
Paratruther
Tony Arterburn
Show overview
Paratruther has been publishing since 2024, and across the 2 years since has built a catalogue of 114 episodes. That works out to roughly 120 hours of audio in total. Releases follow a weekly cadence.
Episodes typically run thirty-five to sixty minutes — most land between 57 min and 1h 3m — and the run-time is fairly consistent across the catalogue. None of the episodes are flagged explicit by the publisher. It is catalogued as a EN-language Society & Culture show.
The show is actively publishing — the most recent episode landed 4 days ago, with 28 episodes already out so far this year. Published by Tony Arterburn.
From the publisher
A deep dive into the realm of conspiracy, para-political, and the unexplained. Hosted by radio host, Combat Veteran & Precious metals analysist Tony Arterburn, along with Top researchers Chris Graves & Mr. Anderson.
Latest Episodes
View all 114 episodes#546 ART - Tomorrowland Markets
#545 ART -Paper Tiger Foreign Policy
#544 ART -The Herd Keeps Mispronouncing Reality So We Buy The Dip
#543 ART - Bread And Circuses In A De-Dollarizing World
#542 ART - Gold, The Fed, And A World In Freefall
#541 ART- The Great Betrayal And The Energy Squeeze
#540 ART -The Conservative Media Crackup
#539 ART- They Could Only Win A War They Made Up
#538 ART - We Are Being Pushed Toward A Forever War
#537 ART - Gold, Power, And The Quiet Reset
#42 Paratruther- Enjoying Your Apocalypse With Richard Willet
#41 Paratruther - David Icke & The Matrix Of Modern War
#536 ART -Operation Run Out Of Gas And Other Brilliant Plans
#535 ART -The End Of Something and other Dystopic Musings
Ep 151#534 ART - Operation Epstein Fury And Other Fairy Tales
“We negotiate with bombs” is the kind of sentence that should stop you cold, not pump you up. We sit with the Iran war narrative, the chest thumping language coming out of Washington, and the way “restraint” has been flipped into weakness while escalation gets sold as clarity. I’m not interested in partisan comfort food. I’m interested in what this posture does to soldiers, civilians, and the future we claim we’re defending. We pull the camera back to history because the present didn’t fall out of the sky. Operation Ajax, decades of intervention, and the concept of blowback explain why today’s talking points can’t be separated from yesterday’s covert action. When people say “you weren’t alive then,” I argue the opposite: continuity matters more than ever, especially when propaganda tries to cut you off from context. We also talk about how movements get hijacked, how slogans get weaponized, and why public anger is so easy to steer. Then we connect the war drumbeat to the economic world order. Trust is evaporating, and when trust dies, everything gets brittle: currencies, markets, supply chains, and daily life. That’s where gold, silver, inflation, oil shocks, and “price discovery” come in, alongside fears about digitization, surveillance, and the push toward technocratic control. If you’ve felt like the crisis cycle is the point, this conversation will help you map the incentives and spot the scripts. Subscribe, share this with someone who still believes war is simple, and leave a review so we can keep building a smarter audience together.
Ep 150#533 ART -What If The Energy Crisis Is The Plan ?
The markets are screaming, the headlines are hypnotic, and somehow we’re supposed to pretend it’s all normal. I’m coming to you from Texas to unpack what’s actually happening when gold sells off during a global war scare, why that doesn’t automatically mean “gold failed,” and how liquidity drives price action when investors scramble for cash. We also talk Bitcoin’s relative resilience, and why uncertainty, not just bad news, is the real volatility engine. From there, we move straight to the geopolitical choke point that can hit every household budget: the Strait of Hormuz. Using Martin Armstrong’s framework, I walk through how an “energy crisis” gets manufactured in real time: supply chain disruption, higher fuel costs, inflation pressure, and the political language that always shows up when leaders want the public to comply. We look at what happens when strikes move from theater to infrastructure, why escalation can linger for years, and how that reshapes commodities, currencies, and the broader economy. Then we get blunt about foreign policy. Regime change is sold as a quick fix, but history keeps punishing the same arrogance: the leader removal fallacy, the cakewalk myth, blowback, and the real human cost that never lands on the people who pitched the war. We also cover reports of 82nd Airborne movement, what “securing Hormuz” would actually require, and Iran’s stated conditions for ending the conflict. If this helped you see the pattern more clearly, subscribe, share the show with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find it.
Ep 149#40 Paratruther - Operation Ajax & The hidden history of U.S. / Iran relations
The cleanest stories are usually the least true, especially when they’re designed to justify the next war. We start with a 2026 headline swirl and a familiar claim that Iran has been America’s enemy for “47 years,” then we pull on the thread until the whole timeline opens up. What we find is a modern US-Iran history built around oil, propaganda, and covert operations, long before the hostage crisis ever hit the nightly news. We walk through Operation Ajax, the 1953 CIA and MI6-backed coup that removed Iran’s elected prime minister Mohammad Mosaddegh after Iran moved to nationalize its oil industry. From there, we connect the dots to the Shah’s return, repression, SAVAK, and the kind of blowback that can shape generations. Along the way we explore a strange side corridor of history: James Forrestal, early debates over Israel and Middle East petroleum strategy, and why the word “Ajax” keeps echoing in unexpected places. Then we fast-forward through the 1979 revolution and hostage crisis into murkier territory: October Surprise lore, the logic of backchannels, and Iran-Contra as a case study in how official narratives can diverge from what governments actually do. We also bring it back to the present with Strait of Hormuz stakes, oil shock fears, and the moral cost of decisions made far from the people who pay for them. Subscribe, share this with a friend who still trusts sound bites, and leave a review so more listeners can find Paratruther
Ep 148#532 ART -How A Strait Closure Can Break Treasuries And Send Gold Soaring
The scariest part of a new Middle East war might not be the missiles. It might be the math. We follow the chain reaction that starts with the Strait of Hormuz and ends where most people never look: the U.S. Treasury market, bond yields, and the global plumbing that keeps the dollar system running. When oil becomes scarce or simply feels unsafe to ship, prices jump, supply chains tighten, and countries that must import energy scramble for liquidity. If they sell Treasuries to buy oil and food, the “battlefield” shifts from tanks to interest rates. We talk through why this moment feels different: historic U.S. debt levels, huge deficits, and a world that has already been nudged toward de-dollarization by years of sanctions and financial warfare. We revisit the petrodollar story, the quiet end of old assumptions, and why central banks buying physical gold signals a preference for hard assets over sovereign paper. Along the way, we weigh the unintended consequences of escalation, including recession risk, market intervention, and the long-term damage to U.S. credibility as a negotiating power. Then we pivot into parapolitics and accountability: reports of catastrophic targeting failures and the human cost that gets minimized as “collateral,” plus renewed attention on bioweapons history and tick-borne illness claims that raise uncomfortable questions about institutional secrecy. We also touch the Bohemian Grove leak and what public reaction reveals about distrust in elite networks. If you care about Iran, oil prices, the dollar, gold, and foreign policy blowback, you’ll want to hear how these pieces connect. Subscribe for weekly analysis, share this with a friend who still thinks war has no price tag, and leave a review with your take: is the real breaking point oil, bonds, or belief in the system?
Ep 147#531 ART - Chaos, War, And The New Economic Order
A quiet milestone just rewired the financial map: central banks now hold more value in gold than in dollars. We dig into why that matters, how it happened, and what it signals about the next decade as wars widen, oil jumps, and supply lines creak. From Tehran airstrikes and a 90% plunge in Hormuz tanker traffic to China’s deliberate buildout of a Hong Kong gold hub, we connect the geopolitical sparks to the monetary fuse—and explain why real assets and self-custody are becoming survival tools, not talking points. We take you inside the mechanics: years of steady central bank gold buying, vault capacity expanding in Asia, and liquidity pipes that move bullion and power where headlines can’t. Then we follow the money under fire—on-chain data showing Bitcoin rushing off Iranian exchanges, a tell for capital flight and counterparty fear. Along the way, we unpack the pressure on small metals dealers, the whipsaw in precious prices, and the way derivatives and policy now wage “fourth-dimensional” warfare in commodities. Beyond markets, we question the moral and strategic drift. What happens when politics becomes an extension of war, not the other way around? We revisit hard warnings—from Madison to Rod Serling—about how endless conflict expands executive power, dulls public judgment, and hollows infrastructure at home. Strategy demands clear ends and steady means. If all we manufacture is chaos, someone else will manufacture the future. Walk away with a plan: diversify into hard assets you control, reduce counterparty risk, understand chokepoints like Hormuz, and keep dry powder for shocks. If you found this thought-provoking, tap follow, share it with a friend who watches the markets, and leave a quick five-star review to help others find the show.
Ep 146Wayback Wednesday 7-15-22 #3 Paratruther -The demolition of the Devil’s monument - with Chris Graves & Mr. Anderson
A granite manifesto appeared in rural Georgia in 1980, spoke in eight languages about remaking civilization after catastrophe, and then—after 42 strange years—vanished in a single day. We open by reading the Guidestones’ “commandments,” then follow the money, the myths, and the missing pieces to ask what the monument really tried to do and why it disappeared when it did. With researcher Chris Graves and the ever‑enigmatic Mr. Anderson, we trace “R. C. Christian” from a polite pseudonym to Fort Dodge, Iowa, where physician Herbert H. Kirsten—wealthy, patent‑heavy, and openly obsessed with population control—fits the profile the best reporting has uncovered. We revisit bank president Wyatt Martin’s secret files, caretakers’ odd experiences during sandblasting, and the UN‑linked translators who helped etch a global polyglot. Then we dig into what matters: a first rule that demands humanity be cut to 500 million, followed by soothing lines about fair laws and harmony with nature. If the entry fee is a purge, do the rest of the rules still sound enlightened? The blast footage is brief; the demolition was immediate. Why bulldoze a crime scene before lunch? We examine the choice of the shattered slab (Swahili–Hindi), conflicting time capsule claims and untouched red clay, and the numerology that haunts the timeline—3/22 commissioning echoes, 42 years of life, and an explosion the day after CERN powered up again. Whether you see coincidence or choreography, the Guidestones sit at the crossroads of parapolitics and the paranormal: elite planning, ritual symbolism, and the PR of power. This is a story about monuments and the ideas they normalize. From eugenics‑adjacent science to today’s “world court” and “tempered reason” rhetoric, we map how population control migrated from country clubs to conference stages. We also ask the practical question: will anyone rebuild the stones, or have they already been replaced by dashboards, white papers, and “resilience” plans that preach the same goals in softer language? Subscribe, share with a friend who loves hidden history, and leave a review with your theory: inside job, lone zealot, or ritual close to a 42‑year chapter? Your take could shape our next deep dive.