Chapter 15, The Bilderberg Diaries, by Jim Tucker
1996 - King City, Ontario
Growing Nationalism in 1996 forced the Bilderberg group to revise its strategy for
global domination
Hail Canada: In 1996, this group of patriotic Canadian citizens gathered
outside Bilderberg meeting site in King City, Ontario, to protest the secrecy
surrounding the Bilderberg confab. Since that meeting Canada has moved closer to a model
police state, clamping down on free speech for controversial topics.
March 1995 - Washington D.C.: When he was speaker of the House, Rep. Newt Gingrich (R-Ga.) said
he never had and never would attend a meeting of either the Trilateral Commission or the Bilderberg Group.
As far as can be determined, he spoke truthfully. However, he is a proud member of the Council on Foreign
Relations. His name has never been found on the participants list of either organization,
although he is a proponent of American military aggression around the world. This chat came
in March 1995, when Gingrich had only been the speaker since January.
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Hunkering down in an unwelcome blizzard of publicity, Bilderberg developed a new strategy
for achieving its goal of a world government. Behind lines of mostly invisible security
at the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce Leadership Center, Bilderberg set forth its plans
during its annual gathering from May 30 to June 1 in 1996.
For openers, the Global Plantation wanted to employ new propaganda techniques to counter
surging patriotism in the West.
New "scientific studies" warned of impending world disasters: Refugees fleeing farms for
lack of "sustainable growth" would lead to famine in cities. Also, hysteria over water
and air pollution was to be generated.
One speaker said:
"People of the world, but especially stubborn Americans, who want to cling to every
last shred of sovereignty, must be made to understand that we all breath the polluted
air and drink the foul water; the air and waterways know no borders and have no loyalties.
"To say that a supranational agency under the UN must address this problem is stating
the obvious," he added. "It is equally obvious that the UN must have final arbitration
over immigration issues as the refugees grow in number."
And another:
"Since we last met [in Burgenstock, Switzerland] we have seen the problem of nationalism
increase, not abate, in Europe but more so in the United States. If reforms are to succeed,
we must convince the middle class that supporting new powers for the UN is a patriotic
duty, to save his country from natural disasters."
Also listening and promising to report nothing were these journalistic prostitutes: Conrad
Black, who owns more than half of Canda's newspapers; conservative leader William F. Buckley, Jr.,
editor-at-large of National Review; Paul Gigot, The Wall Street Journal;
Margarida Marante, identified as a "TV journalist"; Peter Job of Britain, who heads Reuters,
Andrew Knight of Britain, who heads Zionist billionaire Rupert Murdoch's media conglomerate,
News Corporation; Norman Poderetz, editor of Commentary, the "neo-conservative" voice
of the New York chapter of the American Jewish Committee; Toger Seidenfaden of Denmark,
editor of Politiken A/S and Walter Veltroni of Ireland, editor of L'Unita.
The prescece of two leading "conservative" voices within the ranks of the plutocracy,
the aforementioned Buckley and Podhoretz, indicates that Bilderberg intends to continue
flexing its influence over the "loyal opposition" in the ranks of the so-called
"Republican right" and the "conservative movement." Buckley and Podhoretz are charged
with suppressing populist and nationalist grass-roots rebellion with the GOP as
represented by Buchanan's maverick presidential candidacy. At last year's Bilderberg
confab in Burgenstock, Switzerland, the official "guest conservative" was Buchanan's
leading critic, William Kristol, publisher of Murdoch's Weekly Standard.
The gathering of the international elite heard more:
"Make [the masses] understand that, if we fail to have a strong global government,
empowered to act effectively, quickly and decisively, the disaster that will
eventually strike the Earth will impact them, too, and waving a flag will be
meaningless. What is the value of the nation-state if it cannot meet these challenges?"
In that year, the general feeling imparted by Bilderberg was: Brace for propaganda designed
to make you feel unpatriotic unless you support massive transfers of American tax dollars
overseas.
"We must promote a 'Lincolnesque' view ...the world cannot long endure half-poor and
half-rich ...hunger in Africa and poverty in Russia are as important a problem for
America and other industrialized nations as highways and bridges."
Unless wealthy nationas acted, the propaganda line went, they would be overwhelmed with
floods of refugees that could not be stopped.
"Is it not better to surrender a significant amount of sovereignty so world problems
can be addressed on a global level than be so overwhelmed later that our precious
borders are meaningless?" one asked.
"We cannot let America or any other country arbitrarily close its borders so the
refugee or the refugee burden falls more heavily on others," one said. "Still,
estabilishing a supranational UN agency to arbitrate these matters will be as difficult
to sell as it is necessary to be done."
Despite their dejection over the increase in "provincialism" and "nationalism," Bilderberg
had something to celebrate. "We have now established NATO as an instrument of the UN, and
there has been little adverse reaction other than the far-right wing," one said. He predicted
that NATO would change its charter to allow ventures outside Europe - anywhere in the
world.
"The European experiment has succeeded," he announced. He was referring to the fact that
NATO intervened in former Yugoslavia under direction of the UN Security Council. Americans
served under a foreign commander; the president and Congress had no voice in the matter,
despite the Constitution.
The U.S. defense secretary that year, William Perry, who once assured this writer that
he opposed a UN standing army, is not known to have objected to these comments, although
he was present.
"Even American 'conservatives' welcome NAFTA and call for expansion, so the only problem
we must deal with is super patriots and nationalists of the right-wing," one Bilderberg
was overheard saying.
The plutocrats agreed that the program to establish Europe as a superstate with a common
currency is on track and the Asian Pacific Economic Community is evolving, at a
satisfying pace, into the Pacific Union.
"Our biggest problem is America," one said, in an unintended tribute to the United States.
"Where once we could make significant progress undisturbed, every year we are having more
problems with American nationalism, making some things politically difticult."
One of the final goals of the Global Plantation has been to expand the European Union
to include Poland and eventually other former Warsaw Pact countries and, then the former
Soviet states, making the entity continent-wide. similarly, one-world leaders wanted
to press the expansion of NAFTA to include all nations in the hemispheric unit to
ultimately have a governing "parliament" for an "American Union." thus dividing the
world into three great regions as George Orwell predicted in his book 1984.
Establishment Acts on Bilderberg Orders
A few days after the 1996 Bilderberg meeting ended in Canada, one-worlders quickly
put together plans to strengthen the Global Plantation. What a coincidence.
Moving swiftly to advance the Bilderberg agenda unveiled in King City, Ontario, international
manipulators moved to make housing and food an "international right" and expand NATO
as the UN's standing army.
Ultimately, these two moves were to merge into a situation where the UN would have final
authority - enforced by a world army - which would allow it to enter the United States
or any nation, and whereby it could arbitrarily ship taxpayer funds from the Western
nations to poor countries.
These mutual missions have the weight of the White House behind them. Clinton had sent his senior
advisor George Stephanopoulos to the secret meeting in Canada to receive his orders.
Even as the UN-sponsored Habitat II conference in Istanbul, Turkey, was deciding that
housing is a "right" for all people. UN functionaries were calling for a "food summit"
in Rome in Novemeber 1995 to proclaim a full stomach a world "right."
Once it was decided that adquate housing and food are the rights of every world citizen,
it would become the proclaimed "duty" of the United States and other industrialized
nations to implement these "rights".
While these dual campaigns would advance the visionaries' dream of a world government,
there were immediate and immense profits in store for the Rockefellers, Rothchilds and other
international financiers involved in these secret sessions.
While American taxpayers and those of other Western nations provide housing and food,
these international entrepreneurs would be hailed as statesmen for "helping" the
poor countries as they build factories and other enterprises.
As your tax dollars provide food and shelter, the rich get richer by paying slave wages
in poor countries that are unencumbered by such "fringes" as pensions, paid vacations
and health insurance provided by may domestic companies.
The Food and Agricultural Organization, a UN agency, would work toward achieving a "food
for all" goal in November, it said in a statement.
"Support from the United States has been extremely important" for both food and
housing "rights," said Hilmi Toros, who was participating in the Istanbul summit.
"They have given us their full support."
Agreement on the housing "right" in Istanbul was applauded by the United States. "For
the first time [the agreement] translates [housing rights] to the common level," said
Michael Stegman, assistant secretary of Housing and Urban Development and alternate
head of the U.S. delegation.
Participants weren't timid about demanding the resources of the United States and
other Western nations. Wealthy nations should not only make housing a "right," but
should pay the costs, said Fernando Berrocal Soto, a Costa Rican delegate and
representative of the "Group of 77" poor countries.
"Substantial financial resources should be mobilized by the international community
with a view to address the issue of human settlements," he added.
Meanwhile, NATO was being revised to enhance its emerging role as the UN's world
army. Meeting in Berlin, NATO bureaucrats agreed to be "more flexible" and to
continue working "outside the alliance," as it is now in Bosnia, where troops will
remain beyond the one-year commitment.
NATO also agreed to bring in Poland first, then Hungary and the Czech Republic. Ultimately,
all European countries, including Russia, would be part of this continental army.