A group of prominent societal members from heads of state, corporations, media, and consultancies converge in Washington DC over the next few days to discuss common concerns among what has traditionally been considered the West, including America and Western Europe. Called the Bilderberg Group, the annual Bilderberg Meeting was canceled the past two years due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Activated again, out of the entire group of 119 participants only three leaders are from the healthcare sector. Those from healthcare include two Big Pharma CEOs and the Minister of Health and Social Affairs for Sweden. Who are the invited pharmaceutical heads? They include CEOs of Pfizer and GlaxoSmithKline, Albert Bourla and Emma Walmsley.
With the meeting running in Washington DC from June 2-5 one would think that healthcare and post-pandemic realities would be a prioritized topic, but that doesn’t seem to be the case at all based on the dearth of healthcare sector participants. Interestingly, a review of Bilderberg Meeting agendas over the past decade reveals healthcare was never a topic among these prominent gatherings.
What is the Bilderberg Group?
Few people actually know of the Bilderberg Group, a list of top executives, bureaucrats, and governing officials from the West. The history of these meetings goes back to 1954, when the first conference occurred at the Bilderberg Hotel (Hotel de Bilderberg) in Osterbeek, Netherlands. This was actually a smart branding tool for the family-run hotel chain at the time—one that owned 12 hotels across Netherlands and Germany.
According to “The Hotel de Bilderberg, HRH Prince Bernhard of the Netherlands: An authorized biography” authored by Alden Hatch in 1962, the impetus for the group’s genesis was growing anti-American (pro-communist) sentiment in Western Europe at the time. With Cold War divisions intensifying, prominent figures in Western Europe were concerned about the creep of communism threatening Europe’s participation in the booming American consumer-driven capitalism occurring across the “pond.”
According to Hatch, several key players’ moves led to the first Bilderberg session, including Paul Rijkens, a former head of large consumer goods corporation Unilever, Paul van Zeeland, ex-Belgian Prime Minister, Jozef Retinger, an exiled Polish politician, and Prince Bernhard, a German nobleman who married into Dutch royalty (married Queen Juliana of the Netherlands). They represented a cohort of concerned prominent figures on the edge in a very different Europe. With Soviet expansion and tectonic ideological shifts, keeping powerful social, cultural, and economic alignment with the American economy and society was of paramount concern among the prestigious members of Western Europe’s upper crust.
The meeting emerged at a time of a booming consumer-driven American economy while the growing aforementioned ideological tensions in Europe threatened the mandates of the Marshall Plan, the American-led initiative to rebuild Germany and Europe after World War II.
The meeting emerged as a platform for prominent members of the West (predominantly the United States and Western Europe—e.g., UK, Netherlands, Germany, Denmark, etc.) to support an emerging “Atlanticism,” or a geopolitical order conducive to the cultures, morals, and norms of what emerged as a new world power configuration after the war.
Meeting in a more informal, private setting, with no media present, prominent members from governments, corporations, financial institutions share and discuss common social, political, and economic concerns including defense.
The elite status of the participants along with secretive nature of the meetings over the years have raised lots of suspicions, with allegations of a front for elites to plan and manage the New World Order committed to global domination. Anglo press, however, suggests it’s more of a “supper club.”
Bilderbergers did not meet during the past two years. The last time they met was in 2019, in Montreux, Switzerland. Based on their shared public agenda—TrialSite didn’t get an invitation—included at the top of the list was the topic “Stable Strategic Order” followed by “What’s Next for Europe,” and “Climate Change and Sustainability.” Both China and Russia feature prominently next on the list followed by “The Future of Capitalism.” A review of past agendas found healthcare was never a topic, interestingly enough, given the prominence of the topic.
Then the pandemic hit with the whole world going through the worst public health crisis in a century. The 2020 and 2021 meetings were cancelled. Strangely, their 2022 published agenda doesn’t prioritize the topic.
2022 Meeting
Apparently, elites are ready to move on from COVID-19. Even though the pandemic is ongoing with surges of infections around the world, coupled with persisting emergency orders, meeting attendees are primarily concerned with other matters. According to the Bilderberg prioritized meeting agenda, the top concerns include 1) Geopolitical Realignments, 2) NATO Challenges, 3) China, 4) Indo-Pacific Realignment, and 5) Sino-US Tech Competition.
Russia falls to #6, post-pandemic health at #11, and Ukraine dead last at #14!
The Bilderberg Meeting agenda
1. Geopolitical Realignments
2. NATO Challenges
3. China
4. Indo-Pacific Realignment
5. Sino-US Tech Competition
6. Russia
7. Continuity of Government and the Economy
8. Disruption of the Global Financial System
9. Disinformation
10. Energy Security and Sustainability
11. Post Pandemic Health
12. Fragmentation of Democratic Societies
13. Trade and Deglobalization
14. Ukraine
Bilderberg shares more information here.
https://www.trialsitenews.com/a/2022-bilderbergers-include-pfizers-ceo-albert-bourla-gsks-emma-walmsley-but-lacks-healthcare-priority-despite-ongoing-pandemic-1524c9b2