Bilderberg Agenda 2016 | The World’s Elite are Scared to Death of the “Precariat” – the ‘Awakening Ones’ | Stopping Trump, Wealth Inequality Riots, Migrants, Brexit, and more

(Stillness in the Storm Editor) If there’s one thing to take away from this years Bilderberg meeting it is that the elite is scared to death of the precariat

That’s a term coined by the British economist Guy Standing, referring to a class of people who feel less confident about society in general, either because of underemployment, poor economic conditions, political disenfranchisement, or to be perfectly frank, because they realize modern civilization is a fraud. 

In other words, the precariat are people who are beaten down by the system and who have woken up to some degree as a result. If you are reading these words, you are most likely considered part of the precariat, and the elite is afraid of this group of people arguably more than anything else.

But the powers that be are not strangers to being despised and persecuted by those who can see the truth, so why is this year’s meeting any different than the past? 

There are several points to consider, as detailed below, but arguably the most obvious one is the rise of the anti-establishment issue and Donald Trump as a definitive candidate for the 2016 election. 

Now to be clear, I’m not advocating for Trump as a savior, nor do I think voting for anyone or anything is going to effect any real change in the system. But as was discussed in the post, Rubicon Moment: Trump Wild Card vs Establishment | Bilderberg Group and Top Level Marketer to the Elite, Thinks: It Doesn’t Matter about Trump, “Hillary Will Win”, the fact that Hillary Clinton is the anointed Bilderberg or establishment candidate and Trump has gained incredible popularity despite being vilified by the media, suggests that the elite is losing control over the masses. 

The old methods of manipulation via the media have proven themselves to be ineffective recently, and now for the first time in decades, a non-establishment candidate has a chance to win the US election. 

If you can’t fathom the importance of this development, don’t worry, those in attendance of this year’s Bilderberg meeting do, and are taking Trump very seriously. 

Trump has the power to galvanize the unawakened yet disillusioned masses who are on the fence, so to speak. This population of people, who are within the precariat class, are not ready to dive into more obvious conspiracy realities—like 9/11—but at the same time, recognize that the system is a fraud at some level. 

This year the mainstream media, courtesy of Trump’s outspoken manner, gave voice to one of the bigger secrets in our world today, which is that voting is rigged and it doesn’t really matter who wins the election, the establishment always wins. Those who are brave enough to accept this reality—which seems to be a growing number of people—want nothing to do with the establishment, and therefore, appeal to Donald Trump. 

Bernie Sanders, prior to Hilliary securing the democratic nomination, was also magnetizing disillusioned individuals to the anti-establishment cause, but now that he has relinquished to Clinton, those who flocked to him will look for another candidate. Trump is the only one left who even resembles a non-establishment option. 

All of this indicates that the stranglehold the establishment has had on the people is losing its grip, and soon a critical mass will be reached as the truth cannot remain hidden forever. A tidal wave of awakening is at our doorstep it seems. 

And this is just one reason why the elite are terrified of the precariat, which I think is a euphemism for the awakening ones. 

So while this time of year is usually fairly ominous insofar as the world’s elite working to realize their insidious plans, this year, it seems they are in reaction mode. 

I think that this is an encouraging sign. It means that the people really are waking up, and as such, they need the awakened ones to help them see the whole truth. The skills of compassionate discourse, honest communication, and open minded fellowship are important to develop as we enter an age where the masses finally begin to question the status quo. 

As such, do your best to give truth but in a kind way. Don’t become a truth fundamentalist, and realize that waking up to the harsh realities of this world can be a traumatic experience, best done with those who can make us feel safe and secure. 

At this stage, the potential for a grand awakening event, the likes of which we have not seen heretofore, is great. In the coming months, the world could look very different from what it does today, especially if those with knowledge of the truth are proactive in becoming agents of change. 


– Justin


by Tobias Schwarz

For when Davos isn’t exclusive enough, there is Bilderberg. The Bilderberg Meeting is an annual gathering of world leaders, executives, and assorted grandees, established in 1954 and named for the Dutch hotel where the secretive group first gathered.

Amid heavy security, around 130 people—including three prime ministers and 30 CEOs—will hold talks on the world’s most pressing issues this week. The four-day retreat starts on Thursday (June 9) at an undisclosed location in Dresden, Germany.

This year’s agenda includes predictable topics like “China,” “migration,” and “cyber security.” But one talking point is particularly intriguing, addressing the “precariat and middle class.”

The what? The “precariat” is a term popularized by British economist Guy Standing, describing a growing class of people who feel insecure in their jobs, communities, and life in general. They are…

…the perpetual part-timers, the minimum-wagers, the temporary foreign workers, the grey-market domestics paid in cash… the techno-impoverished whose piecemeal work has no office and no end, the seniors who struggle with dwindling benefits, the indigenous people who are kept outside, the single mothers without support, the cash labourers who have no savings, the generation for whom a pension and a retirement is neither available nor desired.

This marginalized group—“alienated, anomic, anxious, and angry,” according to Standing—is fueling the rise of populist politicians like Donald Trump in the US and similar rabble rousers in Europe and beyond. (Discussing this group alongside the middle class, which isn’t doing great either, is telling.) The resulting turmoil in politics, markets, and economics is a factor in nearly all of the Bilderberg meeting’s other agenda items.

So what will the bigwigs do about it? Conspiracy theorists may think that Bilderberg members are in league with the Illuminati, Freemasons, and Lizard People, hatching the New World Order from their secret hideouts. More likely is that the politicians and power brokers meeting in Germany this week are as taken aback by the travails of the increasingly marginalized masses as anybody else.

But what the Bilderbergers really think will remain a mystery. According to the group’s code, “There is no desired outcome, no minutes are taken and no report is written. Furthermore, no resolutions are proposed, no votes are taken, and no policy statements are issued.”

 

Every year, the world’s richest and most powerful business executives, bankers, media heads and politicians sit down in some luxurious and heavily guarded venue, and discuss how to shape the world in a way that maximizes profits for all involved, while perpetuating a status quo that has been highly beneficial for a select few, even if it means the ongoing destruction of the middle class. We are talking, of course, about the annual, and always secretive, Bilderberg meeting.

And, as the Guardian notes, “you know Bilderberg’s about to begin when you start seeing the guns.”



Workers erect a barricade outside the Taschenbergpalais hotel in Dresden
The Taschenbergpalais hotel in Dresden – the venue of “Bilderberg 2016” which starts tomorrow and continues until June 12 – is filling up with pistol-packing plainclothes security as the last guests are ushered out. The frowning gunslingers head up and down the corridors with their hotel maps, trying door handles and checking the lay of the land while, down in the hotel lobby, corporate goons gather in muttering huddles.

A glimpse at what is about to unfold: according to the local newspaper DNN, at least 400 police officers will be surrounding the venue for the three days of the talks. There’s already a ring of concrete blocks around the entrance.

Is that not enough? What are they expecting? The charge of the light brigade?

The hotel is being trussed up tighter than Reid Hoffman’s trousers. No one gets in or out without the right lanyard. As Ed Balls remembers only too well, from that awkward business in Copenhagen. Inside the security cordon, the final nervy tweaks are being made by conference staff. They’ve got to make sure Henry Kissinger’s curtains don’t let any light in. A single ray could be fatal.

Year after year, a sizeable number of extremely rich and powerful workaholics seem to think it’s worth strapping on their Bilderberg lanyard. But why? What’s getting the head of Google, two prime ministers, a vice-president of the European commission and the chairman of HSBC together in the same hotel basement for the same three days in June? On its official website, Bilderberg attempts an answer. It describes itself as “a forum for informal discussions” that are “designed to foster dialogue between Europe and North America”. Dialogue which is designed to foster dialogue. Talk for talk’s sake.

Of course, as Charlie Skelton notes, that’s nonsense. And yet Bilderberg insists “there is no desired outcome”. That’s like a Club 18-30 rep saying there’s no desired outcome of his tequila groin-slurping contest. Someone’s getting something out of the event. Even if that something is chlamydia.

Taschenbergpalais hotel in Dresden


What is really discussed is how to take the existing trends in the world, some favorable, some undesired, and mold them in such a way as to create even more wealth for the world’s 0.01%, while perpetutating the existing system, one which even the IMF agrees is no longer working.
This time, as Paul Joseph Watson infers, the secretive Bilderberg Group whose Steering Committee Advisory Group consists of one David Rockefeller, will discuss how to prevent Donald Trump from becoming president, the possibility of mass riots as a result of wealth inequality, the migrant crisis, as well as the United Kingdom’s vote on leaving the European Union.

As noted above, the official list of “key topics” to be discussed is both broad quite vague and includes:

  1. Current events
  2. China
  3. Europe: migration, growth, reform, vision, unity
  4. Middle East
  5. Russia
  6. US political landscape, economy: growth, debt, reform
  7. Cyber security
  8. Geo-politics of energy and commodity prices
  9. Precariat and middle class
  10. Technological innovation

That’s just for public consumption. After all, who needs massive concrete blocks and 400 police officers for protection to discuss “technological innovation” – better yet, just open up the session to the press and public.

Of course, that won’t happen, because the real agenda must remain under wraps. However one can infer from the agenda and some of the names on the participant list what the group will be discussing in more detail. As PJW writes, the attendance of anti-Trump Senator Lindsey Graham is an obvious sign that Donald Trump will be a prominent topic of discussion at this year’s Bilderberg meeting, with the likely focus on how to prevent Trump from defeating Bilderberg’s chosen candidate, Hillary Clinton, who has already raked in tens of millions in fees from “speaking” before numerous participants at the meeting that begins tomorrow.

In 2015, the Bilderberg elite was confident that Clinton could shake off her GOP challengers, but Trump’s self-funded campaign and his public opposition to globalism and internationalist trade deals like NAFTA has shocked the Bilderberg elitists. As a result, it will now have to spend much more time dealing with the damage control.

Brexit will be another major topic. With the British referendum vote to leave the EU taking place in just two weeks, and with David Cameron getting concerned, a vote to secede threatens the future of the European Union federal superstate that was the brainchild of Bilderberg in the first place.

The inclusion of “precariat and middle class” on the list also means that the powerful lobby group will be ruminating on how they can exploit and manage the inevitability of more riots and civil unrest in the west – and increasingly, the east with an emphasis on China whose government is terrified about the prospect of rising social unrest – a topic that elitists were also concerned about at the 2015 Davos Economic Summit. “Precariat” describes those who are struggling to survive in today’s economy and who have no long term wage security. Studies have shown that wealth inequality increases the likelihood of mass social disorder. Furthermore, as the Fed itself admitted recently, it is the Fed, by way of manipulating markets higher, that has been an instrumental catalyst behind record wealth inequality.

The flooding of Europe with third world migrants, a process which has driven European voters into the arms of nationalist parties that typically oppose Bilderberg’s wider agenda, will also be a key topic of discussion, as per bullet point 3.

As Watson observes, aone interesting name that pops up on this year’s list is that of Richard Engel, NBC News’ chief foreign correspondent. “Normally, a semi-secret meeting of over 100 of the most powerful people on the planet would be a monumental news scoop, but don’t expect Engel to utter a word.” After all, real journalists are not allowed anywhere on the premises; Engel likely has to sign an NDA.

Indeed, Bilderberg operates under Chatham House Rules, which means that none of the participants are able to reveal any comments made during the conference. As the Guardian floridly puts it, “after the politicians drag their drained and bloodless bodies back to their respective parliaments, they don’t say a word about what happened. They act like abuse victims. “It’s just our little secret,” murmurs Kissinger as he pops the politicians back in their limos. “Chatham House rules. You remember? Yes, of course you do. Now off you go.” And he nimbly licks a heart shape on to the car window with his black tongue before it speeds off.”

Although it was reported in the German media that German Chancellor Angela Merkel would attend this year’s conference, her name does not appear on the list. However, it is a common practice for Bilderberg to omit names from the official list if the individual’s attendance is politically sensitive.

* * *

So what do the politicians and public officials get from the deal? For the more ruthless, it’s a chance to line up future employment. As the Guardian reminds us of the then head of MI6, Sir John Sawers, networking with the chairman of BP on a Copenhagen patio in 2014. A year later he was sitting on the oil firm’s board of directors.

For those who don’t use the event as a glorified LinkedIn mixed for billionaires, the motive is far simpler: make even more money. In this regard the Guardian’s amusing conclusion is spot on:

Tony Blair admitted he found the 1993 conference “useful”. And I’m sure it was. It’s useful to know in what direction in the world is being led by the people that own it, so you can trot along in the right direction. And if you learn to play the game, to fit in with the in crowd, then maybe, like Blair, you can end up with a cushy job with US investment bank JP Morgan.

Ultimately, what is decided will never see the light of day, or rather it won’t over the next 4 days. Instead it will emerge as official policy, fiscal but mostly monetary as central bankers live to serve the Bilderberg elite, laws, regulations, and social norms. And if history is any indicator, it will only make the current global situation even worse.

* * *

Below is a full list of this year’s participants:

CHAIRMAN

  • Castries, Henri de (FRA), Chairman and CEO, AXA Group
  • Aboutaleb, Ahmed (NLD), Mayor, City of Rotterdam
  • Achleitner, Paul M. (DEU), Chairman of the Supervisory Board, Deutsche Bank AG
  • Agius, Marcus (GBR), Chairman, PA Consulting Group
  • Ahrenkiel, Thomas (DNK), Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Defence
  • Albuquerque, Maria Luís (PRT), Former Minister of Finance; MP, Social Democratic Party
  • Alierta, César (ESP), Executive Chairman and CEO, Telefónica
  • Altman, Roger C. (USA), Executive Chairman, Evercore
  • Altman, Sam (USA), President, Y Combinator
  • Andersson, Magdalena (SWE), Minister of Finance
  • Applebaum, Anne (USA), Columnist Washington Post; Director of the Transitions Forum, Legatum Institute
  • Apunen, Matti (FIN), Director, Finnish Business and Policy Forum EVA
  • Aydin-Düzgit, Senem (TUR), Associate Professor and Jean Monnet Chair, Istanbul Bilgi University
  • Barbizet, Patricia (FRA), CEO, Artemis
  • Barroso, José M. Durão (PRT), Former President of the European Commission
  • Baverez, Nicolas (FRA), Partner, Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher
  • Bengio, Yoshua (CAN), Professor in Computer Science and Operations Research, University of Montreal
  • Benko, René (AUT), Founder and Chairman of the Advisory Board, SIGNA Holding GmbH
  • Bernabè, Franco (ITA), Chairman, CartaSi S.p.A.
  • Beurden, Ben van (NLD), CEO, Royal Dutch Shell plc
  • Blanchard, Olivier (FRA), Fred Bergsten Senior Fellow, Peterson Institute
  • Botín, Ana P. (ESP), Executive Chairman, Banco Santander
  • Brandtzæg, Svein Richard (NOR), President and CEO, Norsk Hydro ASA
  • Breedlove, Philip M. (INT), Former Supreme Allied Commander Europe
  • Brende, Børge (NOR), Minister of Foreign Affairs
  • Burns, William J. (USA), President, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace
  • Cebrián, Juan Luis (ESP), Executive Chairman, PRISA and El País
  • Charpentier, Emmanuelle (FRA), Director, Max Planck Institute for Infection Biology
  • Coeuré, Benoît (INT), Member of the Executive Board, European Central Bank
  • Costamagna, Claudio (ITA), Chairman, Cassa Depositi e Prestiti S.p.A.
  • Cote, David M. (USA), Chairman and CEO, Honeywell
  • Cryan, John (DEU), CEO, Deutsche Bank AG
  • Dassù, Marta (ITA), Senior Director, European Affairs, Aspen Institute
  • Dijksma, Sharon A.M. (NLD), Minister for the Environment
  • Döpfner, Mathias (DEU), CEO, Axel Springer SE
  • Dyvig, Christian (DNK), Chairman, Kompan
  • Ebeling, Thomas (DEU), CEO, ProSiebenSat.1
  • Elkann, John (ITA), Chairman and CEO, EXOR; Chairman, Fiat Chrysler Automobiles
  • Enders, Thomas (DEU), CEO, Airbus Group
  • Engel, Richard (USA), Chief Foreign Correspondent, NBC News
  • Fabius, Laurent (FRA), President, Constitutional Council
  • Federspiel, Ulrik (DNK), Group Executive, Haldor Topsøe A/S
  • Ferguson, Jr., Roger W. (USA), President and CEO, TIAA
  • Ferguson, Niall (USA), Professor of History, Harvard University
  • Flint, Douglas J. (GBR), Group Chairman, HSBC Holdings plc
  • Garicano, Luis (ESP), Professor of Economics, LSE; Senior Advisor to Ciudadanos
  • Georgieva, Kristalina (INT), Vice President, European Commission
  • Gernelle, Etienne (FRA), Editorial Director, Le Point
  • Gomes da Silva, Carlos (PRT), Vice Chairman and CEO, Galp Energia
  • Goodman, Helen (GBR), MP, Labour Party
  • Goulard, Sylvie (INT), Member of the European Parliament
  • Graham, Lindsey (USA), Senator
  • Grillo, Ulrich (DEU), Chairman, Grillo-Werke AG; President, Bundesverband der Deutschen Industrie
  • Gruber, Lilli (ITA), Editor-in-Chief and Anchor “Otto e mezzo”, La7 TV
  • Hadfield, Chris (CAN), Colonel, Astronaut
  • Halberstadt, Victor (NLD), Professor of Economics, Leiden University
  • Harding, Dido (GBR), CEO, TalkTalk Telecom Group plc
  • Hassabis, Demis (GBR), Co-Founder and CEO, DeepMind
  • Hobson, Mellody (USA), President, Ariel Investment, LLC
  • Hoffman, Reid (USA), Co-Founder and Executive Chairman, LinkedIn
  • Höttges, Timotheus (DEU), CEO, Deutsche Telekom AG
  • Jacobs, Kenneth M. (USA), Chairman and CEO, Lazard
  • Jäkel, Julia (DEU), CEO, Gruner + Jahr
  • Johnson, James A. (USA), Chairman, Johnson Capital Partners
  • Jonsson, Conni (SWE), Founder and Chairman, EQT
  • Jordan, Jr., Vernon E. (USA), Senior Managing Director, Lazard Frères & Co. LLC
  • Kaeser, Joe (DEU), President and CEO, Siemens AG
  • Karp, Alex (USA), CEO, Palantir Technologies
  • Kengeter, Carsten (DEU), CEO, Deutsche Börse AG
  • Kerr, John (GBR), Deputy Chairman, Scottish Power
  • Kherbache, Yasmine (BEL), MP, Flemish Parliament
  • Kissinger, Henry A. (USA), Chairman, Kissinger Associates, Inc.
  • Kleinfeld, Klaus (USA), Chairman and CEO, Alcoa
  • Kravis, Henry R. (USA), Co-Chairman and Co-CEO, Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co.
  • Kravis, Marie-Josée (USA), Senior Fellow, Hudson Institute
  • Kudelski, André (CHE), Chairman and CEO, Kudelski Group
  • Lagarde, Christine (INT), Managing Director, International Monetary Fund
  • Levin, Richard (USA), CEO, Coursera
  • Leyen, Ursula von der (DEU), Minister of Defence
  • Leysen, Thomas (BEL), Chairman, KBC Group
  • Logothetis, George (GRC), Chairman and CEO, Libra Group
  • Maizière, Thomas de (DEU), Minister of the Interior, Federal Ministry of the Interior
  • Makan, Divesh (USA), CEO, ICONIQ Capital
  • Malcomson, Scott (USA), Author; President, Monere Ltd.
  • Markwalder, Christa (CHE), President of the National Council and the Federal Assembly
  • McArdle, Megan (USA), Columnist, Bloomberg View
  • Michel, Charles (BEL), Prime Minister
  • Micklethwait, John (USA), Editor-in-Chief, Bloomberg LP
  • Minton Beddoes, Zanny (GBR), Editor-in-Chief, The Economist
  • Mitsotakis, Kyriakos (GRC), President, New Democracy Party
  • Morneau, Bill (CAN), Minister of Finance
  • Mundie, Craig J. (USA), Principal, Mundie & Associates
  • Murray, Charles A. (USA), W.H. Brady Scholar, American Enterprise Institute
  • Netherlands, H.M. the King of the (NLD)
  • Noonan, Michael (IRL), Minister for Finance
  • Noonan, Peggy (USA), Author, Columnist, The Wall Street Journal
  • O’Leary, Michael (IRL), CEO, Ryanair Plc
  • Ollongren, Kajsa (NLD), Deputy Mayor of Amsterdam
  • Özel, Soli (TUR), Professor, Kadir Has University
  • Papalexopoulos, Dimitri (GRC), CEO, Titan Cement Co.
  • Petraeus, David H. (USA), Chairman, KKR Global Institute
  • Philippe, Edouard (FRA), Mayor of Le Havre
  • Pind, Søren (DNK), Minister of Justice
  • Ratti, Carlo (ITA), Director, MIT Senseable City Lab
  • Reisman, Heather M. (CAN), Chair and CEO, Indigo Books & Music Inc.
  • Rutte, Mark (NLD), Prime Minister
  • Sawers, John (GBR), Chairman and Partner, Macro Advisory Partners
  • Schäuble, Wolfgang (DEU), Minister of Finance
  • Schieder, Andreas (AUT), Chairman, Social Democratic Group
  • Schmidt, Eric E. (USA), Executive Chairman, Alphabet Inc.
  • Scholten, Rudolf (AUT), CEO, Oesterreichische Kontrollbank AG
  • Schwab, Klaus (INT), Executive Chairman, World Economic Forum
  • Sikorski, Radoslaw (POL), Senior Fellow, Harvard University; Former Minister of Foreign Affairs
  • Simsek, Mehmet (TUR), Deputy Prime Minister
  • Sinn, Hans-Werner (DEU), Professor for Economics and Public Finance, Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich
  • Skogen Lund, Kristin (NOR), Director General, The Confederation of Norwegian Enterprise
  • Standing, Guy (GBR), Co-President, BIEN; Research Professor, University of London
  • Svanberg, Carl-Henric (SWE), Chairman, BP plc and AB Volvo
  • Thiel, Peter A. (USA), President, Thiel Capital
  • Tillich, Stanislaw (DEU), Minister-President of Saxony
  • Vetterli, Martin (CHE), President, NSF
  • Wahlroos, Björn (FIN), Chairman, Sampo Group, Nordea Bank, UPM-Kymmene Corporation
  • Wallenberg, Jacob (SWE), Chairman, Investor AB
  • Weder di Mauro, Beatrice (CHE), Professor of Economics, University of Mainz
  • Wolf, Martin H. (GBR), Chief Economics Commentator, Financial Times

* * *

Finally, for those who are skeptical about the massive power and reach of the relatively small Bilderberg group, here is a recent graph which shows the members’ connections to virtually every important and relevant organization, company and political entity in the world.


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