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The CIA, initially created to combat communism, evolved under Allen Dulles into a group of assassins and a tool for American corporate power. They began using coups and disinformation campaigns within the US. The intelligence community has significant power to retaliate against those who challenge them, as Chuck Schumer warns. The media often unknowingly assists the CIA by publishing leaked information, a tactic employed since the 1970s. The CIA's major function is to disseminate propaganda and influence public opinion. They recruit journalists, including well-known figures, to control the stories that are introduced into the press.

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Congress turned a blind eye to government abuses, trusting blindly in their actions. The FBI, led by J. Edgar Hoover, committed blackmail, illegal wiretapping, and political surveillance. The press failed to expose these wrongdoings, allowing them to continue unchecked. Presidents like JFK, Lyndon Johnson, and Nixon were afraid to fire Hoover due to his blackmail material on them.

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Today's CIA has become politicized and weaponized, posing a threat to America. Trump, wary of the intelligence community after being spied on, chose to fund his own transition team. Former CIA officials express a belief that the government exists to serve itself rather than the people, reflecting a troubling mindset within the agency. The top 20% of the CIA is described as malignant narcissists, while the majority are seen as patriotic but constrained by leadership. Fixing the CIA requires significant personnel changes, as current leaders are entrenched in a culture that prioritizes their agenda over serving the public. Effective oversight and the inclusion of experienced, conservative voices are crucial for reforming the agency and ensuring it fulfills its intended purpose of national defense.

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During World War 2, the head of British intelligence sought friendship with the Americans. He approached the Rockefellers, offering access to UK espionage in exchange for financial support. The Rockefellers agreed and provided an entire floor at Rockefeller Center rent-free for the operation of the OSS, the precursor to the CIA. Alan Dulles and others were involved in this Rockefeller-backed organization. The CIA's roots can be traced back to the Rockefellers, who also held a strong disdain for organized labor. This information can be easily found online.

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During World War II, hundreds of Nazis and their collaborators were brought to the United States and given citizenship in exchange for information about the Soviet Union. This was done by the Office of Policy Coordination (OPC), a covert spy agency that preceded the CIA. Despite explicit orders from Presidents Roosevelt, Truman, and Carter, these war criminals were allowed to enter the country. The government knew about their presence and even recruited some of them. The OPC also sent Nazis to South American countries. Many of these individuals are still living in the US today, some even working for government agencies. The truth about this operation is only now coming to light.

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Throughout history, the FBI has been used to spy on American citizens who disagreed with government policies, especially regarding foreign affairs. Both Democrats and Republicans have utilized the FBI for this purpose, including monitoring churches and other groups. While some investigations may have been beneficial, the FBI's extensive record-keeping raises concerns. The CIA, established in 1947, has a poor track record as well, being used by administrations for questionable purposes. It is suggested that the FBI's functions could be handled by state justice departments instead.

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Thank you, Hillsdale, for having me. Today, I'll discuss the history of the intelligence state, starting in 1948, the "zero AD" of US intelligence. In 1948, George Kennan penned "Inauguration of Organized Political Warfare," advocating for overt and covert actions, including "black psychological warfare," to further US objectives. He lamented the public's "attachment to the concept of a basic difference between peace and war," hindering these efforts. NSC 10-2 followed, sanctioning covert operations with "plausible deniability," transforming intelligence agencies into "lie organizations." This led to an "empire of lies" both abroad and at home. Post-WWII, with hard power limited, the US shifted to a soft power empire, using agencies like the CIA for "democracy promotion," even through "dirty deeds." The State Department coordinates this, using the CIA for covert operations, as they lack "plausible deniability."

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They discuss how fear and trauma are used to manipulate populations, mentioning CIA programs like MK Ultra. They touch on the origins of the CIA from OSS after WWII, incorporating Nazi techniques. The CIA's initial purpose was espionage, not domestic operations. Operation Paperclip brought Nazi scientists to the US for missile and biological weapons programs. The CIA's actions were against its original charter.

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The U.S. bioweapons program, initially run by the CIA after World War II, involved recruiting German and Japanese scientists. They conducted unethical experiments on the American public, including spraying toxins in cities and testing bioweapons. In 1969, President Nixon ended the program due to concerns over the potential for widespread harm. However, the CIA secretly retained samples and continued bioweapons research. Following the 9/11 attacks, the Patriot Act was passed, allowing the CIA to bypass legal restrictions on bioweapons. Funding for bioweapons development surged, with Tony Fauci becoming a key figure in this area. Despite a moratorium on gain-of-function studies, Fauci moved research overseas. The CIA also funneled money through organizations to obscure its involvement. The discussion highlights the dangers of government overreach and the importance of resisting authoritarianism.

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In April 1945, as Allied forces liberated Nazi concentration camps, the world learned about the horrors of Hitler's regime. However, what many don't know is that thousands of former Nazis went on to work for the US government, some of whom were war criminals. Declassified documents from the late 1990s reveal that these former Nazis were employed by the US as scientists and intelligence agents, even though they misrepresented and fabricated intelligence. The US government was willing to use these individuals to gain an advantage in the Cold War, despite the ethical concerns and the potential compromise of accurate intelligence. The full extent of the collaboration between the US and former Nazis may never be known.

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During World War II, hundreds of Nazis and their collaborators were brought to the United States and given citizenship in exchange for information about the Soviet Union. This was done by the Office of Policy Coordination (OPC), a covert spy agency that preceded the CIA. Despite explicit orders from Presidents Roosevelt, Truman, and Carter to prevent the entry of war criminals, the government knowingly allowed these individuals to live comfortably in America. The story of this Nazi connection was uncovered by John Loftus, a former prosecutor with the Office of Special Investigations. He revealed that various government agencies, including the FBI and Army intelligence, were aware of and recruited these Nazis. The operation was kept secret through the sanitizing of documents. Some of these war criminals are still alive and even working for the government today.

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Throughout history, the FBI has been used to spy on American citizens who disagreed with certain policies, such as Woodrow Wilson using it during World War I and both Democrats and Republicans using it during the Vietnam era. It seems that the FBI was specifically designed to monitor Americans who opposed foreign policy. While some of their investigations have been beneficial, the FBI's extensive record-keeping could be handled by state justice departments. On the other hand, the CIA, which has only been around since 1947, has a poor track record. It was utilized by Democratic administrations, but the details are not mentioned.

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Throughout history, institutions like the FBI have been used to spy on American citizens who disagreed with certain policies. Woodrow Wilson utilized the FBI during World War I to arrest those who opposed his foreign policy. Similarly, both Democrats and Republicans employed the FBI to monitor various groups, including churches, during the Vietnam era and Central American policy disagreements. While some investigations may have been beneficial, the FBI's surveillance on Americans who express dissent, particularly regarding foreign policy, raises concerns. It is worth considering whether the FBI's role in investigating crime could be fulfilled by state justice departments, without compromising civil liberties. The FBI is known to maintain extensive records on individuals.

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In 1948, George Kennan authored "Inauguration of Organized Political Warfare," advocating for overt and covert actions, including psychological warfare, to further US national objectives. This followed the CIA's first election rigging in Italy, where $250,000,000 was spent to influence the outcome, utilizing media, churches, charities, and even the mafia. Kennan's memo argued for a permanent capacity for such interventions globally, despite potential public disapproval. NSC ten-two, also sponsored by Kennan, sanctioned illegal covert operations with plausible deniability, transforming the CIA from a spy agency into one that could lie. This required lying to both foreign countries and US citizens. The Smith-Mundt Act, intended to prevent domestic propaganda, was later repealed, allowing the US government to disseminate "government-made news" to Americans. Initially, the US had only three government agencies: State, War (later Defense), and Treasury. The Monroe Doctrine and subsequent "Banana Wars" expanded US influence. Woodrow Wilson's promotion of democracy facilitated interventions globally. Post-1948, the CIA orchestrated coups in 85 countries. Scandals led to the Church Committee hearings and initial congressional oversight, but Reagan later restructured the intelligence state, diffusing it into society via captured institutions like the National Endowment for Democracy. The intelligence state serves the State Department and Pentagon, with the CIA doing the "dirty work."

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We spoke to someone with access to hidden CIA documents about their involvement in the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. The response was clear: yes, the CIA was involved. This revelation suggests that there are powerful forces within the U.S. government that operate beyond democratic control, capable of influencing elections and concealing their actions, including the murder of a president. This undermines the very concept of democracy. Trust in the government has declined since Kennedy's assassination, and those in the know, including every CIA director since 1963, have been aware of this troubling reality.

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Speaker 1 argues there was "a lot of crazy stuff like this that was going on in The US first half of the twentieth century overdrive nineteen forties" and cites "the Manhattan Project" and "MKUltra" to claim "these institutions are less functional." He says, "I don't think the CIA is doing anything quite like MKUltra anymore." He references "the church commission hearings in the late seventies" and recalls "black sites" and torture in the war on terror, including "waterboarding" and "the torture memos" that formalized it. By "2007 at Guantanamo" "the inmates were running the asylum," "The inmates and the defense lawyers were running it." He notes "the post j Edgar Hoover FBI" as "Hoover was, I don't know, a law unto himself. It was completely out of control. CIA even more so." He adds "The NSA ... held up longer as a deep state entity" and "the Patriot Act empowered all these FISA courts," with "the NSA FISA court process was weaponized in a really, really crazy way."

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Operation Mockingbird involved the CIA compromising journalists to manipulate media narratives, with around 400 journalists reportedly involved. Despite promises to cease such activities after the Church Committee hearings, the CIA continued to influence journalism globally and is now a major funder of media. This manipulation extends to Hollywood, where the CIA has historically collaborated with filmmakers to shape public perception. Programs like MK Ultra aimed at mind control through unethical experiments, including drug use and psychological manipulation. The CIA's influence over media and entertainment raises concerns about the erosion of democracy and the integrity of information disseminated to the public. The connections between intelligence agencies and media corporations suggest a coordinated effort to shape societal narratives and control public opinion.

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Colonel Rob Manus, a retired Air Force officer, discusses Operation Gladio, a covert network established during the Cold War to resist potential Soviet invasion and prevent the spread of communism in Western Europe. Gladio recruited spies, soldiers, and assets, establishing secret underground bases across Europe. However, Gladio's activities extended beyond defense, often blurring the lines between covert action and political manipulation. The revelation of Gladio's existence in the 1990s shook public trust in governments and institutions. Today, Gladio's legacy raises questions about the balance between security and individual freedoms, the role of secrecy in governments, and the enduring influence of the Cold War.

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In 1948, George Kennan authored "Inauguration of Organized Political Warfare," advocating for overt and covert actions, including psychological warfare, to further US national objectives. Kennan believed the public's preference for peace hindered these efforts. The memo followed the CIA's first election rigging in Italy, where $200 million was used to influence the outcome, involving media manipulation, funding of politicians, and collaboration with questionable entities. NSC ten-two, also sponsored by Kennan, sanctioned a range of covert operations, legal if US government responsibility could be plausibly denied. This led to the CIA transforming into an organization that lies, requiring an "empire of lies" both abroad and at home. Congress attempted to check this with the Smith-Mundt Act, but it was later repealed. Before 1948, the US had already expanded its influence through the Monroe Doctrine, Banana Wars, and the Spanish-American War. The FBI was created in 1908. Woodrow Wilson's promotion of democracy facilitated the use of covert actions without needing a national security threat. Post-1948, the CIA orchestrated coups in numerous countries. Scandals led to the Church Committee hearings and congressional oversight. After a brief rollback under Jimmy Carter, Ronald Reagan restructured the intelligence state in 1983, diffusing the CIA's influence into public-facing institutions like the National Endowment for Democracy. The intelligence state serves the State Department and Pentagon, with the CIA doing the "dirty work."

The Why Files

When The Mob Financed The CIA's Secret Army
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In 1948, a surge in heroin supply in America led Harry Anslinger, the federal narcotics commissioner, to discover that Lucky Luciano, head of the mafia's national crime syndicate, was involved. Luciano was found preparing a large heroin shipment for the CIA, revealing his collaboration with the agency. This partnership stemmed from the Cold War, where the CIA sought to counter Soviet influence in Europe. They initiated Operation Paperclip, recruiting Nazi scientists for covert operations, including General Reinhard Gehlen, who formed a paramilitary organization called "werewolves" to resist communism. As communism threatened Italy, the CIA expanded its operations through Operation Gladio, which involved creating fear and instability to influence elections. They funded this operation using drug money, partnering with the Mafia to smuggle heroin into the U.S. and launder profits through the Vatican Bank. Despite the success of Gladio in manipulating Italian politics, it led to state-sponsored terrorism and violence, with many innocent casualties. The CIA's involvement in drug trafficking and covert operations continued to be controversial, with claims of complicity in drug distribution in black neighborhoods. Investigations revealed a pattern of deception and manipulation by the CIA, raising questions about the true nature of the Soviet threat and the agency's accountability. The narrative suggests a complex interplay between the CIA, organized crime, and political power, culminating in significant historical events, including the assassinations of JFK and RFK.

The Why Files

The Dark Side of DARPA | The Human Cost of Technological Supremacy
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In the early Space Race, the Soviet Union achieved significant milestones, including launching Sputnik and sending the first humans into space, while the U.S. struggled to keep pace. In response to fears of Soviet advancements, the U.S. established the Advanced Research Project Agency (ARPA), later known as DARPA, to develop advanced military technologies. DARPA's innovations include the internet, GPS, and AI, with many technologies initially designed for military purposes later benefiting civilian life. However, DARPA's history also includes controversial projects like Agent Orange during the Vietnam War, which caused extensive harm to civilians and veterans. The agency operates with little transparency, often funding projects through private channels, leading to concerns about the military-industrial complex's influence. Despite its advancements in technology, DARPA's legacy is mixed, balancing significant contributions to society with morally questionable actions. The discussion raises questions about the ethical implications of DARPA's work and the necessity of its existence in modern warfare.

The Why Files

The Real CIA Vol. 1: 693 Pages of Secret Crimes
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The episode recounts a curated history of CIA misconduct revealed through a 693-page release, detailing decades of domestic surveillance, covert operations, and abuses that targeted American citizens. It traces the arc from the 1970s disclosures to later revelations about mass data collection and influence operations, underscoring that these activities were not isolated incidents but part of broader programs approved at high levels of government. Through vivid examples, the narrative covers domestic spying, mail opens, wiretaps, and infiltration of protest movements, along with high-profile investigations and congressional inquiries that sought to bring accountability to the agency. The piece emphasizes the role of journalist Seymour Hersh in exposing major aspects of the story and outlines how the Church Committee and other investigations exposed systemic overreach, including programs that paired intelligence work with domestic civil rights activists, lawmakers, and media outlets. It also highlights the evolution of oversight failures, the later expansion of surveillance powers, and the uneasy continuity of practices into modern policy. In discussing MKUltra, COINTELPRO, CHAOS, and Mockingbird–alongside the NSA and Patriot Act era developments–the episode presents a continuous thread about power, secrecy, and the challenges of preserving civil liberties in the face of national security imperatives. The host closes by reflecting on the difficulty of fully knowing what remains redacted while urging scrutiny of how information and influence are wielded in a modern democracy.

PBD Podcast

"Mossad Is Reckless" - Ex-Spy @Andrew-Bustamante EXPOSES CIA, Mossad & China's GLOBAL Agenda | PBD
Guests: Andrew Bustamante
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The conversation centers on the shadowy edges of modern intelligence work, with a strong emphasis on Mossad’s approach versus the CIA, and on how real-world geopolitics shape security, risk, and policy. The guests describe MSAD as “way more flexible” than the CIA, with “very experimental, very little oversight,” and they say MSAD “actively tries to penetrate CIA. Actively tries to penetrate MI6,” highlighting the asymmetries in risk tolerance and methods between secret services. The discussion pivots to Epstein as a case study: if Epstein was connected to an intelligence service, Mossad is described as the likely patron, with the claim that “MSAD is way more flexible in what they're willing to bring to the table in terms of an intelligence operation other than CIA.” That leads to a broader comparison: the modern intelligence ecosystem is a competition of methods—openly aggressive operations, assassinations, and regime-change advocacy, contrasted with more formalized, oversight-bound approaches in the U.S. The speakers argue that post-9/11 reforms created tighter congressional oversight and a more tightly managed CIA, in contrast to MSAD’s looser structure; they frame 9/11 as a turning point when “the Congress stepped in and created heavy oversight” and when interagency cooperation became a formal, required process, though actual practice remains contested. The dialogue then shifts to personal risk and operational security: Bustamante explains his plan to disappear by 2027, to protect himself and his family while continuing to produce content. He emphasizes that wealth cannot fully shield someone from targeted threats and explains how he prepares for worst-case scenarios on planes and in daily life, including seating near exits and coordinating a family safety plan. The conversation covers corroboration in intelligence—“corroboration of intelligence” as a core concept using multiple sources (human sources from allies, signals intelligence from NSA, and open-source information) to validate what one source reports. They stress that in places like Iran, where CIA officers are scarce, partners like MSAD become essential sources, with the acknowledgement that intelligence from allies can be “shaped” to fit national interests yet still provide valuable confirmation when cross-checked with other channels. The partners discuss strategic leverage and the ethics of influence, noting that abroad, Israel remains a critical ally to the United States, often acting as a regional bulwark against Iran, while acknowledging criticism of Israeli policy in the U.S. political discourse. The talk touches on the Russia-Ukraine dynamic and broader great-power competition, with the host framing foreign policy as a pragmatic calculus: “Israel is there to protect us,” and “NATO is there to protect us,” while American leadership must balance alliance commitments with domestic realities. They address hot-button topics like Tucker Carlson, the Epstein dossier, and the notion that the Russia hoax was used to distract and polarize; they debate whether such narratives are deliberate information warfare or genuine political theater. The hour closes with a reflection on accountability, the limits of presidential consequences, and the idea that the most important threats are the ones that advance American and allied security through pragmatic, sometimes messy, balancing acts rather than through spotless virtue. The book Shadow Cell, detailing a mole-hunt operation by Bustamante and his wife, is announced for September 9, underscoring that personal history and public risk remain tightly interwoven with national-security storytelling. The hosts also promote merch and a sense of “the future looks bright” as branding beacon for independent thought and debate.

Unlimited Hangout

One Nation Under Blackmail
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Whitney Webb announces that her book One Nation Under Blackmail is finished and runs a little over 800 pages (excluding citations). It argues Jeffrey Epstein was not an anomaly but part of a long-running transnational network that blends organized crime and intelligence. The project began in January 2020, and publication is slated for September 22; print will be in two volumes due to supply-chain constraints, while the ebook and audiobook will be a single volume. Webb’s core thesis is to place Epstein in the context of a power structure she describes as the Enterprise, a cross-border, multi-faction network that predates the Reagan era and operates through arms trafficking, drugs, and subversion, with little regard for law or oversight. A late-eighties CIA whistleblower quote underscores this frame: “They are CEOs. They are bankers. They own airlines. They own national television networks… They will take over not only the CIA, but the entire government and the world.” The book traces this network from Operation Underworld in World War II, when the Office of Naval Intelligence joined forces with the National Crime Syndicate to the formation of a modern, transnational structure, showing how intelligence, organized crime, and oligarchs interlock. Part I builds toward Epstein by detailing connections across Roy Cohn, Adnan Khashoggi, Bill Casey, the Bear Stearns era, and the Iran-Contra milieu, including the BCCI network, and describing how money laundering and off-books financing funded covert operations. Part II shifts to Epstein’s real estate network with Leslie Wexner and the Maxwell family, then to Clinton-era figures like Mark Middleton, the White House visits in 1993, and Epstein’s later involvement with the Clinton Foundation and Gates Foundation. Webb discusses the Promise software saga and Robert Maxwell, tying them to later Silicon Valley blackmail capabilities in the digital age. She argues there were two parallel sex-trafficking strands: a broad trafficking operation and an elite track grooming women as wives or companions to powerful figures. The conclusion insists that this is a pattern worth official scrutiny, not a tale of isolated crime. Webb notes publication logistics, encourages readers to consider the ebook or audiobook for broader access, and promises more detailed discussions ahead as publication nears.

Johnny Harris

The “Deep State” Explained
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The discussion centers on the concept of the "deep state," particularly in the context of U.S. history and intelligence agencies. Johnny Harris and Paji explore the origins of the CIA, tracing its roots back to the OSS during WWII and highlighting the agency's evolution into a powerful entity with significant influence over U.S. foreign policy. Key historical events, such as the Cuban Missile Crisis and various covert operations, illustrate the CIA's secretive nature and its impact on democracy. The conversation also touches on the oversight challenges faced by intelligence agencies, especially post-9/11, and the balance between national security and civil liberties. Ultimately, it raises questions about accountability and the concentration of power among unelected officials.
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