BILDERBERG Member set to break SILENCE on its SECRETIVE Meeting
A
Bilderberg Group member is set to speak on record to the BBC in what
represents an unprecedented move for the secretive organization, which
is being forced to become more transparent in the face of huge protests
and widespread condemnation
In advance of an interview with Alex
Jones today, a BBC reporter told Infowars that the broadcaster had
approached a Bilderberg member for a television interview and although
the person had refused to be on camera, a telephone interview was
likely.
As we reported yesterday, a separate source close to the
security operation surrounding the confab told Infowars that numerous
Bilderberg Group members were aggrieved at the organization's obsession
with secrecy and wanted to see more transparency.
Campaigners are
inviting Bilderberg members to come and address crowds of demonstrators
and press at a specially constructed podium within the grounds of the
Grove Hotel in Watford, which is where the conference is taking place
behind a huge police presence
The Telegraph reports today that
the 2004 Bilderberg meeting in Stresa, Italy was where the head of BP
Lord Browne suggested a monumental merger with Shell to create the
world's biggest oil company, a merger that many analysts still expect to
see at some point.
If a Bilderberg member does agree to an
interview with the BBC it would likely serve as an opportunity to
downplay the significance of the group, but the mere fact that a
participant of the secretive confab has been forced to speak publicly
represents major progress.
It would also mark the first time a Bilderberg member went on record since Lord Healy over a decade ago.
Despite
countless examples that prove the contrary, detractors, debunkers and
non believers continually argue that the Bilderberg group holds no
power, and that it is just a talking shop for elite has-beens. Now yet
more evidence has emerged that policy and secret multi-billion deals
between business heads and government are formulated at the meeting.
The
London Telegraph today reports in it's article titled Bilderberg Group?
No conspiracy, just the most influential group in the world, that
recently, a major oil deal, in fact what would be the world's biggest,
was formulated at a Bilderberg meeting:
"And for business leaders, it is a perfect opportunity to lay the groundwork for deals." the report states.
"According
to Tom Bergin's Spills and Spin, the account of the Gulf of Mexico oil
disaster, Lord Browne, the head of BP, used a walk by Lake Como at the
2004 gathering in Italy to suggest a vast merger with Shell to create
the world's biggest oil company."
"Lord Browne left under the impression it would happen." the report asserts.
Indeed,
the cards have been firmly on the table regarding the deal, and
industry experts are sure that it is only a matter of time before the
merger goes ahead.
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research gerald celente farrakhan 829speedy Representatives from both BP
and Shell are at the Bilderberg meeting this year, as usual, as well as
members of the Dutch royal family and the Dutch prime minister -- Shell
Oil is a subsidiary of Royal Dutch Shell, which was founded under a
royal charter.
The report also notes how Lord Healey, a long time
Bilderberg attendee, recalls the importance of the discussions that
were held there regarding policy on the Vietnam war, and particularly on
European integration: Most vividly, he recalls its role in bringing
the architects of the European integration -- Schmidt, Pompidou,
Giscard d'Estaing, Leone -- together for open-ended discussions with
bankers and economists about how the European monetary system might
work.
"A meeting in June in Europe of the Bilderberg Group- an
informal club of leading politicians, businessmen and thinkers chaired
by Mr. Davignon- could also 'improve understanding' on future action, in
the same way it helped create the Euro in the 1990s, he said," reported
the EU Observer in March 2009.
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