The chief geopolitical prize is Eurasia … Now a non-Eurasian power is preeminent in Eurasia—and America’s global primacy is directly dependent on how long and how effectively its preponderance on the Eurasian continent is sustained … To put it in a terminology that harkens back to the more brutal age of ancient empires, the three great imperatives of imperial geo-strategy are to prevent collusion and maintain security dependence among the vassals, to keep tributaries pliant and protected, and to keep the barbarians from coming together.
DAVID ROCKEFELLER PLAYED A KEY ROLE in the creation of the Bilderberg Group at the Hotel De Bilderberg in Oosterbeek in 1954. The group brings together the most powerful bankers, businessmen, top academic and university leaders, and government officials from Europe and North America. From the beginning, the gatherings were extremely exclusive affairs in which utmost secrecy was demanded from its original 73 participants. Ten “rapporteurs” were selected to introduce the talking points on the agenda and to lead the group discussions, including David Rockefeller.1 The organization was set up to serve as a clandestine “global think tank” with the intent of linking “governments and economies in Europe and North America amid the Cold War.”2 Over the years, the “Bilderbergers” have come to include the world’s most influential figures. A list of some attendees is as follows:
FROM THE UNITED STATES
Dean Acheson (Secretary of State under Truman), Allen Dulles (CIA director), Owen Lattimore (CFR, former Director of Planning and Coordination for the State Department), Christian Herter (Secretary of State under Eisenhower), Gabriel Hauge (Assistant to President Eisenhower, later Chairman of Manufacturers Hanover Trust Co.), George F. Kennan (former U.S. Ambassador to the Soviet Union), Dean Rusk (Kennedy’s Secretary of State, former President of the Rockefeller Foundation), Robert S. McNamara (Kennedy’s Secretary of Defense and former President of the World Bank), C. Douglas Dillon (Secretary of Treasury in the Kennedy and Johnson Administrations, from Dillon, Read and Co.), George Ball (CFR, Johnson’s undersecretary of State, foreign policy consultant to Nixon), Henry A. Kissinger (Secretary of State under Nixon; Chairman, Kissinger Associates), Donald H. Rumsfeld (President Ford’s and George W. Bush’s Secretary of Defense), Zbigniew Brzezinski (Carter’s National Security Advisor), Cyrus Vance (Secretary of State under Carter), Philip Jessup (representative to the International Court), Winston Lord (CFR, Clinton’s Assistant Secretary of State), Alan Greenspan (Chairman, Federal Reserve System), former President Gerald Ford, Sen. Walter Mondale (later Vice President under Carter), Sen. William J. Fulbright (from Arkansas, a Rhodes Scholar), Sen. Henry M. Jackson, Sen. Jacob J. Javits (NY), Sen. Adlai Stevenson III, Sen. Charles Mathias (MD), Sen. Lloyd Bentsen (Chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, Secretary of the Treasury under Bill Clinton), Rep. Thomas S. Foley (former Speaker of the House), Rep. Donald F. Frase, Rep. Henry S. Reuss, Rep. Donald W. Riegle, Gen. Walter Bedell Smith, Gen. Andrew J. Goodpaster (former Supreme Allied Commander in Europe, and later superintendent of the West Point Academy), Gen. Alexander Haig (NATO Commander, former assistant to Kissinger, later became Secretary of State under Reagan), Lt. Gen. John W. Vogt (former Director of the Joint Chiefs of Staff), David Rockefeller, Nelson Rockefeller, Laurance Rockefeller, James Rockefeller (Chairman, First National City Bank), John D. Rockefeller IV (Governor of West Virginia, now U.S. Senator), Henry J. Heinz II (Chairman of the H. J. Heinz Co.), Robert O. Anderson (Chairman of Atlantic-Richfield Co. and head of the Aspen Institute for Humanisitic Studies), Henry Ford III (head of the Ford Motor Co.), Thomas L. Hughes (President of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace), Joseph Johnson (President of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace), William P. Bundy (former President of the Ford Foundation, and editor of the CFR’s Foreign Affairs magazine), Shepard Stone (Director of International Affairs for the Ford Foundation), Paul G. Hoffman (of the Ford Foundation, U.S. Chief of Foreign Aid, and head of the U.N. Special Fund), John J. McCloy (former President of the Chase Manhattan Bank), Eugene Black (former President of the World Bank), Bill Moyers (journalist), William F. Buckley (editor of National Review), Paul B. Finney (editor of Fortune magazine), Gardner Cowles (Editor-in-Chief and Publisher of Look magazine), Arthur Taylor (former Chairman of CBS-TV), Father Theodore M. Hesburgh (former President of Notre Dame University), David J. McDonald (President of the United Steelworkers Union), former President George H. W. Bush, former President William Clinton, former President George W. Bush, and former President Barack Obama.
FROM GREAT BRITAIN AND CANADA:
Prince Phillip (of Great Britain, husband of Queen Elizabeth II), Lord Louis Mountbatten, Denis Healy (former British Defense Minister), Edward Heath (former Prime Minister of England), Harold Wilson (former Prime Minister of England), Margaret Thatcher (former Prime Minister of England), Lester Pearson (former Prime Minister of Canada), Donald S. MacDonald (Canadian Minister of National Defense), Tony Blair (former Prime Minister of England), and David Cameron (former Prime Minister of England).
FROM EUROPE:
Baron Edmond de Rothschild, Manlio Brosio (Secretary-General of NATO), Dirk U. Stikker (Secretary-General of NATO), Valery Giscard d’Estang (President of France), Helmut Schmidt (former Chancellor of West Germany), Prince Claus (of the Netherlands), Paul van Zeeland (Prime Minister of Belgium), Giovanni Agnelli (Chairman of Fiat in Italy), Otto Wolff (German industrialist), Wilfred S. Baumgartner (Bank of France), Guido Carli (Bank of Italy), Marcus Wallenberg (Chairman of Stockholm’s Enskiida Bank), Pierce Paul Schweitzer (Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund), and Imbriani Longo (Director-General of the Banco Nationale del Lavoro in Italy), Angela Merkel (Chancellor of Germany), and Emmanuel Macron (President of France).3
Every Bilderberg meeting includes the presidents and chairmen of the Bank for International Settlements, the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank, and the Federal Reserve, along with the directors of the FBI and the CIA, the CEOs of the world’s most powerful corporations, the secretaries eneral of NATO, American senators, members of the U.S. House of Representatives, European prime ministers, and leaders of opposition parties.4 Since the time of its establishment, every American president has appeared at the annual event, with the sole exception of Donald Trump. However, in 2017, President Trump sent several of his top officials, including National Security Advisor H. R. Nelson and Secretary of Commerce Wilbur Ross, to take part in the proceedings.5
Despite the fact that the richest and most powerful individuals in the world gather every year in a luxury hotel to conduct meetings that the press is forbidden to attend and no public statements are ever issued, the mainstream press has decided that the meetings, which are conducted in total secrecy, are not newsworthy.6 The hotels are closed to all outside guests. Those who attend the meetings are granted military protection. Every delivery vehicle that arrives at the hotel is searched from top to bottom and then escorted, by armed guard, to the tradesmen’s entrance. For the sake of added security, the Bilderbergers bring their own chefs, cooks, waiters, secretaries, busboys, cleaning staff, and bodyguards.7
The European founders of the group included Joseph Retinger and Prince Bernhard of the Netherlands. Prince Bernhard had been a member of the Nazi Party until 1934, three years prior to his marrying the Dutch Queen Juliana, and had worked for the German industrial giant, IG Farben, who was linked to Standard Oil. Retinger was the founder of the European Movement (EM), a organization dedicated to creating a federal Europe. The EM was funded by the Council on Foreign Relations and the Rockefeller Foundation.8 He was also a top official in Royal Dutch Shell, the Dutch-British conglomerate, which was controlled by the Rothschilds.9
Along with David Rockefeller, the most prominent Americans involved with the formation of the Bilderberg Group were Dean Rusk (a top official with the Council on Foreign Relations who was then the head of the Rockefeller Foundation), Joseph Johnson (another Council leader who was head of the Carnegie Endowment), and John J. McCloy (a top Council leader who became chairman of Chase Manhattan Bank in 1953 and was also chairman of the board of the Ford Foundation). Everyone involved in setting up the new think tank was closely related to the Rockefeller Empire.
By empowering international agencies, including the United Nations, the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank, and the World Trade Organization, the Bilderbergers, under the direction of the Rockefellers, intend to destroy national identities and to establish one government with one set of values. Within this global government, there will be no middle class, only rulers and workers. Their plan calls for zero growth societies, the centralized control of all education, the empowerment of the United Nations to levy a direct tax on all world citizens, the expansion of NATO into Eastern Europe and Asia so that it can serve as the UN’s world army, the right of the International Court of Justice at The Hague to impose laws that are binding on all peoples of all nations, and the imposition of a universal socialist welfare system to ensure economic equality and the end of predatory capitalism.10 This blueprint for this New World Order was set forth by Zbigniew Brzezinski, one of David Rockefeller’s closest associates, in his 1970 book Between Two Ages: America’s Role in the Technetronic Era.11 A PhD from Harvard, Brzezinski became a founding father, along with David Rockefeller, of the Trilateral Commission. He later served as National Security Advisor of Presidents Jimmy Carter and Barack Obama and as a member of President George H. W. Bush’s National Security Task Force and the Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board.12
The Bilderberg Group discussions have resulted in the 1973 oil crisis, the economic demise of the Soviet Union, the removal of Margaret Thatcher from her position as Britain’s prime minister, the fall of Kosovo, the timetable for the 2003 invasion of Iraq, and many of the CIA’s covert operations, including the creation of a pan-Islamic movement to destabilize the Middle East, Central Asia, and Christian Europe.13
The group also created the European Union (EU) and the euro as a new international currency. The initial plans for the EU were drafted by the Action Committee for a United States of Europe (ACUE), an organization chaired by William “Wild Bill” Donovan and Allen Dulles, two of the Rockefellers’ closest allies. The EU was established to become a European superstate that would assume Britain’s place on the United Nations Security Council. This superstate would have its own president and parliament, its own judicial system that would establish laws binding to all the residents of Europe, and its own Department of Defense with its own armed forces.14 It represented a vital step toward the Rockefeller goal of creating Eurasia, the union of the world’s largest continent into one vast political and economic entity that would be ripe for plunder.
Eurasia, as envisioned by the Bilderbergers, would stretch from France to China and from India to Russia. Free trade would flow from principality to principality, and the various peoples would live under common rule and common law. After establishing the Bank for International Settlements, the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank, the United Nations, and a United Europe, the establishment of Eurasia was an achievable goal. Through the Council on Foreign Relations, the Rockefellers had gained control of the U.S. State Department and had placed the perfect individual in the cabinet of President Richard Nixon to undertake this task. His name was Henry Kissinger.
Kissinger had graduated from Harvard in 1950 as a Rockefeller Foundation Fellow in political science. In 1956, he was invited by the Rockefellers to join the Council on Foreign Relations, where he became a major force in shaping international policy.15 Explaining Kissinger’s rise in the CFR, J. Robert Moskin, author of The U.S. Marine Corps Story, writes: “It was principally because of his long association with the Rockefellers that Henry Kissinger became a force in the Council. The New York Times called him ‘the Council’s most influential member,’ and a Council insider says that ‘his influence is direct and enormous—much of it through the Rockefeller connection.’”16
During the 1960s, Kissinger served as Nelson Rockefeller’s chief foreign affairs advisor and the mastermind behind Nelson’s campaign for the presidency. The relationship between the two men was so close that Kissinger dedicated his memoir, The White House Years, to Nelson, describing him as “the single most influential person in my life.”17
When Richard Nixon became president, he appointed Kissinger as secretary of state in accordance with advice of the Rockefeller family.18 In this position, Kissinger tirelessly advanced the agenda of the Rockefellers and the Bilderbergers, including the promulgation of free trade between all nations. This agenda prompted him in July 1971 to visit China, where he negotiated a trade agreement by which the Communist country would receive “most favored nation status” with the United States, a status that would permit Chinese goods to flow into America free of charge. Kissinger was accompanied by Winston Lord, a member of the National Security Council staff, who later became president of the CFR. By the time Nixon visited China the following year, the terms of the deal had been set in stone. The treaty, which was ratified by Congress, caused David Rockefeller to gloat: “The Chinese are not only purposeful and intelligent, [but] they also have a large pool of cheap labor. So they should be able to find ways to get trading capital.”19 Of course, the Chinese found ways of getting trading capital. However, the funds did not come from their own resources, but rather from the IMF/World Bank, which proceeded to supply the communist country with billions of tax-free loans.20
Manufacturing plants sprouted up throughout China. The products and goods were produced in these plants by workers making less per month than union workers in America were making per hour. Women working in the Timberland Shoe Company in Guangdong Province, labored 14 hours a day at 22 cents per hour. At a factory making Kathie Lee [Gifford] handbags for WalMart, the highest wages were seven dollars a week.21
Compounding the problem for American manufacturers was China’s manipulation of its currency. By 2010, China had devalued the yuan by 45 percent, cutting in half the cheap labor for companies moving to China and doubling the price of U.S. goods entering the communist country. The trade deficit stood at $266 billion.22
Throughout America, factories began to relocate to Southeast Asia, and an ever-increasing number of American workers found themselves on the unemployment line. The following list23 is of the companies that moved their manufacturing facilities to China:
AT&T
Abbott Laboratories
Abercrombe & Fitch
Acer Electronics
Ademco Security
Adidas
ADI Security
AGI–American Gem Institute
AIG Financial
Agrilink Foods, Inc. (ProFac)
Allergan Laboratories
American Eagle Outfitters
American Standard
American Tourister
Ames Tools
Amphenol Corporation
Analog Devices, Inc.
Apple Computer
Armani
Armour Meats
Ashland Chemical
Ashley Furniture
Associated Grocers
Audi Motors
AudioVox
AutoZone, Inc.
Avon
Banana Republic
Bausch & Lomb, Inc.
Baxter International
Bed, Bath & Beyond
Belkin Electronics
Best Buy
Best Foods
Big 5 Sporting Goods
Black & Decker
Body Shop
Borden Foods
Briggs & Stratton
Calrad Electric
Campbell’s Soup
Canon Electronics
Carole Cable
Casio Instrument
Caterpillar, Inc.
CBC America
CCTV Outlet
Checker Auto
CitiCorp
Cisco Systems
Chiquita Brands International
Claire’s Boutique
Cobra Electronics
Coby Electronics
Coca-Cola Foods
Colgate-Palmolive
Colorado Spectrum
ConAgra Foods
Cooper Tire
Corning, Inc.
Coleman Sporting Goods
Compaq
Crabtree & Evelyn
Cracker Barrel Stores
Craftsman Tools (Sears)
Cummins, Inc.
Dannon Foods
Dell Computer
Del Monte Foods
Dewalt Tools
DHL
Dial Corporation
Diebold, Inc.
Dillard’s, Inc.
Dodge-Phelps
Dole Foods
Dollar Tree Stores, Inc.
Dow-Corning
EchoStar
Eclipse CCTV
Edge Electronics Group
Electric Vehicles USA, Inc.
Eli Lilly Company
Emerson Electric
Enfamil
Estee Lauder
Eveready
Family Dollar Stores
FedEx
Fisher Scientific
Ford Motors
Fossil
Frito-Lay
Furniture Brands International
GAP Stores
Gateway Computer
General Electric
General Foods International
General Mills
General Motors
Gentek
Gerber Foods
Gillette Company
Goodrich Company
Goodyear Tire
Gucci
Guess?
Haagen-Dazs
Harley Davidson
Hasbro Company
Heinz Foods
Hershey Foods
Hitachi Hoffman-LaRoche
Holt’s Automotive Products
Home Depot
Honda
Honeywell
Hoover Vacuum
Hormel Foods
HP Computer
Hubbell Inc.
Huggies
Hunts-Wesson Foods
IBM
ICON Office Solutions
Ikea
Intel Corporation
J.C. Penney
J. M. Smucker Company
JVC Electronics
John Deere
Johnson Control
Johnson & Johnson
Johnstone Supply
KB Home
Keebler Foods
KFC, Kentucky Fried Chicken
Kimberly-Clark
Knorr Foods
K-Mart
Kohler
Kohl’s Corporation
Kraft Foods
Kragen Auto
Land’s End
Lee Kum Kee Foods
Lexmark
LG Electronics
Lipton Foods
L.L. Bean, Inc.
Logitech
Libby’s Foods
Linens ’n Things
Lipo Chemicals, Inc.
Lowe’s Hardware
Lucent Technologies
Lufkin
Mars Candy
Martha Stewart Products
Mattel
McCormick Foods
McDonald’s
McKesson Corporation
Megellan GPS
Memorex
Merck & Company
Michael’s Stores
Mitsubishi Electronics
Mitsubishi Motors
Mobile Oil
Molex
Motorola
Motts Applesauce
Multifoods Corporation
Nabisco Foods
National Semiconductor
Nescafe
Nestlé Foods
Nextar
Nike
Nikon
Nivea Cosmetics
Nokia Electronics
Northrop Grumman
NuSkin International
Nutrilite (Amway)
Nvidia Corporation (G-Force)
Office Depot
Old Navy
Olin Corporation
Olympus Electronics
Orion-Knight Electronics
Pacific Sunwear, Inc.
Pampers
Panasonic
Pan Pacific Electronics
Papa Johns
Payless Shoesource
Pelco
Pentax Optics
Pep Boy’s
Pepsico International
PetsMart
Petco
Pfizer, Inc.
Philips Electronics
Phillip Morris Companies
Pier 1 Imports
Pierre Cardin
Pillsbury Company
Pioneer Electronics
Pitney Bowes, Inc.
Pizza Hut
Plantronics
PlaySchool Toys
Polaris Industries
Polaroid
Polo (Ralph Lauren)
Post Cereals
Price-Pfister
Pringles
Praxair
Proctor & Gamble
PSS World Medical
Pyle Audio
Qualcomm
Quest One
Radio Shack
Ralph Lauren
RCA
Reebok International
Reynolds Aluminum
Revlon
Rohm & Hass Company
Samsonite
Samsung
Sanyo
Shell Oil
Schwinn Bike
Sears-Craftsman
Seven-Eleven (7-11)
Sharp Electronics
Sherwin-Williams
Shure Electronics
Sony
Speco Technologies/Pro Video
Shopko Stores
Skechers Footwear
SmartHome
Smucker’s (J. M. Smucker’s)
Solar Power, Inc.
Spencer Gifts
Stanley Tools
Staples
Starbucks Corporation
Steelcase, Inc.
STP Oil
Subway Sandwiches
Sunglass Hut
SunMaid Raisins
Switchcraft Electronics
SYSCO Foods
Sylvania Electric
3-M
Tai Pan Trading Company
Tamron Optics
Target
TDK
Tektronix, Inc
Texas Instruments
Timex
Timken Bearing
TNT
Tommy Hilfiger
Toro
Toshiba
Tower Automotive
Toyota
Toys “R” Us, Inc.
Trader Joe’s
Tripp-lite
True Value Hardware
Tupper Ware
Tyson Foods
Uniden Electronics
UPS
Valspar Corporation
Victoria’s Secret
Vizio Electronics
Volkswagen
VTech
Walgreen Company
Walt Disney Company
Walmart
WD-40 Corporation
Weller Electric Company
Western Digital
Westinghouse Electric
Weyerhaeuser Company
Whirlpool Corporation
Wilson Sporting Goods
Wrigley
WW Grainger, Inc.
Wyeth Laboratories
X-10
Xelite
Xerox
Yahoo
Yamaha
Yoplait Foods
Yum Brands
Zale Corporation
The economic situation in America worsened as more countries, including India and Pakistan, received most favored status. By 2010, 50,000 manufacturing plants in America had shut down. Almost everything that Americans purchased came from overseas manufacturers: shoes, clothes, cars, furniture, TVs, appliances, bicycles, toys, cameras, and computers.24 The goods flowed into the country free of charge, violating the principles of America’s founding fathers. Alexander Hamilton had written:
The superiority antecedently enjoyed by nations who have preoccupied and perfected a branch of industry, constitutes a more formidable obstacle than either of those which have been mentioned, to the introduction of the same branch into a country in which it did not before exist. To maintain, between the recent establishments of one country, and the long-matured establishments of another country, a competition upon equal terms, both as to quality and price, is, in most cases, impracticable. The disparity, in the one, or in the other, or in both, must necessarily be so considerable, as to forbid a successful rivalship, without the extraordinary aid and protection of government.25
Cheap foreign labor and tax-free imports also impacted the defense industry. In 2010, Senator Fritz Hollings wrote: “Today, the United States has less manufacturing jobs than in April 1941. Long before the recession, South Carolina had lost its textile industry, North Carolina its furniture industry, Michigan its automobile industry. The defense industry has been off-shored. We had to wait months to get flat panel displays from Japan before we launched Desert Storm. Boeing can’t build a fighter plane except for the parts from India. Sikorsky can’t build a helicopter except for the tail motor from Turkey. Under law, the Secretary of Commerce lists those items vital to our national security but Congress fails to make sure we can produce these items for our defense. Today, we can’t go to war except for the favor of a foreign country.”26
On January 1, 1995, the World Trade Organization (WTO) came into being with headquarters in Geneva, Switzerland. It was set up to integrate nations into a world order without tariffs or other economic barriers. The principal beneficiaries were the 80,000 transnational corporations that account for two-thirds of the world trade. A 2014 New Science study showed that 1,318 core transnational corporations, through interlocking boards of directors, owned 80 percent of global revenues, and 147 of them formed a “super entity” that controlled 40 percent of the wealth of the entire network.27 Not surprisingly, this “super entity” was dominated by the business interests of the House of Rockefeller.
The WTO represented one of the final steps in the creation of a New World Order. It was empowered under international law to police the economic and social policies of its 164 member states, thereby derogating the sovereign rights of national governments. “Under WTO rules,” noted economist Michel Chossudovsky writes, “the banks and multinational corporations (MNCs) can legitimately manipulate market forces to their advantage leading to the outright re-colonization of national economies.”28
To advance the creation of Eurasia, the Bilderbergers, under David Rockefeller’s instruction, issued invitations to power planners from Japan and China to attend the annual gatherings. The attendees came to include Nobuo Tanaka, Japan’s Executive Director of International Energy; Fu Ying, China’s Vice Minister of Foreign Affairs; and Huang Yiping, professor of economics at Peking University (China’s Harvard).29
In keeping with its global ambitions, the Bilderberg Group has been attempting to create a new global currency to replace the U.S. dollar. The new money will be the International Monetary Fund’s Special Drawing Rights (discussed in the previous chapter). This development, according to the Washington Post, will transform the IMF “into a veritable United Nations for the world economy.”30
By the second decade of the 21st century, the Bilderberg Group represented the high priests of the New World Order, while David Rockefeller emerged as the pope. Regarding his role in reshaping the world, David Rockefeller wrote in his Memoirs (2002): “For more than a century ideological extremists at either end of the political spectrum have seized upon well-publicized incidents such as my encounter with Castro to attack the Rockefeller family for the inordinate influence they claim we wield over American political and economic institutions. Some even believe we are part of a secret cabal working against the best interests of the United States, characterizing my family and me as ‘internationalists’ and of conspiring with others around the world to build a more integrated global political and economic structure–one world, if you will. If that’s the charge, I stand guilty, and I am proud of it.”31
And if this admission wasn’t sufficient, David Rockefeller at the conclusion of the Bilderberg Conference in 1991 said: “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 40 years. 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 supranational sovereignty of an intellectual elite and world bankers is surely preferable to the national auto-determination practiced in past centuries.”32
1 Dubay, The Atlantean Conspiracy, 77.
2 Andrew Gavin Marshall, “Bilderberg 2011: The Rockefeller World Order and the ‘High Priests of Globalization,’” Global Research, June 16, 2011, https://www.globalresearch.ca/bilderberg-2011-the-rockefeller-world-order-and-the-high-priests-of-globalization/25302, accessed February 13, 2019.
3 David Allen Rivera, “Final Warning: A History of the New World Order,” 1994, http://modernhistoryproject.org/mhp?Article=FinalWarning&C=8.3, accessed February 13, 2019.
4 Daniel Estulin, The True Story of the Bilderberg Group, 2nd ed., (Walterville, OR: TrineDay, 2009), p. xxiv.
5 Alex Newman, “Top Trump Officials Attend Bilderberg Summit. Why?” New American, June 2, 2017, https://www.thenewamerican.com/world-news/north-america/item/26162-top-trump-officials-attend-globalist-bilderberg-summit-why, accessed February 13, 2019.
6 Estulin, The True Story of the Bilderberg Group, p. xxv.
7 Ibid., p. 25.
8 Holly Sklar, ed., Trilateralism: The Trilateral Commission and Elite Planning for World Management. (Boston: South End Press: 1980), 161–62.
9 Estulin, The True Story of the Bilderberg Group, p. 20.
10 Ibid., pp. 41–43.
11 Zbigniew Brzezinski, Between Two Ages: America’s Role in the Technetronic Era (New York: Viking, 1970), https://archive.org/stream/pdfy-z5FBdAnrFME2m1U4/Zbigniew%20Brzezinski%20-%20Between%20Two%20Ages_djvu.txt, accessed February 13, 2019.
12 Patrick Briley, “Zbigniew Brzezinski,” Euro-Med, September 16, 2008, https://www.bibliotecapleyades.net/sociopolitica/sociopol_brzezinski06.htm, accessed February 13, 2019.
13 Estulin, The True Story of the Bilderberg Group, pp. 35–48.
14 Marshall, “Bilderberg 2011: The Rockefeller World Order and the ‘High Priests of Globalization.’”
15 G. Vance Smith and Tom Gow, Masters of Deception: The Rise of the Council on Foreign Relations (Colorado Springs, CO: Freedom First Society, 2012), p. 166.
16 Robert Moskin, quoted in Ibid.
17 James Perloff, The Shadows of Power: The Council on Foreign Relations and the American Decline (Appleton, WI: Western Islands, 2005), p. 145.
18 Ibid., pp. 145–146.
19 David Rockefeller, quoted in Gary Allen, The Rockefeller File (Seal Beach, CA: ’76 Press, 1976), p. 121.
20 G. Edward Griffin, The Creature from Jekyll Island: A Second Look at the Federal Reserve (Westlake Village, CA: American Media, 2017), p. 122.
21 Jon E. Dougherty, “Free Trade v. Slave Trade: Brutal Chinese Working Conditions Benefit WalMart, Others,” WorldNetDaily, May 24, 2000, http://www.hartford-hwp.com/archives/55/312.html, accessed February 13, 2019.
22 Pat Buchanan, Suicide of a Superpower (New York: Thomas Dunne Books, 2011), p. 13.
23 Jie’s World Staff, “American and International Companies in China.”
24 Ibid, p. 12.
25 Alexander Hamilton, quoted in Ian Fletcher and Jeff Ferry, “America Was Founded as a Protectionist Nation,” Huffington Post, September 12, 2010, http://www.huffingtonpost.com/ian-fletcher/america-was-founded-as-a_b_713521.html, accessed February 13, 2019.
26 Fritz Hollings, “Fifth Column: The Enemy within the Trade War,” Huffington Post, March 18, 2010, http://www.huffingtonpost.com/sen-ernest-frederick-hollings/fifth-column-the-enemy-wi_b_323833.html, accessed February 13, 2019.
27 Takis Fotopoulos, “The Transnational Elite and the New World Order (NWO),” Global Research, October 28, 2014, http://www.globalresearch.ca/%CF%84he-transnational-elite-and-the-nwoas-conspiracies/5410468, accessed February 13, 2019.
28 Michel Chossudovsky, The Globalization of Poverty and the New World Order (Montreal, Quebec: Global Research, 2003), p. 26.
29 Marshall, “Bilderberg 2011: The Rockefeller World Order and the ‘High Priests of Globalization.’”
30 Anthony Faiola, “A Bigger, Bolder Role Is Imagined for the IMF,” Washington Post, April 20, 2009: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-yn/content/article/2009/04/19/AR2009041902242.html?hpid=topnews, accessed February 13, 2019.
31 David Rockefeller, Memoirs (New York: Random House, 2002), pp. 404–5.
32 David Rockefeller, quoted in Gordon Laxer, “Radical Transformative Nationalisms Confront the US Empire,” Current Sociology, 51, no. 2 (March 2003).