Bilderberg 17:23 - Jun 7 with 20383 views | CHUBBS | No this isn't a new signing.For those that don't already know its the secret(not so secret anymore)meeting of the worlds owners puppets down in The Grove Hotel Watford. These people virtually control our lives, we're given enough choice to think that we have free will, things like buying a car, a house,just enough rope to hang ourselves but all of the major decisions the vast majority have no say on what so ever. We don't even get to vote on important things that change our lives they're passed without our knowledge. Look at the leaders of the various political parties,they change their opinions at the drop of a hat if they feel it will enhance personal future progression. Early in his career Tony Blair was campaigning for a withdrawal from the EU. He was invited to a Bilderberg meeting and came back with a completely different outlook. What could possibly make Blair change his tune? Maybe the promise of being the next prime minister. This is the 61st meeting to which 59 were completely denied as ever happening until the late Jim Tucker finally exposed this criminal cabal for what it is. I see some mainstream illuminati media outlets are there to continue their discrediting of the researchers and the enlightened self educated types present. This sinister meeting needs maximum exposure.The idea that in a democratic state our government officials are meeting billionaire businessmen behind closed doors and we are not privy to their decisions is frightening. If this criminal bunch has nothing to hide, then release all the agendas and minutes of past.They never will because it would incriminate the lot of them. These people are responsible for all the major wars and issues plaguing our planet yet they can just turn up unannounced paid for by a dodgy Bilderberg charity with yours truly footing the vast security bill.No wonder they're so fcukin rich. The whole thing stinks. Am popping down tomorrow to be in the same vicinity as our countries REAL government. http://www.ustream.tv/recorded/33969227 [Post edited 1 Jan 1970 1:00]
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Bilderberg on 13:30 - Jun 11 with 2403 views | THEBUSH |
Bilderberg on 13:17 - Jun 11 by FDC | I've not been to any, obviously! Put it another way. If you're a politician with a dastardly plan - how important is it that you meet you co-conspirators face-to-face at posh hotel in order to put your dastardly plan in to effect? |
If I was a politician with a dastardly plan, I wouldn't tell the Bilderberg group. Coz, they would then know my dastardly plan. Hopefully they would tell me about their dastardly plans and the good guys would win. | | | |
Bilderberg on 14:08 - Jun 11 with 2383 views | FDC |
Bilderberg on 13:30 - Jun 11 by THEBUSH | If I was a politician with a dastardly plan, I wouldn't tell the Bilderberg group. Coz, they would then know my dastardly plan. Hopefully they would tell me about their dastardly plans and the good guys would win. |
Same plan as Blob - infiltrate and takeover. After all this time it's intersting to learn how many Leninists there are on here. | | | |
Bilderberg on 14:13 - Jun 11 with 2377 views | TheBlob |
Bilderberg on 14:08 - Jun 11 by FDC | Same plan as Blob - infiltrate and takeover. After all this time it's intersting to learn how many Leninists there are on here. |
SSSSSHHHHHHHHHHH...... | |
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Bilderberg on 14:14 - Jun 11 with 2373 views | Hayesender | In this brave new world, protesting is verboten | |
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Bilderberg on 14:20 - Jun 11 with 2369 views | FDC | Indeed - see the incredible police presence at the anti-G8 (re-eactment society) protest today. | | | |
Bilderberg on 19:12 - Jun 11 with 2319 views | THEBUSH |
Bilderberg on 14:08 - Jun 11 by FDC | Same plan as Blob - infiltrate and takeover. After all this time it's intersting to learn how many Leninists there are on here. |
Ah, the good old days, since communism fell, the world has gone to rack and ruin. | | | |
Bilderberg on 19:16 - Jun 11 with 2317 views | WanderR | The attendees at the Bilderberg meetings might like to rule the world, they may even think they do, but the idea that all these bankers, government and big business leaders who preside over monumental screw-ups on a daily basis in their day jobs somehow become an all-powerful secret cabal able to secretly manipulate world events by attending a jumped-up drinks reception is laughable. | |
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Bilderberg on 20:35 - Jun 11 with 2300 views | MrSheen |
Bilderberg on 19:16 - Jun 11 by WanderR | The attendees at the Bilderberg meetings might like to rule the world, they may even think they do, but the idea that all these bankers, government and big business leaders who preside over monumental screw-ups on a daily basis in their day jobs somehow become an all-powerful secret cabal able to secretly manipulate world events by attending a jumped-up drinks reception is laughable. |
+1. Well said sir! | | | | Login to get fewer ads
Bilderberg on 20:58 - Jun 11 with 2290 views | CHUBBS | People going on about Jones as if he's a major researcher when in fact there are dozens ahead of him through which he gets HIS information.He's a mouth piece that is being backed by some characters who just don't have a vested interest in nwo research.Why are they backing him? Carroll Quigley was just one of many who has studied these secret societies and stumbled across all sorts of unusual and disturbing events and information. Quigley and secret societies One distinctive feature of Quigley's historical writings was his assertion that secret societies have played a significant role in recent world history. His writing on this topic has made Quigley famous among many who investigate conspiracy theories.[2]:96, 98 Quigley's views are particularly notable because the majority of reputable academic historians profess skepticism about conspiracy theories.[18] Quigley's claims about the Milner Group In his book The Anglo-American Establishment: From Rhodes to Cliveden,[19] Quigley purports to trace the history of a secret society founded in 1891 by Cecil Rhodes and Alfred Milner. Quigley notes that "The organization was so modified and so expanded by Milner after the eclipse of Stead in 1899, and especially after the death of Rhodes in 1902, that it took on quite a different organization and character, although it continued to pursue the same goals."[20] The society consisted of an inner circle ("The Society of the Elect") and an outer circle ("The Association of Helpers", also known as The Milner Kindergarten and the Round Table Group).[21] The society as a whole does not have a fixed name: This society has been known at various times as Milner's Kindergarten, as the Round Table Group, as the Rhodes crowd, as The Times crowd, as the All Souls group, and as the Cliveden set. ... I have chosen to call it the Milner group. Those persons who have used the other terms, or heard them used, have not generally been aware that all these various terms referred to the same Group...this Group is, as I shall show, one of the most important historical facts of the twentieth century.[22]:ix Quigley assigns this group primary or exclusive credit for several historical events: the Jameson Raid, the Second Boer War, the founding of the Union of South Africa, the replacement of the British Empire with the Commonwealth of Nations, and a number of Britain's foreign policy decisions in the twentieth century.[22]:5 In 1966, Quigley published a one-volume history of the twentieth century entitled Tragedy And Hope. At several points in this book, the history of the Milner group is discussed. Moreover, Quigley states that he has recently been in direct contact with this organization, whose nature he contrasts to right-wing claims of a communist conspiracy: This radical Right fairy tale, which is now an accepted folk myth in many groups in America, pictured the recent history of the United States, in regard to domestic reform and in foreign affairs, as a well-organized plot by extreme Left-wing elements.... This myth, like all fables, does in fact have a modicum of truth. There does exist, and has existed for a generation, an international Anglophile network which operates, to some extent, in the way the Radical right believes the Communists act. In fact, this network, which we may identify as the Round Table Groups, has no aversion to cooperating with the Communists, or any other group, and frequently does so. I know of the operation of this network because I have studied it for twenty years and was permitted for two years, in the early 1960s, to examine its papers and secret records. I have no aversion to it or to most of its aims and have, for much of my life, been close to it and to many of its instruments. I have objected, both in the past and recently, to a few of its policies... but in general my chief difference of opinion is that it wishes to remain unknown, and I believe its role in history is significant enough to be known.[23]:949-950 According to Quigley, the leaders of this group were Cecil Rhodes and Alfred Milner from 1891 until Rhodes' death in 1902, Milner alone until his own death in 1925, Lionel Curtis from 1925 to 1955, Robert H. (Baron) Brand from 1955 to 1963, and Adam D. Marris from 1963 until the time Quigley wrote his book. This organization also functioned through certain loosely affiliated "front groups", including the Royal Institute of International Affairs, the Institute of Pacific Relations, and the Council on Foreign Relations.[23]:132, 950-952 In addition, other secret societies are briefly discussed in Tragedy and Hope, including a consortium of the leaders of the central banks of several countries, who formed the Bank for International Settlements.[23]:323-324 Citations of Quigley in exposées of purported conspiracies Soon after its publication, Tragedy and Hope caught the attention of authors interested in conspiracies. They proceeded to publicize Quigley's claims, disseminating them to a much larger audience than his original readership.[2]:96, 98 This began in 1970, when W. Cleon Skousen published The Naked Capitalist: A Review and Commentary on Dr. Carroll Quigley's Book "Tragedy and Hope". The first third of this book consists of extensive excerpts from Tragedy and Hope, interspersed with commentary by Skousen. Skousen quotes Quigley's description of the activities of several groups: the Milner Group, a cartel of international bankers, the Communist Party, the Institute of Pacific Relations, and the Council on Foreign Relations. According to Skousen's interpretation of Quigley's book, each of these is a facet of one large conspiracy.[24] In 1971, Gary Allen, a spokesman for the John Birch Society, published None Dare Call It Conspiracy, which became a bestseller. Allen cited Quigley's Tragedy and Hope as an authoritative source on conspiracies throughout his book. Like Skousen, Allen understood the various conspiracies in Quigley's book to be branches of one large conspiracy, and also connected them to the Bilderbergers and to Richard Nixon.[25] The John Birch Society continues to cite Quigley as a primary source for their view of history.[26] Quigley is also cited by several other authors who assert the existence of powerful conspiracies. Jim Marrs, whose work was used as a source by Oliver Stone in his film JFK, cites Quigley in his book Rule By Secrecy, which describes a conspiracy linking the Milner Group, Skull and Bones, the Trilateral Commission, the Bavarian Illuminati, the Knights Templar, and aliens who posed as the Sumerian gods thousands of years ago.[27] Pat Robertson's book The New World Order cites Quigley as an authority on a powerful conspiracy.[2]:98 Conservative activist Phyllis Schlafly has asserted that Bill Clinton's political success was due to his pursuit of the "world government" agenda he learned from Quigley.[2]:98 G. Edward Griffin relies heavily on Quigley for information about the role Milner's secret society plays in the Federal Reserve in his book The Creature from Jekyll Island: A Second Look at the Federal Reserve. [28] On Gary Allen's None Dare Call It Conspiracy he said: They thought Dr. Carroll Quigley proved everything. For example, they constantly misquote me to this effect: that Lord Milner (the dominant trustee of the Cecil Rhodes Trust and a heavy in the Round Table Group) helped finance the Bolsheviks. I have been through the greater part of Milner's private papers and have found no evidence to support that. Further, None Dare Call It Conspiracy insists that international bankers were a single bloc, were all powerful and remain so today. I, on the contrary, stated in my book that they were much divided, often fought among themselves, had great influence but not control of political life and were sharply reduced in power about 1931-1940, when they became less influential than monopolized industry.[30] Criticism In Wall Street and the Rise of Hitler, the Hoover institution scholar Antony Sutton stated: Quigley goes a long way to provide evidence for the existence of the power elite, but does not penetrate the operations of the elite. Possibly, the papers used by Quigley had been vetted, and did not include documentation on elitist manipulation of such events as the Bolshevik Revolution, Hitler's accession to power, and the election of Roosevelt in 1933. More likely, these political manipulations may not be recorded at all in the files of the power groups. They may have been unrecorded actions by a small ad hoc segment of the elite. It is noteworthy that the documents used by this author came from government sources, recording the day-to-day actions of Trotsky, Lenin, Roosevelt, Hitler, J.P. Morgan and the various firms and banks involved.[31] F. William Engdahl, in an overview of financial imperialism entitled The Gods of Money, criticized Quigley for stating that the power of international bankers declined in the 1930s, and insofar as the influence of international bankers in America was concerned, suggested that Quigley was confusing "international finance" with Morgan interests. He suggested, like Sutton, that Quigley's papers had been vetted. Engdahl argued that it was not the case that the power of "international finance" declined, but rather, Morgan interests fell and were replaced by Rockefeller interests.[32] Quigley stated that the intentions and objectives of the group he profiled, associated with Wall Street and the City of London and Cecil Rhodes' super-imperialism, were "largely commendable". Members of the group, in statements recorded by the New York Times in 1902, proclaimed that they formed their society for the purpose of "gradually absorbing the wealth of the world".[33] Quigley argued that the Round Table groups were not World Government advocates but super-imperialists. He stated that they emphatically did not want the League of Nations to become a World Government. Yet Lionel Curtis, who according to Quigley was one of the leaders of the Round Table movement, wished for it to be a World government with teeth, writing articles with H.G. Wells urging this.[34][35] Although Quigley did not overtly condemn the Anglo-American financial coterie that he wrote about, he, according to an interview he gave,[36] and letters of his that were later published by the magazine Conspiracy Digest, had the plates of his book destroyed against his will by MacMillan, and believed that his work was being suppressed. One of the published letters stated the following: The original edition published by Macmillan in 1966 sold about 8800 copies and sales were picking up in 1968 when they "ran out of stock," as they told me (but in 1974, when I went after them with a lawyer, they told me that they had destroyed the plates in 1968). They lied to me for six years, telling me that they would re-print when they got 2000 orders, which could never happen because they told anyone who asked that it was out of print and would not be reprinted. They denied this until I sent them xerox copies of such replies to libraries, at which they told me it was a clerk's error. In other words they lied to me but prevented me from regaining the publication rights by doing so (on OP [out of print] rights revert to holder of copyright, but on OS [out of stock] they do not.) ... Powerful influences in this country want me, or at least my work, suppressed.[37]} According to Gary North, in Conspiracy: A Biblical View, Gary Allen received a letter from a friend of Quigley's who stated that Quigley had begun to view the group he profiled as a malevolent influence in political affairs by the end of his life. [Post edited 1 Jan 1970 1:00]
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Bilderberg on 21:47 - Jun 11 with 2267 views | CHUBBS | Here's another researcher Mullins who studied the subject for many years and wrote a book regarding the corrupt system of the Federal Reserve: In 1949, while I was visiting Ezra Pound who was a political prisoner at St. Elizabeth’s Hospital, Washington, D.C. (a Federal institution for the insane), Dr. Pound asked me if I had ever heard of the Federal Reserve System. I replied that I had not, as of the age of 25. He then showed me a ten dollar bill marked "Federal Reserve Note" and asked me if I would do some research at the Library of Congress on the Federal Reserve System which had issued this bill. Pound was unable to go to the Library himself, as he was being held without trial as a political prisoner by the United States government. After he was denied broadcasting time in the U.S., Dr. Pound broadcast from Italy in an effort to persuade people of the United States not to enter World War II. Franklin D. Roosevelt had personally ordered Pound’s indictment...[15] After telling Pound that he had little interest in such a research project because he was working on a novel, Pound offered to supplement my income by ten dollars a week for a few weeks. My initial research revealed evidence of an international banking group which had secretly planned the writing of the Federal Reserve Act and Congress’ enactment of the plan into law. These findings confirmed what Pound had long suspected. He said, "You must work on it as a detective story."[16] Mullins completed the manuscript during the course of 1950 when he began to seek a publisher. Eighteen publishers turned the book down without comment before the President of the Devin-Adair Publishing Company, Devin Garrett, told him, "I like your book but we can't print it...Neither can anybody else in New York. You may as well forget about getting the [...] book published."[17] Eventually the book was published by two of Pound's disciples, John Kasper and David Horton, under the title Mullins on the Federal Reserve. In Mullins on the Federal Reserve (1952), (the updated edition published in 1983 was called Secrets of the Federal Reserve) Mullins argued that there was a conspiracy among Paul Warburg, Edward Mandell House, Woodrow Wilson, J.P. Morgan, Benjamin Strong, Otto Kahn, the Rockefeller family, the Rothschild family, and other European and American bankers which resulted in the founding of the U.S. Federal Reserve System. He argued that the Federal Reserve Act of 1913 defies Article 1, Section 8, Paragraph 5 of the United States Constitution by creating a "central bank of issue" for the United States. Mullins went on to claim that World War I, the Agricultural Depression of 1920, the Great Depression of 1929 were brought about by international banking interests in order to profit from conflict and economic instability. Mullins also cited Thomas Jefferson's staunch opposition to the establishment of a central bank in the United States. In the 1983 edition of his book, he argued that Kuhn, Loeb & Co. and the House of Morgan were fronts for the Rothschilds. In this edition, he also outlined how financial interests connected to the J. Henry Schroder Company and the Dulles brothers financed Adolf Hitler (in contrast to the claims of his mentor, Ezra Pound, that Hitler was a sovereign who was completely against the interests of international finance[18] ). He also alleged that the Rothschilds were world monopolists. He furthermore claimed that most of the stock of member banks that owned stock in the Federal Reserve was owned by City of London bankers, since they owned much of the stock of the member banks. He attempted to trace stock ownership, as it changed hands via mergers and acquisitions, from the inception of the Federal Reserve in 1913 to the early 1980s.[19] In the last chapter of the book, he noted various Congressional investigations, and criticized the immense degree of power that these few banks who owned majority shares in the Federal Reserve possessed. He also criticized the Bilderberg Group, attacking it as an international consortium produced by the Rockefeller-Rothschild alliance. In an appendix to the book, he delved further into the City of London, and criticized the Tavistock Institute of Human Relations, which he claimed helps to conduct psychological warfare on the citizens of Britain and the United States. A central theme of Mullins' book is that the Federal Reserve allows bankers to monetize debt, creating it out of nothing by book entry, and thus they have enormous leverage over everyone else. Near the end of the book, he said of the Federal Reserve: The Federal Reserve System is not Federal; it has no reserves; and it is not a system, but rather, a criminal syndicate. It is the product of criminal syndicalist activity of an international consortium of dynastic families comprising what the author terms "The World Order". The Federal Reserve system is a central bank operating in the United States. Although the student will find no such definition of a central bank in the textbooks of any university, the author has defined a central bank as follows: It is the dominant financial power of the country which harbors it. It is entirely private-owned, although it seeks to give the appearance of a governmental institution. It has the right to print and issue money, the traditional prerogative of monarchs. It is set up to provide financing for wars. It functions as a money monopoly having total power over all the money and credit of the people. Eustace Mullins dedicated Secrets of the Federal Reserve to George Stimpson and Ezra Pound. Mullins wrote a follow up to his work on the Federal Reserve in 1985, in a book called The World Order: A Study in the Hegemony of Parasitism,[20] updated in 1992 as The World Order: Our Secret Rulers. He argued that the Federal Reserve and other central banks were tools of a "Rothschild World system", centered in the City of London, which extended its power through organizations like the Royal Institute of International Affairs, various foundations, corporate conglomerates, intelligence agencies, etc. He proposed that Nations were not really governing powers, but rather, that the world was parasitically controlled by this interlock of banks, foundations, and corporations, which acted as a unified force, tending towards World monopoly. He furthermore proposed that this oligarchical apparatus was controlled by corrupt, dynastic families that had accumulated their wealth through trade in gold, slaves, and drugs. He claimed that as this consortium furthered its monopolistic ambitions, it would seek the establishment of a World Culture, eradicate nationalism, impoverish everyone except themselves, and progressively turn the world into a police state. In 1985, Mullins also wrote A Writ for Martyrs, in which he reproduced a large portion of his FBI file, which included a 1959 memo to J. Edgar Hoover from Alex Rosen, which suggested having Mullins forcibly committed for his political views. On this memo is a scribbled note from Hoover, saying the Mullins case was “top priority” and that FBI agents should “see that some action is taken.” It also produced facsimiles of his correspondence with the German and American governments regarding the burning of the German translation of his study of the Federal Reserve. In 1988, Mullins wrote Murder by Injection, where he argued that much of the United States was controlled by the Rockefellers, and that the "medical monopoly" exercised a pernicious influence on American life, intentionally making people sick and deliberately introducing poisons, rather than healing people. In 1989, Mullins wrote The Rape of Justice, where he argued that the United States legal system was fundamentally corrupt. And this... http://www.globalresearch.ca/world-bank-insider-blows-whistle-on-corruption-fede [Post edited 1 Jan 1970 1:00]
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