
This page was inspired by a widely shared Facebook reel—“Crisis By Design”—featuring Ted Gunderson (1928–2011), a retired senior FBI official, speaking about alleged government corruption (link: https://www.facebook.com/reel/4299870416916711). Rather than rely on short social clips, we’ve curated full-length talks and public-access archives so you can hear him in his own words, trace sources, and evaluate the claims with care.
As you listen, to the clip or review the links provided consider a basic civics question: when allegations this serious surface, where are the transparent, independent investigations—and, if warranted, visible consequences? If they didn’t occur, why not?
Ted spent nearly three decades in the FBI, joining in December 1951 and ultimately serving as Special Agent in Charge in Memphis (1973), Dallas (1975), and Los Angeles (1977). He retired in 1979 and later spoke widely about government corruption and covert operations, urging the public to examine primary evidence for themselves. Gunderson died on July 31, 2011; according to his son, the cause was cancer. Wikipedia+2Los Angeles Times+2
Internet Archive – “Ted Gunderson Chronicles (Prophecy Club)”
Full-length lecture upload; stable, non-YouTube host. Internet Archive
Internet Archive – “Let the Truth Be Told: Ted Gunderson Talks the Illuminati”
From Columbia Access Television’s public-access archive (about 1 hour). Internet Archive
Internet Archive – “TedGundersonReports” collection
A bundle of Gunderson audio/video files (zip + files list). Internet Archive
YouTube – compilations & playlists
Useful for browsing (quality varies since they’re re-uploads), e.g., “Retired FBI agent Ted Gunderson tells all.” YouTube
Standout pick
Let the Truth Be Told: “Ted Gunderson Talks the Illuminati” (Columbia Access Television, 1:00:20) — public-access interview with workable audio and downloadable captions. Internet Archive
Why this one? It’s structured (hosted Q&A), it covers his background and core claims in one hour, and the Internet Archive page includes an .mp4, an .mp3, and English VTT captions for quick scanning. Internet Archive+1
Quick jumps (approx.):
- 00:50 – Host’s intro (“Liberty and Justice for All”) and “not a conspiracy theory” framing. Internet Archive
- 01:17 – Gunderson’s bio: 28 years in the FBI; now independent investigations. Internet Archive
- 02:02–03:30 – Retirement in 1979; first big case (Jeffrey R. MacDonald / “Fatal Vision”) and his alternate account. Internet Archive
- 05:30–06:30 – “Disinformation program” description. Internet Archive
- 08:30–10:30 – DNA-testing / evidence handling discussion and claims of stalling. Internet Archive
Tip: If streaming is choppy, click Download Options → MPEG4 (video) or MP3 (audio). The .vtt caption file lets you search keywords like “FBI,” “MacDonald,” or “Illuminati.” Internet Archive
Many of us—neighbors and attorneys alike—have been personally bruised by a court culture that too often forgets it exists to serve living beings, not machinery. I’m still floored by how easily lived experience is waved away, as if the essentials of life—safety, shelter, livelihood, family—were negotiable. A free society must treat those essentials as unalienable and honor self-determination not as a slogan but as a practice: open records, real due process, accessible remedies, and consequences for wrongdoing. As you explore the recordings and sources here, bring both discernment and courage—verify, document, and, when necessary, speak up and stand with those seeking remedy, so justice becomes something we do, not merely something we say.
Given the people under scrutiny—actors on the world stage—it can feel convenient, even scripted. Perhaps it’s designed as a form of gaslighting, meant to mock those with eyes to see and ears to hear, until we doubt our own perceptions. Regardless of intent, the resulting ambiguity often erodes public confidence and leaves conscientious observers questioning what—and whom—to trust.
Lastly, for those looking to have lasting change I suggest comparing claims with primary documents, save what you review, and share any verifiable records so accountability isn’t theoretical—it’s practiced.

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