Ordinary coincidences. It's nothing personal. ♟ ♟ Party 

Ordinary coincidences. It's nothing personal. ♟ ♟ Party 

24-ዘዐሀዩ ጠልፘልጓፗበይ 📓 'ናልናዘዓሀልዩ'

⏳ƬɼⅈᎴʋℓɛ ℵ 🔬Ꮥɑℽʂ 🎙

Mortimer B. Zuckerman, Chairman and Editor-in-Chief, U.S. News & World Report, Publisher, New York Daily News; Founder and Chairman of Boston Properties, Inc .; NY

 Former members of the Commission in the civil service

Stephen Bosworth, U.S. Special Representative for North Korea Policy

 * Lael Brainard, Deputy Secretary of State for International Affairs, US Treasury Department

 Kurt Campbell, Deputy Secretary of State for East Asia and the Pacific, U.S. Department of State

 Thomas e. Donilon, U.S. National Security Advisor

 Diana Farrell, Deputy Director, National Economic Council and Deputy Assistant to the President for Economic Policy, White House.

 Michael B. G. Froman, Deputy Assistant to the President for National Security and Economic Policy, White House

 Timothy F. Geithner, US Treasury Secretary

 Richard Holbrooke, US Special Representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan

 Stephen Kunin, Deputy Secretary for Science, Department of Energy

 Susan E. Rice, United States Ambassador to the United Nations

 Dennis Ross, Senior Advisor, National Security Council

 Anne Marie Slaughter, Director of Policy Planning, US Department of State

 James B. Steinberg, U.S. Undersecretary of State

 Lawrence H. Summers, Director of the National Economic Council, White House

 Robert b. Zoellick, President, World Bank

 * The Bosworth Ambassador remains Dean of the Fletcher School and Member of the Commission.

 ASIAN STATES AND PACIFIC GROUP

 Note: Untitled Commission members are Japanese.

 Chinese and Korean names are displayed with the last name in the first place.

 Narongchai Akrasanee, Chairman of the Board of Directors, Export Import Bank of Thailand, Bangkok; former Minister of Commerce of Thailand

 Philip Burdon, Chair, New Zealand Asia Foundation, Wellington; Former Chairman, Asia 2000 Foundation, Co-Chair for New Zealand APEC Chairman; former New Zealand Minister for Trade Negotiations

 Chen Dongxiao, Vice President, Shanghai Institute for International Studies, Shanghai

 Fujio Cho, Chairman of the Management Board, Toyota Motor Corporation

 Cho Sak Rai, Chairman, Hyosung Corporation, Seoul

 Chun Mong Jun, member of the Korean National Assembly; Vice President of the International Federation of Football Associations (FIFA), Seoul

 Tarun Das, President, Aspen Institute of India, Gurgaon, New Delhi; former Chief Mentor, Confederation of Indian Industries (CII)

 Barry Desker, Dean of the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies, Nanyang Technological University (NTU), Singapore

 Takashi Ejiri, partner, Nishimura & Asahi

 Jesus P. Estanislao, Chairman, Institute for Solidarity in Asia; Chairman, Institute of Corporate Directors, Manila; former Secretary of Finance of the Philippines

 Hugh Fletcher, Chancellor of the University of Auckland; former CEO, Fletcher's Challenge

 Hiroaki Fujii, Chairman, Mori Arts Center; Japanese Foundation Counselor, Former Japanese Ambassador to the United Kingdom

 Shinji Fukukawa, Chairman, TEPIA, Mechanical Engineering History Foundation

 Yoichi Funabashi, Editor-in-Chief, Asahi Shimbun

 Victor K. Fung, Chairman, Li & Fung Group, Hong Kong

 Carrillo Gantner, President, Mayer Foundation, Melbourne

 Ross Garnaut, Professor of Economics, School of Pacific and Asian Studies, Australian National University, Canberra

 Jamshyd N. Godrej, Chairman and Managing Director, Godrej Boyce Mfg Co. Ltd., Mumbai; Chairman of the Climate Change Council CII, Confederation of Indian Industries (CII), New Delhi

 * Toyo Göchten, Chairman, Institute for International Monetary Affairs; Senior Consultant, Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ, Ltd.

 * Han Sun Zhu, Chairman, Asan Institute for Policy Studies; former President, Korea University, Seoul; former Minister of Foreign Affairs of Korea; former Korean Ambassador to the United States; Vice-Chairperson of the Trilateral Commission for the Pacific and Asia

 * Stuart Harris, Professor of International Relations, School of Pacific and Asian Studies, Australian National University, Canberra; former Australian Deputy Foreign Secretary

 Tan Sri Dato 'Seri Azman Hashim, Chairman of the AmBank Group, Kuala Lumpur

 John R. Hewson, Chairman of GlobalDC; Chair, John Hewson Group, Sydney; former leader of the Federal Opposition, Australia; Special Advisor Deputy Gene. The Secretary of the United Nations; UNESCAP Executive Secretary for Infrastructure Financing

 Ernest M. Higa, President, Higa Industries Co., Ltd.

 Hyun Hong SEOK, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Jun Ang Ilbo, Seoul; former Korean Ambassador to the United States

 Shintaro Hori, Chairman, Bain Capital Japan, Inc.

 Murray Horn, Managing Director Institutional Clients, ANZ (New Zealand) Ltd., Sydney; Chairman, ANZ Investment Bank; former Parliamentary Secretary, New Zealand Treasury

 Huang Renwei, Vice President, Shanghai Academy of Social Sciences, Shanghai

 Hyun Hong Choo, Senior Partner, Kim and Chang, Seoul; former Korean Ambassador to the United Nations and the United States

 Hyun Jai Hiun, Chairman of Tong Yang Group, Seoul

 Nabesin Ichimura, Professor Emeritus of Kyoto University; Former Director, International Center for East Asian Development Research, Kitakyushu

 Noriyuki Inoue, Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer, Daikin Industries, Ltd.

 Jamshyd Irani, Director, Tata & Sons, Ltd., Mumbai

 Tan Shri Jowhar Mohamed, Chairman, Institute for Strategic International Studies (ISIS), Malaysia

 Motu Kaji, Professor Emeritus, University of Tokyo

 Kasema Kasemsri, Honorary Chairman, Thailand-USA Business Council, Bangkok; Chairman of the Advisory Board, Chart Tai Thai Party; Chairman of the Thai Malaysian Association; former Deputy Prime Minister of Thailand

 Koichi Kato, member of the Japanese House of Representatives; former Secretary General, Liberal Democratic Party

 Kim Kihwan, Honorary Visiting Scholar, Korea Development Institute, Seoul; Chairman, Seoul Financial Policy Forum; former Korean Ambassador for Economic Affairs

 Kim Kyung Won, President Emeritus, Seoul International Affairs Forum, Seoul; Senior advisor

 Kim Chan, Legal Office; former Korean Ambassador to the United States and the UN

 Eizo Kobayashi, Chairman, ITOCHU Corporation

 Kobayashi Shoichiro, Counselor, Kansai Electric Company

 * Yotaro Kobayashi, Former Chairman of the Board, Fuji Xerox Co., Ltd .; Trilateral Commission, Pacific and Asia Chair

 Akira Kojima, Trustee and Senior Research Fellow, Japan Center for Economic Research (JCER)

 KU John, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, LS Corporation, Seoul

 Kenji Kosaka, former member of the Japanese House of Representatives; former Minister of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology

 * Lee Hong-ku, Chairman of the Board, Seoul International Affairs Forum, Seoul; former deputy. The Prime Minister of Korea; former Korean Ambassador to the United Kingdom and the United States of America

 Lee Jay Y., Executive Vice President, Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd., Seoul

 Lee Kyungsook Choi, Vice-Chair, Korea National Committee for UNESCO, Seoul; Professor, Department of Political Science and International Relations, Li Shin Wa University, Korea, Seoul University

 Vai Leong Tac, Member of the Executive Council of the Macau Government of the UAR; Deputy

 National People's Congress; General Manager Seng San Enterprises Co., Ltd .; Chairman, Smartable Holding Ltd., Macau

 Adrianto Machribie, Chairman, Freeport, Indonesia, Jakarta

 * Minoru Makihara, Senior Corporate Advisor, Mitsubishi Corporation

 Hiroshi Mikitani, Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer, Rakuten, Inc.

 Yoshihiko Miyauchi, Chairman and CEO of ORIX Corporation

 Isamu Miyazaki, Honorary Counselor, Daiwa Institute of Research, LLC; former CEO of Japan Economic Planning Agency

 Alex Yuzaburo, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Corporation

 Kikkoman

 Mike Moore, Former Director General, World Trade Organization, Geneva; former Prime Minister of New Zealand

 Hugh Morgan, Director, First Charnock, Melbourne

 Moriyuki Motono, former Japanese Ambassador to France

 Satoru Murase, Partner, Bingham McCutchen, New York

 N. R. Narayana Murti, Chairman of the Board and Chief Mentor, Infosys Technologies Ltd., Bangalore

 Osamu Nagayama, President and Chief Executive Officer, Chugai Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd. Philippines, Chief Executive Officer, Far East Organization, Singapore

 Masashi Nishihara, Chairman, Peace and Security Research Institute

 Roberto F. de Ocampo, Chairman of the Council of Consultants, RFO Center for Public Finance and Regional Economic Cooperation, Manila; former Secretary of Finance of the Philippines

 Sadako Ogata, Chairman, Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA); UN, former High Commissioner for Refugees

 Shizuro Ogata, Former Deputy Governor, Japan Development Bank; former Deputy Governor for International Relations, Bank of Japan

 Sozaburo Okamatsu, Chairman, Industrial Property Cooperation Center; former Chairman, Research Institute of Economics, Trade and Industry (RIEETI)

 * Yoshio Okawara, Special Adviser, Institute for International Policy Studies (IIPI); former Japanese Ambassador to the United States

 Yoichi Okita, Professor, National Academic Institute for Policy Studies

 Ariyoshi Okumura, Chairman, Lotus Corporate Advisory, Inc.

 Ong Keng Yong, Ambassador-at-Large, Ministry of Foreign Affairs; Director, Institute for Policy Studies, Lee Kuan Tis School of Public Policy, National University of Singapore; former Secretary General of ASEAN

 Takuma otoshi, Chairman, IBM Japan Co., Ltd.

 Anan Panyarachun, Chairman, Thai Industry Federation, Bangkok; Chairman of Saha-Union LLC, former Prime Minister of Thailand

 Qin Yaqing, Vice President, China University of Foreign Affairs, Beijing

 Ryu Jin Roi, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Poongsan Corp., Seoul

 Eisuke Seito, Professor, Aoyama Gakuin University; former Japanese vice minister of finance and international affairs

 SaKong Il, Chairman of the Presidential Committee for the G20 Summit, Office of the President of the Republic of Korea; Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Korea International Trade Association, Seoul; former Minister of Finance of Korea

 Yoshiyasu Sato, Counsel, Shiseido Co. Ltd .; former Japanese ambassador to China

 Yukio Sato, member of the Japanese National Commission on Public Safety; Deputy Chairman of the Board of Trustees of the Japan Institute of International Affairs; former Japanese ambassador to the UN

 Masahide Shibusawa, President, Shibusawa Ei'ichi Memorial Foundation

 Xing Dong Bin, Vice President, Lotte Group, Seoul

 Japanese Yasuhisa Shiozaki, member of the House of Representatives; former chief cabinet minister

 Arifin Siregar, Chairman of the Board of Governors, Indonesian Peace Council (ICWA),

 Jakarta; former International Advisor, Goldman Sachs (Asia Pacific) LLC; former Ambassador of Indonesia to the United States

 Jacob Soetoyo, Executive Director, Gesit Companies, Jakarta

 Howard Stringer, Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer, Sony Corporation

 Shigemitsu Sujisaki, Vice Chairman, Goldman Sachs Japan Company, Limited; former Deputy Managing Director, International Monetary Fund (IMF)

 Dato 'Dr. Sri Tahir, President and Chief Executive Officer, Mayapada Group, Jakarta

 Keizo Takemi, former member of the Japanese House of Councilors; former deputy. Minister of Health, Labor and Welfare of Japan

 Akihiko Tanaka, Managing Director and Executive Vice President, University of Tokyo

 Hitoshi Tanakoy, Chairman, Institute for International Strategy (IIS), Japan Research Institute LLC; Senior Research Fellow, Japan Center for International Exchange; former Deputy Foreign Minister

 Naoki Tanaka, Chairman, Center for International Public Policy Research

 Teh Kok Peng, President, Special Investment Company GIC Ltd., Singapore

 Gautam Tapar, Chairman and CEO, Avantha Group, New Delhi, Chairman, Aspen Institute of India

 Kiyoshi TSUGAWA, Member of the Board, Aozora Bank, LLC

 Junichi Ujiie, Chairman, Nomura Holdings, Inc.

 Sarasin Viraphol, Executive Vice President, Charoen Pokphand Co., Ltd., Bangkok; former Deputy Permanent Secretary of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Thailand

 Cesar E. A. Virata, Director and Corporate Vice Chairman and Acting Chief Executive Officer, Rizal Commercial Banking Corporation (RCBC), Manila; former Prime Minister of the Philippines

 * Yusuf Wanandi, Vice Chairman, Board of Trustees, CBDN Foundation, Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), Jakarta

 Wang Jisi, Dean, Faculty of International Relations, Peking University, Beijing

 Etsuya Washio, Chairman, Workers' Welfare and Cooperative Insurance Fund; Former Chairman, Japan Trade Union Confederation (RENGO)

 Koji Watanabe, Senior Research Fellow, Japan Center for International Exchange; former Japanese ambassador to Russia

 Osamu Watanabe, President, Japan Petroleum Exploration Co., Ltd.

 Wei Jianguo, Former Deputy Minister of Commerce, Beijing

 Yu Wong, Chairman and Founder, Wywy Group, Singapore

 Wu jianmin, member, foreground

 Wu Jianmin, member of the Foreign Policy Advisory Committee, Ministry of Foreign Affairs of China, Beijing; Member of the European Academy of Sciences; Honorary President, Bureau of International Exhibitions; former Chinese Ambassador to France

 Taizo Yakushiji, Counselor, International Policy Research Institute; Visiting Professor, National Academic Institute for Policy Studies (GRIPS)

 Ryuji Yamada, President and CEO, NTT Docomo, Inc.

 Tadashi Yamamoto, Chairman, Japan International Exchange Center; Trilateral

 Commission, Director for Pacific and Asia,

 Yang Jiemian, President, Shanghai Institutes of International Studies, Shanghai

 Noriyuki Yonemura, Secretary of the General Intellectual Cooperation Group for the Promotion of a Market-Oriented Economy

 Zhang Yunling, Professor and Director of the Academic Department of International Studies, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences (CAES), Beijing

 Former Member of the Commission in the Civil Service

 Hisashi Owada, President of the International Court of Justice

 PARTICIPANTS FROM OTHER AREAS, "Participants for a three-year period"

 André Azoulay, Counselor to His Majesty King Mohammed VI, Rabat

 Morris Chang, Chairman, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co., Ltd., Taipei

 Omar Davis, MP of Jamaica and former Minister of Finance and Planning,

 Kingston; former Director of General Planning Institute of Jamaica

 Husnu Dogan, General Coordinator, Nurol Holding; former Chairman of the Board of Trustees, Turkey Development Fund; former defense minister, Ankara

 Alejandro Foxley, Senior Associate, Carnegie Endowment for International Economics, Washington, DC; former Chilean Foreign Minister, Valparaiso

 Jacob A. Frenkel, Chairman, International JPMorgan Chase, New York; Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Group of Thirty (G30); former vice chairman of American International Group, Inc. (AIG); former Chairman, Bank of Israel

 Frene Gynwala, Former Speaker of the National Assembly of the Parliament of the Republic of South Africa, Cape Town

 HRH Prince El Hassan bin Talala, President, Club of Rome; Moderator of the World Conference on Religion and Peace; Chair, Forum of Arab Thought, Amman

 Ricardo Hausmann, Professor of Economic Development Practice, Center for International Development, John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA; former Chief Economist, Inter-American Development Bank; former Minister of Planning of Venezuela and Member of the Board of the Central Bank of Venezuela

 Sergey Karaganov, Dean, School of World Economy and International Relations, Chairman of the Presidium of the Council on Foreign and Defense Policy; Chairman, Editorial Board, "Russia in World Affairs," Moscow

 Jeffrey L. S. Ku, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Chinatrust Investment, Bank, Taipei

 Ricardo Lopez Murphy, Visiting Fellow, Foundation for Economic Research Latin America, Buenos Aires; former Argentine finance minister and defense minister

 Luksic Craig Andr; nico, Vice President, Banco de Chile, Santiago

 Itamar Rabinovich, Oettinger Department of Contemporary History of the Near East, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv; Honorary Member of the Charles & Andrea Bronfman Saban Center, Brookings Institution, New York University Global Professor Emeritus; Visiting Professor, Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University; former ambassador to the United States

 R; sd; Saracoglu, President of the Financial Group Koç Holding; Chairman, Macro Consulting, Istanbul; former Minister of State and Member of the Turkish Parliament; former Governor of the Central Bank of Turkey

 Setubal Roberto Egydio, President and Chief Executive Officer, Banco Ita; S.A. and Banco Ita; Holding Financeira S.A., Sao Paulo

 Stan Shih, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Acer Group, Taipei

 Grigory Yavlinsky A., Chairman and one of the founders of the Russian Democratic Party "Yabloko" and a former member of the State Duma; Chairman of the Center for Economic and Political Research (Putin's representative)


The trilateral commission was founded in 1973 by New York banker David Rockefeller, then chairman of Chase Manhattan Bank, and Harvard University professor Sbigniew Brzezinski, who later became President Jimmy Carter's national security aide.

- Salik.biz

"The Trilateral Commission was, by definition, founded in 1973 by private citizens from Western Europe, Japan and North America to promote closer cooperation between the three regions on common issues. It seeks to improve public understanding of such problems, to support proposals to jointly address them and to establish the usual practice of working together in these regions."

Initially, in 1972, Rockefeller and Brzezinski elected 200 of its members worldwide, comprising about one third of North Americans, one third of Europeans and one third of Japanese.

In 1993, that figure in the world increased to about 325 members, described by the Trilateral Commission as "outstanding citizens", but in fact reflecting an extremely narrow spectrum of world opinion and culture, a layer completely unelected and representing nothing but David Rockefeller's personal views.

From the outset, the commission was called "private" and "unofficial," with the stated aim of "putting together an informal group of the highest level to jointly address the common issues facing our three regions" and "to strengthen cooperation."

In all reports of the Trilateral Commission, you can find a mixture between "private" and "public."

The commission is approved as a private group founded by a private citizen, David Rockefeller. However, its objectives and operations are focused on public policy.

From the documents of the Trilateral Commission:

"The Commission meets once every year.

In addition to special thematic meetings and reviews of current events in our regions, much of each annual meeting is devoted to reviewing draft reports submitted to the Commission.

These reports are generally a joint product of authors from each of the three regions who gather at the consultant level in the course of their work. The discussion at the Commission's annual meeting is followed by publication.

The authors are responsible for their final text. A separate publication is presented at the annual meeting. Informal work sometimes emerges as a result of regional activities.

Each regional group has a chairman and a deputy who jointly form the leadership of the Commission. The executive committee of the total number of members includes another 36 people."

In short, this group of private citizens is organized in such a way as to give its collective views a significant influence on public policy. They meet, they review, they discuss, they report and then they make their recommendations public.

For what purpose? The Trilateral Commission would hardly spend so much energy and funds for academic exercises... The aim should be to define public policy guidelines for all governments around the world.

further. Members are not elected - they are selected. David Rockefeller, the founder and chairman of the entire Trilateral Commission, was the chairman of the executive committee, the committee that selects the members. The whole structure reflects Rockefeller's choice, not impartial or representative choice.

This phenomenon did not pass the attention of observers.

On July 27, 1979, KMG radio station in Blafors, Iowa, interviewed George Franklin, then the coordinator of the Trilateral Commission.

This author was a guest of the program. Here's a recording of franklin answering a question about Rockefeller's influence.

Depicted externally as a high-level discussion group, the Trilateral Commission is dedicated to the New World Order.

The most comprehensive concept of the New World Order can be found in the book by the co-founder of brzezinski's Trilateral Commission " Between Two Centuries: America's Role in the Technotronics Era," published just before the founding of the Trilateral Commission.

Senators and congressmen are members of the Trilateral Commission, which, given the negative understatement of the Trilateral Commission's views on Congress, is somewhat unexpected.

Members of the Trilateral Commission also hold key positions in the White House, namely, the chairman of the Republican Confederation of the White House, the white House majority party organizer, the chairman of the Democratic Confederacy and the chairman of the closed-door meeting of Democrats in the White House.

As a result, the members of the Trilateral Commission are at the helm of the legislative process.

The importance of this influence on the legislative process is manifested when we look at the political ideology of the Trilateral Commission expressed by Crozier, Huntington and Vaisiuki in the book "Crisis of Democracy":

❗, the democratic system no longer meets the requirements of the time;

❗- the concepts of equality and individualism pose problems for the authorities;

❗ - the media is not sufficiently subordinate to the elite;

❗- democracy needs to be balanced (i.e. limited);

❗ the authority and power of the central government of the democratic majority must be strengthened.

The top administration positions - Republicans and Democrats - are filled with talent from the Trilateral Commission.

This electoral process of filling the top vacancies in the executive department by members of the Trilateral Commission was deliberate.

Before President Carter officially took office, many members of the Trilateral Commission were appointed, namely:

Brzezinski, Assistant to the President for National Security; Cyrus Vance - Secretary of State Harold Brown - Secretary of Defense; W. Michael Blumenthal - Minister of Finance; Andrew Young is the U.S. representative to the United Nations. Warren Christopher - Deputy Secretary of State; Lucy Wilson Benson - Assistant Secretary of State for Security; Richard Cooper- Deputy Secretary of State for Economic Affairs; Richard Holbrooke, Deputy Secretary of State for East Asia and the Pacific; W. Anthony Lake - Deputy Secretary of State for Political Planning; Saul Linowitz is a member of the Panama Canal Treaty Negotiations delegation; Gerald Smith is special envoy for the nuclear negotiations.

All administrations after Carter had a particularly large number of members of the Trilateral Commission.

Nominally, they leave the Trilateral Commission when they join the government, but immediately return to the Trilateral Commission, leaving the government, "resignation" is a farce - part of the revolving door of the "government - the private sector" that retains influence in a small, equally-minded, most elite group.

So Bill Clinton became a "former member of the Public Service Commission" when Clinton became president, but returned later.

The Trilateral Commission invites only members with the views and objectives of the New World Order.

At the time, President Bill Clinton was an ideal member of the Trilateral Commission, especially because his entire career was shaped by the guardianship and leadership of supporters of the New World Order (G.B.S. Bulletin, October 1992).

In 1968, Clinton received a Bachelor of Science degree in international affairs from Georgetown University. He studied there under Carroll Kwigley, whose famous book Tragedy and Hope was published in 1966.

He told the story of the most elite English group, funded by the Rothschilds and Cecil Rhodes, whose goal was to rule the world.

Rhodes established scholarships for his name at Oxford University and Clinton, a devoted student on the New World Order mission, was awarded a Rhodes Scholarship at Oxford University.

There's another little-known side to the story of quigley.

He genuinely believed in the New World Order, but did not know about the dark side of the globalists until they refused to reprint his book; He drew the attention of too many honest scholars and citizens to the shadow side of the New World Order.

It is easy to guess that the same ideas adhere to the same ideas and Bill's wife known to us as Aunt Hilary Even-grin . The editorial itself has described this fact more than once, implying a closed golf 🏌️ ♂️ club, son - father, husband - wife that the second candidate with the surname Clinton ran for the presidency of the United States in the last few years, says that the electoral process in the Democratic Party is quite fixated and revolves around the same clans.

The situation is not better in the Republican Party. Suffice it to recall the presidency of the two Bushes - members of the Order of Skull and Bones, from which the history of the Trilateral Commission through David Rockefeller. In addition, Bush's brother was running for office in the last election.

What does that say? This suggests that both parties are somehow drawing their candidates for the Trilateral Commission. It is a kind of personnel reserve golf 🏌️ ♂️ club or part of the dialectical process described in the "Order" cycle.

Don't overstate the plans of the Trilateral Commission and Rockefeller's circle in any way.

The Rockefeller clan stands over the executive committee, and therefore the Trilateral Commission itself.

However, it is naive to consider Rockefeller an almighty dictator or the Rockefeller family as an all-powerful monarchy. It's a trap for the reckless.

The world is much more complicated. The collective of those in power can number several thousand members who collectively seek to turn the world around, not just the United States to achieve their own collective goals (we published articles about these people earlier under the hashtag Freemasons).

Specifically, the Trilateral Commission was david Rockefeller's idea and was carried out with the help of David's funds.

Here is an interview with George S. Franklin, former Commission Coordinator, by Michael Lloyd Chadwick, editor of Triman Digest, published in Provo, Utah:

"Mr. Chadwick: Mr. Franklin, you were a member of the Trilateral Commission with Mr. David Rockefeller, Robert Bowie, Brzezinski, and Henry Owen. Would you tell me briefly how it happened?

Mr. Franklin: David Rockefeller gave several speeches in the winter and autumn of 1972 at the Chase Bank forums in London, Brussels, Montreal and Paris. He recommended the creation of an international commission on peace and prosperity, which is now practically the Trilateral Commission. At these meetings, he did not receive an enthusiastic response and refused the idea. He thought, "If chase bank forums don't respond favorably to my offer, it's probably a rotten thing."

Then he went to a meeting with Bilderberger. There was Mike Blumenthal, and Rockefeller said, "You know, I'm very concerned... Cooperation between these three regions - Japan, the United States and Western Europe - is indeed collapsing, and I foresee all sorts of disasters for the world if this continues. Can't we do something about it?" The next eight speakers said it was a wonderful idea; by all means, we will implement it.


And he took him on a plane on the way home to Brzezinski.

He thought it was a very good idea and wrote something about it. Bob Bowie also wrote something. On my return home, David asked me if I would go back to Europe and talk to some people at leisure, and see if they really thought it was a good idea. It turned out that they sincerely believed so.

David and I went to Japan in June 1972, and he spoke to a lot of people there. They thought it was a good idea, and we, 13 to 15, gathered in Tarrytown, New York. It was decided to move forward."

There is no reason to doubt that the trial took place in a different way - at least we have no evidence that Franklin is hiding anything.

But note that the way the Trilateral Commission is founded involves a free coalition of power, acting in a rivalry rather than a small, close group of conspirators, sandwiched with an iron fist with the Rockefellers at the head."

But even the Washington Post establishment newspaper found worrying signs in the current, outwardly uninteresting packaging of the Trilateral Commission.

Actually, it is not surprising that the goals of the Trilateral Commission are not shouted from the rooftops, but are implied from political statements, newspapers and positions, as well as the personal philosophy of those elected by the members of the Trilateral Commission.

Here's the Washington Post's statement:

"The members of the Trilateral Commission are not Trilateral people. They are members of a private, though not secret, international organization, assembled by wealthy banker David Rockefeller to stimulate establishment dialogue between Western Europe, Japan and the United States.

But here's the troubling moment with the Trilateral Commission.

The President-elect is a member of the Trilateral Commission. The vice president-elect, too. As well as the new Secretary of State, The Ministers of Defense and Finance, Cyrus R. Vance, Harold Brown and Michael Blumenthal.

Also a member of the Trilateral Commission is zbigniew Brzezinski, former director of the Trilateral Commission and Carter's national security adviser, as well as a bunch of others who will shape international policy for the United States in the next four years."

Undoubtedly, this statement was brought to the attention of David Rockefeller by the Washington Post, because by the 1990s the newspaper's editor, Katherine Graham (chairman of the Washington Post's board of directors), had been appointed to the Trilateral Commission!

While the Three-Party Commission's control continued, the Washington Post made no further comment about the "disturbing" moments.

That was the white house in the early 1970s. It stayed the same today.

The position of the members of the Trilateral Commission on the New World Order from their speeches and letters written by them is known.

When the Trilateral Commission met in Tokyo in January 1977, Carter and Brzezinski sent personal letters to the assembly, which were reprinted in The Trial.

The key phrase in both letters is "a fairer world order."

Does this underline that something is wrong with our modern world order, that is, with national structures?

According to Brzezinski, yes; and if the modern structure is unable to solve the world's problems, it must be eliminated and replaced by a world government.

In the era of Brzezinski's technotronics, "the nation-state, as a fundamental unit of organized human life, has ceased to be the main creative force: international banks and multinational corporations operate and plan in terms far ahead of the political concepts of nation-states."

Understanding and observing the philosophy of the Trilateral Commission is the only way in which we can reconcile myriads of obvious contradictions in the information leaked to us in the national press.

In fact, the Trilateral Commission, it must be admitted, makes no secret neither from its essence nor from the purposes of the New World Order.

In 1978, in an earlier radio interview with George Franklin Jr., then executive director of the Trilateral Commission, these goals surfaced after the author's questions:

"Sutton: Mr. Donovan of Time Life has just been appointed special assistant to President Carter. Mr. Donovan is a member of your commission.

Franklin: That's right.

Sutton: Doesn't that confirm the fact that people from an extremely narrow circle are getting into the Carter administration. In other words, from the Trilateral Commission?

Franklin: I don't think it requires any confirmation. It's a fact that he chose most of his main foreign policy personalities, I would say, from people he met when he was on the Trilateral Commission.

Sutton: Well, then I can only say that every sane person has the impression of domination in the Carter administration of the Trilateral Commission, which professes specific ideas with which many disagree.

Well, I certainly agree that former commissioners are the preferred focus on the Carter administration's foreign policy. They are members of the Commission, controlled by us in every sense.

I really think they share a common belief that we're working, particularly with Europe and Japan, or we're all going to get into trouble.

Sutton: But this shared faith may not reflect the faith of the American people. How do you know that's not true?

Franklin: I'm not sure that's not true. I'm not someone who can interpret people's thoughts.

Sutton: In other words, are you determined to continue to create a Commission that, as you say, does not necessarily reflect the views of people in the United States? I think you've seized political power.

Franklin: I don't think it's true at all. Everyone who creates a group for certain purposes naturally tries to achieve these goals. We sincerely believe that this is important when Europe, Japan and the United States come together. That's what we believe in.

We have also chosen the best people we have been able to find as members of the Commission. Fortunately, almost everyone is accepted. The president was one of them, and it so happened that he thought they were really very capable people and asked them to be in his government, that's the whole solution.

If you're going to ask me if I'm not very unhappy about this, the answer is no. I think they're good people."

It was an interview with Franklin.

Trilateral politics is global power and influence, politics best achieved through financial control.

 The interest of the Rockefeller family and international bankers in establishing a world order, world planning, in solving global problems is a sure indicator of what they mean by political control, which can be translated into dollars and cents.

 As one of the most elite organizations fighting for global control, the Trilateral Commission has organized small companies of influence led by its cronies. They facilitate more or less legal progress between contracts - government and corporate.

 Anti-lobbying laws are so cleverly written and so easily circumvented that they are practically the only ones to convince the public who perceive government contracts as free from any influence.

 The reality is that the revolving doors are largely controlled by Trilateral members.

 That is, they are under the full control of an elite, including such organizations as the Council on Foreign Relations (long-term chairman was David Rockefeller) and Yale's Skull and Bones (which included George W. Bush, Averell Harriman and other authors and pushers of ideas in government).

 One well-known channel from within is Kissinger Associates, Trilateral Commissioner Kissinger and its founder and chairman is the former Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs and the former US Secretary of State.

 In this role, Kissinger was able to apply his solid knowledge to establish and continue to use the right contacts in the business world.

 Kissinger Associates takes significant money from multinational corporations to act on its behalf within the United States.

 Kissinger uses his influence to advance his clients' affairs.

 Another example of influence is the Carlisle group. The Carlisle Group was founded by David Rubinstein, a former minor league merchant banker, and is named after the Carlisle Hotel in New York.

 The Carlisle Hotel is a long-standing corporate meeting place. The Carlisle Group holds most of the shares in firms that do business with the US government.

 Day-to-day operations are conducted by former Defense Secretary Frank Carlucci, a Trilateral Commissioner.

 Members of the Carlisle Group include former Secretary of State James Baker, a close friend of George W. Bush, former Budget Director Richard Darman, Treasury Secretary Donald Regan, Bush campaign chairman Fred Malek, George W. Bush, former CIA Director Robert Gates, Chairman of the Commission on Valuables securities and exchanges (SEK) "Arthur Levitt, deputy. Clinton's transition team director, Vernoy Jordan; and politician Bob Strause.

 These are former cabinet-level politicians who have nothing to sell except their access to the government, that is, their personal phone books. All are directly or indirectly related to the Trilateral Commission.

 Frank Carlucci openly identifies himself in Trilateral biographies as "Vice Chairman, Carlisle Group, Former US Secretary of State." Faithful Jordan passes as “Partner Aikin, Gump, Strause, Hauer and Feld.

 Carlisle has great experience in enabling firms to buy government property cheaply - and Carlucci has spent billions of dollars in taxes on contracts with large military-industrial firms.

 Carlucci, worked in all administrations from Kennedy to Bush, in many departments.

 The Trilateral Commissioners want a monopoly, a world monopoly.

 Therefore, a key fundamental statement should be kept in mind: Trilaterals are not interested in which monetary system works best or most equitably, or if gold is a more efficient monetary mechanism than paper, or which monetary system supports a higher standard of living for the poor at all times. the world.

 The main aspiration of the members of the Trilateral Commission is the desire to rule the world economy (it should be noted that the Trilateral Commission is only the common tip of several icebergs. There are several such icebergs, and not only in the United States, but throughout the "Western world", which has already been written about in articles about freemasons and globalism).

 This control is carried out through the so-called coordination of macroeconomic policy.

 The main purpose of this control mechanism is said to be the preservation of world peace.

 The historical fact is nowhere recognized that such control has always led to conflict; that the denial of national ethnic independence is a sure way to fight and bloodshed.

 In Trilateral dogma, you will not find rational consideration of alternatives or weighting of options.

 But you can expect an irrational struggle, no matter what happens, for control of the world in the name of globalism and the New World Order.

 TC 14 report "Towards a Renewed International System" concludes that the 1944 Breton Woods system had already "come under increasing tension ... and events triggered traumatic changes, namely periodic attacks on the dollar and floating exchange rates."

 The current goal of the Trilateral Commission is to build an international system, a world order based on cooperation and focusing on two aspects that require such cooperation: international lending; creation of international reserves.

 The Trilateral Commission proposes to involve 5 to 10 core countries in the establishment of the new system.

 The rest of the world will have to get along as well as possible.

 Some ideas in this regard have already been implemented: for example, a new artificial international money, Special Drawing Rights (SDR.s), has been created for central banks.

 The link can be traced between the international bankers of New York, the Trilateral Commission and the proposals of the Trilateral Commission in Bancor.

 The profits generated by major banks from abroad are worthy of public scrutiny and are indicative of the division between their domestic interests in the United States and the global economy.

 The degree of internal control over the economy by international banks is reflected in a report published by the late Senator Lee Metcalf, entitled Voter Rights in Major Corporations.

 Noteworthy are the names of international bankers who are members of the Trilateral Commission. If we combine these three kinds of statistics:

 a) source of bank profits;

 b) control over national companies and

 c) membership in the Trilateral Commission,

 - we will find a critical relationship between international banks and the Commission's desire to influence the global economy.

 Chase Manhattan Bank has the highest percentage of profits from overseas, with a surprising 78 percent, up from 22 percent in 1970.

 David Rockefeller's international trade made Chase a world bank.

 At the same time, Chase has a very low rating on the Metcalf index. As the largest bank, it is included in 8 out of 122 companies studied by the subcommittee (compared to 25 by Citibank and 56 by J.P. Morgan).

 At least six directors of Chase Manhattan (Kissinger is on the bank's international advisory board) were represented in 1976 on the Trilateral Commission.

 As a result, Chase is almost totally oriented outside the United States. His financial interest in creating the New World Order is more than obvious.

 Compare Chase to J. P. Morgan, where 53 percent of the income comes from abroad (up from 25 percent in 1970), with only one Trilateral representative.

 Banks such as Charter New York (formerly Irving Trust) and Chemical Bank do not appear in the Metcafe index at all and do not have Trilateral representation, that is, they are not involved in the creation of the New World Order.

 In a few words: The Trilateral Commission reports to very few international banks, essentially the Chase Manhattan Bank, and is an institution targeting outside the United States.

 At the same time, the Trilateral Commission oversees its executive branch in the United States.

 However, SDRs were not matched by gold. Attempts to keep the price of gold at the artificially low "official price" proved to be difficult and ultimately showed that even the power of the Trilateral Commission is subject to the action of world market forces, and world market forces are the sum of individual market decisions.

 The challenge for the world's Trilateral rulers is to integrate these monopoly ideas into the global monetary system and make them work.

 The immediate and most pressing challenge is to operate a floating rate system to dampen volatile changes in exchange rates, which of course harm international trade.

 Such volatile changes do not occur in fixed rates pegged to gold. But gold separates the world from the "co-operative" international arrangements required by Trilaterals, and gold is therefore more of a problem than the mess of floating rates.

 This is followed by the task of managing world reserves. Trilateral members want "greater cooperation, for the key to managing the world's reserves is the limited addition of gold and, naturally, currencies such as the US dollar, deutsche mark, British pound and French franc to the central bank's holdings."

 The falling dollar is also an unforeseen problem, especially as it inevitably leads to less use of the dollar as the world's reserve unit.

 The Treasury Department's views on gold (overseen by the Trilateral Commission) are well illustrated in a letter from Gene E. Gaudin, deputy. Secretary of Law at the Treasury Department, to Congressman J. Kenneth Robinson.

The Trilateral Commission is not the only organization working for the New World Order.

 The concept that gave birth to the Trilateral Commission derives from earlier ideas put forward by Cecil Rhodes and Lord Milner, who possessed funds from the gold and diamond mines of South Africa.

 Rhodes established the Rhodes Fellowships to enable outstanding Americans to attend Oxford University for a year.

 B. Clinton became a Rhodes Fellow after studying with Carroll Quigley at Georgetown University.

 Carroll Quigley wrote the voluminous Tragedy and Hope, which outlines the plans for the New World Order.

 Quigley was not a renegade; he agreed with the objectives of the Anglo-American New World Order.

 His disagreement with this company was that he believed that the common cause should be an open goal, and not a secret conspiracy.

 So the Rhodes organization and the Royal Institute of International Affairs in London were essential parts of the New World Order.

 The Royal Institution spawned the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) in the United States on a broader but still limited organization with the same missions.

 CMO has a wider range of views among its members (some even against the New World Order) than the Trilateral Commission or the Royal Institution.

 An interesting aspect is that the founder of the Trilateral Commission, David Rockefeller, was its chairman for a long time, and then he was the emeritus chairman.

 Another more limited part of the New World Order is the parent society Skull and Bones at Yale University.

 Historian Anthony Sutton was able to deeply analyze the impact of Skull and Bones and its infiltration into the US government.

 His book was titled America's Secret Establishment.

 Almost every supporter of the New World Order, from the earliest days of their activity, has a vague past that does not in any way correspond to the declared high ideals.

 Cecile Rhodes himself was accused of deception and fraud in the fight for control of the gold and diamond mines of South Africa.

 His partner Lord Milner was the author of the infamous Milner Telegram that sparked the Boer War in 1899.

 The Rhodes diamond mines became the core of the De Beers monopoly and today still exercises monopoly control over the global diamond market - a model for the New World Order.

 Cecil Rhodes' views on the New World Order would hardly have inspired anyone other than the Anglo-Americans.

 And the past of individual Trilateral members and Trilateral-affiliated corporations is hardly comforting.

 Take, for example, Prudential Securities Company. Its chairman, Robert C. Winters, is a member of the Trilateral Commission.

 If you look at the press, Prudential is being screened on many charges (New York Times, 2/28/94).

 Prudential is at the center of an expanding criminal investigation into how customers were treated when the firm suffered huge losses.

 A few years ago, Wall Street brokerage firms could maintain accounts with zero balances, money was deposited only after a phone call from the bank. This is known in the same way as receiving money against a fictitious bill.

 Brokerage firms got away with it and made millions in this practice in a year. The main player in this swindle was E.F. Hatton.

 Kissinger Associates, an influential body founded by G. Kissinger to raise capital for its "public services", has repeatedly come under fire from unfavorable criticism, but the reports carefully concealed the fact that its founder was a member of the Trilateral Commission.

 The firm, for example, had a memorable day at the bankruptcy of LTV, when $ 144 million went to consultants for professional services in connection with the bankruptcy and the lion's share was received by Kissinger Associates. Nobody investigated gross exaggerations.

 Likewise, the United States avoided an investigation into the BBCI, a global scandal involving Kissinger Associates.

 In England, where many thousands lost their deposits, only a low-ranking manager was imprisoned.

 Although the Trilateral Commission was initially presented as a "research group" of interested citizens engaged in world affairs, we find that it is anything but this.

 The first discovery is that from the very beginning, the Trilateral Commission represented extremely small segments of the population in each individual country.

 The dominant influence in it has always been with David Rockefeller and bankers of his level abroad. The dominant influence is exercised by international bankers, those who exercise largely control over the direction of world events through financial control.

 Moreover, David Rockefeller was long chairman of the Federal Reserve Bank in this private system. The Federal Reserve System is not a public organization, but a private one, and this fact must be borne in mind.

 The distance between the federal reserve and the current dominant government is deliberately kept in order to control the financial system in the interests of those who hold the federal reserve.

 Rockefeller has a small executive committee that invites prominent citizens to join the Trilateral Commission. This perpetuates Rockefeller's influence, for the new members at least sympathize with Rockefeller's objectives in their private judgments.

 This in itself would not be objectionable if the Trilateral Commission were indeed a "study group" and if the Trilateral Commission showed the same interest in disqualifying the federal government from appointments as it does in the work of the federal reserve.

 But the Trilateral Commission is not a "research group." Her research is at the mercy of theorists who may also reflect the views of the Trilateral Commission.

 These studies are then the basis for discussion in the TC, and the agreed policy becomes the political views of individual members.

 When they are appointed to the federal government, and usually about one third of the members are always in the current administration, then they put this policy into practice.

 The conclusion is that the Trilateral Commission is a politically oriented group with the ability to translate policy into action regardless of the wishes of the entire population.

 We will not find anywhere political aspirations in favor of personal free enterprise and personal freedom.

 But we will find many claims that the world is "uncontrollable" and that government action is required to align citizens' goals with Trilateral ambitions.

 Examples of how they try to solve social problems through wars clearly demonstrate such ambitions.

 Whatever the Trilateral members say, we conclude that their goal is a New World Order under the control of the Trilateral members.

 The so-called problem wars are designed to shape problem solving that would lead to the goals of the New World Order and for nothing else. Well, the Trilateral Commission itself, as it was written earlier, is only one of the cells of the world network of such "discussion platforms".

 By the way, the Russian Federation was represented in the 90s at the Commission's seminars as expert speakers by Anatoly Chubais (seminar on the global economy) and Grigory Yavlinsky (on the future of "Russia"). Chubais was also presented for the first time at the Bilderberg convention.

 It is worth mentioning another "Russian", Sergei Karaganov, a member of the International Advisory Council at the CFR.

 He was introduced to the ISS as “Chairman of the Defense and Foreign Policy Council; Deputy Director of the Institute of Europe at the Russian Academy of Sciences.

 The ISS was founded by the CMO Board of Directors in 1995 under the chairmanship of David Rockefeller, CMO Honorary Chairman. He holds his annual meeting during the October meeting of the CMO Board of Directors in order to present his views on a number of issues of interest to the CMO. Members of the ICS are given the opportunity to comment on various programs and strategic directions, as well as on real opportunities for cooperation between the CFR and institutions outside the United States. They also provide the most valuable international assessments of US foreign policy - from the need for new strategies and organizations in the 21st century to the value of multilateral approaches to solving world problems and ways to develop democratization.

March 13, 2017 1:25PM 

Henry Kissinger was recruited by the Soviet State Security Committee just two weeks before Richard Nixon became president of the United States, and he became an assistant for National Security, said Yuri Shvets, a fellow russian President Vladimir Putin and former KGB intelligence officer of the USSR.

Former U.S. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger was an agent of the Soviet State Security Committee, but was not included in the agency. This was reported by former KGB intelligence officer of the USSR and a fellow of Russian President Vladimir Putin on the KGB institute Yuri Shvets in the author's program of Dmitry Gordon "GORDON" on the TV channel "112 Ukraine."

"This is a separate story, which is worthy of the pen of the great master. That was the situation. Henry Kissinger, known in our American department as Kisa, met with our opera operator Borey Sedov. What is an agent? A KGB agent is a foreigner who consciously cooperates with the State Security Committee and voluntarily performs his tasks. And now Mr. Sedov meets with Professor Kissinger, sends dispatches to Moscow, to the center, from which it seems that it turns out that it turns out - he is an agent," Shvets said. 

By the way, Yura also on a visit to Dima pondered about the explosion in September 2019 on Vector in Novosibirsk. Admittedly he was somewhat misunderstood, the false explosion was, in my opinion. There are reasons for that (video blogger, planting duck 🦆) 

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