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October 9, 2025 • 58 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:05):
It's the Opperman Report.

Speaker 2 (00:07):
Join Digital Forensic Investigator and PI at Opperman for an
in depth discussion of conspiracy theories, strategy of New World
Order resistance, hi profile court cases in the news, and
interviews with expert guests and authors on these topics and more.
It's the Opperman Report. And now here is investigator Ed Opperman.

Speaker 3 (00:37):
Okay, welcome to the Opperman Report. I'm your host, Private
Investigator at Opperman, and this show is brought to you
by email revealer dot com. You go to email revealer
dot com. You can get an autograph copy of my
book How to Become a Successful Private Investigator. Also to
any kind of PI services you might need, adoption investigations,

(00:58):
locate skip tracing, UH, child support case. You want to
locate someone's current place of employment, you go to email
revealer dot com. Anys not double. Just go to email
dot com com check us out. Okay, I got with
us today. Over there with all the dogs barking in

(01:20):
the background and the hammer and the nails stuff, we
have Mary Titus and she's down there. It's kind of
an exile almost, I think, in Saint Martin. Mary Titus,
are you there, Yes, I'm right here.

Speaker 1 (01:32):
And thanks you very much for contacting me.

Speaker 3 (01:35):
Thank you so much, because because we chat quite a
bit on YouTube when you're as miss Thrill on YouTube
and you always leave in nice comments on.

Speaker 1 (01:44):
A goofy name I made up to avoid spam, and
now I'm stuck with it. So but that is me.
The Flying Cuttlefish is me, and Missrill is me. On
the web right, A lot of.

Speaker 3 (01:54):
People know about the web the WordPress site flying Cuddlefish
dot WordPress dot com, whereh she covers all the kind
of information about the Epstein case and nine elevel.

Speaker 1 (02:05):
I'm trying to keep and I'm trying to keep a
really good archive, including all of your really good work
that you've done, including the court documents, which are vital
to real reverse and serious journalists need define it. It's
buried on the internet, and trust Google, you know new
booking things. So I try to keep your stuff up

(02:28):
there and the original court docks up there.

Speaker 3 (02:30):
Soon them Hey give me money about that, because I
had a listener send me her data dump all the
Epstein court doctors, which is like my other I've ever
seen before. I don't even have it up on my website.

Speaker 1 (02:43):
Okay, because in there in comments and it's in chronological order,
so I'll put it in part three. I do it
in parts so it's s eesy to load, so it
doesn't take up too much time to load the page.

Speaker 3 (02:55):
And so what would we expect to find at fine
Cuddlefish dot WordPress dot dot.

Speaker 1 (03:01):
Well, it started out as just me trying to organize
websites I like and information I like, But now it's
become a repository of hard to find in banned news.
For instance, over Earning, England, there was a fire in
a low income district in the heart of you know
the movie Nodding Hill, you know what's made where the

(03:23):
hoy PELOI live and they don't like this sietly large
tower block Grenfell Towers, and it burned. It really looked
like it was set up to burn, and not just
by neglect, not just by slum lowords and that type
of thing. It looks like a very sinister hand was

(03:44):
behind that fire. So that may be wrong, but I'm
putting up all the information I can find about that,
and I do it in a way where if you
do a search in the search box, I use really
good tags when I put up articles, so that if
you put in the search box on the Flying Cuddle Through,
you can find the whole story of how I followed
a certain thing. I don't follow everything, but I try

(04:06):
to put up really good little search tags. So if
you're looking up something that Towbridge Ford wrote, or something
on Fukushima, or something of these topics that are not
well covered on the Internet, you'll get it there, and
you can find the chronology of the stories and decide
for yourself what you'd like to believe.

Speaker 3 (04:28):
So, out of all these topics, which one would you
like to cover first, Pizzagate or nine to eleven?

Speaker 1 (04:34):
Well, on pizza Gate, I have to say my Pizzagate
tab at the top of my blog is the story
of how the story broke. Okay, So that's very very
interesting because anything is booted from somewhere like Reddit. I'm
all over, and I'm that way on the vaccine story,
which I thought those people were all cranks and unhappy people.
I didn't know. But after that movie got banned from

(04:56):
Tribeca Film Festival, which is a very prestigious film festival,
I began to get a lot of information on the
movie vax the documentary, and I'm now in agreement with
the movie makers but I have the story of how
that got banned. It has a lot to do with
big Pharmazone in real estate in the Tribeca area where
the wife of the Niro, the film festival sponsor, lives,

(05:20):
and it gets into his family and to personal finance
and big big money and big farmer. So that that
story is a very interesting one. But the other one
is the little Louisiana story. I like to talk about
because people in the Gulf region know about it, and
nationally they should know about how harmed Louisiana was by

(05:42):
the BP oil spill. The deepwater horizon.

Speaker 3 (05:45):
Okay, well let's start with that. Let's start with the
that's Louisiana sinkhole.

Speaker 1 (05:49):
Right, Yeah, that's yeah, And it's l a sinkhole dot
WordPress dot com.

Speaker 3 (05:55):
All so gives an idea what was really going on
back there, because everyone saw the VP thing and aba,
what's going on with that video they had? It was
like on a loop of the underwater Well.

Speaker 1 (06:06):
See, there were underwater remote control device cameras down there,
and there's a lot of curious aspects to it. And
I was contacted confidentially by a person in the know,
and I got to protect the person. But I got
to say that big industry, big Wall Street, big finance

(06:27):
is all watching this area because of the big money
involved in the oil under the Gulf of Mexico, right,
So I can only say that this person is from
a large entity. They are not like a rig worker
or a little local guy in a rowboat. They are
a large, connected, knowledgeable, educated person. Contacted me confidentially, and

(06:50):
I put that whole thing that they wrote me on
the sidebar with an art link, an art button link
saying worst case scenario in full. And that hypothesis is
from people who really watch this stuff and those underwater cameras,
that that thing was deliberately blown to blow, maybe to

(07:12):
manipulate oil prices. I don't know why. I don't know
the motive of people, why they would want to do
a disaster of that form. But my LA sinkhole is
about a sinkhole, the hole in the ground in a
swamp forty miles inland from the Gulf, inland from that
BP disaster, and it was it might be a separate story, Okay,

(07:36):
it's just an idea that they're related. It's unproven, But
all of a sudden, in twenty twelve, these methane bubbles
began bubbling up in swamp and everybody with a very
large methane storage cavern nearby or buttane storage excuse me, buttane,
you know, as a natural gas for your stove. That

(07:58):
type of storage cavern, it had cracks or something in it.
Because I had no idea how natural gas or if
you turn your stove on you get a flamemer oven.
I have no idea how this works before this disaster.
But what happens. The gather the gas up somehow, they
somehow compress it like an air compressor. And where are
they stored ors in these old caves. And the better

(08:20):
place to store it is an old salt cavern caves
because salt caves are dry. So this is stored in
repositories around the country and they fuel the country. I mean,
we will all be dead in the Northeast without this
gas in the winter for furnaces and stoves because it's
cold and the country is reliant on our natural gas.

(08:42):
We really, we do. Our lives depend on a supply
of this. Yeah, get over and get some coal, you know,
and go heat yourself when it's freezing out.

Speaker 4 (08:51):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (08:52):
Let me interrupt you for a second, because you're right
up in Maine. I used to visit Maine all the time,
and they don't have natural gas up there. And what
they do is they actually burned firewood. Several times. They
get up in the middle of the night and put
firewood in the fire in their stoves in the right
the country couldn't do this. They're used to doing it
up there, but the whole country would never be able

(09:12):
to do this. And we would have enough wood if
we had to. Yeah, So what we're what.

Speaker 1 (09:16):
We're worried about is a you know how your your
body has a circulatory system and the heart pumps everything
around the body. The heart of the nation is New Orleans,
the heart of the nation's gas natural gas. It goes
out from New Orleans to these large pipe projects across
the country and then there's many pipelines that supply the

(09:37):
whole country and in the in the cold climate, which
is a lot of the country. Uh, you got to
have those pipelines working. You can't have those pipelines blown
up or exploded or something. And there's such a vast
amount of butt and stored right next to this vulnerable
area with methane bubbles coming up it's amazing. So that's
what we were talking about so much on this little

(09:59):
uh eye. I got a quick education on this because
what I have is contributors who know geology and contributors
who know pipeline. Because I don't know these things myself,
but I have contributors who are giving real available information
in the comments to the blog post from then until now,
and we talk about things like fault lines in the
Gulf of Mexico and another thing the public doesn't know

(10:20):
and I certainly never knew. If you look at the
US map from Texas to Florida, the stuff hanging out
from Texas, you know, Mississippi, New Orleans area, Georgia, Florida.
It hangs over the Gulf of Mexico like a thin
sheet of ice on the edge of a frozen pond

(10:41):
that's half frozen. It hangs out with nothing underneath it.
There's nothing under it, there's water down under there. It's
not that thick a crust and a fissure in it,
or all these wells they've drilled by the way over
the years. It might snap off like a soda cracker.
What with towns with people, people live there, large populations

(11:04):
live along the coast. So we're talking about all this stuff.
We're going, wow, look at this. You know, if this,
if this snapped off, x y Z City would fall
right into this. It's real deep too under there.

Speaker 3 (11:21):
Now with the BP spill, wasn't there something too about
like there was a platform and some like there's an
allegation that some special forces types showed up the day
before and then there was an explosion. Did you look
into that way?

Speaker 1 (11:33):
I don't know about the special forces type. What I
know about is what the contributor pointed out that on
that worst case scenario story was that that there's cables
that don't belong there under the water under the rig,
that the cabling and the devices under the rig are
not normal, you know, and consider this, these things are

(11:59):
highly ensured, highly leveraged finance, you know, So these entities,
these financial energies are washing. Not just the big industry
types and oil types, you know. Uh, And that's that's
that's who's getting this information. More the oil types I
think have sold their sold to the devil, I guess,
you know, because they're the ones at risk. They were

(12:20):
told to work to clean up immediately afterwards, and without
like air masks and the proper safety equipment. I mean,
it's horrible what those people were put through.

Speaker 3 (12:28):
Yeah, it does seem like the oil industry is probably
the most the cutthroat out there. They do have.

Speaker 1 (12:34):
Yeah, and when they cleaned up, they closed the beaches
and had then guard there is so people couldn't see.
He has to keep with us his way, Okay.

Speaker 3 (12:43):
And what about all that business about Kevin Costner had
some kind of equipment to clean up. Did you look
into that? Yeah?

Speaker 1 (12:48):
Yeah, And this and everybody's wondering about this Correx because
after this whole disaster, England and these places over there
in Europe got these terrible winter storms because the golf loop,
the whole weather pattern changed. And I believe this, but
it's just a theory. I go with it that the

(13:09):
cors that created a saran wrap like effect on the
golf of Mexico holding heat in or changing the temperature
somehow and drove that golf loop away. And so now
instead of the normal ocean currents, you got those violent storms.
You got these terrible, terrible effects over sudden violent storms

(13:31):
over you know, around the UK and Ireland and stuff
like that. Right after this big disaster.

Speaker 3 (13:40):
Because you're talking about this stuff this correx was that
that detergent type chemical that they were pouring into the
water there right, Yeah.

Speaker 1 (13:46):
This band all over the world is so toxic. And
what it does, it doesn't mitigate the oil at all.
It grabs the oil globules is my understanding, and sinks
them out of sight so that are not visual, and
it makes these tarmats which later wash up, kind of
like your format on the car made a tar And
that's my understanding of how koraks that work. It's just cosmetic,

(14:10):
it's not. And what we're worried about on the blog
also are these experimental biological weird elements that are untested
that are that they're putting in that are they're almost
like not clones, but there's weird science that's untested. The
man made entities they're supposed to eat the oil, but

(14:33):
you don't know how they're going to react, you know,
ei they're going to reproduce themselves. You don't know how
they're going to react with other species. And they're just
dumping them all over the place down there, Willy nilly.
It's just sounds like a man house down.

Speaker 3 (14:44):
There, right. This is this is a biological creation. They're
supposed to go in and eat the oil, right.

Speaker 1 (14:50):
Except there's a man made thing that's untested, you know
how it's going to behave It's like GMOs where the
pom goes everywhere and you don't know what's happening. People
are alarmed about these things. And that gets into the
topic of fracking. And I think I have on my
sordbar some stuff about fracking that get much more into it,
you know.

Speaker 3 (15:09):
But it's funny because like if you or me we're
to be sitting around and come up with this idea
that we're going to create this biological that's going to
eat the oil, they would lock us up. These oil
come out. Yeah, they're no smarter than us, but they've
got all this money and empowering these lawyers and lobbies
that they can just get away with murder. Now what
happened now?

Speaker 1 (15:25):
The place that does the fracking news is called Blue
Days One word da Z and that's on the blog
roll on the side of the Louisiana sinkhole. They're the
ones that have covered a lot of fracking issues. And
when you get back to the twenty thirteen, fourteen years,
I think you get it maybe on there, maybe on

(15:47):
my blog. I put a lot in there. I don't
know what the keyword on that is, but it's on
bacteria maybe or something like that.

Speaker 3 (15:57):
And this is on the flying cuttlefishto WordPress dot com.

Speaker 1 (16:00):
Well, then this this, this stuff about the sinkhole is
on l a sinkhole dot WordPress dot com.

Speaker 3 (16:06):
Yeah, but there's a there's a you can follow, you
can go to cuddlefish, right, yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1 (16:10):
There's a there's a little button link on the right
that has the flying cuttlefish on it.

Speaker 3 (16:14):
And now what did you come up with about the
whole thing with Kevin Costner's trying it? Because he had
he went to Congress and stuff like that.

Speaker 1 (16:19):
Hed I covered him. You love Costan. You get a
little bit of those stories on there. And then I
think he is rebuffed because some bad deal between the
Correxit people and maybe state officials maybe or something like that,
because that looked like no reason for him to be rebuffed.

Speaker 3 (16:36):
And you mentioned fracking too. Now, the fracking is a
relatively new science that or new technology, new new methodology
that they've come up with.

Speaker 1 (16:43):
What what a lot of people don't like about fracking?
It's all unwell to get stuff out of deep cracks
to get more oil because people like you know oil, right,
But uh, there's two issues on that. One is the
pollution effects of the highly polluting chemicals they use in
the fracking process to get the tiny particles of oil

(17:06):
to get out of these tiny cracks up in the
in these rocks, right. And then the other thing.

Speaker 4 (17:12):
The other thing is maybe those oilly things in those
cracks serve a purpose of lubricating the cracks, and when
you remove the lubricant, you get earthquakes like Oklahoma.

Speaker 1 (17:25):
Has had since the cracking swarm, cracking sworm.

Speaker 3 (17:29):
Now have you seen an increase in earthquakes related to
these fracking locations?

Speaker 1 (17:35):
Well, a lot of people are seeing us why Oklahoma
has these these these quake swarms, And the USGS finally
agreed to that that is related to fracking in earthquakes
place in the place in Ohio maybe Youngston. I have
it on my blog, but if you look at Ohio
you probably get it because I'm buch Ohio News on
the blog.

Speaker 3 (17:55):
Well, let me ask you this because Ohio.

Speaker 1 (17:58):
Sued and one that point they sued someone and one
Now when.

Speaker 3 (18:03):
You think of Oklahoma, you think of they have those tornmatoes, right,
So yeah, if they were having earthquakes too, I think
they would have caught my attention. So it's if this
is something better, you.

Speaker 1 (18:12):
Look okay, If you look okay, you know capitlo capital
K on a search bar, you get a whole ton
on it with maps and stuff.

Speaker 3 (18:19):
But it's relative.

Speaker 1 (18:20):
They're constantly having them around where they had the fracking science.

Speaker 3 (18:23):
But this is something that's just started. They weren't having
these things ten years ago, fifteen years you know.

Speaker 1 (18:27):
Because what happened the reason fracking exploded is they perfected
a science of exporting kind of condensed gas. I don't
know how to say it, but if you see a ship,
a giant containership with these two giant globes on it,
that's that's natural gas for export that's sort of condensed

(18:47):
into a condensed air maybe compressed air type of a thing.
They invented that sort of recently, and they are exporting
it to the Middle East or exporting it. You wouldn't
think they would, but they did. They're exporting all over
the world now because the science and technology is going
to become cheaper to export natural gas, and so that's

(19:09):
become a big thing with tarzans and lots of global things.
The United States isn't using this gas, They're exporting a
lot of.

Speaker 3 (19:18):
It, right, And it's one of the things that Trump
was talking about last night that finally we're now we're
an exporter. We're a energy exporter of gas. Yeah, and
that's going right, which is yeah.

Speaker 1 (19:28):
And the on thing that bothers me nationwide, not about Trump,
but just the nation is the loss of the use
of the word conservation. I don't know what happened to
that idea of just everybody toning down a little bit
on energy consumption just for the good of the planet
and you know, the good of the air and the
health of the nation, and you know, less less pollution everywhere.

(19:52):
I don't know why people think this bad to like conserve,
Just do a little less, put a clothes out on
a clothesline, you know, just think before you turn switches
and use energy.

Speaker 3 (20:03):
You know, well, just imagine if we had followed Jimmy
Carter's energy plan, you know, if we had stuck to
it right now, we would have ten percent solar, would
have temper you know, all these.

Speaker 1 (20:13):
I just I just I don't get I don't get it.
I don't. I don't understand the mindset. I can understand industry.
I understand general motors, they want to make money, But
I don't understand the public going along with the environment
idea and then and then rejecting it. I don't. I
didn't reject it. I'm still in the seventies, let's put

(20:33):
it that way.

Speaker 3 (20:35):
But you know, they have such a these oil companies,
they have so much influence in our media, you know,
because you see that they're advertising on a Sunday morning
TV shows. You know what they need to advertise for
unless to influence what's being published. And then they create
this scenario of the tree hugger, you know, and the
smelly liberal who's out there, you know, and these ridiculous

(20:56):
owl spotted owls we want to protect.

Speaker 1 (20:59):
Well, they're they're putting, they're putting. Let me tell you this.
You know, I think I don't know if you've done
a show on this, but I think you have on
the CIA or the Intelligence Agency's influence on Hollywood, on
putting US policy. Through Hollywood. There's been an influx of
movies lately, including maybe Captain America or one of the
Marvel comics, movies where the environmentalist is a terrorist like

(21:21):
equating environment and it's come up in a couple of
popular movies, and I know that's interjected. I know it
is because I have an acquaintance that went to prison
under this terrorism false charge, and it was a case
of vandalism. It was a case where they did something
that is property damage, and he was against genetic modification

(21:48):
of juniper tree force street stuff, which I didn't know
they're genetically modifying stuff. But they put draconian sentences of
a solitary confinement on these people as terrorists. And you know,
an environmental activist is just like to me, a person
who's you know, okay, you can call them a tree
hugger or something, but it's not. It's not hurting. It

(22:11):
is trying to save people. It's trying to save people's health.
It's trying to stop cancer. You know, it's not. I mean,
it might be bad, it might be a bad public
action to take, or wrong thing to do, but it's not.
It's not. You know, ALCAATA, you know.

Speaker 3 (22:29):
Which they're all in favor of. Anyway, alca doesn't have
any problem getting those that uh jeeps over there right.

Speaker 1 (22:37):
Itself from the film Texas Dealership made a bunch of money.
But you know it, That's why I'm glad I'm not
in the United States, because, uh, it's really scary when
you see these charges put on people. And there's a
thing called Operation back Draft. You know, they find a
forest fire is called a backdraft. It's an FBI sting operation.

(22:59):
It caught these like high school kids, these high school
idealists into doing something. I don't know what, They're gonna
go attack some phone polls or you know, some stupid action.
But I was an FBI person in charge of the
little the little you know, little vandalism, and it resulted
in a suicide or resulted in these lives, the young

(23:19):
lives destroyed. And these kids who get caught up, you
know they've got these problems or their runaways or you know,
they got these little personal problems going on. But I mean,
people died over this, and this is like out of control.
It's really frightening to me that this all comes from
a lot of it comes from a nice website called
Green is the Neewred dot com.

Speaker 3 (23:41):
Yeah, we've uh, we've done We've done shows with Trevor
Aronson who did the whole thing about how the FBI
creates the little terra cells and then sweeps in and
make right.

Speaker 1 (23:51):
Yes, them's them, it's I love the show you did
on them, on the people who got into the FBI
had me too.

Speaker 3 (24:01):
Yeah, I know, it's.

Speaker 1 (24:02):
One of your greatest there's one of your greatest things.
I think I reblogged that one. That was so heroic
and scary of them to do. I mean, consider the
fear of doing such a thing, and in those days,
I mean I just I'm in such awe of people
like that.

Speaker 3 (24:19):
Exactly. When I finished that show that night, I just
sat back. I was very proud of that show. So
thank you very much. But now, how did you wind
up in Saint Martin? Did you go down there because
you're fleeing what you see the coming storm?

Speaker 1 (24:29):
No? No, no no. When I was a teen, my
mother left and she left to kind of go down
the Caribbean and live a lifestyle, and she just walked out,
you know. But then she got really old. You know,
I was kept in touch and everything with my mom,
and my parents are divorced, and she was really old.

(24:50):
She needed help, you know. And then there's no jobs
or anything in New York, you know, And so I
came down I came down here to help help her.
So I was down here like ten years with doing
a homemade and stuff her. Then she passed away a
couple of years ago.

Speaker 3 (25:03):
And how do you earn a living down there in Samemour?

Speaker 1 (25:05):
Don'tor a living? Man? You tell me got some work.
I'll do some work for you.

Speaker 3 (25:11):
But you're able to live down there on no income?
And you tell me about how they're rebuilding your whole mine?

Speaker 1 (25:16):
No, I have no income. I have like I'm draining income, man.
I mean I need to get I have to get
stuff to get it. But you know, I have hope
of because they were destroyed by a hurricane and a
lot of qualified people left. So I'm hoping to pick
up some work from someone who left.

Speaker 3 (25:31):
And now, what about your YouTube channel? Does that make money?

Speaker 4 (25:34):
No?

Speaker 1 (25:35):
Because you know what, First of all, if I monetized anything,
it'd already be kicked out in monetization because a YouTube
stupid censorship right now, So I'd already be kicked out
by that, I'm sure. But if I, if I monetized,
i'd probably make about seven dollars a year out of it.
And I'd have to pay forty dollars federal expiss to

(25:55):
do some tax for them. I'm my stupid seven dollars there,
you know what I mean? Like you know, and also
it compromises you if you if you agree to that,
then then you got to be worried what your sponsor
is going to think of what you say.

Speaker 3 (26:11):
Well, you know what I've been. I've been lucky.

Speaker 4 (26:13):
You know.

Speaker 3 (26:14):
I monetize my YouTube, and the sponsors that sponsor the
show have all been you know, friendly sponsors who haven't
to you know, we don't have to find more trouble
people who donate money and then try and influence the
content and then you have to tell them, hey, listen,
you gotta get Well.

Speaker 1 (26:27):
Maybe I should, Maybe I should go for that, but
I don't have a lot of traffic because for one thing,
YouTube changes all the stats. You know, you got more
than you have, because we've figured it out by comparison.
I'll I'll reblog someone's post on l I sinkhole because
a guy like mining awareness UH dot com, he knows
all this nuke stuff and mining mineral rights and stuff,

(26:51):
and UH he'll post something and I'll reblog it and
he'll he'll stay will show way more than mine, you know,
so we compare notes, so to go. Man, they're here,
you're messing up your statistics.

Speaker 3 (27:02):
Yeah, it's definitely a lot of that going on. But
another thing, because you had mentioned before about these kids
who got caught up in these charges that were set
up by the FBI. I don't know if you're following
what's going on here in the States now, but where
Alex Jones is talking about that Trump should use the
military to arrest protesters, and even a local radio host here,
this guy Wayne Allen Root here in Nevada.

Speaker 1 (27:25):
No, I don't know that. I don't know that.

Speaker 3 (27:26):
Oh yeah, Wayne Lolland he's going as far as to say,
because last night, when they were saying that they should
arrest any undocumented aliens that showed up at the State
of the Union, he was going as far as to say, well,
they should also arrest the congresswomen who brought them in,
and they should arrest the mayors. There's a lot of.

Speaker 1 (27:42):
Talks that's not right. But I'll tell I'll tell you
a related story, this unsung story. Because these things went
on indy media and then indie media almost went on there.
It's almost non entity because the FBI took the servers.
But back in the anti war protests and Bush and
meministration type years in the media had a great story

(28:04):
of Bush at his Bush Junior at his inauguration had
a big, giant protest, and I was there, so I
was following all that news because I was protesting that.
And a lot of people were arrested and rounded up
and taken in school buses away from DC to like
abandoned school or some scary place to be arrested and processed.

(28:30):
But you know, it's scary because they don't know where
they're going. And they took their bags and cut them
with knives, you know, just deliberately vandalizing their their little
personal little stuff. And they really have made these people
very fearful. And when they had to be arraigned, because
they kind of arraigned them kind of quickly because it's

(28:50):
a mass arrest, they put them all in a big
jail thing they're gonna go away to see the judge.
And what they did, because part of their group was
immigrants and people fearful of their status and visa or whatever,
you know, documentation, what they did was the American citizens
teamed up with the immigrants and said, we're all going

(29:12):
to go in and argue as one group, not be
divided one by one, and we're going to be released
all together on you know, appeal or something like that,
and you're not going to separate us. And the way
they did it was they all took off their clothes.
They all made themselves naked so to be carried across
and put before the judge they would have no clothes on,

(29:32):
which would be not respectful for the court, and so
forth and so on. And it was such a brave
act and so kind of ingenious. And then they caved.
They didn't want to take naked people or try to
put their clothes on so many of them that they
caved into the demands, and they the American citizens were
able to protect the immigrants at the protest from having

(29:56):
you know, big problems, and they all got like some
kind of like fine or something like that at the
end of it all.

Speaker 3 (30:01):
You know, did you catch a story about how the
Trump's Department of Justice uh subpoena that served an order
on a website to get emails and IP addresses of
everyone who was interested in attending the inauguration day protests.

Speaker 1 (30:21):
Oh, I wouldn't. I wouldn't. I wouldn't put it past
anyone to be doing that, because it's that's why I'm
not in the country that IP address. But oh my gosh,
you know what I mean, it's not I mean, I
came down because I had a family situation. But at
the beginning of the dire Van Frank, you know that dad,

(30:45):
you know, mister Frank, you know, he had a chance
to leave and go to Argentina or South America, and
he went up to that attic in answerdam saying we'd
blow over in six months. You know, we'll just like
hide out here for a little bit of time and
they'll all be great, you know, we'll come out, you know,
And they all died miserably, you know. So I'm glad

(31:05):
I'm not there, you know, I'm just I'm just really glad.

Speaker 3 (31:09):
But what about the government and the police and stuff
down there in Saint Martin. Are they more oppressive or less?

Speaker 1 (31:14):
Well, no, becaud or not so many of them. And
it is part of kind of an EU kind of system.
But let me tell you this. My mom was an
elder person and she didn't get a rund. She wasn't
a real go ahead, you know gung ho person. You
know so so she had a lot of problems with
their legs and her back and you know, you know stuff.
So she was she was. She wasn't fit, She wasn't healthy,

(31:38):
but she wasn't physically fit as an old stir person. Okay,
she had home care, home visiting, nurse, doctor visits, surgery,
healthcare in the hospital, paper products which are expensive for
an old person who's incontinent. Uh, paid for by the
state free and the only thing I pay paid for

(32:00):
for her healthcare with some tialent all ambleus visits tree
you know what say that stuff? It is the United States.

Speaker 3 (32:08):
Yeah, I can't even get a herne operation. Yeah, I'm
sitting go.

Speaker 1 (32:11):
I'm telling you go to Brazil or go to Cuba.
I'm telling you this. Now, you'll be treated like a king.
You'll be ten percent of the price.

Speaker 3 (32:17):
And plus the food is so good and all the
rumny could drink.

Speaker 1 (32:19):
It's like a hotel. It's like a luxury hotel. Ten
percent of the price. America is like crazy. Come down
to Brazil and Cuba and other countries for healthcare.

Speaker 3 (32:29):
We're gonna have to take a commercial break. Okay, we'll
be right back with more of me. A next Patriot
down there in Saint Martin and the webmaster of Flying
Cuttlefish dot WordPress dot com. But also to you check
out Louisiana Sinkhole La Sinkhole a Missfrill on YouTube, cfgate
dot WordPress dot com. We're gonna be talking about some stuff.
She has some exclusive videos of India sing which is

(32:52):
a nine to eleven witness will be And now a
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(34:42):
So that's Archival dot Revival at gmail dot com, or
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Don't forget the show is brought to you by pscoco
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(35:03):
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(35:48):
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Or you can contact me at Oppermaninvestigations at gmail dot com.

(37:19):
Welcome back to the Opperman Report. I'm your host private
investigator at Opperman. We're here today with Mary Titus, who's
the operator of a Flying Cuddlefish dot com.

Speaker 1 (37:29):
So Maria there, Yes, I'm right here. Ed. I just
want to tell you a real quick story about how
I found your show so interesting. Okay, I'm not a
Christian myself, but I listened to what Christians say because
they happen, and I know quite a bit about surveillance
and so forth. They have some common interest with what

(37:50):
I have an interest. And this always stuck with me,
this weird memory I have of a New York experience,
and you resonated with it with some of the topics
you cover in it. I came out of college and
I came to New York City to go to college
right after op Sale in seventy six. So that makes

(38:10):
me think I'm a little bit older than you because
I was in high school. Yeah, okay, and I miss
it by days. I missed it. I was so mad,
you know. I came out just everybody talking about and
I missed the whole time. I saw it on TV.
And back in those days, it was at two hundred
year anniversary US and I had great TV coverage back
when we thought the US was a great thing back

(38:31):
and had good days. But anyway, I came out of college,
I went to our school, which is a way to
be poor all your life. I came out of our
school around seventy nine and I couldn't get a job,
and I worked at a copy shop next to the

(38:52):
Thalia Movie Theater on ninety sixth Street, and the Thailua
was a movie house that showed old old movies like
you know, famous old movies. Sounds the institution in New
York for the years. And the copy shop is important
because everybody didn't have printers, no one had PCs. It
was really hard to get copies back then. There was

(39:15):
not all this technology back then. This is seventy nine.
There were no word processors back then, and they had
a word process and the word processor was as big
as a stand up piano. And the actors came in
because they have to get their resumes updated about every
six months or so when they do a new show.
In New York's show business town. So that's a big

(39:38):
that's a big customer is a show business place. And
so we were open pretty late, and I had two
customers I opened up after hours for. And one was
a legal battle with a guy with the World War
Two era obligation go on. I'd close and lock up
the shop and let him come in with his rare

(39:59):
document a copy you know that he was afraid of
He's just afraid of losing. And another guy with the
same fear of losing documents. I'd close up shop and
lock it up and let him copy away. Was this
kind of an odd fellow in the neighborhood who was
a Christian who are archived newspaper articles, and the articles

(40:22):
themselves are like this weird, they're just did you think
nothing of them? You read them in the New York
Post you think, well, that's weird. But when you see
a two inch thick folder of this and copying and
you can't help but read, when you're copying and you're
flipping it down and putting it on the page, you
can't help but see headlines. All these items were on
the weird Graveori things where like skulls are stolen and

(40:47):
stuff is stolen like around Queens. And this is before
some Sam, right before people were kind of thinking about
weird stuff. You know, I think Son of Sam made
people think about weird duff like a lot, you know,
So this before are that, and these articles were all
and another thing weird stuff with desecration of Catholic churches

(41:07):
where like some stuff was stolen from the altar, was
like these statuettes, So that was just.

Speaker 3 (41:15):
Uh, cult doing that even before they before they Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1 (41:19):
Evidently it is pervasive, evidently from you from these articles.
I mean, I can't quote them, they're they're just miscellaneous clippings.
But evidently this happens all the time, like out of
Long Island, out in Queens, out of these areas, these
Catholic churches get broken into and it's not just a
statue is stolen but it's weirdo like people poop, you know,

(41:40):
on the middle of the name, you know, whatever, whatever,
we go weird, the weird stuff is happening, right, And
and it just gave me the creeps, you know. But
I didn't think anything of it, but it gave me
the creeps. Then it gave me the bigger creeps. When
I read that famous book about Son of sam By,
that Queen's da guy that what are the famous paperback
whenever it was about. It had all to do with

(42:03):
the Westchester and the damn and that that aqueduct.

Speaker 3 (42:08):
You know, do you think the ultimate evil?

Speaker 1 (42:12):
Yeah, the ultimate evil, that book. And when that book
came out, and I thought about this guy with all
these news beans about skulls taking out graves. It was
not just teenage whimsical handles. It's more targeted than teenage
whimsical vans who do overturn gray stones and stuff periodically

(42:33):
put graffiti somewhere. This is more targeted towards some kind
of a market, like a market in this crud, you know.
And uh, and then when you came out, when you
when I came down here as bored and tears, no TV,
no nothing, you know, and of YouTube like radio, and
and I really got interested in this topic of what

(42:53):
the heck does this all mean? And it looks like
it means a lot. It really does look like it
means a lot to weirdos who believe in this stuff, which.

Speaker 3 (43:03):
Brings me to a question. So can I say about Pizzagate?
I have two questions because a lot of people are
seeing in this business of these we're now numbers up
to nine thousand sealed fire ollings in pace, So you
can see nine thousand sealed federal fire owings. People don't.
I'm sealed in dinats Are you familiar with that?

Speaker 1 (43:24):
I'm on a date because the hurricane cut my internet
and my communication. However, what I do. What I do
is when I look at the news, I get a
lot of it off of vote v O, A T
dot ca A slash, pizza Gate, but other things that
I contribute to because that's pedro Gate. Is the more,

(43:47):
the more bigger thread on there, I think. But my
feeling is you gotta take it with a grain of salt.
There's a lot of flack out there, because I experienced
it with nine to eleven. A lot of phony stories
are put out there to cause confusion, But some of
the stuff is like really very truthful and very worthwhile,

(44:08):
and you have to kind of like use some judgment
when you're looking at things as to what is a source.
But there is in there quite a bit of real
useful information. And what I think is a turning point
in all this is getting the SBII moved away and
getting Justice Department moved in. They seem to be the
better actor in this.

Speaker 3 (44:31):
So when you hear, though, do you have any faith
A lot of these people on vote and read it
have this faith that mister president, mister Trump is somehow
a secret anti pedophile hunter.

Speaker 1 (44:43):
I have a problem with that with Epstein, like I
have a problem that you have it with him. And
here's another thing. I want to bring this up because
I don't think you know this about Trump. This is
more ammo okay, And maybe some people on his team
are good. But I want know if you ever read
this fabulous book called The Assassination of New York by

(45:05):
Bob Fitch Robert Fitch. He's over at City College, He's
an urban studies guy. It's a Verso book publisher, and
the Assassination of New York goes through the nineteen eighties
and the developers and how they de industrialized New York
and it's kind of a model for lots of other
industrialization going on. And Trump is not a good guy

(45:29):
in this. And how they de industrialize it, according to him,
is you cut off the rails. You cut off the
rail contacts through the rail tunnels and the rail railroads
to get the stuff out you're making. And then you
bobber the small manufacturers and textile industry and people make

(45:52):
a lot of people make things in New York and
Queens and stuff. The little factories make all kinds of stuff.
The cloobream with rent increases in things, he des destroy
them and he was part of helping destroy them in
this real estate dash.

Speaker 4 (46:06):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (46:07):
And also Trump was one of those guys that would
when when we had those uh what was that with
the co op boom, you know where they sort of yeah, yeah,
people were renting their apartments and suddenly turning co op
and Trump but.

Speaker 1 (46:23):
Also also this loft boom. Those lofts were productive factories
for boding jobs. And then these rich people want to
live in some fancy place that used to like make
pods or something. Well, you know, you're displacing two hundred workers,
so you can have the place because you're bored with
your house. In lest gesture, it's like, I think gentrification
is murderer. I think gentrification is global. And Catherine Austin

(46:46):
Fitz talks about this a lot where where it's a
moving of money into mortgages, like as a weapon to
displace society and change money and change class and move
low income people on like kind of like OKI's, make
them all a bunch of OKI's or something. Put them,
put them out of their houses right and displace them.

(47:11):
And it's not like I used to live on the
West Side before I lived in West Harlem. I lived
on the West Side and all these East Side, bored
east Siders came over. But you know, you got a
boring life because you're a financier and you're a wall streeter,
and you'll never stop being boring. And you can't come
over to the artists area and get a good life

(47:32):
because you're you're yourself. You you sold your soul to
money and you got this boring lifestyle, and so don't
wreck our lifestyle. But coming over to our neighborhood, that's
my thought.

Speaker 3 (47:44):
Let me ask you this, do you have any regrets
moving out down to Saint Martin and getting away from
that kind.

Speaker 1 (47:48):
Of The only regret I have is it's hard to
have a conversation here because there's there's not a real
culture here. People don't read here. I miss literate people.
I miss conversations with people who know things because everything
here is kind of like Hollywood, and you know not much.
But going through the hurricane, however, you know, you don't

(48:12):
know your neighbors. You got some neighbors, you say good
morning and they empty their trash, you don't like their dog,
blah blah. But in this emergency where we got followed
up by a second Hurricane Maria, which made the sea
so rough, no food was coming in right, so we
only had the food on hand, and everybody here as
a little hurricane stash, you know, but a lot of people.

(48:32):
I had my roof blown off and the windows blown out,
so my stash was ruined. And so what we had
here are like these were apartments, and they all became homes,
so they're kind of joined the houses like a townhouse.
Deal about six of them, and everybody teamed up and
pulled their food together, and we had these beautiful community

(48:54):
dinners with really versatile and these people became really we
all became really good friends, really, and it's an odd group.
We have nothing in common, people from India, people from
Holland me. I mean, I'm not only American here, but wonderful,
wonderful camaraderie. And people were traumatized. You know, you're real

(49:15):
traumatized going through a high winded thing blaking your windows
and wrecking your home and wrecking your finances, and everybody's worried.
You're worried about water. You're worried about your life. You're
worried about not having water and dying a miserable death.
You're worried. You don't know. The army wasn't here because

(49:36):
the high seasons and the airport was partly destroyed, and
you got big fears, and at these dinners everything was
very light and kind of humorous to kind of like
counteract just the blind fear you have after a thing
like that, and it really psychologically is so helpful. So
I can't say a better place to be in a

(50:00):
tough time than down here. It was just such a
lesson to me, a life lesson of just you don't
know your neighbors man, but I got good neighbors.

Speaker 3 (50:09):
We only got about eight minutes left. Okay, okay, but
I got to have you come back. When have you
come back? We'll do another hour with you. But what
of all these topics we had planned to discuss, which
one would you like to cover next?

Speaker 1 (50:23):
Well, I want to discuss your wonderful show. This probably
a lesser show. Is unsung that you did on drunk
driving being very exaggerated in the court system, isn't it?
And I want you to do some kind of remix
with that show and go up to this YouTube song
called Radar Blues back when the truck drivers songs were
good from the seventies. And I tell you, man, I

(50:46):
listened to Radar Blues recently on a cassette because I
got a cassette player, and I thought of your show.
And what you should do is make a new law.
This is my idea. Make a new law. If it's
after dark and you've had a few coming over for
a restaurant, which would help restaurants if you had a few,
just put your blinkers on. Your blinkers will say, hey,

(51:08):
i've had a few, I'm going home. Leave me alone.

Speaker 3 (51:17):
You know that's free pass, free past, you.

Speaker 1 (51:20):
Know, and help all these resort areas like Maine and
Las Vegas and places. You know, these resort areas would
all do boom business because these nice restaurants are pretty
far away from the lodgings on these places.

Speaker 3 (51:33):
That's a great idea because you know, back in the seventies,
like you said, people would actually drink in their car
while they drove car, you know what I mean.

Speaker 1 (51:45):
But yeah, things, Just slow down, put your flashes on.
Everyone's known you have. You don't like avoid you, you know,
just just go slow, don'ncle fast, don't hurt anyone. Just
keep it slow and no one will mind. No one
will mind. And they should legalize pulling over for a
nap if you've had if you're snogger and pull over.
Don't arrest people for like snoozing in their car. They're

(52:08):
trying to like be a responsible citizen, you know.

Speaker 3 (52:12):
To think about that. You can't even pull over, like
in a Walmart parking lot and sober up because the
tops patrolling through they're looking for that. You know.

Speaker 1 (52:20):
I think it's easy money for the community. We saw
from uh, we saw from the sort of Black Lives
Matter protests, that a lot of a lot of wealthy
communities prey on the poor part of their neighborhood for
quick arrests and quick tickets and quick fines and imprisonment
to maintain their suburban lifestyle off of the poor community.

(52:42):
And this got to end, this whole, the whole, the
whole drama has to end.

Speaker 3 (52:49):
Yeah, Dan and Ferguson, I think it was like twenty
five percent or thirty percent had warrants. Everyone had warrants.

Speaker 1 (52:56):
Well, yeah, they get warrants on everybody so that they
can get these drect sentences on everybody. And they don't
do it to white kids. You know. I heard kids
talking in New York just on the street. They're talking
to each other, and there had been a like a
Wendy's robbery or some kind of high profile thing, and
these kids are talking about these are black kids in

(53:17):
the heart I'm talking about the police like snatching them
off the street for lineups, like kidnapping them. You know,
white kids twice, suburban kids don't have that happen where
a cruiser pulls up and they're on their way home
from school and they get kidnapped by the police just
to line up for some kind of a rape or
a serious murder charge. If that happened to white kids,
I tell you their parents would be down there so

(53:39):
fast with a big lawyer and make your head spin.
You know.

Speaker 3 (53:42):
Well, I say more and more it is happening in
the white kids because down here they have this crash
unit here that all they do in Henderson is break
up teenage house parties where the cops come crashing through
the door, beat up everybody at the party, and arrest
whole bunch of teenage kids for having a party in
a house.

Speaker 1 (54:00):
Well, you know, you know I'm from I'm from a
college town. And that went on to where the black
kids who might be supplying marijuana or whatever to the
white kids. You know, they all got these big sentences
and stuff. But the white kids, who are parents or
professors and stuff, they just got a free pass. Man.
I mean they my household was kind of drugged up.
You know, I'm not, but.

Speaker 3 (54:20):
What about my household was?

Speaker 1 (54:24):
Huh?

Speaker 3 (54:24):
Do you have recreational marijuana done in St. Martin?

Speaker 1 (54:28):
No? And they ought to because they've got kind of
a ruined economy from this storm. I think they should
make an area that is medical marijuana. Is my idea.
I think it'd be a great economy boon, but it's
not on the table so far, but I think it
would be helpful. And then people here, it's like anywhere

(54:48):
people do recreationally use some weed, but I don't. I
don't use weed myself, so I don't know all the details,
but it's obvious. But it's a healthier than some other recreations.

Speaker 3 (55:01):
So hell yeah, they just legalize their recreational pot here
in Vegas and everybody, everybody is taking back.

Speaker 1 (55:07):
They'll want it to be a big touristaurant. Colorado's making
out really good with with their decision on it as
far as visitors going upward and so forth.

Speaker 3 (55:17):
You know, got less in one minute, man, What do
you want to leave us with? How can people find
your website and find you if they want to get
a hold.

Speaker 1 (55:21):
Of you, Well, it's on Flyingcuddlefish dot WordPress dot com
and in the about tab at the top if you
want to send an email, you can send an email.
And I try to approve comments, but right now my
internet access is a little limited because of the storm,
so i'm a little I'm a little like forty eight
hours slow on the comment administration. But I do like

(55:47):
all viewpoints because my viewpoint keeps changing on the world
because of the because my information is changing so rapidly
in the last few years. It makes my head spin.
I don't even know what to think, but I'm worried
about things. But information is always good.

Speaker 3 (56:03):
I'm going to write a book after all these shows
have done talking to all these people. I want to
write a book called The More I've Learned, the Less
I Know, because the more information that comes in, it's
just more confusing and what the hell is going on?

Speaker 1 (56:17):
I don't know what to think. But I might be wrong,
and maybe they're all right, and maybe people are reptiles
and have a little lizard skin under Queen Elizabeth, I
don't know who knows, I don't know, and I don't
know if Trump's good or bad. But I'm I'm gonna
com on your side on Trump so far, he has
to prove himself a little more on some issues.

Speaker 3 (56:35):
You got to go into every investigation with an open
mind and see where it leads you. Mary ty flying
Cuttlefish dot dot WordPress dot com, thank you so much.
I'll be in to thank you.

Speaker 1 (56:45):
Thank you a lot. I really like your show.

Speaker 3 (56:47):
Thanks very much. Thank you very much. All Right, Okay,
they have a Mary Titus. What what are I got?
Dogs in the background hammering you got theer? But thank
god for people like Mary Titus. She's Miss Frilly, so
he's always commenting on my YouTube. And she had posted
some stuff on there about Epstein and Trump that was

(57:08):
really exclusive content. And I emailed her years ago trying
to get her on the show. But I'm gonna have
her back a little bit more organized. Mary Titus Flyingcuddlefish
dot WordPress dot com. Now, if you like the show,
check out our members members section at Oppermanreport dot com.
You could sign up. We have exclusive content in there.

(57:29):
We just put a show in there of a woman
who believes that she knows one of the Smiley Face killers,
and we have like a seventy five minute interview with
her and all her documents and stuff like that. We're
going to be loading up to in the members section.
That's not update you the interviews up there, but not
yet the documents. So check out Oppermanreport dot com. Become
a member. If you contact me directly, especially now that

(57:51):
it's the end of a month, we're trying to get
our bills paid. Email me at Oppermanreport at gmail dot
com and I'll hook you up with a membership for
a year sixty bucks. I give you thirteen months sixty bucks.
You email me or sing your paperal in voice. We
get you hooked right up, I said,
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