Talk:Warehouse 13/@comment-24588058-20170424144654/@comment-24588058-20170426014929

I merely assumed that because the Warehouse didn't move to America until 1914, there wouldn't be too much in the way of activity that would arouse enough suspicion from the sitting President to investigate something occurring overseas. I mean, the Revolutionary War period was Warehouse 11 in Russia, on the other side of the globe from America (did we even have foreign relations with them at that time?). Maybe during Warehouse 12, but it still seems like something which wouldn't be as concerning to the U.S. as it might to Great Britain, who was hosting.

I definitely like the idea of the leader of the free world not having a clue about the Warehouse. It's like one of those classified things which is beyond the President's authority to look into, which I'd imagine is not something they'd look into on a whim, so it's safe for the most part. I feel like World War II is when the Warehouse might have been close to being looked into again, simply because of the danger the war possessed. Things of that nature and all.

But when did the Regents decide not to let leaders know about what the Warehouse was? Warehouse's 4 and 7 I know had direct leader knowledge and influence. I'm assuming Warehouse 3 was as well, at least to some degree. Warehouse 1 doesn't count only because the leader was also the founder. In that implication, a correlation might be made that at least through Warehouse 7, the leader of the host country was made aware of the Warehouse's presence. Whether that continued through X Warehouse is unclear, but I feel pretty comfortable saying that Warehouse 12's leaders were not fully aware of the Warehouse's presence.