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How many people are in the Bilderberg Group?

How many people are in the Bilderberg Group?

The Bilderberg Group is 120-140 powerful people who meet each year to discuss policy. The meetings are closed to the public.

What did David Ike say about the Bilderberg Group?

Author David Ike says the “Bilderbergers” are shapeshifting lizards doing the work of the Illuminati. He imagines this group as a potentially satanic cabal that controls everything that happens in the world, which has the intention of enslaving the entire human race.

Where did the Bilderberg meeting take place in Spain?

RussiaToday continued its investigation on Bilderberg covering the annual meetings and reported conflicts in the annual meeting that took place place in Spain when investigators were arrested and beaten by Spanish guards.

When did the Bilderberg Group break up the USSR?

In 1991, the Bilderberg Group disbanded the USSR, praising it as a major victory for the New World Order in breaking up a major obstacle in the global “agenda”. This sparked hope for the formation of the Order of the Illuminati, a global international order.

Where does the Bilderberg Conference take place in Germany?

Barriers stand in front of hotel Taschenbergpalais Kempinski in Dresden, Germany, where the Bilderberg conference will take place place from June 9-12, 2016. A shadowy world government.

What’s the Chatham House Rule of the Bilderberg Group?

Bilderberg operates under the Chatham House Rule, which allow those who attend the meetings to use the information they glean but not to disclose who said what, according to Bilderberg’s website. That has spurred conspiracy theorists to claim that the group is imposing a new world order and playing kingmaker around the world.

Is the Bilderberg Group Guided by the Illuminati?

• As the twenty-first century progresses,a new system of fascism will emerge under the guise of “free-trade” practices that will in fact be guided by the Illuminati. • The Bilderbergers have approved the Red Chinese model of economics as the standard for the emerging European superstate and the United States.