Max
Keiser on Bilderberg and the global financial crisis
Patrick
Henningsen talks with top financial guru Max Keiser in London about
this week's Bilderberg meeting in Chantilly and how they factors into
the current global financial meltdown
From the Guardian
Bilderberg 2012: bigger and badder and better than everAs the conference gets into full swing, Charlie Skelton meets the alternative media and their $700 cameras, as they remain convinced their mainstream brethren are missing the story
Charlie
Skelton
1
June 2012
"Not
to be used as safety barriers" was the warning on the safety
barriers that the police laid around the gates of Bilderberg. The
officers were firm but fair. "Madam, please step away with the
balloons," they asked a protester, as she waved them angrily at
arriving limousine. "But this is my first amendment right,"
she howled. I'll give you my balloons when you pry them from my cold,
dead hands.
It's
hard to look furious when you're holding balloons, but somehow she
managed it. There's a lot of anger in the crowd this year – a great
wall of noise met each delegate as they swooped up the hotel drive.
Personally, I thought the crowd was a little harsh at times: branding
each new arrival "thieving scum!" when, looking at the
delegate list, no more than two thirds of those arriving could
reasonably be called that.
Protestors
outside the 2012 Bilderberg Conference in Chantilly, Virginia
Photograph: Hannah Borno for the Guardian
The
official list of participants was
released early this year. Praise where praise is due: well done
Bilderberg for starting to behave like a grown-up political summit.
Good behaviour like this should be given positive reinforcement – I
feel like I should ruffle Henry Kissinger's hair and toss him a meaty
treat. Alas, I think I might be dropped by a sniper before I could
reach his wheelchair.
That's
if I managed to get past the eagle eyes of Senator John Kerry. He's
attending this year, alongside Governor Mitch Daniels of Indiana. I
can imagine they'd grab an arm each, while Nick Boles MP stood on his
little stool in the corner, jeering, as I was dragged from the
conference room, and booted into the parking lot by Mark Rutte, the
Dutch prime minister, while Michael Noonan, Ireland's minister for
finance, tells me in no uncertain terms to get lost. Which, by the
way, is news to me – Ireland has a minister for finance?
What
a lovely lot of politicians we've got at this year's Bilderberg. What
a shot in the arm for democracy. I don't know if Lord Mandelson
belongs on a list of public servants, but he's here; he's becoming
quite a regular these days. Mandelson will be striving privately
towards a better world with the Polish finance minister, the Finnish
finance minister – and, wait, who's this…?
Why,
it's cuddly old Bilderberg insider, the Lord Chancellor, Kenneth
Clarke MP. No wonder the press officer at the Ministry for Justice
last week was so unwilling to talk: "I'm not in a position to
either deny or confirm that the minister will be attending."
Yup. That's exactly the sort of transparency and openness Ken is so
keen to see implemented – as he said only a few months ago:
"Transparency
is the most effective public inoculation against corruption that any
country can have. There is a strong public interest case for almost
all government information to be open to scrutiny."
How
very true. I feel a Freedom of Information request coming on.
Ken's
presence makes up somewhat for the big absence of 2012: no David
Rockefeller! What on earth would make the 96-year-old mega-banker
miss his favourite big-money shindig? I guess Wisconsin must have
rescheduled its annual Biting The Heads off Small Mammals
Competition. Poor David, such bad timing. But I guess he's got a
title to defend.
Even
without Rocky, there's a stellar cast from the world of banking and
finance. Old favourites like Agius and Flint (the chairfolk of
Barclays and HSBC), and a new name on my radar – Michael J Evans –
who enjoys the elegant title: vice-chairman, global head of growth
markets, Goldman Sachs.
Evans
will be conferencing with his esteemed colleages, James A Johnson
(director of Goldman Sachs) and Peter Sutherland (chairman of Goldman
Sachs International) – the last two both members of Bilderberg's
Steering Group. The strong Goldman showing this year does so much to
reassure me of the benign and worthwhile efforts of Bilderberg. They
just want to get on and help us, quietly and secretly. Like a
corporate cross between Santa Claus and a big friendly squid.
Another
lovely chap from the world of banking is Timothy C Collins. Tim is on
the board of Citigroup, has his own giant private equity company
(Ripplewood Holdings) and is a director of the 'Tony
Blair Faith
Foundation, US'. Of the three, I know which one makes me trust him
the least.
Speaking
of Blair, there's some Tony Blair Bilderberg news just out. Mr Blair,
as we know, attended the Bilderberg conference in 1993. Although he
didn't, because he told Parliament that he didn't. So he didn't go.
Unless he lied to Parliament about not going.
Let's
see now. This is a written Q&A from March 1998:
Mr. Christopher Gill MP: To ask the Prime Minister which members of his government have attended meetings of the Bilderberg Group.
The Prime Minister: None.
But
here's the thing… footage has just been released by activists
from We
Are Change,
who took the liberty of sticking a microphone in Tony's face and
asking him the same question. (You can watch the video here)
Same
question. Different answer.
"Yeah, it's a really useful group actually, I remember going back to that in 1993, and we, er… it's a great way too for people from different parts of the world to get together, um, so it's been good."
Blair's
powers of syntax may be waning, but his memory seems to have improved
in the 14 years since he denied going. It happens. It's a well-known
medical condition – kind of a Reverse Alzheimer's.
After
the awkward admission comes the killer question:
"Conflict
of interest?"
You
have to watch Tony Blair's discomfiture at that question. His answer
is basically: "Yeah. Um." Watch it. And then wonder to
yourself why such a skilled politician would tell such a stupid lie
in the first place.
Luke
Rudkowski is the We Are Changer who put Blair on the spot. He's here
in Chantilly, outside Bilderberg, with more recording equipment
strapped to him than the average moon lander.
"It's
huge," he says, as he records the crowds. And the crowds just
keep on growing. By early afternoon on Thursday, there are well over
200 people, and they keep rolling up. I hate to curse Bilderberg 2012
by saying this so early, but it feels like… this could be the big
one. The breakthrough.
"Everyone's
becoming citizen reporters these days", says Rudkowski – and
even as he says it, we're being filmed by a representative of Occupy
Portland. And over on a grassy knoll, the police are filming us being
filmed.
There's
so many cameras here, so many budding documentarians, so much youth,
determination, tech savvy and political awareness – if I was Henry
Kissinger, I'd be ordering another napalm strike right outside the
gates of the Marriott.
The
mainstream press dropped the ball on Bilderberg; in fact, I'm not
even sure they ever had it in their hands. So people like Rudkowski
have had to step in, pick up the ball, re-edit it, and stick it
online with comments enabled. At Bilderberg 2012, the mainstream
press is quite simply being bypassed. And there's me with my pen and
notepad, interviewing Luke, while he livestreams it. I feel like a
caveman with a bad haircut talking to an astronaut.
I
ask Luke why he's come. "I try not to theorize. I go to the
source. I try and find out exactly what's happening." Rudkowski
used an article I'd
written at Bilderberg 2010 to put Blair on the spot. In my piece, I'd
used the evidence available online to call Blair a liar. Rudkowski
went to the horse's mouth.
"There's
a reason he lied. It shows you something's going on. The more
questions I raise about Bilderberg, the more questions I have –
there's a lot more to the story than what we're being told".
Which, to be fair, isn't much. The Bilderberg Group isn't much good
at telling their own story, which is a shame because it's quite a
tale.
Rudkowski's
also here "to open the dialogue", he says. "Conversation
and communication can help fix a lot of the problems we're facing."
Although I'm not sure that some of the things said to Blair on that
video could fairly be described as 'dialogue openers'.
Another
new media luminary working the gates at Bilderberg is Jason Bermas,
of Loose
Change.
He's just flown in from upstate New York. "I took the pat-downs.
No body scanners for me…"
He
has come here with his $700 camera, "because we have to be here.
The media has trillions of dollars to spend, and they're not here.
But we have the technology, and I believe technology is the power
that will lighten the darkness."
The
power jumps a few thousand watts when an SUV rolls up and out hops
the Oprah Winfrey of alternative media: Alex Jones. Millions listen
his daily thunderings against the 'Empire
of the Bankers'.
He's broadcasting his show live from the police line, streaming
video, one moment educating the police on global power structures,
the next minute bullhorning some poor billionaire delegate as they
try and slip inside unnoticed. "The answer to 1984?" yells
Jones. "1776!" roars the crowd.
Alternative
media star Alex Jones presents his internet video show live from the
Bilderberg 2012 protest line Photograph: Hannah Borno for the
Guardian
It's
a kind of live interactive news documentary history wildlife show, a
roar of protest from the lion's den, and everyone feels a part of it.
The wall between people and events – that dusty old safety barrier
between the news and its consumers – it's tumbling down around
Bilderberg.
This
the working media. They're out here, in the Virginia sun,
working hard. Livestreaming, uploading, swapping data, checking audio
feeds – in short, reporting the news. And why? Short answer:
because CNN isn't.
To
be fair to the dinosaurs, this year saw an actual proper mainstream
journalist turn up to Bilderberg: the Washington Times sent Ben
Wolfgang, who wrote an extremely decent piece – so there you go,
mainstream news: it can be done. You may be late to the party, but
there's plenty more booze behind the bar. Pour yourself a drink, and
let's talk about the transnational machinations of the technocratic
banking elite. You might want to sit down, this is going to take a
while. It all starts with Plato…
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