During a recent Minnesota fund raiser for his wife’s campaign, Bill Clinton was interrupted while giving a speech in front of two thousand people. Members of an organized conspiracy group called the former President’s words a fraud and disrupting his speech by yelling, “Why don’t you talk about 9/11?” and “What about Bilderberg?”
When one member of the group was thrown out by security, another, quiet up until that point, would begin. This courageous activism elicited wild reactions from the corporate press, including comparisons of 9/11 truth groups with Nazis. The comparison is odd, and a striking example of projection since these television pundits have inherited the spirit of appeasement. Almost as surprising as this spurt of activism was rare, was the ability of two thousand people to sit through the Bill Clinton’s speech in silence.
We should all be going to public meetings and disrupting them, asking city and local government officials, “Why don’t you talk about 9/11?” and “What about Bilderberg?” Bilderberg meetings seek to undermine the sovereignty of the United States in a variety of ways, which have been spelled out in their own internal documents. For American politicians to secretly attend these meetings is treason, in clear violation of existing laws, such as the Login Act, which says that unauthorized American citizens are not allowed to negotiate with foreign power brokers and foreign governments. If we as Americans are not willing to engage in such minimal and relatively safe forms of activism, we should go ahead and have the name Neville Chamberlain tattooed across our chests.
Here are some more questions I would like to see asked at public meetings:
What about the 800 prison camps Kellog, Brown and Root is currently constructing across the United States under another no-bid contract?
Is there a plan to merge the United States with Canada and Mexico to form a North American Union?
Why is the Federal Reserve driving down of the dollar? Is this to make it desirable to later have The Amero, a North American currency?
What about the—at least—fifteen war games the U.S. military and CIA was conducting on 9/11?
Why does the media refuse to report on Rudolph Guliani’s mafia ties and his security companies’ links to terrorism?
What about the many U.S. government agents who were on the two flights which crashed into the towers (including three who worked in Raytheon’s remote control airplane division)?
What doesn’t the media report that top CIA and DEA officials have publicly claimed that most cocaine and heroin is brought into the United States either directly by the CIA or under its auspices?
What about the Dutch demolition expert who admitted on Dutch telivision that Building 7 was a good example of a controlled demolition?
Why did most of the media censor a recent death bed confession of former intelligence operative E. Howard Hunt, confessing to involvement in the John F. Kennedy assassination, after he sent the tape to his son Saint John Hunt in Eureka, CA?
These are relevant questions and would be major news stories if they were covered. If covered sympathetically, they would provoke outrage. With determined activism and gorilla news tactics, these things do make headlines. The disruption of the Clinton speech made headlines and was widely reported. We just need more young people with the energy and motivation to shout the truth from the rooftops.