Crown Agents “Since 1833, Global Britain has been managed by a pseudo private system of Crown Agents today named Crown Agents for Overseas Government and Administration. This vast body exists as a semi-official status and describes itself as “an emanation of the crown” and is extremely active in Central and Eastern Europe with its greatest focus on Ukraine’s economic, energy and health management system. The agency is partnered with the World Bank, UN and Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and acts as a giant holding company with one shareholder called the Crown Agents Foundation based in Southwark London.”
Phase V to Phase VI Transition: The Financialists’ All Or Nothing Civil Wars to Prevent ARC
The Financialists—bloodline heirs to ancient Roman elite scum—are dead-set on shattering the United States via their Praetorian Regime and Devil’s Legions. Why? To crush any US-Russia-China alliance that would gut their global stranglehold and restore a world order free from their parasitic grip.
Core Truths
These Financialists are a ruthless chain of money-lords who’ve weaponized economic sabotage to topple empires, tracing from Venetian merchant bankers who rigged the Crusades to crush rivals, through Amsterdam’s trading nets that engineered Britain’s 1688 Glorious Revolution as a Dutch East India Company takeover. Now, they’re gunning for the US to block a powerhouse trio that could end their reign.
The Praetorian Regime runs double-barreled: ancient private banks, rooted in Roman and Venetian practices, fueling the rot in liberal democracies’ bureaucracies and post-WWII global outfits like the IMF, World Bank, and UN—masks for US-centric financial repression and elite wealth grabs.
It’s straight out of ancient Rome’s Praetorian playbook—elites hiding behind layers of owners and managers, knives to their throats, when rival powers threaten their grip, just as early Roman rivalries forced power to cloak itself.
Tools of the trade: Debt traps via unsustainable loans, stoked divisions through resentment and chaos, resource theft via wars and taxes, legal warfare (lawfare), and straight-up hits and assassinations. Pulled from Rome’s collapse by mercenary sackings, Britain’s overextension post-Revolution, America’s hundreds of trillions of unpayable debts and social obligations, and endless elite killings for profit.
Russia and China fought back hard in the 20th century, nearly wiping them out despite all-out destruction attempts. That ramps up the desperation—smash the US or die trying, resistance escalates the stakes for their survival, as there’s two models now for how to beat these fuckers.
Historical Roots
Financial elites have hammered societies with their seven-step Kill Chain: 1) Spot productive targets like Rome’s provinces or Britain’s colonies; 2) Infiltrate with agents and financial hooks, echoing Praetorian sway in Roman politics or Dutch alliances in Britain; 3) Debt-snare through mercenary dependencies or post-Revolution borrowing; 4) Bleed dry via wars, overthrows, and coups—like Roman assassinations or British colonial exploits through color revolutions; 5) Divide and conquer with ethnic manipulations and plots; 6) Trigger collapse, as in Rome’s sacking or Britain’s imperial drain; 7) Abandon the husk and jump to new hosts, like from Rome to Venice or Britain to Wall Street. In the US, it’s skyrocketing national debt, endless military spending, and cultural wars eroding unity—primed for civil war turning to fragmenting revolution.
Modern Machinery
The Praetorian Regime’s twin pillars lock in control worldwide: The private banking underbelly controls liquidity to ensnare nations, backing bureaucratic bloat in democracies and international bodies set up post-Bretton Woods for elite enrichment. Devil’s Legions—self-funded shadow ops of spies, crooks, terrorists, and power brokers like J. Edgar Hoover, the Dulles Brothers, and Meyer Lansky—enforce it all, with assassination as the ultimate hammer, from targeted killings like General Patton’s as a warning to deter system challengers.
Geopolitical Do-or-Die
A US-Russia-China bloc is their nightmare, like the rivals that sacked Rome—Russia’s leadership rejecting Roman-influenced integration, China’s defiance of predatory finance. Add a cohesive US having finally finished the revolution, and it’s an unmatched coalition dismantling centuries of debt-based empire on terms that bury the elites.
Fragmentation Playbook
Flood with forced migration to spark ethnic hatred and exploitable backlashes. Hollow the economy via perpetual wars that expend productive populations, recollateralize banks, and drain treasure. Ignite cultural rifts via “Mob States” and identity chaos to fuel civil war, revolution, and total breakup. Offshore “Spider’s Web” networks of private armies and hidden wealth enable asset seizures, as in Venezuela’s fraudulent takeovers. Underpinning it: Matrilineal dynasties pushing “unhealthy matriarchy” ideologies, fueling an Eternal War between individual freedom and forced collectivism—twisting understandings in neuroscience, entrepreneurship, and special forces insights on human dynamics.
These Financialists trace back to Rome’s dark alleys, honed in Venice’s counting houses where debt manipulation framed religious wars, Dutch trades that hijacked crowns, British colonial finance that bled empires dry, and now Wall Street’s global scale that’s stolen what remains of the Commons. They slaughter with ledgers, not legions, knives in an elites child’s throat, not armies. The Praetorian Regime echoes Rome’s Guard—bodyguards turned kingmakers through corruption and kills—now invisible, turning sovereign states into debtors under democracy’s guise.
Global adaptability shines: Brussel’s bureaucratic tangles as a testing ground, India’s potential as a new Praetorian hub for elite control.
Bottom line, this Sunday morning: Financialists are all-in on breaking America to dodge a sovereign-led global reset that buries their Roman ghost and favors real powers over predators. WWII’s financial restructurings—shifting empires—and today’s tensions scream the ancient pattern of subversion. Fight back with national resolve: Expose the invisible handlers, neutralize the domains, break the Kill Chain once and for all. Revolution, if needed, must prioritize that—or we fall.
Hold the line like Russia and China did, remembering who we are. We’re neither Romans nor their British constructs. We’re Americans, proud descendants and last keepers of English Civilization. Hold the fucking line! For ARC must stand and hold, or the world devolves into four centuries of consuming conflicts and wars.
…a majority (around 63%) of offshore wealth remains unexposed by mechanisms like the Common Reporting Standard (CRS), meaning significant portions still evade detection.
From Grok on January 20, 2026
The International Organizations Immunities Act (IOIA) is a United States federal law enacted by the 79th Congress and signed into law on December 29, 1945 (Public Law 79-291, codified primarily at 22 U.S.C. §§ 288 et seq.).
Historical Context and Purpose
The Act was passed in the immediate aftermath of World War II, during a period when the United States was actively participating in the creation and support of new public international organizations (most notably the United Nations, which was established in 1945, along with bodies like the Food and Agriculture Organization, International Labor Organization, and others). Its primary purpose was to facilitate the work of these organizations by granting them and their personnel certain privileges, exemptions, and immunities within the United States. This ensured they could operate independently, without interference from U.S. taxes, legal processes, or administrative burdens, similar to the protections traditionally afforded to foreign governments and diplomats at the time. Without such protections, international organizations headquartered or operating in the U.S. (e.g., the UN in New York) could face practical obstacles like taxation, lawsuits, or seizures that might hinder their global missions.
Key Provisions
The Act defines an “international organization” as a public international body in which the United States participates (via treaty, congressional act, or appropriation) and that has been designated by the President through an Executive Order as entitled to the Act’s benefits. Major immunities and privileges granted to designated international organizations include:
Immunity from suit and judicial process — The organization, its property, and assets enjoy the same immunity from lawsuits and legal proceedings as foreign governments (with the ability to expressly waive this immunity).
Inviolability of archives and immunity from search or confiscation of property and assets (unless waived).
Exemptions related to customs duties, internal revenue taxes on imports, registration as foreign agents, and treatment of official communications (matching those given to foreign governments).
Tax exemptions for the organization itself.
For officers, employees, and representatives (and often their families):
Exemptions from U.S. income taxes on salaries paid by the organization.
Immunity from legal process for official acts.
Certain immigration and entry privileges.
These benefits are not full diplomatic immunity in all cases (e.g., they are more limited for U.S. citizens working for such organizations), and they can be conditioned, limited, withheld, or revoked by the President (or in some cases the Secretary of State) if there’s abuse or other justification. Important Developments and Interpretation When enacted in 1945, foreign governments generally enjoyed absolute sovereign immunity in U.S. courts. The IOIA thus initially provided international organizations with similarly broad (near-absolute) protection. However, U.S. law evolved with the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act (FSIA) of 1976, which adopted a restrictive theory of immunity — foreign governments can now be sued in U.S. courts for commercial activities and certain other exceptions. A significant U.S. Supreme Court decision in 2019 (Jam v. International Finance Corporation) clarified that the IOIA’s reference to immunity “as is enjoyed by foreign governments” is dynamic — it incorporates the current (restrictive) standard under the FSIA, rather than the absolute immunity of 1945. This means international organizations can be sued for commercial activities in many cases, unless they qualify for other exemptions. Today, the IOIA continues to apply to dozens of designated organizations (via various Executive Orders), enabling the smooth functioning of entities like the UN, World Bank affiliates, and other multilateral bodies in the United States.
Powers and Principalities is a long-running podcast series co-hosted by Tim Kelly and Joseph Atwill. It forms part of Tim Kelly’s broader podcast, Our Interesting Times, and focuses on in-depth discussions of historical revisionism, deep state influences, psychological operations, media manipulation, and critiques of establishment narratives.
Tim Kelly (full name Timothy Kelly) is an independent podcaster best known as the host of Our Interesting Times, a long-running show focused on alternative perspectives on history, politics, power structures, and critiques of mainstream narratives. Background and Personal Life Tim Kelly keeps a relatively low public profile regarding his personal biography. From interviews and descriptions:
He is a traditional Catholic, married, and father to 7 children.
He describes himself primarily through his work as a researcher and commentator on “interesting” (often hidden or revisionist) aspects of current and historical events.
Podcasting Work
Our Interesting Times (launched around 2015): His flagship podcast, hosted on Podomatic (tkelly6785757.podomatic.com), with nearly 1,000 episodes as of early 2026. It features in-depth interviews with authors, researchers, and thinkers on topics like historical revisionism, deep politics, media manipulation, and cultural engineering.
Frequent guests include E. Michael Jones, James Perloff, Donald Jeffries, and many others discussing subjects such as World War II myths, technocracy, oligarchic influence, and psychological operations.
Powers & Principalities: A recurring series (hundreds of episodes) co-hosted with Joseph Atwill (author of Caesar’s Messiah). These are often guest-free discussions delving into conspiracy-related themes, CIA influence in media/politics, Frankfurt School critiques, and current events through a lens of elite control and psyops.
Joseph Atwill (often called Joe Atwill) is an American independent scholar and author best known for his highly controversial thesis on the origins of Christianity.
Background: Atwill spent part of his youth in Japan, attending St. Mary’s International School, a Jesuit-run military academy where he studied Greek, Latin, and the Bible. He later studied computer science in college and co-founded several software companies before shifting focus to biblical and historical research around 1995.
After college (where he studied computer science), he co-founded software companies in the 1980s, including Ferguson Tool Company (with early IBM programmer David Ferguson) and Amalgamated Software of North America (ASNA). Around 1995, he sold his shares and exited the industry, providing the financial independence to pursue full-time independent research on biblical studies and history.
Why did Trump kidnap Maduro? Oil, minerals, drugs, voting machines, or was it something even darker that the MSM won’t even mention? Was this an assault on the City of London? Tom Luongo lays it all out.
Tom Luongo exposes what’s really going on with TRUMP & MADURO
The statement “You cannot have ethos without telos” captures a profound insight from ancient Greek philosophy, particularly Aristotle’s framework. Telos (τέλος) refers to the end, purpose, goal, or final cause of something—the inherent reason it exists or the ultimate aim it serves. Aristotle argued that everything in nature, human action, and society has a telos: an acorn’s telos is to become an oak tree; a knife’s is to cut effectively; a human life’s is eudaimonia (flourishing through virtuous activity).Ethos (ἦθος), in its original ethical sense (distinct from the modern rhetorical meaning of “credibility”), denotes character, moral habit, or the customary way of being that shapes virtuous behavior. It is the disposition formed by repeated actions aligned with excellence. Aristotle ties them inextricably in the Nicomachean Ethics: True ethos—good moral character—emerges only through actions directed toward the proper telos. Virtues (arete) are habits that enable us to fulfill our human purpose (rational, social flourishing). Without a guiding telos, actions lack direction, and character becomes aimless or malformed. You can’t cultivate genuine ethos (moral integrity) in a vacuum; it requires orientation toward an end worth pursuing. In modern terms:
Institutions (e.g., universities) falter when they lose a clear telos (truth-seeking vs. other agendas), eroding their ethical ethos.
Personal character similarly depends on purposeful living—drift without aim, and habits devolve into vice or emptiness.
The phrase isn’t a direct Aristotle quote but distills his teleological ethics: Character (ethos) is meaningless or impossible without purpose (telos). To build one is to pursue the other.