialist had all this money, but no rank. So they send their daughters to marry somebody in England who had a sir, his counsel, what have you. And that's kind of how the Anglo-Atlantic relationship is maintained. She used the term the special relationship.
53:30 Pilgrim Society seeks to promote the special relationship in, get ready for this, in writing. She wrote this in 1912. Intelligence, military, and diplomacy. This is exactly what we've been talking about since day one. And I find it funny that they wrote about intelligence. The United States didn't have an intelligence, any operation during peacetime at all. We had corporate intelligence. Correct. In the form of...
54:02 Sullivan and Cromwell. And the Pinkertons. Indeed. But they're back there in 1909 trying to get this special relationship in intelligence. And we know about the military and the diplomacy we've already talked about. MI5 is founded in 1905, I believe. MI6 shortly thereafter. The relationship between MI6 and the CIA, I mean, you know, originally OSS up in World War II was basically they synced immediately.
54:35 And that was due to the academic nature of what intelligence was, the ties from the major universities that were already incestuous, you know, with professors going back and forth from the Ivy League to England. Right. That's why the intelligence networks synced so perfectly in World War II. Next point, rewriting or softening American history, especially the revolution in education and culture. Think they did that? Today.
55:07 Texas was proposed to delete the revolution from even being taught in Texas. I saw that just yesterday. Yeah. They got that one. Well, she pointed out, yeah, this is why Carnegie spent millions of dollars on libraries. So, yeah, it's his philanthropy. Oh, I want to help kids read. Now, what you wanted to do is figure out which books would be allowed to be read. You wanted to censor. That's exactly what that was. Yes. This is why.
55:39 Robert Maxwell bought up all the publishing in the 50s. This plan's been going on for a century, people. Yes. That's why we have to work so hard to get real history to you. Next point. Economic integration and dependency that would erode U.S. sovereignty over time. Not quite there yet. And of course, we have to have infiltration of universities, think tanks, and foundations.
56:16 So the Pilgrims wanted to send out to influence all of those things in order to reabsorb America into the Anglo-American empire behind our backs without a vote. They've been implementing this for a century as they get us into wars all over the world for the benefit of their corporate sponsors, sending in the military industrial intelligence complex, using our diplomacy, brainwashing us with their think tanks and foundations, controlling what our children read and learn.
56:47 Nice work if you can get it. So our boy Steed. Are you done with her points? That was it for the points, yeah. So there's also one in there that talks about a strong campaign must be waged to any congressman or senator showing hostility to Great Britain. And I find it interesting since you already just mentioned that the change.
57:28 to how we elect senators so that we can buy them happened right around the same time. Interesting, huh? Yeah. And apparently there's even one that says the wives and daughters of men controlling great wealth and influence in America must be given preference at these quote unquote courts, which goes right to your point about the penny princesses.
57:59 Oh my God, this is hysterical. So as she's gathering all this information somehow from networking with among all these people, sorry, Steve is trying to keep her from publishing. Thinks it's a very bad idea because he's still loyal to Rose. However, her tenacity finally convinced her and he allows her to publish in 1912. Here, just pisses off the big names. Two months later.
58:36 He would die on the Titanic just two months after she published that big expose. Remember who owns the Titanic? J.P. Morgan. My God, you just can't make this shit up. It's got to be a coincidence. I'm sure it is. There's more to her, and she's worth talking about. In 1913, she was deeply into exposing what she called a plot with Carnegie and King Edward VII.
59:11 to accelerate the British annexation of America. And she said that they were in collusion with people like J.P. Morgan, Elihu Root, Woodrow Wilson, which means Colonel House. Woodrow Wilson, of course, was a Fabian. And Lord Rothschild's, of course, involved in this whole plot as well. Remember who Elihu Root is, people? Remind them. Pretty big reason we got involved in World War I. Yep.
59:42 She was also a suffragette. MI5, which was formed in 1909, it says I put here, puts her under surveillance. Of course they do. She's obviously anti-war, pro-women's rights, pro-children's, all that sort of stuff. And she's very loud about it. But she gets deported from England in 1919, just weeks before they signed the deed on the League of Nations, which she was critical of. And who put the League of Nations together? Pilgrim Society.
1:00:18 But she comes back to the United States and she does not relent. In the 1940 congressional record, and I should have brought this with us, she gets a 17-part series on the Pilgrim Society read into the congressional record. And it's titled, Steps Towards British Union, a World State and International Strife. So can I make a observation?
1:00:53 That just occurred to me. As controversial as it will be. Everything that we just described is currently being done to the United States by Israel. And who created Israel? Balfour Declaration. The Brits. Yes. So are they just the proxy for them? I don't know.
1:01:30 You just laid out in her entire agenda of basically annexing and controlling the United States is duplicated today by the state of Israel, which was created by Britain. The whole Anglo-American thing. Of course, we know about the unholy alliance between the Israeli Mossad, MI5 and CIA. I mean, that's just that's just that's there since day one.
1:02:00 And the people who call the shots at the intelligence agencies are these people that are on things like the Pilgrim Society. Yes. These dark, smoky rooms. And they don't care about borders. They want their one world Anglo-American government. Yes. 1941, she actually reveals that Steed's late disavowal of the annexation plot. Basically, he disavowed Rhodes and the goal to.
1:02:33 The goal to take over America. And that's why Steed actually ended up being a hero. And deadly. This really cemented her legacy as a whistleblower. And one of the original great whistleblowers. Most of her story is just absolutely buried. Yeah, I'm going to go buy that book. There's an article written by Anonymous Patriots, which is, I guess, a blogger.
1:03:09 What have you, researcher. This is written April 5th, 2025. Name of the article is Lillian Scott Troy, the fearless voice against the Benedict Arnold Society. Her story, once buried by history's gatekeepers, is resurfacing. Lillian was perhaps the first general in a modern information war, a woman who saw the enemy within and refused to back down.
1:03:41 Lillian Scott Troy, an absolute freaking hero. Yeah, that's crazy. So that kind of tees us up for going through all the events that the Pilgrim Society impacted. We'll go from World War I to the Sea Council foreign relations, Treaty of Versailles, all the stuff in 1919, 1921. Talk about appeasement, 1930s. How were they involved in the buildup?
1:04:15 Churchill's Address to the Pilgrims in 1941. We're going to go through all that next week. And we'll highlight some of the more important pilgrims. But some of these names are so well known, we don't have to give you any bio because you've known them your entire life. Yep. And that's kind of the strategy for next week, I think. Sounds good to me. So pretty good round one on pilgrims. Everyone knows exactly what they were out to do and how successful they've been. I agree.
1:04:44 To me, it really is. It's a military-industrial intelligence complex, which brings up our old story about Yankees and Cowboys. These people are all Yankees, but remember when the military contractors and computers all moved south to Texas and California, the Cowboys came on the scene, and they started having a bigger say in foreign policy. That's downstream from the bushes.
1:05:14 They're basically just a satellite office of the Yankees. I know they try to portray them as almost like competitors, but if you look at the oil barons originally, they all still had the banking relationships with the Standard Oil and the J.P. Morgans and the Astors and all of that. To me, it was just like...
1:05:40 okay, we've got the financial piece here. We're going to put the oil piece down here and we're going to put the IT piece out here so that we can kind of dominate the entire country. I think you still get a different divided class because you got old money versus new money. Oh, sure. The old money is, they'll let you come to the party, but they may not let you stay for dessert. There's definitely snobbery in it. But the point is that the people, I don't,
1:06:11 Let me ask you this. How do you think the people in Texas could have ever survived initially without the people in New York? Do you want me to answer that? Yeah. You're talking about the financial survival? Yeah, because that's the same thing with the IT. When it was given birth out in the California area, they were still depending on the old money.
1:06:45 Texas is slightly different than most of the oil development because of the wildcatters. And it's an interesting history. They did not rely as much on all Wall Street money because there was a ton of investment going on into the wildcatting operations. And the wildcatters, you'd hit big. Then you could get the Wall Street money. But, yeah, it's a mixed bag on that just because, like I said, West Texas has a strange history. I wanted to share something.
1:07:18 To end on a good note, everything we're talking about here is defending our way of life, our freedom, our ability to make our own choices against this pervasive oligarchy and aristocracy that wants to take that away from us and impose socialism on us of any way, shape, or some manner of ism so they have total control. And that's really why we're doing all this. And I found a really brilliant sign, and it's written by a guy by the name of...
1:07:49 Dean Alfonge, A-L-F-A-N-G-E. And you guys ought to look this guy up. He's an interesting character. But I wanted to share this with you and leave on a good note today. This is called The American's Creed. I do not choose to be a common man. It is my right to be uncommon. I seek opportunity to develop whatever talents God gave me, not security. I do not wish to be a kept citizen, humbled and dulled.
1:08:21 by having a state look after me. I want to take the calculated risk to dream and to build, to fail and to succeed. I refuse to barter incentive for a dole. I prefer the challenges of life to the guaranteed existence, the thrill of fulfillment to the stale calm of utopia. I will not trade freedom for beneficence, nor my dignity for a handout. I will never cower before any earthly master.
1:08:52 nor bend to any threat. It is my heritage to stand direct, proud, and unafraid, to think and act myself, enjoy the benefit of my creations, and to face the world boldly and say, this, with God's help, I have done. And this is what it means to be an American. Yeah, I need to repost that. That's awesome. Amen, huh? Amen. And that's why we're doing this. People want to take away that freedom that our forefathers gave us.
1:09:23 You know, that's why I do all this homework is exactly what he said right there. Yep. I love that. Freedom to fail. You got it, Rob. I get goosebumps reading the American Creed and I will post that on X right now. Awesome. All right, everyone. Thank you for joining us on our initial show of the Pilgrim Society and join us next week as we take another bite at this apple because it is a very big apple.
1:09:58 Yeah, it is. It tells a lot. Interesting characters throughout. But again, 20th century, all shaped in this time period, right around 1900. And that's why we went through the Fabians first in the London School of Economics, because these tendrils, there's so many heads on this hydra. But once you figure out what they are and what they look like, then it's a lot easier to bring that to today.
1:10:28 and understand what you're seeing i can't wait to get to the rockefellers i know i know i keep so that's kind of the funny behind the scenes with war hamster and i um you know he had his set of things and i had my set and we've been able to weave those together chronologically in order to
1:10:56 um because there's areas of expertise on both sides and i just i really really love this journey yeah that's it's fun it's fun and you know we both we've both been learning you know alongside everyone watching you know i mean i i had you know when we first talked over three years ago i had a pretty good grasp on most of these things we're talking about but i've had to go deeper just to you know to get ready for these shows so i've enjoyed that part of it yep me too all right everyone thanks for joining us see you next week
1:11:26 Cheers.

Entities here

Pilgrims Society25United States22Lillian Scott Troy15United Kingdom14J.P. Morgan10Cecil Rhodes9Joseph Wheeler7Cyril Falls6Harry Brittain6Imperial Press Conference of 19096World War II6W. T. Stead6Brian May6Andrew Carnegie6Michael T. McKibben6Joseph Choate5Boer War5Philip Henry Wicksteed5Venezuela Crisis of 18955Venezuela4Federal Reserve4New York City4James Bryce4Charles Rolls4Texas A&M3Guyana324-point plan3Spanish-American War3Walter Rothschild3Morris K. Jesup3Frederick Roberts3Carnegie Endowment for International Peace2Confession of Faith2London2Antarctica2Skull and Bones2Rhodes Trust2Averell Harriman2Privy Council2Milner Group2

Claims made here

Harry Brittain founded Pilgrims Society host_asserted ▶ 2:11
“uh back in colonial new england but that's not what this is this is pilgrims plural uh big overview it's found in 1902 by a guy named sir sir harry britain and it was described by american secretary o…”
Joseph Kennedy Sr. member_of Pilgrims Society host_asserted ▶ 3:17
“You got to be connected. You got to be part of the club to be an ambassador. And the U.S. ambassador to the U.K. is probably the most important position. So some of the names that have been ambassador…”
John Hay Whitney member_of Pilgrims Society host_asserted ▶ 3:17
“You got to be connected. You got to be part of the club to be an ambassador. And the U.S. ambassador to the U.K. is probably the most important position. So some of the names that have been ambassador…”
Charles Fawes member_of Pilgrims Society host_asserted ▶ 3:17
“You got to be connected. You got to be part of the club to be an ambassador. And the U.S. ambassador to the U.K. is probably the most important position. So some of the names that have been ambassador…”
Andrew Mellon member_of Pilgrims Society host_asserted ▶ 3:17
“You got to be connected. You got to be part of the club to be an ambassador. And the U.S. ambassador to the U.K. is probably the most important position. So some of the names that have been ambassador…”
Averell Harriman member_of Pilgrims Society host_asserted ▶ 3:17
“You got to be connected. You got to be part of the club to be an ambassador. And the U.S. ambassador to the U.K. is probably the most important position. So some of the names that have been ambassador…”
Marshall Plan funded Operation Gladio host_asserted ▶ 4:20
“We talked about him because, well, skull and bones. He also was one of the people that founded Brown Brothers Harriman, which of course financed the Nazis in the first place. And we're going to be, he…”
Brown Brothers Harriman financed_via Operation Gladio host_asserted ▶ 4:20
“We talked about him because, well, skull and bones. He also was one of the people that founded Brown Brothers Harriman, which of course financed the Nazis in the first place. And we're going to be, he…”
Averell Harriman founded Brown Brothers Harriman host_asserted ▶ 4:20
“We talked about him because, well, skull and bones. He also was one of the people that founded Brown Brothers Harriman, which of course financed the Nazis in the first place. And we're going to be, he…”
Winthrop Aldridge member_of Pilgrims Society host_asserted ▶ 4:50
“um that that is so pivotal to um having these people in these places because that's the first um cia station chief was set up under his ambassadorship in london which has played a pivotal role ever si…”
Elliot Richardson member_of Pilgrims Society host_asserted ▶ 5:21
“Oh, isn't that Nelson's namesake? Uh-huh. Me and the guy who put together the meeting on Jekyll Island where we founded the Federal Reserve right before World War I. Hmm. Oh, we've got another one of …”
Cecil Rhodes founded British South Africa Police host_asserted ▶ 6:52
“And he said he viewed Oxford's residential college system as ideal environment for this character building and networking that he proposed. We can think of that as an incubator. Yeah, we can. And Rhod…”
Cecil Rhodes founded Rhodes Scholarship host_asserted ▶ 9:29
“Several points in time, the richest man in Europe. Depends on how we measure that. By the way, women got allowed into Rhodes Scholarships not until 1977. Was that the Rhodes Scholarship or the Pilgrim…”
W. T. Stead member_of Pilgrims Society host_asserted ▶ 10:50
“He looks like a mad scientist, doesn't he? He does. A little bit of Karl Marx to him. You can take him down whenever you want. Just wanted to show him. Why do we show him? Well, he was a member of the…”
W. T. Stead member_of Milner Group host_asserted ▶ 11:18
“Steed is also one of the executors and trustees in the will. He would edit and publish a book called The Last Will and Testament of Cecil John Rhodes, which publicized Rhodes' entire vision. That came…”
W. T. Stead exposed Cecil Rhodes host_asserted ▶ 11:18
“Steed is also one of the executors and trustees in the will. He would edit and publish a book called The Last Will and Testament of Cecil John Rhodes, which publicized Rhodes' entire vision. That came…”
Milner Group founded British Roundtable host_asserted ▶ 13:28
“The Milner Group, which is basically Arthur Milner, is descendant from Milner's kindergarten. These are the guys that they recruited in the Boer Wars to basically fulfill pretty much Rhodes' vision of…”
Rhodes Trust funded British Roundtable host_asserted ▶ 13:28
“The Milner Group, which is basically Arthur Milner, is descendant from Milner's kindergarten. These are the guys that they recruited in the Boer Wars to basically fulfill pretty much Rhodes' vision of…”
Alfred Milner member_of Rhodes Trust host_asserted ▶ 13:57
“Well, Milner was a trustee of the Rhodes Foundation from 1905 to 1925. All right. Let's get to our timeline. All right. I still have the mad scientist up. Well, let's get rid of him for now. All right…”
Joseph Wheeler member_of Pilgrims Society host_asserted ▶ 22:11
“I'll have to say a quick blurb on the founding. We know why they did it, and we know who some of the attendees are. Do you want me to name any of them, or do you just want to go ahead and go through y…”
Joseph Choate member_of Pilgrims Society host_asserted ▶ 22:41
“harry britain himself and of course joseph choate the u.s ambassador those are the ones that brought it down because i didn't see this not passing the baton okay so we talked about harry britain um wh…”
Charles Rolls member_of Pilgrims Society host_asserted ▶ 22:41
“harry britain himself and of course joseph choate the u.s ambassador those are the ones that brought it down because i didn't see this not passing the baton okay so we talked about harry britain um wh…”
Brian May member_of Pilgrims Society host_asserted ▶ 22:41
“harry britain himself and of course joseph choate the u.s ambassador those are the ones that brought it down because i didn't see this not passing the baton okay so we talked about harry britain um wh…”
Charles Rolls founded Rolls-Royce host_asserted ▶ 27:57
“So it's Charles Rolls. He went into business. And by the way, Mahan was a flyer. And so was Charles Roll. And he co-founded the Rolls-Royce company with Henry Royce. And he would go on to die in a pla…”
Henry Royce founded Rolls-Royce host_asserted ▶ 27:57
“So it's Charles Rolls. He went into business. And by the way, Mahan was a flyer. And so was Charles Roll. And he co-founded the Rolls-Royce company with Henry Royce. And he would go on to die in a pla…”
Frederick Roberts member_of Pilgrims Society host_asserted ▶ 28:54
“and Queen Mary on their very first car ride. Fun side story. Do we have any other attendees you want to go into detail on? Well, I had two other strap hangers, but they're kind of important. They came…”
James Bryce member_of Pilgrims Society host_asserted ▶ 30:22
“60s, one of those conflicts. And let's see. I think that's all I have in my notes on him. And then lastly is James Bryce, who was the British ambassador to the US. He joined that first year in existen…”
J.P. Morgan funded Knickerbocker Trust Company host_asserted ▶ 34:28
“And JP Morgan bailed out the Knickerbocker Trust and basically solved some markets. Immediately after that, in response to the panic of 1907, we get Aldrich, Senator Aldrich, Aldrich-Freeland Act, whi…”
J.P. Morgan funded United Kingdom host_asserted ▶ 35:00
“aldridge vreeland act and that's when jp morgan set up the meetings with england for the american lend lease program to basically give food weapons and everything else and supplies to england and jp m…”
Morris K. Jesup member_of Jekyll Island host_asserted ▶ 35:34
“Does that need any more explanation? No, but can I mention one other guy? Yeah. Okay. Morris Jessup. He was also one of the founding members of the American branch. And he also just so happened to be …”
Morris K. Jesup member_of Pilgrims Society host_asserted ▶ 35:34
“Does that need any more explanation? No, but can I mention one other guy? Yeah. Okay. Morris Jessup. He was also one of the founding members of the American branch. And he also just so happened to be …”
Morris K. Jesup funded American Museum of Natural History host_asserted ▶ 36:02
“he's an and it's interesting because you don't hear his name very often but he also was a very very wealthy banker um he died in 1908 um but he was a huge um philanthropist he gave a lot of money to t…”
Morris K. Jesup founded YMCA host_asserted ▶ 36:30
“New York City area. He was born in Connecticut. He set up a company. His banking company was called MK Jessup and Company. He organized the United States Christian Committee during the Civil War. He a…”
Henry C. Potter member_of Pilgrims Society host_asserted ▶ 37:28
“the United States at the time, which they were all a big advocate of. So that's it. So pretty much all of these people in the American branch were white, Anglo-Saxon Protestants from the East Coast. L…”
Grover Cleveland member_of Pilgrims Society host_asserted ▶ 40:39
“understand some of the theory some of the conspiracy theories regarding antarctica secret military bases yeah and at this time and i think it was like the year after the american one started president…”
Philip Henry Wicksteed organized Imperial Press Conference of 1909 host_asserted ▶ 41:16
“and basically exposes the media later the empire the imperial press conference of 1909 was organized by steed and of course this guy um what did we say earlier i forgot the name um choke i believe it …”
Lillian Scott Troy exposed Pilgrims Society book_quoted ▶ 42:30
“Pretty sharp guy. He's been doing videos the last few years. He might be a guy we would enjoy talking to. But basically, Lillian Scott Troy's entire story was buried. And she was the one who exposed t…”
Michael T. McKibben exposed Lillian Scott Troy host_asserted ▶ 43:54
“that explained nothing about the real drivers of the 19th and 20th century geopolitics. Instead of tools for building kinder, more harmonious societies without the endless grind of war, his narrative …”
Cyril Falls covered_up Pilgrims Society book_quoted ▶ 44:25
“but he ghosted the Pilgrim Society entirely. The shattering 1902 dinner club that fused Rockefellers, Morgans, Rothschilds, Carnegies, Barclays, Roots, Churchills, and Roosevelts, and the City of Lond…”
Philip Henry Wicksteed member_of Pilgrims Society host_asserted ▶ 47:20
“Pilgrim Society Imperial Press Conference. There, apparently, she gains access to secret documents from the Pilgrim Society. It's supposedly, I guess she publishes those plans in 1912. And in that, sh…”
24-point plan targeted_for_regime_change United States host_asserted ▶ 48:28
“of the Pilgrim Society. Thank you. She describes it as a long-term strategy to re-annex or subordinate the United States to British imperial control without using military force, but instead using fin…”
Lillian Scott Troy exposed Andrew Carnegie host_asserted ▶ 49:02
“Intelligence is part of this. It's a long-term strategy for Imperial Federation or Anglo-American Union under British elite influence. So you can imagine they're trying to suppress her, but she gets b…”
Andrew Carnegie funded Carnegie Endowment for International Peace host_asserted ▶ 49:32
“This is one year after Carnegie is the Carnegie Foundation for International Peace has been founded. And right there in their mission statement of the Carnegie Foundation for National Peace, he talks …”
Lillian Scott Troy exposed 24-point plan host_asserted ▶ 49:32
“This is one year after Carnegie is the Carnegie Foundation for International Peace has been founded. And right there in their mission statement of the Carnegie Foundation for National Peace, he talks …”
J.P. Morgan funded United Kingdom host_asserted ▶ 50:37
“buying up 25 of the major, biggest newspapers on the East Coast, trying to drum up support to join the British in World War I. J.P. Morgan is a Pilgrim Society founder. Next point, financial dominatio…”
J.P. Morgan member_of Pilgrims Society host_asserted ▶ 50:37
“buying up 25 of the major, biggest newspapers on the East Coast, trying to drum up support to join the British in World War I. J.P. Morgan is a Pilgrim Society founder. Next point, financial dominatio…”
Philip Henry Wicksteed covered_up Lillian Scott Troy host_asserted ▶ 57:59
“Oh my God, this is hysterical. So as she's gathering all this information somehow from networking with among all these people, sorry, Steve is trying to keep her from publishing. Thinks it's a very ba…”
Philip Henry Wicksteed exposed Pilgrims Society host_asserted ▶ 57:59
“Oh my God, this is hysterical. So as she's gathering all this information somehow from networking with among all these people, sorry, Steve is trying to keep her from publishing. Thinks it's a very ba…”
J.P. Morgan secretly_owned Sinking of the Titanic host_asserted ▶ 58:36
“He would die on the Titanic just two months after she published that big expose. Remember who owns the Titanic? J.P. Morgan. My God, you just can't make this shit up. It's got to be a coincidence. I'm…”
Lillian Scott Troy exposed Andrew Carnegie host_asserted ▶ 58:36
“He would die on the Titanic just two months after she published that big expose. Remember who owns the Titanic? J.P. Morgan. My God, you just can't make this shit up. It's got to be a coincidence. I'm…”
Lillian Scott Troy exposed Edward VII host_asserted ▶ 58:36
“He would die on the Titanic just two months after she published that big expose. Remember who owns the Titanic? J.P. Morgan. My God, you just can't make this shit up. It's got to be a coincidence. I'm…”
Lillian Scott Troy exposed Woodrow Wilson host_asserted ▶ 59:11
“to accelerate the British annexation of America. And she said that they were in collusion with people like J.P. Morgan, Elihu Root, Woodrow Wilson, which means Colonel House. Woodrow Wilson, of course…”
Lillian Scott Troy exposed Elihu Root host_asserted ▶ 59:11
“to accelerate the British annexation of America. And she said that they were in collusion with people like J.P. Morgan, Elihu Root, Woodrow Wilson, which means Colonel House. Woodrow Wilson, of course…”
Lillian Scott Troy exposed Walter Rothschild host_asserted ▶ 59:11
“to accelerate the British annexation of America. And she said that they were in collusion with people like J.P. Morgan, Elihu Root, Woodrow Wilson, which means Colonel House. Woodrow Wilson, of course…”
Lillian Scott Troy exposed J.P. Morgan host_asserted ▶ 59:11
“to accelerate the British annexation of America. And she said that they were in collusion with people like J.P. Morgan, Elihu Root, Woodrow Wilson, which means Colonel House. Woodrow Wilson, of course…”
United Kingdom removed_from_power Lillian Scott Troy host_asserted ▶ 59:42
“She was also a suffragette. MI5, which was formed in 1909, it says I put here, puts her under surveillance. Of course they do. She's obviously anti-war, pro-women's rights, pro-children's, all that so…”
Pilgrims Society founded League of Nations host_asserted ▶ 59:42
“She was also a suffragette. MI5, which was formed in 1909, it says I put here, puts her under surveillance. Of course they do. She's obviously anti-war, pro-women's rights, pro-children's, all that so…”
Lillian Scott Troy exposed Pilgrims Society documented ▶ 1:00:18
“But she comes back to the United States and she does not relent. In the 1940 congressional record, and I should have brought this with us, she gets a 17-part series on the Pilgrim Society read into th…”
United Kingdom founded Israel host_asserted ▶ 1:00:53
“That just occurred to me. As controversial as it will be. Everything that we just described is currently being done to the United States by Israel. And who created Israel? Balfour Declaration. The Bri…”
Mossad member_of Pilgrims Society host_asserted ▶ 1:01:30
“You just laid out in her entire agenda of basically annexing and controlling the United States is duplicated today by the state of Israel, which was created by Britain. The whole Anglo-American thing.…”
Philip Henry Wicksteed exposed Pilgrims Society host_asserted ▶ 1:02:00
“And the people who call the shots at the intelligence agencies are these people that are on things like the Pilgrim Society. Yes. These dark, smoky rooms. And they don't care about borders. They want …”
Dean Alfange founded The American Spy host_asserted ▶ 1:07:18
“To end on a good note, everything we're talking about here is defending our way of life, our freedom, our ability to make our own choices against this pervasive oligarchy and aristocracy that wants to…”
Fabian Society member_of London School of Economics host_asserted ▶ 1:09:58
“Yeah, it is. It tells a lot. Interesting characters throughout. But again, 20th century, all shaped in this time period, right around 1900. And that's why we went through the Fabians first in the Lond…”
Credits

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

Colonel Towner-Watkins X Rumble
War_Hamster Brady X Rumble