Catherine Austin Fitts, once a high-ranking housing official, says her search for $21 trillion in unaccounted federal spending led her to a chilling conclusion: vast sums were funneled into a covert infrastructure beneath our feet and even under our oceans. She describes a network of underground bases, advanced transportation systems, and “breakthrough energy” designed not for the public good, but for the survival of a protected elite during a global catastrophe.
Her allegations lean heavily on documented “unsupported adjustments” in Pentagon and HUD budgets, including a single year in which the Army reported trillions it couldn’t properly explain. Yet beyond financial anomalies and scattered hints of classified construction, there is no conclusive proof these underground cities exist. That tension—between hard numbers and unverifiable claims—leaves an unsettling question hanging over every taxpayer: if the money really is gone, what, and whom, was it used to build for?