#451 – Rick Spence: CIA, KGB, Illuminati, Secret Societies, Cults & Conspiracies AI transcript and summary - episode of podcast Lex Fridman Podcast
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Episode: #451 – Rick Spence: CIA, KGB, Illuminati, Secret Societies, Cults & Conspiracies
Author: Lex Fridman
Duration: 03:36:54
Episode Shownotes
Rick Spence is a historian specializing in the history of intelligence agencies, espionage, secret societies, conspiracies, the occult, and military history. Thank you for listening ❤ Check out our sponsors: https://lexfridman.com/sponsors/ep451-sc
See below for timestamps, transcript, and to give feedback, submit questions, contact Lex, etc. Transcript: https://lexfridman.com/rick-spence-transcript
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OUTLINE: (00:00) - Introduction (09:04) - KGB and CIA (23:21) - Okhrana, Cheka, NKVD (38:53) - CIA spies vs KGB spies (45:29) - Assassinations and mind control (52:23) - Jeffrey Epstein (59:15) - Bohemian Grove (1:11:09) - Occultism (1:22:20) - Nazi party and Thule society (2:02:38) - Protocols of the Elders of Zion (2:35:43) - Charles Manson (3:02:30) - Zodiac Killer (3:13:24) - Illuminati (3:20:48) - Secret societies PODCAST LINKS: - Podcast Website:https://lexfridman.com/podcast
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Summary
In episode #451 of the Lex Fridman Podcast, historian Rick Spence examines the complex interactions between intelligence agencies like the CIA and KGB, exploring their historical impact on politics and society. Discussions delve into the practices of infiltration, manipulation, and espionage, alongside the roles of secret societies and conspiracy theories that have shaped contemporary views on power. Key themes include the psychological tactics used within these organizations, the implications of historical events like the Young Turk Revolution, and the troubling narratives surrounding antisemitism, particularly through the lens of the Protocols of the Elders of Zion.
Go to PodExtra AI's episode page (#451 – Rick Spence: CIA, KGB, Illuminati, Secret Societies, Cults & Conspiracies) to play and view complete AI-processed content: summary, mindmap, topics, takeaways, transcript, keywords and highlights.
Full Transcript
00:00:00 Speaker_00
The following is a conversation with Rick Spence, a historian specializing in the history of intelligence agencies, espionage, secret societies, conspiracies, the occult, and military history. And now, a quick few second mention of each sponsor.
00:00:18 Speaker_00
Check them out in the description. It's the best way to support this podcast. We got AG1 for nutrition, NetSuite for business, BetterHelp for the mind, Masterclass for learning, and Shopify for selling stuff online. Choose wisely, my friends.
00:00:34 Speaker_00
Also, if you want to get in touch with me for a bunch of different kinds of reasons, go to lexfriedman.com slash contact. And now, on to the full ad reads. I try to make these interesting, but if you skip them, please still check out our sponsors.
00:00:48 Speaker_00
I enjoy their stuff, maybe you will too. This episode is brought to you by AG1, an all-in-one daily drink to support better health and peak performance.
00:00:59 Speaker_00
A drink I have not been consuming for the last few days because I'm traveling, and it's the thing that makes me miss home.
00:01:05 Speaker_00
I'm in San Francisco, allowing myself to be surrounded and inspired by some incredible software engineering that's going on here, and putting all the other mess of politics and social bubble stuff aside.
00:01:20 Speaker_00
So I'm doing a lot of programming and having a lot of really highly deep technical conversations. But I definitely miss Austin. I miss Texas. I miss Boston. Walking the halls of MIT. Really it's the university I intimately know now.
00:01:37 Speaker_00
And there's something about a university where you can shut off all the mess of the outside world and focus on ideas, on learning, and on discovering.
00:01:50 Speaker_00
Plus the fearless energy of undergraduate and graduate students just boldly going forward, thinking they can completely revolutionize a field. That's really inspiring to be surrounded by.
00:02:04 Speaker_00
And in Texas, the thing I love the most is there's a simple kindness to the hello, to the nod, to the aimless and wonderful conversation that you might have at a coffee shop or when you meet a stranger. I don't know.
00:02:22 Speaker_00
I really fall in love with Texas and the long runs along the river. which I consume AG1 after. Sometimes I forget there's a sponsor read going on. They'll give you one month supply of fish oil when you sign up at drinkag1.com slash lex.
00:02:41 Speaker_00
This episode is also brought to you by NetSuite, an all-in-one cloud business management system. That's the other thing about San Francisco that I'm reminded of. That there's these incredible businesses that are born.
00:02:57 Speaker_00
Just a couple of founders and they're quickly hiring a few folks, especially engineering heavy teams. And they're all dreamers and they're all pushing forward and they're all trying to do the craziest shit they can.
00:03:11 Speaker_00
Yes, there is a San Francisco bubble. Yes, there's a bit of a tunnel vision going on in many ways. but on the pure desire to build something cool, something that has a positive impact on the world. I don't know, that's a truly inspiring desire.
00:03:27 Speaker_00
But of course, sort of from my perspective, I share in that desire, but there's a great cost to it as well, and it's something that is a constant tension in my heart.
00:03:38 Speaker_00
I would like to do more building than talking, and I'm reminded of that when I'm here. Anyway. There is a bit of a mess, a complexity to the scaling of business and the running of a business. And that is what NetSuite can help you with.
00:03:55 Speaker_00
They manage all kinds of messy stuff. Over 37,000 companies have upgraded to NetSuite by Oracle. Take advantage of NetSuite's flexible financing plan at netsuite.com slash Lex. That's netsuite.com slash Lex.
00:04:10 Speaker_00
This episode is also brought to you by BetterHelp, spelled H-E-L-P, help. They figure out what you need to match you with a licensed therapist in under 48 hours.
00:04:22 Speaker_00
I'm reminded of the work and of my conversation with Karl Deisseroth, a psychiatrist and a appreciator of the beauty in the world. What a wonderful human being. Also, Paul Conti. These are all friends of Andrew Huberman.
00:04:40 Speaker_00
And what just deep and interesting people they are. I would venture even to say very different, but both just incredible analysts of the human mind. And what a mystery the mind is.
00:04:53 Speaker_00
I've been reading a lot of mechanistic interpretability work, which is this whole field of analyzing neural networks and trying to understand what's going on inside. And there is just wonderful breakthroughs in that field.
00:05:09 Speaker_00
But whenever I'm reading the papers, I can't help but be caught by the thought that I wish we had this kind of, rigor or the possibility of rigor in studying the human mind. Sort of neurobiology, neuroscience is too messy. There's too many variables.
00:05:29 Speaker_00
There's too much going on and you can't do control experiments like you can in neural network. So anyway, the human mind is a beautiful and mysterious thing.
00:05:39 Speaker_00
And if you want to untangle the puzzles going on in there, check out betterhelp.com slash Lex and save in your first month. That's betterhelp.com slash Lex.
00:05:50 Speaker_00
This episode is also brought to you by Masterclass, where you can watch over 200 classes from the best people in the world in their respective disciplines. Phil Ivey on poker, for example. Great, great Masterclass.
00:06:04 Speaker_00
There's another guy who I don't believe has a Masterclass, although he should, Phil Helmuth. And I got a chance to meet him and hang out with him, and it was... What a cool experience.
00:06:17 Speaker_00
I just love that this world can produce such interesting, distinct, unique characters. And they are unapologetically true to themselves. Beautiful. I love it. Anyway, there's a lot of such characters on Masterclass.com. and you can learn from them.
00:06:37 Speaker_00
So like I said, I love Phil Ivey's masterclass, Aaron Franklin on barbecue, probably somebody I'll talk to eventually. I actually watched a couple of episodes of a barbecue show on Netflix, that's pretty good, but not as good as the masterclass.
00:06:52 Speaker_00
I just love the science and the art that goes into the whole thing. Anyway, get unlimited access to every masterclass and get an additional 15% off an annual membership at masterclass.com slash Lex.
00:07:05 Speaker_00
This episode is also brought to you by Shopify, a platform designed for anyone to sell anywhere with a great looking online store. I set one up, miraculously, lxferment.com slash store. I think about the countless stores that are enabled.
00:07:20 Speaker_00
I think about the countless stores that are enabled by Shopify and the machinery of capitalism. And I was thinking about that when I was talking to Bernie Sanders. And what a genuine human being Bernie is.
00:07:32 Speaker_00
First of all, still firing on all cylinders in terms of the sharpness and the depth and the sort of the horsepower of his mind. He's still there at 83 years old, still got it. And also just has not changed for many, many decades.
00:07:49 Speaker_00
I wish there would be more politicians with that kind of integrity. Agree or disagree with him, the man has integrity. And as we head into this election, I think about the kind of politicians and human beings I would love to see lead our world.
00:08:05 Speaker_00
And to me, integrity is one of the character traits that is of the highest importance, because the pressures when you're at the top, leading a nation, are immense. And I would like someone who refuses to ever for any reason sell their soul.
00:08:23 Speaker_00
For convenience or otherwise. Anyway, sign up for a $1 per month trial period at Shopify.com slash Lex. That's all lowercase. Go to Shopify.com slash Lex to take your business to the next level today. This is the Let's Freedom podcast.
00:08:41 Speaker_00
To support it, please check out our sponsors in the description. And now, dear friends, here's Rick Spence. you have written and lectured about serial killers, secret societies, cults, and intelligence agencies.
00:09:12 Speaker_00
So we can basically begin at any of these fascinating topics. But let's begin with intelligence agencies. Which has been the most powerful intelligence agency in history?
00:09:22 Speaker_03
The most powerful intelligence agency in history. I mean, it's an interesting question. I'd say probably in terms of
00:09:32 Speaker_03
historical longevity and consistency of performance that the Russian intelligence services, notice I didn't say the KGB specifically, but the Russian intelligence services going back to the czarist period are consistently pretty good, not infallible, none of them are.
00:09:56 Speaker_03
Of course, there's a common Western way of looking at anything Russian. Very often, I think it's still the case, Russians are viewed in one of two ways. Either they are bumbling idiots, or they are diabolically clever. No sort of middle ground.
00:10:13 Speaker_03
And you can find both of those examples in this.
00:10:16 Speaker_03
So what I mean by that is that if you're looking at the modern SVR or FSB, which are just two different organizations that used to be part of the one big KGB or the KGB or its predecessors, the Cheka, you're really going back to the late 19th century and the Imperial Russian Intelligence Security Service
00:10:40 Speaker_03
generally known as the Okrana or Okranka. It's really the department of police, the special corps of gendarmes.
00:10:49 Speaker_03
Their primary job was protecting the imperial regime and protecting it against imperial or other interior enemies, revolutionaries for the most part. And they got very, very good at that.
00:11:02 Speaker_03
by co-opting people within those movements, infiltrating and recruiting informers, agent provocateurs. In fact, they excelled at the agent provocateur. Person you place inside an organization to cause trouble.
00:11:17 Speaker_03
usually maneuver them into a position of leadership, and they provoke actions that can then allow you to crack down on them.
00:11:26 Speaker_03
That is, many sort of lure or bring the target organization into any legal or open status that it can be more effectively suppressed. They're very good at that.
00:11:39 Speaker_03
So good that by the early 20th century, in the years preceding the Russian Revolution in 1917, they had effectively infiltrated every radical party, Bolsheviks, Mensheviks, SRs, great and small, and placed people in positions of influence and leadership.
00:11:58 Speaker_03
to the point that arguably, that is, you can debate this, and I think in the whole, they could largely dictate what those parties did.
00:12:09 Speaker_03
Nothing was discussed at any central committee meeting of any revolutionary group that the Ocrona wasn't immediately aware of. And they often had people in positions to influence what those decisions were.
00:12:24 Speaker_03
that raises an interesting question is that if they were that good and they had infiltrated and effectively controlled most of the opposition, then how did the regime get overthrown by revolutionaries?
00:12:36 Speaker_03
The answer to that is that it wasn't overthrown by revolutionaries. It was overthrown by politicians. That would then take us into a detour into Russian history, but I'll just leave it with this.
00:12:48 Speaker_03
If you look at 1917 and you look closely, this is one of the things I would always tell my students, that there are two Russian revolutions in 1917. There's the first one in March or February, depending on your calendar, that overthrows Nicholas II.
00:13:04 Speaker_03
Revolutionaries are really not involved with that. Bolsheviks are nowhere to be seen. Trotsky and Lenin are nowhere to be seen. They have nothing to do with that.
00:13:12 Speaker_03
That has to do effectively with a political conspiracy within the Russian parliament, the Duma, to unseat an emperor they thought was bungling the war and was essentially a loser to begin with. And it was a coup d'etat, a parliamentary coup d'etat.
00:13:30 Speaker_03
The temporary or provisional government that that revolution put in power was the one overthrown by Lenin eight months later. And that government was essentially one dominated by moderate socialists.
00:13:46 Speaker_03
It was a government that very quickly sort of turned to the left. The guy we associate with that is Alexander Kerensky. Alexander Kerensky was a Russian socialist, a politician. He was the quasi-dictator of that regime.
00:14:01 Speaker_03
He's the person, not the czar, who's overthrown by Lenin. So the revolutionaries, they did not prove to be the fatal threat to the czarist regime. It was the czarist political system itself that did that.
00:14:19 Speaker_03
What then transpired was that the Okhrana and its method, and many of its agents, then immediately segued over into the new Soviet security service.
00:14:27 Speaker_03
So one of the first things that Lenin did in December of 1917, within a month of seizing power, since the hold on power was tenuous at best, was that, well, you're going to need some kind of organization to
00:14:42 Speaker_03
infiltrate and suppress those pesky counter-revolutionaries and foreign imperialists and all of the other enemies that we have. And so the extraordinary commission to combat counter-revolution and sabotage, the Cheka, was formed.
00:14:57 Speaker_03
You put a veteran Bolshevik, Felix Dzerzhinsky, at the head of that, someone you could politically rely upon, but Dzerzhinsky built his organization essentially out of the ochronomy.
00:15:08 Speaker_03
There were all of these informers sitting around with nothing to do, and they were employed. In the early 20s, the kind of rank and file of the Cheka might have been 80 to 90% former imperial officials. Those were gradually decreased over time.
00:15:29 Speaker_03
So why would they do that? Well, they were professionals. They also needed to eat and things were somewhat precarious.
00:15:34 Speaker_03
So if your job is to be an agent provocateur, if your job is to infiltrate targeted organizations and lead them astray, you do that for whoever pays you. That's part of the professionalism which goes in.
00:15:50 Speaker_03
And under the Soviets, the Soviet intelligence services are also very good at that. They are very good at infiltrating people into opposing organizations.
00:15:58 Speaker_03
And I guess the one example I would give to demonstrate that are the Cambridge Five, the British traders, Soviet standpoint heroes who were recruited, most notably Kim Philby,
00:16:15 Speaker_03
Guy Burgess, Donald McClain, Anthony Blunt, and there may have been well more than five, but that wasn't bad out of just Cambridge.
00:16:26 Speaker_03
And then placing those people in high positions, the ultimate goal, of course, is to get your people into positions of leadership and influence in the opposing intelligence service. And so they did.
00:16:39 Speaker_03
Of course, it all fell apart and they ended up in, you know, Philby ended up living the last part of his life in exile in Moscow, but they got their money's worth out of him.
00:16:51 Speaker_03
And you can also find this in KGB infiltration of the CIA, the FBI, the Aldrich Ames, the Robert Hansen cases. Of course, we were infiltrating by we. I mean, the Americans in the West managed to infiltrate our moles as well.
00:17:08 Speaker_03
But if it came down, you know, someone could dispute this, but I would think if you were going to come down to a kind of like a who had the most moles Superbowl. probably the Soviets would come somewhat ahead of that.
00:17:24 Speaker_00
So the scale of the infiltration, the number of people, and the skill of it, is there a case to be made that the Okrana and the Chaka orchestrated both the components of the Russian Revolution as you described them?
00:17:41 Speaker_03
Well, there's an interesting question for me. I mean, there are all kinds of questions about this. I mean, one of the questions is whether or not Lenin was an Ocrana agent. Okay. I've just said heresy.
00:17:52 Speaker_03
Some people will, I'll do that quite often because I am a heretic and proud of it. Great. Why would you possibly say that Lenin could have been an Ocrana agent? Well, let's look what he managed to do. So you had coming into the 20th century,
00:18:13 Speaker_03
a single, nominally a single Marxist movement, the Russian Social Democratic Labor Party. And Bolsheviks and Mensheviks, majorityites and minorityites, are merely factions of that party, and they always agreed that they were all Marxists and
00:18:35 Speaker_03
We all believe in dialectical materialism and the rise of... We're all socialists, comrade. The difference was the tactical means by which one would attain this. And what Lenin wanted was a militant, small-scale vanguard party. He wanted a revolution.
00:18:54 Speaker_03
He wanted to seize power, seize control of the state. And once you have the state, then you induce socialism from above.
00:19:05 Speaker_03
Whereas the majority of the people, the so-called Mensheviks, the minorityites, who are, oddly enough, the vast majority of the party, that's one of the first things, how do you lose that argument?
00:19:18 Speaker_03
How does the minority get to grab the name majorityites? But Lenin did that.
00:19:25 Speaker_03
So what Lenin wanted was a conspiratorial party of committed revolutionaries that would plot and scheme and undermine and eventually seize control of the state and induce socialism from above.
00:19:39 Speaker_03
There were other Russian Marxists who thought that that sounded vaguely totalitarian and not really democratic and not even terribly socialist. and they opposed that ineffectively from the beginning, outmaneuvered every step of the way.
00:19:58 Speaker_03
The Mensheviks are a case study in failure of a political organization. That too will be heresy to some people, but look, they lost. Now, so what Lenin managed to do, starting around 1903, continuing on to this, is he managed to divide
00:20:17 Speaker_03
take what had been a single Marxist party and split it into angry contending factions, because he and his Bolsheviks were on one side advocating a much more militant conspiratorial policy.
00:20:32 Speaker_03
The discombobulated Mensheviks were over on the other, and in between were a lot of people who really didn't know where they stood on this. I mean, sometimes they kind of agree, and he seems to be making sense today.
00:20:43 Speaker_03
No, no, I don't think he's making sense in that day. But he managed to completely disunify this organization. Now, who could possibly have seen benefit in that? The Ograna. Now, whether or not they put him up to it, whether or not in some way they
00:21:01 Speaker_03
helped move him into a position of leadership or encouraged it or encouraged it through people around him, whether he was a witting or unwitting agent of the Tsarist secret police, he certainly accomplished exactly what it was that they had wanted.
00:21:19 Speaker_03
And I find that suspicious. It's one of those things that it's so convenient in a way is that I'm not necessarily sure that was an accident. There's also this whole question to me as to what was going on within the Okrana itself.
00:21:41 Speaker_03
And this is one of these questions when I come to later about how intelligence agencies interact or serve the governments to which they are theoretically subordinate. They do tend to acquire a great deal of influence and power.
00:21:59 Speaker_03
After all, their main job is to collect information. And that information could be about all kinds of things, including people within the government structure itself.
00:22:10 Speaker_03
And they also know how to leverage that information in a way to get people to do what you want them to do.
00:22:18 Speaker_03
So an argument can be made, again, an argument, not a fact, merely an opinion, which is mostly what history is made out of, opinions, is that at some point between about 1900 and 1917, people in the Ocrana were playing their own game.
00:22:37 Speaker_03
And that game took them in a direction which meant that continued loyalty to the emperor, specifically to Nicholas II, was no longer part of that.
00:22:50 Speaker_03
To me, in a way, it seems almost during the events of 1917 that, one, you had an organization that was very effective when it did, that suddenly just becomes ineffective. It doesn't really disappear.
00:23:02 Speaker_03
These things don't go away, because it will reappear as the Ochaka, basically, fairly quickly. But it raises the question to me as to what degree there were people within the organization who allowed events to take the course they wished.
00:23:20 Speaker_00
I always wonder how much deliberate planning there is within an organization like Akrana, or if there's kind of a distributed intelligence that happens.
00:23:34 Speaker_03
Well, one of the key elements in any kind of intelligence organization or operation is compartmentalization. Need to know.
00:23:43 Speaker_03
So rarely do you have an occasion where everybody, everybody in an executive position are all brought into a big corporate meeting and we discuss all of the secret operations that are going on. No, no, you never do that.
00:23:56 Speaker_03
only a very limited number of people should know about that.
00:24:00 Speaker_03
If you have a person who is a case officer who's controlling agents, he's the only one who should know who those people are, possibly his immediate superiors, but in no way do you want that to be common knowledge.
00:24:14 Speaker_03
So information within the organization itself is compartmentalized. So you don't need everybody to be in on it. You don't even need necessarily the people who are nominally at the top.
00:24:26 Speaker_03
For instance, the Okrana, the real boss of the Okrana was the Imperial Ministry of the Interior, the Minister of the Interior, in fact. But the Minister of the Interior had no real effective control over this at all.
00:24:38 Speaker_03
I mean, to the point was that at one point early on, they actually organized the assassination of their own boss. They have their agents among the revolutionaries kill the minister of the interior. Because he'll just be replaced by another one.
00:24:53 Speaker_03
He is an imperial bureaucrat. He's not really part of their organization. You know, it's like a director of an intelligence agency appointed by the president. Maybe he's part of the organization. Maybe he isn't. Maybe he is not one of us. So you've got
00:25:17 Speaker_03
different levels, different compartments within it, and who's actually running the show, if anyone is. I don't know, that's never supposed to be apparent.
00:25:27 Speaker_00
Well, that's a fascinating question. I mean, you can see this with NKVD. It's obviously an extremely powerful organization that starts to eat itself, where everybody's pointing fingers internally also, as a way to gain more power.
00:25:45 Speaker_00
So the question is, in organizations like that, that are so compartmentalized, where's the power? Where's the center of power?
00:25:55 Speaker_00
Because you would think, given that much power, some individual or a group of individuals will start accumulating that power. But it seems like that's not always a trivial thing. Because if you get too powerful, the snake eats that person.
00:26:10 Speaker_03
Well, if we go back into the founder of Soviet secret police, Felix Dzerzhinsky. Dzerzhinsky dies in 1926. Heels over after giving a heated speech to a party meeting.
00:26:27 Speaker_03
Now, the common view, what you usually read, which was key for the time, is that, you know, clearly Stalin had him whacked because anytime someone died, it was almost always it. And I think a lot of times he did.
00:26:41 Speaker_03
But in some cases, Stalin's probably getting blamed for things that he didn't actually do. Dzerzhinsky wasn't even opposed to Stalin.
00:26:51 Speaker_03
So it's not clear why he would, but this was the, you know, Stalin died, you know, obviously he was poisoned, something happened. It was an unnatural death.
00:26:58 Speaker_03
Somebody goes in for an operation, you know, it gets a little too much anesthesia, Stalin killed them. Uh, somebody tips over in a canoe in upstate New York, Stalin killed them. There's actually a case about that. So,
00:27:14 Speaker_03
That itself can be kind of useful, where every time someone dies, they think you killed them. That's kind of an interesting method of intimidation in that regard. But the suspicion is nonetheless there.
00:27:27 Speaker_03
Dzerzhinsky had been, he was the grand inquisitor. He was seemingly firmly in control of the organization. Of course, maybe he wasn't. Maybe he was. My guess would be is that if Dzerzhinsky's death was
00:27:43 Speaker_03
not natural causes, that he was probably eliminated by someone within his own organization. And then you look at the people who take over.
00:27:54 Speaker_03
His immediate successor is Vyacheslav Menzhinsky, who's really not really a secret policeman, more kind of intellectual dilettante. But if you look behind him, you'll notice the fellow is Henrikh Yagoda.
00:28:11 Speaker_03
and Yagoda will really sort of manage things from behind the scenes until Minzynski dies in 1934. And then Yagoda will hold on until he's a victim of the purges, I think, in 37 or 38. Yagoda is ambitious, murderous,
00:28:33 Speaker_03
And if I was going to point the finger to anybody who possibly had Zerzhinsky whacked, it would be him. And for the purposes simply of advancement. That's the, uh, you know, the person to look out at any kind of corporate organization is
00:28:49 Speaker_03
your immediate subordinate, the person who could move into your job, because more than likely, that's exactly what they're planning to do.
00:28:58 Speaker_00
Yeah, just one step away from the very top, somebody there will probably accumulate the most power. You mentioned that the various Russian intelligence agencies were good at creating agent provocateurs, infiltrating the halls of power.
00:29:17 Speaker_00
What does it take to do that?
00:29:20 Speaker_03
Well, there's a interesting little acronym called MICE, M-I-C-E, and it's generally used. And it's just the way in which you would acquire. How do you get people to work for you? Well, M stands for money. You pay them. People are greedy. They want money.
00:29:38 Speaker_03
You know, if you look at Aldrich Ames, he had a very, very expensive wife with expensive tastes. So he wanted money. I is for ideology.
00:29:50 Speaker_03
So during, particularly in the 1920s and the 1930s, the Soviets were very effective in exploiting communists, people who wanted to serve the great cause.
00:30:01 Speaker_03
Even though that's initially not really what they wanted to do, because the idea was that if you recruit agents from among, let's say, American communists, you compromise the party.
00:30:12 Speaker_03
Because exactly what your enemies are going to say is that all communists are Soviet spies. They're all traitors in some way. So you would really want to keep those two things separate, but ideology was just so convenient.
00:30:25 Speaker_03
And those people would just work for you so well. You could get them to do anything, betray their grandmother. They would go ahead and do that for the greater good. So ideology can be a motivation. And that can be, you know, someone who is a
00:30:42 Speaker_03
is a devoted Marxist-Leninist. It can also be someone who's a disgruntled communist because there's no anti-communist like an ex-communist. Those who lose the faith can become very, very useful.
00:31:01 Speaker_03
For instance, if you look in the case of American intelligence, the people who essentially temporarily destroyed much of the KGB organization in the U.S.
00:31:12 Speaker_03
post-World War II, where people like Whitaker Chambers, Louis Budenz, Elizabeth Bentley, all of those people had been Communist Party members. They had all been part of the Red Faithful.
00:31:25 Speaker_03
They all, for one reason or another, became disillusioned and turned rat or patriot, whichever case you may want to put in that regard. What does the C and the E stand for? The C is for coercion.
00:31:44 Speaker_03
That's where you have to persuade someone to work for you. You have to pressure them. So usually you blackmail them. You know, that could be, they have a gambling habit. Uh, you know, in the old days it was very often because they were gay. Okay.
00:31:58 Speaker_03
Gets them in a position where they can be compromised. you can get them to do your bidding. Those people usually have a certain amount of control. Here's an interesting example of how the Okrana tended to handle this. I think it's still largely used.
00:32:13 Speaker_03
You'd round up a bunch of revolutionaries on some charge or another, distributing revolutionary literature, running an illegal printing press. You bring a guy into the room and you say, okay, you're going to work for us.
00:32:27 Speaker_03
He, of course, would refuse to do so. And they go, well, if you refuse, we'll keep the rest of your comrades in jail for a while, you know, maybe beat them with a rubber truncheon or so, and then we're just gonna let you go.
00:32:41 Speaker_03
We're just gonna put you back out on the street, and if you don't work for us, we will spread the rumor through our agents already in your organization that you are, and then what will your comrades do? How long are you going to live?
00:32:56 Speaker_03
So you see, you have no choice. You're ours and you're going to cooperate with us. And the way that that effectiveness would be ensured is that you have multiple agents within the same organization who don't know who each other are.
00:33:15 Speaker_03
That's very important. And they'll all be filing reports. So let's say you have three agents inside the central committee
00:33:25 Speaker_03
of the SR party, and there's a committee meeting, and you're going to look at the reports they file, they all better agree with each other, right?
00:33:33 Speaker_03
If one person doesn't report what the other two do, then perhaps they're not entirely doing their job, and they can be liquidated at any time. All you do is drop the dime on them. And this was done periodically.
00:33:46 Speaker_03
In fact, in some cases, you would betray your own agents just to completely discombobulate to the organization.
00:33:54 Speaker_03
This happened in one particular case around 1908, the fellow who was the head of the chief revolutionary terrorist organization, which wasn't Bolshevik, but the so-called socialist revolutionaries.
00:34:06 Speaker_03
They're actually the biggest revolutionary party, the SRs, who aren't even actually Marxists, more anarchists. But they went all in for the propaganda of the deed. They really like blowing people up and carrying out quite a campaign of terrorism.
00:34:24 Speaker_03
The fellow who was the head of that terrorist organization was a fellow by the name of Yevno Azef. And Yevno Azef was, guess what, an Okhrana agent. Everything he did, every assassination that he planned, he did in consultation with his control.
00:34:44 Speaker_03
So he'd kind of run out his string. There was increasing suspicion of him. He was also asking for a lot more money. So the Akrana itself arranged to have him ride it out. And what did that do?
00:34:59 Speaker_03
Well, what do you do in your party when you find out the chief of your terrorist brigade was a secret police agent? It's consternation and mistrust. Nobody in the party would ever trust and you couldn't tell who you were sitting around.
00:35:16 Speaker_03
I know that a fellow, I wrote a biography on Boris Sevenkov, who was a Russian revolutionary, and the second in command within the terrorist organization. By the way, the guy that wanted Azev's job so bad he could taste it.
00:35:31 Speaker_03
Well, on the one level, he expressed absolute horror that his boss was a police agent. And well, he should, because Savinkov was a police agent too. See, they already had the number two waiting in the wings to take over. But he was legitimately shocked.
00:35:47 Speaker_03
He didn't really suspect that. So it's a way of manipulating this. And then finally we come to the E. That, I think, is the most important. Ego. Sometimes people spy or betray because of the egotistical satisfaction that they receive.
00:36:08 Speaker_03
The sheer kind of Machiavellian joy in deceit. An example of that would be Kim Philby, one of the Cambridge Five. Now, Philby was a communist, and he would argue that he always saw himself as serving the communist cause.
00:36:26 Speaker_03
But he also made this statement, I think it's in the preface to his autobiography, and he says, one never looks twice at the offer of service in elite force.
00:36:41 Speaker_03
He's talking about his recruitment by the NKVD in the 1930s, and he was absolutely chuffed by that. The mere fact that they would want him, what he considered to be a first-rate organization would want him, satisfied his ego.
00:36:59 Speaker_03
And if I was to take a guess as to whether it was ideological motivation, whether it was the romance of communism or whether it was the appeal of ego that was the most important in his career of treason, I'd go with ego.
00:37:13 Speaker_03
And I think that figures into a lot, you know, people don't, someone doesn't get the promotions that they wanted.
00:37:19 Speaker_03
Again, if you look at something like Aldrich Ames' career in particular, you've got these kinds of, his career in the CIA was hit or miss. He didn't get the postings or promotions that he wanted as evaluation.
00:37:38 Speaker_03
He never felt that he got credit for doing that. And that's the type of thing that tends to stick in someone's craw and can lead for egotistical reasons and added incentive to betray.
00:37:50 Speaker_00
Yeah, that there's a boost to the ego when you can deceive, sort of not play by the rules of the world and just play with powerful people like they're your pawns. You're the only one that knows this.
00:38:06 Speaker_03
You're the only one that knows that the person who is sitting across from you, to which you have sworn your loyalty, you are simultaneously betraying. What a rush that must be for some people.
00:38:18 Speaker_00
I wonder how many people are susceptible to this. I would like to believe that people have, a lot of people have the integrity to at least withstand the MI. the money and the ideology, the pull of that, and the ego.
00:38:34 Speaker_03
It can also be a combination of the two. I mean, you can create a recipe of these things, certain amount of money, ego, and a little push of coercion, that if you don't, we'll rat you out.
00:38:51 Speaker_00
You'll be exposed. What are some differences to you as we look at the history of the 20th century between the Russian intelligence and the American intelligence, the CIA?
00:39:03 Speaker_03
If you look at both the Okhrana and the KGB, one of the things that you find consistent is that they, a single organization handled foreign intelligence, that is spying upon enemy or hostile governments, and also internal security.
00:39:21 Speaker_03
So that's all part of it. Whereas if you look at the US models that evolves, you eventually have the FBI under Hoover, who insists that he's going to be the counterintelligence force.
00:39:34 Speaker_03
If there are commie spies running around America, it's the FBI who's supposed to ferret them out. The CIA is not supposed to be involved in that.
00:39:45 Speaker_03
The charter, the basic agreement in 1947, did not give the CIA any... It's often said they were barred from spying on Americans, which isn't quite true. You can always find a way to do that.
00:39:57 Speaker_03
What they don't have is they don't have any police or judicial powers. They can't run around in the country carrying guns to use on people. They can't arrest you. They can't interrogate you. They can't jail you. they have no police or judicial powers.
00:40:12 Speaker_03
Now that means they have to get that from someone else. That doesn't mean that other agencies can't be brought in or local police officials, corn or whatever you need, you can eventually acquire, but they can't, they can't do that directly.
00:40:27 Speaker_03
So you've got this division between foreign intelligence and domestic counterintelligence often split between hostile organizations. The relationship between the FBI and the CIA, I think it's fair to say, is not chummy, never has been.
00:40:47 Speaker_03
There's always been a certain amount of rivalry and contention between the two. And it's not to say that something like that didn't exist between the domestic counterintelligence and foreign intelligence components of the KGB.
00:41:04 Speaker_03
But there would be less of that to a degree because there was a single organization. They're all answerable to the same people. So that gives you a certain greater amount, I think, of leeway and power because you're controlling both of those ends.
00:41:25 Speaker_03
I remember somebody telling me once that, and he was a retired KGB officer. There you go. Retired. One of the things that he found amusing was that in his role, one of the things that he could be is that he could be anywhere at any time in any dress.
00:41:47 Speaker_03
which meant that he could be in or out of uniform and any place at any time. He was authorized to do that. So more freedom, more power.
00:41:55 Speaker_03
I think one of the things that you would often view is that, well, the Russians are simply, you know, naturally meaner. There's less respect for human rights. There's a greater tendency to abuse power that one might have.
00:42:15 Speaker_03
I mean, frankly, they're all pretty good at that. They're probably, it is fair to say that there's probably some degree of cultural differences, not necessarily for institutional reasons, but cultural reasons.
00:42:30 Speaker_03
There could well be things that Americans might balk at doing more than you would find on the Russian or Soviet side of the equations. The other aspect of that is that Russian history is long and contentious and bloody.
00:42:49 Speaker_03
One of the things it certainly teaches you is you never trust foreigners. Every foreign government, anywhere, any country on your border is a real or potential enemy. They will all, at some point, if given the chance, invade you.
00:43:04 Speaker_03
Therefore, they must always be treated with great suspicion. It goes back to something that I think the British observed was that countries don't have friends. They have interests and those interests can change over time.
00:43:21 Speaker_03
Well, the CIA is probably equally suspicious of all other nations. That's your job. You're supposed to be suspicious. Your job is not to be trusting. Yeah.
00:43:29 Speaker_03
The basic job of an intelligence agency is to safeguard your secrets and steal the other guys and then hide those away.
00:43:37 Speaker_00
Are there laws, either intelligence agencies, that they're not willing to break? Is it basically lawless operation to where you can break any law as long as it accomplishes the task?
00:43:51 Speaker_03
Well, I think John Le Carre gave his pen name. He was talking about his early recruitment into British intelligence.
00:44:00 Speaker_03
And one of the things he remember being told up front was if you do this, you have to be willing to lie and you have to be willing to kill. Now, those are things that in ordinary human interactions are bad things.
00:44:15 Speaker_03
Generally, we don't like it when people lie to us. We expect that people will act honestly towards us, whether that's being a businessman you're involved with, your employers.
00:44:30 Speaker_03
We're often disappointed in that because people do lie all the time for a variety of reasons, but honesty is generally considered to be it. But in a realm where deception is a rule, dishonesty is a virtue.
00:44:46 Speaker_02
To be good at that, to be able to lie convincingly is good. It's one of the things you need to do. And killing also is generally frowned upon.
00:45:03 Speaker_03
you know, put people in prison for that. They're otherwise executed. But in certain circumstances, killing is one of those things that you need to be able to do.
00:45:13 Speaker_03
So what he felt he was being told in that case is that, you know, once you enter this realm, the same sort of moral rules that apply in general British society do not apply. And if you're squeamish about it, you won't fit in.
00:45:27 Speaker_03
You have to be able to do those things.
00:45:30 Speaker_00
I wonder how often those intelligence agencies in the 20th century, and of course, the natural question extending it to the 21st century, how often they go to the assassination, how often they go to the kill part of that versus just the espionage.
00:45:48 Speaker_03
Let's take an example from American intelligence, from the CIA, 1950s, 1960s into the 1970s, MKUltra. that is a secret program, which was involved with what is generally categorized as mind control, which really means messing with people's heads.
00:46:12 Speaker_03
And what was the goal of that? Well, there seemed to have been lots of goals, but there was an FBI memo that was, I recently acquired, quite legally, by the way, it's declassified, but it's from 1949,
00:46:28 Speaker_03
So this is only two years after the CIA came into existence. And it's an FBI memo because the FBI, of course, very curious what the CIA is up to.
00:46:36 Speaker_03
And the FBI are not part of this meeting, but they have someone in, they're sort of spying on what's going on. So there was a meeting which was held in a private apartment in New York.
00:46:49 Speaker_03
So it's not held in any kind of, it's essentially never really happened because it's in somebody's house. there are a couple of guys there from the CIA. One of them is Cleve Baxter. Cleve Baxter is the great godfather of the lie detector.
00:47:08 Speaker_03
Pretty much everything that we know or think we know about lie detectors today, you owe to Cleve Baxter. He's also the same guy that thought that plants could feel, but which somehow was a derivative of his work on lie detectors.
00:47:22 Speaker_03
So these guys are there and they're giving a talk to some military and other personnel. And there are certain parts of the document which are of course redacted, but you could figure out what it is that they're talking about.
00:47:33 Speaker_03
And they're talking about hypnotic suggestion and all the wonderful things that you can potentially do with hypnotic suggestion.
00:47:43 Speaker_03
And two of the things they note is that one of the things we could potentially do is erase memories from people's minds and implant false memories. That would be really keen to do that. Just imagine how that would be done.
00:47:57 Speaker_03
So here to me is the interesting point. They're talking about this in 1949. MKUltra does not come along until really 1953. Although there are all sorts of, you know, Artichoke and others. Everything is sort of leading up to that.
00:48:10 Speaker_03
It's simply an elaboration of programs that were already there. I don't think that it ultimately matters whether you can. implant memories or erase memories. To me, the important part is they thought they could and they were going to try to do it.
00:48:31 Speaker_03
And that eventually is what you find out in the efforts made during the 1950s and 60s through MKUltra, MKSurge, MKNaomi, and all the others that came out. That's one of the things they're working for.
00:48:46 Speaker_03
And among the few MK Ultra era documents that survived, there's that whole question is that you get someone to put a gun to someone's head and pull the trigger and then I remember it later. Yeah. You could, interestingly enough.
00:49:02 Speaker_00
So non-direct violence, controlling people's minds, controlling people's minds at scale, and experimenting with different kinds of ways of doing that.
00:49:11 Speaker_03
Well, one person put it that the basic argument there, or the basic thing you were after, was to understand the architecture of the human mind, how it worked, how it put together, and then how you could take those pieces apart and assemble them in different ways.
00:49:27 Speaker_03
So this comes, this is where hypnosis comes in, which is a, was then still is, fairly spooky thing. Nobody's ever explained to me exactly what it is.
00:49:37 Speaker_03
The idea was that could you, you think of the whole possibilities in this case, could you create an alternate personality and use that alternate personality in an agent role, but then be able to turn it on and off.
00:49:56 Speaker_03
So subsequently the person which that personality inhabited was captured and interrogated, tortured, had their fingernails torn out, they would have no memory of it.
00:50:10 Speaker_03
They couldn't give any kind of secret away because it was embedded in some part of their brain where there was a completely different person. I mean, you can just imagine the possibilities that you can dream up.
00:50:22 Speaker_03
And again, it's not, I think, the question as to whether that is possible or whether it was done. although I suspect that both of those are true, but that you would try to do it. Then imagine the mischief that comes out of that.
00:50:38 Speaker_03
And one of the big complaints from a legal standpoint about MKUltra and the rest is that you were having medical experiments, essentially, being carried out on people without their knowledge and against their will, which is, you know, a no-no.
00:50:52 Speaker_00
Yeah, the fact that you're willing to do medical experiments says something about what you're willing to do. And I'm sure that same spirit, innovative spirit, persists to this day.
00:51:08 Speaker_00
And maybe less so, I hope, less so in the United States, but probably in other intelligence agencies in the world.
00:51:17 Speaker_03
Well, one thing that was learned, and the reason why most MKUltra and similar records were destroyed on order in the early 70s, around the time the CIA became under a certain amount of scrutiny.
00:51:31 Speaker_03
The mid-70s were not a good time for the agency because you had the church committee breathing down their neck. You had all of these assassins. People were asking lots of questions.
00:51:39 Speaker_03
And so you need to dump this stuff because there's all kinds of, because you are committing crimes against American citizens. So let's eradicate it. And the important lesson to be learned is that never do this type of thing again
00:51:55 Speaker_03
where at least in any way in which the agency's direct fingerprints are placed on it. You can pay people. You can subsidize research. You can set up venture capital firms. You got plenty of money.
00:52:12 Speaker_03
And you can funnel that money into the hands of people who will carry out this research privately. So if something goes wrong, you have perfect deniability.
00:52:23 Speaker_00
On the topic of mice, on the topic of money, ideology, coercion, and ego, let me ask you about a conspiracy theory. So there is a conspiracy theory that the CIA is behind Jeffrey Epstein. at a high level, if we can just talk about that.
00:52:42 Speaker_00
Is that something that's at all even possible? That you have, basically this would be for coercion. You get a bunch of powerful people to be sexually mischievous, and then you collect evidence on them so that you can then have leverage on them.
00:52:58 Speaker_03
Well, let's look at what Epstein was doing. He was a was a businessman who then also developed a very lucrative sideline in being a high-level procurer, basically in supplying young girls.
00:53:17 Speaker_02
And he also filmed much of that activity. I think
00:53:26 Speaker_03
His partner in this, Ghislaine, and I'm hoping I'm pronouncing her name correctly. I think it's Ghislaine. Ghislaine? Well, I've heard it both ways. Ghislaine or Ghislaine, whichever it may be.
00:53:35 Speaker_03
I think her argument at one point was that, well, we did this to protect ourselves. But this type of thing has been done before. There's nothing new about this. Getting influential people in compromising situations and filming them.
00:53:51 Speaker_03
I could give you another historical example of that. In late 1920, actually early 1930s, just pre-Nazi Berlin, there was a very prominent sort of would-be psychic and occultist by the name of Erich Jan Hannesen.
00:54:08 Speaker_03
He had a private yacht, I think it was called the Seven Sins, and he hosted parties. He also had a whole club called the Palace of the Occult, which hosted parties where things went on and there were cameras everywhere.
00:54:22 Speaker_03
He filmed important people, guys like the brown shirt chief of Berlin in various states of undress and sexual Congress. And he did that for the purposes of blackmail. So in Epstein's case, he is a procurer of young girls to wealthy men, largely.
00:54:50 Speaker_03
And many of those events were recorded. Now, even if it wasn't his intention to use them for blackmail, think of what someone else could do because people know about this.
00:55:07 Speaker_03
So you can raise a question, is this not, you know, Epstein is just kind of a greedy pervert, but through his greedy perversion, he's now collecting information that could be useful. Who could that be useful to?
00:55:21 Speaker_03
Who would like dirt on Prince Andrew on the claim? Think of all the people who were there and these, you know, there were important people who, you know, went to Lolita Island.
00:55:34 Speaker_03
So if it isn't Epstein directly, he might have been being, I'm not trying to let him off the hook because I have anything for him. He was either running his own blackmail business or someone was using him as a front for that.
00:55:46 Speaker_03
I mean, I think we're kidding ourselves. We tried to pretend that's not what was going on.
00:55:51 Speaker_00
So you think even American intelligence agencies, uh, would be willing to swoop in and take advantage of a situation like that?
00:56:00 Speaker_03
Well, you know, American politicians could ultimately end up in a position to oversee things like intelligence budgets. One of them might even become director. You never know, you can never tell what some crazy president might do.
00:56:19 Speaker_03
One of the guys who understood the part was J. Edgar Hoover. J. Edgar Hoover spent a long time collecting dossiers and politicians. How do you think he'd remain director of the FBI as long as he did? Because he systematically collected dirt on people.
00:56:38 Speaker_03
So, there is a history. of this type of thing. And again, you could argue that's partly for his protection, to keep his job, to protect the sanctity and security of the Bureau. You can find a million different ways to justify that. It's really dark.
00:56:58 Speaker_03
Well, there is that side to human nature. Let's put it that way.
00:57:04 Speaker_00
Whether it's the CIA or the Krana, maybe that's what the President of the United States sees when they show up to office, is all the stuff they have on him or her. And say that there's an internal mechanism of power that you don't want to mess with.
00:57:22 Speaker_00
And so you will listen, whether that internal mechanism of power is the military-industrial complex or whatever, the bureaucracy of government. Conducting the deep state. The deep state.
00:57:32 Speaker_03
The entrenched bureaucratic. Well, it's been said, and I think it's generally true, that bureaucratic creatures are like any other creatures. It basically exists to perpetuate itself and to grow. I mean, nobody wants to go out of business.
00:57:46 Speaker_03
And of course, you get all of these things like Pizzagate, accusations of one form or another. But here's an interesting thing to consider. Okay.
00:57:56 Speaker_03
And I want to argue that I'm not saying that Pizzagate in any way was real or QAnon had to say that, but where do they get these ideas from? So let's ask ourselves, do pedophiles exist?
00:58:10 Speaker_02
Yeah.
00:58:11 Speaker_03
Do organized pedophile organizations exist? Yeah. They, they, they share information pictures. They're out there on the dark web. they cooperate. So does child trafficking exist? Yeah, it does. So in other words,
00:58:35 Speaker_03
Whether or not specific conspiracy theories about this or that group of organized pedophile cultists is real, all the ingredients for that to be real are there. Pedophiles exist. Organized pedophilia exists. Child and human trafficking exists.
00:58:58 Speaker_03
At some point, at some time, someone will put all of those together. In fact, certainly, they already have.
00:59:09 Speaker_00
We'll jump around a little bit, but because your work is so fascinating and it covers so many topics. So let's, if we jump into the present with the Bohemian Grove and the Bilderberg Group. Bilderbergers.
00:59:23 Speaker_00
So the elites, as I think you've referred to them. So this gathering of the elites, can you just talk about them? What is this?
00:59:33 Speaker_03
Well, first thing I have to point out is that Bohemian Grove is a place, not an organization. It's where the Bohemian Club meets. It's that 2,700 acre old growth redwoods near, you know, north of San Francisco.
00:59:50 Speaker_03
The Bohemian Club began way back in the 1870s. Its initial members were mostly journalists. In fact, supposedly the name itself comes from, it was a term for an itinerant journalist who moved from paper to paper was called the Bohemian.
01:00:10 Speaker_03
And although I think there may be other reasons why that particular term was chosen as well, but I think the original five members, there were like three journalists, there was a merchant and there was a vintner guy who owned a vineyards, California, how surprising.
01:00:27 Speaker_03
None of them terribly wealthy, but they formed an exclusive men's club, was and still is, and nothing terribly unusual about that at the time. But it became fashionable, and as it became fashionable, more wealthy people wanted to become part of it.
01:00:42 Speaker_03
And the thing about getting rich guys to join your club is what do rich guys have? Money. And of course, it's one of those rich guys that bought Bohemian Grove, where now you build your your old boy summer camp, which is what it is.
01:00:56 Speaker_03
They got cabins with goofy names. They go there, they perform skits, they dress up in costumes. Yeah, true. Some of those skits look like pagan human sacrifices, but you know, it's just a skit. What's really going on there?
01:01:11 Speaker_03
So on the one hand, you can argue, look, it's, it's, it's just, it's a rich guy's club. They like to get out there. The whole motto of the place is weaving spiders come not here. So we're never going to talk about business.
01:01:24 Speaker_03
We just want to get out into the woods, put on some robes, burn a couple of effigies in front of the owl, have a good time, probably get drunk a lot.
01:01:33 Speaker_00
What's with the robes? Why do they do weird, creepy shit? Why do they put on a mask and the robe and do the plays and the owl and then sacrificing, I don't know, whatever. Why do you have a giant owl? I mean, why do you do that?
01:01:50 Speaker_00
But what is that in human nature? Because I don't think rich people are different than not rich people. What is it about wealth and power that brings that out of people?
01:02:00 Speaker_03
Well, part of it is the ritual aspect of it. And that clearly is a ritual. Rituals are pretty simple. Rituals are just a series of actions performed in a precise sequence to produce an effect. That describes a lot of things.
01:02:17 Speaker_03
It describes plays, symphonies, every movie you've ever seen. A movie is a ritual. It is a series of actions carried out in a precise sequence to produce an effect, with an added soundtrack to cue you to what emotions you're supposed to be feeling.
01:02:33 Speaker_00
It's a great idea. So the rich people should just go to a movie, or maybe just go to a Taylor Swift concert. Like, why do you have to put- Well- Why the owl thing?
01:02:43 Speaker_03
Part of it is to create this kind of sense, I suppose, of group solidarity. You know, you're all going to appear, and also a way of sort of transcending yourself in a way. You know, when you put on the robe,
01:02:57 Speaker_03
It's like putting on a uniform, you are in some way a different or more important person. It's a ritual. Okay. The, the, the key ritual at Bohemian Grove is a thing called the cremation of care and cremation. And that's what it's supposed to be.
01:03:12 Speaker_03
It's, it's the, we're going to put all of our, you know, we're rich, important people. We have to make all of these critical decisions. Life is so hard. So we're going to go out here in the woods and we're going to kick back.
01:03:22 Speaker_03
and we're all gonna gather around the lake, and then we're gonna carry, it's wicker, it's not a real person, and how would you know?
01:03:34 Speaker_03
And this is the cremation of our care, but it's a ritual which is meant to produce a sense of solidarity and relief among those people who are there. The question comes down with the rituals is how seriously do you take them?
01:03:48 Speaker_03
How important is this to the people who carry them out? And the interesting answer to that is that for some people it's, you know, for some people it's just boring.
01:03:58 Speaker_03
I mean, there are probably people standing around the owl who think this is ridiculous and can't wait for it to get over with.
01:04:03 Speaker_03
There are other people that are kind of excited about it and get caught up into it, but other people can take it very seriously. It's all a matter of the intention that you have about what the ritual means.
01:04:20 Speaker_03
And I don't mean to suggest by that that there's anything necessarily sinister about what's going on, but it is clearly a ritual carried out for some kind of group reinforcing purpose. And you're absolutely right. You don't have to do it that way.
01:04:37 Speaker_03
I've gone to summer camps and we never carried out mock sacrifices in front of an owl. We did all those other things. We didn't even have any robes either. So it goes beyond merely a rich guy's summer camp, although that's an aspect of it.
01:04:56 Speaker_03
But it also, I think, often obscures it. Focusing on Bohemian Grove at the getaway of the club ignores that the club is around all the time. That's what's at the center of this. It is the club and its members.
01:05:13 Speaker_03
So despite all the talk about no weaving spiders coming around here, one of the other features of the summer meeting are things called lakeside talks. And this, often people are invited to go there.
01:05:24 Speaker_03
And one of the people who was invited, I think around 1968, was Richard Nixon, who was making his political comeback. And he was invited to give a talk where very important people are listening. And Nixon, in his memos, realized what was going on.
01:05:43 Speaker_03
He was being auditioned as to whether or not he was going to be right. He recognized that that was really the beginning of his second presidential campaign. He was being vetted.
01:05:54 Speaker_03
So one of the main theories, call it a conspiracy theory or not, about the bohemian club and the gatherings is that people of wealth and influence gathered together
01:06:07 Speaker_03
And whether or not it's part of the agenda or not, inevitably, you're going to talk about things of interest.
01:06:14 Speaker_03
But to me, the mere fact that you invite people in, political leaders, to give lakeside talks means that there are weaving spiders which are going on. And it is a perfect private venue to vet people for political office.
01:06:31 Speaker_00
I mean, yeah, where else are you going to do it? If you're interested in vetting, if you're interested in powerful people selecting,
01:06:37 Speaker_03
Well, see, here's the question. Are these guys actually picking who's going to be president? Is that the decision which is being made or are they just deciding what horses they're going to back? Right.
01:06:49 Speaker_03
I think the latter is the simpler version of it, but it doesn't mean it's the other way around. But these are the kinds of, you know, I mean, Nixon was, you know, there was the whole 1960 thing.
01:07:01 Speaker_03
So he's the new Nixon, and this is where the new Nixon apparently made a good impression on the right people, because he did indeed get the Republican nomination, and he did indeed become president.
01:07:16 Speaker_00
Well, there could also be a much more innocent explanation of really it's powerful people getting together and having conversations and through that conversation influencing each other's view of the world.
01:07:28 Speaker_00
And just having a legitimate discussion of, you know, policies, foreign policy. Why wouldn't they? I mean, why would you assume that people are not going to do that? It's the owl thing with the robes. Why the owl and why the robes?
01:07:44 Speaker_00
Which is why it becomes really compelling when guys like Alex Jones, forgive me, but I've not watched his documentary, I probably should at some point, about the Bohemian Grove.
01:07:55 Speaker_00
where he claims that there is a Satanist human sacrifice of, I think, children. And I think that's quite a popular conspiracy theory. Or it has lost popularity, it kind of transformed itself into the QAnon set of conspiracy theories.
01:08:18 Speaker_00
but I mean, can you speak to that conspiracy?
01:08:21 Speaker_03
Let's put it this way, the general public rich people are inherently suspicious. Yeah. Okay, let's put it that way. First of all, they've got all that money and exactly how did one obtain it?
01:08:34 Speaker_03
And I do not of necessity adhere to the view that behind every great fortune there is a great crime, but there often are. There are ways in which it's acquired, but I think it's,
01:08:48 Speaker_03
One of the things I think that can happen is, particularly when people acquire a huge amount of money, and I won't name any names, but let's say there are people who perhaps in the tech sphere, who coming from no particular background of wealth, suddenly find themselves with $600 billion.
01:09:08 Speaker_03
Well, this is the question you would have to ask yourself, why me? Because you are one of the rare tiny group of human beings who will ever have that kind of wealth in your hands.
01:09:20 Speaker_03
Even if you are a convinced atheist, I think at some point you have to begin to suspect that the cosmic muffin, Providence, whatever it is, put this money in your hands to do what? Achieve great things. Just think of all the stuff is.
01:09:35 Speaker_03
So you're going to start a foundation and you're going to start backing all the things that you, you like. This is, yeah, I think there's an element of ego that comes in with it as well. And
01:09:47 Speaker_03
Again, it may not be so much what the rich person with a huge amount of money at their disposal and a lot of fuzzy ideas about what to do with it can be influenced by others. It's always that question as to who's actually manipulating these events.
01:10:14 Speaker_03
what's going on in that regard. And in some way, they can be a very useful sucker, you know, find somebody with a lot of money and get them to finance the things that you want them to do. The Bohemian Club is
01:10:29 Speaker_03
I don't think in and of itself inherently evil or sinister, but it means that there are lots of different people in it who have different agendas. It goes back to what I said about how somebody feels about the cremation of care ritual.
01:10:42 Speaker_03
This is either just a waste of time. It's just some sort of silly thing that we're doing, or it is something of great importance, perhaps even mystical or religious importance because that's, ostensibly what it's pretending to be.
01:11:01 Speaker_03
There's always this question as to what degree you begin to play and the play becomes serious. That tends to happen a lot.
01:11:10 Speaker_00
You've studied a lot of cults and occultism. What do you think is the power of that mystical experience?
01:11:19 Speaker_03
Well, what is broadly referred to, well, beginning to, what's occultism? What's the occult? Occult is the hidden.
01:11:25 Speaker_02
That's all it really means, specifically hidden from sight.
01:11:30 Speaker_03
And the basis of it is the idea that what is hidden, well, what is hidden from us is most of the world, most of reality.
01:11:40 Speaker_03
So the basic concept within occultism, the basic concept within most religions, which are approved forms of occultism, is that the world, the physical world that we are aware of, is only a very small part of a much larger reality.
01:12:00 Speaker_03
and that what the methods and practices of occultism arguably do is to allow someone to either enter into this larger reality or to access that larger reality for purposes to be exploited here.
01:12:20 Speaker_03
The most interesting statement about, and a key element of this becomes the thing called magic. Now we all know magic, you know, it's a guy standing on stage performing a trick.
01:12:31 Speaker_03
But the interesting thing about a stage magician is that a stage magician is... We know, when we're watching this, that it's a trick.
01:12:42 Speaker_03
Yet we can't really figure out, if he does it well, how that trick is being accomplished, because it seems to defy physical laws. And that's what's fascinating about it.
01:12:55 Speaker_03
So even though you know it's a trick, if you can't figure it out, it has this kind of power of fascination. But it's mimicking something. Stage magic is mimicking real magic. So it's real magic.
01:13:10 Speaker_03
Well, let's go back to Aleister Crowley because he always has to come. I knew he was going to come up at some point in this, earlier than that, because he always does. All roads lead to Aleister Crowley. All roads lead to Aleister Crowley.
01:13:22 Speaker_03
Aleister Crowley, and I've said this enough so I should be able to get it right, but I'm paraphrasing here. He goes, magic, which of course he spelled with a K or CK, is the art and science of causing change to occur in conformity with will.
01:13:42 Speaker_03
So in a way that's sort of mind over matter, but it's the idea that one can, through will, through intention, bend reality to make something happen. Somebody once put it this way, it's tipping the luck plane.
01:14:03 Speaker_03
And so, you know, you got some kind of a level plane that we're trying to do, just tip it just a little bit. So the marble rules rolls over one side or another. Now that presupposes a lot of things that is there a luck plane?
01:14:16 Speaker_03
I don't know, but you know, it's, it's a good sort of idea to have, but, and here again, don't become overly bothered trying to figure out whether you actually can bend reality.
01:14:32 Speaker_03
become bothered by the fact that there are people who believe that they can and will go to great efforts to do so and will often believe they have succeeded. So it's this effort to
01:14:50 Speaker_03
make things occur in a particular way, maybe just to sort of nudge reality in one little way or another. And that's where things like rituals come in. Rituals are a way of focusing will and attention.
01:15:04 Speaker_03
We're all there, we're all thinking about the same thing. And you have to imagine just how, you know, the pervasiveness of what could be called that kind of magical thinking every day happens everywhere. So let me give you an example.
01:15:19 Speaker_03
You ever attended a high school football pep rally? Think of what's going on there. Okay, your team is going to battle the other team. You've now assembled everyone in the gymnasium. You've got people who are dancing around in animal totem costumes.
01:15:38 Speaker_03
And what are you chanting? Everyone is supposed to chant that the other team dies, that you'll be horribly defeated, and that our team will be victorious. That is a magic ritual.
01:15:51 Speaker_03
The idea is it becomes into this idea that's very popularly about visualizing things, visualizing, manifesting. I love this term. You need to manifest your success. Well, that's just magic. That is trying to cause change in conformity with will.
01:16:11 Speaker_03
So these things can happen without you being even consciously aware of what's going on, and you don't need to be, because if you're all a part of the mob, which is there in the gymnasium, and you get into this and you get worked up, an occultist would argue what you're doing is you're creating a huge amount of energy.
01:16:35 Speaker_03
All of these people are putting energy into something, and that energy goes somewhere, and maybe you can, maybe, just maybe, you actually can slightly increase the chances of your team's victory.
01:16:49 Speaker_03
Of course, your opponents are having their own ritual at the same time, so whoever has the bigger mojo will apparently win on the team.
01:16:57 Speaker_00
So that's a, I would say, trivial example of that. but a clear one. I do believe that there's incredible power in groups of humans getting together and morphing reality. I think that's probably one of the things that made human civilization what it is.
01:17:16 Speaker_00
Groups of people being able to believe a thing and bring that belief into reality. Yes, you're exactly right.
01:17:23 Speaker_03
Bring to conceive of something and then through intention, will. to manifest that into this realm.
01:17:35 Speaker_00
And of course, that power of the collective mind can be leveraged by charismatic leaders to do all kinds of stuff, where you get cults that do horrible things, or anything. There might be a cult that does good things, I don't know, it depends.
01:17:54 Speaker_03
We usually don't call those cults. We don't call those cults, exactly. Without endorsing this entirely, and interesting, one of the questions, what's the difference between a cult and a religion?
01:18:06 Speaker_02
And it has been said,
01:18:10 Speaker_03
that in the case of a cult, there's always someone at the top who knows what's going on. Generally, who knows it's a scam. In a religion, that person is dead. So, see, I've just managed to insult every single religion.
01:18:29 Speaker_03
But it's an interesting way of thinking about it because I think there is some degree of of accuracy in that statement.
01:18:38 Speaker_00
Do you think, actually, the interesting psychological question is, in cults, do you think the person at the top always knows that it's a scam?
01:18:47 Speaker_00
Do you think there's something about the human mind where you gradually begin to believe- Begin to believe your own bullshit? Yeah.
01:18:53 Speaker_03
Yes, that's- That seems to be- That again is part of magic, I think, is believing your own bullshit. It doesn't necessarily mean that the head of the cult realized, but there's someone
01:19:04 Speaker_03
Maybe the second, you know, I always sort of look in the lieutenant, someone probably has an idea about what's going on.
01:19:16 Speaker_03
The other thing that seems to be a kind of dead giveaway for what we would call a cult is what's called excessive reverence for the leader. People just believe everything these people say.
01:19:31 Speaker_03
Give you an example of the first time I ever encountered anything like that was in Santa Barbara, California in the 1970s. I was going to grad school and there was a particular cult locally, which I think was Brotherhood of the Sun. It was the same.
01:19:49 Speaker_03
There was some guy who was, among the other things, followers were convinced to hand over all their money and personal belongings to I believe he used part of that money to buy a yacht with. Anyway, a lot of it went to him.
01:20:07 Speaker_03
And then, of course, working for free upon different cult-owned business enterprises, of which there are several.
01:20:15 Speaker_03
And there was a person I knew who became a devoted follower of this, and it was, all I could think of at one point was ask them, what the hell is the matter with you? I mean, have you lost your mind?
01:20:30 Speaker_03
Why would you, what is it that this person can possibly be providing that you essentially are going to become a slave to them, which is what they were doing.
01:20:41 Speaker_03
And I actually give that credit in a way of sort of sparking my whole interest in things like secret societies.
01:20:48 Speaker_03
And here again, as a disclaimer, I am not now nor have I ever been the member of any fraternal organization, secret society or cult that I know of. And that's what interests me about them.
01:21:02 Speaker_03
Because I'm just always trying to figure out why people do these things. Like I said, why the robes and the owl? Why? Why do you do that? And it's trying to figure it out. I mean, I couldn't even hack the Boy Scouts, okay? That was too much of that.
01:21:19 Speaker_03
Because to me, you join an organization and the first thing that comes along is there's somebody, there are rules and someone is telling you what to do. Okay.
01:21:26 Speaker_03
I don't like people telling me what to do spent much of my life trying to avoid that as much as possible and join a cult. There's going to be someone telling you what to do.
01:21:36 Speaker_03
Um, join the Bohemian club and there's going to be someone telling you what to do. Yeah, obviously a lot of people. I really get something out of that. It becomes, in some ways, it's sort of necessary for them to function.
01:21:51 Speaker_03
But I do not understand it, and my study of it is a personal error to try to understand why people do that.
01:22:00 Speaker_00
And there are so many reasons. Primary of which, I would say, is the desire in the human heart to belong. Yes. and the dark forms that it takes throughout human history, recent human histories, something I'd love to talk to you a bit about.
01:22:20 Speaker_00
If we can go back to the beginning of the 20th century, on the German side, you've described how secret societies like the Thule Society lay the foundation for Nazi ideology.
01:22:31 Speaker_00
Can you, through that lens, from that perspective, describe the rise of the Nazi party?
01:22:37 Speaker_03
Well, I guess we could start with what on earth is the Thule Society? So the Thule Society was a small German occult society, that is, they studied metaphysics, another fancy word for occultism, that appeared in Munich around 1917, 1918.
01:23:08 Speaker_03
The key figure behind it was a German esotericist by the name of Rudolf von Zebotendorf. Okay, not his real name. His real name was Adam Rudolf Glauer. He was adopted by a German nobleman and got the name von Zebotendorf. And I like to say that name.
01:23:29 Speaker_03
So I had this real thing about vague, mysterious characters that show up and do things. and trying to figure out who these people are. So we're working with the years sort of prior to the First World War.
01:23:41 Speaker_03
So a decade or so prior to World War I, he spends a lot of time in the Ottoman Empire. Turkey, there was none in the Ottoman Empire, which was a fairly tumultuous place because in 1908 and 1909, there was the Young Turk Revolution.
01:24:02 Speaker_03
And you had a kind of military coup, which effectively overthrew the Ottoman Sultan and installed a military junta, which would go on during the First World War to make its greatest achievement in the Armenian genocide.
01:24:20 Speaker_03
Eventually, he created a genocidal military regime, which would lead the country into disastrous First World War, which would destroy the Ottoman Empire. out of which modern Turkey emerges, yada, yada, yada.
01:24:33 Speaker_00
And by the way, we should take a tiny tangent here, which is that you refer to the intelligence agencies as being exceptionally successful. And here in the case of the Young Turks being also very successful in doing the genocide, meaning they've
01:24:52 Speaker_00
achieved the greatest impact, even though the impact on the scale of good to evil tends towards evil.
01:25:00 Speaker_03
It's one of those things that often comes out of revolutionary situations. Revolutions always, always, always seek to make things better, don't they?
01:25:07 Speaker_03
We're going to take a bad old regime, you know, the sultan does, you know, and the sultan was bad, I think it's fairly stated. Abdul Hamid II was, not a, wasn't called the Red Sultan because of his favorite color type of thing.
01:25:25 Speaker_03
And the idea is that they were going to improve, they were now going to, the Ottoman Empire was a multinational empire, they were going to try to equalize and bringing in the different groups, and none of that happened. It became worse.
01:25:44 Speaker_03
In the same way that you could argue that the goal of Russian revolutionaries was to get rid of the bad, old, incompetent, medieval czarist regime and to bring in a new, great, shining future, and it became even more authoritarian.
01:26:01 Speaker_03
And the crimes of the imperial Russian regime pale in significance of what would follow in the same way that the crimes of Abdul Hamid pale to when you get to the young Turks. But that wasn't necessarily the intention.
01:26:15 Speaker_03
But von Zappotendorf is a German businessman who's working in this period. And the whole point here is that the Ottoman Empire in this period is a hotbed of political intrigue. all kinds of interesting things about it.
01:26:30 Speaker_03
The Young Turk Revolution is essentially a military coup, but it is plotted in Masonic lodges. I know technically Masonic lodges are never supposed to be involved in politics, but they are.
01:26:47 Speaker_03
Or, you know, the launch meeting breaks up and then you plot the revolution. So, same group of people, but it's not technically.
01:26:53 Speaker_03
But yes, and there's the Macedonia Risorsa Lodge in Thessaloniki was ground zero for plotting this military coup that was supposed to improve the empire. Zebotendorf is in one way or another mixed up in all of this, or at least he's an observer.
01:27:14 Speaker_03
Plus, he's initiated into the Masonic lodges. Interestingly enough, the fellow who initiates him into one of these Eastern lodges is a Jewish merchant by the name of Ter-Mudi, who's also a Kabbalist. and involved.
01:27:35 Speaker_03
So, Svobodentorf is very, very interested in the occult. He's initiated into Eastern Masonic lodges in a period when those same lodges are being used as a center for political intrigue.
01:27:50 Speaker_03
He also apparently is involved in gun running, which in revolutionary periods, there's a lot of money to be made off of that. So, he's connected to various
01:28:01 Speaker_03
dark businesses in a tumultuous time with connections to politicized Freemasonry and the occult. Now, in the course of the First World War, he returns to Germany. He just shows up.
01:28:26 Speaker_03
and it would be my operative suspicion or theory that Sobotendorf was working for someone. I don't think he just pops up in Munich on his own accord. Why does he leave the Ottoman Empire and return to that place?
01:28:44 Speaker_02
Who's behind him? Well, maybe no one, but
01:28:51 Speaker_03
maybe someone, because he does seem to have money at his disposal. And he comes into Munich and he basically takes over this small sort of a cult study group.
01:28:59 Speaker_03
Now, the interesting thing is that the Thule Society is really just a branch of another existing, what's called an Areosophist order, a thing called the German order or the Germanen Orden, which is centered in Berlin.
01:29:20 Speaker_03
for some reason, he doesn't want his group to be connected by name with the Germanen Orden, so Thule Society. Thule, in this case, is a reference to supposedly a mythical Arctic homeland of the Aryan race.
01:29:39 Speaker_03
Apparently, they were all snow people who wandered out of the snow at some point. It's like a frozen Atlantis. So I mentioned these people, the Ariosophists, which is, you have to practice saying that. So what are they?
01:29:53 Speaker_03
Well, they're a kind of racist, Germanic offshoot of theosophy. And I know I'm explaining one thing to explain something, but there's no other way to do this.
01:30:06 Speaker_03
So theosophy was a 19th century, very popular and widely modeled, a cult belief that was founded by a Russian woman by the name of Helena Blavatsky. She was a medium psychic. She supposedly got channelings from the ascended masters.
01:30:24 Speaker_03
The basic story there, they're all of the ascended masters, which are mystical beings that may or may not have once been human. They live inside the Himalayas or they float among them on a cloud and they guide the spiritual evolution of humanity.
01:30:40 Speaker_03
What Blavatsky did was to take Western esotericism, and blend it with Hindu and Buddhist esotericism, which became very, very sexy in the West, still is. Buddhism attracts a lot of people because, well, it's Buddhism. It's different, see?
01:30:57 Speaker_03
So the Mahatmas, the ascended masters were sending her messages, despite the fact that she was later proven pretty much to be a fraud and writing the letters herself.
01:31:07 Speaker_03
Nevertheless, people still went along with this doctrine, and it's been widely modified and copied since then. So an idea in theosophy was that human spiritual evolution was tied to physical evolution.
01:31:24 Speaker_03
So in the case of Levosky, Levosky never said that Aryans, white people, anything out this for superior.
01:31:32 Speaker_03
She talked about the different root races, but it's just, her version of it is just total gobbledygook that seems to include everyone, and I'd defy you to make much sense out of it.
01:31:45 Speaker_03
But in the early 20th century, there were different sort of, you know, one of the things that became fashionable, you know, not terribly popular. These are small movements with the idea that, well, you know, Germany is a new upcoming country.
01:32:01 Speaker_03
And part of this I think was really trying to define who the Germans were because remember, the German Empire, Germany as a political state doesn't come into existence until 1871.
01:32:17 Speaker_03
Prior to that, Germany was a geographic expression, a vague one, which described a large area in Central Europe where a lot of people who wore leather shorts and
01:32:31 Speaker_03
or something like that and spoke similar German dialects were nominally Germans, but they might be Prussians or Bavarians or, you know, they came in all sorts of varieties and religion. There was no German identity.
01:32:46 Speaker_03
Something very similar happened in Italy in the same period. I mean, you know, there weren't Italians. There were Sardinians and there were Romans and there were Sicilians.
01:32:56 Speaker_03
Umbrians spoke again, dialects of a similar language, but it never lived, not since the Roman Empire under a single state and really didn't think of themselves as the same. So, you have to create this artificial thing. You have to create Germans.
01:33:12 Speaker_03
There's now a Germany with an emperor, and so we're all going to be Germans.
01:33:17 Speaker_02
Well, exactly what is that?
01:33:23 Speaker_03
Much of it is an artificial creation. You have to decide upon some sort of standard dialect. Okay, we'll decide what that is.
01:33:33 Speaker_03
Often dialect that only a few people actually speech, and then they will be drilled into children's heads through state schooling programs. So I think this is the kind of milieu that it comes out of.
01:33:44 Speaker_03
People were trying to figure out what on earth Germans actually were, and the need for some sort of common identity And that leads to everything like Wagnerian opera. Richard Wagner wanted to create a German mythical music.
01:34:01 Speaker_03
So he went back and strip-mined old German myths and cobbled them together into a lot of people standing on stage singing. And that was his purpose. He was a nationalist. He was, in many ways, a kind of racialist nationalist.
01:34:14 Speaker_03
And this was his idea of trying to create, out of bits and pieces of the past, a newfangled form of German identity.
01:34:24 Speaker_03
So on the more mystical end of this, you had the ideas that, well, Germany must have been created for some special purpose because the Germans must be very special people, and we must have some sort of particular destiny.
01:34:36 Speaker_03
And then out of this, you know, the direction this is heading, well, we're all part of some sort of master race with some sort of ties to some sort of great civilization in the past. Call it Thule, call it whatever you want to be.
01:34:51 Speaker_03
They basically just invent things. and try to attach those to the past. And so, Ariosophy was the Arianized version of Theosophy.
01:35:05 Speaker_03
And what this did was to take the idea that spiritual and physical evolution had led to the most advanced form of human beings, which were the Arians, and the most advanced group of them were, of course, the Germans. and this attracted appeal.
01:35:23 Speaker_03
Keep in mind, again, this was not a mass movement. This was very much a fringe movement.
01:35:27 Speaker_03
Most people weren't aware of it and weren't particularly interested in it, but it had an appeal for those who already had a kind of esoteric bent in some form or another.
01:35:38 Speaker_03
And this is where things like the German Order and their other groups, it was only one of many sort of grew out of. And what it was that the Thule Society as a branch, the Thule Gesellschaft was supposed to do was to study this.
01:35:59 Speaker_03
It was an esoteric study group. And so people would get together and they'd talk about things, probably make more stuff up and all sort of work around this idea of
01:36:10 Speaker_03
of German Aryans as the most advanced type of human beings and all the wonderful things that the future would hold.
01:36:19 Speaker_03
And the fact that this was in the midst of a war in which Germany was again fighting, as they saw it, for its existence heightened those kinds of tensions as well. So my suspicion, again,
01:36:40 Speaker_03
is that Siboltendorf in terms of who was behind him, that he was essentially called back to Germany to work either for the Prussian political police or for some aspect of German intelligence or security to try to mobilize a cultism or esotericism for the war effort.
01:37:02 Speaker_03
Because again, this is 1918, the war has gone on way too long. Within a few months, Germany will collapse and it will collapse simply from the psychological exhaustion of the population.
01:37:15 Speaker_00
So this is almost like to help the war effort with a kind of propaganda, a narrative that can strengthen the will of the German people. It will strengthen the will of some people. Some people.
01:37:27 Speaker_03
You have to try to appeal to different aspects of this. But the mystical aspect is one of those things that can have a very powerful influence.
01:37:37 Speaker_03
And the idea is that if we can come up with some kind of mystical nationalism, maybe that's one to put it, a kind of mystical nationalism that can be exploited For the Wickers, at this point, you're kind of grasping at straws.
01:37:54 Speaker_03
And this is a whole period when the Germans are marshalling the last of their forces to launch a series of offensives on the Western Front, the peace offensive, which will initially be successful, but will ultimately fail and lead to a collapse in morale.
01:38:11 Speaker_03
But among the leadership of Germany, it was a recognition, it was that national morale was flagging. And
01:38:19 Speaker_03
One of the other things that was kind of raising its head was what had happened nearby, well, the Russian Revolution, which had now brought another solution to all of this, the idea of revolutionary Marxism.
01:38:35 Speaker_03
Here we need to remind ourselves as to where Marxism comes from, not Russia, Germany. Where was the largest Marxist party?
01:38:43 Speaker_00
In Germany. And Marx probably expected the revolution to begin in Germany. Where else? I mean, the Soviet Union is not very industrialized. Germany is, and so that's where it would probably be.
01:38:56 Speaker_03
Russia, 5% of the population is industrial workers. In Germany, 40% of the population is industrial. So if any place was like made for Marxism, it was Germany. I think that's why it caught on in East Germany so well, because it had kind of come home.
01:39:13 Speaker_03
And it was a local belief. It wasn't something imparted by the Russians. It was a German invention.
01:39:22 Speaker_03
So the Thule Society, one of the things you can see in this is the Thule Society was particularly involved in sort of anti-Marxist or anti-Bolshevik agitation.
01:39:37 Speaker_03
They saw themselves, the Bolton source saw them as this whole movement, it was a counter to this, it was a kind of counter Marxist movement.
01:39:46 Speaker_00
Can we sort of try to break that apart in a nuanced way? So it was a nationalist movement, the occult was part of the picture, occult racial theories, so there's a racial component, like the Aryan race, So it's not just the nation of Germany.
01:40:06 Speaker_00
And you take that and contrast it with Marxism. Did they also formulate that in racial terms? Did they formulate that in national versus global terms? Like, how did they see this?
01:40:18 Speaker_03
Marxism formulates everything by class. Okay, people are categorized by class. You're either part of the proletariat or you're part of the bourgeoisie or just, you know, you're either part of the proletariat or just some sort of scum. Really?
01:40:29 Speaker_03
Needs to be swept into the dustbin of history. Only workers count. And that was what would take someone who was a nationalist, would sort of drive them crazy because their idea is we're trying to create a German people.
01:40:46 Speaker_03
We're trying to create a common German identity. But what the Marxists are doing is they're dividing Germans against each other by class. German workers hate the German bourgeoisie. German proletariat is opposed to German capitalists.
01:41:01 Speaker_03
We're all trying to fight this war together. So that was why Marxism, particularly in the form of Bolshevism, was seen as unpatriotic. And of course, it was opposed to the war as a whole.
01:41:17 Speaker_03
The idea that parroting Lenin was that the war was an imperialist war. And the only thing that was good that was going to come out of it is that the imperialist war through all of the crises it was creating would eventually lead to a class war.
01:41:32 Speaker_03
And that would be good because that would reconcile all of these things.
01:41:35 Speaker_03
But think of this, the two very different versions of this, the Bolshevist version, or let's just call it the Marxist version of Germany, it was going to be a class society in which we're going to have to have some kind of civil upheaval, which will have Germans fighting Germans.
01:41:54 Speaker_03
Whereas the kind of mystical nationalism, the almost kind of religious nationalism that Siboltendorf from the Thule Society had hitched his wagon to held that Germans are all part of a single racial family, and that's what must be the most important thing.
01:42:15 Speaker_03
And that these can be different ways of trying to influence people. It comes down to a matter of political influence.
01:42:24 Speaker_03
So in a sense, I think that what Siboltendorf and the Thule Society was trying to do, at least within Munich, was to use this idea of mystical nationalism as a potential rallying point for some part of the population to oppose these other forces, to keep people fighting.
01:42:42 Speaker_03
The war is lost, though, in November. The Kaiser abdicates, and essentially, the socialists do take over Germany. things come very, very close to following the Russian model.
01:43:01 Speaker_03
And you even get the Russian version or take on the Bolsheviks, which are the Spartacists who try and fail to seize power early on. But you do essentially end up with a socialist Germany.
01:43:16 Speaker_03
And that then leaves in the aftermath of the war, the Thule Society is sort of the the odd man out, although they're still very closely connected to the army. Now, here's one of the things that I find interesting.
01:43:29 Speaker_03
When you get into 1919, who is it that's paying Siboltendorf's bills? It's the army. The one thing the German army is absolutely determined to do is to preserve its social position and power. And they're perfectly willing to dump the Kaiser to do that.
01:43:50 Speaker_03
That's sort of this deal which is made in November of 1918, Kaiser's abdication, the proclamation of a German Republic, which you just had this guy declare it. It wasn't really planned. There's the Ebert-Groener Pact.
01:44:11 Speaker_03
Groener is the chief of staff, general staff at this point. Friedrich Ebert is the chief socialist politician, basically, and they make an agreement. And the agreement basically is that the army will support Ebert's government.
01:44:32 Speaker_03
if Ebert supports the army. And particularly that means the continuation of the officer corps and the general staff in one form or another. So a deal is made. And that of course is what will eventually help defeat the Spartacist uprising.
01:44:48 Speaker_00
Now was the army doing the similar kinds of things that we've talked about with the intelligence agencies? This kind of same kind of trying to control the direction of political power?
01:44:59 Speaker_03
The German intelligence landscape in the First World War is obscure in many ways. There are lots of things that are going on. Germany has a military intelligence service called Abteilung or Section 3B. That's just plain military intelligence.
01:45:18 Speaker_03
They're constantly trying to collect military information before the war about the weaponry and plans of the enemies and then about what the operational plans were during the war. Doesn't really go much beyond that, though.
01:45:32 Speaker_03
The German foreign office runs a kind of political intelligence service. And that's the one which is much more involved in things like subsidizing subversion in Russia, which is one of the things that the Germans sign on to fairly early.
01:45:59 Speaker_03
little diversion here. In 1915, there is a Russian revolutionary who's lived much of his life in Germany, who goes by the code name of Parvus. And he essentially comes to the Germans in Constantinople, interestingly enough, in Turkey.
01:46:18 Speaker_03
He's hanging around there the same time as the Botendorf is there, which I find curious. So Parvus, or Alexander Hellpand, to give his actual name,
01:46:29 Speaker_03
somebody goes, look, there's a lot of revolutionaries in Russia and there's a lot of mistrust with the regime. We think that the war will increase the contradictions in Russian society.
01:46:38 Speaker_03
And if you give me a lot of marks, I can finance this revolutionary activity and through subversion, I can take Russia out of the war. the Germans are facing a two front war. That sounds great.
01:46:52 Speaker_03
We'll use money in order to, but notice what they're doing. The German general staff, a very conservative organization, not a bunch of revolutionaries are going to finance revolution in an opposing country.
01:47:09 Speaker_03
They are going to finance revolutionary subversion to take Russia out of the war, which basically works. So that gives you another idea as to what the German military is willing to do.
01:47:26 Speaker_03
They're not revolutionaries, but they'll pay revolutionaries to subvert another regime. Now you've got the problem is that The revolutionary regime that your money helped bring to power is now threatening to extend into your country.
01:47:46 Speaker_03
So the whole question for the army and for others in Germany in 1919 is how to keep Germany from going Bolshevik, from, in a sense, being hoist by your own batard.
01:48:01 Speaker_03
So the Thule Society, I don't think, is a huge part of this program, but it is a part of it. and it's all an effort to try to keep control, and that's where the army is financing them.
01:48:11 Speaker_03
That's even where the army at some point then supplies them with its own propagandists.
01:48:17 Speaker_03
So the Thule Society begins to create under Subotindor's leadership what he called the Rings of Thule, and these are satellite organizations that aren't the society as though, but they're kind of controlled and inspired by it.
01:48:36 Speaker_03
And one of those is a thing called the German Workers' Party. And the German Workers' Party, again, is local. It's not large. It's not terribly influential. But what does it aspire to be?
01:48:49 Speaker_03
It aspires to be a party that will bring German workers away from the seductive influence of the Bolsheviks and into a more patriotic position, a patriotic
01:49:05 Speaker_03
And the way that I describe this is that it's not an anti-communist organization, it's a counter-communist organization.
01:49:14 Speaker_03
So you don't create something which completely opposes it, you create something which mimics it, which is ultimately what the German Workers' Party will become, is the National Socialist German Workers' Party, known as that term, socialist.
01:49:31 Speaker_03
And that is in my view, what Nazism is from the beginning. It is a counter-communist movement.
01:49:40 Speaker_00
And by the way, for people who don't know, the National Socialist German Workers' Party is also known as the Nazi Party. So how did this evolution happen from those, that complicated little interplay?
01:49:55 Speaker_00
We should also say that a guy named Adolf Hitler is in the army at this time. Yes.
01:50:02 Speaker_03
Well, here's the way to come into this, because remember I said the army was going to supply its own propagandists to help the German workers party and the Thule society do their work.
01:50:11 Speaker_03
And the propagandists they supply them with is a man who the army trains, sends to classes to learn the art of public speaking and propaganda. And that fellow is Corporal Adolf Hitler.
01:50:28 Speaker_00
So how does Adolf Hitler connect with the German Workers' Party?
01:50:33 Speaker_03
Well, he'd been in the army during the war, the only regular job that he'd ever had. Kind of liked it. So you often get the view is that, well, at the end of the war, he joined millions of other German soldiers who didn't have jobs.
01:50:44 Speaker_03
No, no, he stays in the army. He stays in the army until 1921. He's on the army payroll at the very time in which he is held to set this up.
01:50:56 Speaker_03
What appears to have happened is this, Subbotendorf had organized the Thule Society, that had tried to oppose, there's actually a brief period of time in which the communists actually take over Munich, the Bavarian Soviet Republic, which doesn't last very long, and eventually the army and volunteers put this down.
01:51:21 Speaker_03
While that's going on, by the way, Hitler is actually sitting in the, barracks in Munich wearing a red armband, because he is technically part of the soldiers who have gone over to the Bavarian Soviet Republic.
01:51:36 Speaker_03
He seems to have had flexible interests in this case. So once order is restored, so to speak, the army comes in and decide that, well, one of the things we need, we need to have people who can lecture soldiers on patriotic topics.
01:51:55 Speaker_03
And so there is a particular captain by the name of Karl Meyer, who sort of spots Hitler. He later describes him as like a stray dog looking for a master. Hitler has a knack for public speaking. Other soldiers will listen to him.
01:52:10 Speaker_03
Some people can do that. Some people can't. Meyer decides that he's a good candidate for further training. And so, yes, they bring him in, they turned him into what's called a Weimann, a kind of liaison man. He's an army propagandist.
01:52:30 Speaker_03
And then you've got this little outfit called the German Workers' Party, And essentially what happens is that Hitler is sent in to take over leadership of that, which is what happens. He shows up, he attends the meeting. There are like 50 people there.
01:52:48 Speaker_03
By the way, the topic of that, the first meeting he's at is how and why capitalism should be abolished. Okay. Which is not what you might well expect. And because remember the German workers party is trying to cast itself as a counter Bolshevism.
01:53:08 Speaker_03
So it's not saying that capitalism is great, which is important. No, capitalism is evil. We agree upon that. We just agree it has to be destroyed from a nationalist point of view, as opposed from some sort of strange internationalist point of view.
01:53:21 Speaker_03
So Hitler is essentially, as I see it, sent in by the army as their trained man to assume leadership within this small party and to use it for the army's patriotic propaganda campaign.
01:53:36 Speaker_03
And it's his season doing so, even to the name change to the National Socialist or German Workers Party. I mean, really, what sounds more red than that?
01:53:48 Speaker_00
So the interesting thing here is from where did anti-Semitism seep into this whole thing?
01:53:56 Speaker_00
It seems like the way they try to formulate counter-Marxism is by saying the problem with capitalism and the problem with Marxism is that it's really Judeo-capitalism and, quote, Judeo-Bolshevism. From where did that ideology seep in?
01:54:17 Speaker_03
Well, it's a huge topic. Where does antisemitism come from? Well, let's start with that term itself, a term which I have really grown increasingly to dislike because it doesn't actually say what it means. Antisemitism is anti-Jewism. That's all it is.
01:54:38 Speaker_03
I'm not sure whether there has ever existed a person who hated Jews, Arabs, and Maltese equally. Okay, that's kind of hard to imagine, I don't know. But that's technically what that would mean, because let's face it, most Semites are Arabs.
01:54:54 Speaker_03
So if you're an anti-Semite, then you don't seem to distinguish Jews from Arabs. It makes no sense. The origin of the term is invented by, guess what, an anti-Semite. A guy in the 1870s, a German journalist by the name of Wilhelm Marr, who is,
01:55:15 Speaker_03
wouldn't you know it, part Jewish himself, and who decides that you really need a better term than Judenhass, Jew hate, which was the term that, because that just sounds so, you know, inelegant, doesn't it? Okay. What do you want to call yourself?
01:55:33 Speaker_03
A Jew hater or an anti-Semite? See, Antisemitism, it's got that ism part at the end of it, which means it's a system of belief. Anything that has an ism must somehow be scientific and important.
01:55:46 Speaker_03
It's all part of the 19th century obsession with trying to bring science into something or the other. So we're going to get rid of Jew hate and we're going to turn it into antisemitism.
01:55:57 Speaker_03
And we're only going to be talking about Jews, but we'll never actually say that. And somehow,
01:56:03 Speaker_03
the invention of a Jew-hater to disguise the fact that he's a Jew-hater, even though he's partly Jewish, by inventing the term anti-Semitism worked because everybody has bought it and repeated it ever since.
01:56:17 Speaker_03
So I don't know, maybe just because anti-Jewism would just be, is it too direct in some way? Do we have difficulty confronting actually what it is that we're talking about?
01:56:30 Speaker_00
I do wish terms were a little bit more direct and self-explanatory, yeah. Jew hate is a better term.
01:56:36 Speaker_03
Well, the question then comes, what exactly do you hate about Jews? And a lot of this has to do with If you go back prior to the 19th century, if Jews were hated, they were hated for religious reasons.
01:56:51 Speaker_03
In Christian Europe, they were hated because they weren't Christians. And they existed as the only kind of significant religious minority. But other than that, they tended to live separately. They had little economic influence.
01:57:08 Speaker_03
Jews tended to live in shtetls in the east, ghettos elsewhere. They were, some were involved in banking and business, but they sort of remained segregated from much of society.
01:57:22 Speaker_03
That changes when you get to the 19th century and with what's called Jewish emancipation. And that means that between about 1800 and 1850, most European countries dropped the various legal or social restrictions against Jews.
01:57:37 Speaker_03
They are assimilated into the general society. So ideally, you stop being a German Jew and you become a Jewish German. Those are two very different important concepts.
01:57:51 Speaker_03
And what that does, of course, is that it opens up the professions business world elsewhere.
01:57:59 Speaker_03
So Jews move, who had been largely within those realms to begin with, they already had a good deal of experience in banking and business, and they move into those areas and professions and become quite visible.
01:58:15 Speaker_03
And that's what then creates anti-Semitism. because in some way that is seen as part of the changes that have taken place. And there are a lot of things going on here.
01:58:33 Speaker_03
Part of it has to do with the kind of wrenching social and economic changes that took place with industrialization.
01:58:41 Speaker_03
So one of the things to keep in mind is that in the process of industrialization, just like today, whole classes of people were made extinct economically. Craftsmen, for instance.
01:58:53 Speaker_03
So when factories came along and began to produce things with machines, all the craftspeople who had made those things previously are now unemployed or go to work as wage labor in factories. So there are winners and losers in industrialization.
01:59:14 Speaker_03
What people saw in Germany and elsewhere is that among this new sort of rising capitalist elite, among these new professions, among the bureaucrats that are coming out of these burgeoning states, there were visibly a fair number of Jews.
01:59:32 Speaker_03
So in some way, the rise of Jews in the minds of many people were connected to all of the other bad things that were going on. You know, the world was changing in a way we don't like. And seemingly, the Jews are prospering, while I am not.
01:59:50 Speaker_03
And that was during Germany, that's where Jews became highly visible in the professions. They became very visible in banking, they became visible in legal profession, they became visible in the medical profession.
02:00:02 Speaker_03
And those are people that a lot of people would come in contact with, bankers, lawyers, and doctors. They were not the majority there, but vastly over-represented in terms of the general population. and especially within the cities.
02:00:22 Speaker_03
So in that sense, the roots of antisemitism to me is that Jews in Germany and elsewhere, and not just in Germany by any means, France, Britain, everywhere else, became identified with the bad changes that were taking place.
02:00:40 Speaker_03
But you also found that Jews were not only prominent among capitalists, they were also prominent in the socialist movement as well.
02:00:50 Speaker_03
So one of the things you could look around, if we return to Germany in 1919 in the aftermath of World War I, and you look around in Bavaria or elsewhere, you tend to find that there are a lot of Jews in visible positions on the German left.
02:01:07 Speaker_03
Rosa Luxemburg is but one example of that. Eugen Levine, some of them came in from Russia. When the Soviets send a representative to Germany in this period, it's Karl Radek, a Jew.
02:01:21 Speaker_03
So it wasn't difficult to exploit that to argue that just as the ranks of capitalism was full of Jews, the ranks of Bolshevism or of the revolutionary left were full of Jews because you could easily go around and distinguish a great many of them.
02:01:43 Speaker_03
They don't have to be the majority, they just have to be numerous, prominent, and visible, which they were. So this provided you a
02:01:55 Speaker_03
You know, in the case of the propaganda of the German army, the type of stuff that Hitler was spewed out, they could put all the anti-capitalist rhetoric in there wanted to.
02:02:03 Speaker_03
The army was never going to overthrow capitalism and the capitalists knew they weren't going to do it. So go ahead, you know, talk shit about us. We don't really care. That's not going to, because we know that the army would prevent that from happening.
02:02:17 Speaker_03
The way to then undermine the real enemy it was seeing, the revolutionary left, was to point out the Jewish influence there. I mean, look at Russia. Trotsky, there he is. Look, there's a Jew. There's one. Radek is a Jew.
02:02:35 Speaker_03
It wasn't hard to find him in that regard.
02:02:38 Speaker_00
You gave a lecture on the protocols of the elders of Zion. It's widely considered to be the most influential work of antisemitism ever, perhaps. Can you describe this text?
02:02:52 Speaker_03
Well, the protocols of the alerted elders of Zion is probably one of the most troublesome and destructive works of literature that has ever emerged.
02:03:09 Speaker_02
and yet its origins remain obscure.
02:03:15 Speaker_03
So you get a whole variety of stories about where it came from. So the one story that is often is that it was the work of the Okhrana, the Russian secret police, and in particular, it was all crafted in 1904 and 1905.
02:03:28 Speaker_03
In Paris, there's a whole description of Piotr Raczkowski, who was the, supposedly the chief of the Okhran at the time, was the man behind it. Another fellow by the name of Matvei Golovinsky was the drafter of it.
02:03:50 Speaker_03
And that they had this document written by a French political writer from some decades back called Dialogue and Hell Between Machiavelli and Montesquieu. which they were then adapting, usually it's argued that they plagiarized it into the protocols.
02:04:13 Speaker_03
And none of that is really true. I mean, the first part about it is that at the time this supposedly took place, Rajkowski wasn't working for the Ocrana, he'd been fired, and he wasn't in Paris.
02:04:26 Speaker_03
And the whole situation which is described couldn't have taken place because the people who did it weren't there. It's a story. but it provides a kind of explanation for it. So the protocols emerge. So you always have to go back.
02:04:42 Speaker_03
This is one of the things that I have found always useful in research is go back to the beginning. Find the first place this is mentioned or the first version or the first iteration. Where does it start? So you go back to St.
02:05:05 Speaker_03
Petersburg, Russia, run 1903. There is a small right-wing anti-Semitic newspaper published there called Znamya, Banner. And it publishes in a kind of serial form a work doesn't credit with any original author. And this is the first version of the
02:05:31 Speaker_03
protocols of the learned elders of Zion. But what it's actually describing is a Judeo-Masonic plot to rule the world. Those two terms are always combined together.
02:05:44 Speaker_03
And in fact, in the earlier version, there's far more mentions of Freemasons than there are Jews.
02:05:53 Speaker_03
And the publisher of Znamya is closely connected to a thing called the Union of Russian People, the Union of Russian Men, which ostensibly existed to defend the empire against subversion
02:06:11 Speaker_03
particularly against what I thought was Jewish subversion, when they also argued that the prominence of Jews in revolutionary movements somehow proved that this was in some way a Jewish revolution. But again, this is not a mainstream newspaper.
02:06:23 Speaker_03
It's not appealing to a mainstream population. Very few people saw it, but this is where it appears. Now, keep in mind, that's two or three years before it's usually said to have been written.
02:06:35 Speaker_03
Or the other version is that there's this crazy priest by the name of Sergei Niles, and he wrote it, or actually appended it as an appendix to his work in 1905. Now, it was around before that. So Nihilist didn't create it.
02:06:49 Speaker_03
It wasn't drafted in Paris in 1904, 1905. It was serialized in an obscure right-wing Russian newspaper in 1903.
02:07:01 Speaker_00
And by the way, we should say that these are 24 protocols. Well, it varies. It varies.
02:07:11 Speaker_00
That are, I guess, supposed to be like meeting notes about the supposed cabal where the Jews and Freemasons are planning together a world domination, but it's like meeting notes, right? Protocol, which are
02:07:28 Speaker_03
Russian term basically for notes of a meeting. Well, it's notes of a meeting, these are the goofiest things I've ever seen. Because what you've got here, it's not notes, no one takes notes from a meeting that way.
02:07:42 Speaker_03
What you've got is like the exposition of a Bond villain. It's all of this, boy, all of them are gonna do this. The last thing you wanna do is lay out your, if you've got a plan for world domination, my suggestion would be don't write it down.
02:07:58 Speaker_03
So it's not notes of a meeting. It's, again, it's another sort of narrative or story that's being told. It bears no resemblance to the dialogue in hell between Machiavelli and Montesquieu.
02:08:15 Speaker_03
But what it is, the best thing, it's not particularly readable in some ways. There was an Italian writer by the name of Cesare Michalis, who wrote a book, translated in English, called The Non-Existent Manuscript.
02:08:32 Speaker_03
And what it is, is that he takes the different versions, starting with the 1902, 1903 versions, and looks through the other ones, and he tries to, in the process, to reconstruct what he thinks the original might have been.
02:08:47 Speaker_03
But the other thing he does, which was fascinating to me, is that he takes this whole initial text, And in bold type, he indicates the paragraphs, but more often sentences or phrases that appear to be identical from the Jolie work.
02:09:05 Speaker_03
And they're just scattered throughout it. There's no particular rhyme or reason to it. You don't plagiarize that way. I mean, who does that? Sentence here, sentence there.
02:09:21 Speaker_03
which has led to a peculiar theory of mine, which of course I will have to expound upon, which is that I think that the original author of the Protocols was the same Maurice Jolie.
02:09:33 Speaker_03
I think what someone stumbled across was a work which he wrote and never published, and which he just drew. It's exactly what someone would do working from your own kind of material.
02:09:51 Speaker_03
Because I've written things and then taken what I've written and then sort of repackaged that into something else. Sentence here, sentence there. Yeah, and the same sort of thing comes out. Only sort of bits and pieces of it remain.
02:10:04 Speaker_03
So why would Jolie have done that? Jolie was, we're talking about a man whose career basically spanned the 1850s to 1870s. He's an obscure figure. I'm not even totally sure he existed.
02:10:23 Speaker_00
But it's one of those things, you go looking for him. I love that you're a scholar of people that just kind of emerge out of the darkness. They just come from nowhere. And there's the Ocrana there also.
02:10:34 Speaker_00
And we should also say this was, I guess, the original would be written, I mean, what's the language of the original? Russian? Russian.
02:10:40 Speaker_03
But my hunch is that that's adopted from a French version. First of all, they're constantly harping on Freemasons, which wasn't nearly as a big idea there. If you go back to France in the 1890s, there's some big scandals.
02:10:53 Speaker_03
Well, there's the Dreyfus scandal. Well, we got that. All right. Where you've got a Jewish officer on trial for being a traitor. All right. So, you bring in the whole Jewish element, Jews is disloyal, Dreyfus case, 1894.
02:11:07 Speaker_03
Earlier, you had the Panama scandal, which was this huge investment scandal when the Panama Canal Company in Paris collapsed. And again, many of the major players in that were Jewish financiers. And then you've got the Taxel hoax.
02:11:26 Speaker_03
So the Taxel hoax was the work of this guy. His real name was, I think, Jogan Paget. He was kind of a French journalist. He started out writing porn.
02:11:38 Speaker_03
So when he wrote things like sex lives of the popes and the erotic Bible and various things of that kind, he was a Catholic, broke with the Catholic church, wrote bad stuff about the popes.
02:11:50 Speaker_03
and apparently became a Freemason for a while, and then supposedly recanted his evil ways, went back to the church, and then under the name Leo Taxel began writing these whole series of articles, basically arguing that there was a Masonic Satanic conspiracy, run by the way, by an American, Albert Pike.
02:12:15 Speaker_03
And this also included child sacrifice. It's got Pizzagate. Yeah, it is well by a high priestess, Diana Vaughn. And so there's like child sacrifice, you know, weird Robey Bohemian Grove stuff.
02:12:30 Speaker_03
And the Freemasons are devil worshipers going back to the Knights Templars. And so there's a thing called the devil in the 19th century and the secrets of Freemasonry. And this became a bestseller in France.
02:12:43 Speaker_03
So France is just obsessed with all these kinds of conspiracies. So evil satanic Freemasons, evil Jewish financiers, Dreyfus, this is the brew where all of this comes. So I wanna figure out how Freemasons and Jews get connected together.
02:12:59 Speaker_03
France is the place where this happens. Now, Taxel, or Joe Gampaget, eventually pulls another interesting thing in this.
02:13:09 Speaker_03
Around 1897, critics argue that he's making this stuff up and demand that he present Diana Vaughn, supposed satanic high priestess, toddler killer. And he says, oh, we're going to have a press conference.
02:13:22 Speaker_03
She'll appear and say all of this stuff as she returns to the church and possibly becomes a nun. And so people show up, you know, Hive figures in the Catholic church shows up and he does, no Diana Vaughn, and Dogan Pesce goes, it's all a hoax.
02:13:36 Speaker_03
I made it up. You're all a bunch of idiots for believing it. Okay. You, you members of the church, especially just, just what gullible, you know, morons you are. And that's it. He confesses to this day.
02:13:49 Speaker_03
However, you will find people who will insist that it's actually true because they desperately want it to be true. But this is, I think, the milieu that, I like that word apparently, that this comes out of.
02:14:03 Speaker_03
And this is this whole kind of unhealthy mix. So France, to me, is the only place that in the decade preceding it, that something like this would be concocted.
02:14:17 Speaker_03
So it was either created by some sort of unknown person there, but I still think that even though he dies in like 1879, that in Maurice Jolie's troubled career, he went from being an opponent of French Emperor Napoleon III, which is what the whole dialogues was written against,
02:14:45 Speaker_03
And then he was, for a time, a close political ally of a French politician by the name of Adolphe Cremieux. So Adolphe Cremieux, what's he got going for him? Well, he was kind of a radical politician. He was an opponent of Napoleon III.
02:15:05 Speaker_03
He was a Freemason. Oh, and he was Jewish. In fact, at one point, I think he was actually the head both of the Scottish right in France and an important figure in the Allianz Israelite, the Jewish organization in France.
02:15:26 Speaker_03
So he was publicly, very prominently Jewish and Masonic. So someone else who would have linked them together. Jolie, as he did with virtually everyone, this is a guy whose life largely consisted of dual threats and fistfights.
02:15:41 Speaker_03
So he gets angry at Cormieu. And it's exactly the type of thing that he might write to vent his spleen about it. But he died. probably a suicide, that's kind of difficult to tell. In obscurity, his son seems to have inherited most of his literary works.
02:16:14 Speaker_03
And his son then became a journalist to work for newspapers in France in the 1890s, but was also associated with some people on the fringes of the Okhrana or the Russian press. in France.
02:16:32 Speaker_03
So, one of the little things that had happened by this time is that France and Russia had become allies, even though their political systems are completely incompatible.
02:16:43 Speaker_03
And so, the Russians were using money to subsidize French newspapers that were championing the alliance between the two, Russian meddling. Okay. Now, just paying to have the right kind of newspapers come out.
02:16:59 Speaker_03
So there's this whole connection between the kind of Russian journalistic world and the French journalistic world and all of these scandals which are going on and Jolie's son, and then 10 years down the road, this thing pops up in a newspaper in St.
02:17:17 Speaker_03
Petersburg. That's where I think the origins lay.
02:17:25 Speaker_00
Why do you think it took off? Why do you think it grabbed a large number of people's imaginations? And even after it was shown to be not actually what it's supposed to be, people still believe it's...
02:17:41 Speaker_03
Well, it doesn't take off immediately. Okay, never receives any kind of wide, I mean, nobody much reads the first edition of it. When it's re-edited, it keeps getting, there are something like 18 or 19 different versions as it goes through.
02:17:55 Speaker_03
I mean, it gets, you know, people leave this protocol out or leave another one. As time goes on, there's more and more emphasis on Jews and less and less on Freemasons. So it's sort of, and the whole thing could have begun as an anti-Masonic tract.
02:18:12 Speaker_03
I mean, you could leave Jews out of it entirely and just turn it into a Masonic plot to rule the world. But let's just throw them in as well, since the two things are already being combined elsewhere.
02:18:24 Speaker_03
It doesn't become a big deal until really after the First World War, because the initial versions of it are all in Russian. And let's face it, while that's widely read in Russia, it's not much read anywhere else. a different alphabet.
02:18:39 Speaker_03
Nobody can even see what it means. So it has no particular influence outside of Russia. But then you get to 1919 and you get all these different versions of it.
02:18:50 Speaker_03
So suddenly you get two English versions in the US, another English version in Britain, a German edition, a French edition, a Dutch edition. Everybody is coming up with these things.
02:19:02 Speaker_03
So it's not until in the immediate aftermath of the First World War that this metastasizes and it begins to show up in all of these different foreign additions. And I think that it just has to do with the changes that have taken place during the war.
02:19:23 Speaker_03
One of the things that people began looking for was that, why was there a war? And we just had this whole disastrous war and the world has been turned upside down. So there has to be some kind of explanation for that, I don't know.
02:19:35 Speaker_03
And one of the things this offered is, see, there's this evil plan, there's this evil plan that has been put into motion, and this could possibly explain what's taking place.
02:19:47 Speaker_03
The reason why the protocols were, I think, widely bought then, and why they still are in many ways, is the same reason that the Taxel hoax I was talking about was, because it told a story that people wanted to believe.
02:20:04 Speaker_03
So in France in the 1890s, there was widespread suspicion of Freemasons. It was seen as a somewhat sinister, secretive organization, certainly secretive. And there was also the same sort of generalized prejudices about Jews.
02:20:27 Speaker_03
clannish, distinct, too much influence, all of the things that went on. So it was sort of easy to combine those two things together. And even though Taxel admits it was a hoax, there were those who argued that this is just too, it's too accurate.
02:20:45 Speaker_03
It describes things too completely to be a hoax. And then you get the same arguments. In fact, I've heard the same arguments with the protocol.
02:20:55 Speaker_03
I don't even buy this as an example of plagiarism because you can't actually prove what's being plagiarized in any sense. To me, the protocols are a prime example of what I call a turd on a plate. These things crop up. I have to explain that now.
02:21:14 Speaker_03
Yeah, please. What is a turd on a plate? Well, a turd on a plate is a turd on a plate. Suppose you come in and there's a plate sitting on the table and there's a turd on it. Now, the first thing you're going to, what is, is, is that a turd?
02:21:28 Speaker_03
Is it a human turd? Where did it come from? Who's, why would someone poop on a plate? There are all these questions that come to mind. It makes no sense. But that's what you come, it's just there, right?
02:21:43 Speaker_03
I don't know where it came from, I don't know why, but there's a turd on a plate, and that's what the protocol is, that they're just there.
02:21:51 Speaker_00
But the reality is, just like with a turd on a plate, you take a picture of that in modern day, and it becomes a meme, becomes viral, and becomes a joke on all social media, and now it's viewed by tens of millions of people or whatever, it becomes popular.
02:22:03 Speaker_00
So wherever the turd came from, it did, captivate the imagination. It did speak to something. It seemed to provide an explanation. Can you just speak to Jew hatred? Is it just an accident of history? Why was it the Jews versus the Freemasons? Is it
02:22:29 Speaker_00
the collective mind searching for a small group to blame for the pains of civilization, and then Jews just happened to be the thing that was selected at that moment in history. It goes all the way back to the Greeks.
02:22:48 Speaker_03
Let's blame them. So one of the first occasions you find the idea that Jews are a distinct, mean-spirited, nasty people goes back to a Greco-Egyptian historian named Manetho. This is around, I think, 300 BC. early.
02:23:19 Speaker_03
Can't even rope the Romans into this one. So Manetho is trying to write a history of the dynasties of Egypt.
02:23:27 Speaker_03
I think his history of dynasties of Egypt still is one of the basic works in this, but he tells this whole story, which essentially describes the kind of first blood libels that the Jews to celebrate their
02:23:41 Speaker_03
various religious holidays would capture Greeks and fatten them up in the basement and then slaughter them and eat them or drain their blood or do something. It's just the earlier version of that kind.
02:23:54 Speaker_03
Also, I think it repeats the Egyptian version of the Exodus out of Egypt, which is quite different than the biblical version. In this case, the Egyptian, They stole all the stuff out of the Egyptians' houses and ran off into the desert.
02:24:12 Speaker_03
The Jews stole all the stuff and ran off. Yeah, Hebrews. Hebrews robbed the Egyptians. They were taken in. We took them in and sheltered them, gave them jobs, and then they stole all the jewelry and ran away. We didn't even chase them.
02:24:28 Speaker_03
We were glad to see them gone. So it's a different narrative on that story. But it essentially portrays the Jews as being hostile. They don't like other people. They're contemptuous of other people's religions, the rest of it.
02:24:49 Speaker_03
And see, the Greeks tended to think of themselves as being extremely cosmopolitan. Now, the Greeks ran across people worshiping other gods. They go, oh, those are just our gods under different names. Everything was adjusted into their landscape.
02:25:04 Speaker_03
So you end up with that kind of hostility, which was there at the time. And that was probably influenced also by some of these earlier rebellions that had taken place in Egypt.
02:25:20 Speaker_03
During the Roman period, you not only have the Judean rebellion in 70 AD, but you have a couple of other uprisings in North Africa. And they're very bloody affairs. And in some cases, Jews begin massacring other people around them.
02:25:38 Speaker_03
They start killing the Greeks, the Greeks start killing them.
02:25:41 Speaker_03
So there was a fair amount of, from that period on, a certain amount of bad blood, of mutual contempt between Greeks or between Hellenes, between the people who became Hellenized, as the Romans would be, and the Jews.
02:25:56 Speaker_03
And the Romans also seems to have developed much of that idea. They consider Judea as being a horrible place to have to govern, inhabited by a stubborn, obnoxious people, not well-liked.
02:26:15 Speaker_02
So that's really where you see the earliest version of that. And the reasons for it would be
02:26:29 Speaker_03
complicated. What you could say is that going back to Manetho and to the Roman period, Jews, Judeans frequently experienced difficulties, conflicts with other people living around them.
02:26:45 Speaker_03
And part of that probably had to do with the diaspora, which was the movement. Well, you know, you get the idea. The Romans came and they kicked everybody out, which they didn't.
02:26:52 Speaker_03
Jews had been leaving Judea since it was a poor, limited area, and moving into areas like North Africa, Egypt, Cyrenaica, all the way into Southern France. They moved widely around the Roman Empire.
02:27:04 Speaker_03
So that sense of both distinctness and hostility existed since ancient times.
02:27:15 Speaker_03
So it wasn't just the attitude of the church towards Jews was mixed by, well, one of the ideas, of course, is that at the end of time, just before the second coming, one of the signs, how are we going to know that Jesus is going to return and the world is going to end?
02:27:34 Speaker_03
Well, the Jews will all convert. There will be a mass conversion. They'll sort of see the light. Now, So there have to be Jews around to do that or we won't, you know, it's like a canary in a coal mine. You have to have them there to tip it off.
02:27:48 Speaker_03
So that was one of the arguments as to why within the church, as to why Jews would not be forcibly converted beyond the fact that it's just kind of bad policy to forcibly convert people because you don't know whether it's sincere, but they need to be preserved as a kind of artifact.
02:28:12 Speaker_02
which will then redeem itself at the end of time. It's not something which is encouraged, it predates Christianity.
02:28:26 Speaker_03
And then Christianity, of course, in its own way just sort of plagiarizes the whole Jewish thing, doesn't it? I mean, I hesitate to use that term, but that's what you do. It's just like, well, we're the Jews now. Okay.
02:28:41 Speaker_03
You used to have a unique relationship with God, but now it's been passed over to us. And so, you know, thanks. Thanks for the Bible. You know, I can remember that.
02:28:52 Speaker_03
And my mom's side, I was periodically exposed to Sunday school and, and pretty much the old Testament was always presented as if somehow it was the you know, the history of like, for lack of a better term, you know, Europeans in some way.
02:29:09 Speaker_03
It was sort of a Christian history. It was all the prequel to that. And there'd be some sort of, first the term Hebrew was always used, never Jews.
02:29:18 Speaker_03
So, you know, the ancient Hebrews, and somehow the Hebrews just sort of became the Christians, and I don't know, the Jews just got, they didn't get a memo or something. So it's basically like Christianity, the prequel. is the Old Testament.
02:29:32 Speaker_03
But they just sort of take over, okay. We have the special dispensation now, thank you very much. You're an artifact.
02:29:40 Speaker_00
So it's interesting, so this whole narrative that I would say is kind of like a viral meme started, as you described, in 300 BC. It just carried on in various forms and morphed itself.
02:29:58 Speaker_00
and arrived after the Industrial Revolution in a new form to the 19th and 20th century, and then somehow captivated everybody's imagination.
02:30:08 Speaker_03
I think that modern anti-Semitism is very much a creation of the modern world and the Industrial Revolution. It's largely a creation of Jewish emancipation.
02:30:22 Speaker_02
It's the nasty flip side of that, okay? all of the restrictions are thrown off, but now also you become the focus of much more attention than what you had before.
02:30:36 Speaker_03
Prior to that, you had the kind of ghettoization, which worked both ways. I mean, there were rabbis who praised the ghettos as a protection. of Jews against the outside world, because inside we can live our life as we wish and we're unmolested.
02:31:02 Speaker_03
Whereas the great fear is that if we were sort of absorbed into this larger world, we'll lose our identity.
02:31:11 Speaker_03
That sort of question comes up in the 18th century and things like the Haskalah movement in Germany, because the German Jews were always at the sort of cutting edge of assimilation and modernity.
02:31:22 Speaker_03
Moses Mendelssohn was an example of that, arguing that we just need to become Germans. So as much as possible, synagogues should look like Lutheran churches. Things should be given in good German. And that's the way, we need to become Jewish Germans.
02:31:44 Speaker_03
We don't want to become a kind of group of people who are part in that way. And that has created great tensions ever since. You know, one of the essential points, it seems to me, in anti-Semitism, anti-Jewism, is that all the Jews are in this together.
02:32:03 Speaker_03
Isn't that one of the things? Okay, they're always talking about as if they're a collective. Jews this, Jews that. as if it's a single undifferentiated mass of people who all move and speak in the same way. From my personal experience, not being Jewish,
02:32:22 Speaker_03
It's incredibly diverse. In many ways, really, one of the things that anti-Semitism proposes is a continuity or a singularity of Jewish identity that never existed.
02:32:37 Speaker_00
Just like you said, in one hand, there's a good story. In the other hand is the truth. And oftentimes the good story wins out. And there's something about the idea that there's a cabal of people, whatever they are, in this case, our discussion is Jews.
02:32:53 Speaker_00
seeking world domination, controlling everybody, is somehow a compelling story. It gives us a direction of a people's to fight, of a people's to hate, on which we project our pain, because life is difficult.
02:33:08 Speaker_00
Life for many, for most, is full of suffering. And so we channel that suffering into hatred towards the other. Maybe if we can just zoom out, what do you, from this particular discussion,
02:33:21 Speaker_00
learn about human nature, that we pick the other in this kind of way. And we divide each other up in groups, and then construct stories, and like constructing those stories, and they become really viral and sexy to us. And then we channel the hatred.
02:33:43 Speaker_00
We use those stories to channel our hatred towards the other.
02:33:47 Speaker_03
Well, Yeah, Jews aren't the only recipient of that.
02:33:50 Speaker_03
I mean, anytime you hear people talking about Jews this or that, white people this or that, black people this or that, Asians this or that, where they're an undifferentiated mass who apparently all share something in common, well, then nobody's really thinking.
02:34:07 Speaker_03
And the other thing you'll find is that people who will express those views when pressed will argue that, oh, well, if they actually know anybody from those groups, those are OK. You know, it's like Nazis. Oh, they go, oh, this isn't okay, Jew.
02:34:21 Speaker_03
They're all right. They were getting, they were always constantly making exceptions. And one for, you know, what they actually met an actual human being and they seem to be fairly normal. Well, they were okay.
02:34:32 Speaker_03
So what it was that they, they hated weren't actual people for the most part. It was just this kind of gollywog vision that they had with them. You're not even talking about real people. Uh, I don't know. What does that tell you about human nature?
02:34:49 Speaker_03
Well, okay. In 70 odd years, what have I learned about my fellow creatures? One, I don't actually understand them any better than I ever did. In fact, less so.
02:35:03 Speaker_01
Okay.
02:35:04 Speaker_03
I would say that when I was 17, I thought that I had the world much more figured out than I do now.
02:35:09 Speaker_01
Mm-hmm.
02:35:11 Speaker_03
completely deluded, but you know, it seemed to make much more sense and I could categorize things. Basic take upon human beings, most people, most of the time are polite, cooperative and kind until they're not.
02:35:31 Speaker_03
And the exact tipping point and moment in which they go from one to the other is unpredictable. God, that's brilliantly put.
02:35:43 Speaker_00
Speaking of the tipping point, you gave a series of lectures on murderers, crimes in the 20th century. One of the crimes that you described is the Manson family murders.
02:35:56 Speaker_00
And that combines a lot of the elements of what we've been talking about and a lot of the elements of the human nature that you just described. So can you just tell the story at a high level as you understand it?
02:36:08 Speaker_03
The Manson Family. Well, you begin with Charles Manson, who's the key element in this. And Charles Manson, for most of his life, up until the time that he's around 33, is an unexceptional petty criminal.
02:36:21 Speaker_03
In and out of prison, reform school from an early age, not really associated with violent crimes. He did stuff like steal cars, write bad checks, became an unsuccessful pimp and drug dealer.
02:36:37 Speaker_03
So around 1967, he gets out of his latest stint in federal lockup in Terminal Island near Los Angeles, California. By that time, he's learned how to play the guitar, has ambitions to become a musician, and also has proclaimed himself a Scientologist.
02:36:57 Speaker_03
Not that he ever seems to have, but that's what he would claim that he was. of, you know, self-educated himself in prison to a certain degree. And so when he gets out of prison in 67, he was a model prisoner.
02:37:12 Speaker_03
He behaved himself, you know, and seemed, you can sort of imagine his life is going in a completely different direction. And here again, I'm going to say something kind of good about Charles Manson, which is that he actually was a decent singer.
02:37:29 Speaker_03
If you really sort of listened to some of the stuff he did, he's not a great singer, but he could have, you know, other people got recording contracts with less talent than he had, and he could play a guitar.
02:37:43 Speaker_03
The Beach Boys actually do record one of his songs without him.
02:37:47 Speaker_00
How would you evaluate Hitler's painting? Uncompared to Charles Manson.
02:37:51 Speaker_03
Well, you're supposed to say it's terrible. Okay. Okay. It looks average to me Yeah landscape. I mean if you didn't know it was Hitler Yeah. I don't know what people say about it. Sorry for the distraction. It's just an average painter. That's what it was.
02:38:10 Speaker_03
Something like crazy genocidal maniac paintings. You don't really have those. So Manson, he could have done that. He probably could have. He made certain inroads into the music industry.
02:38:22 Speaker_03
And if he hadn't been such a weirdo, he might have gotten further with it. But his life could have taken a different turn. So this is one of the questions I have.
02:38:29 Speaker_03
Where did a guy who's an unexceptional career petty criminal suddenly emerge into some sort of criminal mastermind, a Svengali, who can bend all of these people to his will and get them to go out and commit murder? That's a real shift that you have.
02:38:50 Speaker_03
So the first thing it kind of could tell you that something odd is going on is he gets out of prison in LA County, and he's on parole. Parolees are supposed to have a job, not supposed to leave the jurisdiction of their parole.
02:39:08 Speaker_03
He heads straight for the Bay Area, violates parole right off the bat. Two weeks later, he drifts into the parole office in the Bay Area, whereupon he should have been arrested and sent back to Terminal Island.
02:39:22 Speaker_03
But instead, they just assign him a parole. I don't know, maybe things were easier then in some way. So he gets assigned a parole officer, Michael Smith.
02:39:29 Speaker_03
Michael Smith is initially handling a number of parolees, but after a while, once he takes on Manson, he only has one parolee he's supervising, Charlie Manson, which is odd.
02:39:42 Speaker_03
And you also find out that Michael Smith, in addition to being a parole officer, is a graduate student at the University of California. studying group dynamics, especially the influence of drugs on gangs and groups.
02:39:58 Speaker_03
And he's also connected to the Haydn Ashbery Free Clinic, which is a place where the influence of, because Haydn Ashbery had lots of drugs and lots of groups. So, you know, Charlie Manson never gets a regular job, hangs around with young girls,
02:40:19 Speaker_03
ex-cons, engages in criminal activity, is repeatedly arrested but nothing ever sticks for the next couple of years.
02:40:30 Speaker_02
So who gets that type of thing? Who gets a get-out-of-jail-free card? Informants. So here is what, again, this is speculation, but
02:40:48 Speaker_03
Manson, at some point after he got out of prison, is getting this treatment because he is recruited as a confidential informant. For who?
02:40:56 Speaker_02
For who? That's the interesting question.
02:41:02 Speaker_03
So, probably not for any local police departments. My best suspicion is probably the Federal Bureau of Narcotics, precursor to the DEA. You know, federal parolee, federal parole officer, cum graduate student in drugs and group dynamics.
02:41:22 Speaker_03
And eventually, with permission, he goes back down to L.A. And what is he part of when he's there? Well, he's on the fringes of the music industry. Not so much, you know, these.
02:41:33 Speaker_03
That was the Wilsons and elsewhere, which also brings him to the fringes of the film industry. So one of the things, if you're sort of looking in terms of Hollywood music industry elites in the flow of, Oh, and he's also dealing in drugs and girls.
02:41:50 Speaker_03
So an early version of Jeffrey Epstein. Yeah. Uh, Manson attracted lots of underage runaways and reign them, use them, also associating with biker gangs who produced drugs, et cetera.
02:42:08 Speaker_03
So that's part of what... He's an informant in the movement of drugs, basically within the film and music industries. And he's given pretty much a kind of free reign at that point. What then happens in August of 1969 is that there are these murders.
02:42:26 Speaker_03
First, Sharon Tate and her friends in Cielo Drive, I think everybody has probably pretty much heard that story before. And of course, the question is, why Cielo Drive? Why Sharon Tate, Frikoski, and the rest of them? Manson was familiar with the place.
02:42:42 Speaker_03
He had been there before. Members of the family had been there before. So he knew where it was. It wasn't an easy place to find.
02:42:51 Speaker_03
I mean, the way that that house, the house, the original house is no longer there, but the same sort of property in a house is built there.
02:42:58 Speaker_03
And if you didn't know where it was, it's not someplace, let's just go for a drive in the Hollywood Hills and murder people in a house. Well, that isn't the one that you would come across. There are lots of connections there.
02:43:10 Speaker_03
Uh, Wojtek Furkowski, who was one of the people killed at the CLO drive house was involved in drug dealing. That's a possible connection between the two, probably a fairly likely one. probably not unfortunate Sharon Tate at all.
02:43:25 Speaker_03
She was probably in the wrong place at the wrong time. Her husband might've been, you never know. And then the next night after the slaughter there, which by the way, Manson is not at.
02:43:40 Speaker_03
So this is one of the interesting things about is Charles Manson doesn't kill any of these people.
02:43:44 Speaker_02
His crime is supposedly ordering the killings to be done.
02:43:51 Speaker_03
He supposedly thought that the killings at the Tate house were sloppy, and he was going to give everybody a crash course in how you apparently commit seemingly random murders.
02:44:02 Speaker_03
So the next night he takes a group of people over to the LaBianca's house in a different section of LA, and you've got Lena and Rosemary, LaBianca, guy's a grocer, his wife runs a dress shop, upper middle class,
02:44:19 Speaker_03
And, you know, they're bound to gagged and hacked to death.
02:44:21 Speaker_03
And as at the Tate residence, various things like piggy are written, you know, various messages in blood, things that are supposed to look like cat's paws, because one of the groups trying to be framed for this was the idea was the Black Panthers.
02:44:37 Speaker_03
So the general story that comes out in the subsequent trial is that this was all a part of something called Helter Skelter, which Manson supposedly was an idea that that sounds like a Beatles song. That's where he got it from.
02:44:50 Speaker_03
He thought the Beatles were talking to him through their music and that there was going to be an apocalyptic race war. And this was all part of a plan to set this off. So this is why the Black Panthers were trying to be implicated in this.
02:45:07 Speaker_03
although how it was supposed to do that is never really explained. Here is what I think was really happening, what really happened and how I think it fits together.
02:45:21 Speaker_03
Before Sharon Tate and her friends or the LaBiancas were killed, there was a murder by members of the family of some of the same people involved in the later killings of a musician drug manufacturer by the name of Gary Hinman.
02:45:38 Speaker_03
So Manson again was involved in the drug trade, and Hinman made them. He was a cook, basically.
02:45:47 Speaker_03
And he brewed them up in his basement, sold the drugs to Manson, who sold them to biker gangs like the Straight Satans, which was one of the groups that he used, and they distributed them elsewhere.
02:46:00 Speaker_03
Well, one day, the Straight Satans show up and complain that the last batch of meth, or whatever it was that they got, from Manson had made some of their brothers very, very ill. And they were quite unhappy about that.
02:46:15 Speaker_02
And they wanted their $2,000 back. Manson had gotten those drugs from Gary Hinman.
02:46:24 Speaker_03
So he is unhappy and he sends Bobby Bose away and a couple of the girls over to Hinman's place to get the money from him. As the story is later related, I think by Susan Atkins,
02:46:38 Speaker_03
Hinman denied that there was anything wrong with his drugs and refused to pay up, which led to a interrogation torture session in which he was killed. And the idea was here, what are we going to do with that?
02:46:51 Speaker_03
Well, one of the other groups that Hinman had sold drugs to were, guess what? People associated with the Black Panthers. So we'll leave these things up and it will make them, but they will do it. So it's Bobby Beausoleil.
02:47:05 Speaker_03
who then takes Hinman's car and decides to drive it up the coast, by the way, with a bloody knife with Hinman's blood and hair on it and blood on the seats in the car.
02:47:19 Speaker_03
And then he pulls it off the road and decides to sleep it off and he gets busted, right? So find Hinman's body, find Beausoleil in Hinman's car with a bloody knife with him. Yeah, he gets arrested. So Beausoleil was very popular with some of the girls.
02:47:38 Speaker_03
There's consternation in the family that Bobby has been arrested. So how can we possibly get Bobby out of jail? Copycat killings. So if we go kill more people and we make it look the same, then see, Bobby couldn't possibly have done it.
02:47:54 Speaker_03
No, see, he just borrowed the car. Okay. He stole the car, but the knife was already in. He didn't have anything to do with this. So that, to me, makes the most sense out of what followed. How often do people talk about that theory?
02:48:08 Speaker_03
That's an interesting theory. Well, it's there. It's just not the one that... Bugliosi wanted to go with Helter Skelter because it was, again, it was a story that people could understand.
02:48:18 Speaker_00
Yeah.
02:48:19 Speaker_03
And it was sensational, and it would catch on. Also, another probable issue in that was that his star witness was Linda Kasabian. Linda Kasabian She was present at both the Tate and LaBianca murders.
02:48:36 Speaker_03
She didn't participate in the killings, according to her. She sort of drives the car, but everybody else talked about what had happened. Well, OK, she turns state's evidence and gets total immunity.
02:48:50 Speaker_03
And it's largely in her testimony that all the rest of the case is based.
02:48:55 Speaker_03
Now, if you start throwing into the equation that she proclaimed her love for Bobby Beausoleil and that she, according to others, was the chief proponent of the copycat killings, well, then that would get messy.
02:49:11 Speaker_03
Now, there's one guy that's at the center of this. It's Charles Manson. He ordered all of this done. to ignite a race war even though, how would any of that do it?
02:49:25 Speaker_00
Okay. So that doesn't make sense, but he is nevertheless at the center of this because he's the glue of the family, right? He exerts a tremendous amount of psychological control over them. How was he able to do that, Sergeant Charles?
02:49:38 Speaker_00
Because you said he was a petty criminal. It does seem he was pretty prolific in his petty crimes. He did a lot of them. He had a lot of access to LSD.
02:49:48 Speaker_03
Okay. Okay. Which he started getting at the free clinic in San Francisco. So lots of it floating around.
02:49:59 Speaker_03
Some descriptions of the family at Spahn Ranch is that people were basically taking acid on a daily basis, which by the way was also a potential problem with Linda Kasabian's testimony since she also admitted to being high most of the time and also thinking she was a witch.
02:50:14 Speaker_03
All right. So you want to put her? Okay. Where do you want to go with that?
02:50:18 Speaker_03
See, if Manson wasn't Manson, if he hadn't acted like such a complete, if he hadn't actually acted like the crazed hippie psycho goofball that Bugliosi painted him as being, then Kasabian's testimony wouldn't have been as strong because you could, I mean, the first thing I guess there is you've gotten immunity.
02:50:41 Speaker_03
for telling the story the prosecution wants. Hmm, you know, that's a little iffy. And we won't even bring in the witch and the drugs and being in love with Bobby Bosley, all right.
02:50:51 Speaker_03
So if Manson had been dressed like you, sitting there in a suit and tie, and, you know, and had behaved himself and spoken normally, things might've, this isn't to say that he wasn't guilty as hell.
02:51:05 Speaker_02
So what he supposedly did was to inspire all of these killings.
02:51:12 Speaker_03
And I think that's probably, you know, sort of beginning with the Hinman killing. He told them to go over there and get the money one way or the other.
02:51:23 Speaker_03
I don't know whether it's clear whether he told them if you don't get the money, kill him, but Hinman's dead. And then, might also have seen the value in terms of having copycat killings as a way of throwing off any other kind of blame.
02:51:42 Speaker_03
The other story you get is that one of the people who had lived at the Cielo house where Sharon Tate was before was a record producer by the name of Terry Melcher.
02:51:51 Speaker_03
Melcher supposedly, as the general story goes, had welched on a deal with Manson in terms of a record contract.
02:52:01 Speaker_03
He screwed over Manson in some sort of a record deal and Manson wanted to get revenge and sent them to kill everybody in the house, which again, doesn't make it much of a sense. One, Manson knew that Melcher wasn't living there anymore.
02:52:17 Speaker_03
probably knew where Melcher was living. If he wanted to get Melcher, he could have found him. It wasn't that difficult to do. It's not revenge on Terry Melcher that drew him there.
02:52:36 Speaker_03
He was familiar with the house, so if the idea was to simply commit random killings that would throw
02:52:44 Speaker_03
would muddy the whole waters with the Hinman killing, then you might pick some place you knew of, you knew the place with Ronan out, there'd be someone there and you really didn't care. In the same way that the La Bianca seemed to have been.
02:52:58 Speaker_03
Manson was familiar with that because it supposedly had been the scene of creepy crawling. This is a little interesting things that the family would be taught to do. Creepy crawling is when you sneak into somebody's house at night
02:53:14 Speaker_03
while they're there, asleep, or when they're not there, and you move things around.
02:53:20 Speaker_03
So when they get up in the morning or they come home, they'll suddenly notice that someone has been in their house, which will freak them out, which is the whole point of that.
02:53:29 Speaker_00
But it doesn't seem like the murder or the creepy crawling was the, well, creepy crawling may be, but it doesn't seem like the murder, like some of the other people you've covered, like the Zodiac Killer, the murder is the goal.
02:53:43 Speaker_00
maybe there's some psychopathic kind of artistry to the murder that the Zodiac Killer had and the messaging behind that. But it seems like with the, at least the way you're describing it with the Charles Manson family, the murder was just the,
02:53:59 Speaker_00
They just had a basic disregard for human life, and the murder was a consequence of just operating in the drug underworld.
02:54:07 Speaker_03
So Manson set up a kind of base, I think called the Spawn Movie Ranch, which was an old movie ranch out on the northwest edge of LA. And they just kind of camped out there. He used the girls, in particular Squeaky Frome, to get the owner or operator
02:54:28 Speaker_03
Um, I think George spawned to let them hang out there. And basically she slept with him and he was perfectly happy to let them hang out. They also had a place out in the desert that they had. They dealt in credit card fraud, stolen cars.
02:54:42 Speaker_03
It was kind of a chop shop that they ran out of the place. So. He had a fairly good little criminal gig going, which with the protection he had, probably would have, the one thing they couldn't cover him on was murder.
02:54:58 Speaker_00
So you think there was, if he was an informer, you think there was still a connection between DEA, FBI, CIA, whatever, with him throughout this until he'd come into murder?
02:55:08 Speaker_03
Well, the real question is, there is a book written on this by Tom O'Neill called Chaos. I'm not saying it's the easiest thing to get through. There's a lot of material there.
02:55:16 Speaker_03
I don't think O'Neill necessarily knows what to make of some of the stuff he came up with, but he does a very good job of demolishing the whole Bugliosi narrative. One of the people he mentions is a name that I had run into elsewhere.
02:55:33 Speaker_03
I really paid attention to it when I saw it again. The name is Reeve Whitson. Reeve Whitson shows up on the fringes, even though he has no judicial function. He sort of hangs around Bugliosi in the prosecution. He's some sort of advice.
02:55:51 Speaker_03
He's just kind of there. In the same way that he was one of these guys, you know, he grew his hair kind of long, wore bell bottoms, hung around the music community and elsewhere in Hollywood, but no one could tell you exactly what he did.
02:56:06 Speaker_03
I know what he did later.
02:56:10 Speaker_02
But a decade later, he shows up as a CIA officer in Central America. Hmm. So Reeve Whitson, later in his career, at least, is CIA. What was he in 1969? What is he doing in this?
02:56:33 Speaker_03
The other thing about it is he appears to have been the person who called, there's a little question of when the bodies at Cielo Drive are discovered.
02:56:42 Speaker_03
So the general story is that Sharon Tate's housekeeper shows up around 8.30 in the morning, finds the bloody scene and goes screaming next door.
02:56:52 Speaker_03
But there was another fellow who knew, I think the owner of the house, he's a photographer, last name may be Hatami.
02:56:58 Speaker_02
He gets a call earlier in the morning saying that there'd been murders. there and the person he recalls calling him is Reeve Whitson. So someone had been at the house before the bodies were discovered and they had not called the police.
02:57:23 Speaker_03
So I don't know what's going on there, but it's a curious kind of situation. And Manson, in a lot of ways, just kind of self-immolates himself. I mean, his behavior at the trial is bizarre. It's threatening. It's disruptive.
02:57:44 Speaker_03
You know, he's got his girls out on the street carving X's in their forehead, carrying knives. One of the attorneys, initially his attorney, Ron Hughes, becomes Van Houten's attorney.
02:57:59 Speaker_03
And he figures out that the three girls supposedly on Charlie's insistence going to confess. And they confess that it was all their idea and Charlie had nothing to do with it.
02:58:12 Speaker_03
Hughes doesn't like this because his defense for her is that she was under his influence and therefore not responsible for her own actions. He was having psychic control. So he refuses to go along with it. There's a break in the trial.
02:58:28 Speaker_03
He goes camping up in the mountains with some friends disappears during a rainstorm, and then some months later, his decomposed remains are found. Now, rumors, always the rumors, okay? What would history be without rumors?
02:58:46 Speaker_03
Hell, that, ah, see, members of the family, they were pissed off at Ron Hughes because he messed up Charlie's idea to get him off, and so they killed him. Oh, maybe they did, maybe he drowned. That's absolutely impossible to say.
02:59:01 Speaker_03
You got that kind of story. There's a guy named Juan Flynn, who was an employee at the spawn ranch, didn't like Manson, held Manson responsible for the murder of his boss.
02:59:10 Speaker_03
He would testify that Manson told him that he had ordered all the killings and that Manson also admitted that he had killed 35 people.
02:59:21 Speaker_03
Maybe he did, on the other hand, Juan Flynn didn't like him and he had no other than his word had no real proof of what he was saying.
02:59:30 Speaker_03
So, please understand me in this case, is that unlike some people who argue that Charles Manson got a raw deal, I don't think that's the case. I think that he influenced tremendous influence over the people there through drugs, through
02:59:55 Speaker_03
Sex was another frequent component in it. He had a real whammy over a lot of these people's minds. I'm not sure how, that still kind of puzzles me. He was a scrawny guy and he wasn't physically intimidating.
03:00:08 Speaker_03
I mean, even a lot of women wouldn't be physically intimidated by him, but he nonetheless had this real psychological power. And if you look around him, the male followers he had were fairly big guys. So he could get people to do what he wanted.
03:00:27 Speaker_03
And again, to me, the simplest explanation for this is that it began with the Hinman killing and probably on Manson's instigation, the others were copycat killings to throw off what was going on.
03:00:40 Speaker_03
That would, if I was a cop, that's what I would focus on, because that seems to make the most sense.
03:00:47 Speaker_00
It's still, it's fascinating that he's able to have that much psychological control over those people. without having a very clear ideology, so it's a cult.
03:00:56 Speaker_03
Yes, the great focus on Charlie the leader, the excessive devotion.
03:01:02 Speaker_00
But there's not like a, maybe, there's not an ideology behind that, like something like Scientology or some kind of religious or some kind of, I don't know, utopian ideology, nothing like this.
03:01:15 Speaker_03
No, I think that Manson, again, was essentially a criminal. He had a sociopathic mindset and he hit upon a pretty good deal.
03:01:24 Speaker_00
Yeah, but how do people convince anybody of anything? With a cult, usually you have either an ideology or you have maybe personal religion, like you said, sex and drugs. But underneath that, can you really keep people with sex and drugs?
03:01:38 Speaker_00
You have to kind of convince them that you love them in some deep sense, like there's a commune of love. You have a lot of people there in the cult.
03:01:47 Speaker_03
They have some sort of what we like to call dysfunctional families. Yeah. A lot of the females in particular seem to have come from more or less middle-class families, but those are full of dysfunction.
03:02:03 Speaker_03
Their parents didn't love them, they were semi-runaways, and now they had this whole family. A lot of the younger women had children, You know, some of them by Manson, some of them by the others. They sort of bonded together.
03:02:20 Speaker_00
And again, we return to that pull towards belonging that gets us humans into trouble. So it does seem that there was a few crimes around this time. So the Zodiac Killer.
03:02:40 Speaker_03
Well, California. But I'm from, so I remember this period vividly. Okay. So by the way, the Tate-LaBianca killings occurred on my birthday, the year I graduated from high school. So I remember this. Happy birthday.
03:02:56 Speaker_03
A term which has been used for that, there's a writer by the name of Todd Wood who's coined, I wish I'd come up with this, Killerfornia. And which is just sort of a chronicle of the serial killers and disappearances in the late 60s and 70s.
03:03:12 Speaker_03
So you've got the Zodiac, you've got other ones. I mean, you know, I hate to say it, I'm not trying to be flippant about it, but I mean, young female hitchhikers were disappearing at an alarming rate in Northern California.
03:03:25 Speaker_03
There are bodies that have never been attributed. Some think they're the Zodiac's victims, but it was a dangerous time. Edmund Kemper, the co-ed killer was another one. There were a lot of creepy psychopaths running around.
03:03:45 Speaker_03
I don't know if it was something in the water or what was going on, but it was menacing in some cases.
03:03:55 Speaker_03
Hitchhiking, especially if you were alone and female, was not something you wanted to do in much of the Golden State, certainly not up around the Bay Area.
03:04:05 Speaker_03
So with a lot of these strange sort of killings that were going on, the Zodiac is, it's one of those things where you have these people who have theories about it.
03:04:14 Speaker_03
And if you don't share their theory, then you're part of the problem in some form or another. So I'm not sure, for instance, that the Zodiac killings were all committed by the same person. I think there might've been multiple people involved.
03:04:30 Speaker_03
And the first killings are all of couples. It's very sort of clear that they, I remember in my examination of it, one of the things I was looking at specific, what else is there to say about this Zodiac killing?
03:04:43 Speaker_03
So what I was gonna look at is that there are all of these accusations that there is an occult aspect to it. There was some sort of ritualistic, aspects. So I looked at different things, locations, victims, phases of the moon.
03:04:58 Speaker_03
That's always worth looking at. I didn't find much correspondence in any of those. In one of the killings, I think the one in Lake Berryessa, he does appear in this kind of weird hooded costume.
03:05:12 Speaker_03
He's got his symbol, the sort of compass or aiming rectal circle. With a cross through it, it can mean a variety of things.
03:05:22 Speaker_03
He used guns and he used knives, but he certainly had a thing for couples, except in the last of the killings, which is of a cab driver in downtown San Francisco, who he shoots in full view of witnesses, which is completely atypical.
03:05:39 Speaker_00
And also when he was stabbing the victims, it doesn't seem like he was very good at it. Or if the goal was to kill them, he wasn't very good at it because some of them survived.
03:05:50 Speaker_03
Yeah, he doesn't, he's not particularly thorough about it. He seems to have had much more, more of the violence seems to be directed at the females than the males.
03:06:00 Speaker_00
So, I mean, there's a couple of questions to ask here. First of all, do people see his face?
03:06:05 Speaker_03
There's a composite drawing of his face, which I think is based upon the Stein killing, the cab driver killing, where there were people who saw him or who claimed that they saw him. The other ones were all when it was fairly dark.
03:06:21 Speaker_03
I'm not sure that anyone else got to look at his face. The one that occurred in the daylight at Berryessa, he was wearing a mask. So there's something in common initially in the targeting of victims, which doesn't in the last case.
03:06:35 Speaker_03
Then after that, there's just these different cases of where there's a pretty good case to be made of a woman who claims, I think she and her small child were picked up, her car broke down, she got a flat tire and she was picked up by this guy who she got a very sort of strange vibe from, who eventually just let her go.
03:06:57 Speaker_03
Well, you know, that might have been the Zodiac.
03:07:00 Speaker_00
It might not have been. You do this kind of rigorous look, saying, OK, what is the actual facts that we know? Reduce it to the thing that we know for sure. And in speaking about his motivation, He said that he was collecting souls.
03:07:21 Speaker_00
Souls for the afterlife. For the afterlife. That's kind of a culty. Yeah. I mean, that's what I believe. Is it the Vikings or the Romans? They believed this in battle.
03:07:31 Speaker_03
You're essentially making sacrificial victims and they will be your ghostly servants in the afterlife. Do you think he actually believed that? Who knows? I mean, here's the question. Was he making that up just
03:07:44 Speaker_03
to be scary, or is that what his actual, that's what he's saying his motivation is. So let's take him at face value.
03:07:53 Speaker_03
Rather than trying to wish that into the cornfield, that is to get rid of it, let's just take it at face, so he's claiming that he's killing these people in order to acquire slave servants in the afterlife.
03:08:10 Speaker_03
He will subsequently go on to claim many more victims. I'm not sure, 44 eventually he will have before he just kind of vanishes.
03:08:19 Speaker_03
One of the really interesting clues to me when I was looking at that case, which I didn't find anybody else that tended to make much of it up, is that it all has to do with this kind of Halloween card that he sends to the press in San Francisco.
03:08:35 Speaker_03
And it's talking about sort of rope by gun, by fire. And there's this whole sort of wheel, you know, sort of like the Zodiacs. But what was this drawn from? Where he got this from is from a Tim Holt Western comic book published in 1951.
03:08:52 Speaker_03
And you see the same thing in the cover. It's wheel of fortune, but with different forms of grisly death on it. And all of the things that he mentioned are shown on the cover of this. So whoever put together that card saw that comic book.
03:09:10 Speaker_03
Well, that's kind of an interesting clue. So does that mean he's a comic book collector? When would he have, I mean, that is one, and also before he got the idea from. So he's incorporating these things for me.
03:09:22 Speaker_03
Then there are, of course, his codes, which people have, which aren't all that difficult to decipher, probably because they weren't meant to be. The other thing that you find often with serial or psychopathic killers is they're toying with the press.
03:09:38 Speaker_03
I mean, this goes all the way back to Jack the Ripper. You know, they get attention and then he just disappears. Why do you think he was never caught? I think they knew who to look for. There's nothing much to go on.
03:09:52 Speaker_03
I mean, there was a guy who was long a suspect. And then eventually they tested his DNA and find that it didn't match any of the things that they'd found.
03:10:04 Speaker_03
Again, it goes back to, I'm not even sure that it's one person who's responsible for all of them.
03:10:11 Speaker_00
So one of the interesting things you kind of bring up here, and our discussion of Manson inspires this, but there does seem to be,
03:10:21 Speaker_00
connection, a shared inspiration between several killers here, the Zodiac, the son of Sam later, and the monster of Florence. So is it possible there's some kind of like an underworld that is connecting these people?
03:10:38 Speaker_03
Well, you take the Zodiac, and you had his claim that he's collecting souls for the afterlife. There are other things that are occult-ish connected to that.
03:10:50 Speaker_03
He may have picked some of the killing sites due to their physical location, to their position in a particular place.
03:11:01 Speaker_03
If you look at the Son of Sam case, of course, David Berkowitz will on and off claim that he was part of a satanic cult that was carrying out, again, these killings, mostly of couples and young women similar to the Zodiac.
03:11:19 Speaker_03
and that he had only committed some of them and was witnesses at others. And that has really created the whole idea that yes, there is this some kind of satanic cult, which engages in ritual murders.
03:11:33 Speaker_03
Then if you go all the way to Florence, you've got murders who go on and off for a long period of time, again, focusing on couples in isolated areas, which Italian prosecutors ultimately tried to connect to some kind of satanic cult, although I'm not sure they ever made a particularly strong case for that.
03:11:53 Speaker_03
But that element comes up in all three of them.
03:11:58 Speaker_03
So you can, with a little imagination, argue that those similarities, that those things should come up in each of those cases in different places, either suggest that, oddly enough, psychopathic criminals all sort of thinking the same way, or that there is some sort of higher element involved in this, that there's some kind of common inspiration.
03:12:28 Speaker_03
Here again, you come back to something similar we were talking before about do pedophiles exist, do pedophiles? Okay, so do satanic cults exist? Well, they do. Okay, there was one in my hometown, apparently quite harmless.
03:12:44 Speaker_03
As far as I know, never did anything to be, but there are people who, robes, here we come again, robes, cut the head off a chicken, naked woman is an altar. You can get off on that, I suppose, if that's your thing.
03:12:59 Speaker_03
So, professed Satanists exist, Satanic cults exist, serial killers exist, ritual murders exist. Are those things necessarily connected?
03:13:10 Speaker_02
No. Could they be connected? Yes. There's nothing.
03:13:17 Speaker_03
Don't ever tell me that something is just too crazy for people to do, because that's crazy talk.
03:13:25 Speaker_00
You've studied secret societies. You gave a lot of amazing lectures on secret societies. It's fascinating to look at human history through the lens of secret societies, because they've permeated all of human history.
03:13:38 Speaker_00
You've talked about everything from the Knights Templar to Illuminati to Freemasons like we brought up. Freemasons lasted a long time. Illuminatis you've talked about. in its sort of main form lasted a short time, but it's legend. Never gone away.
03:13:54 Speaker_00
Never gone away. So maybe like Illuminati is a really interesting one. What was that? Well, the Illuminati that we know started in 1776.
03:14:05 Speaker_03
In fact, you can pin it down to a day, the 1st of May, May Day, 1776 in Ingolstadt, Germany, founded by a professor, Adam Weishaupt. It wasn't initially called the Illuminati, because that's not really the name of the organization.
03:14:23 Speaker_03
It was called the Order of Perfectibilists. Apparently, that changed. Weishaupt would say things like, never let our organization be known under its real name anywhere, which leaves wondering what's its real name.
03:14:38 Speaker_03
So Illuminati is simply the plural of Illuminatus, which means one who is illuminated, one who has seen the light. So in Roman times, Christian converts were Illuminati because they had seen the light.
03:14:54 Speaker_03
Anyone who thinks, and there've been organizations called, the term is not trademarked, not copyrighted. Anybody who thinks they've seen the light about anything is an Illuminati. So it defines nothing. The symbol of the order was an owl.
03:15:15 Speaker_03
which interestingly enough is almost identical to the owl, which is the emblem of the Bohemian club. Oh boy. Make of that what you will.
03:15:26 Speaker_03
I don't make that much out of it because one owl looks pretty much like another owl to me, but compare them, you know, you got to kind of wonder about this a little, just a little thing. Maybe there's some kind of connection there.
03:15:40 Speaker_03
But that supposedly has to do with the connection to the goddess Minerva, and the owl was sacred to her, and the order was the Minerval, the person who was brought in. The number of levels changed over time.
03:15:55 Speaker_03
There was a higher level for the order that people at the lower level didn't know about, pretty typical for this. But the thing about Weishaupt was that he was quite
03:16:06 Speaker_03
He was a luminous correspondent with members, with his Illuminati, both during the time that it legally existed in Bavaria and later on. So, Weisshoff himself lives, I think, until 1830, dies in Gotha, which was ruled by an Illuminati prince.
03:16:26 Speaker_03
And so, nothing ever happens to these men. No Illuminati has ever put to death or arrested, imprisoned for any period of time. What happens is that Their plan, well, what was his plan?
03:16:38 Speaker_03
His plan was to essentially replace all existing religions and governments in the world with a one world order governed by the Illuminati. So to do this, you had to subvert and destroy all the existing order.
03:16:56 Speaker_03
And the purpose for this is to, we wish to make men happy and free, but first we must make them good. Oh, right. So that's what the order is all about. Of course, he also said things like, oh man, is there nothing that you won't believe?
03:17:14 Speaker_03
Okay, so myth would be used in that. Also thought women should be brought into it. He had a rather interesting view about that was that we should appeal to women in part because women have a chip on their shoulder because they're left out of things.
03:17:28 Speaker_03
So we should appeal to their vanity on that point and offer that in the future,
03:17:34 Speaker_03
all things will be open and they will be emancipated, so we should hold out the prospect of female emancipation to attract them, because he argued in the short term there's no better way to influence men than through women.
03:17:47 Speaker_03
get women on our side by promising them emancipation, but he made sure we'll never actually deliver it to them because the future world will be a boys club.
03:17:56 Speaker_03
So he talks about these things fairly openly, and this is where you get this idea of some sort of a new world order, which is to be based upon the destruction of the existing order. So there are those who argue
03:18:13 Speaker_03
that there is a trail of dissent that leads from Weishaupt's Illuminati to the communist manifesto, and in fact, communism itself, that Marxism was simply a further restating of this idea. And you can draw some sort of connection.
03:18:33 Speaker_03
I mean, the idea never entirely goes away. The Bavarian government gets a hold of the order's inner texts. So the story is they're delivered to them. I think that Weishaupt gave them to him.
03:18:49 Speaker_03
I think he engineered the exposure of his order because it gave him publicity. By being exposed in Bavaria, you gained great renown and they continued to recruit after this. And the Bavarian government actually bans the Illuminati four different times.
03:19:07 Speaker_03
Why? because apparently the first three times didn't work. So the fourth one does. You can notice that it's like papal bands on Freemasonry, and they just go on and on and on, because this clearly isn't working.
03:19:19 Speaker_00
And you actually highlight the difference between, speaking of publicity, that there's a difference between visibility and transparency, that a secret society can be visible.
03:19:30 Speaker_00
It could be known about, it could be quite popular, but you could still have a secrecy within it.
03:19:35 Speaker_03
You have no idea what's going on inside. Yeah. It's like a black box. If I set a black box on this table, we can see that there is a black box. What's in the black box? A cat? Who knows?
03:19:45 Speaker_03
In fact, the secrecy might be the very thing that makes it even more popular. Adam Weisshaupt again, there is no more more convincing than a concealed mystery. Give people a concealed mystery.
03:19:55 Speaker_03
So we need to make the order mysterious for that exact reason. Always hold out the possibility that special knowledge that no mere mortals have other than you have in that way. So he senses a lot of things.
03:20:11 Speaker_03
The use of vanity and ego to recruit people to influence both men and women. It's quite sophisticated.
03:20:24 Speaker_02
And as you might expect from a professor of canon law trained by Jesuits. So I certainly don't think that it ceased when it was banned in Bavaria, because everybody just scatters and goes elsewhere, like Paris.
03:20:43 Speaker_00
And then you have the French Revolution. So the idea of the Illuminati, to put it crudely, the branding, is a really powerful one. And so it makes sense that it can, there's a thread connecting it to this day.
03:21:01 Speaker_00
That a lot of organizations, a lot of secret societies can sort of adopt the branding.
03:21:06 Speaker_03
Anybody can call it, you can go out and form a club and call it the Illuminati.
03:21:10 Speaker_00
And if you're effective at it, I think it does attract It's the chicken or the egg. But powerful people tend to have gigantic egos, and people with gigantic egos tend to like the exclusivity of secret societies.
03:21:23 Speaker_00
And so there's a, it's a gravitational force that pulls powerful people to these societies. It's exclusive, only certain.
03:21:32 Speaker_03
And you also notice something goes back to when we were talking about much earlier, when we were talking about intelligence. Remember mice? Ego. Ego, yeah. Is a means of recruitment and control.
03:21:42 Speaker_03
That's a great Achilles heel in human beings, the exploitation of ego.
03:21:48 Speaker_00
And of course, if we go back to the conversation of intelligence agencies, it would be very efficient and beneficial for intelligence agencies to infiltrate the secret societies, right? Because that's where the powerful people are.
03:22:03 Speaker_03
Yeah, or the secret societies to infiltrate the intelligence agencies.
03:22:06 Speaker_00
Oh boy, well, I mean, that's actually, in all the lectures, I kinda had a sense that intelligence agencies themselves are kind of secret societies, right?
03:22:20 Speaker_03
Well, it comes down, I give you my definition of secret societies, what they come down to. One is that generally their existence isn't secret. It's what they do is secret. It's what's in the box as opposed to the existence of the box.
03:22:33 Speaker_03
So one of the most important criterions is that they are self-selecting. You just don't join, they pick you. They decide whether or not you're going to, they admit you. And oftentimes they will sort of recruit you.
03:22:48 Speaker_03
Once you have been recruited, you have to pass tests and initiations. And you also have to swear oaths of loyalty. Those are always very, very critical.
03:23:03 Speaker_03
So, broadly speaking, what entrance into an intelligent organization does, they decide whether you get in, you just don't automatically get the job.
03:23:12 Speaker_03
You have to pass tests, a lie detector test, for instance, field training tests, a whole variety of tests, and then you're sworn to secrecy. You never talk about what you do, ever.
03:23:28 Speaker_02
or there will be dire consequences.
03:23:32 Speaker_03
So the method is very much the same, and also this idea of creating a kind of insular group. The organization is us, and everyone else is outside of that. We are guardians of special knowledge.
03:23:54 Speaker_03
See, this is the type of thing that would generally happen if you question whatever any kind of intelligence agency did. Well, we know things that you don't. Why? Because we're the organization that knows things. We collect information.
03:24:05 Speaker_03
We know the secrets. We guard the secrets. Therefore, if we tell you, you must believe us.
03:24:12 Speaker_00
I have this sense that there are very powerful secret societies operating today, and we don't really know or understand them. And the conspiracy theories in spirit might have something to them, but are actually factually not correct.
03:24:28 Speaker_00
So like, you know, an effective, powerful secret society or intelligence agency is not going to let you know anything that it doesn't want you to know, right? They'll probably mislead you if you get that close.
03:24:44 Speaker_03
So I think the question is, what's the most powerful or important secret society? Probably the one you don't know about. One that doesn't advertise its existence. The one which is never known anywhere under its real name.
03:24:59 Speaker_03
You've got things like the Bohemian Club. You've got the Bilderbergers, which is another sort of, you know, formed in the 1950s. Largely the creation of a guy by the name of Josef Rettinger.
03:25:14 Speaker_03
Polish, mysterious, peers at an elsewhere, a schemer for years. A man expelled from Britain, France, and the United States at one point or another. Long active in the Mexican labor movement. Rettinger is a mysterious figure.
03:25:33 Speaker_03
In fact, I think there was even a book written about him called Eminence Gris, Grey Eminence. The front man for the Bilderbergers was Prince Bernhard of the Netherlands, who was at one point a Nazi and then a Dutch freedom fighter.
03:25:47 Speaker_03
All right, take your pick. But Rettinger is the moving hand behind the whole thing, and I'll be damned if I can figure out who Rettinger is.
03:25:58 Speaker_03
So the idea is that, well, you get influential people in media, business, politics, and you bring them together just to talk, to try to find common answers or common questions. It's all very much sort of Western Europe, Anglo-European.
03:26:20 Speaker_03
I mean, it's all very closely sort of connected to NATO. The whole concept of a kind of Atlanticist world, which is essentially the Anglo-American combine combined with Western Europe.
03:26:35 Speaker_02
But you got a bunch of these things.
03:26:37 Speaker_03
I mean, the Council on Foreign Relations is very similar to that. the Bilderbergers, and there's an overlap with the Bohemian Club.
03:26:49 Speaker_03
And then you've got the Penae Circle, or Les Circle, which is more military, but also linked to the so-called secret Gladio, you know, the idea of the Soviets overran Western Europe, there would be a stay-behind organization called Gladio.
03:27:07 Speaker_03
There'd be these freedom fighters. So the question I have about that is that how many secret organizations do you need I mean, why all these separate groups which often seem to have the same people under them?
03:27:20 Speaker_00
Yeah, there's a... I mean, the closer I look, the more I wonder the same question we asked about the Russian intelligence agencies is where is the center of power? It seems to be very hard to figure out. Does the secrecy scare you?
03:27:35 Speaker_03
Well, I guess on one level, I'm comforted that there's somebody actually making decisions. I mean, what do you want? Do you want chaos or do you want everything kind of rigidly controlled?
03:27:48 Speaker_03
And I don't put much stock in the idea that there actually is some small group of people running everything because if they were, it would operate more efficiently. I do think that there are various disparate groups of people
03:28:08 Speaker_03
who think that they're running things or try to. And that's what concerns me more than anything else.
03:28:18 Speaker_03
Well, I hate to go back to them again, especially bringing up, you go back to the Nazis, they had their whole idea about a new world order and they only had 12 years to do it. Look what a mess they made.
03:28:27 Speaker_03
I mean, look at the damage, the physical damage that can be done by an idea inspiring a relatively small group of people controlling a nation.
03:28:41 Speaker_03
Based upon some sort of racial or ideological fantasy that has no real basis in reality and yet guides their actions.
03:28:52 Speaker_03
It's this differentiation that I always make and I would try to get across to students between always be clear about what you know and what you believe. You don't know many things.
03:29:07 Speaker_03
You know your name, you know when you were born, you probably know who your father is, but that's not absolute unless you've had a DNA test and only if you trust DNA tests. So you know who your mother is. You believe this man is your father. Why?
03:29:24 Speaker_03
Because your mother told you he was. So you believe things generally because someone has told you this is to be true, but you don't really know for sure. Well, because we know so little, we tend to go by beliefs.
03:29:41 Speaker_03
So we believe in this, we believe in that. You believe that your cult leader is the answer to everything. And it seems to be very, very easy to get people to believe things. And then what happens is that
03:29:57 Speaker_03
Whether or not those beliefs have any real basis in reality, they begin to influence your actions. So here again, regrettably in some ways to bring it back to the Nazis, what were the Nazis convinced of?
03:30:12 Speaker_03
They were convinced that Jews were basically evil aliens. That's what it comes down to. They weren't really humans. There's some sort of evil contamination, which we must eradicate. And they set out to do that.
03:30:26 Speaker_00
And they were sure that there's just a few problems that can be solved, and once you solve them, that you have this beautiful utopia where everything would be just perfect. It'd be great, and we can just get there.
03:30:37 Speaker_00
And I think it's really strong belief in a global utopia. It just never goes right. It seems like impossible to know the truth in it.
03:30:48 Speaker_03
For some reason, not long ago, I was listening on YouTube to old Wobbly songs. The Workers of the World. I don't know why. I didn't know there was a whole album of Wobbly songs. And there was one of them called Commonwealth of Toil.
03:31:08 Speaker_03
And like most of them, they're sort of taken from gospel songs. And it's talking about in the future, how wonderful everything will be in the common wealth of toil that will be.
03:31:24 Speaker_03
And now these are revolutionary leftists, in this case, Wobblies, but nonetheless, it's like a prayer for communism, everything. Now in the future, everything will be good because the earth will be shared by the toilers
03:31:43 Speaker_03
And from each his abilities to each according to his need. And it's this kind of sweet little song in some way. But I'm just sort of imagining this.
03:31:53 Speaker_03
If I was gonna stage that, I'd have like this choir of children singing it with a huge hammer and sickle behind them. Because that's what it's combining.
03:32:04 Speaker_03
And you can think that the sentiments that are expressed in that song, which are legitimate in some way,
03:32:13 Speaker_02
of all the horrors that that then leads to.
03:32:19 Speaker_00
It is fascinating about humans. A beautiful idea on paper, an innocent little idea about a utopian future can lead to so much suffering and so much destruction and totally, the unintended consequences that you see described.
03:32:34 Speaker_00
The law of unintended consequences. And we learn from it. I mean, that's why history is important. We learn from it, hopefully. Do we? Slowly, or slow learn. I'm unconvinced of that, but perhaps it's... Speaking of unconvinced, what gives you hope?
03:32:54 Speaker_00
If human beings are still here, maybe expanding out into the cosmos 1,000, 5,000, 10,000 years from now, what gives you hope about that future? About even being a possible future, about it happening?
03:33:11 Speaker_02
Most people are cooperative and kind most of the time. And that's one of those things that can usually be depended upon.
03:33:26 Speaker_03
And usually you'll get back to what you put into it. Another thing that I have like a weird fascination of watching are people who have meltdowns on airplanes.
03:33:42 Speaker_02
Cause that's just bizarre.
03:33:47 Speaker_03
It's fascinating to watch, yeah. The people who will, you know, there's some sort of psychotic break that occurs and it's always going to end the same way. The cops are going to come on and drag you off the plane.
03:33:58 Speaker_03
Now true, and you're going to inconvenience everybody there and usually at some point they don't care about that. That's the one little sense of power that they have. So they have some sort of sense of powerlessness.
03:34:11 Speaker_03
And if their only way of power is just to piss off everybody else on that plane, they're going to go ahead and do it, even though it's going to lead nowhere for them.
03:34:23 Speaker_00
And there's similar sometimes psychological behavior in traffic.
03:34:27 Speaker_03
Oh, the road rage thing.
03:34:28 Speaker_00
The road rage, yeah. It's fascinating.
03:34:30 Speaker_03
And I bet the most, there again, those are all people who up to some point were cooperative and kind and polite. And then they snap. So those are all part of the human makeup as well.
03:34:44 Speaker_00
But also part of the human makeup
03:34:47 Speaker_00
Difference between humans and chimps is the ability to get together, cooperate on a mass scale over an idea, create things like the Roman Empire did, laws that prevent us and protect us from crazy human behavior, manifestations of a man sent up.
03:35:05 Speaker_00
But human beings are just weird animals. It's not getting around. They're just completely peculiar. I'm not sure that we're altogether natural. But I think we are altogether beautiful.
03:35:16 Speaker_00
There is something magical about humans, and I hope humans stay here, even as we get advanced robots walking around everywhere, more and more intelligent robots that claim to have consciousness, that claim they love you, that increasingly take over our world.
03:35:33 Speaker_00
I hope this magical things that makes us human still persist.
03:35:38 Speaker_03
Well, let us hope so.
03:35:40 Speaker_00
Rick, you're an incredible person. You've done so much fascinating work, and it's really an honor.
03:35:47 Speaker_03
I've never had anybody ask me as many interesting questions as you have.
03:35:51 Speaker_00
Thank you so much.
03:35:52 Speaker_03
Or as many questions.
03:35:53 Speaker_00
This was so fun. Thank you so much for talking today. Well, thank you. Thanks for listening to this conversation with Rick Spence. To support this podcast, please check out our sponsors in the description.
03:36:04 Speaker_00
And now, let me leave you with some words from John F. Kennedy. The very word secrecy is repugnant in a free and open society. And we are as a people inherently and historically opposed to secret societies, to secret oaths and to secret proceedings.
03:36:22 Speaker_00
We decided long ago that the dangers of excessive and unwarranted concealment of pertinent facts far outweighed the dangers which are cited to justify it. Thank you for listening and hope to see you next time.