Bilderberg 2013: welcome to 1984
June 6, 2013 0
Relax: thanks
to Goldman Sachs and other ‘donors’, this year’s conference will be
cost-neutral for Hertfordshire – despite the construction of the Great
Wall of Watford
The auditorium grew hushed as a senior Watford borough councillor took to his feet. The police
liaison team looked nervous. They had made their presentation and laid
out their plans for this “unique event”: the anti-terrorism zones, the
identity checks, the restriction on vehicles stopping in the vicinity of
this “important international conference”. But now it was the turn of
the people of Watford to speak.

What would they make of this
international three-day policy summit, with its heavyweight delegate
list bulging with billionaire financiers, party leaders and media
moguls, protected by the biggest security operation Watford has ever
seen?
“What this whole thing boils down to,”
boomed the councillor, “is this: are you, or are you not, setting a
precedent for vehicles parking on the verge of the Old Hempstead Road?”
Thus began an hour-long (hour-and-a-half-long?) discussion about whether or not cars and press vehicles should be allowed
to park on a strip of grass running parallel to the A41, just opposite
the Grove hotel. It was like a weird, dystopian episode of Keeping Up
Appearances. Never mind that our ministers are meeting in secret with
the heads of Shell, BP, Google and Amazon – what about the verge!
There was an audible
gasp when, under intense questioning, Chief Inspector Rhodes was forced
to admit, citing a “bylaw”, that the no-parking signs on the verge were
actually fraudulent: no such law existed.. One lady, almost beside
herself, gestured to the audience. “There are media here! This story is
going to get out!” The verge would never be the same again, thanks to Bilderberg.
The audience was an odd mix. Half were
residents from around the venue worried about the possibility of
tyre-damage to a strip of lawn; the other half were journalists from
around the world worried about the geopolitical implications of a
conference at which BAE, Stratfor and General Petraeus will be
discussing “Africa’s challenges”.
Both halves were worried about the
funding for the gigantic security operation. The police assured
sceptical residents that the conference would be “cost-neutral” for
Hertfordshire, thanks in part to a “donation” from the conference
organisers. This “donation” will have come, in part at least, from the
Bilderberg Association, a registered UK charity that takes “donations”
from BP and Goldman Sachs.
So, in a sense, the Herts police are
doing charity work for Goldman Sachs. Which must be a comfort for the
executives of Goldman Sachs attending the conference: the vice-chairman,
a director and the chairman of Goldman Sachs International. They’ve got
their charity team out patrolling, keeping the lenses at bay.
At one point in the meeting, during a tense exchange about contingency plans
for dog-walkers, Rhodes let slip that Operation Discuss (the codename
for the Bilderberg security operation) had been up and running for 18
months. Residents and journalists shared an intake of breath. “Eighteen
months?” The reason for all the secrecy? “Terrorism”.
The Great Wall of Watford
After 59 years of Bilderbgerg guests scuttling about in the shadows, ducking lenses
and dodging the news, that’s the rationale we’re given? The same
rationale, presumably, is behind the Great Wall of Watford, a
concrete-and-wire security fence encircling the hotel. As ugly as it is
unnecessary, it looks like the kind of thing you throw yourself against
in a stalag before being machine-gunned from a watchtower. Appropriately
fascistic, you might say, if you regard fascism as “the merger of
corporate and government power”, as Mussolini put it.
The same threat of “terrorism” was used
to justify the no-pedestrian, no-stopping zones near the venue. The
police laid out their logic: they had “no specific intelligence”
regarding a terror threat. However, in recent incidents, such as Boston
and Woolwich, there had been no intelligence prior to the attack.
Therefore the lack of any threat of a terror attack fitted exactly the
profile of a terror attack. The lack of a threat was a threat. Welcome
to 1984.
Rhodes admitted that the anti-terror zones were flexible, and that residents would be allowed to pass
through to their homes. But their value for security, he said, was that
if people gathered in these zones who did not live locally, “they can
easily be moved on” – not because they are terrorists but simply because
they are gathering. That’s the great thing about the threat of
terrorism: it’s so infinitely applicable.
That said, the police liaison team have
been amazing, and this year has marked a turning point for Bilderberg.
Under pressure from journalists, and thanks in large part to the Herts
constabulary liaison team, a press zone has been set aside within the
hotel grounds. The pressure was kept up, and it was met with the early
release of the delegate list, rushed out by the conference organisers
with such speed that they forgot to change the date at the top of the
web page from 2009 to 2013. But the biggest news of all was at the foot
of the page. Two words: media contact.
Welcome, Bilderberg, to the world. Suddenly, miraculously, we had entered a brave new world of normality: an international policy summit attended by the head of the IMF, the president (and a vice-president) of the European commission,
the prime minister of Holland, a dozen other ministers, any number of
transnational CEOs and bank bosses, the chairmen of the Swiss and Dutch national banks,
and our own chancellor of the exchequer, was entering into a normal
working relationship with the press. This was amazing! This was
historic!
And then, a few hours later, the media contact email
address simply vanished from the website. Like a nervous faun,
Bilderberg had nosed its way out of a hedge, sniffed the air, sensed
danger, and jittered back into a thicket. Still, it was a courageous
first step, and certainly not the last. There are rumours that a few of
the delegates are fed up (understandably) with all the secrecy, and want
to shift towards a more transparent way of doing business. To these delegates, we say: keep pushing. Between us, we can get there.
Before the media contact was snatched
away, I did manage a friendly email exchange, and my questions were
promptly answered by a spokesman for the conference. The gist of the
answers was this: none of the delegates pay to attend; no delegates join
by phone or satellite; the conference programme “never includes any
entertainment or performances”; and, as for the food, it’s “buffet only,
all days, all meals”.
I’m slightly sad about the buffet. I was
kind of hoping for roast swan wrapped in gold leaf and stuffed with
songbirds. As, I’m sure, was Ken Clarke.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2013/jun/05/bilderberg-2013-goldman-sachs-watford

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