💰 In 1815, ONE Spanish ship sank carrying $47 BILLION in Philippine gold. But that's just one of 309 ships that never made it to Spain. And the ones that DID make it? The total will make you sick.
Spain occupied the Philippines for 333 years. They documented everything—every gold mine, every galleon, every ounce of treasure. Those documents are sitting in Spanish archives RIGHT NOW. And what they reveal is the largest theft in human history: $3 TRILLION DOLLARS stolen from the Philippines. I went through the receipts. I did the math. And Spain can't hide anymore.
💎 What You'll Discover:
→ Spanish documents admitting "more gold than Peru and Mexico combined"
→ 287 active gold mines operated by FORCED LABOR for 230 years
→ The Manila Galleon Trade: $187.5 BILLION successfully stolen
→ 309 shipwrecks holding $154.5 BILLION still underwater
→ The Golden Tara, San Diego treasure, and Yamashita's Gold connections
→ Why Philippines would be richer than Norway if Spain had paid fairly
→ The exact locations of unfound Spanish treasure ships
→ How to demand reparations from Spain TODAY
📜 Primary Sources & Evidence:
Archive of the Indies,
Seville (43,000 boxes of colonial records)
Miguel de Loarca's 1586 Relación (gold mine documentation)
1698 Manila Customs House tax ledgers
Spanish Galleon manifests (1565-1815)
Archaeological reports: San Diego (1992),
Nuestra Señora de la Concepción (1987)
Roxas vs. Marcos court ruling ($43B verdict confirming treasure existence)
🎯 TIMESTAMPS:
0:00 - The $47 Billion Shipwreck Discovery
2:34 - Spain's Secret Archives Exposed
5:12 - 287 Gold Mines: The Industrial Theft Operation
8:45 - The Math Spain Doesn't Want You To See
11:23 - Manila Galleon Trade: $187.5 Billion Stolen
14:56 - The 309 Shipwrecks Still Underwater
17:38 - Treasures Found: Golden Tara, San Diego, Yamashita's Gold 2
1:14 - Where The Lost Galleons Are (Documented Locations)
24:47 - The $3 TRILLION Calculation Breakdown
28:15 - What Philippines Would Look Like If Spain Had Paid
LINKS & RESOURCES:
→ Full calculation spreadsheet with sources: [Link to Google Sheets]
→ Archive of the Indies digitized documents: [Link] → Interactive map of 309 Spanish shipwreck locations: [Link]
→ Philippine Senate Resolution on Spanish reparations: [Link]
→ Donate to Philippine maritime archaeology: [Link]
→ Petition for Spanish reparations: [Link]