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Originally Posted by cHeal Well straight away it's important to remove the phrase "conspiracy Theory" from the debate, it's far too loaded and has connotations which do not make for balanced debate. As already stated the push for further global governance is not a conspiracy theory in the same way the 9/11 truth is a conspiracy theory, rather it is an accusation of intent to mislead and manipulate the citizens of the world.
Even if one was to believe that what the CFR and Bulderberg group do is for the greater good, the fact that their is no public consultation and education of the reasons and results of their policy objectives makes it a usurption of democratic rule. World government is inevitable but do we want a world where there is truly freedom, a world without borders or war because we no longer want to go to war? Or do we want a world where we the people are kept occupied by shiny gadgets, where there is no such thing as people, but only consumers, with a bar code and price tag?
At the end of the day the elected representatives of this, or any country are rarely any more qualified to theorise on what is best for man, than the average joe on the street, And if we are to presume that the EU is a precursor to a tangible form of world government then surely it is thus evident that such extended democratic rule is far more susceptible to elitism and corruption? And since all politics is local, can we really expect the democratic check on such behaviour to function when their actions rarely have any direct effect on the citizens they represent? |
The part I highlighted there is part of the problem. The absence of consultation is not evidance of malice or indeed malintent, as is being claimed. The inclinataion by some is to claim that an absence of evidance is in itself evidance, and come up with any number of associated theories that that evidance then supports. Clearly flawed logic.
The value of Bilderburg meetings is that influential people can meet and discuss serious issues in an informal atmosphere, and hopefully find common ground, without said issues being subject to pointless political wrangling, speculative and misleading media analysis and opportunism.
The evidance of increased co-operation in the west at least is all around us, for those who care to look. Serious political issues that crop up in the West do not become issues where national prestige is on the line and one side or the other must win at all costs. It might be news to some people, but that scenario is the reality of the economic and poltical world and has in the past led to serious conflicts and even wars over relatively minor issues. Instead a common ground is found and compromise is usually the preferred method or progressing a cause - not all or nothing engagement.
Now another issue that I have highlighted in your post is in
italics (third paragraph). The fundemental contradiction in that statement is startling. A world without borders? In this very thread the phrase has been parsed to mean loss of sovereignty. A Europe without borders does not mean loss of physical border demarcations or indeed soverignty, and no one wants a world without borders. I yet to hear anyone (sane) make a claim that such a thing is even desirable. So a circular arguement, based on nothing, becomes a self fulfiling conspiracy theory, and not a scintilla of evidance to back it up.
All in all people over estimate the influence of the Bilderburg group because it is not a group, as in a unified entity. Therefore it cannot act as a group. The very nature of what the Bilderburg group is, is being twisted or misunderstood.
If there was a world government in the offing don't people think Putin or Chavez would be at these meetings? They who control the flow of oil to all the crucial Western economies? Or the leadership or a representitive of them from Iran? At no time in the forseeable future is the West ever going to control the worlds oil reserves so why is OPEC not calling the shots at these Bilderburg meetings? Because any of the afore mentioned would not leap at the chance of getting in on a world government because they are such upstanding and moral characters? Please.
Those who cannot accept the paradox at the heart of democracy and indeed freedom will always seek to find other ways to explain events that surround them. But utlimitely even of they skate over the very human facts that affect all our lives, the holes in the resulting 'world government theory' are just too huge to reconsile with reality.