The Brotherhoods:

🐖 Harvard’s Billion-Dollar PIG,

☠️ YALE Skull & Bones, and

🏛️ The Wharton School

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If you ever find yourself walking past a plain door at Harvard with no sign, no bell, and no welcome mat, keep walking. What lies behind it isn’t for the curious—it’s for the chosen. Because while America claims to run on democracy, merit, and elbow grease, the truth is far simpler: it runs on pig emblems, whispered names, and men who’ve never interviewed for anything in their lives.

There’s a battle playing out behind the scenes of the American empire. At Yale, Skull and Bones once crowned kings and spies in a shadowy chapel of ambition. At Wharton, today’s titans crunch spreadsheets like sacred texts, flipping billion-dollar deals before breakfast. But the Porcellian Club? The Pig? It doesn’t fight. It waits. Because old money knows it’s not about headlines—it’s about handshakes, trust funds, and legacy power that doesn’t expire with election cycles or market crashes.

Now, I’ve heard of clubs where men drink whiskey, tell lies, and leave their problems at the door. But this? This is where men create your problems, buy the whiskey company, and then charge you interest on the bottle you didn’t know you financed.

So if you want to understand how power really moves in America, don’t follow the news—follow the neckties. The ones with pigs, not patterns. Because those are the ones who knew your interest rate before you signed the loan.

The Pig Endures

Don’t mistake this for conspiracy. Conspiracies are clumsy things that need meetings, masks, and manifestos. This? This is tradition. It’s a dynasty where the only initiation ritual is birthright and where silence speaks louder than any campaign promise.

Yale once whispered into the ears of presidents and CIA chiefs. Wharton now roars across Wall Street with algorithms and activist capital. But the Porcellian? It doesn’t whisper or roar. It just adjusts its cufflinks and makes a phone call—and the world bends, just a little.

While most Americans pass down fishing rods or casserole recipes, the sons of Porcellian pass on control—subtle, surgical, and soaked in inheritance. If Skull and Bones builds the spy, and Wharton builds the banker, the Pig builds the one who owns both.

So next time you spot a tie with a tiny pig on it, tip your hat. You may not know the man, but he likely knows your mortgage rate, your senator’s talking points, and who’s about to run the Federal Reserve.

Because in this quiet war between legacy, strategy, and ambition… the Pig never squeals. It simply waits.

Let’s get into some of the details


 

The Billion-Dollar Brotherhood

Behind an unmarked door at Harvard lies a society more powerful than many sovereign states. With no sign or address, this secretive enclave—known as the Porcellian Club—has shaped America’s financial and political elite for over two centuries. Identifiable only by pig-themed jewelry or watch chains, members of this $7 billion network possess the power to appoint judges, steer Wall Street, and dictate trillion-dollar investment flows.

Theodore Roosevelt counted his Porcellian affiliation among his greatest achievements. Nine members of the Adams family joined its ranks. Supreme Court appointments, diplomatic assignments, and IPO fortunes often share one subtle fingerprint: a pig emblem.

Rejection from this brotherhood is no minor snub. Franklin D. Roosevelt never gained entry despite family pedigree. His wife Eleanor suggested this rejection gave him a lifelong chip on his shoulder. Meanwhile, those accepted gain access to deals, networks, and financial parachutes that shield them from market crashes and elevate them above political shifts.


From Pig Roast to Power Brokers

It began in 1791 with a pig roast. Harvard student Joseph McKeen hosted a feast so memorable that classmates created a dining society—the Pig Club. Within decades, it evolved into a club of aristocracy, wealth, and social dominance.

By the 1830s, membership was capped at 24 undergraduates, with lineage and connections required for entry. It merged with rival clubs to consolidate Harvard’s social ladder. Members like Justice Joseph Story and Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. paved the way from this brotherhood to the Supreme Court.

Harvard’s Brahmin elite—the Lowells, Lodges, and Adamses—used the Porcellian as a social nucleus. The club built a system where the “pork” wasn’t just dinner—it was an exclusive ticket into power’s inner sanctum.


Titans of the Twentieth Century

By the 1900s, the Porcellian Club was no longer just a college society—it was America’s operating system. Its alumni included presidents, senators, judges, and titans of finance.

Richard Whitney, head of the New York Stock Exchange during the 1929 crash, famously tried to halt the crash while wearing his golden pig emblem. Speaker of the House Nicholas Longworth and railroad magnate Harold Vanderbilt also stood among its influential members.

Rumors persist of a “million-dollar safety net”—a belief that any member who failed by age 30 would receive a financial bailout. Whether myth or not, the reality is this: Porcellian members had access to capital, partnerships, and insider knowledge that most Americans never imagined.


Wealth in a Changing World

In the postwar decades, the Porcellian Club seamlessly adapted. Members left behind industry and embraced finance, tech, and high-stakes investing. Defense strategist Paul Nitze helped shape Cold War policy. Investment banks with Porcellian roots managed billions. The 1973 oil crisis and ensuing recessions became opportunities, not setbacks.

As deregulation redefined Wall Street, Porcellian alumni were at the helm. Private deals, hedge funds, and elite venture capital channels allowed them to surf economic disruption with surfboard precision. Harvard’s endowment itself drew from this brain trust, reinforcing the cycle of control.


The New Millennium’s Power Elite

Today, the pig lives on—in Bitcoin, in Blackstone, and in billion-dollar tech unicorns. Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss, class of 2004, rode their Harvard/Facebook settlement into a $6 billion crypto empire. Other alumni lead venture firms, hedge funds, and government offices.

Porcellian members now influence everything from quantum computing to the Federal Reserve. Their watch chains and ties still signal a shared secret: early access to the next trillion-dollar trend.

The club’s real estate empire sprawls across prime cities and resorts. Its private funds outperform Wall Street averages by leveraging pre-IPO access and global strategic positions. The 2008 crisis? A blip they navigated with insider advantage.

As the digital age reshapes power, the Porcellian adapts. Secretive. Unapologetic. Unmatched.


The Porcellian Club may have started as a pig roast, but it became the master key to the American kingdom. Not merely a social club—but a legacy engine ensuring that old money stays powerful, connected, and quietly in control.

So ask yourself: If you had the chance, would you open that unmarked door?


Lot - TWO PHOTOGRAPHS OF HARVARD PORCELLIAN CLUB MEMBERS 9" x 12.5 ...

Below is a curated table of notable members of Harvard’s Porcellian Club, detailing their names, Harvard class years, and significant positions or achievements:

Name Harvard Class Year Notable Position(s)/Achievements
Theodore Roosevelt 1880 26th President of the United States
Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. 1861 Associate Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court
Charles Sumner 1830 U.S. Senator from Massachusetts
Henry Cabot Lodge 1871 U.S. Senator from Massachusetts
Richard Henry Dana Jr. 1837 Author of Two Years Before the Mast
James Russell Lowell 1838 Poet, diplomat, and Harvard professor
Joseph Story 1798 Associate Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court
Paul Nitze 1928 U.S. Secretary of the Navy; co-founder of Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies
Richard Whitney 1911 President of the New York Stock Exchange (1930–1935)
Nicholas Longworth 1891 Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives (1925–1931)
Leverett Saltonstall 1914 Governor and U.S. Senator from Massachusetts
Charles E. Bohlen 1927 U.S. Ambassador to the Soviet Union
August Belmont Jr. 1875 Financier; namesake of Belmont Park and the Belmont Stakes
Cameron Winklevoss 2004 Olympic rower; co-founder of ConnectU and Gemini cryptocurrency exchange
Tyler Winklevoss 2004 Olympic rower; co-founder of ConnectU and Gemini cryptocurrency exchange
Owen Wister 1882 Author of The Virginian
Edward Everett 1811 U.S. Secretary of State; President of Harvard; Governor of Massachusetts
Charles Paine 1820 15th Governor of Vermont
Francis Gardner 1793 U.S. Representative from New Hampshire
David Sears II 1807 Boston philanthropist and real estate developer
Grenville Lindall Winthrop 1886 Art collector; benefactor of Harvard’s Fogg Museum
Charles W. Upham 1821 U.S. Representative from Massachusetts; historian

These individuals represent a fraction of the Porcellian Club’s extensive network of alumni who have significantly influenced various facets of American society, including politics, law, literature, finance, and the arts.

Notable Publicly Known Members (Past 40 Years)

Name Harvard Class Year Notable Positions/Achievements
Cameron Winklevoss 2004 Olympic rower; Co-founder of ConnectU and Gemini cryptocurrency exchange
Tyler Winklevoss 2004 Olympic rower; Co-founder of ConnectU and Gemini cryptocurrency exchange
William Batts Jr. 1986 First African-American member of the Porcellian Club, admitted in 1983

Due to the club’s emphasis on privacy and discretion, further details about its recent membership remain undisclosed.


NOT TO BE OUTDONE – YALE SKULL AND BONES

Yale University has its own legendary secret society that parallels Harvard’s Porcellian Club in both mystique and influence: Skull and Bones.


☠️ Yale’s Equivalent: Skull and Bones

Feature Skull and Bones
Founded 1832
Location Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut
Nickname “Bones”
Meeting Place The “Tomb” – a windowless, fortress-like building
Known For Political power, intelligence agency ties, elite secrecy
Membership ~15 juniors selected each year
Symbols Skull & crossbones, the number 322

🔥 Famous Skull and Bones Members

Name Position/Claim to Fame
William Howard Taft U.S. President & Chief Justice
George H.W. Bush U.S. President, CIA Director
George W. Bush U.S. President
John Kerry U.S. Secretary of State, Senator
Austan Goolsbee Chair of the Council of Economic Advisers under Obama
Stephen A. Schwarzman CEO of Blackstone Group
Robert Rubin U.S. Treasury Secretary, Goldman Sachs co-chairman (rumored)

⚖️ Porcellian vs. Skull and Bones – A Comparison

Feature Porcellian Club (Harvard) Skull and Bones (Yale)
Founded 1791 1832
Nature Social club Secret society
Membership Size ~24 undergraduates 15 juniors/year
Symbol Pig Skull and crossbones
Focus Finance, elite networking Politics, intelligence, diplomacy
Access Ultra-exclusive, lineage-based Invitation only, often legacy
Known for Quiet control of business networks Covert influence in government

💡 Skull and Bones…. CIA recruiting

While Harvard’s Porcellian Club rules the world of money and markets behind silk curtains, Yale’s Skull and Bones operates in the shadows of statecraft and strategy—think Goldman Sachs vs. Langley. the CIA and FBI is full of Skull and Bones, an inner group within the secret Agencies. Both train the American elite in their own ways, but one prefers a tie with a pig emblem, the other a coffin and code.


🏛️ Wharton: The Modern Machine of Power

The Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania—while not historically cloaked in the same secretive tradition as Harvard’s Porcellian Club or Yale’s Skull and Bones—has produced an elite, hyper-networked power class in a very different but equally potent way: through open dominance in finance, real estate, and corporate leadership.


 

Aspect Details
Founded 1881 – First collegiate business school in the U.S.
Known For Finance, private equity, real estate, investment banking
Type of Network Professional elite; meritocratic (mostly), money-first
Alumni Base Over 100,000 globally
Style Less secret society, more boardroom dominance
Reputation “Where the power brokers of Wall Street are forged”

🔥 Notable Wharton Alumni

Name Claim to Fame
Donald J. Trump 45th President of the United States; real estate mogul
Elon Musk CEO of Tesla, SpaceX, Neuralink (double major at Penn)
Ron Perelman Billionaire investor, Revlon CEO
Laurene Powell Jobs Founder of Emerson Collective; widow of Steve Jobs
Anil Ambani Indian business magnate
Ivanka Trump Advisor to the President, entrepreneur
Peter Lynch (MBA) Legendary Fidelity fund manager (attended Wharton MBA)
Sundar Pichai (exec ed) CEO of Alphabet/Google (attended programs at Wharton)

🤝 Secret Societies at Wharton?

Wharton does not have a singular “secret society” like Skull and Bones. However:

🔹 In Practice:

  • Top Wharton students often join exclusive professional fraternities (e.g. Delta Sigma Pi, Alpha Kappa Psi).
  • There are elite investment clubs and private alumni dinners that serve as real-world power networks.
  • Hedge fund recruiters, private equity scouts, and VC gatekeepers target Wharton as a talent pool early.

🔹 Alumni Networks:

  • Wharton’s Penn Club in NYC and other global alumni hubs often function like modern elite clubs.
  • The school’s Board of Overseers includes billionaires, top CEOs, and influential global financiers.

🧠 Porcellian & Bones vs. Wharton

Feature Porcellian/Bones (Harvard/Yale) Wharton School (Penn)
Founded 1791 / 1832 1881
Access Secretive, by invitation Academic + professional merit (mostly)
Network Type Generational power, hush-hush Global corporate dominance, transactional
Power Focus Government, law, finance Finance, real estate, entrepreneurship
Culture Gentleman’s code Competitive capitalism
Tools of Influence Handshakes, emblems, tradition Capital, strategy, data

💬 Final Thought = The Rest of the Story

Harvard has secrecy. Yale has symbolism. Wharton has spreadsheets and stock options.
It may not wear pig emblems or meet in tombs, but Wharton shapes the modern empire—by underwriting it.


🐖💀💼 Epilogue: The Social Food Chain of American Power

In the high towers of Harvard, the Porcellian men sip their Scotch and scoff at the Yale boys. “Too dramatic,” they say. “Too eager to save the world and be seen doing it.” The Bonesmen, in turn, roll their eyes at Wharton. “Too flashy,” they mutter. “No subtlety. They think money is power—how gauche.”

And Wharton? They don’t care. They’re too busy buying the company that owns the scotch distillery, the publishing house that prints the memoirs, and the media outlet that airs the debates.

But here’s the punchline: they all hate Trump… and they all created him.

Because in the hierarchy of American power, Trump is the Frankenstein of privilege. Wharton polish with Queens swagger. He wasn’t supposed to enter the club—he was supposed to donate to it. But he bought the country club, fired the butler, and put his name in gold letters on the gate.

And now you understand why they hate him, fear him, and need him—but never truly invite him in.


🇺🇸 Last 20 U.S. Presidents and Their Alma Maters

# President Term(s) College/University
46 Joe Biden 2021–2024 University of Delaware (BA), Syracuse (JD)
45 Donald Trump 2017–2021 University of Pennsylvania (Wharton)
44 Barack Obama 2009–2017 Columbia (BA), Harvard (JD)
43 George W. Bush 2001–2009 Yale (BA), Harvard (MBA)
42 Bill Clinton 1993–2001 Georgetown (BA), Yale (JD), Oxford (Rhodes)
41 George H. W. Bush 1989–1993 Yale University
40 Ronald Reagan 1981–1989 Eureka College
39 Jimmy Carter 1977–1981 U.S. Naval Academy
38 Gerald Ford 1974–1977 University of Michigan (BA), Yale (JD)
37 Richard Nixon 1969–1974 Whittier College (BA), Duke (JD)
36 Lyndon B. Johnson 1963–1969 Southwest Texas State Teachers College
35 John F. Kennedy 1961–1963 Harvard University
34 Dwight D. Eisenhower 1953–1961 U.S. Military Academy at West Point
33 Harry S. Truman 1945–1953 No college degree (attended some night school)
32 Franklin D. Roosevelt 1933–1945 Harvard University
31 Herbert Hoover 1929–1933 Stanford University
30 Calvin Coolidge 1923–1929 Amherst College
29 Warren G. Harding 1921–1923 Ohio Central College
28 Woodrow Wilson 1913–1921 Princeton (BA), Johns Hopkins (PhD)
27 William H. Taft 1909–1913 Yale University (Skull and Bones member)

 

 

 


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