Bilderberg 2012: the technocrats are rising at this year's annual conference
0 views
Skip to first unread message
-Pastor-Dale-Morgan-
unread,
Jun 1, 2012, 1:56:01 AM6/1/12
Reply to author
Sign in to reply to author
Forward
Sign in to forward
Delete
You do not have permission to delete messages in this group
Copy link
Report message
Show original message
Either email addresses are anonymous for this group or you need the view member email addresses permission to view the original message
to Bible-Pro...@googlegroups.com
Perilous
Times, Globalisation and the New World Order
Bilderberg 2012: the technocrats are rising at this year's
annual conference
Our man at Bilderberg is back for a fourth year and has touched
down in Chantilly for the 2012 gathering. The shadowy elite
leaders' conference starts tomorrow, so what's on the agenda?
It's all change at Bilderberg this year, with a new chairman, new
media and Occupy Bilderberg knocking at the gates.
Everything's set. The hotel is being primped and hoovered, the
security is arriving, the press is nowhere to be seen, and I just
had a really boring crab salad. It's shaping up to be a vintage
Bilderberg.
We were lunching in the Palm Court restaurant of the Westfields
Marriott hotel, in Chantilly, Virginia. A few days from now, this
hotel will be dripping with billionaires and bankers, industry
CEOs and finance ministers, here for the annual Bilderberg summit.
"The leaders of the world are coming to our hotel", beams one
member of staff. "Are you here for the brunch?"
We are. Most of the other guests have left by now. The hotel is
edging towards lockdown. All that's left is a team of nervy
conference organizer who start filming us with their iPhones,
several dozen security operatives, me, my wife and a really rather
boring 'spook', brunching on an adjacent table.
He droned on for the full length of a crab salad about his
"internal and external drivers", about how "I got a panel of
three-star admirals together" to secure a "$30m contract" and how
"CACI excels in capture management".
He talked fondly of CACI International Inc (a giant defense
contractor), although more recently he's had "a nice success rate
with Booz Allen" (another giant defense contractor). His world was
the deathly dull blur between the federal government and private
defense corporations. The grim feeding trough of "systems
solutions", "security logistics" and "mission assurance". My crab
ended just as he was declaring, wisely: "When you leave the navy
and you go to a contractor, you say: what's my mission?"
His mission for the next week or so is to keep the queen of the
Netherlands, the chairman of Barclays, and the chairman,
vice-chairman and CEO of Shell Oil safe and sound for a three-day
conference. The hotel is encircled by the offices of the world's
largest arms' manufacturers, 15 minutes up the road from the
headquarters of the CIA. I suspect they'll be OK.
Welcome to Chantilly: a little bit of paradise on earth.
Photograph: Charlie Skelton for the Guardian
The Bilderberg conference was last here in Chantilly, at the exact
same godforsaken spot, back in 2008 – which, like 2012, was a US
election year, and the moment the current economic woes really
started hitting the fan. You might remember, it was the year when
then-senators Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton paid a flying visit
to Bilderberg (aka 'an event in northern Virginia'), after shaking
off the press pack during the Democratic presidential campaign. AP
had the story:
"Reporters travelling with Obama sensed something might be
happening between the pair might when they arrived at Dulles
International Airport after an event in northern Virginia and
Obama was not aboard the airplane."
You can watch the hilarious footage of Robert Gibbs, Obama's press
secretary, trying (and failing) to placate a furious press corp,
who found themselves tricked aboard a flight to Chicago. "Others
had a desire to meet with him in a private way," he explains. This
is an extraordinary admission from Gibbs – "others" clicked their
fingers, and Obama came running, with Hillary in tow.
Bill Clinton was introduced to the political big league at
Bilderberg 1991. The man who introduced him was Vernon Jackson, a
lawyer, civil rights activist and currently board member of Lazard
investment bank. Speaking last year about the occasion, Jackson
recalls:
"In 1991, I took Bill Clinton to the Bilderberg meetings in
Baden Baden, Germany. Bilderberg meetings have been going on since
1954, sort of the North-American / European Alliance."
Later, after Clinton won the election:
"The steering committee of Bilderberg came to Washington in
January, and I called the president up and I said 'Mr President,
they're here' – and he came to the Four Seasons hotel, and the
Europeans felt like they owned him because they met him when he
was totally unknown."
That's interesting: a meeting of the Bilderberg steering committee
at the Four Seasons in Washington? In January? But according to
Bilderberg's official website, "Bilderberg's only activity is its
annual conference".
As for this year's election, rumours are already circulating about
Bilderberg and presidential running mates, sparked off by a
Washington Post report back in April on the matter of Republican
senator Marco Rubio's speech at the Summit of the Americas:
"[John] Edwards gave a speech in June 2004 at the Bilderberg
conference that was widely credited as one reason John Kerry chose
him."
Aside from the US presidency, the big debate of Bilderberg 2012 is
likely to be: what in Hades do we do about Greece? The Eurozone is
Bilderberg's biggest project, but it's been looking distinctly
shaky of late. What's to be done? You can feel the unwillingness
of Bilderberg to countenance a 'Grexit' in the stern words of
Bilderberg spokesperson, the UK member of parliament for
Rushcliffe, Kenneth Clarke. To leave the Euro, says Clarke, would
be "disastrous" for the Greeks. "If they get a hopeless lot of
rather cranky extremists elected at the next election then they
will default on their debt." Clarke took the time to brand
eurosceptic British MPs "right-wing nationalists", and
euroscepticism itself "irresponsible".
Clarke's most telling remark is that: "It's going to take a
crisis, an absolute crisis, to make Europe's leaders act." This
week's Economist magazine agrees: "For the past six decades, steps
forward to greater European union have taken place at moments of
incipient crisis."
"A consensus is slowly emerging that, whether a Greek exit is
to be averted or weathered, there will have to be a greater level
of integration in the euro zone, with tighter constraints on the
freedom of national governments."
This message, that out of the struggle will come a new strength,
seems to be the Bilderbergian line. For example, EU Commissioner
Joaquin Almunia (whom we spotted at Bilderberg 2010) says we need
now to "reinforce the European Parliament's role" which "will also
strengthen the role of the [EU] Commission". So his solution to
the crisis: "I need a bigger office."
The Economist says that if the "elite venture" of Europe is to
survive and thrive, "Europe's elites" have got their work cut out.
It ventures to give the elites some "unashamedly technocratic"
advice on how to forge their closer union, but it needn't worry,
the technocrats of Bilderberg seems to have the matter in hand.
Mario Monti (unelected Italian PM, Bilderberg steering committee)
said this week: "Europe can have euro bonds soon."
But we're not in Europe now, we're in Chantilly, and the CIA is
just up the road from the conference venue, so protestors had
better stay on their best behaviour. And we're expecting plenty of
them – gathering under the activist umbrella: "Occupy Bilderberg"
What a difference a year makes. Occupy Bilderberg? I love it. The
Occupy movement seems finally to have realised that the problem
isn't the 1%, it's the 0.001%. It's the guys and gals and whatever
David Rockefeller is who are meeting in Chantilly, Virginia, at
the end of the week. Many hundreds of protestors have pledged to
show up. And who knows, they may just manage to drag the
mainstream news media with them.
Historically, one of the biggest problems people have had with
Occupy is that its aims and demands have been a little, shall we
say, "diffuse". Not the case with Occupy Bilderberg. That's the
nail getting hit squarely on the head. Occupy Bilderberg is
keyhole activism. Picking the exact right spot and sticking the
scissors in.
"We refuse to pay for the banks' crisis" was the cry from
OccupyLSX back in the autumn. They demanded an end to "our
democracy representing corporations instead of the people." What
Bilderberg represents is the fact that our democracy IS our
corporations. And politics is just the wake behind a shark fin. http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/may/30/bilderberg-2012-technocrats-are-rising