Picture this: Hitler didn't die in that bunker. He escaped to Antarctica with his top scientists, built a massive underground fortress powered by geothermal energy, perfected UFO technology, and recruited an army of penguins as the perfect Aryan mascots. Too crazy? Well, the U.S. Navy sure didn't think so when they launched Operation Highjump in 1947—sending 4,700 troops and Admiral Byrd himself to the frozen continent for some very suspicious "scientific research." Spoiler alert: it involved a lot of explosions. But here's where it gets really weird, Strangers. In 1938, the Nazis actually did send a secret expedition to Antarctica aboard the MS Schwabenland. They dropped swastika flags from planes, claimed a chunk of ice the size of Germany, and—this is completely true—brought back Nazi penguins to the Berlin Zoo. Because apparently even flightless birds weren't safe from the Third Reich's recruitment efforts. Was Base Neuschwabenland a desperate grab for whale oil and bragging rights? Or did something far stranger happen in those ice caves beneath Queen Maud Land? Join Lee, Josh, and Jen as they waddle through 80 years of conspiracy theories, government cover-ups, and the most adorable war criminals in Antarctic history. From UFO sightings to U-boat convoys, we're diving deep into the frozen mystery that has everyone from tabloid journalists to Pentagon officials asking: What's really down there? 🕯️ Come curious. Stay strange. 🕯️ Like what you heard? Subscribe, share, and tell your fellow conspiracy theorists! 📧 Contact us: SSOSpodcast@gmail.com 📱 TikTok: @SSOSpodcast 📸 Instagram: @secretsocietyofstrangerspod 📘 Facebook: Secret Society of Strangers Podcast All Video & Audio Edited By Jeremy of Schroeder Audio
Picture this: Hitler didn't die in that bunker. He escaped to Antarctica with his top scientists, built a massive underground fortress powered by geothermal energy, perfected UFO technology, and recruited an army of penguins as the perfect Aryan mascots. Too crazy? Well, the U.S. Navy sure didn't think so when they launched Operation Highjump in 1947—sending 4,700 troops and Admiral Byrd himself to the frozen continent for some very suspicious "scientific research." Spoiler alert: it involved a ...