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-----Original Message-----
From: Dejan Mihajlovic <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Tuesday, November 23, 1999 5:57 PM
Subject: SN596:Bilderberg


>
>      BILBERBERG GROUP
>      SECRET MINUTES REVEALED
>      by David Icke
>
>
>---------------------------------------------------------------------------
-----
>
>
>      The British publication, The Big Issue, which is
>sold on the streets by unemployed people, claims to
>      have been leaked minutes from this year's
>meeting of the Bilderberg Group which took place in
>      Portugal.
>
>      Here is their report with my comments in
>parenthesis.
>
>      Title: 'Bilderberg': Secret Minutes Revealed for
>the first time in 50 years
>
>      Date: 15 NOV '99
>      Author: Gibby Zobel
>      Source: The Big Issue, London
>
>      For nearly 50 years an elite group of the West's
>most powerful men and women, including Bill Clinton
>      and Tony Blair, has met in secret. Today The Big
>Issue can reveal for the first time the confidential
>      minutes The Bilderberg Papers of what some
>commentators have called a shadow world government.
>
>
>      The clandestine meetings do not make policy, yet
>directly inform the thinking of world leaders. This
>      years meeting took place in June under armed
>guard at the exclusive Caesar Park Hotel, Penha
>      Longa, Portugal. Northern Ireland secretary of
>state Peter Mandelson, Conservative MP Kenneth
>      Clarke, and environmentalist Jonathon Porritt
>attended and mixed with presidents, chairmen of
>      multinational companies, world bankers, Nato
>chiefs and defence ministers.
>
>      The 64-page leaked document reveals the group
>was advised that after Kosovo, Russia now has
>      carte blanche to intervene in Chechnya. Nato
>will not bomb Moscow if Russia invades Chechnya.
>      Two hundred thousand Chechens have been forced
>to flee their homes since Russia began bombing
>      last month. Last week the Clinton administration
>accused Russia of breaking international law. But
>      the minutes make clear that world leaders are
>operating in an environment where international law
>      has become obsolete and where Nato is in danger
>of effectively becoming a colonial power.
>
>      In another debate, How Durable is the Current
>Rosy Complexion of European Politics?, Britain's cuts
>      in welfare were put into sharp context. The new
>Left, argued one Briton, was consolidating the
>      victories of the Right. The electoral failures
>of the Right had largely been self-inflicted, and the
>Left
>      may well prove to be better at reforming the
>welfare state. With 17 million unemployed, it might be
>      easier for somebody who claimed to be a
>socialist to impose change. Welfare, one panellist
>thought,
>      would be the Red man's burden. Governments had
>to think like business people. But not every
>      socialist government in Europe has bitten the
>bullet the group talked of Germany, France and Italy's
>      lack of guts for welfare cuts.
>
>      (THE CREATION OF THE "WELFARE STATE" TO CREATE
>DEPENDENCY AND THEN THE DESTRUCTION
>      OF THAT WELFARE STRUCTURE TO LEAVE PEOPLE
>HELPLESS AND FORCED TO DO WHATEVER THEY
>      ARE TOLD TO SURVIVE HAS BEEN ONE OF THE KEY
>PLANS OF THE ILLUMINATI IN THE 2OTH
>      CENTURY. TONY BLAIR, THE BRITISH PRIME MINISTER
>AND BILDERBERG PUPPET, HAS BEEN PUT IN
>      THERE TO DO JUST THAT.
>
>      IT IS ALSO A WELL TESTED TECHNIQUE TO USE
>"SOCIALIST" PARTIES WITH AN IMAGE OF "CARING
>      FOR THE DOWNTRODDEN" TO INTRODUCE THESE CHANGES
>WHICH RIGHT-LEANING PARTIES WITH AN
>      IMAGE FOR NOT CARING FOR THE DOWNTRODDEN, WOULD
>NOT GET AWAY WITH.)
>
>      Governments fear of social unrest was the major
>reason for lack of action. As a British panellist
>      noted: Things would only change when the cost of
>not doing anything really did seem larger than
>      that of doing something. Most of the group
>thought the new European Left was just a genetically
>      modified version of the old one. It is simply a
>rotation of power, said one German. In many cases the
>      real power lies with central banks. This idea
>was given greater emphasis by discussions about the
>      introduction of dollarisation.
>
>      The Bilderberg papers reveal:
>
>      - Nato has given Russia carte blanche to
>intervene in Chechnya
>      - After the euro, a global currency
>dollarisation may be the next step
>      - Post-Kosovo, Nato is in danger of mimicking a
>colonial empire
>      - Its easier to cut welfare benefits if you call
>yourself a socialist
>
>      HIDDEN AGENDA - FEATURE
>
>      In the first of a two-part series, Gibby Zobel
>uncovers how the global power elite decides our future
>      at the shadowy Bilderberg Summit each year.
>Documents from the secret summit - leaked to The Big
>      Issue - reveal what they said about money and
>war.
>
>      For nearly 50 years an elite group of the West's
>most powerful men and women, a shadow world
>      government, have met in secret. Tony Blair is in
>the club. Every US president since Ike Eisenhower
>      has been too. So are top members of the British
>Government. So are the people who control what
>      you watch and read the media barons. Which is
>why you may never have heard of Bilderberg.
>
>      Lines of black limousines, unmarked except for a
>OB on the windscreen, swept in, sometimes
>      accompanied by police escorts, sometimes not,
>says an eyewitness of this years meeting in
>      Portugal. A helicopter was overhead, and other
>security officers were prudently patrolling the
>      hillsides. The policy on duty at the gates made
>it crystal clear that they were only the tip of the
>      security iceberg.
>
>      For two-and-a-half days, relaxing in exclusive
>luxury amid vast armed security, the powerful leaders
>      discussed past and future wars, a European
>superstate, a global currency, genetics, and the
>      dismantling of the welfare state. Unaccountable,
>untroubled and unreported, the Bilderberg meetings
>      have formed the basis of international policy
>for decades.
>
>      Last year freelance journalist Campbell Thomas
>was arrested just for knocking on doors near the
>      clandestine gathering in Turnberry, Scotland. He
>remained in custody for eight hours. Other
>      journalists were told that even the Bilderberg
>menu was confidential (a move they named
>      Kippergate). A serving police officer told The
>Big Issue: Special Branch and CIA were everywhere
>      they were calling the shots.
>
>      Never in its 47-year history has the content of
>these discussions been made public. Until now. The
>      Big Issue has uncovered the Bilderberg Papers
>the secret minutes of this years meeting in Portugal.
>      Some of it is banal, some of it sensational. It
>blows the lid off the thoughts of presidents, chairmen
>      of multinational companies, world bankers, Nato
>chiefs and defence ministers.
>
>      The meetings are shrouded in such secrecy that
>Prime Minister Tony Blair, when asked last year in
>      the House of Commons, failed to disclosed his
>own attendance at Bilderberg in Athens in 1993. So,
>      what have they been hiding?
>
>      Although 14 media chiefs and journalists from
>across eight countries attended this year, none of
>      them chose to tell their readers of the meeting.
>It would not serve their interests to be cut out of
>      the elite loop.
>
>      With an invite-only guest-list, covert
>operations and such deafening silence, it is little
>surprise that
>      conspiracy theories have thrived, from the
>anti-semites who believe in a Jewish global elite, to
>the
>      paranoid delusions of the radical left. The
>effect has been to leave the importance of the
>meetings
>      tainted by association. It suits the
>Bilderbergers perfectly.
>
>      (WHY OH WHY DO PEOPLE WHO PRESENT EVIDENCE OF A
>CONSPIRACY STILL DISMISS SO
>      CONTEMPTUOUSLY THOSE WHO HAVE BEEN INVESTIGATING
>FOR DECADES THE VERY COVERT
>      MANIPULATION WHICH THE BIG ISSUE HAS AT LAST
>TURNED ITS ATTENTION TO?
>
>      I HAVE BEEN RIDICULED IN BRITAIN FOR YEARS FOR
>SAYING THE VERY THINGS THAT THE BIG ISSUE
>      IS NOW CONFIRMING IN THIS ARTICLE. WHAT THEY DO
>NOT SEEM TO APPRECIATE YET IS THAT
>      THE BILDERBERG GROUP IS ACTUALLY ONLY ONE STRAND
>IN A GIGANTIC WEB - A WEB THAT IS
>      CREATING THE VERY UMEMPLYMENT AND LACK OF
>OPPORTUNITY THAT THE BIG ISSUE IS SEEKING
>      TO ADDRESS.)
>
>      The Bilderberg meetings began in a Dutch hotel
>on May 29 1954, from where it gets its name. The
>      Economist, in a rare reference to it in 1987,
>said that the importance of the meetings was
>      overplayed but admitted: When you have scaled
>the Bilderberg, you have arrived.
>
>      At last years meeting, former defence minister
>George Robertson, who is now Nato
>      secretary-general, planned strategies with the
>Bilderberg chair and ex-Nato chief Lord Carrington.
>
>      Observer editor-in-chief Will Hutton attended
>Bilderberg in 1997. He believes that it is the home of
>      the high priests of globalisation. No policy is
>made here, he says, it is all talk. But the consensus
>      established is the backdrop against which policy
>is made worldwide.
>
>      The 64-page leaked document The Bilderberg
>Papers is dated August 1999. The powerful
>      transatlantic clique at the private hideaway
>included new Northern Ireland secretary Peter
>      Mandelson MP, environmentalist Jonathon Porritt,
>Kenneth Clarke MP, former US secretary of state
>      Henry Kissinger, billionaire oil and banking
>tycoon David Rockefeller, Monsanto chief Robert B
>Shapiro,
>      and the head of the World Bank, James D
>Wolfensohn.
>
>      Although Asian and African politics and
>economics were discussed the continents countries had
>no
>      seats at this summit. The official eight-strong
>UK delegation included bankers Martin Taylor, former
>      chief executive of Barclays and Eric Roll, a
>banker for Warburgs. They were joined by Martin Wolf
>of
>      The Financial Times and two journalists from The
>Economist, John Micklethwait and Adrian
>      Wooldridge, who, the minutes indicate, prepared
>this document.
>
>      The papers are marked Not for Quotation. It
>states: There were 111 participants from 24 countries.
>      All participants spoke in their personal
>capacity, not as representatives of their national
>      governments or employers. As is usual at
>Bilderberg meetings, in order to permit frank and open
>      discussion, no public reporting of the
>conference took place.
>
>      None of the quotes in each of the 10 sections
>are directly attributable to any named individual, but
>      the moderator and panellists in each discussion
>are listed. It is made perfectly clear, however, who
>      is saying what. It is not known who else is in
>the audience, but their comments are identified by
>      their country and profession.
>
>      Over two weeks, we report on the central themes
>of this years meeting. This week: money and war.
>      Next week: genetics what the head of Monsanto
>and a leading British environmentalist discussed
>      behind closed doors. What they said about money.
>Giants of the global banking world, in a debate
>      titled Redesigning the International Financial
>Architecture, discussed the concept of dollarisation
>      which is sure to send euro-sceptics into a
>frenzy.
>
>      Around the table were Kenneth Clarke MP, Martin
>S Feldstein, president of the National Bureau of
>      Economic Research, Stanley Fisher, deputy
>managing director of the International Monetary Fund
>      (IMF), Ottmar Issing, board member of the
>European Central Bank and Jean Claude Trichet,
>governor
>      of the Bank of France.
>
>      Bilderberg is understood to have been the
>birthplace of the single european currency. The deputy
>      director of the IMF opens by remarking: It is
>worth noting that this is the first Bilderberg meeting
>      where the euro is fact rather than a topic for
>discussion. During the discussion, One of the
>panellists
>      was sure that if the euro worked, more regional
>currencies would emerge. Others raised the question
>      of dollarisation as a possible cure.
>
>      There is a dissenting voice: The only possible
>reason for surrendering control of your monetary
>policy
>      to Washington (where nobody would make decisions
>on the basis of what mattered in Buenos Aires
>      [or London]) is the fairly rotten financial
>records of the governments concerned.
>
>      What they said about war:
>
>      Despite Tony Blair's presidential stance over
>Kosovo, Natos historic war was pilloried at
>Bilderberg.
>      The mood at the meeting was surprisingly subdued
>most of the speakers concentrated on the
>      downside of the conflict, begins the discussion
>on Kosovo.
>
>      Henry Kissinger, former US secretary of state,
>weighs in, saying Kosovo could be this generation's
>      Vietnam. Nato is in danger of replacing the
>Ottoman and Habsburg Empires in a series of permanent
>      protectorates, he said.
>
>      (EXACTLY WHAT HE AND THE ILLUMINATI WANT!)
>
>      Another panelist warned that troops could be
>there for 25 years.
>
>      Kissinger felt that this left Nato open to
>accusations of colonialism. How did one persuade
>countries
>      like China, Russia and India that Natos new
>mandate was not just a new version of the white mans
>      burden colonialism? asked Kissinger.
>
>      Charles D Boyd, executive director of the US
>National Study Group, said Kosovo is now a wasteland,
>      a humanitarian disaster comparable with
>Cambodia. Nato used force as a substitute for
>diplomacy
>      rather than as a support for it used force in a
>way that minimised danger to itself but maximised
>      danger to the people it was trying to protect.
>
>      An unnamed British politician wondered whether
>the [Nato] alliance could hang together after the
>      end of the war. He warned that there would be
>little popular enthusiasm for putting lots of
>resources
>      into solving the regions gigantic problems.
>
>      Peter Mandelson told the group that two roads
>stretch in front of Nato. One leads to a new division
>      of Europe, where the continent returns to its
>ethnocentric ways. Under this scenario, the UN is
>fairly
>      powerless, Russia and China are excluded, and
>Nato is little more than an enforcer. The second road
>      is a little closer to the nineteenth century
>Europe, with all the great powers not just America and
>      the EU, but Russia, China and Japan
>co-operating.
>
>      David Icke
>
>
>
>
>__________________________________________________
>Do You Yahoo!?
>Bid and sell for free at http://auctions.yahoo.com
>

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