|
Bilderberg.org the view from the top of the pyramid of power
|
View previous topic :: View next topic |
Author |
Message |
kevink Trustworthy Freedom Fighter
Joined: 07 Dec 2006 Posts: 284 Location: Santa Rosa, California, USA
|
Posted: Thu Jul 24, 2008 9:38 pm Post subject: UK MOD's DCDC outlines Bilderberg's plan |
|
|
Mike Finch of American Free Press reports on the Development, Concepts and Doctrine Centre's (DCDC) Global Strategic Trends Programme 2007-2036. DCDC is part of the UK's Ministry of Defence. Mike writes that this document "predicts possible “key risks and shocks” for the future in a recently released report. The report predicts microchip brain implants, flash-bombs, Marxist middle-class revolutionaries, extreme globalization and more, all likely within 30 years. In otherwords, Bilderberg's plan.
http://www.americanfreepress.net/html/UK_govt_report_070208.html
Here's the link to the DCDC doc:
http://www.dcdc-strategictrends.org.uk/viewdoc.aspx?doc=1
The Governance and Order sections starting on p 14 is particularly noteworthy and reads like it could have been written by Brzezinski 40 years ago (this is Crown Copyright with credit to the DCDC)
Key Theme 3 - Governance and Order
States and Communities will be progressively challenged by the range and complexity of
the national and transnational risks that are beginning to dominate the 21st century - and
some will not cope. Owing to world-wide communications, the pervasive scrutiny of the
media and the inter-connected nature of international engagement, challenges to stability,
security and political order will increasingly have local, regional and global consequences.
Therefore, there will be a growing understanding of the limits to which solely locallyderived
solutions are able to contain, and deal with, these challenges. Governments will
increasingly seek international and cooperative solutions to safeguard national interests.
Typically, those which share common interests will increasingly collaborate to contain the
symptoms of crises, while developing new institutional mechanisms to mitigate, control or
deal with their causes. However, some regimes may take whatever action they believe
necessary to prevail or survive, maintain control or perpetuate a way of life, especially in
the face of catastrophic or abrupt change. Also, the transition from a unipolar to multipolar
world will be uneven, with varying and volatile degrees of competition and collaboration.
Consequently, tensions will continue between the desire to establish collective solutions
and the limitations on the independent operation of national sovereignty required for them
to work.
Governance and Order - Potential Implications
• Transnational pressures, competition and globalization will challenge the
robustness and resilience of governance and social mechanisms at every level.
• New collaborative institutions, philosophies and mechanisms will be required to
cope with complex, inter-connected global and regional problems.
• The exercise of national sovereignty will increasingly be expressed in support of
collective international action, but regimes and polities will continue to act to
protect their citizens and sustain their vital interests and stability.
• Responsibility for international arrangements will lie with the national parties to
them; the emergence of a new supra-national sovereign power is unlikely.
• Gaps and strains in the increasingly complex patchwork of arrangements for
international governance will be open to exploitation and abuse. |
|
Back to top |
|
|
|
|
You cannot post new topics in this forum You cannot reply to topics in this forum You cannot edit your posts in this forum You cannot delete your posts in this forum You cannot vote in polls in this forum
|
Powered by phpBB © 2001, 2005 phpBB Group
|