In this hard-hitting clip from Man In America, researcher Mel K breaks down the little-known International Organizations Immunities Act of 1945, pushed through under Truman with heavy influence from the Dulles brothers. The law granted sweeping diplomatic-style immunity to the Bank for International Settlements (BIS), IMF, World Bank, UN, and dozens of connected globalist entities operating on American soil — shielding them from audits, lawsuits, investigations, or even entry without their permission. Mel K explains how this architecture allowed foreign and supranational institutions to embed themselves in New York and D.C. while remaining untouchable, with roots in post-WWII banking structures involving Rockefeller interests (via J.P. Morgan) alongside European banking networks. She stresses it’s not a treaty, meaning a president like Trump could revoke it via executive action, and ties it to broader efforts to dismantle the old CIA/globalist model alongside figures like Tulsi Gabbard, Rubio, and Ratcliffe.