Back to episode — Episode 3053 CWSA 12/25/25
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hole, which they've done. But is it possible that they've always been their best employees and that they would have continued to be their best employees because what they really wanted was a job? Anyway, I think that's funny. Well, did you hear there's another million Epstein records that they didn't know about? So suddenly they found another million records. So if you thought that the release of…
← Previous segment →e worked on trades connected to BCCI which were clearing billions of dollars for intel agencies like the CIA and MI6 and Saudi-led Safari Club, whatever that is.
All right. So now we know Epstein was definitely CIA. There's no doubt about it. And we know that his connections were with a senior Barr who was a coverup guy and also junior Barr who was a CIA coverup guy. So he has a strong connection to two CIA coverup guys.
Going further, there's this gentleman named Stan Pottinger who I'd never heard of until Benz. So Stan Pottinger was, I guess he's well known today as a CIA mop-up man. In other words, he was a coverup guy for the CIA. So you got two Barrs, senior and junior, who were both on the payroll, and they were both coverup guys. But this Stan Pottinger was the ultimate coverup guy. And he covered for let's see the MLK assassination when people were asking if the CIA was involved, the civil rights movement in a number of ways, Watergate, Operation Condor. And Benz says that Pottinger appeared in quote every CIA scandal of the 60s and 70s. So that if anything needed to be covered up, you would always find Pottinger.
But what does Pottinger have to do with anybody? Well Pottinger was Epstein's roommate during the early 80s. Pottinger was his roommate. So the three most famous CIA coverup guys had a confirmed and definite close relationship with Epstein.
Epstein was so deeply embedded with the CIA that he's the guy who signed off on moving the CIA's airline, which they used for moving, I think they use it for Iran Contra and some other stuff. So CIA had its own plane that they used for sketchy stuff and somehow Epstein got to sign off on moving that to be the private plane of the Limited, which is remember that I believe that was the company for Victoria's Secret. Remember his billionaire friend owned Victoria's Secret.
So how in the world, Benz asks, would Epstein be able to move a CIA plane from one ownership to the other unless he was deeply embedded with the CIA or they wanted him to do it.
All right. So did that summary work? Once you realize that his closest associations, yeah Wexner was the head of the Limited, once you realize that his closest associations were CIA coverup guys, are you surprised that we're not seeing all the files? You should not be surprised there. There's really no way we're going to see all the files. Now I would imagine that the good stuff has already been deleted from the files a long time ago. I assume. But even if it hadn't been, you're never gonna see it. You will never see it.
So how many of you did that answer your questions? This is a little bit confusing, but once you know the players, and that's what Mike Benz does so well, he figures out who the players are and how they're connected. Every bit of this, by the way, is from public records. So I don't think there's anything I said that's not publicly documented beyond any question. Yeah, Mike Benz, it's old news for you. I think it's old news for a number of people, but it's still hard to hold it all in your head, isn't it? That's the problem I was having. It's like, okay, Pottinger, Barr senior, junior, BCCI, what's the name of that bank? Bear Stearns. But once you realize I guess there's maybe half a dozen names. Once you realize how those half a dozen names fit together, right? And then you look at his friend there, Ghislaine Maxwell. Wasn't her father intel?
So here's the question. Barr was Clinton's coverup guy for the drug running. Yeah. So also Bill Barr was hired as attorney general under George Bush senior who had been the head of the CIA. So that's yet another confirmed CIA connection. And he had a connection to Khashoggi, who was this big arms dealer at least until he got boned. So anyway, that answered all my questions about Epstein.
Well, the McDonald's, there's a McDonald's in Minneapolis that you can't get in unless somebody unlocks the door for you because there's too much mischief and crime. I remember a time when you could just go to McDonald's and walk in and order something and that was so dangerous even to be in public in Minnesota that they've got the door locked and they check you out before they let you in to get a hamburger. Oh no, you're not getting near our hamburgers unless we feel safe.
Here's a weird one. So apparently the Trump administration did an EO to force Indiana to keep open some power plants, some coal power plants that they were going to close. And it made me wonder, how can the federal government tell a state to keep a coal plant open? What authority would allow you to do that? It's not exactly national defense. So seems to me that Indiana might challenge that and win because I don't see an executive order having that kind of power over a state. But I could be surprised.
You heard that the military was going to use Grok, the AI. Apparently they also are going to use Gemini, which would be a competing AI. So I don't know if they've thought this through. Is it a good idea to have two major AIs in the military or should they have put all their chips in Grok because it will be better? You know, Grok will be better than Gemini. But is it a mistake that the military might have two different major AIs? I don't know. Maybe one keeps the other one from being too adventurous. I don't know. There might be an argument for it.
Meanwhile, Russia wants to put a nuclear power plant on the moon within a decade. Do you believe that Russia has the technical capability to put a nuclear power plant on the moon within a decade? And how would they get there? Would they rent space on SpaceX? Would they build the power plant here and then pay Elon Musk to take it to the moon or do they have that capability? I don't know. I'm not so sure they can pull that off, but maybe AI will let them pull it off.
All right. I saw a clip of Palmer Luckey. Speaking of Palmer Luckey, and he's the CEO and founder of Anduril, who's making high-tech weapons for the US. Now apparently he's figured out how to make a missile that you could produce in something like a car manufacturing line. Now why that's a big deal is that you could take a $100,000 missile and make it a $1,000 missile. It would be just as good if you could manufacture it more efficiently and you could quickly change over your domestic manufacturing from whatever it was already doing to make missiles.
He claims this pretty good argument that China would have to think twice about attacking because if China thought, haha we can make missiles faster than they can, we'll just wait till they run out of missiles, then maybe they would get adventurous. But if they knew we could make missiles for $1,000 a piece and we could in let's say two weeks convert a car assembly line into a missile maker, then they would have to worry that we could make cheaper, better, smarter, faster missiles than they do because we did better with manufacturing. I don't know if you beat China in manufacturing, but it's an interesting argument.
So I've noticed that Elon Musk and Palmer Luckey have one thing in common besides being geniuses. That they put a high value in the ability to quickly manufacture. And if you take the quickly manufacture part seriously, then everything changes. So militarily it's a big deal, but profit-wise it's an even bigger deal.
I think I told you yesterday that Musk thinks they can get the production of the Cybercab, that would be the one that has no steering wheel, be self-driving. He thinks he can get that down to 5 seconds per unit. So that from beginning to end, I think that's what that means. Or maybe it just means that yeah, it would have to be from beginning to end. That it would be so efficient that it would just go and in 5 seconds you would have a new vehicle. That's his goal. 5 seconds. So good luck China beating 5 seconds.
So I think that might be, that's all I want to talk about today. Bo, there's somebody named Bo who's being a problem. They have a long view of history.
All right, let me look at your comments and hang out with you for a while. You used to being ahead of everybody? Sure. We could always whip the Uyghurs off. Yeah. Cold dust on the fiddle. It's funny. Yeah. It's not building. Yeah. Okay. I think you're right. It's one coming off the assembly line every five minutes. That's different. Existing plants are once every minute. Is that true? Huh? Interesting. I would not have known the answer to that question, but a minute feels about right. Yeah. A nice dog pictures. Hey, look at me. Well, thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Yeah. Barbara's sister is married to Matt Gaetz. True. Small world. Um, yeah. And the girls were a party favor probably. So it makes you wonder what other bad behavior people linked to the CIA get away with. If Epstein was getting away with this stuff because he was valuable to the CIA, how many other people fall in that category? How many indeed?
He's got a boat. What am I having for breakfast? You know, I'm not going to tell you. Happy birthday, Denim. What? Oh, you liked it.
So did my summary of the Mike Benz thing add to what you knew or did it pull it together? I hate to step on his good work, especially if I'm making it worse, but I just feel like we had to get that summary down a little bit. It's really hard to summarize.
You want a steering wheel in the back seat? Well yeah. Obviously I credited him as much as possible. I'm very impressed with his work. You know, I've said this before, but when I think
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of him, I always think of the Marvel universe, and there's a famous line in the Marvel movies where whoever says it, I don't know. Somebody says, "We have a Hulk." Who says that? Is it Tony Stark? Who's the person in the superhero movies who says we have a Hulk? Well, whoever says it, it makes me think of Benz because we have a Benz. They don't really have one of those. And without him, we would n…
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