Eyes Wide Classified: Globalists on the Run as WEF Leadership Collapsing and Epstein Fallout Exposing Evil Elite Secrecy
The Epstein Files may be reaching critical mass for globalists and royal elites. In Stanley Kubrick’s surreal tale of masked balls and secret gatherings, the powerful operate behind veils of privilege and secrecy — until the facade cracks.
The sudden resignation of Børge Brende as president and CEO of the World Economic Forum — the elite gathering once synonymous with Davos dinners and global policymaking — is not an isolated corporate shake-up. It is, in the estimation of veteran intelligence adviser for Prince Albert II of Monaco, Robert Eringer, a dramatic turning point: the globalist class is on the defensive as the Epstein scandal exposes decades of intertwined power, secrecy, and moral compromise.
Order the new book by Robert Eringer, The Spymaster of Monte Carlo
Brende’s departure comes as the Epstein Files continue to topple careers and tarnish reputations from academia to finance and politics. High-profile figures like former Harvard president Larry Summers and top corporate executives have resigned or faced scrutiny in recent weeks. The ripple effects are global — and they speak to something deeper than personal misconduct.
Eyes Wide Shut Film playing out with Royals and Globalists
Eringer, who built intelligence apparatus for Prince Albert II of Monaco and witnessed firsthand the entwined social worlds of European royalty and Western elites, contends that this moment resembles a real-world Eyes Wide Shut plot more than typical public scandal.
“We are living out the unraveling of a global elite culture that long believed itself untouchable,” says Eringer, drawing on his unique vantage point and years of interaction at the highest levels of international society. “The mask is slipping.”
Unlike the Kubrick film’s mystique, however, the exposure here is not fictional: recently released documents from the U.S. Department of Justice tie Brende and other influential figures to direct contact with Epstein, prompting both internal investigations and external pressure that ultimately made Brende’s continued leadership untenable.
Eringer notes that even the decision by Brende to frame his resignation as a move “to avoid distractions” mirrors the careful public messaging elites use to protect institutions while sacrificing individuals. But the broader trend cannot be so easily contained.
This moment signals more than one CEO’s resignation — it suggests a new chapter in the erosion of unaccountable power. Eringer is available for interviews to explain how his experiences within elite circles inform his view that the globalist project is shifting from offense to defense, and why the unraveling of secrecy may have profound implications for global governance, accountability, and public trust.
Relevant Article(s):
Epstein files: World Economic Forum CEO Brende resigns
OPTIONAL Q&A:
- How does the resignation of the World Economic Forum’s CEO signal a broader collapse in global elite power structures?
- Why do you believe the Epstein scandal has pushed globalist institutions from offense to defense?
- From your time advising Prince Albert II of Monaco, what did you witness about how elites protect themselves behind social and institutional walls?
- How did Prince Albert’s close relationship with Prince Andrew reflect the insular culture now being exposed?
- What does the fallout involving figures like Larry Summers and Bill Gates tell us about the fragility of elite networks once secrecy breaks down?
- Why do you see parallels between these real-world events and the themes explored in Eyes Wide Shut?
- Do you believe these resignations represent accountability—or are they strategic sacrifices to preserve larger institutions?
- What happens next if the public continues to pull back the curtain on elite power, secrecy, and corruption?
ABOUT ROBERT ERINGER…
In 2002, Prince Albert of Monaco appointed Robert Eringer as his intelligence adviser. He went on to create the principality’s first intelligence service. He currently lives in Montecito, California. Eringer has spent nearly five decades in the intelligence and investigative game. He began as an undercover journalist for Fleet Street and served as a foreign correspondent for The Toronto Star and The Toledo Blade. Infiltrating the Ku Klux Klan was just the start. From 1993, he operated undercover for FBI Counterintelligence in Moscow, Havana, and beyond.
TO SCHEDULE AN INTERVIEW, CALL OR TEXT 512-966-0983 OR EMAIL BOOKINGS@SPECIALGUESTS.COM
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