DEMONIC BILDERBERGERS SLITHER AWAY
Tehran Times - June 15, 2006 - Tehran - They left in silence,
blanketed by a near-total media blackout, just as they had
arrived. Very few media outlets covered the June 8-11 meeting of
the Bilderberg Group at a hotel just outside of Ottawa, Canada.
Only the alternative media deemed the story to be newsworthy. It
seems that “all the news that’s fit to print” is not always
printed.
Tom Spears of the Ottawa Citizen wrote: “The Bilderberg Group, a
secretive organization of politicians and business leaders from
around the world, gave no public statements. With private
security guards and metal barriers keeping outsiders on the
street, the Bilderbergers met in secret and then whisked
themselves away in ones and twos, mostly to the airport.
“What they talked about at the Brookstreet Hotel is still a
secret. The group meets annually, and is usually rumored to
discuss international politics and business, from Middle East
crises to oil prices.
“They emerged singly Sunday -- Bilderberg president Etienne
Davignon of Belgium, American David Rockefeller, Italian
economist Mario Monti, European competition commissioner Neelie
Kroes from the Netherlands, and, watchers thought, Iraqi
politician Ahmed Chalabi”.
[HR: FREEDOM OF THE PRESS?]
Alex Jones of Prison Planet.com and two of his crew were
detained by Canadian immigration at the Ottawa airport at 11:45
p.m. on the night of June 7 and only released after 2 p.m. the
next day.
Jones said, “It's a group of very powerful individuals whose
objective is to create one world government, based on an
economic model from the Middle Ages”, adding that it would be “a
post-industrial model where you have slaves and slave owners”.
Sources say Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez’s challenge to the
Free Trade Area of the Americas was on the top of the agenda of
the Bilderberg Group meeting.
The June 12 edition of the Ottawa Citizen published the
following partial list of participants in the Bilderberg
meeting:
Andrzej Olechowski
Olechowski is a former minister of foreign affairs and finance
in his native Poland, where he has frequently been involved in
politics since the 1990s. He ran unsuccessfully in the 2000
presidential election and Warsaw's 2002 mayoral race. Mr.
Olechowski was a founding member of the centrist Civic Platform
party and is currently a member of the supervisory boards of
Vivendi Universal, Citibank Handlowy and PKN Orlen.
Egil Myklebust
Myklebust served as president and CEO of Norsk Hydro, a
Norwegian oil and gas group, which is one of that country’s
biggest companies, between 1991 and 2001. He then served as
Norsk's chairman until 2004 and was also a member of the World
Business Council for Sustainable Development. While he is a
well-known face in the world's oil and gas industry, Mr.
Myklebust is currently chairman of Scandinavian Airlines.
Robert Zoellick
Zoellick now reports to Condoleezza Rice as the U.S. deputy
secretary of state, after serving as the U.S. trade
representative from 2001 to 2005. A lawyer, Mr. Zoellick has
worked in economic and diplomatic policy development in
different Republican administrations for more than two decades.
He has a strong reputation for hammering out international trade
deals; he played a key role in sealing NAFTA and has been an
important player in World Trade Organization talks.
James B. Steinberg
Steinberg is best known for his work as deputy national security
adviser to U.S. president Bill Clinton from 1996 to 2000. After
working in government, Mr. Steinberg went on to direct foreign
policy studies at the Brookings Institution in Washington and is
now the dean of the Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs
at the University of Texas at Austin. He is a frequent media
commentator on U.S. foreign policy and has written several books
on national security topics.
Juan Luis Cebrian
Cebrian is the CEO of the Spanish media conglomerate Grupa
Prisa, which owns El Pais, a centre-left daily that is the
country's leading newspaper. Mr. Cebrian is a former editor at
El Pais and has also served as chairman of the International
Press Institute. He is also an acclaimed author of books such as
Red Doll and the essay collection The Press and Main Street.
Mario Monti
Monti, dubbed "Super Mario" by the press, is an Italian
economist, president of Bocconi University in Milan and chairman
of the European think-tank Bruegel. He has most notably served
on the European Commission, where he was sometimes called an
antitrust czar. Mr. Monti fought against a proposed merger
between General Electric and Honeywell in 2001. The European
Union eventually blocked that merger, earning criticism from
U.S. regulators.
Jean-Pierre Hansen
Hansen is CEO of energy giants Electrabel, Belgium's top power
producer, and Suez-Tractebel, Belgium's top utility holding
company and one of the world's biggest independent power
producers. Mr. Hansen holds advanced degrees in engineering and
economics and has worked in the electricity and gas sectors
since the 1970s.
Neelie Kroes
Kroes is a veteran Dutch politician and businesswoman who has
served as European Commissioner for Competition since 2004. Ms.
Kroes' appointment to the position was met with some
controversy, due to her extensive business contacts. Since
assuming her post, Ms. Kroes has been in the middle of
Microsoft's ongoing dispute with the EU over a 2004 antitrust
ruling against the company. Ms. Kroes has also been a staunch
ally of controversial Dutch politician Ayaan Hirsi Ali.
Franco Bernabe
Bernabe is vice-chairman of the European investment bank
Rothschild Europe, former CEO of the Italian energy giant ENI
and a board member of Petro-China. Mr. Bernabe headed ENI's
privatization process in the early 90s and was recently quoted
as saying the world oil industry remains "uneasy" with the
feverish development of Alberta's oilsands near Fort McMurray.
Mr. Bernabe also worked as a chief economist at Fiat, and
started his career as an academic at Turin University.
David Rockefeller
Rockefeller is the founder of the Trilateral Commission, formed
in 1973 by citizens of Japan, European Union countries, the U.S.
and Canada with the goal of fostering closer cooperation among
those regions. Mr. Rockefeller, who has a Ph.D. from the
University of Chicago, spent 35 years as an officer of the Chase
Manhattan Bank and was chairman and CEO from 1969 to 1980. He
serves as honorary chairman of the Americas Society, the Council
on Foreign Relations and Rockefeller University.
Frank McKenna
McKenna served as Canada's ambassador to the U.S. under prime
minister Paul Martin. When Mr. Martin lost the election, Mr.
McKenna returned to private life, quickly quelling rumors he
would run for the Liberal party leadership. Before his U.S.
stint, Mr. McKenna practiced law and served on numerous
corporate boards. He became New Brunswick's premier in 1987,
winning every seat. He served for a decade and created a call
center industry in the resource-based province.
Jorma Ollila
Ollila served as chairman and CEO of Nokia Corporation for 14
years, from 1992 until this month when he became non-executive
chairman of Royal Dutch Shell while hanging on to his Nokia
association, also as non-executive chairman. He is the first
non-Dutch, non-Briton to head Shell. He took Nokia from a cell
phone company on the brink of takeover to the world's most
successful company in the field. The Finn is a member of the
board of directors of Ford Motor Company and UPM-Kymmene.
Queen Beatrix
Queen Beatrix of the Netherlands became queen in 1980 when her
mother, Juliana, abdicated. Ottawa is not new to the queen, who
moved to the capital in the 1940s, and lived in Stornoway. She
went to Rockcliffe Park Public School and her sister, Princess
Margriet, was born in Canada. Queen Beatrix, who has a degree in
law, married Claus von Amsberg, a German diplomat, in 1966.
Richard Perle
Perle was assistant secretary of defense to U.S. president
Ronald Reagan and is still considered influential in the U.S.,
having advised President George W. Bush. Mr. Perle served as
chairman of the Defense Policy Board from 2001-2003 and was
assistant secretary of defense for international security policy
from 1981 to 1987. His opinions appear regularly in the New York
Times, the Wall Street Journal and London's Daily Telegraph.
James Wolfensohn
As president of the World Bank, Wolfensohn walks the fine line
between being a banker and an advocate for the world's poor.
Born in Australia, he ended up on Wall Street via London,
eventually founding a banking firm with former head of the U.S.
Federal Reserve Paul Volker. Today, he is credited with working
to return the World Bank to its original mandate of relieving
poverty.
Etienne Davignon
Davignon is a former Belgian politician and president of the
annual Bilderberg conference. Mr. Davignon was born in Hungary
and quickly established a name for himself in business and
politics. He was the first president of the International Energy
Agency from 1974-77 and at the age of 32 he became head of
cabinet. Between 1977 and 1985, he was an influential member of
the European Commission. In 1989, he joined the board of the
Societe Generale de Belgique.
John Vinocur [HR: disgusting creep!]
Vinocur is a senior correspondent for the International Herald
Tribune and reports on everything from politics to sports. He
went to the Tribune from the New York Times, where he was
metropolitan editor. He served as the Times bureau chief in
France and Germany. He went to the Tribune as executive editor
and served as the newspaper's vice- president from 1986-96. He
writes for Foreign Affairs and the New York Times Magazine.
Adrian Wooldridge
Wooldridge is the Economist's Washington bureau chief. Prior to
this, he was the magazine's West Coast correspondent and also
held positions as its management correspondent and its
correspondent in Britain. He co-wrote The Company: A Short
History of a Revolutionary Idea, and A Future Perfect: The
Challenge and Hidden Promise of Globalisation, Witch Doctors,
and The Right Nation, a look at American conservatism.
Vernon Jordan
A Washington insider, Mr. Jordan chaired the Clinton transition
team in 1992. He started his public life through the civil
rights movement in the 1960s, working for the NAACP, and served
as executive director of the United Negro College Fund and
National Urban League in the 1970s. The lawyer is a managing
director with the investment banking firm Lazard Freres & Co.
LLC and is on several boards, including American Express and Dow
Jones & Company.
Tony Comper
Comper has been chief executive officer of BMO Financial Group
since 1999. In his three decades with BMO, he served as chairman
from 1999 to 2004, when the company moved to a non-executive
chairman model. He first signed on with the bank in 1967, after
completing a B.A. in English. Mr. Comper is a member of the
board of directors of the International Monetary Conference and
vice-chairman of the C.D. Howe Institute.
Dermot Gleeson
Chairman of Allied Irish Banks, Gleeson is a lawyer. He is a
member of the Royal Irish Academy and chairman of the Irish
Council for Bioethics and is the former attorney general of
Ireland. He also served as a member of the Council of State for
Ireland and as then Irish prime minister John Bruton's chief
legal adviser from 1994-97. He joined the board of Allied Irish
Banks in 2000 and was appointed chairman in 2003.
Story at Url.:
http://www.tehrantimes.com/Description.asp?Da=6/15/2006&Cat=2&Num=014
Bilderberg Conference +Canada - Google 'news' selection - Url.:
http://tinyurl.com/fwjo7
* ROME TRIBUNAL ON WAR CRIMES AND MEDIA: Held Guilty of
Deception - The tribunal said mainstream media reportage on Iraq
also violated article six of the Nuremberg Tribunal (set up to
try Nazi crimes) which states: "Leaders, organisers, instigators
and accomplices participating in the formulation or execution of
a common plan or conspiracy to commit any of the foregoing
crimes (crimes against peace, war crimes and crimes against
humanity) are responsible for all acts performed by any persons
in execution of such a plan." - Url.:
http://tinyurl.com/68jws
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