An Anthony J. Hilder Film (2017)
The Illuminati Records is a documentary film about a set of venal records produced by Anthony J. Hilder in 1967 and the journey they took to launch the great expose of the Illuminati. The film documents the career of Anthony who set out to expose the Illuminati and gave birth to the modern conspiracy movement. The records were read by Myron Fagan an American writer , producer and director for film and theatre and a red scare figure in the late 1940s and 50s.
Are you a coincidence theorist — someone who believes that power, money, and influence just happen to align by accident? Or is it more reasonable to believe that people with power, wealth and control, often work together behind closed doors, shaping outcomes to protect their interests?
Because history tells us: empires aren’t built on coincidence. They’re built on strategy, deals, and decisions made in rooms most of us will never see. So the question isn’t whether people with money conspire — it’s how often, how deeply, and how quietly they do it. but magic is definitely not involved.
Prison Talk: The Illuminati
That’s why I put a K to it. Cause niggas be talking to me about this illuminati shit while I’m in jail. That’s another way to keep our self esteem low. That’s another way to keep you unconfident. And i’m putting the K cause i’m killing that illuminati shit. Trust me, if these motherfuckers wanted to kill you why the fuck they gon’ tell Farakhan why they gon’ tell the Nation of Islam, why they gon’ tell this nigga in jail about the plan ? How do he know ? How did it leak to here, who told him ? The pope ? Who ? Cause they’re like “the pope and the money” come on man, get the fuck outta here. You’re so thinking about the money you’re not getting the money. Get the money nigga I don’t give a fuck whose face on there as long as its my face point- put that money and they accept it. And they do, believe me I tried it I tried to – everywhere I go with money they let you in. Trust me, that’s all it is, it’s all about money. When you got money you got power. If we unify, I guarantee if people keep supporting me, just buying my records, just going to my concerts, just supporting me Imma keep giving money. Right, Makaveli ? Everytime it go platinum i’m putting money up – and I ain’t putting it out there right, i’m just doing it. Everytime it go platinum somebody gon get a big check. That’s real. Not for nothing but just like I really do love motherfuckers who giving me this power. Its like being elected, I feel like being an elected official. Tupac Shakur.
“I put a ‘K’ to it,” he said. “Because I’m killing that Illuminati talk.”
While locked up, people would come to him with conspiracy theories — whispering about secret societies, hidden agendas, shadowy powers controlling the world. The Illuminati. To him, it was all noise — just another tactic designed to keep people, especially young Black men, feeling powerless and uncertain.
“That’s just another way to keep our self-esteem low,” he explained. “Another way to make us feel like we don’t have control. Like we’re not capable of building something real for ourselves.”
He challenged the logic behind the paranoia. “If this secret group really wanted me gone, why would they tell Farrakhan? Why would the Nation of Islam know about it? Why would I — sitting in a jail cell — be in on the plan? Who told me? The Pope? Come on, man.”
To him, the obsession with the Illuminati and hidden power structures was a distraction from the real work: getting the money, building influence, and helping the community. He pointed out how people get so caught up in the symbols — whose face is on the money, what the government is doing behind closed doors — that they forget to focus on actually earning and using that money for change.
“I don’t care whose face is on the dollar — as long as when I put it down, it opens doors. And it does. Believe me, I’ve tried it. Everywhere I go, if you got money, they let you in. That’s the truth. It’s all about power. And power comes with money.”
But for him, it doesn’t stop at personal gain. If the community supports him — buying the records, coming to the shows, showing love — he’s committed to giving that energy back. Quietly. Consistently.
“Every time I go platinum, somebody’s getting a check. Real money, no publicity. I’m not putting it on the ‘Gram, I’m not shouting it out. I’m just doing it.”
He likens the relationship with his supporters to something deeper than celebrity. It feels like being elected — chosen to lead, to speak for the unheard, to invest in the future.
“I really do love the people who give me this power,” he says. “Because without them, I’m just another voice. But with them, I can build something real.”
This isn’t about superstition or conspiracy. It’s about unity, money, and purpose. And as far as he’s concerned, that’s the real power — not the myths, not the fear.
Just action.
Are you a coincidence theorist? or is it more likely that people with money conspire.
With all that said, it’s tragically poignant that shortly after this interview, Tupac Shakur was gunned down in a drive-by shooting in Las Vegas. According to multiple reports, including Wikipedia, the shooting took place on the night of September 7, 1996, as Tupac sat in the passenger seat of a BMW at a red light on the intersection of Flamingo Road and Koval Lane.
He was struck by four bullets — two in the chest, one in the arm, and one in the thigh. One of the chest wounds penetrated his right lung, causing severe internal damage. Despite being rushed to the hospital and undergoing multiple surgeries, Tupac succumbed to his injuries six days later, on September 13, 1996. He was only 25 years old.
The irony is devastating. Here was a man speaking boldly about empowerment, unity, economic independence — dismantling myths about secret societies and refocusing the conversation on real, tangible change — only to be silenced by the very violence he often spoke out against. His death wasn’t just a loss for hip-hop; it was a loss for a generation searching for leadership, truth, and transformation in a world that too often punishes those who speak out too loudly, or shine too brightly.
“P Diddy” Sean Combs linked to Tupac shooting:
The Los Angeles Times has linked two former associates of rap mogul Sean “Diddy” Combs to a 1994 assault on singer Tupac Shakur and suggested Combs knew of the attack in advance. Then there is the connection with Puff and Epstein…
Amid Sean ‘P. Diddy’ Combs’ legal battles based on alleged s*xual abuse and reported transportation for prostitution, one infamous celebrity name that got eclipsed, despite making headlines for similar crimes is Jeffrey Epstein. Considering how a few months back Epstein and his girlfriend Ghislaine Maxwell made headlines as a few of their co-conspirators were revealed, Joe Rogan and Israel Adesanya recently dissected his possible association with Diddy.
During a recent appearance on Joe Rogan’s podcast, the professional Mma and former kickboxer Israel Adesanya addressed how the entertainment industry is gradually peeling its layers and revealing the dreadful monsters lurking in the shadows of the spotlight. Recalling how months before Diddy’s case, Jeffrey Epstein’s trafficking reports went viral, Adesanya noted that the rapper and the infamous businessman were closely associated with each other…
What a rabbit hole, I guess we all live in a Prison now?
But that’s all just a coincidence right? leave your thought in the comments below.

























Leave a Reply