The highest levels of the Obama administration are infested with members of a shadowy,
elitist cabal intent on installing a one-world government that subverts the will of the
American people.
It sounds crazy, but thats what a group of very persistent conspiracy theorists
insists, and they point to President Obamas nominee for Health and Human Services
Secretary, Kansas Gov. Kathleen Sebelius, as the latest piece of evidence supporting their
claims.
It turns out that Sebelius - like top administration economists Timothy Geithner, Larry
Summers and Paul Volcker, as well as leading Obama diplomats Richard Holbrooke and Dennis
Ross - is a Bilderberger. That is, she is someone who has participated in the annual
invitation-only conference held by an elite international organization known as the
Bilderberg group.
The group, which takes its name from the Dutch hotel where it held its first meeting in
1954, exists solely to bring together between 100 and 150 titans of politics, finance,
military, industry, academia and media from North America and Western Europe once a year
to discuss world affairs. It doesnt issue policy statements or resolutions, nor does
it hold any events other than an annual meeting.
Past participants have included Margaret Thatcher, who attended the 1975 meeting at
Turkeys Golden Dolphin Hotel, former media mogul Conrad Black, who has been to more
than a dozen conferences, and Bill Clinton, Tony Blair, Condoleezza Rice, Donald Rumsfeld,
Queen Beatrix of the Netherlands, King Juan Carlos of Spain and top officials of BP, IBM,
Barclays and the Bank of England.
It is precisely that exclusive roster of globally influential figures that has captured
the interest of an international network of conspiracists, who for decades have viewed the
Bilderberg conference as a devious corporate-globalist scheme.
The fulminating is aggravated by Obama's preference for surrounding himself with
well-credentialed, well-connected, and well-traveled elites. His personnel choices have
touched a populist, even paranoid nerve among those who are convinced powerful elites and
secret societies are moving the planet toward a new world order.
Their worldview, characterized by a deep and angry suspicion of the ruling class rather
than any prevailing partisan or ideological affiliation, is widely articulated on
overnight AM radio shows and a collection of Internet websites.
The video sharing website YouTube alone is home to thousands of Bilderberg-related videos.
I dont laugh at the people who claim that they understand the connections, but
Ive never really spent much time tracing that through, said Rep. Ron Paul
(R-Texas), a former presidential candidate whose libertarian sensibilities have made him a
darling of the Bilderberg conspiracists.
The one thing that concerns me is that the people who surround Obama or Bush
generally come from the same philosophic viewpoint and they have their organizations -
they have the Trilateral Commission, the CFR [Council on Foreign Relations] and the
Bilderbergers, and theyve been around a long time. And my biggest concern is what
they preach: Keynesian economics and interventionism and world planning, he said.
While it's easy to dismiss the Bilder-busters as cranks, these voices have a way of making
themselves heard on the margins of the debate in ways that can prove to be a real, if
minor, distraction to Obamas political team. Bill Clinton had trouble shaking rumors
that he was behind a shady criminal syndicate operating out of the Mena airport. George W.
Bush was sometimes portrayed as the puppet of clandestine Middle Eastern oil interests.
Obamas selection of numerous Bilderbergers for key posts certainly would
verify their suspicions, said Paul, referring to fears of the groups
influence.
And I dont think its just Obama. Whether ts the Republicans or the
Democrats - Goldman Sachs generally has somebody in treasury. And the big banks generally
have somebody in the Federal Reserve. And theyre international people, too. And
theyre probably working very hard this weekend, with the G20. And they get involved
in the IMF. But that is their stated goal. They do believe in a powerful centralized
government and we believe in the opposite.
One popular website, Prison Planet, greeted Sebelius nomination with the
headline Obama Picks Bilderberger for Health Secretary.
Its obvious why Bilderberg is a frequent target of conspiracy theorists, whove
credited it with anointing aspiring presidents, selecting their running mates, creating
the European Union and instigating the war in Iraq and the bombing of Serbia, among other
coups.
Bilderberg meetings are closed to the press, participants are asked not to publicly
discuss the proceedings and the attendee list is only occasionally released. As a result,
the group has come to be viewed as a more publicity-shy cousin to the Trilateral
Commission and the Council on Foreign Relations - other influential international think
tanks that are staples of fringe group conversation.
Unlike Bilderberg, though, those organizations have opened their proceedings to public
scrutiny, maintain websites and have long listed their members.
The Bilderberg group, in a rare press release last year, laid out a benign if vague
mission: creating a better understanding of the complex forces and major trends
affecting Western nations.
Bilderberg is a small, flexible, informal and off-the-record international forum in
which different viewpoints can be expressed and mutual understanding enhanced, read
the press release, which noted that a list of participants would be available by phone
request between 9:00 AM and 5:00 PM on the second and third days of the conference.
The Bilderberg conspiracists first pounced on the Obama connection during the 2008
campaign, when news leaked in May that the candidate, who at the time was closing in on
the Democratic presidential nomination, had initially tapped former Fannie Mae chairman
Jim Johnson, a top Bilderberger, to help him select a running mate.
IRS filings show that Johnson as recently as 2006 was the treasurer of a non-profit group
called American Friends of Bilderberg. The group has raised hundreds of thousands of
dollars over the years to pay for meetings--including $125,000 in total contributions from
Bilderberg stalwarts Henry Kissinger and David Rockefeller in 2005 and 2006 plus $25,000
in 2005 from the Washington Post, whose chairman Don Graham has attended in the past.
Johnson did not return a message inquiring about his role at Bilderberg.
The news further puts to rest any delusions that Bilderberg is a mere talking shop
where no decisions are made, reported Prison Planet. It also ridicules once
again any notion that an Obama presidency would bring change to the status quo
of America being ruled by an unelected corporate and military-industrial complex
elite.
One month later, in June, Johnson was joined at the 2008 Bilderberg meeting by Geithner,
Holbrooke, Summers and Ross, as well as Obamas first choice for HHS secretary, Tom
Daschle, and Sebelius, who at the time was included on some short lists of prospective
Obama running mates and who also attended the 2007 meeting in Istanbul, Turkey.
According to the Bilderberg press release, the meeting was designed to deal mainly
with a nuclear free world, cyber terrorism, Africa, Russia, finance, protectionism, US-EU
relations, Afghanistan and Pakistan, Islam and Iran. Approximately two-thirds of the
140 expected attendees came from Europe, according to the release, and the rest from North
America.
Had the meeting been held outsie the United States, that might have been the end of the
Obama angle. But the conference, which took place from June 5 through 8, was held at a
heavily guarded hotel in Chantilly, Va. in suburban Washington-coincidentally overlapping
with an Obama campaign event in the area.
While Obamas schedule indicated he was to fly home to Chicago for the weekend-and
journalists were herded on a campaign plane under the impression they were headed there
along with Obama-the future president slipped away for a private meetings and never
actually boarded the flight. As it turned out, Obama secretly met that evening with
Hillary Rodham Clinton in Washington, D.C., but not before raising alarms among the
Bilder-busters, who were convinced something was rotten in Chantilly.
Prison Planet connected the dots and concluded Obama and Clinton met at the Bilderberg
meeting, declaring that the complete failure of the mainstream media to report on
the fact, once again betrays the super-secretive nature and influential reputation that
the 54-year-old organization still maintains.
It is now seems increasingly likely that the secret meetings with Bilderberg this
weekend will herald the decision to name Hillary Clinton as Obama's VP candidate,
predicted a sister site, Infowars.net.
Even the snarky D.C.-based Wonkette blog weighed in, half-seriously positing that
really, it sounds like Obama and Clinton rendezvoused at that creepy
Bilderberg Group meeting, which is happening now, and which is so secret that nobody will
admit theyre going, even though everybody who is anybody goes to Bilderberg.
Curiously, though, the episode wasnt the first time a Bilderberg meeting intersected
with vice presidential selection machinations.
In 2004, both Time magazine and the New York Times noted that then-Sen. John Edwards
(D-N.C) had impressed Bilderbergers at that years conference in Stresa,
Italy-roughly one month prior to his selection as Sen. John Kerrys (D-Mass.) running
mate-- when Edwards debated Republican Ralph Reed. Then, as in 2008, Jim Johnson led the
vice presidential vetting.
Time reported that then-Sen. Jon Corzine (D-N.J.) and Holbrooke attended and called
Kerry with rave reviews about Edwards' debate skills.
In its tick-tock of the vice-presidential selection process, the New York Times also
noted the Bilderberg effect.
"His performance at Bilderberg was important," a friend of Kerry told the Times.
"He reported back directly to Kerry. There were other reports on his performance.
Whether they reported directly or indirectly, I have no doubt the word got back to Mr.
Kerry about how well he did."
An attendee of the 2004 meeting dismissed the notion that Edwards Bilderberg
performance helped land him on the Democratic ticket.
It wasnt because of his performance at the meeting - he was at the meeting
because he was going to get picked said the attendee, who did not want to be
identified breaching Bilderbergs off-the-record rule. He was there as a
surrogate for Kerry and to boost his foreign policy bona fides, said the attendee.
Either way, the attendee contended, the Bilderberg conspiracy theories dont make
sense on their face, if only because the wide array of ideologies represented would make
it difficult to reach consensus.
There were so many different people there with so many different viewpoints that it
belied the opportunity to really conspire, because obviously a Kissinger and a [prominent
neoconservative Richard] Perle are going to come down in a very different place than say a
Holbrooke or a Johnson, the attendee said.
Besides, the attendee observed, its almost impossible to name a Bilderberger-free
Cabinet.
Youd be hard pressed to find an administration that hasnt reahed into
those ranks into the last 20, 30, 40 years." (3.15.2009,
Kenneth P. Vogel, Politico)
Eastern