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Click Here: <A HREF="aol://5863:126/alt.conspiracy:591166">New World Order
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Subject: New World Order (Alt-Bilderberg)
From: Pro Bono <A HREF="mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]">[EMAIL PROTECTED]</A
>
Date: Tue, 25 January 2000 05:23 AM EST
Message-id: <86jti7$3a8$[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

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 'B' on the windscreen,
swept in, sometimes accompanied by police escorts, sometimes not," says
an eyewitness of this year's 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 year's 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?

- Nato gave Russia carte blanche to bomb Chechnya

- 'Dollarisation' could be the the next step after the single European
currency

- A senior British politician thinks New Labour is "consolidating the
victories of the Right". On welfare cuts he adds: "It might be easier
for somebody who claimed to be a socialist to impose change."

- After Kosovo Nato is in danger of mimicking a colonial power

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.

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 year's 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 Barclay's 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 year's 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, Nato's 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. Another panellist 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 Nato's
new mandate was not just a new version of 'the white man's 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 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 region's 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."

------------------------------------------------------------------------


Article by: Gibby Zobel

>From The Big Issue, November 15-21 1999. More details from the papers
will be published on November 22.


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