As politicians, captains of industry and intelligence personnel descended on Copenhagen last week for the annual Bilderberg conference, we were reminded once again why nothing says conspiracy theory quite like Bilderberg.
Eerie conversation pieces such as “Does Privacy Exist?” (originating as they do from a group of people barricaded into a conference hotel, it’s painfully clear that it isn’t their privacy that is under discussion) as well as the Chatham House Rules (the rich man’s version of “what happens in Vegas, stays in Vegas” which allows participants to use the information they have received but prohibits them from revealing who has said what at the conference) has ensured that Bilderberg continues to hold off new competition from the Trilateral Commission and best even old favorites like the Illuminati for the title of conspiracy shindig of the year par excellence.
And while I doubt that invitees are off worshipping owls, calling up the Antichrist or transmogrifying into aliens (for one thing, they don’t possess that kind of creativity), we all know that the Christine Lagardes (head of the IMF), Robert Zoellicks (now at Goldman Sachs and formerly President of the World Bank), and David Petraeuses (former four-star general, CIA director, and now – post-extramarital-affair – at global investment firm KKR) of this world do carve out three or four days from their heavy schedules to shoot the breeze.
People are rightly concerned that business magnates and top politicians are conducting conversations like “Jobs, Entitlement and Debt” in private, along with “Challenges for Africa,” which considering the complete absence of African attendees, says a lot about whose challenges in Africa are going to be discussed (my guess would be that Chinese and Western leaders attempted to carve out their respective roles on this resource-rich continent). I think we can all agree that these politically relevant conversations should be happening in public and that your ability to enjoy an occasional cocktail schmooze with politicians should not be tied so tightly to the size of your bank account. Full story...
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Eerie conversation pieces such as “Does Privacy Exist?” (originating as they do from a group of people barricaded into a conference hotel, it’s painfully clear that it isn’t their privacy that is under discussion) as well as the Chatham House Rules (the rich man’s version of “what happens in Vegas, stays in Vegas” which allows participants to use the information they have received but prohibits them from revealing who has said what at the conference) has ensured that Bilderberg continues to hold off new competition from the Trilateral Commission and best even old favorites like the Illuminati for the title of conspiracy shindig of the year par excellence.
And while I doubt that invitees are off worshipping owls, calling up the Antichrist or transmogrifying into aliens (for one thing, they don’t possess that kind of creativity), we all know that the Christine Lagardes (head of the IMF), Robert Zoellicks (now at Goldman Sachs and formerly President of the World Bank), and David Petraeuses (former four-star general, CIA director, and now – post-extramarital-affair – at global investment firm KKR) of this world do carve out three or four days from their heavy schedules to shoot the breeze.
People are rightly concerned that business magnates and top politicians are conducting conversations like “Jobs, Entitlement and Debt” in private, along with “Challenges for Africa,” which considering the complete absence of African attendees, says a lot about whose challenges in Africa are going to be discussed (my guess would be that Chinese and Western leaders attempted to carve out their respective roles on this resource-rich continent). I think we can all agree that these politically relevant conversations should be happening in public and that your ability to enjoy an occasional cocktail schmooze with politicians should not be tied so tightly to the size of your bank account. Full story...
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