Guess who's at super-secret Bilderberg meeting -                            NJ's Senator Corzine

                                                      By Joseph A. Lypowy


   The 50th anniversary conference of the elite Bilderberg group – which many believe conspires semi-annually to foster global government – took place in Stresa, Italy. The conference, which began June 3 was hosted at the Grand Hotel des Iles Borromees. Since 1953, the Bilderberg group has convened government, business, academic and journalistic representatives from the U.S., Canada and Europe with the express purpose of exploring the future of the North Atlantic community. According to sources that have penetrated the high-security meetings in the past, the Bilderberg meetings emphasize a globalist agenda and promote the idea that the notion of national sovereignty is antiquated and regressive.
   One of the guests at this years Bilderberg meeting was New Jersey Senator Jon Corzine. Corzine, a former Goldman-Sachs Executive who spent an unprecedendted 80 million Dollars to get elected. Many crittics have asked "why would a guy want to spend 80 million Dollars to buy a US senatorial seat?" Maybe that question could best be answered by one of Mr. Corzines elite buddies at the Bilderberg group. Maybe some New Jersey voters and constituents should ask the senator what goes on there?
   According to a BBC report on the conference in Stresa: "Not a word of what is said at Bilderberg meetings can be breathed outside. No reporters are invited in and while confidential minutes of meetings are taken, names are not noted. The shadowy aura extends further – the anonymous answerphone message, for example; the fact that conference venues are kept secret. The group, which includes luminaries such as Henry Kissinger and former UK chancellor Kenneth Clarke, does not even have a website." British journalist Jon Ronson, who is the author of a book on Bilderberg, said:"I think they wouldn't go to that much trouble of having this incredibly expensive international conference every year and they'd go to all this trouble to keep themselves out of the press and be really secret and invite the world's most powerful people if it was just a chat and a game of golf, which is basically what they say it is. So I do think they have some impact on world affairs."