Bilderberg and other meetings
At Infowars, Jim Tucker and Daniel Estulin report on the Bilderberg meeting in Greece. Reporting from these meetings is always thin, it takes a while before somebody leaks what went on inside the meetings. Don’t blame these reporters for Bilderberg secrecy.
The Times has its own report. The Times seems not to have figured out that all these calls for global governance and New World Oder cooperation amount to an elite conspiracy. It’s pointless to play dumb, the conspiracy is out in the open now. We would send The Times a copy of The Hidden Masters, but we know they are posturing and favor the global takeover.
WiseUpJournal reviews last year’s Bilderberg meeting.
America has its own Bilderberg meeting, held last week. The usual suspects attended, David Rockefeller, George Soros, Bill Gates, Ted Turner, Warren Buffett, Michael Bloomberg. They used the “charity” front for this meeting. You do understand that charitable ideas need to be kept secret, don’t you?
The more meetings, the more nervous they are.
New developments in good old fashioned diplomacy: The Guardian reports on secret talks between the United States and China on “climate change” dating back to the last months of the Bush administration. The agreements provide the background to Obama’s handling of the auto companies. It’s easy to imagine that importing Chinese cars was agreed upon before Obama set his policies regarding General Motors. Of course, that wasn’t reported in the Guardian’s summary of key agreements, we are just speculating.
Deutsche Welle reports on the China-EU summit. It appears nobody budged at this meeting.
Putin signed gas pipeline deals with Italy, Greece, and Bulgaria. Pravda reports that the Russian Central Bank has switched out of dollar-based assets toward Euro assets.
Turkey is going broke and is negotiating with the IMF for a bailout. The problem is, Turkey doesn’t want to cut government spending.
Recall that the IMF is already issuing billions of dollars of “special drawing rights” so that the global bailout doesn’t fall entirely on the Federal Reserve Bank.
In Britain, the resignation of Speaker Michael Martin over expense-account irregularities has a wider implication. Britain will abolish its Commons Fees Office and enlist independent regulators to monitor Parliament’s expenses. Now if we could just get independent regulation of our corrupt Congress…
Dan Schaffer explains how the government has manipulated the stock market to hold it up while the banks raise capital. If you have been wondering how the stock market can go up in the face of rising unemployment and shrinking GDPs around the world, now you know how it’s done.
Daily Markets reports on an interview between Representative Alan Grayson and Federal Reserve Bank Inspector General Elizabeth Coleman. Coleman doesn’t know, or doesn’t want to tell, what happened to $9 trillion in Federal Reserve assets. Maybe we could get an independent auditor for the Fed?
Enough bad news for one day.
By the way, we kind of like Pravda. Never thought we’d say that.
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