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THE RISE OF THE FOURTH REICH
continued his participation in Bilderberg meetings until his death in 1960. Another CIA-connected person who helped create the Bilderberg Group was Life magazine publisher C. D. Jackson, who served under President Eisenhower as βspecial consultant for psychological warfare.β In fact, the list of American institutions that initially supported the Bilderberg Group reads like a list of prewar financiers of HitlerβFirst National City Bank [now Citibank], Morgan Guaranty Trust Company, Ford Motor Company, Standard Oil, and Du Pont. The common denominator of these societies seems to be the acquisition of money, which translates into power. Spencer Oliver, the ranking Democratic Party leader whose telephone was bugged as part of the Watergate break-in, has stated, βThe biggest weapon in American politics is money, because you can use money to influence people, to influence the media, to influence campaigns, to influence individuals, to bribe people.β As has been seen, the fascist globalists have all the money. They are where the buck stops . . . and begins. In 1991, then Arkansas governor Bill Clinton was honored as a Bilderberg guest, and the next year he ran for and won the presidency of the United States. After his election, Clinton made no mention of the Bilderberg meetings. Hillary Clinton attended a meeting in 1997, becoming the first American first lady to do so. Thereafter, talk steadily grew concerning her future role in politics, and by 2008 she was a leading Democratic presidential candidate. One illustration of globalist control within the Clinton administration can be found in the person of President Clintonβs treasury secretary Robert E. Rubin, a former cochairman of Goldman Sachs, who was named to head Clintonβs National Economic Council. Despite Clintonβs promises to βreform our politics so that power and privilege no longer shout down the voice of the people,β according to Professor Donald Gibson, who lectures on wealth and power at the University of Pittsburgh and is author of Battling Wall Street, Rubin, in his capacity as council director, fought βto protect Chinaβs preferred trading status, to protect employersβ interest in health-care reform, and to pursue a tougher policy in negotiations with Japan.β βAt Goldman Sachs, Rubin had been involved in the kind of high-level paper-shuffling that Bill Clinton has said was undermining the economy,β