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Castro - Rockefeller Installed Actor to Control Sugar Prices "Mirror"

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This video/audio was created by Tim Kelly. It is one of the few interviews available of Servando Gonzales. I unashamedly "Stole it" from Tim's Youtube Channel. I will spend eternity in Hell for my transgressions. Notice "transgressions" is plural. I am a sinner and although not proud, it is one of the few things I do well. You will find evidence of my crimes all over my channel...however, I do appreciate 153.News and vow to stop pissing in the pool from this point forward. Furthermore, as time permits, I will review previous posts and make adjustments and / or deletions where required. Apologies to 153News.

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Welcome to our interesting times with host Timothy Kelly, who interviews today's top alternative and revisionist thinkers. May you live in interesting times. I guess not just to Vando Gonzalez, he's a Cuban-born American writer. He received his training as historian at the University of Havana. He has written books, essays, articles, and multimedia on Cuban and Latin American history, intelligence, and espionage, semianotics, hypertext and art history. His articles have been published in many magazines, newspapers and websites in the United States and abroad. Svonder is the author of many books including the Nuclear Deception, the Ketakruščov, and the Cuban Missile Crisis. Psychological Warfare, the new World of Order, the secret war against the American people, and the most recent, I dare call it treason, the Council of Foreign Relations and the betrayal of America. So, Vando, how are you doing this evening? I'm fine, Tim. Thank you for inviting me to your interesting times. As you know, it's a Chinese cross. I was telling you that I have lived on the democracy and on the totalitarian dictatorship. And the change from democracy to the dictatorship was almost unnoticed. But then the change from the dictatorship to the totalitarian dictatorship in Cuba was really bad. And I'm seeing that the... is a repetition. So the Chinese curse had trapped me. Well, first, I'm just certainly welcome and thank you for coming on the show. Now, thanks to you. Now, the main focus of the show, tonight's show, although we may talk about other things, as the discussion progresses, is your book, Psychological Warfare and the New World Order, the secret war against the American people, where you put forth and was interesting thesis regarding the true character and purpose of Fiddle Castro, the communist dictator of Cuba. Okay, so your book. Let's get into it. Fiddle Castro. Who is he? What is he? Well, let's go before going to Castro, who was recruited by the CIA in 1940. But first, we need to talk about the CIA, the CIA and the origins of the CIA. Actually, the roots of this thing go early in the past century, I would say, 1917, when Colonel Edward Mantelhaus, that was President Udu Wilson, Adviso. And he was actually an agent of the Rothschild Warble Rocky Farmer, Banking Cartel. And then he created a group of intellectuals and university professors to assist spies in the signing of the piece of Armistice in France. And then he called the group the inquiry. And this group of people, well, the inquiry was actually a sort of a proto-civilian American intelligence agency. And the these group were for by Mantelhaus himself and some other people who later joined what is called the constant correlation. And they were Allen Dollas, and his brother John Foster Dollas, Christian Hertha, Walter Lippmann, Archival Kool-Hitch, our Harryman and Herbert Kuber. And these guys met in Paris and they gathered information to advise person who was. And then they were, since the very beginning, these acted like a intelligent agency. It was divided in several study groups, to a different geographical areas like Africa, Austria, the Balkans were East and Latin America, Pacific Island, Russia, etc. And then this division was very similar to what later the CIA called Dessks. And they inquired his activity world surrounding secrecy, and they were paid from hidden funds directly from President Welsk. Now, after the signing of the armistice and the creation of the League of Nations, the later was not approved by the US Congress. They, the two groups, because there was a similar group of British agents, and then they met in a hotel and they decided, well, this is so good, this is so nice to be, to be a spy. Why don't we keep this and make this a proficient? And then from this they created two different organizations, one that is called the Royal Institute of International Affairs, the British branch, and the other one, the Council on Foreign Relations. And it's very important, because sometimes most people don't really know what the Council on Foreign Relations really is, and forget about what the New York Times and the, and for the next third, says a, I'm not a club of the very rich of the bankers, it's actually an intelligence agency for the bankers. That is what the Council on Foreign Relations is going to talk about this. Now, after the, they created that they have worked like intelligence, gathering intelligence for the masters of the bankers, the CEOs of international corporations and the oil magnates and the, and the sort. Now, during the second world war, they created another intelligence organization called the Office of Strategic Services, that in my book, I called of the bankers by the bankers for the bankers, that was in 1942, and then the one who worked the chief of the OSS was General William Donovan, a millionaire, Wall Street Corporal lawyer. And his right hand was Allen Dollas, also Wall Street lawyer, and other Wall Street related, the guy from Wistner, will call me that later they join the CIA. The, all you know, the CIA is in July 26, 1947, when President Truman signed the National Security Act that created both the Central Intelligence Agency and the National Security Council. The National Security Council in my book was created to surround the, the presidents with the National Security Advice, to manage the information that gets to them. And as I mentioned in my book, to give them the most room, the most room treatment, keeping them in the dark and feeding them manure. And that's what the, what the National Security Council acts. Now, question, how come in the Council on Foreign Relations is an intelligence agency, why they need another one? Well, this is a two-piece on time to find out, and then I think I have, I have a, I have an answer for this. Well, they, they, the conspirators, I call them, they, in the Council on Foreign Relations, and I call the conspirators because you know very well that they have some, some goals that have nothing to do with the democracy of, of the, actually, the destruction of democracy. The elimination of borders and the creation of an international government, government controlled by them. And if I go further to kill 95% of the population in this planet and turn the survivors into medieval Serbs. So, they're very rich and they're very poor and this I call a real life, hunger games. Now, they, they created the, the CIA, Central Intelligence, why they, they have a one way. The thing is that they needed also a strong arm hand to carry out the, the governments that they cannot force to do what they wanted, they used military arm and for that they were using the United States Army forces. But they found some, some, some real American officer who really took the oath of office for real, that were not happy with that role fighting wars for the bankers. The, the, the, one, the most known was a general cemented bottle. And if you believe the, he say, actually, was a long speech war is a racket. You see why most a honor of military officer were not happy with the role of being the army of the bankers and they had that role. Then they created the CIA. Now, the CIA is wrong as a, the name implies Central Intelligence Agency was to act as an office gathering information and changing it into intelligence. By the way, most people who get into the field of a, of Italian espionage, they don't see that there is a, there is a cardinal different between intelligence and espionage, even, even books written by people close to the CIA, they, they confused. And what is intelligence intelligence is just information that has been evaluated, that has been validated. And in my books in, I, in psychology, warfare and other books, they, there is a, just a part of what I explained the methodology that I used that I copy from a native document. But I think that the, the most intelligence agencies, the KGB when it was the, the most sad, the my six, they use something similar. And then is based on the evaluation of information, you evaluate the information with certain methodology. And then that's the role of an intelligence agency gathering for the current information and change it into usable intelligence. But that was not the role of the, of the, they, they care about the CIA because they had their own intelligence agency. And then see what happened less than a year after the CIA was created secretly. People in the, in the national security council created something that is a monster that is a branch of the CIA for covert operations. Okay. And always the person that was the chief of covert operation was a member of the council of all. So they don't care about the CIA. That's why some people in the, so the CIA has two sides of a coin. One side that is the true, the true purpose purpose that is covert operation and the other that is sort of a cover that is gathering intelligence intelligence. Now some people through patents in the intelligence branch or area of the CIA, they were not happy because they, they produce intelligence and then the government took totally different methods or, or, or, or acted totally ignoring what the CIA had produced. So the intelligence produced by the CIA was never take into into consideration by the government why because they were taking the intelligence from the council on foreign relation because they control the use government. And these are created many things that even in the one was that in the 50s, they could when when Bush was in the CIA, they created what is called the group that was a people who, who question the intelligence produced by the, by the CIA. So and this is, this is very important. The role of the CIA. So the CIA is fully an organization under the control of the council of foreign relation bankers and conspirators who are looking for the creation of the, of destroying the national borders and created a new world. And this is very important to to understand what is happening because some people like say more harsh. He's always criticized in the CIA, the CIA is a tool. We need to go step further, step further. And I mentioned this before getting into Castro because actually Castro was recruited in 1948. He was a 21 years old. He was a student, a lost student in the University of Havana. He was a gangster. He already have killed two, two person, two of his, a, enemies in the, at the university. He was into politics. And then I have information, I read the cable from the American Embassy in Havana. They, they noticed him. And there is probably some things that are in the, in a, I have no real proof just from that he, he had been in the United States before and probably saw him before and they recruited him. And they, I, I began researching the subject many years ago. And then I, I explain in a, in a long article that I title, Tong In Cheek, Fidel Castro Supermode. And that was probably the first article that I published in the internet many years ago in a site called Sumeria. I don't know if this is anymore. And this I, I mentioned the possibility again, Tong In Cheek, a little, because I have no real proof of your suspicions based on, on some evidence that, that the same way that the CIA had a chief of counterintelligence. James Jesus Angleton, who was convinced that the KGB had infiltrated a secret agent, a mole into the CIA. I said, well, using the mirror image. Vision of intelligence, well, there should be in the KGB, a, a chief of intelligence that I call him Angletonovitch. And then that he suspected that the CIA had infiltrated a mole into the communist camp. And this mole was Fidel Castro. And I, and I, in this article, I gave some, some background information, but very, a speculation, but then many years later, I found a guy, Cuban, who was a member of the, of the Bay of Pix invasion. He was a capture and, and it's an impression in Cuba for, I think, a couple of years, then he was liberated and came to United States. And he wrote a, a, a, not one non book, he self-polluting Miami called the Secret Times of Fidel Castro, where he explains at the very beginning that he was working for the CIA, in 1948, he was working for the CIA, in a low level, he was called, what he, he's really called a Muslim, this people who, he forced his knee to the, they act. And then he was with another Cuban also working for the CIA in a car, in a, in a place, a, east of Habana, in area of Manchester, in front of the, of the mansion, of the mansion, of a, a residence of, a, Mario Lasso, Mario Lasso was a, American educated lawyer that have closed ties to the American embassy in Habana. And then Fidel Castro was invited to a secret meeting with some people there, and among the people who were several, people linked to the CIA. And then he went with his friend Rafael del Pinocero, and then they were, and this guy was in a car, in the, in the shadows, close to the mansion, looking, and they were armed to see if Castro did any, any of his crazy things, polygons, something like that, and they were going to act. And they, Castro went there, they were sometime there, and then he, he said that he knew that Castro was recruited, that he had a guy who was his controller, and he was sent to Bogotá, Colombia as an agent provocateur to create chaos there, and then blame the comments. Keep in mind that at the, and then on April 9, in 1948, there were violent riots in Bogotá, Colombia, they called, they were called the Bogotá, the Bogotá, the riots that destroyed the central part of the city, was, it destroyed many people were killed. And then the riots began when somebody killed a, a populist leader, a guy, and then the writer of the anterior castle was there. And then all the indications is that he actually, he, he throws some flyers in the, in a meeting, and then he was acting like he was a member of the Cuban Communist Party, and was linked to, to the KGB, and that was, this is all CIA, this information. And then, well, and this is how Castro was recruited by the, by the CIA, and that was a total success. It's interesting because the Bogotá, so coincide with the was a very important meeting in Bogotá, Colombia, the nine conference of Latin American Chancellor's or Secretary of State, and was, they, besides the, by George, George, George, George, George, that at the time was US Secretary of State, and it's interesting. He ends, ends CFR agent too, right? Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah. Yeah. He, Marshall Plank came out of the CIA. Oh yeah, yeah, he was one of the traitors. Big traitors. And I have the big traitors. And, and in my book, I explained that the, that he had direct participation in the assassination of General Patton, that does another, another chapter, sad, sad and dark chapter of our history. So now, it's interesting because, because the, the essence of this meeting were to convince the Latin American leaders of the creation of the organization of American states. But there were some reluctance because they have been a previous meeting in, in Mexico, maybe, and then the United, promised a lot of money, a lot of things that never accomplished. And then the Latin American leaders were reluctant to sign the creation of a, to support the creation of the organization of American states. And then put the riots erupted. And there was the killing and then, well, everybody was scared. And then Marshall used the opportunity to, to scare everybody. And then they not only approved the creation of the Latin American states, organization of Latin American states, but also they signed a very anti-communist document. And they, that the role of Latin America was going to fight communist blah, blah, blah. So in my specific classic problem of reaction solution. Yeah, yeah. And then I say, he gave me a, he gave me a, and then a, well, this is the beginning. Actually, that, that was the beginning of the Cold War in Latin America. That's what it started the beginning. Cold War in Latin America. Then Castro, Castro was a rescued by the Cuban, he went with his friend, Alpino, did the right today to the Cuban Embassy. And then there was a plane that mysterious appeared and then he was friend to Cuba. And then when I was writing my book, I was talking to, to a Cuban in Miami. And he told, oh, we know there is a journalist who was in the house of, a, a, a, a, a grouse on Martin Ramon, grouse on Martin was the president of Cuba at the time. And he was a, a nationalist leader. He was not a right role. He was just a national leader, but the, the Americans hated him because he fought against the plot amendment. The elimination of the plot amendment in Cuba. And, and they didn't like him. Well, and then and then the, the, that this different connected me to a journalist who was a close friend of Grauss and Martin, the president. And then during every seat, another friend of Grauss and Martin was there, that was the guy who was Guillermo Belt, who was the Cuban ambassador in Bogota at the time. And then this, the journalist has a Guillermo Belt. Guillermo, why did you help Castro? Could he play it from him? You told me that you hated Castro. And then he answered with this. Well, because we get orders from above. And then he turned, he turned not to Grauss and Martin, not to a president, but to the north. And then we get orders from and pointed to the north. And then we have to save him. And that's the story of Castro. Now, Castro disappeared from the line-light. And then Batista was a guy who was the president. He lived Cuban. Then he was a military man. And then came back to Cuba. And then he got recruited and began a president through a coup d'etat. And then he became the editor. And Castro tried to throw Batista with a military action in the East part of Cuba. But failed. And he was sent to jail. Joseph, a less than a year later, Batista signed an embassy. And he was free. And went to Mexico, created a group of revolutionaries and invaded Cuba. And then he was a... Is that the July 7th movement or something? Yeah. Yeah, OK. Well, me and Comentissé, the 26th of July. No, sorry, July 26th. Yeah, because the 26th of July was the date of the attack on the more calm, more catabarriks than the castle was. Surviving. Most people were killed, but he managed to save it. And he was captured and sent. It's a longer story. Yeah. And then he went to Mexico and created this group, guerrilla group. And went to the Sierra Maestra, and mountains. And then he invaded and won the battle. Now, we know later that the battles were not one with lead, but with gold. It was dollars that came from the American Council in Santiago de Cuba, that's a capital of the Eastern province of Cuba, who was also a CIA officer. And most of the weapons that he got in the Sierra Maestra came through the Guantanamo base. And then he simply, instead of fighting the Batista army, he bought the officers. Because this thing... His arm, suppose. Is that like the International Arms Company or something? What? The International Arms Company. Like reverse CIA or something? That supply, the casters of... Yeah, there was a company. I don't remember now the name, but also the CIA was behind the... Yeah. And then sent... And nobody knew in Cuba about Castro, nothing was happening. They weren't the Sierra, but nobody knew about that. Life was working then. And then they... They completed their sent, their agent... From the New York Times, this guy... From the New York Times, I went there. And then interview Castro, and then he was... He created the myth of the Robin Hood in the Sierra Maestra. This is her... Herbic Matthews? I have her Matthews, yes sir. And then he was a pro-comi... Being in the revolution in Spain, and then... Well, and that's the... That's the story. And we have been sold this revolution. Actually, actually, the American they have created a myth. Okay, according to what you read, most of what you read, is Cuba before Castro was a... I hate it. Yeah, he was working in... In... In... Was a very underdeveloped country, but that's a lie. That's a lie. And it's absolutely a lie. Cuba was not... When in 1959, when Castro took power in Cuba, Castro was one of the most developed countries in Latin America and the world. Okay, and this is not that. This is... I'm going to show you... But when Castro took power in Cuba, Cuba had a system of telecommunication by microwave that was unique in the world. Not even in the United States, we have this. Why? Because an American company was testing the system in Cuba. Because Cuba was so close to the American markets that the guys in Lexington Avenue, the marketers that they discovered that the Cuban public was so close to the American public that they used Cuba to test American products before launching it in the American market. I remember something that probably you still have in your kitchen, some cleaning that's called Ajax. Oh, we had in Cuba six months before they launched it in the United States. When Castro took power in Havana alone, we have, I think, 22 or 23 radio stations. Probably 1959. Today, 2016, Paris doesn't have 22 radio stations. We have six... Five or six TV channels, three of them national, wide for the whole, like Cuba's a long island. And then the first color TV station in the world, outside the United States, was in Havana. Have you heard about that before? Well, I read about it. You read about it. Well, and then we have newspapers. I remember there was the radio La Marina. One newspaper, the Sunday, the radio La Marina was thick, almost an inch thick. When the New York Times was almost, from the Sunday, New York Times was also one inch thick. We have this newspaper, so Cuba was not an underdeveloped country by any, any, any stretch of the imagination. Cuba had a very developed middle class. A very... I'm my family word. They were not a profession. They were just blue-colored workers. My father, my two uncles, they worked in the railroad. And they had very good salaries. We have our own home, a big house, many rooms. So, Cuba middle class was similar to the American middle class, the middle class of well-paid workers. And the Cubans, even though at the world of Spain, they were so little American capital. Capital, after the Second World War, the Cuban capital began recovering, recovering industries. And most of the of the sugar mills were in 1959, were already back in the hands of Cubans, the Cuban capital. So, and this is what Castro created his, his revolution, that we needed, need what the Cuban who respected, what's the rebellion against a president who had become a dictator. That's interesting because one of the real reasons for the Spanish-American war was that the bankers, National City Bank, the Rockefellers, coveted the sugar fields of Cuba, wanted to get control of it. And they used the excuse for Spanish oppression in Cuba to start the war. And they sent the main battleship that he was seriously exploiting in the upper of the... Exactly, was it, remember the main to help with Spain? And so what you're saying is that indirectly, using Castro as an agent, you're saying is by the 50s, Cuba was developing so well economically, and Cuban started to get a hold of their own national resources again. And one way the Wall Street and the international bankers would get control of again, would be well to send Castro in as an agent to change the reversal. Of course, I'm saying. An empower, yeah. That is interesting because I really remember that in the 1980s, Mexico, Mexico is a very rich country. I've been in Mexico so far. It's a very rich country that has all mineral resources of the agricultural land. It's a very rich country resources. It has a very educated working class and really working. And then in the 80s, Mexico was developing. And something happened. The peso collapses and the economic crash. And later I read something that initially thought was a... who say that was Henriquez Kibar. Now I found the information that, apparently, was a big news, Broshinski, who say we cannot allow for a Japan south of the border. Yes. I will. The first Japan south of the border, we have been Cuba. And some people say, no, we should not allow this Japan south of the border. They fear Japan in Cuba. I remember that... Oh, the... Patista was a dictator. But the last three years under the... Patista dictatorship, the economy in Cuba was booming. Booming, incredible. I never before, I never before. And there were so many plans for development in Cuba. One of them was that some of the Hollywood companies who were paying high amount of taxes in the United States, they have put an eye on island finders, a big island south of the western part of Cuba. And then called island find, that is a... The island mentioned in Robert Wiesstivinson, Treasure Island, and they plan to move eventually some of the studios to island find. Island finders already had a free trade zone and then some companies were planning to make a subway in Habanana and the Malacone that is this beautiful prominent close to the sea is like a U and they plan to stray this and build, I don't know, 10, nine big hotels and all this stuff, all this stuff. And it's interesting because is now the economy of Cuba, the Cuban economy, the indexes of the Cuban economy are probably below Haiti. And in 1959, Cuba was only second to Argentina and probably Argentina is only... I mean, some things to Mexico in a very few things, okay? But Cuba produced most of the food, most of the meat was self-sufficient and well, everything was destroyed. So it's an example of taking a very well developed country, with a very well developed economy and in a few years, turning it into a land of poverty where there are just two classes, the all powerful rich that is Castro, his family, his aunt is called the Numenta Tura and then the rest of the people that live live medieval, well, that is exactly what the new order is about. It sounds like Marie Strong, Club of Rome, these things, yeah. And then it's interesting because sometimes, 15 years ago, David Rockefeller and a group of people from the castle of rural relations and then later was a coffee annum what the time was, the Chief of United Nations and they were marble when they saw Cuba. Oh, this is a marble of education here, the public, and they say openly that Cuba was a model to follow. Well, I see what they were talking about, by the way, more than 20 years ago, I began talking to relatives and close friends, what is happening in the United States? These remembers me to help me to Cuba, oh, so round the year, crazy, well, most of them now agree with me. Yeah, the Stole Erosion Destruction, the middle class. And this is not by chance, but now you see my books, and my books are about the conspiracy. Well, as you mentioned, the beginning of the problem, I have my degrees in history. I'm a historian by train, but working in, when I began writing the book on castle, I realized that recent events were there with a large amount of intelligence and espionage to analyze and write about these events, the tools, the methodological and analysis tools of historians don't work. And then I began learning by myself, the trade of intelligence and espionage, and I became myself an intelligence analyst. That is what I am now. And I began writing my book, not from the point of view of a historian, but from the point of view of a historian, the point of view of an intelligence analyst. That's why in my book about castle, the secretive castle, the concept of the same world, I mentioned in the introduction, this is not a history of the keyword revolution, this is not a biography of a federal castle, this is a CPP comprehensive personality profile like most intelligence agencies keep up for leaders. The KGB, the Monsat, the MySQL, the Vatican, they keep working in the CBB comprehensive personality profile, and then using a similar methodology, I created my own, that is this book. And I follow, I follow this, or this my model was a book written by a member of the OSS, Professor Wynne Langer, that was a CPP about the Hidal Hitler. And then after the many years after the end of the world, it was published, that was secret, secret reporting history, and then was published under the name, the mine of Hidal Hitler. And this is the model I follow to write my book about Catherine, I say my book, well the CIA has one, the KGB has one, and I have one, mine is probably not exactly the same as the CIA, but this is the, I think I have reached something that not many people have written. And my point of view is not anti-castro, it's not from the right, or from the left, I'm trying to be totally impartial and about the, what I found in his life, but let me tell you is, is to be terrorized, the guy is a monster, that's another way, another way to qualify the guy. Like Hitler is a monster, so we have the Castro here, he's a psychopath, and the Rocky for put him in power, he's been always, that's just that interesting, as you mentioned, the comprehensive press study profile, in your book you mentioned, there's some, well, there's some problems with his life, if you're going to reconcile it with his, suppose that, you know, figure as a communist revolutionary, is that he seemed to admire much of America, you mentioned that he wrote a letter to Roosevelt, and he was 12 years old. He supposed to be an agent, he wanted a $20 bill from Roosevelt. Because Roosevelt did that thing, never sent a money probe, that's how he began hating America. He aspired to be a pitcher for the sent to the film, your giants, and he also act was a bit actor in a couple films in Hollywood. Yes, something that I found, you know, as a researcher, because I told you, I use a different methodology, a historian, only read, history books, and an article written in, in P.O. Review, magazine, whatever, you know, I read everything. And then this I found, it's not in a DVD, there's somebody created about Hollywood films. That's right, most historians then are quoting each other. Yeah, and he said, so, a historian, look straight, and an intelligence analyst looked with the side of the eye, you look at the same thing, it's a totally different approach. But you found this DVD with these old movies, right? Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. And what did you find? I found that he has worked in two films, with one is Carnival in Mexico, and another one with a Estruelians, and a heavier cookout, the musician, and he was just a, just a, probably he had no role, just a, just an extra. Yeah, actually. But the, the, and, and, but the point is, in order to work in this key was in California, I just not mentioned by any, any by your, a, a, a, a, and that's quite a, can you say a gap, if you're right? I mean, that's interesting. Another thing, but he was very good as a teacher, because eventually, eventually they tried to recruit him, and when they say, well, no, I decide, I have other things to do. And then he refused the, and of all the team, they're all the best, all the teams he liked, elected New York Yankees. Yeah, yeah, he, he did not say the, the, the offer. And these I found the, the first person I hear, about these was this guy, what is his name, that he had a problem, the rest of the story, you know, for Harvey, or Harvey, and Paul Harvey, yeah. Paul Harvey. And then, I was a teacher, and I wrote to the guy of the, of the National, the director of the National Archives, and he had the, well, in the, and he had the, and he, and he sent me a photo copy of the letter that he wrote to Roswell. So, that is my book. Now, and this is something, one day, because I've been in many parts of the United, I was in, a four-place in the mobile Alabama, and I was with my son in a line, in a post office, and there was a guy behind us, and then he listened to us, talking in Spanish, and he talked to us, he's an American, he talked Spanish, and then we got talking to him, and I don't know what, this, there was a long line, waiting, and then, he told me that he was a, a movie, a filmmaker, he was going to Brazil, next day, and then, the conversation went into Cuba, and he told me, that he was working for military intelligence, and that he got his training at Quantico. Okay, he was in Hollywood. No, no, no, this guy I met in Alabama. Okay, okay, but he's, he, he, maybe I'm a senator, he's saying he worked for Hollywood, he's saying he worked in Hollywood. No, no, no, no, that's, that's people casual. He was, okay, I'm a senator. He's been to another person that wasn't a line, a conversation, and he said, oh, you know, that I, I was, I get my training in Quantico. They begin in the CIA, get trained before they have, for example, the farm, they train in in Quantico, that what were the CIA trained people? And he told me that in Quantico, he, her, rumors that Peter Castro had been trained there. Mm-hmm. I have not proved just this. On the other hand, on the other hand, the first, the first KGB Asian, the first Soviet Asian, that they sent to Cuba, was a guy that, what's his name? Sergei, Alexei, Alexander Alexei, that later began, uh, was a, uh, appointed by Castro, the Soviet ambassador. This is a story. I'm going to tell this is very interesting. And then, and then Alexei, when they're passing as journalists for his bestia. They say, they say, uh, they have two, two newspapers in Russia, in the Soviet Union, rather than means true, and it's bestia that means news. And the joke was that the, that the news have not truth, and the truth no news. He was, he was a, he was a, a, uh, a journalist for his bestia. And then, uh, well, he's interesting. Alexei tried to recruit Castro. But you know what? Castro ended up by recruiting Alexei. Huh? So that means that he had some training in intelligence and espionage. It's obvious that he was trained. There are, there are gaps in his biography, he was in the US. Yeah, yeah, yeah. That is a, that is inculcated. By the way, uh, do you know that Castro expelled a Soviet ambassador from Cuba? Is this related to this, the coup that Khrushchev had planned or something? Yeah, the Cuban Missile Gras. Well, they, uh, sort of a dimension to that thing, which was not known. Yeah, well, the, uh, let's, let's jump. We're going back and forward to make this interesting. The, I, I wasn't office in the Cuban Army, the Cuban Missile Gras. And then, uh, I'm not in the very important friendship, but I was an officer that I knew many people there and there. And, uh, when the Cuban Missile Gras was going on, nobody in Cuba, at least at my level, knew what really wasn't going on. Actually, I knew because there was another, another officer who leads to, was listening to the voice of America. So we discovered what was really going on by the voice of America. Okay. And then according to Kruschev, you know, the story of Castor, the, the Nikita Kruschev, Pelae is a Missile Sincuba. And then, uh, Kennedy was offered the, the, the, the YouTube plans took a photograph of the Missile basis. And they, one, a photo, see a photo in interpreter show, uh, Kennedy, the, the ultimate proof and about the Missile Sincuba that started the Cuban Missile Sincuba. Class, okay. Uh, well, according to Kruschev, Nikita Kruschev for the, uh, Soviet Prime Minister, Minister at the time. And then in his memoirs, he gave an explanation. He said that he was in, uh, the, the, the Cuban Missile Sincuba, October 1962. And then he was in April in Bulgaria. And he saw over the, the, the sea and so on. The American, they have nuclear missiles there in Turkey, pointing to Russia. And, uh, and we are very upset about that. And I'm going to give them a taste, uh, of their own medicine. We're going to place nuclear missiles in Cuba to protect Castro. Uh, well, that is Kruschev's explanation. But this really is very difficult to take because it was in April, 1962, when Castro expelled a Soviet ambassador from Cuba. The name of the ambassador was Sergei Kudrijatssev. These are great kudrijas, it was a bad guy. And it doesn't look very important, but he, uh, according to Baronin, his book, KGB, he had been expelled from Canada. Uh, some years before, because he was the guy who stole some of the nuclear secrets. And Baron called him master spy. And it seems that, that Kudrijatssev and some KGB guys in the, in the Soviet ambassador embassy in Havana, link to a group of members of the Cuban Communist Party that threw Cuban Communist Party, not the Communist Party created for Castro. And they explained to you that Cuba traditionally had a very strong Communist Party. And then these people were conspiring to overthrow Castro by force. And then Castro discovered the operation and then, uh, apprehended the, uh, the Soviet ambassador, Kudrijatssev put him in the, in jail. And next day, without letting him chance to change his underwear, put him in a plane to Moscow. Like that. A few weeks before, Kattle had recalled his ambassador, followed him on from Moscow. Now, I'm asking you, when, when two countries retired their ambassadors, how do you think about the, the, the relation between these two countries are very high, very low? A, a bit strained. A strain, a strain. Usually, sometimes, this is the, the beginning of the, breakdown relations. So, and that was the time that the Cuban who shared, choose to give Kattle nuclear missiles. So what he had, a masochist, he was crazy. I don't think so. Another thing that is, we, oh, okay, Kudrijatssev was sent to Moscow, who had Nikita Krushchev, did Kudrijatssev, who acted so crazy, sent him to, shot him in the world, sent him to Siberia. No, he was appointed in a high position at the, in Paris, at the UNESCO. That means that Kudrijatssev, did not, by himself, he was following orders from Kable. Now, they are not a thing that is strange and the Cuban missile missiles this. They, in intelligence and espionage, to accept something, a, as a setback, you need to, to have, when, when something, you are a setback. When these links, links, well, to previous event, event. So, and the, the Soviets, never, never, never, before the Cuban missile crisis placed nuclear warheads outside their borders. At sometimes, I think they had missiles in Poland and Rolinchikoslovakia, capable of nuclear capability, but the, but the, the nuclear warheads were kept in Soviet territories. Moreover, the warheads were not even in the hands of the army, were in the hands of war control by a special sped-knuts group, just to take care of the nuclear warheads. Okay? So, never before, in 1962, the Soviet put nuclear warheads out of their borders and never after. Hmm. This is something strange. Okay? Even more, even more. They, in all the literature about the Cuban missile crisis, except in my book, there is mentioned something important about nuclear warheads, that is called radiation. Nuclear warheads emit radiation, gamma rays. And there is nothing that was detected. The nuclear warheads emitting a radiation in Cuba. And the United States, the American have the technology to detect it because in the in the environmental strain, they have some sophisticated equipment to detect nuclear warheads, nuclear radiation, from Soviet submarines under the water. So, the technology is there, no radiation. Then, the CIA say that the missiles were in Cuba. Now, the, again, the proof that was given to President Kennedy was the photos by the users. And the CIA photo interpreted this name as a Dino Brugioni, went to the White House. Oh, this is this, this is it, this is it. Well, the CIA saw some things in the Cuban soil, similar to nuclear missile a basis in the Soviet Union. But the point is this, there is say some long wooden boxes covered with tarps, that the CIA say that inside these boxes were the missiles. There were some concrete bonkers that the CIA say they contain the nuclear warheads. Then, after Khrushchev decided to prepare the missiles in Cuba, there were some things covered with tarps on the the deck of the Soviet ships that the CIA say were not aware that nobody touched smell, measured the radiation, and much less photographed the missiles. So, in my conclusion, what were what the, what the Russians were retired from Cuba? The guess of the CIA were nuclear missiles. My guess was have I not see cars for making the car. My guess is as good at the CIA. I have not proved that we're have I not see cars and the CIA had not proved that we're not seeing cars and the nuclear missiles back to Cuba. Also, it's a strange why they didn't can't order the American ships to stop the Soviet cargo ships and physically inspect the missiles. Why? Many, many, many things that defied logic and explanation. In my opinion, there were, the Soviets in Cuba who had been missing the nuclear missiles in Cuba with a nuclear warhead has never been proved period. And this is final. I have read many books after I told my book and the author repeat the same, the same story. In Minamara, when the Cuba and the, and they were ate a nuclear warhead then the Russian, they were nobody has proof of that. In my opinion was just a scare operation that Nikita Hukrukshav, that was a theory when I published my book. Now I have other theories without discarding this that Nikita Hukrukshav wanted to get rid of fiddle castle but he couldn't do it openly. He was not going to overthrow Castro because that was a big scandal. Castro was a communist and you cannot do that. And then they say, well, let's do, let's provoke the American to do the dirty work for me. Now, let's suppose that the United States had invaded Cuba during the Cuban Missile Class. And Cuba killed a lot of people fighting there and they went to the nuclear bases and no, Missile here, no, nuclear warheads, what would happen? Then Nikita Hukrukshav would have gone to the United Nations and accused of strongly the United States for invaded. They called Cuba, Cuba and the poor Castro. He was killing action in Cuba, he was hanging, whatever. And then, well, he put a egg in the heads of the Americans and also got rid of Castro. Yeah, that blow would be on the American Empire's hands. That's my theory. Very interesting. And I don't see, it seems crazy, but is the only one that explains a lot of things. And what explains why the United States were not invading is because Castro was ultimately working for the CFR, which controls the system. That's over at the time. Yeah, yeah. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. But ever explain why the US has tolerated Castro for so long. Of course, of course. You know, you know, they can kill an American president. They can kill people all around the world. They cannot kill this crazy guy in Cuba. According to Castro, they tried to kill, the CIA tried to kill him 80 times, 200 times. Well, there is something interesting when the Cuban sent Miami control by the CIA tried to kill Castro. Mm-hmm. Try to kill Castro. The CIA allowed it, but they always failed. Yeah, the powder was a, was a not the one. The, the, the poison never worked. And now when a group of Cuban out of the CIA, out of the control of the CIA, three Lancers tried to kill Castro. What happened? The FBI captured them and said, no, no, no, no. Oh, you cannot do that. OK. It's all, it's all. And you know, this is, we see this happen and it happen and it happen over and over. But the point, the interesting point is that if you want to know what is, what is coming to it, I say, what is, the new world order, just go to Cuba. Yeah. Just go to Cuba. They go to Cuba. And this explains perhaps the failure of the Bay of Pigs, right? Oh, yeah. No, the fact, the fact of the benefit that people blame Kenny, Kenny, they acted on the advice of some CIA guys who, all of them, were members of the Council of Foreign Relations. Another one that they, I like Stevenson, a nation member of the Council of Foreign Relations. And then they, they followed that bias. And that's why after that Kenny realized that something was wrong with the CIA and say, I'm going to destroy the CIA breaking it in a thousand pieces and throw it to the wind and put, well, oh, big mistake. He fired Allen Dahls. Big mistake. And he paid the report for it. So he realized that the CIA was the, was not doing what it was supposed to do. So the CIA has always protected the field catalogue. And, and. Well, you also mentioned that during the, in Canberra rebels, something where they were given the wrong ammunition. And also you, you, you, you, you, you, you, the Cubans in Florida, which actually rounded up just before the Bay of Pigs, right? And, and yeah, say the rounded up. And I'm putting the in the Opaloka base. And then they, they all, all then in the, the most of the landing aircraft were destroyed by the, by the reef that was very clear in the two photos, but never was so, you know, that was an operation. So in my, my point, my point, the Bay of Pigs operation was a total success because the goal of the operation was to keep cattle in power and reach the goal. Now, before, before, before the Bay of Pigs, there were, there was about eight or nine very strong anti-castle organization, very active in Florida, in the United States, mostly in Florida. There was a group of, a strong group of guerrillas in Cuba, in the central part of Cuba. Cuba has three, three group of mountains. In the east part, the, the Sierra Maestra, and the central part of Cuba, the Scampride, and all the small, in the, in the west. In this Sierra del Scampride, the central part of Cuba, there was a strong group of guerrilla fighters fighting the Castro government. And they have been strong for months and months. And the, the CIA is stopping sending them some more and constant and will keep out of the information about the, the invasion also. So there was the, the anti-castle groups in Miami. There was the guerrilla groups in, fighters in the, the Scampride. And also in the big cities, there was an anti-castle underground, ready, ready to fight when, when the, when an invasion was produced. They were, all of them were getting the, that. So what did they see, the, the, the, the, they consolidated all the anti-castle groups in, in Florida, in one. And the capitated in, with the, with the fellow, the invasion. So the invasion made Castro stronger. And that was the purpose of the, the speaking invasion. So to me, it was a total success. For us, they signed the failed and it failed. Period. There's no other explanation. Yeah, never, never, never in the history of the United States, you have planned a, a landing at night. It was a night. So everything was, it was a, you know, the, the three astuctions on the, the, the, the, the, everything due to, to frustrate a popular uprising, which was, yeah, yeah, yeah. A testable plan was the invasion would spark an uprising, but the say we were, we're elements within the CAA, the CFR agents were, working to prevent that very think happening. Now, at the same time, Castro, he, she'll, the victor and I would, he would earn street cred or credibility or his bonafidi, so to speak, as a communist, um, opponent to American imperialism in the Caribbean would be solidified in the eyes of the Soviets, correct? Because they might have to suspect. Yeah, yeah. No, no. In my opinion, my opinion, creating a, a, a, a, creating a model or a testing ground of the newer order in Cuba was like a second top initially, the plan to use Castro was for other ends. The problem is this, Nikita Hushov had been an actor, a Stalin and then several leaders, the electric Nikita Hushov and then Nikita Hushov, uh, who had been an officer in the Soviet army during the war against the Nasigir Manit and he saw that 60 million uh, Soviet citizens were killed in the, the war. He, he, he was a, a son in the war, he was affected, everybody was affected by this war and then he realized that a nuclear war, uh, had no survivors. That was crazy. And then he launched something, where he, in a, in a secret speech of the Soviet, uh, Polyburo, he made a speech, condemning the crimes of the Joseph Stalin and also he launched a new policy that he called his policy of peaceful coexistence. Mm-hmm. The policy of peaceful coexistence. That, that would have scared a lot of people. Yeah. They kind of got out of the Wall Street. The military industrial complex that later I call the military industrial banker complex were scared. Well, we're going to lose our enemy. There is no reason for our existence. Then they put Castro in power in Cuba. Since the very beginning, Castro began trying to infiltrate the Soviet, but the Soviets were reluctant. Reloved them. They, uh, were not buying. They were, they were not buying. Because, oh, I'm a communist. I'm a socialist. They were not buying. But then came the Bay of Picks. One day at the Stanford Universe, I was talking to a, to a, to a Soviet scholar, was there and he told me that during the first days of the Bay of Picks, the, uh, newspapers and media in the Soviet universe were preparing the Soviet people for the fall of Cuba, the Castro Cuba. But so then, Castro won the battle of the, of the Bay of Picks and these convinced the Soviet leadership that Castro was, was through. A very important thing that they had suspicion about Castro was a Nikita Khrushchev, son, Sergei Khrushchev. He came to the United States, uh, twenty-three years ago. He became an American citizen and he was a college professor. And in a speech that he gave in a college, he mentioned that a long time ago when he was a teenager, he was in the Kremlin and he overheard his father, Nikita Khrushchev, talking to a small group of high-level, uh, Soviet leaders that they had suspicions about Castro. Because Castro was a, he was a lawyer educated by the Jesuits. Uh, his father was a landlord in the Eastern Paracupy. And they suspected that Castro was an American agent. Let's say it by Sergei Khrushchev. Well, they came to the Bay of Picks and Castro won and that was the fact that convinced the Soviet leadership, Nikita Khrushchev among them, that Castro was real. And then they began supporting Castro. Now, what and they opened the arms and accepted Castro. Why? Castro did exactly as he was accepted into the Soviet field. He began strongly criticizing Nikita Khrushchev, doctrine of peaceful coexistence. And then began creating guerrillas in Latin America in Middle East and Africa. And so he, he began fighting the Nikita Khrushchev with the West. Khrushchev was a traitor to the communists movement because we need to fight imperialism, American imperialism. So he began fighting the Khrushchev. So that was a good news for the American military. Yeah, that creates an arena for drug running arms, arms deals. He was involved. He was involved in the trafficking. He even killed someone. He's an officer. There is a Q1 writer who said that Gathra ran out of enemies and they can kill his friends. Children for friends and enemies. The guy said he killed because of the drug trafficking. He was not involved in that. And then just simply he, he said he's a psychopath. But his role is a stirrup trouble throughout Latin America. I guess this would create, this would, again, a strategy of tension. This would make maybe the, the wealthy class, the people that own capital in Latin America, maybe not to invest it locally. But the center broad perhaps to, to chase men hadn't banks, suppose they keep it local bank. And he held the, the, the, the flight of capital from the Florida and America to the United States was because insecurity created by castors, guerrillas and, and, and many things. But also, it creates greater indebtedness because yeah, capital flies. Those companies have to borrow more. Yeah, also in, uh, when he, uh, cast, we invaded Angola. And then the invasion of Angola, by the way, at the time I was not a member of the, of the, of the military, but I was in the, in the reserve. In Cuba, you get in the military, then you go to the first reserve and then after 60, you get to the second reserve. Everyone is sitting in the middle of the, and then they, uh, except, except some, some people from, uh, tankers and I'm very, uh, and pilots that the, uh, really who invaded Angola were not soldiers, that were from the army were, were, were reservists. And I was, and I got my training to, be sent to Angola, very tough training. Uh, fortunately I was in the last groups. And then there was an international scandal and I finally was not sent, but there was many people sent to Angola. Ah, Castro went to Angola now. Who profited? Ah, the, the, the first things written about Angola was the, oh, the Soviets used their, their, uh, their puppet Castro doing bad Africa. Not true. Not true. Yeah, even though the, the material, the, the, the tanks, the planes, the, the, the, the trucks, everything, I was a Soviet, but they used even merchant ships to, to, to, human, to ship these things to Cuba, to Angola and the Soviet have no part in the invasion. The Soviets, in my opinion, they believed that Castro was going to fail and they were going to allow Castro to fail, but then surprisingly, Castro was winning and they began supporting Castro. Now, during, Castro was in Angola. They, uh, he, uh, he wasn't getting, uh, a money from the, from some, uh, companies and they'll, then after Castro took power, most American corporations took power in Angola and controlled the, the, the country saw the Soviet never profit from Castro invasion of Angola. Actually, the ones who profited were American corporations. Yeah, like, like, like, like, like, like, like, golf, golf oil, right? He's protecting your own platform in the world. There were, like, so that, your communist, communist soldiers protecting the assets of American multinational country, like, golf oil, like, like, I'm being paid, and being paid in dollars. Which is kind of like, that's kind of like the entire cold war, isn't it? Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. So there, there are many things that, that, that, that, that, part that doesn't fit, doesn't fit. And then this, my, my explanation that I don't claim that everything I tell is, say, it's true, is the right explanation, but at least I have found a, a, a theory that make all these things a whole that makes sense. Because the other thing is things happen because they happen, they're, but no, no, things, things, no problem. Now, why I have, uh, center my, my recent study in the, in the council of foreign affairs, they, uh, there was an old saying that all roads lived through wrong. And now all prison lived to the council of foreign relations behind every act of prison to the people of the United States. You're always going to find, this is our fifth, you're always going to find one or more member hiding in the shadows, more, one or more members of the council on foreign relations. This is the most anti-American organization. The enemy is inside all borders in my, in my, uh, prison article. I, I write for the, for an organization called News with views and always, even I published there before, before, putting the, uh, theoretically, in my site. And then I, I wrote an article, and then I say about Trump. And then I say, well, one of the things that Trump will do is to reduce the 50% the pay of the, of officer, a number of the high, uh, the high brass in the military and even retired to 50%. Why? Because they take an old office to defend the constitution from enemies both abroad, foreign and domestic. And they have never, they, the latest one who, who defend the, the constitution, domestic enemies were, uh, George Patton, that I remember, George Patton, and it's mainly both. So if they do have a job, they should be paid half of the pay. Yes. Why? Why? None of these of these, uh, military people who are fighting, uh, defending us for enemies, several, never defend us from enemies here. And, and our foreign enemies are, are, are, are financed by the CFR. And, yeah, yeah, through, through different channels. And, yeah, and you see George Soros, who is George Soros? George Soros, he makes him, you know, the rocket fair is made, George Soros. Maurice Strong, I read some time ago that Maurice Strong, you know, he died recently, Maurice Strong was a security guard at the United Nations. And then it was a Nelson or, or David Rockefeller who talked to him and then, and then, but, and then sold it. It's a millionaire and, and fighting for the environment. And, and the same Henry Kissinger, Henry Kissinger was a sergeant in military intelligence. And Nelson Rockefeller was also, I mean, that is really the important, uh, Henry Kissinger, and then Henry Kissinger, Professor Robert and they, what you, okay, they're, they're, all these people are reflections of the Rockefeller and other managers. Yes. This, this, this sort of this, this, this, this transnational elite or so, you don't need to invade Afghanistan. We need to invade Walla's been, actually, right, uh, uh, uh, rockets, a missiles, whatever. This is what the enemy's, uh, well, Castro, again, where, Castro seems like one of these, uh, should, like, a Basilis, the same way that Lenin and Trosky were sent into Russia, I landed in New York, uh, like, a, uh, we're such a church that, that, that they send, uh, plainly, like, like a virus. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. And to destabilize Russia, to weaken it and impoverish it to cover, so it doesn't compete with the West. On the other hand, on the other hand, don't underestimate capital. He has been an alien, but not a puppet. In fact, I think that at some time, he threatened the Rocky Fellows. Mm-hmm. Oh, yes, he had, uh, he mentioned that he had no, nuclear missiles, but he had planes that he can, uh, he can drop bombs in the, in a nuclear planning corridor and create a nuclear catastrophe in the United States. And then, well, I have the opinion that he had an active role in the assassination of President Kennedy, and many others that we ignore. So, and the Rocky Fellows, uh, know that the guy is, say, he's not being, uh, he's, say, he's, uh, he's, uh, he's, uh, he's a real and present danger. Well, yeah, David's 101 now, but he did have a quote a couple decades ago that kind of gives us the, uh, at least him and his, the whole milieu or, or, or, or super class that he, he's a part of. He said in his memoirs, some even believe we are a part of a secret cabal working against the best interest of the United States, characterizing my family and me as internationalists, and of conspiring with others around the world to build a more integrated global political economic structure. One world, if you will, if that's the charge, I stand guilty and I'm proud of it. I'm proud of it. Yeah. Yeah. Listen, listen, listen, and they are interesting now in Cuba. The thing is that they, uh, they have been working, the council for the rest have been working for almost 10 years and they had a lady, there was her name Julia Schweig, Schweig, that is a head in this, uh, that is to keep castroism in Cuba after the death of Castro. And then Castro became very sick. A nine years ago, and he retired, but then so, surprisingly, he sort of recovered and then, uh, forget about Raul Castro, the person is still in power in Cuba is Pidell Castro. The thing in Cuba is that the, the Cuban government on the castle has never been a pyramid is a, is a truncated pyramid. Would you have Castro on top? Number one. And there are no number two's. And there are several number three's. Okay. And every time that one of these number two's seems to go number three's seems to go reaching number two, Castro eliminated him. That happened to, uh, to the first one that came in and he was in fuego that was in command that happened to Che Guevara. And Che Guevara, it was a, in my opinion, the killing of Che Guevara was a joint CIA Castro operation and happened to many of them. So, and so Raul Castro has never had any real power in Cuba and has no knowledge of power. So, and, and Castro is still in power and see that now when Obama took this, a unilateral, action in Cuba, Castro immediately began criticizing, uh, strongly Obama for trying to change things in Cuba. So, while Castro is alive, no change will be in Cuba. There is no change will catch us. He's still in power in Cuba. Believe it or not, he's still in power. And Raul Castro is all, he's very sick, he's an alcoholic and he has no power, no real power. So, and this is the, the Cuban Conundrum. Thank you. And, and unfortunately, uh, things are changing the United States, resembling what we had in Cuba so many years ago. And this is, this is real. Bad news and the only hope is a, uh, Donald Trump. Donald Trump. There are so many theories about Donald Trump, but my point is that there is a, uh, by the way, I'm not a member of the pre-Borick and old, or Democrat party, and I promise myself many years ago, never give my boat to any incumbent or to any member of the old Republican or Democratic party. So, if Donald Trump goes independent, I give my boat, if he's wrong, has a, has a Democrat, I never give him what. But there is, there is a, some people have so specious about Trump, I would say. Well, there is a five percent of possibilities that Trump is not what he says that he is. But on the other hand, there is a 95 percent of possibilities that Hillary Clinton is controlled by the Council of Foreign Relations. He said that. He said publicly, but they were inaugurated and you see a far-building in Washington, the DC, that's where I go to get my order. And that's, uh, unfortunate. That's what is going on in America, but this, we are leaving freely, introducing time. Don't you agree, Tim? Oh, yes, unfortunately, are. You're in for the quiet life, but yes, things are getting very interesting, unfortunately. But you stole that out. You stole that out. How this got going was the formation of the Council of Foreign Relations, 1921, coincided with the creation of the World Student and National Affairs. Both of these grew out of the Rhodes Trust, which is this scheme created by CISO Rhodes and is a will to establish an Anglo-American global empire. And this is kind of what we're talking about here. But what you're saying is the CFR created all these desks, sir. The dream of CISO in Rhodes. Yes. And idea was, well, this is how it works structure or practically was these guys, the CFR were so well organized that when the American empire came into fruition, I would say arguably after World War I, but two, 30s into the into the second world war, which was created by the same people who who created the first world war, really. They're in a position to swarm the, the, the, all the agencies that popped up, whether it's, whether it's the expanded state department, the National Security Agency and the CIA. So they're in position immediately, because they're the experts. Right? And you saw that. I think it was that the CFR had the war in peace studies, which is a Rockefeller's plan, planning out post-war Europe in 1939. Controlling the, controlling the state department. Yeah. And so they were, they had all their ducks lined up and they could take over these, they had a, they were in a better position to manage the world, because they were, they were succeeding the British Empire at that point. Although at this point, the British Empire is a shell, but so is the United States. Because behind this are the Rockefellers, the Rothschilds, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the elite families who control the central banks and the financial situation in the world, who make money off all the blood, all the blood that's spilled in the wars, all the death that's created. You were mentioning what they have planned for Cuba. Well, I mean, if that's not just speculation, because in 1974, Henry Kissinger wrote that National National Security Study Memorad, I'm 200, calling for the impoverished, piratism of, of the third world to death. And also, it's one of the reasons why they created the oil crisis was just right development in the, in the third world. You know, on the other hand, it seems that we have put a rebar on the CFR machinery, I just published a, published an article in, in three parts that I titled, how the CFR conspirators miscalculated the first part is the internet. They have lost the monopoly of information. Second part is the new Russia putting and the third part is Donald Trump. So let's see. Yes, see what happens. I don't know, like you, I, I don't put, I don't put, put much faith in electoral politics, much Donald Trump, but I do know, I know, I know what you're saying. I do see some, some hope in some resistant power block, like whether it's China or Russia, this isn't to say I, I respect the regime in China or I respect Putin, is this true knowledge that maybe they were, they represent different interests or different block that can at least check the, the madmen who run the, the angle. Yeah, yeah. Yeah, but the, the thing is that it's much better a world control by three bad guys that for, that having one control by all the bad guys. Yes, it does. Finally, shot. Because there's some check, there's some chance sanity. Yeah, yeah, because they, they, they, they, they, they want one world to talk about. Unipolar war, they, they, they, they, they taught all on, hey, hey, hegemon like, like, ah, you see, but some, the, the plants are not going according to, to the oil machinery that they have, they, something, something is wrong wrong that they, the machinery has the stall. Yes,