cluas
24-11-2008, 10:25 AM
Hey all,
The newspaper called "information" in Denmark brought this article today, and i translated it from danish, using google-translater :)
So i hope you will be able to understand this :
Secret minutes gone
Neither Anders Fogh Rasmussen or his ministry know what has become of the minutes of the Bilderberg meeting.
http://i283.photobucket.com/albums/kk312/Cluas911/20081123-211614-pic-146011900.jpg
Photo: Jesper Kristensen / Scanpix
Mysticism is spreading on the prime minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen's in the top-secret Bilderberg meeting for a number of the world's most influential men and women.
Despite the fact that the taxpayers paid the bill when Anders Fogh Rasmussen attended the Bilderberg meeting in 2003, he has so far refused to give details about the meeting content.
And now it turns out that the minutes are gone in the Prime Ministery. :eek:
Anders Fogh Rasmussen declares in a brief response to the parliamentary political-economic committee that the Prime Minister on 18 August 2003 received a letter appended to the minutes, there were journalists at the ministry and was given a number and file.
"The record is no longer in the Prime Ministery or Prime Minister possession," writes Anders Fogh without further explanations.
'Very convenient'
The deputy chairman of the "Unity List", Per Clausen, however, requires an explanation:
"In advance, we know that participants in Bilderberg meetings sworn to secrecy, and therefore it is highly appropriate that the record disappears when we begin to ask the prime minister after it. It seems strange to say the least."
Socialists' political-economic spokesman, René Skau BJÖRNSSON, is also surprised that the report may simply disappear.
Facts are few, for example, is also the menu for the dinner party confidential, and the Bilderberg meetings since the beginning of the Hotel de Bilderberg in the Netherlands back in 1954 was surrounded by equal parts of myths and massively secretive. Perhaps because there are no public records.
Anders Fogh Rasmussen has also previously refused to tell the Parliament about what was on the agenda when he himself took part in 2003, on the grounds that "the meeting was of an informal nature and without such materiality" that the prime minister considers that should explain for its content.
-Ritzau
I just find it very wrong, that the taxpayers actually paid for this trip, and the prime minister refuse to answer questions about it :mad:
What do you all think ???
The newspaper called "information" in Denmark brought this article today, and i translated it from danish, using google-translater :)
So i hope you will be able to understand this :
Secret minutes gone
Neither Anders Fogh Rasmussen or his ministry know what has become of the minutes of the Bilderberg meeting.
http://i283.photobucket.com/albums/kk312/Cluas911/20081123-211614-pic-146011900.jpg
Photo: Jesper Kristensen / Scanpix
Mysticism is spreading on the prime minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen's in the top-secret Bilderberg meeting for a number of the world's most influential men and women.
Despite the fact that the taxpayers paid the bill when Anders Fogh Rasmussen attended the Bilderberg meeting in 2003, he has so far refused to give details about the meeting content.
And now it turns out that the minutes are gone in the Prime Ministery. :eek:
Anders Fogh Rasmussen declares in a brief response to the parliamentary political-economic committee that the Prime Minister on 18 August 2003 received a letter appended to the minutes, there were journalists at the ministry and was given a number and file.
"The record is no longer in the Prime Ministery or Prime Minister possession," writes Anders Fogh without further explanations.
'Very convenient'
The deputy chairman of the "Unity List", Per Clausen, however, requires an explanation:
"In advance, we know that participants in Bilderberg meetings sworn to secrecy, and therefore it is highly appropriate that the record disappears when we begin to ask the prime minister after it. It seems strange to say the least."
Socialists' political-economic spokesman, René Skau BJÖRNSSON, is also surprised that the report may simply disappear.
Facts are few, for example, is also the menu for the dinner party confidential, and the Bilderberg meetings since the beginning of the Hotel de Bilderberg in the Netherlands back in 1954 was surrounded by equal parts of myths and massively secretive. Perhaps because there are no public records.
Anders Fogh Rasmussen has also previously refused to tell the Parliament about what was on the agenda when he himself took part in 2003, on the grounds that "the meeting was of an informal nature and without such materiality" that the prime minister considers that should explain for its content.
-Ritzau
I just find it very wrong, that the taxpayers actually paid for this trip, and the prime minister refuse to answer questions about it :mad:
What do you all think ???