It’s Bilderberg time again. Government and corporate pooh bahs met privately June 12 through 15 at a posh Stockholm, Sweden hotel for the by invitation only 71st Bilderberg meeting.
As tends to be the case, war was a major focus among the Bilderberg hobnobbers. For many of them, war is business and business is good.
As he usually does, Charlie Skelton did some good reporting on what he could discern from the outside was going on inside the highly secured meeting place. His Sunday The Guardian article will help you keep up with the Bilderbergers and their world-affecting scheming. Concerning war and the Bilderberg meeting, Skelton wrote in part:
The four days of transatlantic talks are taking place at the swanky Grand hotel, which is owned, like so much else in Sweden, by the Wallenbergs. The Swedish PM, Ulf Kristersson, turned up for welcome dinner on Thursday evening, and would have been about halfway through his second plate of meatballs when the first of Israel’s rockets dropped on Tehran.
What better time for the prospects of world war three to go up a gear than in the middle of a Bilderberg conflab, with nuclear proliferation slated for discussion, and the heads of Nato and MI6, and two of America’s most senior military officers in the room. They’re joined in Stockholm by the CEOs of several major defence suppliers such as Palantir, Thales and Anduril. Even the quietly spoken host of the conference, Marcus Wallenberg, happens to run an arms company. He’s chair of Sweden’s largest defence contractor, Saab.
Read Skelton’s complete article here.
Back in 1992, when I was traveling around America with Libertarian Party presidential nominee Andre Marrou, someone called in during one of Marrou’s radio interviews and asked if he had ever attended a Bilderberger meeting. “No,” answered Marrou, but he had attended a “McDonald’s burger meeting.” It is a funny joke. It also hints at the truth that people who have received the invite to a Bilderberger meeting or are otherwise hooked in with powerful interests behind the scenes have a leg up on succeeding in politics, and business as well. For true outsiders who march to a different beat the barriers to success are formidable.