Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (01:26):
Anything from.
Speaker 2 (01:36):
M M.
Speaker 3 (03:14):
Hello everybody, welcome to the B system. My computer keeps
cutting in and out? Did your alls keep cutting in
and out? Intro is going? Now?
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Your computer's just jacked up.
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Too much action over here. Well, welcome to the.
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Probably got some nasty stuff on that computer you need
to clean off there.
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I got a virus.
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Well, you know I'm getting over the flu. So if
I start laughing tonight, everybody hears me wheezing, it's not
me getting old, Okay, I promise it's me getting still
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(04:06):
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I'm streaming Rumble.
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I mean, hey, if y'all want some really good content,
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could be putting me in the White House, getting y'all
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I applied. I applied for it. Did you actually apply?
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No? Not yet.
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I applied. Everybody go apply. They got like two thousand
applicants or more. I mean, I'm sure I won't get
in there, but still.
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Like two years to get through it.
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That's fine, he's still going to be in office.
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I'll take it my luck. I'll get picked, and then
I got to figure out how I'm going to get
there to do it. Uber, I fel like, does Uber
have a flight helicopter service?
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I needs you to Uber me to the White House
and my White House corson.
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That's the Uber XL service?
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Like, is that included in the deal? Travel expenses?
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You could write it off. You could be a ten
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(07:22):
this evening. So we got some topics we're going to
be getting into. Oh what happened?
Speaker 1 (07:30):
Only thought you got rid of me?
Speaker 3 (07:32):
He's back. Oh you got me flustered now, Daniel, I
ain't angry voice giving me some flashbacks of some bad bosses.
So we're getting in some topics tonight. I don't I
always have so many topics to go over, and we
get through maybe one of them. Absolutely, we're going over
(07:55):
Fort Knox. And then I found something that's really interesting
about the super Bowl that we may get to. And
then obviously we're going to do US A I D
and all this Elon Musk Doge type stuff talking about
this evening.
Speaker 5 (08:13):
So is this super Bowl conspiracy that it's food related?
Speaker 3 (08:18):
No, it's state farm related, like a good neighbor, like
a good neighbor farm? Is there? Yeah, a state farm
related rabbit hole on that. And Taylor Swift and Kelsey's
fake relationship.
Speaker 5 (08:36):
Oh good, So we get to talk to Jake.
Speaker 3 (08:39):
Oh you know, I got so excited because I thought
somebody said something in chat and it's just me saying
hello to everybody.
Speaker 5 (08:48):
So, are you at your second glass of wine?
Speaker 1 (08:50):
Already?
Speaker 3 (08:51):
No, just one glass. It's a it's a work night.
We're going to have seven No one glass, one glass only.
Speaker 5 (09:01):
Yeah. But what she's not telling everybody is the one
glass is like the largest glass she has.
Speaker 1 (09:06):
You're gonna have to hold an entire bottle.
Speaker 3 (09:08):
It's one of the mom tumbler, one of those those
expensive glasses called the Stanley's. The Stanley's yep. So all right, anyway,
I want to be yet. Have you seen the old
Stanley cups? My dad has one of the old Stanley's back.
Speaker 1 (09:27):
On four of them.
Speaker 4 (09:29):
Back when my dad was buying them and they were
like two bucks apiece at the dollar store.
Speaker 3 (09:35):
You probably can sell them on eBay now for like
five hundred bucks. Show the antique Stanley mug. So anyway,
speaking of antiques, we're going back to antique gold tonight
(09:55):
about a Fort Knocks and the gold supply. This underneath
uh of Fort Knox, and this is supposedly the most
secured building in the nation or in the world, I
can't remember.
Speaker 5 (10:09):
I'd say let's play.
Speaker 1 (10:10):
It safe and say the names I want to say
the nation for sure.
Speaker 6 (10:13):
Nation.
Speaker 3 (10:14):
Okay, So anyway, so when was this the gold was
put in back in the forties, I think that's right.
I can't remember. Did you all read anything about this.
Speaker 7 (10:28):
I don't think it's got a proper external audit since
it's been put out there.
Speaker 5 (10:32):
Yeah, I don't know that they actually ever really said
when I originally was put in.
Speaker 3 (10:38):
Well, I know that there's like one hundred and forty
seven forty eight million ounces of gold, which is pretty
much securing the backbone of America's you know, financial system
that's down there, and it is sposedly being heavily guarded
by armed soldiers and vaults and everything else, but it's
(10:59):
very few peace people have actually been inside the building
to witness the gold. And before we went live tonight,
we were talking about what was it, RFK no, FDR, FDR.
Speaker 5 (11:16):
I can see how you got the too confused, though.
Speaker 3 (11:18):
Yeah, I know it's all the initials and everything, But
FDR was the only president that's been in a vault.
And I'm hoping Trump's going to go I have a
video of him talking about that today. But let's go
back in time a little bit. Let's watch this video
of what Fort Knox. What they've talked about. This is
an all video here.
Speaker 8 (11:36):
Three years depository officials were pressured to open the vault
for civilian inspection, but Fort Knox continued to refuse to
allow the public inside. Finally, in nineteen seventy four, for
the first and probably last time, a dozen Congressmen and
one hundred journalists were invited inside. Among them was a
(11:58):
young senator from Kentucky called Walter Huddleston.
Speaker 9 (12:02):
As one who has lived within just a few miles
of this installation for a good many years, but who
has never been inside the front gate, I can say
that it is with a great deal of interest that
those of us from the Congress have this opportunity to
view the deposit here and to learn just what is
(12:22):
inside the gold vault here at Fort Knox.
Speaker 8 (12:26):
It was the opportunity of a lifetime Illinois Congressman, Philip Crane,
who'd helped initiate the audit, was also there.
Speaker 10 (12:34):
Congressman Crane, you suggested all this, Why.
Speaker 11 (12:37):
Well, I did, because there were rampant rumors and numbers
of Congress were deeming a great deal of mail based
on the charge that significant portions of our gold reserves
that Fort Knox were gone. So I had suggested to
Secretary of the Treasury Simon that I thought this would
be a good way, I think to dispel those rumors.
Speaker 8 (12:54):
The secret contents of the vault were about to be
viewed by the public and recorded on film for the
first they I don't.
Speaker 3 (13:02):
Think it worked. Rumor's just going on today.
Speaker 8 (13:09):
Huddleston was on hand as the vault door was unlocked
and the wheel was turned fourteen times to open.
Speaker 3 (13:15):
The latch, fourteen times to open the latch, and just
what I read about it too, is that there's only
one person that knows the code to the vault as well.
Speaker 5 (13:30):
It doesn't seem smart.
Speaker 3 (13:34):
I'm sure they have it somewhere else, like a hidden treasure,
like to go find it. If they die, open this envelope.
If I die, read the.
Speaker 5 (13:42):
Bat I have a sick day. Open this envelope.
Speaker 3 (13:49):
You know, its like hidden treasures here, But you know,
I don't think the gult's there. But later here we
go twenty times.
Speaker 12 (14:00):
I think there was a considerable amount of excitement, an expectation.
I personally felt like we were going to find gold.
I didn't think that we were going to find it empty.
But I, you know, recognized maybe that was a possibility.
Speaker 8 (14:14):
The visitors were let to a room. A blue sign
showed exactly what was inside this one single compartment.
Speaker 3 (14:27):
Okay, one single campaign contains thirty six thousand, two hundred
and thirty six gold bars valued at four to two
two two two two perf fine forty two two two
two two. I can't tell what that is because the
(14:49):
line broke out. I don't know how they have that
measured out per fide total.
Speaker 5 (14:54):
It looks like it's forty two dollars and twenty two
to twenty two cents.
Speaker 4 (14:59):
Yeah, it makes looks like the total amount of the
compartment is four hundred and ninety nine million, eight hundred
and twenty five thousand, two hundred and forty four dollars
and fifty eight cents.
Speaker 3 (15:09):
Okay, thank you.
Speaker 5 (15:10):
That must be four hundred and twenty two thousand, two
hundred and twenty two per troy ounce.
Speaker 8 (15:15):
Yeah, thirty six thousand, two hundred and thirty six.
Speaker 3 (15:22):
Okay, if we listened to.
Speaker 5 (15:27):
We went through all that, He's the leading for it.
Speaker 8 (15:30):
Stole base almost twelve billion ounces. At the time, it
was valued at almost five hundred million dollars we're.
Speaker 6 (15:39):
Cutting the ribbon.
Speaker 3 (15:42):
Now, we have to be very careful of this document.
Speaker 8 (15:45):
What they saw next was astounding.
Speaker 5 (15:48):
Come out you believe that.
Speaker 6 (15:49):
I look at that the way to the sewer.
Speaker 12 (15:53):
I remember being somewhat in awe of seeing all the
gold stacked for the ceiling. Hellod here I am in
the present, great fortune. It was an interesting experience right
from the beginning.
Speaker 6 (16:06):
And he's been weighing about twenty two.
Speaker 8 (16:09):
Each of the gold bricks was worth sixty five thousand
dollars at the market price of the time.
Speaker 6 (16:14):
Got John, don't drop it.
Speaker 8 (16:16):
Bill Evans was one of the journalists allowed inside.
Speaker 13 (16:19):
Nobody knew what to expect, and everybody was wide eyed
and said.
Speaker 3 (16:26):
Don't you think it's weird that they have all of
them in there and just going in and just handling
it all like you think it's weird or is that
just me?
Speaker 5 (16:35):
Well? What I found weird was only two bars were
taken out in and one was weighed and one was
just being held. And I'm thinking, are those the only
two real bars in there? And everything else is just
like a painted rock looking thing. They're really not gold.
(16:55):
Is there a reason we only touched two?
Speaker 3 (17:01):
I don't know. It just seems like there's also to
just a lot of people crammed into that little space
as well. It's just like that's all I can.
Speaker 6 (17:09):
Put it in your pocket and walk away with it. Though.
Speaker 3 (17:13):
Yeah, but it's just like I would think that they
would have some kind of more of an order into
reviewing the gold, and they're like, Oh, nobody's ever been
in here. Open the door we're going in.
Speaker 5 (17:26):
Why is there a ribbon on the door if nobody
goes in this door? And secondly, why did the guy
make the comment don't drop it? That seems weird because
gold golic gold wouldn't I break if you dropped it?
Speaker 1 (17:44):
No, but gold is a soft metal.
Speaker 3 (17:45):
Soft metal. Yeah, it will like this softer, it'll scratch
her dent anything like that if you drop it. Which
does that drop the value in it?
Speaker 14 (17:57):
No?
Speaker 3 (17:57):
I don't think so.
Speaker 1 (17:59):
No, But if there's any.
Speaker 4 (18:03):
Anything wrong in integrity of it, then if it drops,
you could end up breaking a chunk off of it.
Speaker 3 (18:09):
Mm hmmm. We'll just solder it back on.
Speaker 5 (18:13):
It would be good ounce back that we lost.
Speaker 13 (18:19):
This is inside for Knock And as we were taking
down one of the corridors, we were allowed to see
the gold, and we were allowed to pick it up,
hold it, look at it, and inspect it.
Speaker 5 (18:31):
And to my knowledge it was get the measurements, so to.
Speaker 3 (18:38):
His knowledge it was gold. But has he ever held
another gold bar somewhere else to compare it?
Speaker 2 (18:44):
I know?
Speaker 5 (18:45):
What's with the measuring the length of the bars are like.
Speaker 4 (18:50):
If a bar is the with the measurement and the
overall weight, you can find out how many how much
With the measurement and the overall weight, you can find
not how much that one brick is worth per you know, ounce,
square inch whatever, unless it's.
Speaker 6 (19:08):
Gold covered tungsten.
Speaker 5 (19:13):
Yeah, see that. That's what I'm starting to wonder is
is this gold plated exactly? Is this electro plate similar
weight too? Hm?
Speaker 3 (19:25):
Hm, I don't know. I just feel like it's a
frenzy now. It almost feel like they would be a
lot more organized with this stuff and more civilized in
me thinking because this is Fort Knox, and like they
would have a like signing in, signing out, like who's
gonna be around this? And it just seems like a frenzy.
(19:47):
Everybody's just everywhere. Is this just a big distraction? People
pulling things out, measuring it, holding this and then talking
to get keep us distracted, to make us really think
that gold's there, but it's not.
Speaker 5 (19:59):
I imagine they did sign some forms before entering. But yeah,
it does make you wonder if this is the only
room they went in, what's what the other room saying?
You know, are we just supposed to think because one's full,
they're all full?
Speaker 3 (20:22):
I don't know. Here, let's play the last minute of
this and then I have another video of what what
you have to go through.
Speaker 8 (20:30):
Gerald Blush was editor of the News Enterprise daily newspaper.
Speaker 10 (20:34):
He too, was that I never had a doubt once
I late just the look of it.
Speaker 1 (20:40):
I just thought, that's the real thing.
Speaker 11 (20:42):
There's no way you could fake that.
Speaker 3 (20:49):
But how does he know, Like, how does he know?
Speaker 5 (20:54):
Yeah, nobody in the seventies knew how to fake anything.
Speaker 3 (20:59):
I mean, come on, really, and it's like they didn't
go anywhere else. Compare it to or any there's no
let's just go and open it. I was like winning
a prize at a freaking amusement park or something like
you get to open the door and get your stuffed
animal whatever.
Speaker 6 (21:19):
You know.
Speaker 5 (21:19):
What people are starting to sound like what the CIA
agents that are put into this.
Speaker 3 (21:26):
Is probably this is probably all C, I, A and
the Feds right here.
Speaker 8 (21:31):
Every one of these people are amid the excitement. Director
of the Mint, Mary Brooks, took center stage as host
of the event. She wore a money green dress and
a necklace adorned with gold coins.
Speaker 5 (21:45):
Christmas Brooks, are you happy now that the gold is here?
Speaker 3 (21:47):
Of course is here all the time? I need to
do a.
Speaker 13 (21:50):
Deep I mean, how many times do you get to
are you happy that gold is here?
Speaker 3 (21:57):
Did she say I see it all the time?
Speaker 6 (22:01):
Did she say that was all the time?
Speaker 5 (22:04):
I think she's that. I know.
Speaker 3 (22:07):
Samuel was here all the time.
Speaker 13 (22:10):
I think she was having I mean, how many times
you get to to make a tour and lead a
tour of Fort Knox, Kentucky first time.
Speaker 8 (22:19):
Ever once no photographer or reporter has been allowed into
Fort Knock since.
Speaker 3 (22:30):
H There we go. So the interesting pictures that came
out from this, and I'm going to get into that
here in a little bit, But any any thoughts about
the video and then going in there.
Speaker 5 (22:45):
It seemed awfully staged.
Speaker 3 (22:50):
I mean, I feel like it's staged.
Speaker 5 (22:54):
I'm sure there were protocols to go through, but it
just seems like they could have been really in any
building inside looking they could have been in a bank vault.
For all we know that knock from.
Speaker 7 (23:11):
The time they were started filming. They showed you out
on the lawn and then the next thing you know,
you're inside a vault. So there was no continuity getting
you from outside in.
Speaker 3 (23:23):
And that was just cut in and out right, like
we didn't watch the full thing come to pass. Well,
here's a video. This one's fairly new or it's animated
and stuff about all the security measures of getting into
Fort Knocks world.
Speaker 15 (23:40):
So good luck trying to break in. No one has
ever tried, unless, of course you count Goldfinger. The two
story tall fortress is surrounded by an electric perimeter fence,
and beneath the structure lies a basement.
Speaker 3 (23:51):
That see my thing. My thoughts too, what's beneath this basement?
Like you know how all these tunnels are in these
secret tunnels or underground cities and stuff. It makes me
think that they would take it from underneath.
Speaker 5 (24:08):
Well, how do they say nobody's tried to break in?
Because I have a very strong suspicion a lot of
people have tried to break in and test the measures.
Speaker 3 (24:23):
I'll have to look that up here in a second
and see what goes on. But you know, I just
don't trust underground stuff anymore, after all my conspiracy deep
dives like, I don't trust underground at all period.
Speaker 16 (24:37):
Houses the underneath there.
Speaker 4 (24:40):
But well, I mean, it's a military installation. It's it's
it's an armored cavalry military installation.
Speaker 3 (24:51):
Wouldn't it have tunnels underneath?
Speaker 1 (24:53):
Well no, I'm saying like.
Speaker 2 (24:55):
That.
Speaker 4 (24:56):
You know, y'all were asking the question about well, you know,
nobody's tried to break in.
Speaker 1 (24:59):
I don't believe.
Speaker 4 (25:00):
I mean, people try to break into military installations all
the time, but for one, to my knowledge, this building
is seated like deep within the interior of the confines
of the base. It's not like next to a fence
line or close to the front gate or no, like
you got to go like miles into the base to
even get to the building. I'm sure there are people
(25:23):
that have tried to get on the base. They didn't
make it very far.
Speaker 3 (25:30):
I'm looking through here. There's nobody that doesn't say anything
about anybody trying to attempt to even.
Speaker 5 (25:36):
No, But I just found a fun fact, though.
Speaker 3 (25:39):
What's a fun fact.
Speaker 5 (25:41):
It's according to this site. It says the actual structure
and content of the facility is known only by a
few and no one person knows the procedures to open
the vault. And then it goes the first gold arrived
at Fort Knox in nineteen thirty seven by the US Mail. Ha ha,
(26:04):
The US Mail delivers the Fort Knox.
Speaker 3 (26:10):
Delivers the gold to Fort Knox. Well, they're saying now
that like all this stuff that's gone on in Kentucky
over the last few weeks, the flooding and the snow
and all that kind of stuff, they're saying, I kind
of believe in it too, is that they're doing this
on purpose to delay the Doge or Trump administration to
(26:32):
go in and audit the gold bars. And it's given
them time to get the gold. Now I don't know
about this part. This last half, it's given them time
to get the gold back into Fort Knox from the UK.
They're sending it via plane and they're putting it back.
Speaker 5 (26:55):
Why wouldn't they just use the underground rail system that's faster.
Speaker 3 (27:01):
I mean, I don't know, I don't know this is
coming from the UK or the Vatican one, that's who
people think have the gold. The Royals or Vatican I
don't know.
Speaker 15 (27:17):
The secure vault holds half of the US Treasury's gold reserves,
valued at two hundred and ninety one billion dollars. It's
only accessible by a few officials, and no single person
knows the entire combination. Even the President is denied access
to the facility, and no US leader has been inside
since FDR. Here's a secret tour inside Fort Knox. Let's
(27:38):
take a look at the exterior of Fort Knox before
we venture inside. Officially known as the United States Bullyon Depository,
the impenetrable facility was built back in nineteen thirty six
at the behest of President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. The US
gold reserves were previously held in York City and vulnerable
to attack from foreign military powers. Fort Knox, which is
(28:00):
one thousand miles inland and to the west of the
Appalachian Mountains, is packed full of security features and weaponry.
As we pan around the exterior, you'll notice Fort Knox
Gray facade. That's four two hundred cubic yards of concrete
and sixteen thousand cubic feet of granite, over seven hundred
and fifty tons of reinforced steel and six hundred seventy
(28:20):
tons of structural steel. Building such a menacing fortress wasn't cheap.
The building materials cost the US government four hundred thirty
one thousand, one hundred and sixty seven dollars, which equals
about eight point zero two million when adjusted for inflation.
Speaker 3 (28:37):
I wonder what that's compared to you, like some of
our prisons, you know, is there any federal prisons maybe
or even stronger as strong as that?
Speaker 5 (28:51):
Probably not, you don't think so now, because prisoners are
supposed to eventually leave. The gold is not supposed to leave,
so they would make it thicker. I think to withstand,
like they were saying, any bombs, you really want that
to stay put. So I think it'll be a lot stronger,
(29:14):
because if someone drops a bomb in or prison, they're like, well,
so we lost a few bad apples holders a little
more important to them.
Speaker 3 (29:26):
You know, you got a sound clip on that.
Speaker 4 (29:30):
Let's see what I got here. That's not the only
thing I got for it.
Speaker 3 (29:41):
There you go. When did they say it was built
nineteen thirties.
Speaker 5 (29:48):
Nineteen thirty six, they said, But I found that it
was in nineteen thirty two.
Speaker 6 (29:55):
I don't. I don't believe that it was built done.
Speaker 3 (29:59):
When was Sport Knox built? It says nineteen eighteen. It
was established in nineteen eighteen as Camp Knock the Stab.
Speaker 4 (30:13):
That's when the base was established. We're talking about building,
not when the.
Speaker 3 (30:17):
Building on and became a permanent military base in nineteen
thirty two. The Bullion building was built in nineteen thirty six,
So nineteen thirty.
Speaker 6 (30:32):
I believe that. Look at the what's the little thing?
Speaker 7 (30:34):
Now? What's in the background there is in the photograph
behind the animation thing? Is that actually supposed to be
part of the main building?
Speaker 6 (30:44):
That thing in the lower right hand corner just kind
of I'm going to start looking at the building now, Yeah, I.
Speaker 3 (30:51):
P hit the building in the banner.
Speaker 15 (30:55):
Cost of the entire project was five hundred and sixty
thousand dollars, which is about nine point three million adjusted
for inflation. See these fences around Fort Knox. There are
actually two separate electric fences around the depository. Around those
two fences lies yet another concrete barrier which acts as
an additional defence measure. There's no way a vehicle could
plow through the fences because of this barrier. Fencing surrounds
(31:18):
the entirety of the facility, and if you look closely,
you'll notice searchlights just past the innermost perimeter fence. As
you drive along the entryway, you'll pass the barrier in
first fence. The inner fence is protected by two guard
stations on each side of the entryway. Show your credentials
to the US MINT Police guarding the entrance. Everything has
to be in order. US Mint Police can make upwards
(31:40):
of seventy thousand dollars a year, and there can be
as many as fifty guards on the base at any time.
The entire security detail costs the government four to five
million dollars per year. Let's drive up to the fortress
and take a closer look at the exterior security measures,
Motion detectors and cameras are strategically placed around the exterior,
so be aware that you're being watched. Take a look
(32:01):
up and to the left. On the second level, you'll
notice a guard tower being manned by officers with machine guns.
There's a tower at the back too, as well as
one atop the second story. The area is being surveilled
by ground sweeping radar and the lawn is littered with
land mines. Yeah, I said land mines, So watch your step.
At the back of the building, you'll find two large
garage doors. This is where the two hundred thousand dollars
(32:23):
armored trucks unload the precious cargo. Have your credentials ready
because we're about to head inside. As the twenty two
ton front blast door opens, you'll be directed towards a
security check where guards will pat you down and make
sure your credentials are in order. Keep your pass on
you at all times, because this is only the first
checkpoint you'll have to clear. Every inch of Fort Knox's
(32:44):
interior is covered in cameras and motion detectors. Follow the
hallway down to the authentication room, where officials weigh and
inspect the gold. They make sure everything is real before
the gold heads down to the.
Speaker 3 (32:58):
Yeah, but how's he describing all this when supposedly nobody's
been in the building, Like, I mean, the guards have
been there and everything.
Speaker 4 (33:06):
I mean, yeah, the security protocols aren't exactly a you know,
national state secret.
Speaker 3 (33:12):
Yeah, but where to go and be inside the building
and which direction to go in I would think you
would almost keep that a little bit more private when
you have all this gold.
Speaker 5 (33:21):
Well, I think the fact that.
Speaker 3 (33:23):
Like, you're not be taking this as literal.
Speaker 5 (33:26):
Credentials were checked twice, even though you were checked at
the gate. They're kind of telling you that, yeah, you know,
they're going to escort you where you need to go.
He's just assuming this is the path that you take.
They may not be.
Speaker 3 (33:45):
I'm taking it as literal when I shouldn't be. Then
when you go inside the building, you.
Speaker 4 (33:50):
Know ypothetical, I mean you could you you could probably
they're in the National Archives. There's probab probably blueprints of
the building.
Speaker 5 (34:04):
Oh, I'm sure there is in the Library of Congress
will have that, But the protocols, like where the stations
are and everything checkpoints, that's probably not in the blueprints.
Speaker 15 (34:16):
Tacation room connects directly to the garage where the gold
is unloaded. It's actually incredibly rare for new gold to
be added to the depository. In fact, no gold has
been transferred to or from Fort Knox for.
Speaker 3 (34:28):
Many Remember all that gold over there in desert storm.
Didn't they find all that gold and soldiers are taking
pictures of it. What happened to that gold?
Speaker 1 (34:42):
The UAE has it?
Speaker 17 (34:44):
The USA AID took it, Yes, the USAID took it,
and a few soldiers took a few samples home.
Speaker 4 (34:57):
George Clooney led a few guys on some special mission
to go try to recover some of it for themselves.
Speaker 3 (35:06):
George Clooney is from Kentucky and he knows. I'm sure
you got trained at Fort Knox.
Speaker 5 (35:12):
He's fun, he's probably got the credentials to get through.
Speaker 3 (35:16):
He does, he hasn't. Mitch McConnell cleared him.
Speaker 5 (35:24):
George Clooney's real name is Ethan hunt.
Speaker 1 (35:34):
Years.
Speaker 15 (35:35):
Let's take the hallway down to one of the service elevators.
These are wide enough to carry palettes of gold down
to the basement. As you exit the elevator, you'll be
greeted by a security team who will once again check
your credentials. After a pet down, you can head down
the hall to the vault, where all the bullion is stored.
The hallways in the basement are lined with cameras and
motion detectors too.
Speaker 1 (35:56):
The gold vault door.
Speaker 15 (35:58):
Before your eyes is just as impen as the depository's
front door. It's also twenty two tons and is twenty
one inches thick. Nothing can get through, not explosives nor
machine guns. Put them away, even a flamethrower won't do
any good. The door will laugh at you if you
try to get through the door. You'd need the combination,
but no single person in the world knows the entire code.
(36:20):
Once officials enter all parts of the combination, we can
head inside the vault. As you look around, you'll see
rows and rows of gold bars. Inside the vault lies
one hundred and forty seven point three million ounces of gold,
worth a book value of about six point two billion dollars.
Because the price of gold has skyrocketed over the last
few decades, the stash is now worth two hundred and
(36:42):
ninety one billion. At the end of the vault is
a hidden door. This door leads to a secret escape
tunnel with access to the main level of Fort Knox.
It can only be accessed from the inside vault. Let's
head up to the top level.
Speaker 3 (36:58):
See, that's why I don't trusting This is why I
don't trust it.
Speaker 5 (37:03):
You know it's interesting about this is the door to
enter the vault, there was a first aid kit there,
but on the tunnel to escape there's no first aid kits.
Apparently you only get injured going into the vault, not
way out.
Speaker 3 (37:28):
Well, it's probably all the stuff you're trying to do
to open the vault, you probably injured yourself.
Speaker 5 (37:34):
Brooke A. Dale, let's see what we got.
Speaker 3 (37:41):
Forty seconds left of this. I think it's just the end.
They're just going to play it out. There's another video
of being up on the top part of Fort NS.
Speaker 5 (37:49):
So you know what was interesting is there was no
checkpoint to go into the escape tunnel to check your credentials.
Speaker 3 (38:00):
No, so they could have taken the gold from the
bottom out. I mean, what do you think, Daniel, you're military, dude.
Speaker 4 (38:15):
I was in the Marine Corps. What you do Well,
you didn't have shit to do with that, I know, but.
Speaker 3 (38:19):
What do you do you think the capabilities of taking
the gold underneath and out? I guess it's there.
Speaker 1 (38:29):
I mean, if I guess, like I can't.
Speaker 4 (38:35):
I was in the military. I was never part of
some you know, heist team or something. We never tried
to steal the Hope Diamond or anything like that.
Speaker 3 (38:44):
So you don't think the military would collude and taking
the dark military I call them the dark military taking
the gold.
Speaker 1 (38:54):
No, that's what the CIA is for.
Speaker 3 (38:56):
Yeah, but they.
Speaker 5 (38:57):
Collude work for the CIA.
Speaker 1 (39:02):
No, the CIA recruits from the military.
Speaker 3 (39:06):
That's why I say they collude. So I don't know.
I don't think the gold's there, folks. And another big
reason why I don't think it's there. I find it
very suspicious that when I start looking, started looking into
all of this and everything, let me see if I
find this here we go. I just wanted to look
(39:29):
at pictures of the gold and what it looked like.
I started finding out that Mitch McConnell was there in
twenty seventeen with munchin.
Speaker 5 (39:39):
Mention.
Speaker 3 (39:40):
But when I look at these pictures of Mitch with
the gold, it's all black and white. So is with
munchin black and white? Here where they hold the gold
here it's black and white.
Speaker 5 (39:56):
And then.
Speaker 3 (39:58):
We saw a video here over here they did black
and white photos with the gold, Like, what's up with
that black and white? Here they have her in black
and white. It almost looks like it's the same filter.
Speaker 5 (40:12):
Even well, they probably just transposed and copied the background
and pasted it and put him in front of it
versus her.
Speaker 3 (40:21):
Yeah, so you know this is I don't know, it
was just weird. I don't think. I don't think they
were in there and in this guy here they just
got a video of him.
Speaker 1 (40:33):
The gold.
Speaker 18 (40:36):
Has moved it, I'm sure they haven't. I was the
first Treasury Secretary to go there, and I think over
fifty years there's very serious security protocols in place, obviously
to protect the gold that I can't talk about. But
we went, we saw it, and if President Trump wants
it to be audited, that's obviously something that can.
Speaker 5 (40:55):
Be Yeah, if it's taking fifty years for someone to
step foot in, I don't think it's gonna be easy
for anyone to just go, Okay, we're gonna go audit
and go check it out.
Speaker 3 (41:14):
Like this looks weird. Look at the back here? Does
that look like windows at the top? And I can't
tell what that sign says back there something I couldn't
make that out start here if I felt like it
says behind.
Speaker 5 (41:31):
His head, Probably it says something like lineup photo here
for accuracy.
Speaker 3 (41:39):
But you know here they are holding a gold bar.
Speaker 5 (41:43):
Yeah, but what's all that behind them?
Speaker 3 (41:45):
Yeah? But this is also black and white.
Speaker 7 (41:49):
And they have gloves on too, where older film they
didn't have any. They were pretty pretty well fondling the
gold bars.
Speaker 5 (41:57):
Well, they probably figured out the oil and people's hands
kind of tarnishes them, so they probably had to polish
all the bars if not doing that again, So we're
making everyone wear a glove.
Speaker 6 (42:14):
I don't know.
Speaker 7 (42:14):
If they were that meticulous about getting in, they're going
to be meticulous about it's handled if it's real. So
I think pointing out that it felt very staged.
Speaker 5 (42:29):
Maybe they're worried about a fakedemic being passed in there
because they were.
Speaker 6 (42:33):
Touching gloves on that's contemporary? Yes, what was it?
Speaker 3 (42:40):
I'm sorry? I was looking at this picture trying to
see what numbers they're saying on here and something.
Speaker 5 (42:45):
Walker Walker Ranger was there.
Speaker 3 (42:50):
There's the thing next to him. It says show, show,
we don't need that stuff.
Speaker 5 (43:02):
So what I find a little interesting too is Munchkin
is over there saying I was there but I'm not
supposed to talk about it, but yeah it's there, and
I'm like, so if you're not supposed to talk about it,
why are you talking about it?
Speaker 3 (43:21):
I want to know why there's a fish on this
on here? What what are they signing here?
Speaker 6 (43:28):
Kilroy was here?
Speaker 5 (43:31):
Yeah, it's the visitor log.
Speaker 6 (43:39):
The fish crime. That was the Joel his name is
Joel Love It.
Speaker 3 (43:43):
Joelish hold on, I think Daniel. We lost Daniel for
a minute. Hello Daniel.
Speaker 1 (43:51):
Oh, I'm back.
Speaker 3 (43:54):
I just don't know. Is there a reason for the
black and white? Do you think that they just made
her her image in black and white? And then now,
I mean, this was twenty seventeen when they.
Speaker 5 (44:09):
Went, so back in the seventies, color would have been
a little bit more expensive, so they probably did do
black and white.
Speaker 7 (44:19):
No, there were color pictures of that lady landing in
the vault, and the contemporary pictures are also black and white.
Speaker 6 (44:26):
M h isn't that munchkin as you're calling them?
Speaker 3 (44:30):
Yeah, I know. I'm still looking at Walter. There's that show.
It's this show there Orson Wells.
Speaker 5 (44:39):
No, behind his head, it looks like it's Orson Wells,
which that's going to put that background to the fifties.
Speaker 3 (44:55):
This is nineteen ninety three, Joe Colvage, Colavage Cavalgi. I
don't know, I don't know. I just think that's super
weird that they would just go ahead in every picture
of Mitch and this munchkin guy sorry munching holding gold
(45:18):
or in the gold is black and white. None of
them are color.
Speaker 5 (45:23):
Maybe they're trying to hide the fact that it wasn't
really gold because I'm black and white. You can't tell
the color of what they're holding.
Speaker 3 (45:37):
They watched the solar eclipse on the trip, so they
did this during a solar eclipse. That's weird too. That
gets my conspiracy brain going and looking a trip on
a military aircraft that cost textspayers nearly thirty three thousand.
(46:02):
What the heck are they doing?
Speaker 5 (46:05):
Are they Something just dawned on me. If like Daniel's saying,
this is in the middle of a military base. Why
is military police not securing the building? Why do they
have civilians in the heart of a military base.
Speaker 16 (46:29):
I don't know.
Speaker 3 (46:30):
I didn't see military, did you?
Speaker 5 (46:33):
They had military in the guard towers on the three
guard towers.
Speaker 1 (46:38):
No, I guarantee those are all mint police.
Speaker 5 (46:41):
They are.
Speaker 1 (46:43):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (46:45):
McConnell has had a bit of a moment this month
after being attacked as cocaine Mitch.
Speaker 5 (46:55):
Well, you know when you're hanging out with a hunter,
you know, trying to.
Speaker 3 (46:59):
Happen cocaine, Mitch, watch on X straight up sugand hold on.
Oh it just hasn't gif.
Speaker 2 (47:12):
Uh.
Speaker 3 (47:12):
Here's the Fork Knox trip related documents, including more pictures. Foya,
here we go. Secretary Munchkin was official travel during April
or August twenty first, twenty seventeen, and the eclipse did
(47:34):
not factor into the date of the trip. They made
sure to put that in there.
Speaker 5 (47:38):
That's kind of weird when I'm curious. So it was
August twenty one.
Speaker 3 (47:47):
Now, August twenty first of twenty seventeen was the trip.
I have to read through these documents. We had Governor Bevin. Oh,
he was that, he was pretty bad.
Speaker 5 (48:01):
He's yeah. On the twenty first was a total solar
eclipse yep, and Kentucky was.
Speaker 3 (48:14):
The initial The initial plan was for August eighth, but
was postponed to accommodate the congressional calendar. As Treasury Inspector
General reported, six dates in mid August were proposed to
Leader McConnell, and August twenty first worked for everyone. There
is no indication that the date was chosen to coincide
(48:36):
with the solar eclips.
Speaker 5 (48:40):
Well, check out what I just sent you.
Speaker 3 (48:47):
Hold on a second here. The total solar eclipse on
August twenty first was visible. It was called the Great
American Eclipse by some media.
Speaker 5 (49:06):
Yeah, so events don't get named when they're meaningless.
Speaker 3 (49:15):
The Great American Eclipse. Did they steal the money? They
stole it, they stole the gold. They did it. They
did it.
Speaker 5 (49:23):
That's why. That's why Mitch votes the way he does
is he's got it in his basement.
Speaker 3 (49:36):
So does Andy Basheer. I'm afraid Andy Basheer is gonna
take Mitch's place or run for Senate maximum of eight passengers.
I'm just trying to look through this real quick, but
this is twenty pages long. I'm gonna have to go
back in and look at all this stuff later and
(49:57):
see what's going on.
Speaker 5 (50:00):
Under the moon blocked out Kentucky.
Speaker 3 (50:06):
How long were they there see to Washington? So they
got there to Louisville nine thirty in the morning, and
then they left to go back to Washington at five pm.
So they were there just that one day.
Speaker 5 (50:18):
I wonder what time the eclipse happened over Kentucky. That
would be even more interesting. If it was after, then
that kind of blows our theory. But if it's during,
that makes it was.
Speaker 3 (50:34):
During they were outside watching it.
Speaker 5 (50:37):
Here we go. The maximum point of the eclipse took
place near Hopskinsville, Kentucky, at one twenty pm local time
there and it lasted two minutes and forty seconds. So
I wonder how far Hopskinsville is from Fort Knox.
Speaker 16 (50:58):
I don't know.
Speaker 5 (50:59):
That's your state, I.
Speaker 3 (51:01):
Know, but I don't know everywhere like there's a hollers
and hollers and hollers. I mean, we got meat House Kentucky,
all right, Like I know where Meathhouse is.
Speaker 5 (51:12):
Yeah, my Kentucky is what a third or a quarter
of the size of Texas.
Speaker 3 (51:21):
He's a wheeler and dealer. Mitch is, yeah, he is,
and he's he's China Like. Speaking of Mitch, you know, yeah, well,
his sister in law died last year. They're they're looking
into it as being murdered now in her car. There's
a lot going on with Mitch.
Speaker 5 (51:41):
She shouldn't have spoken out about Hunter.
Speaker 3 (51:44):
Did she.
Speaker 5 (51:46):
I don't know.
Speaker 3 (51:47):
I thought that she was. I thought she was Mitch's handler.
Speaker 7 (51:57):
I don't know so well your HYPOTHESI I think that
that the gold is not there. So if they went
in and made the announcement that it wasn't there, what
do you think that that would have repercussions for.
Speaker 5 (52:09):
Oh, the American people would be in the uproar.
Speaker 1 (52:15):
I have no clue to mention our economy would just
go to shit?
Speaker 6 (52:21):
Is no.
Speaker 7 (52:21):
I think somebody's going to be pulling the plunger on it.
It's already in the it's going to go down the gurglar.
It's going to do the big spin.
Speaker 3 (52:32):
Here here's a video clip.
Speaker 14 (52:35):
So, the first time in over fifty years, America's largest
gold depository could receive its first public audit. So is
the claimed four hundred and twenty five billion dollars of
gold still there?
Speaker 16 (52:46):
Well?
Speaker 14 (52:47):
Ask the question. Elon Musk in the Department of Government
Efficiency is asking you.
Speaker 1 (52:51):
See.
Speaker 14 (52:51):
Fort Knox is one of the most secure facilities in
the world and is located adjacent to the Fort Knox
Military Base in Kentucky. It was established during the nineteen
thirties during the Great Depression, to secure a significant portion
of the nation's gold. It has a strict no visitors policy,
and that extends to everyone. There is only one president
in history to have entered the gold depository, Franklin D.
Speaker 1 (53:15):
Roosevelt.
Speaker 14 (53:15):
In fact, the last time that the public saw what
was inside was all the way back in nineteen seventy four,
when they allowed journalists and a congressional delegation to enter
because there were rumors that was empty. Once those rumors
were dispelled, the door staged shut until twenty seventeen, and
that's when the Secretary of Treasury visited. And now those
rumors are back in Elon and DOJ. They don't want
(53:37):
to just visit. They actually want to go inside and
order the reserves and make it public and even live
stream it, which would all be unprecedented. So the question
is either this is a good idea and helps with transparency,
or is Elon just fueling unnecessary distrust.
Speaker 3 (53:57):
I mean, I think they should go in it.
Speaker 1 (54:00):
Think they should think there's anything unnecessary about it.
Speaker 5 (54:04):
Well, what's interesting is I was looking to see what
what I was looking up on Google what would happen
if the gold was missing? And one of the things
that they came up with was it says except when
they weighed the gold, no gold was missing. The impit
theft was actually paperwork heirs no gold was missing. So
(54:27):
apparently at some point there was theoretically a theft.
Speaker 3 (54:33):
Well I didn't mean to start playing this video, but
I got another video talking about the possibilities of theft.
I got this one of the TikTok's old.
Speaker 10 (54:43):
Nine years later, gold sold for eight hundred and eighty
dollars browns, twenty five times what the gold in Fort
Knox was sold for. One would think that eventually someone
in the government would get wind of what was happening
and blow the whistle. The large fortune in the history
of the World stolen shades of the old James Bond
(55:05):
film Goldfinger well. As a matter of fact, Ian Fleming,
the author of the James Bond series, was head of
the British Counterintelligence Service I five. Some believe in the
intelligence community that he wrote much of his fiction as
a warning, as many authors of fiction do. If the
(55:25):
removal of all the good delivery gold from Fort Knox
can be viewed as a deliberate raid on the US Treasury,
then such an operation might well have been years in
the making, namely forty years, certainly enough time for Fleming
to get wind of it and try to prevent it.
So just how did the story of the Fort Knox
gold robbery get out? It all started with an article
(55:50):
in a New York periodical in nineteen seventy four. The
article charged that the Rockefeller family was manipulating the Federal
Reserve her to sell off Fort Knox gold at bargain
basement prices to anonymous European speculators.
Speaker 16 (56:09):
Three days later, the anonymous.
Speaker 3 (56:11):
Source of this I mean, I don't put past these.
Speaker 16 (56:13):
Auchincloss Boyer mysteriously.
Speaker 10 (56:15):
Fell to her death from the window of her tenth
floor apartment in New York.
Speaker 3 (56:21):
There we go. They still doing that to this day,
pushing people out of windows and stuff. You know, all
these there's there was a big financial guy that just
this just happened. What was that three months ago up
in New York out.
Speaker 5 (56:35):
Of the window, missus Boyer, Yeah, Emily, Yeah, my mom
just sent me something interesting in the text. I put
it in the chat for you.
Speaker 3 (56:48):
About the shadow of the moon.
Speaker 5 (56:50):
No, underneath that.
Speaker 3 (56:53):
See the stamped I d in shape of the bars
in the later pictures. In those earth pictures there was
no stamping and they were very they were very rectangular.
Speaker 16 (57:07):
At him Fort Knox gold heist.
Speaker 10 (57:10):
She was the longtime secretary of Nelson Rockefeller.
Speaker 2 (57:17):
For the next fourteen years.
Speaker 10 (57:19):
This man ed Derrell, a wealthy Ohio industrialist, devoted himself
to a quest for the truth concerning the Fort Knox gold.
He wrote thousands of letters to over one thousand government
and banking officials trying to find.
Speaker 2 (57:34):
Out how much gold was really left and where the
rest of it had gone.
Speaker 10 (57:39):
Edith Roosevelt, the granddaughter of President Teddy Roosevelt, questioned the
actions of the government in a March nineteen seventy five
edition of the New Hampshire Sunday News. Allegations of missing
gold from our Fort Knox vaults are being widely discussed
in European financial circles. But what is puzzling is that
the administration and is not hastening to demonstrate conclusively that
(58:03):
there is no cause for concern over our gold treasure,
if indeed it is in a position to do so. Unfortunately,
Ed Darrell never did accomplish his primary goal, a full
audit of the gold reserves in Fort Knox. It's incredible
that the world's greatest treasure has had little accounting or auditing.
(58:26):
This goal belonged to the American people, not the Federal
Reserve and their foreign owners.
Speaker 2 (58:32):
One thing is certain. The government could.
Speaker 10 (58:35):
Blow all of the speculation away in a few days
with a well publicized audit under the searing lights of
media cameras, it has chosen not to do so.
Speaker 2 (58:45):
One must conclude that they are afraid of the truth.
Speaker 10 (58:49):
Such an audit would reveal what is the government so
afraid of? Here's the answer. When President Ronald Reagan took
office in nineteen eighty one, his conservative friends urged him
to study the feasibility of returning to a gold standard
as the only way to curb government spending. It sounded
(59:10):
like a reasonable alternative, so President Reagan appointed a group
of men called the Gold Commission, to study the situation
and report back to Congress. What Reagan's Gold Commission reported
back to Congress in nineteen eighty two was the following
shocking revelation concerning gold the US.
Speaker 3 (59:31):
You know what, Trump just put Ronald Reagan's portrait up
in his office and he's calling this the Golden Age?
Are we going? Are we going to be going back
to the gold standard? They're going to I think now
putting this together, I think they're absolutely going to be
going into Fort Knox and they're going to be doing
(59:55):
an audit. I guarantee it. I'm going to play the
last thirty seconds this c goals, start talking some more,
and close out all.
Speaker 10 (01:00:02):
The goal that was left in Fort Knox was now
owned by the Federal Reserve a group of private bankers
as collateral against the national debt. The truth of the
matter is that never before has so much money been
stolen from the hands of the general public and put
into the hands of a small group of private investors.
Speaker 2 (01:00:23):
The money change.
Speaker 3 (01:00:29):
I think we're going to be going in there. I
mean they need to now. They've posted this out so
much for all of us to, you know, learn about
it and start looking at Fort Knox and start asking
questions and stuff. I think that's the only way to
go is to go in, you.
Speaker 5 (01:00:46):
Know, I kind of question because, like you're saying, they're
pushing it so much. I wonder if Doge or somebody
got somebody in there and said, wait a minute, there's
a discrepancy. And that's why they're pushing we have to
get in there now. And there's such an urgency on
(01:01:09):
it is because they want to expose it and not
allow them time to cover it up.
Speaker 3 (01:01:17):
And that's why they've given us bad weather to get
campas time. I mean it's completely flooded and then we
have snow. I mean I had six inches of snow
between yesterday and last night here here again. I mean,
we've it's been miserable for the last six weeks here
in Kentucky.
Speaker 1 (01:01:38):
Well that's because it's Kentucky.
Speaker 3 (01:01:40):
No, it's not. We usually have pretty good winters, not
too bad, but.
Speaker 5 (01:01:47):
Maybe boons come back to get revenge.
Speaker 3 (01:01:53):
Wonder why they chose Kentucky Anyway, The mountains are nearby
because it's a malls well, and we also got a
lot of mind uh like my ale sits on top
of the mine. A lot of underground tunnels in Appalachia
mountains all Eric, What do you.
Speaker 7 (01:02:13):
Think whether it's there or not?
Speaker 6 (01:02:18):
Yeah, I think it.
Speaker 7 (01:02:19):
I think it's a little complex. It's not whether just
it's there or not. It's also about manipulating the money system.
So if they did prove that it was there, you know,
that's going to affect the money system. That they say
that it's not, that's going to affect the price of
you know, not just money, but of precious metals. So
(01:02:40):
gold is just the first step, and they're probably going
to have to move to other pressures metals too. I
think silver is tied to like technology and whatnot, so
this is I think this is the first step to
getting back to that real tangible commodity attached to our money,
(01:03:00):
having something actually back at again what we need because
the petrol dollar is basically useless.
Speaker 3 (01:03:11):
Yeah. Well, and we got bricks coming into play now
with all of them and moving away from the dollar too.
How many countries now, seventeen eighteen countries with bricks. Well,
we know what they did with Gadaffi in Saddam Hussein.
They weren't the people that they said that they were.
(01:03:32):
They were moving away from the dollar. Goadaffi was caught
the Clintons doing illegal weapon trades in Libya. It's all
about money.
Speaker 5 (01:03:43):
Well, and if history, if my history is right, we
were on the green back until the Federal Reserve arrived
and changed it to their system. And now the fact
that they control Fort Knox is not very comforting because yeah,
(01:04:09):
that's supposed to be America's federal gold depository, not private
companies gold depository. So when did they get to get
control over the gold and when did that go into
effect and for how long?
Speaker 3 (01:04:30):
Here I looked up the question that Ralph was asking,
didn't France make inquiries on where their their gold was
and opened up their mouths back when we used gold
as a gold standard. Well, it said, when did France
get their gold from the US. When did France get
back her gold from the USA? And it was nineteen
(01:04:53):
fifty eight. The last audit was seventy four, so France
got there. Yeah, so France got their gold back in
nineteen fifty eight from Fort Knox and the last audit
was nineteen seventy fours or yeah, supposedly. I don't know.
(01:05:20):
This is all weird.
Speaker 7 (01:05:21):
I don't.
Speaker 3 (01:05:21):
I think some of it's there. I do think some
of it's there, but I think the majority of it's gone.
And the only way we're gonna know is if actually
Doage goes in there. And I'm kind of worried about
him going in there, like, why has nobody ever done anything?
Was Ran Paul? Was it Ran Paul that was saying
(01:05:41):
the other day it's not there.
Speaker 5 (01:05:43):
He tried to get in, but they won't allow him access.
That's suspicious in itself. If it's a government facility, how
are government officials denied access? I mean, i'd understand if
it was like the aid to a senator wanted to
(01:06:06):
go and look at something. No, you're not a government official.
You work for the government official. But if the Department
of Treasury or the commit the Treasury Commission in the
House or Senate says I want to go look, and
they say no, that's suspicious to me. And I would
demand access because that's federal money and you're a federal representative.
(01:06:33):
How are you not able to see federal assets. That'd
be like going to Fort Knox and saying to the military, Yeah,
you have an armory over here, but you can't go
into the armory because you're not the right military rank
(01:06:56):
or branch, and it's like it's on our base, it's ours. Nope,
you don't have access. That's just weird.
Speaker 3 (01:07:07):
Bill Bailey is the chief of the United States Mint Police.
He's the first black to serve the role. He manages
security for MINT facilities in Washington, d C. Philadelphia, West Point, Denver,
and San Francisco, and manages the security at the Fort
Knock at Fort Knox. Bill Bailey, I mean.
Speaker 5 (01:07:33):
Do you agree with me, Daniel that that's really weird?
Speaker 3 (01:07:39):
Is Daniel with us?
Speaker 5 (01:07:43):
I think he went to sleep.
Speaker 3 (01:07:46):
Daniel, he's probably gonna I wanted to kick him out.
He's gonna have to come back in. He's been having
connection issues. But Bill Bradley or Bailey, he began hold
on He began his career in San Francisco, California. You
(01:08:08):
know what San Francisco is, right.
Speaker 5 (01:08:11):
Cia, Well, Cia Pelosi Territory.
Speaker 3 (01:08:18):
He began his career in nineteen ninety one. He developed
a local training program in San Francisco. In two thousand,
he was promoted to the rank of field chief in Washington.
Speaker 10 (01:08:36):
D c.
Speaker 3 (01:08:40):
Oh, No, we're probably gonna have to go down the
rabbit hole these people and who's been watching over this
facility over the last forty fifty years. Let's see what
goes on there. But well, that hour's gone by super fast.
We've gone over a little over hour. Of course, we
didn't get to the Super Bowl and talk about the
(01:09:00):
us AID stuff, so we're gonna have to do that
the next time. Any final thoughts before we close out.
Speaker 5 (01:09:07):
Well, Daniel just messaged me that his computer didn't namb
or heard.
Speaker 3 (01:09:13):
Pooped on a pillow.
Speaker 5 (01:09:20):
As he's trying to get it back up down.
Speaker 3 (01:09:25):
Any final thoughts or because I know you may need
to hop.
Speaker 7 (01:09:28):
Off, Yeah, you know, I don't know. I think it
feels like the whole if you step back and look
at the big picture, it feels like the whole thing
is manipulation. And trying to get people to start asking
those types of questions, and it may or may not
(01:09:48):
be relevant whether there's something in there or not, even
if it's short. You know, technically they've never had an
outside audit.
Speaker 6 (01:09:57):
It's always been you know, the boy is running.
Speaker 3 (01:10:00):
The show, the good old Boys group.
Speaker 7 (01:10:04):
Yeah, taking taking the pictures and glad handing and yeah.
So I think it's a manipulation of just getting getting
people to you know, look over here and just start
asking a lot of questions.
Speaker 6 (01:10:20):
That's not a bad thing.
Speaker 3 (01:10:23):
Well, I mean I also think too that I'm not
thinking that all the gold all of a sudden, just
left all at once. I think this has just happened
gradually over the years. I think they've been selling it
off to not necessarily stolen or somebody go in and
steal it. I think they've been selling it off and
somebody's benefiting from it over the last fifty years. That's
(01:10:50):
a potential of that, Michael, any final thoughts or anything.
Speaker 5 (01:10:54):
The final thought that I have is the fact of
all the secrecy around it and all the information that
doesn't add up or like no explanation for like, you know,
saying nobody has done an audit since the seventies is
(01:11:20):
suspicious and I think is either gross oversight or leads
to like you and Oric were saying, leads to many
questions that why has nobody asked until now and stood
up and said, wait a minute, this isn't right.
Speaker 6 (01:11:41):
And so.
Speaker 5 (01:11:44):
Whether or not the gold is really they're or not,
it's how they're acting about it that makes everyone suspicious.
So that they were more transparent, then there wouldn't be
this mystery and conspiracy theory around the building and people
would just be like, Okay, there's four knocks. But because
(01:12:05):
they put the air of not gonna share any information
and we're only going to audit ourselves, yeah, that leads
to a lot of conspiracy theories coming up.
Speaker 3 (01:12:22):
Yeah, it'll be interesting to see what happens. I mean,
I definitely think that Doge is going to go in there,
and I think President Trump will go in there. Whether
they'll stream it live, I think that they need to.
If they can stream it live, I'm sure that they'll
be able to have some kind of way to do that.
But we need transparency because the players involved. We have
the Federal Reserve, which is a private banking system right
(01:12:45):
has zero transparency. We got the US government that that
you know, has the dollar and they don't have.
Speaker 5 (01:12:55):
The goal transparency.
Speaker 3 (01:12:57):
Yeah, if we don't have the gold that backs up dollar,
I mean, there's this debt like there's it's all an
illusion really, and then the last people that we have
is like the big banks in the elites, which could
have funneled, emptied it and funneled, you know, to other
(01:13:18):
financial networks that benefit them. So if this is true, y'all,
we're we're gonna be seeing the biggest financial deception in
history period and it's all on plain sight. It's gonna
be crazy. It's gonna be crazy. But that's why I'm
gonna end on. I want to say thank you everybody
(01:13:39):
for tuning in here to the B System tonight. We
appreciate you. Please share the show, please like it, give
us a thumbs up. On Rumble, we're gonna be having
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having that soon. I guess No, Daniel after Dark only
only tonight, everybody. It's uh sorry, I couldn't get through
(01:14:04):
all the topics this evening too so, but we appreciate
everybody on tuning in. We'll see you next time here
on the B System.