Catherine Austin Fitts/Soul:Ask #crackpot #wingnut #conspiracy soulask.com


In recent times, the concept of underground cities has transitioned from the realm of science fiction into a topic of serious discussion and investigation. Prominent figures such as Catherine Austin Fitts, a former Assistant Secretary of Housing and Urban Development under President George H. W. Bush, have brought attention to the possibility of extensive subterranean infrastructures.

In a conversation with Tucker Carlson, Fitts claimed that the U.S. government has secretly constructed approximately 170 underground bases, interconnected by advanced transportation systems, to serve as shelters for the elite in the event of a global catastrophe.
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Her claims are detailed, documented, and chilling: hundreds of underground bases, some allegedly under the ocean, many connected by high-speed transit tunnels — possibly even maglev or vacuum trains — built in secrecy over decades under the umbrella of national security.
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Here are just a few examples that have made their way into public knowledge:

The Denver International Airport — long rumored to sit atop a vast underground complex.
The Norwegian Global Seed Vault — a doomsday repository of all plant life.
China’s Underground “Great Wall” — a network of tunnels for nuclear and military purposes.
Russia’s Yamantau Mountain Complex — one of the largest known secret installations on Earth.
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Underground cities. Rooms like honeycombs. Obedience to a central authority. Swarm behavior.

These aren’t just metaphors — they’re encoded symbols used by secret societies for centuries.

Freemasonry and other esoteric groups often revere the bee, the hive, and the concept of a central queen-like intelligence. In their vision of the “perfect society,” humans are like worker bees — loyal, subservient, and expendable.
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It sounds insane. But so did AI, smart cities, digital currency, and population surveillance — just 20 years ago.

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