Figure 1: Ketanji Brown Jackson during her Senate Judiciary Committee confirmation hearing on Capitol Hill, on March 22, 2022. Kent Nishimura / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images. Failed to disclose the following.
By Anonymous Patriots, April 21, 2025.
In the hallowed halls of American justice, Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson stands as a symbol of political grandstanding over merit. Yet, beneath her celebrated ascent lies a web of ties to the Boston Brahmins—a self-anointed aristocracy whose fortunes were forged in the sordid crucible of opium trafficking, slavery, and British imperialism. Far from a mere historical footnote, the Brahmin legacy of blood money casts a long shadow over modern Boston and, shockingly, over Jackson herself. Her proven failure to disclose these connections, as evidenced by her Senate Judiciary Committee Questionnaire, entangles her in ethical fraud, violating the Code of Judicial Conduct and betraying the American people’s trust.
A Sinister Scheme Born in 1902: The Pilgrims Society’s Imperial Ambitions Dragged Into the Light!
Substantial evidence unveils the British Pilgrims Society as a clandestine force orchestrating a more than century-long plot to subvert American sovereignty and entrench Anglo-American elitist dominance. Founded on July 16, 1902, in London, with its American branch established on January 13, 1903, in New York, this shadowy organization, inspired by Cecil Rhodes’ vision of Anglo-Saxon supremacy, has woven a web of influence across politics, finance, and media. Its members, including Boston’s self-anointed Brahmin aristocracy, have profited from opium trafficking, usury, slavery, and imperialism, shaping a transatlantic empire that persists in modern power structures.
The Boston Brahmins: Merchants of Misery
The Boston Brahmins, a self-anointed aristocracy of the city’s elitist families, were architects of a ruthless empire built on opium, usury, and human suffering. In the 19th century, families like the Forbes, Perkins, Russells, and Lowells dominated the China trade, funneling vast quantities of opium from Smyrna, Turkey, to China in partnership with British merchants. Their faster American-built ships sailed from Boston to Canton, exchanging opium for tea, silk, and silver, fueling addiction and exploitation. The First (1839-1842) and Second Opium Wars (1856-1860) were crescendos of this trade, with Brahmins like John Murray Forbes partnering with the British East India Company, amassing fortunes while Chinese communities crumbled. . Many times they stopped in India to pick up spices like pepper in whose barrels they would stuff with opium to fool Chinese drug-sniffing dogs.
The First Opium War (1839–1842) and Second Opium War (1856–1860) were the gruesome crescendos of this trade. The Brahmins, alongside British firms like Jardine Matheson, backed Britain’s military campaigns to force China to open its ports to opium. The Forbes family, in particular, was neck-deep in this enterprise. John Murray Forbes, a titan of the China trade, partnered with the British East India Company, amassing a fortune while Chinese communities crumbled under addiction. The blood of millions stains the Brahmin legacy, their wealth inseparable from the devastation they wrought.
From Opium to Power: The Brahmin Grip on Boston
The Brahmins didn’t just profit—they parlayed their opium and slave-derived wealth into dominance over Boston’s economy and society. Railroads, shipbuilding, and banking owe their foundations to this tainted capital. The Boston & Lowell Railroad, a cornerstone of American industrialization, was financed by Brahmin opium profits.
Click image to enlarge. Click again to return.
Shipyards churned out clipper ships for the China trade, each vessel a floating testament to their moral bankruptcy. Russell & Company, the Brahmin-led trading titan, revolutionized opium commerce by using opium credits—rather than metals or cash—to settle deliveries of opium and spices, funneling these illicit gains into Boston’s financial arteries. Founded in 1818, the Suffolk Bank of Boston and the Suffolk System (precursor of the Federal Reserve) acted as a private clearinghouse in Boston, facilitating the exchange and redemption of banknotes among various banks. This system helped stabilize the currency and supported the financial transactions of the merchant families involved in the opium trade.
After the Slavery Abolition Act of 1833 ended Black slavery in the British Empire, The City of London’s Rothschilds, in concert with Parliament, established offshore banking havens to compensate slavers, including the Boston Brahmins, for their losses, ensuring their aristocrats could replace Black slaves with White, Brown, and Yellow slaves without financial ruin, perpetuating their exploitative empire. State Street Corporation, a financial behemoth, traces its roots to Brahmin opium and slavery beneficiaries like George Peabody, a deep Rothschild & Sons Ltd. ally based in The City of London, who bequeathed his wealth to Junius and J.P. Morgan, a co-founder of the British Pilgrims Society in 1902. See Accounts of Slave Compensation Claims, House of Commons, Mar. 16, 1838.
This wealth cemented the Brahmins’ political influence, intertwining their interests with the British Pilgrims Society—a shadowy transatlantic network dedicated to Anglo-American dominance. Founded in 1902, the Pilgrims Society united Brahmin elites with British bankers and aristocrats from The City of London, including the Rothschilds, Baring Brothers, and Barclays, all of whom profited from slavery and opium. The Forbes family, with their Chase-Harris Forbes Corporation, epitomized this alliance, merging American and British financial power.
The Pilgrims Society: A Transatlantic Conspiracy
The Pilgrims Society, uniting the Brahmin and British bankers like the Rothschilds, Baring Brothers, and Barclays, helped cement this evil empire. Founded in 1902, it advanced Anglo-American dominance, with the Forbes family’s Chase-Harris Forbes Corporation merging American and British financial power. State Street Corporation, tied to Brahmin opium wealth via George Peabody, and First Boston Corp., a hub for opium-derived capital, exemplify this nexus. The Ditchley Foundation and Freedom House, Pilgrims-affiliated groups, coordinated elitist agendas, with figures like Zbigniew Brzezinski and Jeane Kirkpatrick advancing their goals. The House of Morgan was mentored by George Peabody, who, having no children, passed his banking legacy to Junius and J.P. Morgan.
Ketanji Brown Jackson: Brahmin by Marriage
Enter Ketanji Brown Jackson, whose marriage to Patrick Graves Jackson binds her to the storied and sinister legacy of the Boston Brahmins. Allegations assert that Patrick, a descendant of Brahmin dynasties such as the Gardner, Weld, Russell, Perkins, and Peabody families, is a “masked Boston Brahmin” whose lineage ties him to the opium, usury, and slave trades, as well as the British Pilgrims Society’s transatlantic machinations.
Through this bi-racial union, Jackson is no mere bystander but a figure intertwined with a world of privilege and power built on exploitation. These claims, while contentious, cast her as an insider to the Brahmin elite, raising troubling questions about her place in their enduring influence. Her career trajectory only deepens the intrigue. Her rise through elite institutions—Harvard, prestigious clerkships, and corporate law—mirrors the Brahmin playbook. Her connections to figures like Caspar Weinberger, former Defense Secretary and First Boston Corp. affiliate, and James D. Zirin, a prominent attorney with Brahmin ties, hint at a network of influence. First Boston Corp., a Brahmin-backed investment bank, was a hub for opium-derived wealth, while Zirin’s provides legal work to interlocked relationships as a member of the Pilgrims Society.
The Brahmins weren’t just complicit—they were central to a global system of exploitation.
Interlocked Elitists: The Brahmin-Pilgrims Nexus
The Brahmin web extends far beyond Boston, entangling global power players. Zbigniew Brzezinski, architect of U.S. foreign policy, and Jeane Kirkpatrick, Reagan’s UN ambassador, were linked to Freedom House, a Pilgrims Society-affiliated group promoting Anglo-American agendas. James Woolsey, former CIA director, and Lord Catto, a Barclays executive from The City of London, further tie the Brahmins to British banking and intelligence. The Forbes family, through Forbes magazine and figures like Malcolm Forbes Sr. and Christopher Forbes, amplified Brahmin influence, shaping narratives to obscure their opium-stained past. The Ditchley Foundation, another Pilgrims Society outpost, facilitated transatlantic elite coordination, with Brahmin fingerprints all over its proceedings. Ditchely is peopled with Pilgrims members including The Lord Robertson of Port Ellen, Baron Robertson, Privy Counsellor, NATO Secretary General, Atlantic Council Chairman, Chatham House president, President of the Pilgrims (2004-2023); and Sir Peter Mandelson, current British Ambassador to the U.S.
The Rothschilds, Baring Brothers, and Barclays—British banking giants rooted in The City of London with slave trade ties—were Brahmin partners in crime. Their financial networks, including the Chase-Harris Forbes Corporation, laundered opium and slave profits, creating a transatlantic empire that persists in modern finance. These interlocks reveal a chilling truth:
The Brahmins weren’t just complicit—they were and still are central to a global system of exploitation.
Click image to enlarge
Ethical Fraud: Jackson’s Failure to Disclose
As a Supreme Court Justice, Jackson is bound by the Code of Judicial Conduct, which demands transparency and the avoidance of conflicts of interest—or even their appearance. Yet, she has remained silent on her Brahmin ties through marriage and their implications.
Conclusion: A Reckoning Overdue
Ketanji Brown Jackson’s ascent to the Supreme Court is a triumph for many, but her Brahmin connections cast a dark pall. The Boston Brahmins, with their opium-fueled fortunes and Pilgrims Society alliances, built modern Boston on the backs of the enslaved and addicted. Their blood-stained legacy lives on in banking, politics, and power structures that Jackson, knowingly or not, inhabits. Her failure to disclose these ties is not just an oversight—it’s a betrayal of justice itself. The American people demand transparency, and the truth can no longer be suppressed.
Relationship Map
Below is a detailed relationship map outlining Ketanji Brown Jackson’s connections to the Boston Brahmins through her marriage to Patrick Graves Jackson, their opium and slave trade activities, and their interlocks with the British Pilgrims Society and related entities.
Key Players and Entities:
- Ketanji Brown Jackson: Supreme Court Justice, tied to Brahmins through marriage to Patrick Graves Jackson.
- Patrick Graves Jackson: Husband, Brahmin descendant of Gardner, Weld, Russell, Perkins, Peabody families, linked to Pilgrims Society.
- Forbes Family: Opium traders (John Murray Forbes), founders of Chase-Harris Forbes Corporation, Forbes magazine (Malcolm Forbes Sr., Christopher Forbes).
- Sir Caspar Weinberger: Defense Secretary, First Boston Corp. affiliate, Brahmin network, member of the Pilgrims Society.
- James D. Zirin: Attorney, Pilgrims Society member, provides legal work to interlocked Brahmin and Pilgrims networks.
- Zbigniew Brzezinski: Foreign policy strategist, Freedom House, Pilgrims Society ties.
- Jeane Kirkpatrick: UN ambassador, Freedom House, Pilgrims Society affiliate.
- James Woolsey: C.I.A. director, Pilgrims Society connections.
- 1st Baron Catto: Barclays executive from The City of London, Pilgrims Society member.
- Rothschilds, Baring Brothers, Barclays: British banking giants based in The City of London, slave and opium trade financiers; established offshore banking post-1833 to compensate slavers.
- Russell & Company: Brahmin-led trading firm, used opium credits to settle opium and spice deliveries.
- Suffolk Bank: Boston clearinghouse, stabilized currency and supported opium trade transactions; used opium as a primary currency.
- First Boston Corp.: Brahmin-backed bank, opium wealth hub.
- Chase-Harris Forbes Corporation: Brahmin-British financial alliance.
- Ditchley Foundation: Pilgrims Society platform for elite coordination.
- Freedom House: Pilgrims Society-affiliated advocacy group.
Connections:
- Jackson’s Marriage: Tied to Brahmin families (Gardner, Weld, Russell, Perkins, Peabody) through Patrick Graves Jackson, whose ancestry links to opium trafficking with George Peabody and the British East India Company.
- Forbes Family: Central to opium trade, partnered with Rothschilds and Baring Brothers of The City of London; founded Chase-Harris Forbes Corporation, linking to First Boston Corp.
- Russell & Company: Dominated opium trade, using opium credits instead of metals or cash to settle deliveries, fueling Brahmin wealth.
- Suffolk Bank: Facilitated banknote exchange in Boston, stabilizing currency and supporting opium trade transactions for Brahmin merchants; used opium as a currency.
- Rothschilds and The City of London: Post-1833, established offshore banking to compensate slavers, including Brahmins, for replacing Black slaves with White, Brown, and Yellow slaves, preserving their wealth.
- Pilgrims Society: Unites Brahmins (Forbes, Weinberger, Zirin) with British elites from The City of London (Catto, Rothschilds, Barclays); influences Freedom House (Brzezinski, Kirkpatrick, Woolsey).
- Banking Nexus: Rothschilds, Baring Brothers, Barclays from The City of London finance Brahmin opium and slave trade; Russell & Company, Suffolk Bank, State Street Bank, First Boston Corp., and Chase-Harris Forbes Corporation launder profits.
- Political Influence: Weinberger, Brzezinski, Kirkpatrick, Woolsey, and Zirin leverage Brahmin-Pilgrims networks in U.S. and global politics.
- Media Control: Forbes magazine (Malcolm Forbes Sr., Christopher Forbes) shapes narratives to obscure Brahmin crimes.
- Ditchley Foundation: Facilitates Brahmin-British elite coordination, with Catto and others from The City of London as key figures.
Flow Chart
The flow chart below visualizes the flow of influence and wealth from the Brahmin opium and slave trades to modern power structures, with Jackson’s alleged role through marriage.
Click Flow Chart to enlarge
Timeline
The timeline below traces key events in the Brahmin opium trade, their financial and political legacy, and Jackson’s alleged involvement through marriage.
- 1800s: Boston Brahmins (Forbes, Perkins, Peabody) dominate opium trade with China, partnering with British East India Company, Rothschilds, and Baring Brothers; Russell & Company uses opium credits to settle opium and spice deliveries.
- 1818: Suffolk Bank founded in Boston, acting as a clearinghouse to stabilize currency and support opium trade transactions.
- 1833: Slavery Abolition Act ends Black slavery in the British Empire; Rothschilds and Parliament establish offshore banking to compensate slavers, including Brahmins, for replacing Black slaves with White, Brown, and Yellow slaves.
- 1839–1842: First Opium War; Brahmins back British efforts to expand opium markets.
- 1856–1860: Second Opium War; Brahmin fortunes grow as China is forced open.
- 1860s–1880s: Brahmin opium wealth, including Russell & Company’s credits and Suffolk Bank’s clearinghouse system, funds Boston railroads, shipbuilding, and State Street Corporation.
- 1902: Pilgrims Society founded, uniting Brahmins with British elites from The City of London (Rothschilds, Barclays, Catto, J.P. Morgan).
- 1920s: Chase-Harris Forbes Corporation emerges as Brahmin-British financial hub.
- 1940s–1980s: Brahmin influence in politics via Weinberger, Brzezinski, Kirkpatrick, Woolsey; Freedom House advances Pilgrims Society agendas.
- 1970s–Present: Forbes magazine, led by Malcolm Forbes Sr. and Christopher Forbes, shapes public perception.
- 1994: Ketanji Brown Jackson marries Patrick Graves Jackson, allegedly tying her to Brahmin lineage.
- 2013–2022: Jackson rises through legal ranks; appointed to Supreme Court without disclosing alleged Brahmin ties through marriage.
- 2022–Present: Allegations surface of Jackson’s Brahmin connections via Patrick Graves Jackson and ethical lapses under Code of Judicial Conduct.

