Tuesday With Mike | Dig em Up! 40 Famous Natural Deaths or Assassinations by Poison

Spread the truth

KIrk Elliott Offers Wealth Preserving Gold and Silver
5G

 

📰 Stay Informed with Sovereign Radio!

💥 Subscribe to the Newsletter Today: SovereignRadio.com/Newsletter


🌟 Join Our Patriot Movements!

🤝 Connect with Patriots for FREE: PatriotsClub.com

🚔 Support Constitutional Sheriffs: Learn More at CSPOA.org


❤️ Support Sovereign Radio by Supporting Our Sponsors

🚀 Reclaim Your Health: Visit iWantMyHealthBack.com

🛡️ Protect Against 5G & EMF Radiation: Learn More at BodyAlign.com

🔒 Secure Your Assets with Precious Metals: Get Your Free Kit at BestSilverGold.com

💡 Boost Your Business with AI: Start Now at MastermindWebinars.com


🔔 Follow Sovereign Radio Everywhere

🎙️ Live Shows: SovereignRadio.com/Shows/Online

🎥 Rumble Channel: Rumble.com/c/SovereignRadio

▶️ YouTube: Youtube.com/@Sovereign-Radio

📘 Facebook: Facebook.com/SovereignRadioNetwork

📸 Instagram: Instagram.com/Sovereign.Radio

✖️ X (formerly Twitter): X.com/Sovereign_Radio

🗣️ Truth Social: TruthSocial.com/@Sovereign_Radio


Summary

➡ On May 27, 2025, Ron Partain discussed Mike’s new book, “Dig Them Up,” available on Amazon. The book explores the suspicious deaths of 40 high-profile individuals, mostly politicians, who died young and had upset powerful people. Mike suggests these deaths may not have been natural, but rather convenient for those in power. The discussion also touched on the possibility of medical malpractice playing a role in some of these deaths.
➡ The text discusses the political history of the United States, focusing on the presidencies of James Garfield and Chester Arthur. It suggests that their conservative ideologies and anti-corruption stances may have led to their untimely deaths, paving the way for the Democrats to gain power. The text also mentions the influence of Jewish immigrants on the Democratic party and the desire of certain groups to weaken the Republicans. The text ends by discussing the potential manipulation of elections and the stock market to influence political outcomes.
➡ The text discusses the political landscape in the late 1800s and early 1900s, focusing on the Republican party and key figures like McKinley, Hobart, and Teddy Roosevelt. It suggests that there were secret plans to establish a central bank and income tax, and that these plans were set in motion by the deaths of certain politicians. The text also implies that Teddy Roosevelt’s rise to power was part of a larger scheme to change the direction of the Republican party and ultimately led to the establishment of the Federal Reserve and income tax. The text ends by suggesting that these events were not coincidental, but part of a larger, pre-planned strategy.
➡ The 1912 election was a significant event in history, with Woodrow Wilson winning due to various manipulations. Taft, who was expected to win, ended up in third place due to unfortunate circumstances and political maneuvering. The text also discusses the role of Herbert Hoover during World War I, where he secretly provided food to Germans to prolong the war. Lastly, it mentions Theodore Roosevelt’s opposition to the League of Nations and his sudden death, which prevented him from running for president again.
➡ The text discusses a man’s strong support for war, which led to his sons’ participation and subsequent injuries or death. This experience may have caused him to change his views, leading to his opposition to the League of Nations. Despite his past warmongering, he was denied command of a unit in the war due to his age. The text also mentions his sudden death and the possibility of a pattern of sudden deaths among influential figures.
➡ The speaker discusses controversial views about Martin Luther King Jr., suggesting he was manipulated by powerful figures and his image was used for their benefit. They also speculate about internal conflicts within powerful factions, comparing it to historical events. The speaker expresses uncertainty about what to believe, acknowledging there’s much they don’t know. The conversation ends with a discussion about book covers and a recommendation for listeners to buy certain books.

Transcript

Hey to the Untold. His channel. My name is Ron Partain and It is Tuesday, May 27, 2025. The year is almost half over. Insanity. It just time. Time goes. Just time like it. It knows no bounds. I swear. Crazy. But today. I know, I know we requested, we requested Mike to do the thing with the Japanese because we just on the heels of World War II. But I think, and this is a smart move on his part, but what we’re going to do today is we’re going to talk about his new book that is available at Amazon in paperback called Dig Them Up.

And he’s, we’ve presented, he’s, he’s sent me a presentation where we’re going to kind of go through a few of Just, just, just a little bit, you know, just to kind of give a taste of what’s inside the book. That. Would that be an accurate statement? Yep, just a few excerpts. There’s 40 individuals in all, and I think we’ve got like five or six in the dock tonight. And these are high profile, mostly political persons who died suddenly and at a relatively young age. And they all had something in common in that they were pissing off some powerful people.

And their deaths were rather timely. You’re gonna, you’re gonna appreciate the, the comment that I just put on the screen. Yeah, it’s like it was, it was actually supposed to be donkey face lesbian typo. Donkey face communist lesbian. Close enough. Yes, I just, I, when he said that, I just, I, I couldn’t resist. I had to, I had to hear you say it. Yeah. So it’s, it’s. That’s. I actually. You remember, you remember the book, the Curtis B. Dahl book about my fdr, my exploited, My exploited father in law? Yeah. So I have quite a collection of PDF books and if you want it, I’ll send it to you, but it’s, I have an application that will convert it into.

It’ll like convert to text audio, so it’ll read it like it’s an audiobook. And I went through that whole. I went through the entire book in like, like four hours. It was, it was crazy. But man, I’d for. I’d forgotten so much from after, you know, I hadn’t read that book in probably four years and I’d forgotten so much of it. But man, what, what, what a piece of work that that chick was. Yeah. So anyway, not to derail you, but it just. I, it, it may, it, it may. It tickled my funny bone, so I had to, I had to itch it or Scratch it anyway.

But, but on, on to the dig them up. So what, what, what inspired you to do the dig them up? Well, you know, just over the course of years, reading, researching and coming across all these characters and how they, in one way or another had made some powerful enemies and then suddenly died, you know, I began to see a pattern. And I actually had written articles about this in, in the past, so something I had on the back burner because I think it’s so, I mean, I’m not aware of anybody else who has visited this subject, nor I.

Yeah. And it was just dying to come out of me at a point, certain point I must have accumulated just from memory maybe about 30 or so such cases of people whose deaths you could deem to be suspicious. Suspicious. And during the course of researching for this book, I began to take a closer look at just about every president and vice president. And I had got some feedback from readers who knew I was in the process of doing it. And I ended up with 40. So I discovered like another 10. And they all meet a basic criteria of relatively good health.

Suddenly getting sick, dying either suddenly all at once or health deteriorating over a period of months. All had done something wrong, let us say. And you can say their deaths were quite convenient to the powers that be. So it’s an unmistakable pattern. And you know, even if you throw some of these out as truly natural causes, it’s just the sheer volume of these cases. They didn’t have planes, they didn’t have planes that they could crash back in the, in the 1800s. Yeah. So. And you also have to realize that the idea of assassination by poisoning, this is all the civilization itself.

The Romans were knocking people off. The Egyptians, the Greek, every culture, Indian, Persian, they have this in their, their histories and their oral histories. Knocking people off by poison is ideal because you always have plausible built in deniability. Right. Because the symptoms mimic natural causes. And given how many people we know that they’ve shot, stabbed, thrown bombs at suicides, plane crashes, etc, of course, that this would also be one of their means of killing people. Right. But not a single one of them is ever even speculated as deliberate poison. Except for Napoleon, establishment historians, they will entertain that as a possibility, maybe a few others.

But generally speaking, it’s move along, nothing to see here. Heart attack, stroke, barium, no autopsy, move on. So, yeah, yeah, I think this is a very, you know, assembled all in one place. Like this is a very powerful little booklet here. Well, let’s, what do you say we dive into it? Yeah. And I, I I’m gonna pick out a. A time in history where it was clear that the Cabal was making war against the traditional conservative constitutionalist Republicans. I guess you could call them the Ron Pauls or the Donald Trumps of their day. And they start dropping like flies.

So. By the way, the book, like you said, is available at Amazon. My author page is Mike King or Mike S. King. Let’s dig them up. For those who prefer it as a PDF, it’s also on Kindle format at Amazon. At the website, real news in history.com, you can get it as part of the PDF package too. So that’s how you can get it. Great cover. I have. Well, I was a leader. She’s a student, Med student in Kuwait. She does my covers for me. Well, I did. I’m not trying to brag, but. But I mean, I.

I couldn’t make your cover work on the screen, so I had to make my own. I did that one. Oh, nice. Yeah. They really look ghosty in that one. Yeah, yeah. So she did. She did a good job here. I. I just didn’t do anything. I. I just didn’t do any fading. But. But this was. This was done really well. Yeah, yeah. So. But anyway, onwards and upwards here. The first person, James Garfield. Yeah. And again, the ones I picked out tonight, these are all consecutive, but they fitted. They fit a pattern. Yeah. At this moment in history, the Republicans were all solid.

One was just. They’re all like cookie cutters, really. They were all pro peace, gold standard, no income tax tariff, protective tariff, everything that was anathema to the Rothschild globalist agenda which is coming. And the first. The first one in this era who get. Who gets it is President James Garfield, Republican of Ohio. He’s an interesting man. Not much is known about him because he was only president for a few months, but what I did discover about him, he was quite brilliant, actually. They said he could write ancient Greek in one hand while writing Latin in the other hand.

So he was a real classical scholar. Yeah. So had he served that two full terms, he would have been someone to be remembered. But in July 2, 1881, and this is just three, less than three months after being inaugurated. The inaugurations were in March. Back in those days, he shot. He got to him early. You know the story, the old lone gunman, crazed lone gunman. But the reason I have him in this book is because the original bullet did not kill him. And it. It is acknowledged by establishment historians that he was killed by medical malpractice.

So you have to. Which raises the question was it truly negligent, unintentional malpractice, or did they finish them off? Because they, they are known to surround you with doctors. Once they get you in their hospitals, they can finish you off. So we don’t know. We do know they killed them, that’s for sure. We don’t know if the doctors came in, acted as the closers, to use a baseball analogy. True. Back in the 80s, back in the 1880s, the Rockefellers didn’t have the control of the medical system like they did when they, when they did their, you know, the Flexner reports.

They didn’t have control of, of the, of, of the doctors. But that doesn’t mean that they didn’t have control of doctors, of certain doctors. So, yeah, the standard here is reasonable suspicion. Right. And like I said, some of these cases could turn out to be. I mean, I mean, you know, part of the reason so many soldiers died in the Civil War is because of the infection of the wounds. Oh, 100. They didn’t have that kind of knowledge and treatment back then. But nonetheless, even by the standards of those days, people were highly critical of the doctors.

So we don’t know. It’s an open question. But what, what we do know is they got them. And right. When we learn about what he stood for ideologically, it just fits a pattern that’s going to unfold and really continues all the way up to the present day. This guy, you could say he was maga. And here’s my favorite Garfield quote right there. Whoever controls the volume of money in any country is the absolute master of all industry and commerce. And again, this is a period in our history where there’s no central bank. Andrew Jackson had killed it.

Yep. And during that interim period, that was the, the project was to get back in one way or another, slowly but surely establish a central bank and move to fiat currency. You’re not going to get it with a guy like this. So that’s, that’s his feeling on money. Interesting. I’m, I’m. That’s really interesting. This. Oh, this is still Garfield. Yeah, that’s still Garfield. So that’s a artistic rendition of it being shot in the back. He’s on his deathbed. You know, he lingered, he suffered for weeks, and it was thought that he was going to be okay, but then, you know, it was either.

Then the infection set in. I don’t know if they facilitated the infection. They gave him something to finish off. Like I said, we don’t know. But the important point is this is really it’s the beginning of a long string of attacks on these conservative Republicans of the day. There’s the, the assassin Charles Guttel, foreign born foreigner alone nutshell. That’s the way it works. This was going on in Europe. You recruit a low number gunman to take one for the team. Some of these guys actually would commit suicide after they made an attempt on the king or the President or Prime minister said I didn’t care but he was trying to get out of the death penalty.

And he did because. Well, you know, let me, let me check that. But he did say in his defense, I didn’t kill the President, the doctors did. That’s interesting. Yeah, I, you know I, I just did a, a real quick search on, I said what were James Garfield’s main, what was James Garfield’s main belief system? And it says President Garfield, the 20th President United States had a belief system shaped by Christian values, classical liberalism and a commitment to constitutional government, civil rights and anti corruption through his pres. Or. Though his presidency was tragically cut short by assassination, his long career as a congressman reveals a consistent ideological profile.

More. He was very moral and religious convictions and often quoted scripture and speeches. He was very strong supporter of civil rights and wanted government reform and was, and was anti corruption. Being anti corruption I think would have that, that, that right there probably is what. Of all the things that probably got him killed, that was the biggest thing. He was, he was solid and immensely respected by his peers and, and, and the public and very talented. You know he served his two terms. He would have been someone we would have heard about. Right. But they, they got, they got him early.

That’s tragic. Yeah. Now we have, he’s gone and his Vice president, Chester Allen Arthur becomes president. And again in those days, I mean the Republican party was pretty much monolithic. It’s not till you start to get into the 20th century where that globalist rhino wing starts to arise. And then there’s a party split which continued all the way to the present day between the conservatives and your so called modern Republicans, your Wendell Wilkies and your Thomas Dewey’s and your Dwight Eisenhower’s, etc. But at this time they were all the same, pretty much all the important ones.

So Chester Alan Arthur becomes President. He’s from New York, he’s a solid conservative, so he’s basically a clone of Garfield and he finishes up his term. 1984 comes along, he gets sick while he’s in office. Not interesting. And he starts to gradually deteriorate and he, he’s, he only makes a half hearted effort to seek his party’s nomination for the presidency. If he really wanted it, he could have gotten it because he’s, he’s the incumbent president now. But he didn’t. So Garfield’s out, Arthur’s out. And that paved the way for one of the very few Democrats to get elected during this period, Grover Cleveland.

But what I learned about Chesterton Island Arthur, in addition to getting sick just a year after Garfield is eliminated, that was actually they, they attribute his sickness or his seeming unwillingness to really pursue the nomination to his sickness. So. And had he pursued the nomination aggressively and received it, he would have died in office early on. Look at his date of death. 1886. Wow. So there’s another Republican that they knocked off and that opened the way for Grover Cleveland who served two terms but non, non consecutively. He won and he lost. Then he came back and won.

And in the second term, Grover Cleveland opened up Jewish immigration at the request of Jacob Shift. Isn’t that interesting? So you’re already seeing the, the, the cabal, the Jewish cabal beginning to dominate the Democrat party and maneuver to essentially kill off and weaken the Republicans and cultivate the Democrat party as their party. So this is, this definitely meets the standard of reasonable suspicion. And look at the age, age 57, right? 100%. Well and I, and another thing, I, you know, I just looked him up again real quick and it said he’s best remembered for his dramatic personal transformation in office.

Evolving from a political insider tied to corruption and patronage to a reformer and defender of merit based governance. His belief system is best understood in two phases, before and after he became president. So before he was president he was like corrupt. And then once he became president he was not, he was like anti corruption. So. Well, he might have just been part of the New York State system which was already shady back then. And sometimes you don’t really see the true man either good or bad until he’s actually got power, you know. Right, right. He was pretty solid.

He would have been solid. He, he could have gotten that second term. So his post presidency was the second shortest of all ex presidents after that of the aforementioned James Polk. He’s also in my book and he was, he was Andrew Jackson’s boy. Andrew Jackson essentially has an ex president anointed Polk and Polk, he leaves, he’s very young and he dies just months after leaving office. But that’s earlier in the book. The deaths of Garfield and the sudden terminal illness of his replacement President Arthur enabled the Democrats to finally break the Republican Run. And I talked about Grover Cleveland and how it was Cleveland that opened up Jewish immigration to this country at, at the, at the insistence of Jacob Schiff.

So I won’t go as far as to say that Cleveland was you know, a cabal puppet like a Woodrow Wilson. I, I don’t know that much about the man. I wouldn’t go that far. But I will say that they absolutely had influence in the Democrat party at this time. The shifts a few more years, Baruch starts to rise and they, they wanted the Republican Party destroyed. They wanted the Democrats. So there’s your motive there. Garfield Arthur. Boom boom. They get a Democrat but that’s, he does two terms non connected. And then in 1896 William McKinley is elected.

So it goes back to another right wing, pro gold standard, pro peace, isolationist, conservative Republican. You know it’s interesting, I just, I just looked this up because I was curious. You know, after this, after the Civil War, the Republicans it was, it was basically a uni party. The Republicans had full control. And so you had, Lincoln was a Republican, Grant was Republican, Hayes was a Republican, Garfield, Arthur, Harrison, McKinley, Roosevelt and Taft, all Republicans consecutive. Yeah, they, they would have won. And the Democrats at this time were associated with corruption, not the whole party. But the infamous Kameny hall of New York City was Democrat.

But if it wasn’t for these assassinations and sudden deaths and then the rigging of the 1912 election and even the manipulation of the stock market, conservative Republicans would essentially have had a clean Sweep for almost 100 years. Yeah, the only reason Democrats would sneak in there is because of manipulations and assassinations. But, but after Cleveland it returns to McKinley and McKinley was solid. Yeah. What do we got in the next panel here? The, that McKinley was, this is the funeral of, of Chester Arthur. Yeah, that’s Arthur being sworn in. He finishes the term and then he gets, he gets sick during that period, grief period and it turns out to be a terminal illness.

He doesn’t run. And if he did run and get elected, he would have died in, in office too. So, so that’s it, That’s a couple of biggies of the party they took out there. Well, and I, I, we, we’ve, we, we’ve talked about this gentleman before. Oh yeah, yep. Quite a few times. This is, this is, this is big because now we’re really beginning to approach the point in history where the cabal, they’ve got everything lined up, the dishes are all prepped. They just got to get the right people in there and put in the oven.

World War I, the planning for it is already in motion at this time. The idea of establishing the central bank income tax, getting rid of the tariffs, going to income tax, all of that is in motion. It’s been in motion throughout the 1880s, 1890s, but they got to kill this Republican dynasty. And McKinley’s elected in 1896. He’s solid. I mean, Trump always talks about him. They just renamed the mountain back to Mount McKinley. I saw that update that saw Trump and the white hats. They understand this history. That’s why they keep talking about McKinley and gold and tariffs and so on.

And his vice president is Garrett Hobart from my hometown, Patterson, New Jersey. So these are not exactly household names, are they? Garfield, Chester, Allen, Arthur, Garrett Hobart. But their deaths are actually history altering. Okay. And Garrett Hobart is just as solid as McKinley. Again, they didn’t have this factional thing back then. The Republicans were kind of monolithic, so they didn’t have to play this game where if you got a, a conservative nominee for president, you got a so called balanced ticket with a rhino or vice versa. Now these guys were all kind of clones of each other.

Hobart was just as solid ideologically as McKinley. They were also very close personal friends, as were their wives. And in 1899, towards the end of McKinley’s term, Hobart just gets sick and dies suddenly. And McKinley finishes out his term, the last year and several months of his term without a vice president. Oh, they didn’t have a vice president for about a year. Yeah. Okay. Okay, what, what happened now that you have an election coming up? McKinley’s going for a re election in 1900 and Teddy Roosevelt, Governor of New York, the war hero of the Spanish American War, is imposed upon McKinley.

And Teddy Roosevelt represents kind of a departure from this mold of Republicans. Okay. Which is why the shifts and the baroques, they all, they’re behind them. So he would end up taking Hobart’s place the following year. So what do we have in the next panel here? There they are. That’s McKinley and Hobart in the first image. Solid. Yep. Hard money, gold standard. In fact, if you look at his campaign poster of 1900, it’s. It’s men holding up a giant gold coin with McKinley standing on it. Because the issue of the day. Yeah, because the, the Democrats wanted to alter the money supply and include free silver.

And so wouldn’t you like to have those kind of debates today? Should we be gold or should we be gold and silver? How far we’ve come. Now we’re just paper, the solid gold standard, tariff, etc. But he’s gone. Just like that, he’s gone. Young man, 55. And look at his new vice president, Teddy Roosevelt. Just a heartbeat away from the presidency. So you better hope Nothing happens to McKinley. Oh, oh, look what happens. So he wins re election. That’s the ticket. McKinley and Teddy and what? Six months into his second term, he shot at the World’s Fair in Buffalo.

And again, like Garfield, I include him and this is a book about poisonings or potential poisonings. I include him because he was expected to survive. He was recovering, was in all the newspapers, good news, he’s doing well. And then suddenly he took a turn for the worse and he went to sleep and never woke up. Age 58. So the fact that the Cabal took him out, yeah, that’s, that’s not in question. We just don’t know again, if the doctors gave him a parting assist, who knows? But it’s, it’s, it’s a mystery. He should not have died.

And again, establishment historians both will concede that with Garfield and McKinley, mistakes were made. So that’s the question. Was it negligence or was it something else? We don’t know. Yeah, I mean, I just want to share this real quick. This is what you’re talking about. Yeah. Prosperity at home and at home, prestige abroad, civilization, commerce and all the guy, all the, all these workers holding up a gold coin with McKinley standing on top of it. Yeah. Very, very, very 18, late 1800s art. Yeah. Let’s see. So, you know, you look like you look at a, a campaign poster like that from the historical perspective which we’ve gained so many years later, you see a dead man walking just from a poster like that, right.

There’s the headline. Chief Executive the victim of the most cowardly anarchist. And that’s how they used to do. They had these, they had an infinite supply or an abundant supply of these Reds, these anarchists, especially in Europe, if, if they needed to whack somebody, the word would go out through the buffering labels, layers, and somebody would emerge to take one for the team. And that’s what this assassin did. He was another immigrant, Polish Red Leon. So he lingered. He was, he was getting better. And then he took a turn from the worst. And you see the headline there.

The President is dead at 2:15. His life ebbed away. The President died as though sinking into a deeper sleep. Did they put him in that sleep? Interesting. And with, and with this one, there were, there were conspiracy theories circulating at the time, so. But we just moved along. Teddy Roosevelt is now the new President. And we’ve Talked in previous shows about the damage that Teddy Roosevelt did. Not so much overtly but in terms of setting the table for Woodrow Wilson and actually enabling Wilson to win when he ran that third party thing. So Teddy Roosevelt was a, was a disaster.

He also set up the commission after the panic in 1907 which was headed by Nelson Aldridge Rockefeller. The commission then reported its findings and recommendations and their recommendation was surprise, surprise, we need a central bank and, and that’s what led to the establishment of Federal Reserve. So Teddy, Teddy set the table for the Fed and the income tax. That is the significance, the history altering, monumental significance of the one two punch of getting rid of Hobart and McKinley. That’s why I say dig them up, both of them and Chester Allen Arthur and James Garfield. So we’re seeing a pattern now.

Yes we are. They’re waging war on these right wing Republicans. They’re killing them. And this gentleman would have been Taft’s vice president. Yes. Yeah that’s right. William Howard Taft, conservative, Ohio again, cookie cutter mold. He’s the president and he was actually good. He was friends with Teddy Roosevelt and Teddy Roosevelt turned on him because he was expecting him to be a progressive and pick up where he left off but he wasn’t. Taft was a, was a hardcore conservative. So Roosevelt turned against Taft and The election of 1912 was approaching and this is critical because they had everything’s ready to go now because we know what happened in 1913.

Just to fast forward a little bit, everybody knows that so I’m not giving anything away. The establishment of the income tax, establishment of federal reserve bank and then the following year World War I just breaks out in Europe as planned. A few years after that U. S enters the war to Balfour decorate. I mean hell broke loose at this point in time but it was all carefully pre planned but it’s, none of it’s going to happen if Taft gets reelected so he’s got to go. And we’ve spoken about this several times before to that end, Bernard Baruch and Jacob Schiff and that whole greasy bunch Warburg they were, and this is all confirmed by Benjamin Friedman, they went out and recruited Teddy Roosevelt to go third party and Roosevelt tried to actually unseat Taft at the convention and that’s always an uphill climb so that that effort failed.

So then Roosevelt runs third party, bull moves progressive ticket and that’s what the cabal had in mind. We’ll split the Republican vote that way because Teddy was a Republican and we’ll get our wholly owned slave Woodrow Wilson in there. If we don’t get Wilson, we’ll settle for second choice, which will be Teddy Roosevelt. But Taft had to go. And there was, and there was an October surprise that year. Teddy Roosevelt’s giving a speech just weeks before the election. And supposedly he shot with the bullet lodged against his rib cage. He announces, friends, I don’t know if you realize what’s happened.

I’ve been shot, the bullet is in me, but I’m gonna do my best. And then he speaks for 15 minutes. He became legend. That was fake. But who knows how many votes he siphoned off from Taft with that stunt because you know, normies ate that up. It was all in the headlines. Colonel Roosevelt shop speaks for 50 minutes. So things are going bad for Taft now. And just 16 days later after this so called assassination attempt on Teddy Roosevelt, and it’s only six days before the election, Taft was again dealt a devastating political blow. His Vice president and ideological ally Sherman of New York died suddenly after a period of, he started having health issues a few months earlier then he just died suddenly.

Sixteen before the election. Taft was led left to run with a dead man on the ticket. So it was like a very bad look for Taft. Everything just seemed to be going bad for him and good for Teddy. So very, very suspicious timing. Another big name Republican conservative and from a big state, had a future, could have been a future president. He’s out of the picture. Taft ends up third place. Teddy actually got 37% of the vote. Wow. Woodrow Wilson got 41 of the vote which translated into a big electoral victory for Woodrow Wilson. All cause of this maneuvering and manipulation.

And you cannot exaggerate how important, how critical the election of 1912 was to cabal thousand percent. You know, I, I would, I would actually say if you had to pin me down, I would say that the 1912 election was probably the most pivotal election in, in our modern day history. Yeah. The only thing I would compare it to and the reverse thing would be 2016. Yeah. And I won’t even say 1932, even though that was huge. Fact is that election was already won when they crashed the stock market in 29. That’s right. Hoover never had a shot.

But different because Taft could have, he would have won without this manipulation. Have you ever, have you ever done it? Have you ever done any deep diving onto Hoover? Herbert Hoover? I kind of like Hoover. Wait, wait, wait until I give you, wait until I send you some stuff to look about Hoover. And you, you’re probably going to have a completely different opinion about Hoover. So Just. Yeah, well, he was considered by Republican standards, progressive. Okay. But. Well, during, During World War I, he was the one who was in charge of the. They called it the Belgian food relief.

And what he was doing was secretly giving. He was secretly making sure that the Germans had food so that they could prosecute the war longer. And then when the war was over, he took a whole bunch of historians and went all through Europe to find any document that would have. That, that, that would have shown that. That England was the one responsible and planned the attack on the Archduke Ferdinand in. Out of Petrograd. And they, they, they brought all of those documents to the Hoover Institution. And that’s where, that’s where our good friend Anthony Sutton gets all of his information when he writes a lot, when he.

Well, he got a lot of that information when he wrote some of those books. It came from the Hoover Institution because he had access to the records. And then, you know, he talks about how we funded the Russians and how so. So Hoover was responsible for. Well, I mean, Churchill put a hunger blockade in. I mean, Germans were dying. So, I mean, I don’t, I don’t know. Well, yeah, Hoover helped give relief to the German people. He did. He did. But that, that, but because they wanted. But if, if the German army was starving, then they couldn’t.

The war would have been over and they had to keep the war going to get the Americans in. Is. That’s, that’s the point I’m trying to make. So that was that. So Hoover was responsible for that. But anyway, I digress. That’s. That’s where that’s completely off topic. So, but, but, but in any event, so there it is. Nation mourns the death of Vice President Sherman. And that was the ticket. Taft and Sherman. And, and, you know, just everything that year. I mean, Taft would have won in the landslide just like all the Republicans did. But the combination of Teddy undermining him at the convention and then Teddy running third party, and then Teddy gets shot, and the shooting not only exalted Teddy and took both away from Taft, but they, they did like a, a 1995 Alfred Murrah building bombing routine.

They say, oh, these fanatics, they’ve been attacking me. And they stirred up hatred. And, and so the last few weeks of the campaign, everything was muted. You couldn’t say nothing bad about Roosevelt because he’s been shot. And it’s all the hate speech that did it. So. And then this guy died. So between everything, it’s really a shame. I mean, Taft would have, he would have Rolled big time. And I mean. I mean, sooner or later they would have got their war. Maybe they would have imposed another rhino Republican on Taft and then killed Taft. Right. That would have been an easy one because he was obese.

They couldn’t just say he had a heart attack. Going, going back to the book that I just mentioned, you know, the doll book, because it talks, you know, you know, that whole. That whole phrase of a baruch leading Wilson like a dog on a string or a poodle on a string comes from that book. And both Teddy Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson were in agreement to what they wanted to have done, but Taft wouldn’t have any. Taft wouldn’t have any of it. Yeah. Now they were all quote, unquote isolationists. None of these guys wanted war. So it’s like, but he’s gone, and then the rest is history.

Woodrow Wilson gets in and we, we know what happened to hell. That. Now, this is an interesting one in which I had to dig into this case a little bit. I. I know Teddy Roosevelt died around this time, and he also died suddenly. Now, you wouldn’t think anything of it because he was such a. Apparently such a good, loyal soldier and a cabal. Why would they want to get rid of him? Well, it turns out he was going to run for president again. Oh, really? Yeah, in 1920. And he would have won because he still had the big name.

And it would have. It was definitely. I was a foregone conclusion that it would be a Republican year. So that’s your next president, and He’s. He’s only 60, and he just died out of nowhere. Boom, just like that. And we go to the next panel. This is what I learned about Teddy Roosevelt. Now, you would remember Alan Cranston. He was from your state, that communist globalist senator. Yep. I dug up in the New York Times archives an article that Alan Cranston wrote in the 1990s, and he was writing about the killing of the peace and how the League of Nations died or never really became what it should have been because the U.

S. Refused to enter. And I’m quoting from Alan Cranston in New York Times. In 1945, I wrote a book, the Killing of the Peace. It was an account of how opponents of the League of Nations, especially Henry Cabot Lodge and former president Theodore Roosevelt, got the senate to reject the Versailles treaty which ended World War I. Both politically opposed. And both of them, Roosevelt and Lodge opposed and personally detested Woodrow Wilson. Both feared that the League might interfere with American domestic affairs. That as a. And it Continues on the next panel. As a League member, we mean the United States might have to submit to decisions made by smaller nations.

Roosevelt and Lodge, I wrote, knew that the bulk of the Senate and the bulk of the American people supported Wilson’s plan for League of Nations. In a meeting in New York on December 17, 1918, three weeks before T.R. s death, Roosevelt and Lodge, who was the chairman of the federal of the Foreign Relations Committee, agreed that the League could not be defeated by an open assault. Accordingly, they determined to destroy it slowly, bit by bit, piece by piece. They agreed that no matter what precise form the League of Nations took, they would seek to strike out its most, most vital provisions.

And when they failed to strike them out, they would cripple them with alterations until even those who originally supported the League of Nations would vote against it. They would introduce amendment after amendment after reservation after reservation, provoking endless discussion and debate. Eventually the Senate and the people would become divided and disgusted, full of doubts and fears. Then the League would be defeated. And that’s precisely what happened. And these were the key players were because it didn’t take a lot, Ron, because you needed 75% to pass a treaty in those days. Well, you still do, but now when they do a treaty they do fast track or some like that.

So. And I think There were only 96 senators at the time. Hawaii and Alaska not being states yet of course only needed like 20 something senators to kill this thing. And, and these are big men. Lodge is the chairman of Foreign Relations Committee. Roosevelt is the ex president who’s a living legend and expected to be the future president. Senator Warren Harding who did become president, he was against this Senator William Bar. So that was the core group. I did not realize how intense Roosevelt’s involvement in killing the League of Nations was. And what’s interesting is he once supported it.

This is one of Baro’s boys. What changed? I don’t know. I have some theories. And we go to the next panel. Maybe this has something to do with that. I don’t know. Theodore Roosevelt died today. Check out the sub headline. The great statesman answered death’s subject sudden call out of nowhere. Boom. Now as to the question of why he was so passionately and vociferously against the League of Nations. Could it have to do with what happened to his sons in the World War? A war that he demanded and he lobbied intensely for from the very get go.

And a war which he sent this boy, he was proud. He bragged about it. All four of my boys have volunteered. Well, two of them come Back crippled, shattered kneecap and a busted up leg. They both, both walked with canes the rest of their life. And then the youngest, Quentin, was killed in a dog fight. I mean, I don’t know. I think even the most psychotic man has got to love his sons. Right? Maybe he’s reconsidering. So he’s so love of warfare. I don’t know. He had a. He had a change of heart from his progressive ideals.

Where’s warmongering ideals? Yeah. I mean, this was Teddy Warmonger, one of the principal architects of the Spanish American War. He was screaming about Wilson dragging his feet in 1914 as to getting us into war. So evidently nobody clued him in about the Balfour Declaration. Wilson had to be restrained until the Russians could be taken out and the Balfour Declaration could be met. But this is a principal architect of this. He demanded it. And his voice was very influential. And he was, he was very busted up about. He told a colleague, this war is taking a heavy toll on our family.

I got two crippled sons and Archie is dead, Quentin is dead. So could that have affected him? If he’s got any degree of normality in him, I would think so. You know, another possibility is he did despise Wilson. So maybe he wanted to piss in Wilson’s lemonade bowl because he, he was very butt hurt. Because when, when we did enter the war, he wanted command of a unit. He’s like 58. He’s like 58 years old and he wants to go off the war. He’s a glory hound. Wilson administration blocked it. They said no, no way. So I don’t, I don’t know.

I haven’t. He got, he, he probably got lucky because the, the, the Spanish American War was nothing like. Yeah, yeah, World War I. He might have thought this was another cakewalk reality of what Spanish America war. I mean, come on. That’s like. I mean, and, and if we’re being, if I’m being completely honest, the United States, the only reason that the United States beat this, beat the Spanish and the Spanish American War, it wasn’t because we were awesome. It was because they sucked worse than we did. Yes. I mean, Spain was a dying empire. Yeah. You know.

Yeah. I mean, our military. Maybe he expected World War I to be the same. Maybe he’s carrying guilt of how his, his sons ended up. Because his sons were all gung ho. Because they were raised on this mythology of the hero of San Juan Hill and they all volunteered. He was very critical of elite families whose sons did not volunteer. He says in our Family. We have standards. People shouldn’t be waiting for a draft. They should volunteer now, set the example. And now his sons come back in this condition. So I don’t know what changed, but he was dead set against the League of Nations.

And it’s interesting, establishment historians who puffed this guy up, they kind of brushed that aside. Yeah, that’s interesting. I didn’t. I didn’t. Okay. But generally when they speak about the killing of the League of Nations, it’s those big, bad isolationists. Cabot Lodge, Senator Mora, Harding, Teddy, they don’t mention. But he was. Well, now you kind of. You know. You know, that’s the second time that you have. You’ve educated me on something about one of the Roosevelts. You know, you. You were the one that told me that. That FDR was absolutely opposed to a. To a Jewish state in.

In Palestine. I did not know that. And now. And I did not know that he had. You know, maybe he. Maybe he turned on the globalist. I think that’s. That’s. That’s interesting. Yeah. Yeah. It’s fascinating that he went to this to this extent and then he just dies. They weren’t going to let him be president again, and he would have really been problematic. And, you know, I’m no fan of this guy. I wrote a book on him called Teddy the Terrible, okay? So, I mean, even. Even if he did turn against him, nothing could redeem what he did, right, by installing that bastard Woodrow Wilson and all the disasters that came out of it.

However, you know, there’s. There’s also a history sometimes of politicians are. They’re brought up and they rise and rise, and then you obtain a position and they get too big for their britches. It’s sort of like these mafia movies. You know, the guy starts getting big, he’s making money, he thinks he can start doing his own deals, and then he disrespects the higher ups. They whack him like you’re nothing. They brought you up. They could tear you down. Absolutely. So this is really. This was a surprise to me. You know, I knew about his sudden death, but I never really pieced the two together because I did not know until I read Cranston’s piece about.

And then I was able to corroborate with other sources how involved he was. It was his strategy, him and Cabot Lodge, to use all of these amendments because actually that thing was going to sail through because it was being promoted. We had this horrible war. We’ll have a League of Nations. It’ll Never happen again. And Woodrow Wilson was going around the country on a whistle stop tour and the majority of American people were kind of in favor of it. But this core group of senators and men of this stature, first and foremost, Roosevelt and Cabot Lodge killed the League.

That’s interesting. Imagine how pissed the cabal is. They engineered the whole war for this purpose primarily because that’s their framework of the world government. And because they didn’t get it, they went right back to the drawing board. We’re going to have a. Got to have a second war now. Yeah. And here’s William Harding. And here’s Warren Harding again, one of that core group of senators that killed the League of Nations. And he gets the presidential nomination, which Teddy would have surely gotten in 1920. And by this time the country is sick of Woodrow Wilson and the big government and the taxes in the war.

And Warren Harding runs on a platform pledging a return to normalcy. He’s elected with the large. Still to this day. It’s the largest presidential landslide in American history. Really. It was 2 to 1 on the popular vote. So that was huge. I think it was even bigger than Roosevelt’s victory in, in 32. So he swept into office massive tax cuts, massive cuts in spending. And we were in a depression, a post World War I Wilsonian and depression. And we immediately come out of it, cracks down and crushes the emerging communist revolution in this country. It’s referred to as the first red scare.

It was pretty bad what they were doing, blowing up bombs all over the country, inciting riots. So he, that was suppressed. And quickly we got back to being normal. Well, and there was a, there was a small depression that happened what like two in, in 1921 or something. And he, I, I think Harding. Wasn’t Harding president at the time? Well, he just became president right, right away. The tax cuts, spending cuts. So it was, it was, it was sharp and severe, but very short lived in large measure due to his policies. And I want to read you actually a little winded.

I’ll have you read this excerpt. Okay. Yeah, no worries. His inaugural address, the recorded progress of our republic. I love how he says Republicans opposed to fucking democracy material and spiritually proves the wisdom of the inherited policy of non involvement in old old world affairs. Confident in our ability to work out our own destiny and jealously guarding our right to do so. We seek no part in directing the destinies of the old world. We do not mean to be entangled. We will accept no responsibility except our as our own conscience and judgment. In each instant may determine.

We sense all the call of the human heart for fellowship, fraternity and cooperation. We create friendship and harbor no hate. But America, our America, the America built on the foundation laid by the inspired fathers can be a party to no permanent military alliance. It can. It can enter into no political commitments nor assume any economic obligations which will subject our decisions to any other than our own authority. It’s maga. And there’s this campaign poster, by the way, below that 1920 look at the slogan America First. I like that. So you see, this is all a continuation of this same history leading us right up until Trump and in the Q operation.

America First. And surprise, surprise, President Harding dead apoplexy snuffs out his life without a moment’s warning. Just like Ted Roosevelt, another one in his 50s. So are you seeing a pattern here, Ron? I am seeing a pattern here, yeah. You know, it’s, it’s interesting that you, you, you, you talk about this because I, I think of, I think of like mlk. Right. MLK was as, as I understand it, Martin Luther King was basically a communist. Yeah. And that a lot of, you know, he was not a reverend and he was not a doctor. His doctors, his doctoral thesis was plagiarized.

Completely plagiarized. Yeah. And he was not a reverend. That was just a title. It was kind of an hon. That they gave him because it just. But, but he, he was an extraordinarily charismatic speaker and he, he wasn’t, he was, he was pretty corrupt, actually. I mean, she, when, when, when he was shot, he was like, he was, he was like with two hookers in a hotel. Right. So. But my understanding is, is that, you know, he, he was essentially being run by, by men with big noses and little hats. And they, they had his whole speeches and everything.

I mean it was all, it was basically, it was all laid out for him. All he had to do was show up. But the, but as I understand it, he started to kind of come around and see things for what they were because he was, you know, he was. When, when, if you’re involved in that work world, you see things and you’re like, wait a second, that doesn’t necessarily add up. And he, he probably recognized that the, or, or the powers that be probably recognized that if he was going to turn against us, he would be a very dangerous enemy to have.

So the best thing to do is just to kill him and martyr him while he, while he, while everybody still sees him in this particular light. And I, that’s just from some, some cursory. Research I’ve done, but that actually to me that makes the most sense of why they would have. Well, I, I understand I haven’t confirmed this, but I, I heard a few times that he was sympathetic to the Palestinian cause. Which, which, which means he would have been, it doesn’t mean he actually gave, gives a, about Palestinians, but it would have been, he might have been like in the Roosevelt camp because, because you’ve got this divide and it’s pretty brutal.

Even though they’re part of the same mafia class, right, which is Jewish dominated, there’s these two factions that often clash and it could be very vicious because the globalist Marxists did not, they’re not too crazy about the whole Zionist thing. They, they see it actually as an impediment to progress. It’s like, you know, because of you guys, we can’t get the Arabs on board. Right? It’s kind of like that. And it could be very vicious. I mean, forget it was Zionists that killed Rabin of Israel. Right? Well, yeah, I, I think the, because I’ve had this discussion with several friends many times and you know, we kind of come to the conclusion that there are multiple factions out there.

And right now they’re, they’re fact that, you know, these multiple factions have come together because they, their, their desires are congruent. But once they actually get into the position where they want to be, it’s kind of like Chiang Kai Shek and Mao Zedong in, you know, fighting, fighting the, the Japanese. Well, okay, well, if they’re fight, if the Japanese are coming in and we’re gonna fight them, then we’re gonna, you know, we’ll unify and fight, but then ultimately we’re gonna go back to fighting each other. So, you know, it’s, you know, I, I, I don’t really know what to believe.

I, I feel like, I, I feel like there’s, I know a lot, but I feel like there’s a lot that I don’t know. And, and, and there’s a lot more that I don’t know than I do know. You know what I mean? Well, yeah, his, his death really enabled his handlers to unload somebody who was almost becoming a liability. He was not popular at the time of his death. Yeah, I’m of blacks, but most white folks saw him as a troublemaker or like the Al Sharpton of his day. So there was a limit to his usefulness.

Right. Maybe they just threw him out. They say, hey, we make him this guy, okay, We’ve got everything we can out of them people, they’ve got MLK fatigue, civil rights fatigue. We knock them off, boom, we got a martyr, and we can take it to a level. Yep. That’s a possibility too, because that’s certainly how it turned out. He would have just faded away into obscurity. 100 and, and now, now he’s got freaking streets and. Oh, gosh. I mean, he’s got safest street in the hood mlk. You ever noticed that? Yeah, that’s, it’s, it’s, it’s ridiculous.

Yeah. So, guys, I got my copy. So go, go to Amazon. And the link, the link should be in the description. If it’s not, there’s definitely a link to Mike’s Amazon store in the description where you can get this book. So. And I have, I have this one. I’ve got my divine. I got the Turin book. What a fan. God, look at that. I’ve got this. I got the real Roosevelts. And then I’ve got my side of the story. So can’t get. These are people people. Little by little will collect these. Such nice artwork. I used to have the late, great David D’s.

Used to do my covers. Like, I would come up with the concept and say, this is what I want, and I would send them the images. And he died suddenly too. Who knows? You’re familiar with David D’s? I don’t, I don’t, I don’t recognize that. I don’t recognize. Probably if you ever visit rents.com, his work would be all over there. Okay. Hardcore. Hardcore. And then he passed away. And then like, oh, that sucks. But, you know, then God sent me this reader from Kuwait and puts together some images that she. I said, oh, did you do that yourself? I said, listen, I’m looking for.

She does it for free. These used to charge me. Hey, I, I, I, I think I kind of recognize. What was it? Oh, I don’t have. Where’s my 911 one? I have a 911 one someplace, but the 911 one, I think I, I got some, some amateur out in California. Yeah, somebody. But yeah, and I, I love to do that kind of stuff too. So. Yeah, I love, I love doing that. Can you do the fade? Oh, yeah, I can do 100. There’s not, there’s nothing there’s. I, I’m, I’m, I’m pretty proficient at Photoshop. Yeah. Yeah, yeah.

Okay. That’s good to know. Yeah. Yeah. So. And now that I have AI to help me with stuff. Oh, my God. It’s like like the ghost. The ghost like image. That’s what I meant. Like. Oh yeah. Oh yeah. Well, I mean that. Yeah. I mean. So that would have been a like if I did here. In fact, I’ll just show you real quick. The. If I would. If I would have done this. It would have. It would have. Let’s see here. Open it. Because I could have. I could have made those. Uh. I. I all. It was all has to do with transparency and the.

The. If you just. Those were 100 transparent but I could have made them like about a 80 transparent and that could have. That would have made them. Yeah, here we go. Yeah, this is you. You’ll like this because this is. This is making them. Mike, this is making a more ghostly. No, I. I didn’t do it in. In a. I didn’t do this anything in like fancy. I just. I’m doing it in a hurry. So. There we go. All right, close this. Go here and here and here. Okay, here we go. So There we go. Well, of course it’s going to do that.

There we go. Area it. I’ll send. I’ll. I’ll email it to you and you can see what I did. So. Because I’m not gonna. I’m not gonna keep you on. I’m not gonna give you on hold forever for that. That’s stupid. So. All right, guys. Hey, thanks for. Thanks for your time tonight. Apologize for the. With that little hookup. The end. But yeah, everybody. Everybody go out and get. Get a copy of that book and. And also get a copy of the. The. As well as the. Was it the. Yeah. If you go to the Amazon author page, Mike King or Mike S.

King, you’ll see them all. The Bad War you can only get at the website. The Crash Course. The Crash Course NWO because that’s. This is. This is actually the starting point because it gives you a framework of the whole shebang. Yeah. And then you could add meat to the bones with the. With the other books, you know. Yeah, 100%. So definitely. Definitely go get. Get some of those and thank you, Mr. King for another great presentation and look forward to seeing you next week. All right, have a good night. I’ll see. I’ll shoot you that email over here shortly.

Okay. Alrighty. Okay, take everybody. Good night. Okay.
[tr:tra].

Author

KIrk Elliott Offers Wealth Preserving Gold and Silver

Spread the truth

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

SIGN UP NOW!

Subscribe to our newsletter for the latest trends, news, and exclusive content. Stay informed and connected with updates directly to your inbox. Join us now!

By clicking "Subscribe Free Now," you agree to receive emails from My Patriots Network about our updates, community, and sponsors. You can unsubscribe anytime. Read our Privacy Policy.