
Upon reading the
1970 book Between Two Ages, David Rockefeller lured its writer,
Professor Zbigniew Brzezinski, away from Columbia University to become the
Chairman and co-founder of the
Trilateral Commission.
Brzezinski, who later became the mastermind of Jimmy Carter's foreign affairs
and national security blunders, is still looked to as a policy guru by the
liberal media today. Using the same socialist mindset, objectives and premise
as the CFR, the TC sprang from, and was purposely patterned after, Brzezinski's
book in 1973.
Along with Zbigniew Brzezinski and a few others,
including the Brookings Institution, Council on
Foreign Relations and the Ford Foundation, Rockefeller convened initial
meetings and held their first executive committee meeting in Tokyo in October
1973. Members include corporate CEOs, politicians of all major parties,
distinguished academics, university presidents, labor union leaders and
not-for-profits involved in overseas philanthropy.
The Trilateral
Commission was founded to become a type of international CFR. The goal of the
Trilateral Commission is to align the free world with the advanced communist
states to organize a world government. [Eric Barger, "The New
World Order Under Clinton: Establishment Insiders and Political Deceit," The
Christian World Report, May 1993, pg. 7.]
Some people who are or
have been members include:

Presidents George
H.W. Bush, Jimmy Carter, and Bill Clinton- Dick Cheney, William Cohen, Dianne Feinstein, David Gergen, Henry Kissinger
- Federal Reserve Chairmen Alan Greenspan and Paul Volcker
- Caspar Weinberger: Secretary of Defense under Reagan
- Yotaro Kobayashi, (chairman of the Fuji Xerox company),
- John H. Bryan (former CEO of Sara Lee bakeries, affiliated with
the World Economic Forum and part of the Board for Sara Lee, Goldman Sachs,
General Motors, British Petroleum and Bank One).
Due to Goldman Sachs secretive culture and revolving door relationship with the Federal government, Goldman has recently been referred to as Wall Street's secret society, with former Goldman employees currently heading the New York Stock Exchange, the World Bank, the U.S. Treasury Department, the White House staff, and even rival firms such as Merrill Lynch. Its landmark profits during the 2007 Subprime mortgage financial crisis led the New York Times to proclaim that Goldman Sachs is without peer in the world of finance.
James E. Burke (CEA of Johnson & Johnson from 1976
to 1989)
Hank Greenberg (former chairman and CEO of
American International Group (AIG), the world's largest insurance and financial
services corporation)
Lee Raymond (ExxonMobil (Former CEO and Chairman, vice
chairman of the Board of Trustees of the American Enterprise Institute,
director of J.P. Morgan Chase & Co., director and member of the Executive
Committee and Policy Committee of the American Petroleum Institute), and
others.- David Rockefeller: Founder of the Commission; Chairman of the Chase Manhattan Bank board from 1969 to 1981; Chairman of the Council on Foreign Relations from 1970 to 1985, now honorary Chairman; a life member of the Bilderberg Group.
More video about the
New World
Order and
Trilateral Commission
Close Connections to Banking Industry
Actions taken by the
Trilateral Commission generally help the banking industry. Jeremiah Novak,
writing in the July 1977 issue of Atlantic, said that after international oil
prices rose when Nixon set price controls on American domestic oil, many
developing countries were required to borrow from banks to buy oil, many of
them with doubtful repayment abilities. All told, private multinational banks,
particularly Rockefeller's Chase Manhattan, have loaned nearly $52 billion to
developing countries. An overhauled IMF would provide another source of credit
for these nations, and would take the big private banks off the hook.This
proposal is the cornerstone of the Trilateral plan.
Learn more about the Trilateral Commission
Trilateral Commission:
World Shadow Government

