[GJM] Who owns the World?

Richard Foley rerailer at earthlink.net
Tue Aug 28 04:14:01 MDT 2007


Robert, you have stumbled across a truth that few know anything  
about.  However, there are a couple of hundred million people in the  
US who would dispute the argument that this law still applied to the  
U.S.  Nevertheless, you are very near a core truth about the reasons  
why certain things were done in the US that were very different  
regarding the owning of land.

I am sure that I will misspell this term "aloadial title."  This is a  
title which an individual receives from the Federal Beau. of Land  
Management (or what ever it was called in the previous centuries.)  
and yes there are still a few of them around which have not been  
superseded by other types of titles.  That is why it is necessary  
that a "title search" be done on every home mortgage and why it is  
necessary that "title insurance" is part of every home purchase.

If you read enough American history you will come across the early  
struggle between those who wanted to institute land sales by  
mortgage, and those who opposed this kind of finance.  Daniel Boone  
was another famous American frontiersman who at various times owned  
vast tracks of land.  In the end he lost all his (?) land in law suits.

Under an aloadial title you truly own your land as a sovereign  
citizen.  Your land can not be taxed away from you.  Local and state  
government can not tell you what you can do or build or not build on  
your land.

In the US at various times titles to land could be asserted in a  
variety of ways with different types of titles.  George Washington  
certainly before the revolt against King George of England, was one  
of the largest land title holders in all of the 13 Colonies.  This  
was by virtue of "tomahawk titles" in the area north of the Ohio  
River and west of Fort Pitt (now Pittsburgh, PA. Certain men were  
hired to cross into the Shawnee lands and chop marks on trees which  
served to meet the necessary legal requirement for a claim of title.   
Of course the Shawnees would chop off the heads of all those they  
could catch doing such marking.

All land in the borders of the U.S. came into the possession of the  
U.S. by virtue of treaty.  Treaty Law is superior to all other law,  
even constitutional law.  The American Rebellion of 1776 was ended by  
a treaty between the English Crown and the U.S. but like most laws  
and most treaties some just can't resist trying to break them.

For example, the U.S. as the colonies before it, practiced breaking  
every treaty ever made with native peoples.  And yes, I do agree that  
what happened after 1865 was nothing less than a Genocidal War Policy  
of the U.S. against the native peoples of the West, in which every  
treaty was systematically broken.  The same players in the War  
Between the States carried out this genocide, and were as proud of it  
as were some of the Nazis in Germany were about their genocide  
against the inferior races of Jews, Gypsies, Hungarians, Poles,  
Russians etc.etc. But, that is another subject.

Richard Foley


On Aug 21, 2007, at 9:41 AM, E. Crockett wrote:

>
> --- robert searle <dharao4 at yahoo.co.uk> wrote:
>
>>
>> Dear All,
>>
>>         On TalkSport I happened to hear a somewhat
>> short interview with Kevin Cahill who has research,
>> and published material concerning who owns the
>> world.
>> Incredible as it seems Queen Elizabeth II owns most
>> of
>> it (including the former colonies ofcourse!!)This is
>> due to a legal arrangement, and appears in what is
>> called The Land Registry Act which is "medieval" in
>> character, and originates from that time.
>> Apparently,
>> there was an attempt to "repeal" it in 1875 but
>> later
>> in 1925 it was put back on the statute book without
>> any real consultation with Parliament.
>>
>> When people "own" property "freehold"in England, and
>> in the former colonies presumably they do so only as
>> TENANTS to the Crown!! Most people know next to
>> nothing about this! The danger of this (in theory)is
>> that Her Majestys Government can take away any
>> property from anyone without  much (if any) legal
>> redress.
>>
>> Indeed, one caller to TalkSport claimed that they
>> had
>> a compulsory purchase order which they took to the
>> European Court of Human Rights. However, it is
>> expensive to do this.
>>
>> It must be remembered too that the UK has no written
>> constitution, and people are seen as "subjects" (or
>> "serfs" to the Crown!!)as opposed to "citizens".
>>
>>
>>
>> http://www.whoownstheworld.com/
>>
>>
>> Robert Searle
>>
>>
>>
>>
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>
> Next Chapter: The Council on Foreign Relations and the Trilateral  
> Commission
>
> Previous Chapter: The New Age
> The Systems Method
>
> Bilderberg and Club of Rome
>
>
> 			
> David Rockefeller	Henry Kissinger	Peter Carrington	James Wolfensohn
>
> "We are grateful to the Washington Post, the New York Times, Time  
> Magazine and other great publications whose directors have attended  
> our meetings and respected their promises of discretion for almost  
> forty years." He went on to explain: "It would have been impossible  
> for us to develop our plan for the world if we had been subjected  
> to the lights of publicity during those years. But, the world is  
> more sophisticated and prepared to march towards a world  
> government. The supernational sovereignty of an intellectual elite  
> and world bankers is surely preferable to the national  
> autodetermination practiced in past centuries."
> -attributed to David Rockefeller at the June 1991 Bilderberger  
> meeting in Baden Baden, Germany (a meeting also attended by then- 
> Governor Bill Clinton and by Dan Quayle).
>
> Bilderberg is driven by the systems methodology. This is the  
> methodology satirized in The Report from Iron Mountain and Silent  
> Weapons for Quiet Wars. This latter in particular is a direct and  
> deliberate indictment of Bilderberg. Of the former, Henry Kissinger  
> wrote "Whoever wrote it is an idiot."
>
> The system paradigm, in a nutshell, is the precept that one can  
> effectively control the future by a two step process: (1) analyzing  
> the present into primitive components and their interrelations, and  
> (2) architecting a strategy of selective manipulation,  
> reconstruction, introduction, and abolition, of components and  
> interrelations. Strictly speaking, this methodology is the most  
> effective of any - though if applied unwisely or maliciously, it is  
> also the most destructive and pernicious.
>
> Problems - grave problems - arise in three principal areas: (1)  
> accurate, precise, thorough ascertainment of what the components  
> and the interrelations are, (2) the choice of goal, and (3) the  
> development of an implementation strategy. Total accuracy,  
> precision, and thoroughness of analysis are impossible with any  
> system of more than modest complexity.  Societies of humans are, of  
> course, of far more than modest complexity. Systematicians tend to  
> underestimate the complexity of natural systems, and overestimate  
> their capacity to accommodate complexity, both in analysis and in  
> architecture. In particular, based on an undefendable presumption  
> of rigor of analysis, and due to mistaken ascertainment of human  
> nature, they develop architectures that include components and  
> relations of rigor and regimentation, where chaos-tolerant  
> components and relations of suggestion and flexibility are requisite.
>
> Social and economic systematicians, being institutional academics  
> as a rule, often choose and accept goals that are noxious,  
> particularly when the system includes people. And, often through no  
> deliberate intent, the architectures they develop cause disastrous  
> collateral damage, wreaking havoc on human autonomy and conflicting  
> wildly with the prerequisites of individual human fulfillment.
>
> An old cliché is an apt caution for all systematicians and those  
> subject to their machinations: A little knowledge is far more  
> dangerous than none at all.
>
> Bilderberg is where the top conspirators broadly effect  
> implementation of their architecture. It is ground zero for  
> practical conspirator coordination. The conspirator systematicians  
> exhibit all the ills detailed above. In particular, the goal they  
> accept is perpetuation of the existing power structure. This goal  
> is inimical to humanity, and particularly noxious to its brightest  
> and most inventive members. In one of those examples of  
> happenstance that smack of fate, the chief conspirator architect -  
> Henry Kissinger - has the initials HAK.
>
> Using data assembled by Tony Gosling, I have done a simple analysis  
> of attendance at Bilderberg '99 (Hotel Caesar Park Penha Longa,  
> Sintra, Portugal), '98 (Turnberry, Ayrshire, Scotland), '97 (Pine  
> Isle resort, Lake Lanier, near Atlanta, Georgia, USA), '96 (CIBC  
> Leadership Centre, Toronto, Canada), and '95 (Zurich, Switzerland).  
> The nucleus of power obviously is the set of people who attended  
> all of them - these are the people Bilderberg is built around. I  
> separately list people who attended four of the five meetings, and  
> end with a list of curious attendees who aren't regulars. David  
> Rockefeller is notable in his habitual attendance not only of  
> Bilderberg, but of CFR and TLC gatherings, making it obvious that  
> he is indeed the Chairman of the Board of the World. Hidden behind  
> the scenes is the House of Rothschild, which nonetheless does make  
> personal Bilderberg appearances.
>
> My guess is that Sir Evelyn de Rothschild (Chairman, N M Rothschild  
> & Sons - nmrothschild.co.uk) and perhaps some other Rothschilds set  
> the covert agenda for each Bilderberg meeting, and have final say  
> on who will attend in a given year, and David Rockefeller mediates  
> their agenda, though Henry Kissinger may also act as a direct  
> mediator. Carrington likely has much direct involvement in auditing  
> prospective invitees. The Chairman - Peter Carrington, until 2000  
> when Etienne Davignon assumed the chairmanship - is the one who  
> actually sends the invitations. The Advisory Group, Steering  
> Committee, and Honorary Secretaries-General, nominally recommend  
> attendees, but in practice this is not quite how things work.
>
> Conrad Black brags (or confesses, depending on one's point of view)  
> that "After 1986, I became the co-leader of the Canadian group and  
> effectively chose most of the Canadian participants." Presumably,  
> Agnelli "effectively" chooses the Italian participants, Balsemao  
> the Portuguese, Barnevik the Swedish, Davignon the Belgian, Hoegh  
> the Norwegian, Halberstadt the Dutch, Olechowski the Polish, de  
> Pury the Swiss, Schrempp the German, Seidenfaden the Danish,  
> Sutherland the Irish, Vranitzky the Austrian, Collomb the French,  
> David the Greek, Carvajal Urquijo the Spanish, and Wolfensohn, all  
> those not otherwise included. Selection of US and UK participants  
> is clearly more complicated.
>
> One might assume that those officially designated as  
> "representatives" ("REP" in the below list) would be the ones that  
> choose participants from their respective nations, but this is  
> clearly not the case, considering that Black is not a  
> "representative." Status as a representative is likely indicative  
> of a person tending to organizational and reporting  
> responsibilities specific to his nation. The Steering Committee  
> ("STEERING") consists of four people responsible for more general  
> administrative and organizational responsibilities. The role of the  
> Advisory Committee ("ADVISORY") is unclear to me, but appears to be  
> an ultra-select aristocratic old boy's club.
>
> Tony Gosling has assembled a treasure trove of details on  
> Bilderberg's history and function. This is vital reading.
>
>
> This is Bilderberg
>
> 95-99:
>
> Allaire, Paul A - USA - Chairman, Xerox Corporation
> Balsemao, Francisco Pinto - P - REP: PORTUGAL -
> Professor of Communication Science, New University, Lisbon;  
> Chairman, IMPRESA, S.G.P.S.; Former Prime Minister.
> Barnevik, Percy - S - REP: SWEDEN - Chairman, ABB Asea Brown Boveri  
> Ltd
> Black, Conrad M. - CDN - Chairman, The Telegraph plc.
> Carrington, Peter - GB - STEERING: FORMER CHAIRMAN -
> Former Chairman of the Board, Christie's International plc; Former  
> Secretary General, NATO Honorary Secretary General for Europe and  
> Canada
> Hoegh, Westye - N - REP: NORWAY -
> Chairman of the Board, Leif Hoegh and Co. A.S.A.; Former President,  
> Norwegian Shipowners Association
> Holbrooke, Richard C. - USA -
> Former Assistant Secretary for European Affairs; Vice Chairman, CS  
> First Boston
> Jordan, Jr., Vernon E. - USA - REP: USA -
> Senior Partner, Akin, Gump, Strauss, Hauer & Feld, LLP (Attorneys- 
> at-Law)
> Kissinger, Henry A. - USA - REP: USA - Former Secretary of State;  
> Chairman, Kissinger Associates; Inc.
> Netherlands, Her Majesty the Queen of the - NL
> Olechowski, Andrzej - PL - Chairman, Central Europe Trust, Poland
> Pury, David de - CH - REP: SWITZERLAND - Chairman, de Pury Pictet  
> Turrettini and Co. Ltd.
> Rockefeller, David - USA - ADVISORY -
> Chairman, Chase Manhattan Bank International Advisory Committee
> Schrempp, Jurgen E. - D - Chairman of the Board of Management,  
> Daimler-Benz AG.
> Seidenfaden, Toger - DK - Editor in Chief, Politiken A/S
> Taylor, J. Martin - GB - Group Chief Executive, Barclays plc.
> Vranitzky, Franz - A - Former Federal Chancellor
> Wolfensohn, James D. - INT - REP: USA/INT -
> President, the World Bank; President, James D. Wolfensohn, Inc.
> Yost, Casimir A. - USA - REP: USA -
> Director, Institute for the Study of Diplomacy, School of Foreign  
> Service, Georgetown University, Washington; Executive Director, The  
> Asia Foundation's Center for Asian-Pacific Affairs
> 96-99:
>
> Collomb, Bertrand - F - Chairman and CEO, Lafarge
> David, George A. - GR - Chairman of the Board, Hellenic Bottling  
> Company S.A.
> Wolff von Amerongen, Otto - D - ADVISORY - Chairman and CEO of Otto  
> Wolff GmbH
> 95-98:
>
> Agnelli, Giovanni - I - ADVISORY - Honorary Chairman, Fiat S.p.A.
> Davignon, Etienne - B - STEERING: CHAIRMAN, REP: BELGIUM -
> Executive Chairman, Societe Generale de Belgique; Former Vice  
> Chairman of the Commission of the European Communities
> Levy-Lang, Andre - F - Chairman of the Board of Management, Banque  
> Paribas.
> Sutherland, Peter D. - IRL - REP: IRELAND -
> Chairman and Managing Director, Goldman Sachs International; Former  
> Director General, GATT and WTO.
> Wolfowitz, Paul - USA -
> Dean, Nitze School of Advanced International Studies, Former Under  
> Secretary of Defense for Policy (see The Challenge of Managing  
> Uncertainty: Paul Wolfowitz on Intelligence Policy-Relations)
> notables:
>
> Spain, Her Majesty the Queen of - 96 - ES
> Sweden, His Majesty the King of - 98 - S
> Lipponen, Paavo - 98 - FIN - Prime Minister
> Ahtisaari, Martti - 95,96 - FI - President of the Republic of Finland
> Oddsson, David - 97 - ICE - Prime Minister.
> Chretien, Jean - 96 - CDN - Prime Minister
> Harris, Michael - 96 - CDN - Premier of Ontario
> Klein, Ralph - 95 - Premier of Alberta
> Brittan, Leon - 98 - INT - Vice President of the European Commission
> Almunia Amann, Joaquin - 98 - E - Secretary General, Socialist Party
>
> Rothschild, Evelyn de - 98 - GB - Chairman, N M Rothschild and Sons
> Rothschild, Emma - 95 - Dir Ctr for History and Economics Cambridge
> Soros, George - 96 - USA - President, Soros Fund Management
> Lamont, Norman - 95 - MP, Fmr Chan Excq, Director of N.M. Rothschild
> Crockett, Andrew - 98 - INT - General Manager, Bank for  
> International Settlements
> Victor, Alice - 96 - USA - RRR - Executive Assistant, Rockefeller  
> Financial Services, Inc.
> McDonough, William J. - 97,98 - USA - President, Federal Reserve  
> Bank of New York
> Feldstein, Martin S. - 96,98 - USA - President and CEO, National  
> Bureau of Economic Research Inc.
> Kopper, Hilmar - 95,98 - D - REP: GERMANY - Chairman of the  
> Supervisory Board, Deutsche Bank A.G.
> Roll, Lord of Ipsden - none - GB - ADVISORY - President, S. G.  
> Warburg Group plc.
>
> Deutch, John M. - 98 - USA -
> Institute Professor, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept.  
> of Chemistry. Former Director General, Central Intelligence Agency;  
> Former Deputy Secretary of Defence
> Soderberg, Nancy - 95 - Dep Asst to President for NSA
> Berger, Samuel R. - 97 - USA - Assistant to the President for  
> National Security Affairs.
> Stephanopoulos, George - 96,97 - USA -
> Visiting Professor, Columbia University, Former Senior Advisor to  
> the President for Policy and Strategy.
> Beugel, Ernst H van der - 97,98 - NL - ADVISORY -
> Emeritus Professor of International Relations, Leiden University;  
> Former Honorary Secretary General of Bilderberg Meetings for Europe  
> and Canada
> Griffin, Anthony G.S. - 96 - CDN - ADVISORY - Honorary Chairman and  
> Director, Guardian Group
> Chubais, Anatoli B. - 98 - RUS - Former First Vice Prime Minister;  
> Chairman RAO EES
> Buckley, Jr., William F. - 96 - USA - Editor-at-Large, National Review
> Ball, George W. - none - USA - ADVISORY - Former Under-Secretary of  
> State.
> Bundy, William P. - none - USA - ADVISORY - Former Editor, Foreign  
> Affairs.
> Elliott, Theodore L., Jr. - none - USA - STEERING: SECRETARY  
> GENERAL FOR USA -
> Dean Emeritus, The Fletcher School of Law & Diplomacy; Former US  
> Ambassador.
> Jankowitsch, Peter - none - A - REP: AUSTRIA - Member of  
> Parliament, Former Foreign Minister.
> Lacharrére, Marc Lardreit de - none - F - REP: FRANCE - Chairman,  
> Fimalac.
> Carras, Costa - 96,97 - GB - REP: GREECE - Director of Companies
> Monti, Mario - 96 - INT - REP: ITALY -
> Commissioner, European Communities, Rector and Professor of  
> Economics, Bocconi University, Milan.
> Ruggiero, Renato - 96 - INT - REP: ITALY -
> Director General, World Trade Organization; Former Minister of Trade
> Knight, Andrew - 95,96 - GB - REP: UNITED KINGDOM -
> Executive Chairman, News International plc.
> Mathias, Charles McC. - none - USA - REP: USA -
> Partner, Jones, Day, Reavis & Pogue; Former US Senator (Republican,  
> Maryland).
> Whitehead, Rozanne C. - none - USA - REP: USA - Former Deputy  
> Secretary of State.
> Williams, Lynn R. - none - USA - REP: USA - International  
> President, United Steel- Workers of America.
> I have also created a complete alphabetically sorted list of all  
> '95-'99 attendees.
>
> Read here the documents presented at Bilderberg '99.
>
> Here's Tony Gosling's mailing regarding Bilderberg 2003, just to  
> refresh this info a bit:
>
> Date: Sat, 24 May 2003 15:55:48 -0400
> Subject: PEPIS #51 - Bilderberg participants, Versailles 2003
> Reply-to: tony at gaia.org
> Sender: messagebot at harry.flamingtext.com
> From: "tony at gaia.org" <tony at gaia.org>
>
> This is being sent on behalf of tony at gaia.org as part of the  
> mailing list that you joined.
> List: PEPIS
> URL: http://www.bilderberg.org
> ------------------------------------------------------------
>
>
> PEPIS #51 - 24May03 - Bilderberg participants, Versailles 2003
>
>
>
> Here's this years list of participants, with a few comments.
>
> The version of this participant list is on my web-page  http:// 
> www.bilderberg.org/2003.htm#participants includes many links to  
> Bilderberg participants' websites. It makes for interesting  
> surfing. Please send me in any 'missing links' or comments.
> Even though I clearly photographed King Juan-Carlos of Spain going  
> into the conference he does not appear on the list - unless as an  
> appendage of Queen Sofia - which I doubt. So I'd advise you to  
> treat this official participant list with plenty of healthy suspicion.
>
>
> cheers,
>
> Tony
>
>
>
>
> 2003 Agenda -- from Bilderberg Press Release
>
> "The conference will deal mainly with European-American relations  
> and in this context Iraq, The Middle East after Terrorism, Non- 
> Proliferation, The European Convention, Economic Problems." (rest  
> of 'press release' much like previous years but no participant list  
> yet)
>
> 2003 Participant list
>
> BILDERBERG MEETINGS Versailles, France, 15-18th May 2003 CURRENT  
> LIST OF PARTICIPANTS
>
> B - Honorary Chairman - Davignon, Etienne - Vice-Chairman, Societe  
> Generale de Belgique
> GB - Honorary Secretary General - Taylor. J Martin - Chairman WH  
> Smith PLC; International advisor, Goldman Sachs International
>
> F - Adler, Alexandre - Editorial counsel, Le Figaro
> I - Ambrosetti, Alfredo - Chairman Ambrosetti Group
> TR - Babacan, Ali - Minister of Economic Affairs
> GR - Bakoyannis, Dora - Mayor of Athens
> GB - Balls, Edward - Chief Economic Advisor to the Treasury
> P - Balsemão, Francisco Pinto - Professor of Communication Science,  
> New University, Lisbon; Chairman and CEO, IMPRESA, S.G.P.S.; Former  
> Prime Minister
> P - Barroso, José M. Durão - Prime Minister
> TR - Bayar, Mehmet A. - Deputy Chairman of DYP (True Path Party)
> A - Becker, Erich - Chairman of the Managing Board and CEO, VA  
> Technologie AG
> I - Bendetti, Rodolfo de - Managing Director CIR S.p.A.
> I - Bernabè, Franco - Chairman Franco Bernabe & C. S.p.A.
> F - Beytout, Nicolas - Editor-in-Chief, Les Echos
> KW - Bishara, Ahmad E. - Secretary General of Kuwait's liberal  
> National Democratic Party
> CDN - Black, Conrad M. - Chairman, Telegraph Group Limited
> INT - Bolkestein, Frits - Internal Markets Commissioner, European  
> Commission
> USA - Bolton, John R. - Under-Secretary of State for Arms Control  
> and International Security
> F - Bon, Michel - Honorary Chairman, France Telecom
> F - Bruguière, Jean-Louis - First Vice President, Justice Department
> D - Burda, Hubert - Publisher and CEO, Hubert Burda Media Holding  
> GmbH & Co.
> F - Camus, Phillipe - CEO, European Aeronautics Defence and Space  
> company European Aeronautics Defence and Space company (EADS)
> INT - Cary, Anthony J. - Head of Christopher Patten's cabinet, EU.  
> [Patten is European Commissioner for Enlargement]
> F - Castries, Henri de - Chairman of the Board, AXA
> E - Cebrián, Juan Luis - CEO, PRISA
> B - Claes, Willy - Minister of State [Willy Claes is not now a  
> Belgian Minister but former Belgian Foreign Minister and former  
> Secretary General of NATO 1994-1995 - now disgraced - TG]
> GB - Clarke, Kenneth - Member of Parliament, [former Chancellor of  
> the Exchequer]
> USA - Collins, Timothy C. - Senior Managing Director and CEO,  
> Ripplewood Holdings LLC
> F - Collomb, Bertrand - Chairman and CEO, Lafarge
> F - Copé, Jean-François - Secretary of State in charge of relations  
> with Parliament; Government Spokesman
> USA - Corzine, Jon S. - Senator (D, New Jersey)
> S - Dahlbãck, Claes - Chairman, Investor AB
> GR - David, George A. - Chairman of the Board, Coca-Cola H.B.C. S.A.
> USA - Donilon, Thomas E. - Executive Vice President, Fannie Mae
> I - Draghi, Mario - Vice-Chairman and Managing Director, Goldman  
> Sachs International
> DK - Eldrup, Anders - CEO, Danish Oil and Gas Corporation
> USA - Feldstein, Martin S. - President and CEO, National Bureau of  
> Economic Research
> CDN - Fell, Anthony S. - Chairman, RBC Dominion Securities Inc.
> USA - Friedman, Thomas L. - Foreign Affairs Columnist, The New York  
> Times
> F - Gergorin, Jean-Luis - Executive Vice President, Strategic  
> Coordination, European Aeronautics Defence and Space company (EADS)
> USA - Gigot, Paul A. - Editorial page editor, The Wall Street Journal
> F - Giscard d'Estaing, Valéry - French President 1974-81; Chairman  
> of the Convention on the Future of Europe
> N - Gjedrem, Svein - Governor, Central Bank of Norway
> IRL - Gleeson, Dermot - Chairman designate, Allied Irish Banks, p.l.c.
> GB - Gould, Philip - Public Relations Adviser to Prime Minister Blair
> USA - Haass, Richard N. - Director, Office of Policy Planning  
> Staff, State Department
> NL - Halberstadt, Victor - Professor of Economics, Leiden  
> University; Former honorary Secretary General of Bilderberg Meetings
> CDN - Harper, Stephen - Leader of the Opposition
> USA - Hertog, Roger - Vice-Chairman, Alliance Capital Management
> NL - Hoop Scheffer, Jaap G. de - Minister for Foreign Affairs
> USA - Hubbard, Allan B. - President, E&A Industries
> USA - Hubbard, R. Glenn - Russell L. Carson Professor of Economics  
> and Finance, Columbia University
> USA - Johnson, James A. - Vice Chairman, Perseus L.L.C.
> USA - Jordan, Jr., Vernon E. - Senior Managing Director, Lazard  
> Freres & Co. L.L.C.
> CH - Kielholz, Walter B. - Former Chairman of the Board, Credit  
> Suisse; Executive Vice Chairman of the Board of Directors, Swiss Re
> GB - King, Mervyn A. - Deputy Governor, Bank of England
> USA - Kissinger, Henry A. - Chairman, Kissinger Associates, Inc.;  
> Member, Defense Policy Board; Member J.P. Morgan International Council
> FIN - Kivinen, Olli - Senior Editor & Columnist, Helsingin Sanomat
> NL - Kok, Wim - Former Prime Minister
> D - Kopper, Hilmar - Former Chairman of the Supervisory Board,  
> Deutsche Bank AG
> USA - Kravis, Henry R. - Founding Partner, Kohlberg Kravis Roberts  
> & Co.
> USA - Kravis, Marie-Joseé - Senior Fellow, Hudson Institute, Inc.
> INT - Lamy, Pascal - Trade Commissioner, European Commission
> F - Lellouche, Pierre - Vice Chairman, NATO Parliamentary Assembly
> F - Lévy-Lang, André - Former Chairman, Paribas
> S - Lindh, Anna - Minister for Foreign Affairs
> FIN - Lipponen, Paavo - Former Prime Minister; Speaker of the  
> Parliament
> DK - Lykketoft, Mogens - Chairman, Social Democrat Party
> CDN - MacMillan, Margaret O. - Provost, Trinity College, University  
> of Toronto
> RUS - Margelov, Mikhail V. - Chairman, Committee for Foreign  
> Affairs, Council of Federation
> F - Montbrial, Thierry de - President, French Institute of  
> International Relations (IFRI)
> INT - Monti, Mario - Competition Commissioner, European Commission
> USA - Mundie, Craig J. - Chief Technical Officer, Advanced  
> Strategies and Policy, Microsoft Corporation
> N - Myklebust, Egil - Chairman, Norsk Hydro ASA
> D - Naas, Matthias - Deputy Editor, Die Zeit
> NL - Netherlands, H.M. the Queen of the [Queen Beatrix - Royal  
> Dutch Shell]
> PL - Olechowski, Andrzej - Leader, Civic Platform
> FIN - Ollila, Jorma - Chairman of the Board and CEO, Nokia Corporation
> INT - Padoa-Schioppa, Thomasso - Member of the Executive Board,  
> European Central Bank
> I - Panara, Marco - Journalist, La Republica
> I - Passera, Corrado - Managing Director, Banca IntesaBCI
> USA - Perkovich, George - Vice President for Studies, Carnegie  
> Endowment for International Peace
> USA - Perle, Richard N. - Member, Defense Policy Board ; Resident  
> Fellow, American Enterprise Institute (AEI) for Public Policy  
> Research; member Project for a New American Century (PNAC)
> B - Philippe, H.R.H. Prince - Crown Prince of Belgium
> I - Poli, Roberto - Chairman, Eni S.p.A.
> F - Ranque, Denis - Chairman and CEO, Thales Aerospace and Defence
> DK - Rasmussen, Anders Fogh - Prime Minister
> CDN - Reisman, Heather - President and CEO, Indigo Books & Music Inc.
> F - Riboud, Franck - Chairman and CEO, Danone Foods
> CH - Ringier, Michael - CEO, Ringier AG
> USA - Rockefeller, David - Member, J.P. Morgan International Council
> P - Rodrigues, Eduardo Ferro - Leader of the Socialist Party;  
> Member of Parliament
> E - Rodriguez Inciarte, Matias - Executive Vice Chairman, Banco  
> Santander Central Hispano
> F - Roy, Olivier - Senior Researcher, CNRS
> USA - Ruggie, John - Director, Center for Business and Government,  
> Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University
> NL - Ruys, Anthony - Chairman of the Board, Heineken N.V.
> TR - Sanberk, Özdem - Director, Turkish Economic and Social Studies  
> Foundation
> I - Scaroni, Paolo - Managing Director, Enel S.p.A.
> D - Schãuble, Wolfgang - Deputy Parliamentary Leader, CDU/CSU Group
> D - Schily, Otto - Minister of the Interior
> A - Scholten, Rudolf - Member of the Board of Executive Directors,  
> Oesterreichische Kontrollbank AG
> D - Schrempp, Jurgen E - Chairman of the Board of Management,  
> Daimler Chrysler AG
> INT - Schwab, Klaus - President, World Economic Forum
> DK - Seidenfaden, Toger - Editor in Chief, Ploitiken
> RUS - Shevtsova, Lilia - Senior Associate, Carnegie Endowment for  
> International Peace
> E - Spain, H.M. the Queen of [King Juan Carlos (see photo) arrived  
> with the queen, but he is not on this list]
> USA - Steinberg, James B. - Vice President and Director, Foreign  
> Policy Studies Program, The Brookings Institution
> CDN - Steyn, Mark - Journalist for various publications
> IRL - Sutherland, Peter D. - Chairman and Managing Director,  
> Goldman Sachs International; Chairman, BP Amoco
> USA - Thornton, John L. - President and CEO, Goldman Sachs Group, Inc.
> F - Trichet, Jean Claude - Governor, Banque de France
> GR - Tsoukalis, Loukas - Professor, University of Athens; President  
> Hellenic Foundation for European and Foreign Policy
> A - Trumpel-Gugerell, Gertrude - Vice Governor, Central Bank of  
> Austria
> CH - Vasella, Daniel L. - Chairman and CEO, Novartis AG
> NL - Veer, Jeroen van der - President, Royal Dutch Petroleum  
> Company; Vice Chairman of the Committee of Managing Directors of  
> Royal Dutch/Shell Group of Companies
> F - Villin, Philippe - Vice Chairman, Lehman Brothers Europe
> NL - Vries, Klaas de - Member of Parliament (Labour); Former  
> Minister of the Interior
> FIN - Whalroos, Björn - President and CEO, Sampo plc.
> S - Wallenberg, Jacob - Chairman of the Board, Skandinavivska  
> Enskilda Banken
> GB - Williams, Gareth - Leader of the House of Lords
> GB - Wolf, Martin H. - Associate Editor/Economics Commentator, The  
> Financial Times
> USA/INT - Wolfensohn, James D. - President, The World Bank
> USA - Wolfowitz, Paul - Deputy Secretary of Defense, US Department  
> of Defense
> USA - Zakaria, Fareed - Editor, Newsweek International
> USA - Zoellick, Robert - Principal Trade Adviser to the President
> D - Zumwinkel, Klaus - Chairman, Deutsche Post Worldnet AG
>
> Rapporteurs
>
> GB - Micklethwait, R. John - United States Editor, The Economist
> GB - Rachman, Gideon - Brussels Correspondent, The Economist
>
> from BBC News Online, 2004-Jun-3, by Jonathan Duffy:
>
> Bilderberg: The ultimate conspiracy theory
>
> The Bilderberg group, an elite coterie of Western thinkers and  
> power-brokers, has been accused of fixing the fate of the world  
> behind closed doors. As the organisation marks its 50th  
> anniversary, rumours are more rife than ever.
>
> Given its reputation as perhaps the most powerful organisation in  
> the world, the Bilderberg group doesn't go a bundle on its  
> switchboard operations.
>
> Telephone inquiries are met with an impersonal female voice - the  
> Dutch equivalent of the BT Callminder woman - reciting back the  
> number and inviting callers to "leave a message after the tone".
>
> Anyone who accidentally dialled the number would probably think  
> they had stumbled on just another residential answer machine.
>
> But behind this ultra-modest façade lies one of the most  
> controversial and hotly-debated alliances of our times.
>
> On Thursday the Bilderberg group marks its 50th anniversary with  
> the start of its yearly meeting.
>
> For four days some of the West's chief political movers, business  
> leaders, bankers, industrialists and strategic thinkers will hunker  
> down in a five-star hotel in northern Italy to talk about global  
> issues.
>
> What sets Bilderberg apart from other high-powered get-togethers,  
> such as the annual World Economic Forum (WEF), is its mystique.
>
> Not a word of what is said at Bilderberg meetings can be breathed  
> outside. No reporters are invited in and while confidential minutes  
> of meetings are taken, names are not noted.
>
> The shadowy aura extends further - the anonymous answerphone  
> message, for example; the fact that conference venues are kept  
> secret. The group, which includes luminaries such as Henry  
> Kissinger and former UK chancellor Kenneth Clarke, does not even  
> have a website.
>
> DISCREET AND ELITE
> This year Bilderberg has announced a list of attendees
> They include BP chief John Browne, US Senator John Edwards, World  
> Bank president James Wolfensohn and Mrs Bill Gates
> In the void created by such aloofness, an extraordinary conspiracy  
> theory has grown up around the group that alleges the fate of the  
> world is largely decided by Bilderberg.
>
> In Yugoslavia, leading Serbs have blamed Bilderberg for triggering  
> the war which led to the downfall of Slobodan Milosevic. The  
> Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh, the London nail-bomber David  
> Copeland and Osama Bin Laden are all said to have bought into the  
> theory that Bilderberg pulls the strings with which national  
> governments dance.
>
> And while hardline right-wingers and libertarians accuse Bilderberg  
> of being a liberal Zionist plot, leftists such as activist Tony  
> Gosling are equally critical.
>
> A former journalist, Mr Gosling runs a campaign against the group  
> from his home in Bristol, UK.
>
> "My main problem is the secrecy. When so many people with so much  
> power get together in one place I think we are owed an explanation  
> of what is going on.
>
> Mr Gosling seizes on a quote from Will Hutton, the British  
> economist and a former Bilderberg delegate, who likened it to the  
> annual WEF gathering where "the consensus established is the  
> backdrop against which policy is made worldwide".
>
> "One of the first places I heard about the determination of US  
> forces to attack Iraq was from leaks that came out of the 2002  
> Bilderberg meeting," says Mr Gosling.
>
> But "privacy, rather than secrecy", is key to such a meeting says  
> Financial Times journalist Martin Wolf, who has been invited  
> several times in a non-reporting role.
>
> "The idea that such meetings cannot be held in private is  
> fundamentally totalitarian," he says. "It's not an executive body;  
> no decisions are taken there."
>
> As an up-and-coming statesmen in the 1950s, Denis Healey, who went  
> on to become a Labour chancellor, was one of the four founding  
> members of Bilderberg (which was named after the hotel in Holland  
> where the first meeting was held in 1954).
>
> His response to claims that Bilderberg exerts a shadowy hand on the  
> global tiller is met with characteristic bluntness. "Crap!"
>
> "There's absolutely nothing in it. We never sought to reach a  
> consensus on the big issues at Bilderberg. It's simply a place for  
> discussion," says Lord Healey.
>
> Formed in the spirit of post-war trans-Atlantic co-operation, the  
> idea behind Bilderberg was that future wars could be prevented by  
> bringing power-brokers together in an informal setting away from  
> prying eyes.
>
> "Bilderberg is the most useful international group I ever attended.  
> The confidentiality enabled people to speak honestly without fear  
> of repercussions.
>
> "In my experience the most useful meetings are those when one is  
> free to speak openly and honestly. It's not unusual at all. Cabinet  
> meetings in all countries are held behind closed doors and the  
> minutes are not published."
>
> That activists have seized on Bilderberg is no surprise to Alasdair  
> Spark, an expert in conspiracy theories.
>
> "The idea that a shadowy clique is running the world is nothing  
> new. For hundreds of years people have believed the world is  
> governed by a cabal of Jews.
>
> "Shouldn't we expect that the rich and powerful organise things in  
> their own interests. It's called capitalism."
>
> from WorldNetDaily, 2004-Jun-4:
>
> Guess who's at super-secret Bilderberg meeting today
> Italy hosts 50th-anniversary confab of mysterious society of world  
> leaders
>
> The 50th anniversary conference of the elite Bilderberg group --  
> which many believe conspires semi-annually to foster global  
> government -- is under way in Stresa, Italy.
>
> The conference, which began yesterday and will run through Sunday,  
> is being hosted at the Grand Hotel des Iles Borromees.
>
> Since 1953, the Bilderberg group has convened government, business,  
> academic and journalistic representatives from the U.S., Canada and  
> Europe with the express purpose of exploring the future of the  
> North Atlantic community.
>
> According to sources that have penetrated the high-security  
> meetings in the past, the Bilderberg meetings emphasize a globalist  
> agenda and promote the idea that the notion of national sovereignty  
> is antiquated and regressive.
>
> 'Shadowy aura'
>
> "It's officially described as a private gathering," noted a BBC  
> report last year, "but with a guest list including the heads of  
> European and American corporations, political leaders and a few  
> intellectuals, it's one of the most influential organizations on  
> the planet."
>
> And according to a current BBC report on the conference in Stresa:  
> "Not a word of what is said at Bilderberg meetings can be breathed  
> outside. No reporters are invited in and while confidential minutes  
> of meetings are taken, names are not noted. The shadowy aura  
> extends further -- the anonymous answerphone message, for example;  
> the fact that conference venues are kept secret. The group, which  
> includes luminaries such as Henry Kissinger and former UK  
> chancellor Kenneth Clarke, does not even have a website."
>
> But, counter participants, the secrecy is not evidence of a grand  
> conspiracy, but only an opportunity to speak frankly with other  
> world leaders out of the limelight of press coverage and its  
> inevitable repercussions.
>
> "There's absolutely nothing in it," argues the UK's Lord Denis  
> Healey, one of the four founders of Bilderberg. "We never sought to  
> reach a consensus on the big issues at Bilderberg," he told the  
> BBC. "It's simply a place for discussion."
>
> Here is the partial guest list of the current meeting obtained by  
> WorldNetDaily -- which includes Senators John Edwards, D-N.C. and  
> Jon Corzine, D-N.J., Henry Kissinger, Richard Perle, Melinda Gates  
> (wife of Bill Gates), David Rockefeller, Timothy F. Geithner,  
> president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, Donald Graham,  
> chairman and CEO of the Washington Post Company, and even Ralph  
> Reed, former head of the Christian Coalition:
>
> N - Auser, Svein - CEO, DnB NOR ASA; D - Ackermann, Josef -  
> Chairman, Group Executive Committee, Deutsche Bank AG; I -  
> Ambrosetti, Alfredo - Chairman, Abbrosetti Group; TR - Babacan, Ali  
> - Minister of Economic Affairs; P - Balsemao, Francisco Pinto -  
> Chairman and CEO, IMPRESA, SGPS, Former Prime Minister; ISR -  
> Barnavie, Elie - Department of General History, Tel-Aviv  
> University; I - Benedetti, Rodolfo De - CEO, CIR; I - Bernabe,  
> Franco - Vice Chairman, Rothschild Europe; F - Beytout, Nicolas -  
> Editor In Chief, Les Echos; INT - Bolkestein, Frits - Commissioner  
> for the Internal Market, European Commission, former leader of  
> Dutch right wing Liberal Party VVD; USA - Boot, Max -  
> Neoconservative, Council on foreign Relations, Features Editor,  
> Wall Street Journal; CH - Borel, Daniel - Chairman, Logitech  
> International S.A.; I - Bortoli, Ferrucio de - CEO, RCS Libri; S -  
> Brock, Gunnar - CEO, Atlas Copco AB; GB - Browne, John - Group  
> Chief Executive, BP plc; NL - Burgmans, Antony - Chairman, Unilever  
> NV; F - Camus, Phillipe - CEO, European Aeronautic Defence and  
> Space NV; I - Caracciolo, Lucio - Director, Limes Geopolitical  
> Review; F - Castries, Henri de - Chairman, AXA Insurance; E -  
> Cebrian, Juan Luis - CEO, PRISA (Spanish language media company),  
> former Chairman, International Press Institute; TR - Cemal, Hasan -  
> Senior Columnist, Milliyet Newspaper; GB - Clarke, Kenneth - Member  
> of Parliament (Con.), Deputy Chairman, British American Tobacco;  
> USA - Collins, Timothy C - MD and CEO, Ripplewood Holdings LLC,  
> Yale School of Management, Trilateral Commission; USA - Corzine,  
> Jon S. - Senator (D, New Jersey), Chairman and CEO, Goldman Sachs;  
> CH - Couchepin, Pascal - Former Swiss President, Head of Home  
> affairs Dept.; GR - David, George A. - Chairman, Coca-Cola Hellenic  
> Bottling Company SA; B - Dehaene, Jean-Luc - Former Prime Minister,  
> Mayor of Vilvoorde; TR - Dervis, Kemal - Member of Parliament,  
> former senior World bank official; GR - Diamantopoulou, Anna -  
> Member of Parliament, former European Commissioner for Social  
> Affairs; USA - Donilon, Thomas L - Vice-President, Fannie Mae,  
> Council on Foreign Relations; I - Draghi, Mario - Vice Chairman and  
> Managing Director, Goldman Sachs; USA - Edwards, John - Senator (D.  
> North Carolina), Democratic Presidential Candidate; DK - Eldrup,  
> Anders - Chairman, DONG gas company (becoming privatised) A/S; DK -  
> Federspiel, Ulrik - Ambassador to the USA; USA - Feith, Douglas J.  
> - Undersecretary for Policy, Department of Defense; I - Galateri,  
> Gabriele - Chairman, Mediobanca; USA - Gates, Melinda F. - Co- 
> Founder, Gates Foundation, wife of Bill Gates; USA - Geithner,  
> Timothy F. - President, Federal Reserve Bank of New York; I -  
> Giavazzi, Francesco - Professor of Economics, Bocconi University;  
> adviser, world bank and European Central bank; IRL - Gleeson,  
> Dermot - Chairman Allied Irish Bank Group (currently being  
> investigated for personal and corporate tax evasion); USA - Graham,  
> Donald E. - Chairman and CEO, Washington Post Company; USA - Haas,  
> Richard N. - President, Council on Foreign Relations, former  
> Director of Policy and Planning staff, State Department; NL -  
> Halberstadt, Victor - Professor of Economics, Leiden University; B  
> - Hansen, Jean-Pierre - Chairman, Suez Tractabel SA; S -  
> Heikensten, Lars - Governor, Swedish Central Bank; USA - Holbrooke,  
> Richard C - Vice Chairman, Perseus, former Director, Council on  
> Foreign Relations, former Assistant Secretary of State; USA -  
> Hubbard, Allen B - President E&A Industries; USA - Issacson, Walter  
> - President and CEO, Aspen Institute; USA - Janow, Merit L. -  
> Professor, International Economic Law and International Affairs,  
> Columbia University; USA - Jordan, Vernon E. Senior Managing  
> Director, Lazard Freres & Co LLC; USA - Kagan, Robert - Senior  
> Associate, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace; GB - Kerr,  
> John - Director, Shell, Rio Tinto, Scottish American Investment  
> Trust; USA - Kissinger Henry A. - Chairman, Kissinger Associates  
> Inc.; TR - Koc, Mustafa V. - Chairman, Koc Holdings AS; NL -  
> Koenders, Bert (AG) - Member of Parliament, president,  
> Parliamentary Network of the World Bank; USA - Kovner, Bruce -  
> Chairman Caxton Associates LLC, Chairman, American Enterprise  
> Institute; USA - Kravis, Henry R. - Founding Partner, Kohlberg  
> Kravis Roberts & Co., acquisitions financier; USA - Kravis, Marie  
> Josee - Senoir Fellow, Hudson Institute Inc.; FIN - Lehtomaki,  
> Paula - Minister of Foreigh Trade and Development; FIN - Lipponen,  
> Paavo - Speaker of Parliament; CHN - Long, Yongtu - Secretary  
> General, Boao forum for Asia; P - Lopes, Pedro M. Santana - Mayor  
> of Lisbon; USA - Luti, William J. - Deputy Under Secretary of  
> Defense for Near Eastern and South Asian Affairs; CDN - Lynch,  
> Kevin G. - Deputy Minister, Department of Finance; USA - Mathews,  
> Jessica T. - President, Carnegie Endowment for International War  
> Peace; USA - McDonough, William J. - Chairman and CEO, Public  
> Company Accounting Oversight Board, former president, Federal  
> Reserve Bank of New York; CDN - McKenna, Frank - Counsel, McInnes  
> Cooper, former premier of New Brunswick; I - Merlini, Cesare -  
> Executive Vice Chairman, Council for the United States and Italy,  
> Council on Foreign Relations, former director, Italian Institute  
> for International Affairs; F - Montbrial, Thierry de - President,  
> French Institute of International Relations; INT - Monti, Mario -  
> Competition Commissioner, European Commission; USA - Mundie, Craig  
> J. - Chief Technical Officer, Advanced Strategies and Policies,  
> Microsoft Corporation; N - Myklebust, Egil - Chairman, Scandinavian  
> Airline System (SAS); D - Naas, Matthias - Deputy Editor, Die Zeit;  
> NL - Netherlands, HM Queen Beatrix; GB - Neville-Jones, Pauline -  
> Chairman, QuinetiQ (UK privatized military research/services  
> company), governor of the BBC, Chairman Information Assurance  
> Advisory Council, formar Chairman Joint Intelligence Committee,  
> former Managing Director NatWest Markets; USA - Nooyi, Indra K. -  
> President and CEO, PepsiCo Inc.; PL - Olechowski, Andrzej - Leader,  
> Civic Platform; FIN - Ollila, Jorma - Chairman, Nokia Corporation;  
> INT - Padoa-Schioppa, Tommaso - Director, European Central Bank; CY  
> - Pantelides, Leonidas - Ambassador to Greece; I - Passera, Corrado  
> - CEO, Banca Intesa SpA; USA - Perle, Richard N. - Resident Fellow,  
> American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research, former  
> Likud policy adviser, former chair Defence Policy Board, former co- 
> chairman, Hollinger Digital; B - Phillipe, HRH Prince; USA - Reed,  
> Ralph E. - President, Century Strategies; CDN - Reisman, Heather -  
> President and CEO, Indigo Books and Music Inc.; I - Riotta, Gianni  
> - Editorialist, Corriere della Serra; USA - Rockefeller, David -  
> Member JP Morgan International Council, Chairman, Council of the  
> Americas; E - Riodriguez Inearte, Matias - Vice Chairman, Grupo  
> Santander; USA - Ross, Dennis B - Director, The Washington  
> Institute for Near East Policy; D - Sandschneider, Eberhard -  
> Director, Research Institute, German Society for Foreign Policy; I  
> - Scaroni, Paolo - CEO, Enel SpA; D - Schilly, Otto - Minister of  
> the Interior; USA - Schnabel, Rockwell A. - Ambassador to the EU; A  
> - Scholten, Rudolf - Director, Oesterreichische Kontrollbank AG; D  
> - Schrempp, Jurgen E. - Chairman, DaimlerChrysler AG; E - Serra  
> Rexach, Eduardo - Head, Real Institute Elcano; RUS - Shevtsova,  
> Lilia - Senior Associate. Carnegie Endowment for International  
> Peace; PL - Sikora, Slawomir - President and CEO, Citibank  
> Handlowy; I - Siniscalo, Domenico - Director General Ministry of  
> the Economy; P - Socrates, Jose - Member of Parliament; USA -  
> Strmecki, Marin J. - Smith Richardson Foundation; B - Struye de  
> Swielande, Dominique - Permanant repressentative of Belguim, NATO;  
> IRL - Sutherland, Peter D. - Chairman, Goldman Sachs International,  
> Chairman, BP plc; USA - Thornton, John L. - Chairman, Brookings  
> Institution, Professor, Tsinghua University; I - Tremonti, Giulio -  
> Minister of Economy and Finance; INT - Trichet, Jean-Claude -  
> President, European Central Bank; I - Tronchetti Provera, Marco -  
> Chairman and CEO, Pirelli SpA; N - Underdal, Arild - Rector,  
> University of Oslo; CH - Vasella, Daniel L. - Chairman and CEO,  
> Novartis AG; NL - Veer, Jeroen van der - Chairman, Committee of  
> Managing Directors, Royal Dutch/Shell; GB - Verwaayen, Ben J. M. -  
> CEO, British Telecom; former director, Lucent Technologies; I -  
> Visco, Ignazio - Foriegn Affairs Manager, Banca D'Italia; INT -  
> Vitorino, Antonio M. - Justice and Home Affairs Commissioner,  
> European Union; INT - Vries, Gijs M. de - EU Counter Terrorism Co- 
> ordinator; S - Wallenberg, Jacob - Chairman, SEB investments  
> (including biotech); Chairman, W Capital Management AB; D - Weber,  
> Jurgen - Chairman of the Supervisory Board, Deutche Lufthansa AG;  
> GB/USA - Weinberg, Peter - CEO, Goldman Sachs International; NL -  
> Wijers, Hans - Chairman, AkzoNobel NV; D - Wissmann, Matthias -  
> Member of Parliament; GB - Wolf, Martin H. - Associate Editor/ 
> Economic Commentator, The Financial Times; INT/USA - Wolfenson,  
> James D. - President, The World Bank; RUS - Yavlinsky, Grigory A. -  
> Member of Parliament; USA - Yergin, Daniel - Chairman, Cambridge  
> Energy Research Associates; D - Zumwinkel, Llaus - Chairman,  
> Deutche Post Worldnet AG.
>
> In addition, according to the Bilderberg.org website, two reporters  
> ("rapporteurs") from the British publication The Economist will  
> also be attending: Gideon Rachman, Brussels correspondent, and  
> Adrian D. Wooldridge, the magazine's foreign correspondent.  
> [Bilderberg has two Economist reporters in attendance every year,  
> and they never disclose a word about the event. -AMPP Ed.]
>
> That may afford slightly more transparency than in the past. In  
> 1998, British free-lance journalist Campbell Thomas attempted to  
> cover the conference in Turnberry, Scotland, for the Daily Mail.  
> Thomas began by seeking the opinions of neighbors to the secret  
> meeting being held nearby. One of those was a young woman who told  
> him he was in the hotel's staff quarters and should leave  
> immediately, which he did. A short while later, two local police  
> officers arrested Thomas, who reportedly remained in custody for  
> eight hours.
>
> British journalist Jon Ronson, who is the author of a book on  
> Bilderberg, had this to say: "I'm a sort of semi-conspiracy  
> theorist when it comes to Bilderberg because I think they wouldn't  
> go to that much trouble of having this incredibly expensive  
> international conference every year and they'd go to all this  
> trouble to keep themselves out of the press and be really secret  
> and invite the world's most powerful people if it was just a chat  
> and a game of golf, which is basically what they say it is. So I do  
> think they have some impact on world affairs."
>
> Some observers are even speculating that President Bush will make  
> an appearance at this year's event, just as Bill Clinton did at the  
> group's 2000 meeting. By coincidence, it just happens that Bush  
> will be in Italy over the weekend ...
>
> from American Free Press, 2004-Jun, by James P. Tucker Jr.:
>
> Investigation Reveals: Bilderbergers Want Taxes Up, War in Iraq Over
>
> Stresa, Italy-At this year's secret Bilderberg meeting, some of the  
> world's most powerful elite focused on U.S. taxes and foreign  
> giveaways, as well as the increasingly violent Iraq occupation and  
> the role the United Nations should play in all future similar  
> outbreaks of violence.
>
> Prior to the meeting, a Bilderberg memo promised that its members  
> would deal mainly with European-American relations and in that  
> context, with U.S politics, Iraq, the Middle East, European  
> geopolitics, NATO, China, energy and economic problems.
>
> During the conference, Britain came in for harsh criticism for  
> supporting the invasion of Iraq. It was also lambasted for failing  
> to embrace the euro, despite Prime Minister Tony Blair's promise to  
> do so at a Bilderberg meeting some years ago in the Scottish resort  
> of Turnberry.
>
> Bilderberg members also expressed frustration with the rising  
> clamor in Britain to quit the European Union.
>
> As expected, the United States was heavily criticized for the fact  
> that its foreign aid was a smaller percentage of gross domestic  
> product than that of other nations. That marked the third straight  
> meeting at which Bilderbergers' decades of almost total  
> congeniality was marred by hostility among the Americans, Britons  
> and continental Europeans.
>
> The first evidence of division in the ranks was apparent in 2002  
> when Bilderbergers met at Chantilly, Va., near Washington. Then,  
> Europeans were angry that the United Sates was preparing for an  
> invasion of Iraq. Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld tried to  
> placate them with a promise not to invade "this year." Instead, the  
> war began in March 2003.
>
> Bilderbergers, however, remain united in their long-term goal to  
> strengthen the role the UN plays in regulating global relations.  
> Aside from that objective, other matters on this year's conference  
> agenda included the following:
>
>
> British elites are to press on with membership in the European  
> Union despite growing domestic opposition.
>
>
> The Free Trade Area of the Americas should be enacted and include  
> the entire Western Hemisphere except for Cuba until Fidel Castro is  
> gone. It should then evolve into the "American Union" as a carbon  
> copy of the European Union.
>
>
> An "Asian-Pacific Union" is to emerge as the third great  
> superstate, neatly dividing the world into three great regions for  
> the administrative convenience of banking and corporate elites. The  
> United States and other international financial institutions should  
> facilitate and administrate these global trade pacts.
>
> Bilderbergers have, for some time, argued for three global  
> currencies-the euro for Europe, the dollar for the American Union  
> and another for the "Asian-Pacific Union."
>
> One Bilderberger, Kenneth Clarke, a former chancellor of the  
> British exchequer, saw the consolidation of currencies as an ideal  
> strategy when he spoke to this reporter several years ago in  
> Portugal. At that time, Clarke told me that "dollarization" would  
> dominate the globe and "our children will laugh at all the petty  
> currencies we have now."
>
> Another much-discussed subject at this year's conference was the  
> concept of imposing a direct UN tax on people worldwide. In order  
> to achieve it, some Bilderbergers presented two proposals: a tax on  
> oil at the wellhead and a tax on international financial transactions.
>
> Bilderberg leaders tilted strongly toward the oil tax because  
> everyone who drives a car, rides public transportation or flies in  
> a plane will end up paying the tax. That will represent more people  
> than those engaged in international financial transactions across  
> the globe.
>
> On the issue of Iraq, European Bilderbergers were more upset that  
> the United States invaded without the UN's blessing than the fact  
> that over 800 American soldiers have died and thousands of innocent  
> Iraqi citizens have been killed. [Note that American Free Press is  
> a fanatical left wing propaganda outfit - the author says American  
> soldiers "died" but Iraqi citizens "have been killed", whereas of  
> course many of those American soldiers were killed - many by booby  
> traps.  -AMPP Ed.]
>
> Word reached the conference from Rumsfeld, who was unable to attend  
> this year's meeting, that the U.S. military would assume a more  
> defensive stance in Iraq, rather than the more provocative  
> operations of door-to-door searches and widespread detention.
>
> Rumsfeld was, however, represented in Stresa by Douglas Feith, his  
> undersecretary for policy, and William Luti, deputy undersecretary  
> for Near Eastern and South Asian affairs. Former Pentagon advisor  
> Richard Perle, one of the major architects of the war in Iraq, was  
> also present. It had been Perle, Feith and Paul Wolfowitz who, from  
> the mid 1990s, had fashioned the Middle East policy later adopted  
> by Bush, Cheney and Rumsfeld.
>
> European Bilderbergers also protested the fact that the Pentagon  
> was considering reducing troop levels in Germany and tried hard to  
> convince their American counterparts to resist the move. They  
> argued it would "undermine unity" and, irrespective of the military  
> implications, the German economy benefited annually from the  
> millions of dollars spent by U.S. servicemen there.
>
> Resistance in Britain to the euro, and to membership in the  
> European Union, caused much concern and was deemed an obstacle to  
> the solidification of the superstate.
>
> It was noted that many Europeans were unaware of the European  
> Parliament elections scheduled for June 10 and should there be a  
> low turnout, it could be attributed to a protest boycott of the  
> elections by EU opposition groups.
>
> Four former Conservative members of Parliament have endorsed the  
> United Kingdom Independence Party, which demands British withdrawal  
> from the European Union. And, if allowed to vote in a referendum,  
> it has been reported that Britons would reject membership in the  
> European Union by strong proportions. A YouGov survey, taken at the  
> end of May, showed 48 percent would vote to get out of the European  
> Union and 36 percent would vote to stay in.
>
> As it stands, Europeans can only select members for the European  
> Parliament but not the EU Commission, the bureaucratic powerhouse  
> of the union.
>
> Bilderberg participants ended their secret sessions on an upbeat  
> note with a ferry ride to a luxury island on Lake Maggiore, where  
> John Elkman, the latest vice president of the Fiat motor company,  
> will marry his new bride in September.
>
> from The News, 1999-May-1:
>
> International power brokers meet to discuss global future
> World's most secret society to meet in Sintra
>
> The world's most secret society is to meet in Portugal in June.  
> Bilderberg, one of the most secretive organisation in the world,  
> comprising presidents, royal families, ministers, top  
> industrialists and financial leaders are set to meet in Sintra,  
> Portugal at the beginning of June. Francisco Pinto Balsamão, former  
> Portuguese PM, media baron and frequent attendee of the meetings is  
> listed as the member for Portugal. The security for the Bilderberg  
> meetings, which are held at irregular intervals and prompted by the  
> state of world affairs, is the responsibility of the host country.  
> According to sources in Washington, Bilderberg will pay hundreds of  
> thousands of dollars to reimburse the Portuguese government for  
> deploying military forces to guard their privacy and for  
> helicopters to seek out intruders. Bilderberg have ordered the  
> resort to be shut down for a full 48 hours before the conference.  
> The Bilderberg delegates, comprising some of the world's most  
> powerful decision makers, will be here to     discuss highly  
> classified issues which are not supposed to be disclosed to the  
> public by the press, before or after the meeting.
>
> Initially alerted to this meeting by a New York reader who  
> requested anonymity, The News contacted the Caesar Park Penha Longa  
> resort in Sintra to verify the information that the secret meeting  
> will be held at their resort. The only confirmation we received was  
> that an organization `wishing for the utmost privacy' would be in  
> Sintra and that the hotel was fully and exclusively booked by this  
> organisation from June 2 to June 7.
>
> The agenda for the meeting is said to include a "globilaztion  
> summit", during which nations which cling tenaciously to their  
> sovereign identities will be denounced by its leadership. The  
> principal feature of Bilderberg is that it seeks one global  
> government, (a structure similar to the European Union), while  
> counteracting nationalist sentiment is supposedly its greatest  
> battle. Renewed calls for the United Nations to be able to directly  
> tax all people of the world is said to be another major topic to be  
> tabled for discussion in Sintra. Bilderberg meetings are only held  
> when and where the hosts can provide the highest levels of security  
> for their guests. All Bilderberg participants, their staff members  
> and resort employees will wear photo identification tags. They will  
> have separate colours to identify the wearer as participant, staff  
> member or employee. A computer chip "fingerprint" will assure the  
> identity of the card's wearer.
>
> According to the Washington based investigative newsletter,  
> Spotlight, who claims to have a contact inside Bilderberg, any  
> intruders are to be manhandled, cuffed and jailed and if the  
> intruders resist arrest or attempt to flee, they will be shot.  
> International and national media are said to be welcome only when  
> an oath of silence has been taken, news editors are held  
> responsible if any of their journalists 'inadvertently' report on  
> what takes place.
>
> Bilderberg members are immune to all forms of bureaucracy that face  
> ordinary citizens on a daily basis. No visas are required and a  
> free and safe passage is provided by the government providing the  
> Bilderberg rendezvous. They travel to and from the airport to the  
> resort in armoured vehicles with a police escort. Meetings are held  
> annually but rarely at the same locations for obvious security  
> reasons. The first Bilderberg conference was held at the Bilderberg  
> Hotel in Osterbeek Holland in May 1954, and the organization is  
> said to have been established as a secret and supportive wing of  
> NATO and the Marshall plan which was launched in the 1940s.
>
> International conspiracy
>
> The News having researched various sources on the Bilderberg  
> meetings, discovered that PSD co-founder, Francisco Pinto Balsemão,  
> allegedly attended at least the previous two Bilderberg meetings  
> held in Scotland (1998) and Georgia in the United States (1997).  
> Balsemão is said to be the only Portuguese representative on the  
> Bilderberg steering committee. Other prominent figures listed to  
> have attended previous meetings are Ricardo Salgado chief executive  
> officer at Banco Espirito Santo, Henry Kissinger, Tony Blair (who  
> attended the meeting held in 1995) and Giovanni Agnelli who is the  
> owner of the Fiat Motor Corporation.
>
> The News is Portugal's largest circulation English language  
> newspaper. Established for over 20 years, it is the only Portuguese  
> newspaper on the net that covers all the major news about Portugal  
> in the English language.
>
> from The News, 1999-May-8:
>
> Bilderburg meeting - wall of silence?
>
> As revealed exclusively in The News last week, the Bilderbergs,  
> reputedly the world's most secret society, are due to meet in  
> Sintra next month. We have received e-mails from all over the world  
> congratulating The News on making this information public. Yet in  
> Portugal, as we closed the paper on Thursday, the press has  
> remained tight lipped about this meeting, in spite of the fact that  
> Portugal's national press agency LUSA decided to distribute The  
> News' report to all the Portuguese media.
>
> A quick search of the internet on the single keyword Bilderberg,  
> will bring up some of the most extraordinary claims regarding the  
> objectives and activities of this powerful group of industrialists,  
> financiers and ex-politicians. It will also reveal many reports of  
> the lengths to which this organisation will go to maintain full  
> secrecy over its meetings. Much of the information could be seen as  
> scurrilous, even far fetched, with claims that these people are  
> part of what is described as the New World Order. An hour or so of  
> research will be enough to find the names of most of the members,  
> details of their past meetings and claims of what has been discussed.
>
> It is not for this newspaper to become part of this speculation,  
> yet it is extraordinary that even in a democracy such as Portugal,  
> the very presence of what can only be described as one of the most  
> prestigious meetings of powerful men and women from around the  
> world, could remain unreported anywhere.
>
> Except in The News.
>
> from The Big Issue, 1999-Nov-15, by Gibby Zobel, from http:// 
> www.bigissue.com/london/articles/0006.htm:
>
> The Bilderberg Papers
> World exclusive: Leaked minutes from confidential meeting of  
> world's elite...
>
> In the first of a two-part series, Gibby Zobel uncovers how the  
> global power elite decides our future at the shadowy Bilderberg  
> Summit each year. Documents from the secret summit - leaked to The  
> Big Issue - reveal what they said about money and war
>
> For nearly 50 years an elite group of the West's most powerful men  
> and women, a shadow world government, have met in secret. Tony  
> Blair is in the club. Every US president since Ike Eisenhower has  
> been too. So are top members of the British Government. So are the  
> people who control what you watch and read - the media barons.  
> Which is why you may never have heard of Bilderberg.
>
> "Lines of black limousines, unmarked except for a 'B' on the  
> windscreen, swept in, sometimes accompanied by police escorts,  
> sometimes not," says an eyewitness of this year's meeting in  
> Portugal. "A helicopter was overhead, and other security officers  
> were prudently patrolling the hillsides. The policy on duty at the  
> gates made it crystal clear that they were only the tip of the  
> security iceberg."
>
> For two-and-a-half days, relaxing in exclusive luxury amid vast  
> armed security, the powerful leaders discussed past and future  
> wars, a European superstate, a global currency, genetics, and the  
> dismantling of the welfare state. Unaccountable, untroubled and  
> unreported, the Bilderberg meetings have formed the basis of  
> international policy for decades.
>
> Last year freelance journalist Campbell Thomas was arrested just  
> for knocking on doors near the clandestine gathering in Turnberry,  
> Scotland. He remained in custody for eight hours. Other journalists  
> were told that even the Bilderberg menu was confidential (a move  
> they named 'Kippergate'). A serving police officer told 'The Big  
> Issue': "Special Branch and CIA were everywhere - they were calling  
> the shots."
>
> Never in its 47-year history has the content of these discussions  
> been made public. Until now. 'The Big Issue' has uncovered the  
> Bilderberg Papers - the secret minutes of this year's meeting in  
> Portugal. Some of it is banal, some of it sensational. It blows the  
> lid off the thoughts of presidents, chairmen of multinational  
> companies, world bankers, Nato chiefs and defence ministers.
>
> The meetings are shrouded in such secrecy that Prime Minister Tony  
> Blair, when asked last year in the House of Commons, failed to  
> disclosed his own attendance at Bilderberg in Athens in 1993.
>
> So, what have they been hiding?
>
> - Nato gave Russia carte blanche to bomb Chechnya
>
> - 'Dollarisation' could be the the next step after the single  
> European currency
>
> - A senior British politician thinks New Labour is "consolidating  
> the victories of the Right". On welfare cuts he adds: "It might be  
> easier for somebody who claimed to be a socialist to impose change."
>
> - After Kosovo Nato is in danger of mimicking a colonial power
>
> Although 14 media chiefs and journalists from across eight  
> countries attended this year, none of them chose to tell their  
> readers of the meeting. It would not serve their interests to be  
> cut out of the elite loop. With an invite-only guest-list, covert  
> operations and such deafening silence, it is little surprise that  
> conspiracy theories have thrived, from the anti-semites who believe  
> in a Jewish global elite, to the paranoid delusions of the radical  
> left. The effect has been to leave the importance of the meetings  
> tainted by association. It suits the Bilderbergers perfectly.
>
> The Bilderberg meetings began in a Dutch hotel on May 29 1954, from  
> where it gets its name. 'The Economist', in a rare reference to it  
> in 1987, said that the importance of the meetings was overplayed  
> but admitted: "When you have scaled the Bilderberg, you have arrived."
>
> At last year's meeting, former defence minister George Robertson,  
> who is now Nato secretary-general, planned strategies with the  
> Bilderberg chair and ex-Nato chief Lord Carrington.
>
> 'Observer' editor-in-chief Will Hutton attended Bilderberg in 1997.  
> He believes that it is the home of the "high priests of  
> globalisation". "No policy is made here," he says, "it is all talk.  
> But the consensus established is the backdrop against which policy  
> is made worldwide."
>
> The 64-page leaked document - The Bilderberg Papers - is dated  
> August 1999. The powerful transatlantic clique at the private  
> hideaway included new Northern Ireland secretary Peter Mandelson  
> MP, environmentalist Jonathon Porritt, Kenneth Clarke MP, former US  
> secretary of state Henry Kissinger, billionaire oil and banking  
> tycoon David Rockefeller, Monsanto chief Robert B Shapiro, and the  
> head of the World Bank, James D Wolfensohn.
>
> Although Asian and African politics and economics were discussed  
> the continents' countries had no seats at this summit. The official  
> eight-strong UK delegation included bankers Martin Taylor, former  
> chief executive of Barclay's and Eric Roll, a banker for Warburgs.  
> They were joined by Martin Wolf of The Financial Times and two  
> journalists from The Economist, John Micklethwait and Adrian  
> Wooldridge, who, the minutes indicate, prepared this document.
>
> The papers are marked 'Not for Quotation'. It states: "There were  
> 111 participants from 24 countries. All participants spoke in their  
> personal capacity, not as representatives of their national  
> governments or employers. As is usual at Bilderberg meetings, in  
> order to permit frank and open discussion, no public reporting of  
> the conference took place."
>
> None of the quotes in each of the 10 sections are directly  
> attributable to any named individual, but the moderator and  
> panellists in each discussion are listed. It is made perfectly  
> clear, however, who is saying what. It is not known who else is in  
> the audience, but their comments are identified by their country  
> and profession.
>
> Over two weeks, we report on the central themes of this year's  
> meeting. This week: money and war. Next week: genetics - what the  
> head of Monsanto and a leading British environmentalist discussed  
> behind closed doors.
>
> what they said about money
>
> Giants of the global banking world, in a debate titled 'Redesigning  
> the International Financial Architecture', discussed the concept of  
> 'dollarisation' which is sure to send euro-sceptics into a frenzy.
>
> Around the table were Kenneth Clarke MP, Martin S Feldstein,  
> president of the National Bureau of Economic Research, Stanley  
> Fisher, deputy managing director of the International Monetary Fund  
> (IMF), Ottmar Issing, board member of the European Central Bank and  
> Jean Claude Trichet, governor of the Bank of France.
>
> Bilderberg is understood to have been the birthplace of the single  
> European currency. The deputy director of the IMF opens by  
> remarking: "It is worth noting that this is the first Bilderberg  
> meeting where the euro is fact rather than a topic for discussion."
>
> During the discussion, "One of the panellists was sure that if the  
> euro worked, more regional currencies would emerge. Others raised  
> the question of dollarisation as a possible cure."
>
> There is a dissenting voice:
>
> "The only possible reason for surrendering control of your monetary  
> policy to Washington (where nobody would make decisions on the  
> basis of what mattered in Buenos Aires [or London]) is the fairly  
> rotten financial records of the governments concerned."
>
> what they said about war
>
> Despite Tony Blair's presidential stance over Kosovo, Nato's  
> historic war was pilloried at Bilderberg. "The mood at the meeting  
> was surprisingly subdued most of the speakers concentrated on the  
> downside of the conflict," begins the discussion on Kosovo.
>
> Henry Kissinger, former US secretary of state, weighs in, saying  
> Kosovo "could be this generation's Vietnam". Nato is in danger of  
> replacing the Ottoman and Habsburg Empires in a series of permanent  
> protectorates, he said. Another panellist warned that troops could  
> be there for 25 years. Kissinger felt that this left Nato open to  
> accusations of colonialism. "How did one persuade countries like  
> China, Russia and India that Nato's new mandate was not just a new  
> version of 'the white man's burden' - colonialism?" asked Kissinger.
>
> Charles D Boyd, executive director of the US National Study Group,  
> said Kosovo is now a wasteland, a humanitarian disaster comparable  
> with Cambodia. "Nato used force as a substitute for diplomacy  
> rather than as a support for it it used force in a way that  
> minimised danger to itself but maximised danger to the people it  
> was trying to protect."
>
> An unnamed British politician "wondered whether the [Nato] alliance  
> could hang together after the end of the war. He warned that "there  
> would be little popular enthusiasm for putting lots of resources  
> into solving the region's gigantic problems."
>
> Peter Mandelson told the group that "two roads stretch in front of  
> Nato. One leads to a new division of Europe, where the continent  
> returns to its ethnocentric ways. Under this scenario, the UN is  
> fairly powerless, Russia and China are excluded, and Nato is little  
> more than an enforcer. The second road is a little closer to the  
> nineteenth century Europe, with all the great powers - not just  
> America and the EU, but Russia, China and Japan co-operating."
>
> The following book review, from The Economist 1999-Feb-13, is a  
> useful introductory treatment of the systems paradigm, and  
> particularly its strengths and weaknesses:
>
> The systems approach
>
> By the book
>
>
> RESCUING PROMETHEUS.
> By Thomas Hughes.
> Pantheon Books; 416 pages; $28.50
>
> AT AN American diplomat's home soon after Neil Armstrong had set  
> foot on the moon in 1969, this reviewer teased a fellow guest whose  
> firm had helped design the lunar-landing module: ``So, when the  
> crunch came, Armstrong had to override your faulty computer and  
> land the spacecraft manually.'' The guest was Simon Ramo, a guiding  
> spirit behind the Atlas missile programme, the ``R'' in the  
> aerospace firm TRW and, as a pioneer of systems engineering, one of  
> the heroes of this book. ``Do you seriously believe,'' he replied,  
> ``that we could allow a mere astronaut to override our lunar- 
> landing system?''
>
> His implication was that ``the system'' of hardware, software and  
> communications protocols that managed the spacecraft had been  
> programmed to allow for a very common human anxiety: the last- 
> minute conviction that the machine has got it wrong. Had NASA  
> engineers anticipated this and built in enough ``feedback'' to give  
> the astronauts an illusion of control when they panicked? Shades of  
> the computer HAL in Stanley Kubrick's ``2001''. The truth of Mr  
> Ramo's boast is not the issue. The fact is that already 30 years  
> ago there were large technical systems smart enough to do their  
> assigned tasks while taking care of emergencies, errors and  
> expediencies - even unpredictable ``wetware'' (humans) trying to  
> mess things up.
>
> Big engineering systems existed, to be sure, before systems  
> engineering. The pyramids involved meticulous co-ordination. The  
> cathedral builders of medieval Europe melded technology, utility  
> and artistic skill into a form of religious architecture yet to be  
> surpassed. For its day, Brunel's construction of the Great Western  
> Railway was no less challenging than the Manhattan Project which  
> produced the atom bomb nearly a century later.
>
> By the mid-1950s, however, something had changed. The sheer scale  
> of projects demanded a new approach. With its 18,000 academic  
> researchers plus 70,000 workers spread around more than 200 firms,  
> the Atlas project to build America's first intercontinental  
> ballistic missile did more than change the cold war. It produced a  
> new sort of management that spread through the military and  
> industrial worlds to alter forever how the United States earned its  
> keep.
>
> As teams of engineers and scientists polarised around problems  
> rather than technologies, new cross-disciplinary bodies such as  
> Rand, Mitre, and Ramo-Wooldridge (later TRW) emerged in America to  
> apply theories of queuing, games, decisions, information and  
> control as well as statistics, operations research and linear  
> programming in a wholly integrated way. As American industry inched  
> into the systems era, its prowess evolved, from stamping out  
> gadgets by the million to creating smaller numbers of much pricier  
> and more complex things - airliners, fancy weapons, telecoms  
> satellites, chemical plants, air-traffic controls. These, today,  
> are among America's main exports.
>
> In ``Rescuing Prometheus'', an industrial historian, Thomas Hughes,  
> seeks to give the large technological undertakings of the cold-war  
> era their due. His ode to systems engineering includes a detailed  
> look at three large defence projects and one civilian one. The  
> first, the SAGE (Semi-Automatic Ground Environment) project to  
> build a radar-based air-defence system, is the most instructive -  
> in large part because it was a flop.
>
> As an air-raid defence system, SAGE worked well. Unfortunately, by  
> the time it was deployed in 1958, missiles had replaced bombers as  
> the big threat. But SAGE pioneered a new form of collaboration, in  
> which a university (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) worked  
> with the Pentagon during the design and development stage. Like the  
> troublesome Erie Canal in the early 19th century, SAGE was one of  
> technology's big learning experiences.
>
> As chapters of post-war history, the author's three other examples  
> provide a rare insight into industrial planning on a huge scale.  
> His account of the Atlas missile programme is an eye-opener on how  
> efficient the military-industrial complex really was when seriously  
> competent people were in charge. The description of Arpanet, the  
> forerunner of the Internet that the Pentagon's Advanced Research  
> Projects Agency backed so that university researchers could easily  
> communicate amongst themselves, explains a lot of what the web- 
> surfers nowadays take for granted. The one purely civilian system  
> Mr Hughes considers, Boston's central artery and tunnel-road  
> project, makes much the same point as his other case histories, and  
> with more or less equal force: no matter how much computational  
> power is assembled or data collected, there is no substitute for  
> managerial genius.
>
> If this excellent book has a fault, it is the over-defensive tone  
> that Mr Hughes adopts towards critics of the systems approach.  
> When, in the 1960s and 1970s, this was applied to social problems  
> such as poverty, healthcare and crime, the results were usually  
> disappointing. Systems enthusiasts woefully underestimated the  
> complexity of human behaviour and the great quantities of computing  
> power needed to model it in any meaningful way. Misuse in the  
> Vietnam war did not help. A reaction set in and ``the systems  
> approach'' became a term of abuse. Yet, in its proper place - an  
> industrial or military context with clear lines of command -  
> systems engineering remains to this day the most powerful tool yet  
> devised for problem-solving on a giant scale. As such, it needs no  
> defence.
>
> from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Sloan School of  
> Management, System Dynamics Group, by Jay W. Forrester,  
> Germeshausen Professor Emeritus and Senior Lecturer, D-4224-4 1991- 
> Apr-29 (download in its entirety, in PDF format with graphics, from  
> ftp://sysdyn.mit.edu/ftp/sdep/papers/D-4224-4.pdf):
>
> System Dynamics and the Lessons of 35 Years
>
> 1. INTRODUCTION
>
>
> The professional field known as system dynamics has been developing  
> for the last 35 years and now has a world-wide and growing  
> membership. System dynamics combines the theory, methods, and  
> philosophy needed to analyze the behavior of systems in not only  
> management, but also in environmental change, politics, economic  
> behavior, medicine, engineering, and other fields. System dynamics  
> provides a common foundation that can be applied wherever we want  
> to understand and influence how things change through time.
>
>
> The system dynamics process starts from a problem to be solved-a  
> situation that needs to be better understood, or an undesirable  
> behavior that is to be corrected or avoided. The first step is to  
> tap the wealth of information that people possess in their heads.  
> The mental data base is a rich source of information about the  
> parts of a system, about the information available at different  
> points in a system, and about the policies being followed in  
> decision making. The management and social sciences have in the  
> past unduly restricted themselves to measured data and have  
> neglected the far richer and more informative body of information  
> that exists in the knowledge and experience of those in the active,  
> working world.
>
>
> System dynamics uses concepts drawn from the field of feedback  
> control to organize available information into computer simulation  
> models. A digital computer as a simulator, acting out the roles of  
> the operating people in the real system, reveals the behavioral  
> implications of the system that has been described in the model.  
> The first articles based on this work appeared in the Harvard  
> Business Review (Forrester, 1958). From over three decades in  
> system dynamics modeling have come useful guides for working toward  
> a better understanding of the world around us.
>
>
> The continued search for better understanding of social and  
> economic systems represents the next great frontier. Frontiers of  
> the past have included creating the written literatures, exploring  
> geographical limits of earth and space, and penetrating mysteries  
> of physical science. Those are no longer frontiers; they have  
> become a part of everyday activity. By contrast, insights into  
> behavior of social systems have not advanced in step with our  
> understanding of the natural world. To quote B. F. Skinner:
>
> "Twenty-five hundred years ago it might have been said that man  
> understood himself as well as any other part of his world... Today  
> he is the thing he understands least.  Physics and biology have  
> come a long way, but there has been no comparable development of  
> anything like a science of human behavior... Aristotle could not  
> have understood a page of modern physics or biology, but Socrates  
> and his friends would have little trouble in following most current  
> discussions of human affairs." (Skinner, 1971, p. 3)
>
>
> The great challenge for the next several decades will be to advance  
> understanding of social systems in the same way that the past  
> century has advanced understanding of the physical world.
>
> 2. DESIGNING MANAGERIAL AND SOCIAL SYSTEMS
>
>
> Everyone speaks of systems: computer systems, air traffic control  
> systems, economic systems, and social systems. But few realize how  
> pervasive are systems, how imbedded in systems we are in everything  
> we do, and how influential are systems in creating most of the  
> puzzling difficulties that confront us.
>
>
> People deal differently with different kinds of systems.  
> Engineering systems are designed using the most advanced methods of  
> dynamic analysis and computer modeling to anticipate behavior of a  
> system when finally constructed. On the other hand, although  
> political, economic, and managerial systems are far more complex  
> than engineering systems, only intuition and debate have ordinarily  
> been used in building social systems. But, powerful system-design  
> methodologies have evolved over the last 50 years.
>
>
> In designing an engineering system, say a chemical plant, engineers  
> realize that the dynamic behavior is complicated and that the  
> design can not successfully be based only on rules of thumb and  
> experience. There would be extensive studies of the stability and  
> dynamic behavior of the chemical processes and their control.  
> Computer models would be built to simulate behavior before  
> construction of even a pilot plant. Then, if the plant were of a  
> new type, a small pilot plant would be built to test the processes  
> and their control.
>
>
> But observe how differently social systems are designed. We change  
> laws, organizational forms, policies, and personnel practices on  
> the basis of impressions and committee meetings, usually without  
> any dynamic analysis adequate to prevent unexpected consequences.
>
>
> "Designing" social systems or corporations may seem mechanistic or  
> authoritarian. But all governmental laws and regulations, all  
> corporate policies that are established, all computer systems that  
> are installed, and all organization charts that are drawn up  
> constitute partial designs of social systems. Such redesigns are  
> then tested experimentally on the organization as a whole without  
> dynamic modeling of the long-term effects and without first running  
> small-scale pilot experiments. For example, bank deregulation and  
> the wave of corporate mergers in the 1980s constituted major  
> redesigns of our economy with inadequate prior consideration for  
> the results. All systems within which we live have been designed.  
> The shortcomings of those systems result from defective design,  
> just as the shortcomings of a power plant result from inappropriate  
> design.
>
>
> Consider the contrast between great advances during the last  
> century in understanding technology, and the relative lack of  
> progress in understanding economic and managerial systems. Why such  
> a difference? Why has technology advanced so rapidly while social  
> systems continue to exhibit the same kinds of misbehavior decade  
> after decade? I believe the answer lies in failing to recognize  
> that countries and corporations are indeed systems. There is an  
> unwillingness to accept the idea that families, corporations, and  
> governments belong to the same general class of dynamic structures  
> as do chemical refineries and autopilots for aircraft.
>
>
> There is a reluctance to accept the idea that physical systems,  
> natural systems, and human systems are fundamentally of the same  
> kind, and that they differ primarily in their degree of complexity.  
> To admit the existence of a social system is to admit that the  
> relationships between its parts have a strong influence over  
> individual human behavior.
>
>
> The idea of a social system implies sources of behavior beyond that  
> of the individual people within the system. Something about the  
> structure of a system determines what happens beyond just the sum  
> of individual objectives and actions. In other words, the concept  
> of a system implies that people are not entirely free agents but  
> are substantially responsive to their surroundings.
>
>
> To put the matter even more bluntly, if human systems are indeed  
> systems, it implies that people are at least partly cogs in a  
> social and economic machine, that people play their roles within  
> the totality of the whole system, and that they respond in a  
> significantly predictable way to forces brought to bear on them by  
> other parts of the system. Even though this is contrary to our  
> cherished illusion that people freely make their individual  
> decisions, I suggest that the constraints implied by the existence  
> of systems are true in real life. As an example, we see the  
> dominance of the political system over the individual in the  
> evolution of the Federal budget deficit. Every presidential  
> candidate since 1970 has campaigned with the promise to reduce the  
> federal deficit. But the deficit has on the average doubled every  
> four years. The social forces rather than the president have been  
> controlling the outcome. How to harness those social forces has not  
> been effectively addressed.
>
> [...]
>
> The Club of Rome offers the standard fare - disarmament, population  
> control, fear of unbridled technology, macroeconomic modelling and  
> management, etc. There is much more about the Club of Rome below.  
> But in a fascinating twist, a member of the executive committee -  
> Ilya Prigogine - has written a short paper that is at odds with  
> much of the Club's traditional views - indeed, wonderfully  
> dismissive of a core premise of the entire world government  
> paradigm: the Bilderberger mentality, the Harvard Model, the whole  
> bloody nine yards. Here it is in its entirety (hand-converted from  
> RTF to HTML), from http://www.clubofrome.org/public/ 
> prigogi_txt_sat12.rtf:
>
> Uncertainty: the key to the science of the future?
>
>
> By Ilya Prigogine, Nobel laureate, Director of the International  
> Solvay Institute of Physics and Chemistry in Brussels and the I.  
> Prigogine Center for Studies in Statistical Mechanics and Complex  
> Systems at the University of Texas at Austin; member of The Club of  
> Rome.
>
>
>
> In a world where little seems predictable, where every day brings  
> news of further political and economic upheavals, where we are even  
> threatened with radical changes in the global climate, certainty is  
> a rare commodity. Yet in his best selling book, A Brief History of  
> Time (1), Stephen Hawking argues that we are close to the certainty  
> which will come from understanding the full complexity of the  
> universe. Once the "complete theory" of the universe is discovered,  
> Hawking says the only remaining question would be "why it is that  
> we and the universe exist. If we find the answer to that, it would  
> be the ultimate triumph of human reason...", for then we would know  
> the mind of God.
>
>
> This quest for total understanding has been the ultimate goal of  
> physics, from Leibniz three centuries ago to contemporary writers  
> such as Steven Weinberg (2).
>
>
> It is indeed a grandiose project. To quote Leibniz: "In the least  
> of substances, eyes as piercing as those of God could read the  
> whole course of the universe." There would be no distinction  
> between past, present and future; we would share the certainty of God.
>
>
> We can perhaps take comfort from the fact, recently pointed out by  
> Stephen Toulmin (3), that the religious wars and political  
> instability of the 17th century formed the background for Descartes  
> to formulate his quest for certainty - a certainty that all human  
> beings could share, irrespective of religion. Descartes' programme  
> proved to be immensely successful : it influenced Leibniz's concept  
> of "laws of nature" and found concrete expression in Newton's work  
> which provided the model for physics for over 300 years.
>
>
> For Einstein, also, science was a way of going beyond the turmoil  
> of everyday existence. He compared scientific activity to the  
> "longing that irresistibly pulls the town-dweller away from his  
> noisy, cramped quarters and toward the silent, high mountains" (4).  
> He, too, considered certainty to be the supreme ideal of science.
>
>
> The problem with this ideal of certainty is that it is associated  
> with a denial of time and of novelty which leads to feelings of  
> alienation. As Weinberg has said, "The more the universe seems  
> comprehensible, the more it seems pointless." Indeed, the ideas of  
> certainty forces us to give up the notion of events and eliminates  
> the novelty and creativity without which our own lives would be  
> pointless.
>
>
> The logical consequence is dualism. In Descartes' system, matter  
> follows deterministic laws and is radically separated from  
> intellectual activity.
>
>
> Certainty is, however, beginning to be challenged - quite rightly,  
> in my opinion. We are witnessing the start of a timely reappraisal  
> of the fundamental laws of physics. In 1986, the then president of  
> the International Union of Theoretical and Applied Mechanics, Sir  
> John Lighthill, was moved to apologize collectively for physicists  
> spreading ideas about determinism, based on their forebears'  
> enthusiasm for the achievements of Newtonian mechanics - ideas  
> which had since 1960 been proved false (5). This is a quite unusual  
> confession. Certainty, for three centuries the key symbol of  
> scientific intelligibility, is being put into question.
>
>
> Lighthill was referring to developments in chaos theory, a topic  
> too complex to explain here. I want only to make a remark based  
> mainly on the recent work of my groups in Austin and Brussels.  
> Chaos changes the formulation of the laws of physics: instead of  
> expressing certainties, they express possibilities. At its  
> beginning "the universe was like a newborn baby who can become a  
> lawyer, an astronaut - but not all at the same time." As W.  
> Thirring has written, "Our formulation of the laws of nature cannot  
> contradict experience ... but they will be far from determining  
> everything. As the universe evolves, the circumstances create new  
> laws." (6)
>
>
> Some people may feel that giving up the ideal of certainty marks a  
> defeat for human reason, but I do not agree.
>
>
> Once we replace the deterministic description with one involving  
> probability, we can introduce the arrow of time into our basic  
> equations and start to describe an evolutionary universe, in  
> agreement with the important place of evolution in describing  
> everything from cosmology to human history.
>
>
> We can now make predictions, going far beyond classical theory,  
> about complex systems such as the stability of our planetary system  
> and our ecosystem.
>
>
> Once we include time, we begin to understand the variety of the  
> physical world - both the order of living systems and the disorder  
> existing in the universe. The distinction is basically due to the  
> arrow of time: over time, non-equilibrium processes generate  
> complex structures that cannot be achieved in an equilibrium  
> situation. The result is a whole new physics and a new biology of  
> non-equilibrium processes.
>
>
> Since evolutionary events related to self-organization play an  
> essential role in both living and non-living sytems, science is no  
> longer deterministic. Nor is it reductionist as new properties of  
> matter appear in non-equilibrium processes that cannot be expressed  
> in terms of individual particles.
>
>
> Even the direction of time itself becomes linked to global  
> properties of ensembles, whether elementary particles, living cells  
> or human populations. For example, societies evolve not because  
> individuals become older, but because the relations between  
> individuals change.
>
>
> Far from coming to the end of science, as Hawking suggests, in my  
> opinion we are only just beginning to be able to produce a coherent  
> view of the universe. We come from a past of conflicting  
> certainties - be they related to science, ethics or social systems  
> - to a present of questioning. This will mean finding a type of  
> scientific rationality more appropriate to our times.
>
>
> The future is uncertain, but this uncertainty is at the heart of  
> human creativity. Time becomes "construction" and creativity a way  
> to participate in this construction. As Aurelio Peccei, the founder  
> of the Club of Rome, said, "Inventing the future is the most  
> important and most difficult human invention."
>
>
> Hopefully, just as in the 17th century, our present turmoil is  
> stimulating scientific developments which will contribute to  
> inventing the future.
>
>
> 1 Bantam Books, New York 1988.
> 2 Dreams of a Final Theory (publication details to be supplied)
> 3 Cosmopolis The University of Chicago Press, 1990
> 4 Ideas and Opinions, Crown Publishers, New York 1954, p. 225.
> 5 Proceedings of the Royal Society 402 1986, p. 35.
> 6 (to be supplied)
>
> from http://www.icom.net/~nexus/Bilderbergers.html:
>
> The Bilderberg Group
> - The Invisible Power House -
>
> With its membership selected from the power élite of Europe and  
> North America, many wonder if the Bilderbergers are conspiring to  
> establish a 'new world order'.
>
>
>
> Extracted from Nexus Magazine, Volume 3, #1 (Dec '95-Jan '96).
> PO Box 30, Mapleton Qld 4560 Australia. nexus at peg.apc.org
> Telephone: +61 (0)7 5442 9280; Fax: +61 (0)7 5442 9381
> >From our web page at: http://www.peg.apc.org/~nexus/
>
> © 1994 by Armen Victorian,
> PO Box 99, West PDO,
> Nottingham, NG8 3NT UK
>
>
> The conspiracy theory writers have repeatedly linked one powerful  
> global elite, the Bilderberg Group, with the ultimate take-over of  
> the world. Members of the Bilderberg together with their 'sister'  
> organisations-the Trilateral Commission (known also as the "Child  
> of Bilderberg")(1) and the Council on Foreign Relations(2)-are  
> charged with the post-war take-over of the democratic process. The  
> measures implemented by this group so far prove the control of the  
> world economy through indirect political means.
>
> The constitution of several democratic monarchies of the Western  
> Europe bans members of their royal families from playing an active  
> role in the political process. However, the Bilderberg meetings  
> provide this exact forum and platform for them.
> "This unprecedented period of European cooperation is more than a  
> product of simple nation-state diplomacy. One of the key  
> institutions that has fostered unity and cooperation with the  
> Atlantic Community beyond the old concepts has been the Bilderberg  
> Group."(3)
> "I tell you frankly that I am deeply alarmed today over the  
> possibility that a right-wing reaction may draw some sections of  
> capital so far away from our traditions as to imperil the entire  
> structure of American life as we know it."(4)
>
> These comments by Pasymowski and Gilbert(3) two decades ago may  
> seem out of phase with the current events in former Yugoslavia,  
> but, in terms of the continued stability of the "European State",  
> they have proven to be largely accurate. Warfare has been removed  
> from the intra-European systems as a means of controlling and  
> directing nationalistic goals and ideas. Even in the case of former  
> Yugoslavia, one observes that the current state of war has resulted  
> from Tito's and the Soviet Union's demise. Consequently, the lid  
> has been lifted on rivals and racial memories which had been  
> artificially kept in place for previous decades. The several proto- 
> states which make up the former Yugoslavia were not part of the  
> economic and social development programs which evolved in Western  
> Europe. As we would see, the way in which the rest of Europe  
> evolved and developed was very different, and for very particular  
> reasons.
>
> Whether co-incidence or not, it is equally ironic that the current  
> Chairman of the Bilderberg, Lord Carrington, was the first UN- 
> appointed representative to bring peace to the war-torn Yugoslavia.
>
> ORIGINS
> The single most important personality connected with the birth and  
> creation of the Bilderberg Group is Joseph H. Retinger (also known  
> as L'Eminence-His Grey Eminence). Retinger had a colourful,  
> lifelong career that raised him to the top of the world power  
> élites. At his funeral in 1960, Sir Edward Bedington-Behrens said:
> "I remember Retinger in the United States picking up the telephone  
> and immediately making an appointment with the President, and in  
> Europe he had complete entrée in every political circle as a kind  
> of right acquired through trust, devotion and loyalty he inspired."
>
> Retinger, as a Catholic, was viewed by many as an agent of the  
> Vatican, acting in liaison between the Pope and the Father-General  
> of the Jesuit order.
>
> One of Retinger's renowned achievements in European politics was  
> the founding of the European Movement, leading to the establishment  
> of the Council of Europe on 5th May 1949. With its headquarters in  
> Strasbourg, the Council Executive Committee provided Retinger his  
> first major platform for his expansive ideology. From his earlier  
> days at the Sorbonne, Retinger believed in greater European unity,  
> both in military and economic terms. It was also at the same time  
> when his interest in the guidance of the Jesuit order manifested  
> itself. He spent a great deal of his time fulfilling these  
> ambitions. He suggested to Premier Georges Clemenceau a plan to  
> unite Eastern Europe-involving the merging of Austria, Hungary and  
> Poland as a tripartite monarchy under the guidance of the Jesuit  
> order. Clemenceau, doubtful of the Vatican-inspired plan, rejected  
> Retinger's proposal outright. This plan labelled Retinger,  
> thereafter, as a Vatican agent.
>
> Retinger's activities were not limited to uniting Europe. Through  
> his several trips to Mexico he played a key role in the creation of  
> a trade union movement in the 1920s. Due to his unprecedented  
> success, and by gaining the Mexican Government's trust, Retinger  
> convinced them to nationalise the US oil interest in Mexico. In the  
> process, Retinger conducted the secret negotiations with Washington  
> for the Mexican Government.
>
> Retinger also had an active war career. He was the political aide  
> to General Sikorski, and served for the London-based Polish  
> Government-in-exile. In addition, at the age of 58, he parachuted  
> into German-occupied territory outside Warsaw for some sabotage  
> missions.
>
> Due to his high-profile career, in the 1950s he was able to create  
> contacts with numerous high-ranking military officials and  
> political leaders. His main aim was to unite the world in peace.  
> His peace dividend was to be under the control of supernational,  
> powerful organisations. He believed that such organisations would  
> be immune from short-term ideological conflicts erupting between  
> governments. To Retinger, it was insignificant what dominated the  
> economic ideology of a country. He believed these differences could  
> be brought into line by powerful multinational organisations  
> dictating and applying powerful economic and military policies,  
> thereby creating a union and a bond between the nations.
>
> Retinger's personal 'left-wing' views from his heady days convinced  
> him that many leaders of newly born socialist and communist nations  
> would be prepared to talk to him. Additionally, his Church  
> background gave him an arena for dialogue with people from the  
> middle-ground connections in international relations.
>
> Nevertheless, Retinger knew that control of the world affairs  
> cannot be achieved without US participation. In pursuit of this  
> ideology, he began a campaign for the creation of an Atlantic  
> Community. This would make the development of Europe an important  
> political aim for the American politicians, thereby preventing  
> their retreat into political isolation.
>
> Retinger, with this in mind, set out his carefully calculated move  
> by involving one of his close and powerful friends, Prince Bernhard  
> of the Netherlands. Prince Bernhard, at the time, was an important  
> figure in the oil industry and held a major position in Royal Dutch  
> Petroleum (Shell Oil), as well as Société Générale de Belgique-a  
> powerful global corporation.
>
> In 1952 Retinger approached Bernhard with a proposal for a secret  
> conference to involve the NATO leaders in an open and frank  
> discussion on international affairs behind closed doors. The  
> meeting would allow each participant to speak his mind freely  
> because no media representative would be permitted inside; nor  
> would there be any news bulletin about the meeting or the topics  
> discussed. Furthermore, if any leaks occurred, the journalists  
> would be discouraged from writing about it.
>
> Prince Bernhard fully supported Retinger's proposal for an  
> international meeting. Consequently, they formed a committee to  
> organise a plan. In 1952, Bernhard approached the Truman  
> administration and briefed them about the meeting. Despite a  
> positive reception, it was not until the Eisenhower administration  
> when the first American counterpart group was formed. The two key  
> role-players in the US group were General Walter Bedell Smith  
> (Director of the CIA) and C. D. Jackson. Both (European-American)  
> groups working interactively set out to fulfil Retinger's initial  
> plan. From the outset, the American group was heavily influenced by  
> the Rockefeller family, the owners of Standard Oil-competitors of  
> Bernhard's Royal Dutch Petroleum. From then on, the Bilderberg  
> business reflected the concerns of the oil industry in its meetings.
>
> According to Bilderberg's draft document of 1989:
> "Bilderberg takes its name from the Bilderberg Hotel in Oosterbeek,  
> Holland, where the first meeting took place in May 1954. That  
> pioneering meeting grew out of the concern expressed by many  
> leading citizens on both sides of the Atlantic that Western Europe  
> and North America were not working together as closely as they  
> should on matters of critical importance. It was felt that regular,  
> off-the-record discussions would help create a bett