FINAL WARNING: The Illuminati Influence on International Affairs
Company was coming back together. In 2001, Conoco (Continental Oil)
and Phillips Petroleum (Phillips 66) merged, to make ConocoPhillips,
the 3rd largest oil company, the 12th largest company, and the 6th
largest oil company in the world. If this trend continues, it will make it
all the more easier for oil companies to manipulate and control a
crucial commodity like gasoline and oil.
CLUB OF ROME
This think-tank of Anglo-American financiers, scientists, economists,
politicians, heads of state, and industrialists from ten different
countries, met in April, 1968 at Rockefeller’s private estate in Bellagio,
Italy, at the request of Aurelio Peccei, the Italian industrialist who had
close ties to Fiat and the Olivetti Corporation. He claimed to have
solutions for world peace and prosperity, which could be
accomplished through world government. The Club of Rome (COR)
was established with a membership of 75 prominent scientists,
industrialists, and economists from 25 countries, which along with the
Bilderbergers, have become one of the most important foreign policy
arms of the Roundtable group.
Many of the COR executives were drawn from NATO, and they have
been able to formulate a lot of what NATO claims are its policies.
Through Lord Carrington, they were able to split NATO into two
factions, a left-wing political group (whose doctrine was formed on the
basis of Peccei’s book Human Quality), and its former military alliance.
The first Club of Rome conference in the U.S. was in 1969, where the
American branch was organized as the “American Association of the
Club of Rome.” Among its members were: Norman Cousins (honorary
Chairman of Planetary Citizens), John Naisbitt (author of Megatrends),
Amory Lovins (a speaker at Windstar, John Denver’s New Age center
in Snowmass, Colorado), Betty Friedan (founding President of NOW,
the National Organization of Women), Jean Houston and Hazel
Henderson (New Age authors and speakers), Robert O. Anderson and
Harlan B. Cleveland (CFR members and part of the Aspen Institute for
Humanistic Studies), Sen. Claiborne Pell (D-RI), and Rep. Frank M.
Potter (staff director of the House Subcommittee on Energy).