15-11-2010, 10:40 AM
You don't get to be a participant at a Bilderberg Conference meeting if you hold views that are contrary to the wealthy elite.
Just so we know just some of the UK attendees at Bilderberg's bashes a shortened list follows (for example no busnessmen/bankers are listed and, I think, some pols are also missing):
Quite a list isn't it.
I feel sure that Peter Carrington attends as a representative of HM the Queen. He has been the Chancellor of the royal family's most prestigious chivalric Order of the Garter since 1994; is Lord of Her Majesty's Most Honourable Privy Council; was Chancellor of the Order of St. Michael & St. George for the years 1984-94 (until his appointment as Chancellor of the senior royal Garter Order). Quite apart from having his own country pile, I believe he also lives in a "grace and favour" place on royal lands.
(and forgive me for what follows - it's a pet hate thing). Most onerously, Carrington won the Military Cross in 1945 for allegedly capturing and holding the bridge at Nijmegen, Holland. The bridge was actually captured at at terrible cost by the men of the US 82nd and was only "captured" by Carrington and his tanks when the Nazis withdrew from both ends following the assault of the 82nd. Nice gong Pete.
What is not mentioned was his refusal to then proceed with his tanks to take advantage of the capture of the Nijmegen bridge and make a rush to relieve the British paratroopers holding out at Arnhem. Had he done this the war would almost have ended in 1944 not 1945. He didn't proceed and the rest is history. And the Bormann "capital flight" programme continued unhindered ensuring that the Nazi creed could resurrect itself after the war -- notably in 1954 at the very first Bilderberg Conference held, interestingly, at Oosterbeek, just a stone's throw from, yup, Nijmegen. The Conference was held under the chairmanship of SS officer and Nazi spy Prince Bernhard of the Netherlands.
All that Nazi loot that was rushed to safety by Bormann was now able to be repatriated and invested in the bright future.
But hey, getting one of the most important military "gongs" for not doing one thing, but rather doing something altogether different, is a classic elite form of double-think.
Just so we know just some of the UK attendees at Bilderberg's bashes a shortened list follows (for example no busnessmen/bankers are listed and, I think, some pols are also missing):
Quote:United Kingdom
Rt Hon the Baroness Shirley Williams ( at least 2010), stateswoman and member, House of Lords; Harvard University Professor; Past President, Chatham House; int'l member, Council on Foreign Relations.
Paddy Ashdown (1989),[29] former leader of Liberal Democrats, High Representative for Bosnia and Herzegovina
Ed Balls (2006),[30] former Economic Secretary to the Treasury and advisor to British Prime Minister Gordon Brown and was Secretary of State for Children, Schools and Families (2007–2010)
Peter Carington, 6th Baron Carrington (Steering Committee member) ,[31] former Foreign Secretary
Kenneth Clarke (1993,[32] 1998,[33] 1999,[34] 2003,[35] 2004,[36] 2006,[37] 2007,[37] 2008,[38][39] Chancellor of the Exchequer 1993-1997, Shadow Secretary of State for Business, Enterprise and Regulatory Reform 2008-2010, Lord Chancellor, Secretary of State for Justice 2010-current
Robert Gascoyne-Cecil (Viscount Cranborne) (1997),[1] Leader of the House of Lords 94-97
Denis Arthur Greenhill, Lord Greenhill of Harrow (deceased) (1974),[40]) former Head of Foreign and Commonwealth Office
Denis Healey (founder and Steering Committee member),[31] former Chancellor of the Exchequer
Peter Mandelson (1999,[41] 2009[42] Business Secretary (2008–2010)
John Monks (1996),[43] former TUC General Secretary
George Osborne (2006,[44] 2007,[44] 2008[45] 2009[46]) Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer (2004–2010), Chancellor of the Exchequer 2010-current
David Owen (1982),[47] former British Foreign Secretary and leader of the Social Democratic Party
Enoch Powell, (deceased) (1968),[48] MP and Ulster Unionist
Malcolm Rifkind (1996),[43] former Foreign Secretary
Eric Roll (1964, 1966, 1967, 1973–1975, 1977–1999) (Bilderberg Steering Committee),[49] Department of Economic Affairs, 1964, later Bilderberg Group Chairman
David Hannay, Baron Hannay of Chiswick (1995),[50] Diplomatic posts at European Union and United Nations.
John Smith (1989) (deceased),[51] Labour Party leader
[edit]Prime Ministers
Tony Blair (1993),[21][32] Prime Minister 1997-2007
Gordon Brown (1991),[22] Prime Minister 2007- 2010
Edward Heath,[4] Prime Minister 1970-1974
Alec Douglas-Home (1977–1980),[52] Chairman of the Bilderberg Group, Prime Minister 1963-1964
Margaret Thatcher (1975),[53] Prime Minister 1979-1990
Quite a list isn't it.
I feel sure that Peter Carrington attends as a representative of HM the Queen. He has been the Chancellor of the royal family's most prestigious chivalric Order of the Garter since 1994; is Lord of Her Majesty's Most Honourable Privy Council; was Chancellor of the Order of St. Michael & St. George for the years 1984-94 (until his appointment as Chancellor of the senior royal Garter Order). Quite apart from having his own country pile, I believe he also lives in a "grace and favour" place on royal lands.
(and forgive me for what follows - it's a pet hate thing). Most onerously, Carrington won the Military Cross in 1945 for allegedly capturing and holding the bridge at Nijmegen, Holland. The bridge was actually captured at at terrible cost by the men of the US 82nd and was only "captured" by Carrington and his tanks when the Nazis withdrew from both ends following the assault of the 82nd. Nice gong Pete.
What is not mentioned was his refusal to then proceed with his tanks to take advantage of the capture of the Nijmegen bridge and make a rush to relieve the British paratroopers holding out at Arnhem. Had he done this the war would almost have ended in 1944 not 1945. He didn't proceed and the rest is history. And the Bormann "capital flight" programme continued unhindered ensuring that the Nazi creed could resurrect itself after the war -- notably in 1954 at the very first Bilderberg Conference held, interestingly, at Oosterbeek, just a stone's throw from, yup, Nijmegen. The Conference was held under the chairmanship of SS officer and Nazi spy Prince Bernhard of the Netherlands.
All that Nazi loot that was rushed to safety by Bormann was now able to be repatriated and invested in the bright future.
But hey, getting one of the most important military "gongs" for not doing one thing, but rather doing something altogether different, is a classic elite form of double-think.
The shadow is a moral problem that challenges the whole ego-personality, for no one can become conscious of the shadow without considerable moral effort. To become conscious of it involves recognizing the dark aspects of the personality as present and real. This act is the essential condition for any kind of self-knowledge.
Carl Jung - Aion (1951). CW 9, Part II: P.14
