There are things that no one needs to know, things that someone tries to imagine, but in the end, neither understands the sense nor the scope.
Some believe that globalization is about to engulf us all, that what we have read in books like "Big Brother" or seen in films deemed to have a lot, too much imagination, is really happening. Step by step, dot by dot, conviction by conviction, everything that frightens us the most, is exactly what someone will force us to be. It started with an ATM, with a credit card, then a more complex electronic card with personal data inserted, then - again - a sim card that interfaces our position, a satellite navigator, which is so cool but allows us to be located anywhere... again and again until the famous chip under the ear of some "science fiction" story. But is it really science fiction?
Daniel Estulin, the author of this book, believes that since the '50s everything has actually been programmed and every event in the world, as a global political entity, is decided at the table by a large, but terribly restricted group, that decides the fate of everything and everyone: economy, wars, seats, politics, everything is chosen, by them, first and then after the decision, it has the power to implement every planned plan. Do we want to believe it? As frightening as it is, this global orthodoxy that manages to do what it wants, seems really to exist.
It is called the "Bildergerg Club" and it has no headquarters. It is made up of about 150 extremely powerful and famous people who meet once a year, in different places, to make the decisions that we will see happening in the following months. Attacks, Presidents, assaults, stock market crashes, economic crises, assassinations of inconvenient characters. Everything premeditated and planned: whether it was the murder of Moro, the removal of Thatcher, the installation of Clinton, the Falkland war or the ousting of the Shah of Persia, the outbreak of the Watergate case, the Marshall Plan, everything would have happened under the strict covert direction of this group of elect.
And Estulin names names: Kissinger, Donald Rumsfeld, Condolezza Rice, the Rockefellers, the Agnellis, former presidents, industrialists, economists, Nobel laureates, intelligence directors, secret services, and key figures of international chessboards, etc. etc. All accompanied by beautiful photos that portray them in handshakes, pats on the back, and rounds of power in an Orwellian game that is incredible. To divert journalists' attention, this mythical and incredible "sect" would meet on the occasion of other events, such as the G8 or the Olympics.
Estulin brings up the presence of some former members who would collaborate with him, indicating the itinerant venues that follow each year for secret meetings, quotes dates, events that then consequentially followed other events, indicates the results of fifteen years of intense investigation in a whirlwind of cold war occurrences and international spies, highlights, as an incipit, that:
"in 1996 they tried to kill me, in 1998 to kidnap me, in 1999 to corrupt me, in 2000 to arrest me, and the year after they offered me a blank check if I kept silent once and for all."
We can take it all with a grain of salt and consider it as reading a novel, we can believe word by word what Estulin says, we can, with our head evaluate whether to delve deeper or not. The fact remains that the world is going in a direction of globalization that, in some ways, seems inevitable.
We shall see, in the meantime let's read this book that will open our eyes a little.
sioulette
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