Page added on April 23, 2011
In a follow-up to his American Free Press article, veteran newspaper reporter and Bilderberg sleuth Jim Tucker told Alex Jones today that the globalists fully intend to launch a ground invasion of Libya and also jack up the price of gas to $7 per gallon. (See also: Kissinger Calls For US Ground Invasion Of Libya.)
“By the end of the year 2012,” Tucker told Jones, “they (the Bilderbergers and the elite) want us paying $7 a gallon for gasoline… what they want to do is bring the American standard of living down to the standard of the so-called third world… they want the whole world to have the same standard of living.”
In 2007, Jose Barroso, president of the European Commission and a Bilderberg member, called for a “post-industrial revolution” under the guise of eliminating so-called greenhouse gases. The failed 2009 Copenhagen climate summit was an effort to impose a lower standard of living on the United States and much of the Western world.
In order to usher in the a new feudal society and implement authoritarian control over humanity, the global elite must slash the standard of living across the board. They plan to this through the United Nations and Agenda 21 and demands for “sustainable development.”
Maurice Strong, a commissioner of the World Commission on Environment and Development at the United Nations, spelled out the Brave New World the elite have in mind for us when he stated that “current lifestyles and consumption patterns of the affluent middle class involving high meat intake, consumption of large amounts of frozen and convenience foods, use of fossil fuels, appliances, home and work-place air conditioning, and suburban housing are not sustainable. A shift is necessary toward lifestyles less geared to environmentally damaging consumption patterns.”
In 2005, Tucker and fellow Bilderberg sleuth and author Daniel Estulin cited inside sources that indicated oil prices would double within a year.
During the 2006 Bilderberg meeting in Ottawa, Canada, the elite agreed to push for $105 a barrel before the end of 2008.
Crude oil futures peaked at a close of over $77 in July 2006, and in December 2006 at about $63. In September 2007, U.S. crude crossed $80. Less than a year later, on July 11, 2008, oil prices rose to a new record of $147.27. The price settled to around $125 a barrel on July 24, 2008. In March of that year, Goldman Sachs predicted a “super-spike” in crude prices that would push the price over $200 a barrel.
In order to put this into perspective, consider that oil stood at $17 a barrel in January of 1999.
On October 26, 2008, pastor Lindsey Williams, who worked closely with transnational oil corporations in Alaska, was told by his insider sources that the price of oil would fall to around $50 per barrel. On December 21, 2008, oil was trading at $33.87 a barrel, less than one fourth of the peak price reached four months earlier. Paster Williams said the elite would then take the price back up through the stratosphere, a process we are now witnessing firsthand at the gas pump.
Estulin’s insider information has proven accurate in the past. In 2006, the researcher’s Bilderberg sources told him the elite planned to implode the artificially inflated housing bubble, create an economic crash, implement a global centralization of banking power, and use the crash as an excuse to call for world government.
In 2007, during the annual Bilderberg conference, Henry Kissinger told attendees that the elite had resolved to make sure oil prices doubled within 12-24 months, “which is exactly what has happened,” Paul Joseph Watson wrote on September 17, 2007.
4 Comments on "Bilderberg Wants Gas Prices at $7 a Gallon"
James on Sat, 23rd Apr 2011 6:59 am
This really shouldn’t hurt people if they adopt a more lenient lifestyle and become more agrarian. The Elite and Corporations can’t really control local, agrarian societies. They are geared to control high technology and manufacturing. If we become agrarian, we would have control over the seeds, bartering, animals, Etc. Blacksmiths would provide tools and equipment for the local small farms. Just think in terms of living like 1940 and backwards.
green_achers on Sat, 23rd Apr 2011 8:35 am
I wonder what color the sky is on whatever planet those folks inhabit.
DC on Sat, 23rd Apr 2011 10:20 am
Seven dollars for americans? Bring it on! Actually, Ill see your $7.00 a gallon, and raise it. Lets make it $10.00. Americans have gotten a free ride for far too long(literally).
DMyers on Sat, 23rd Apr 2011 11:57 pm
Don’t dismiss this information too readily by tossing it into the can labeled “conspiracy theories.” Consider this in relation to the Jeffrey Brown presentation from the item at the top of the peakoil.com page this morning.
If you stand back a certain distance and look at the two perspectives, they seem to be pointing in the same direction. Two things strike me about Jeffrey Brown, the very high correlations between his model’s predictions and the actual data, and his conclusion that the price of oil will continue rising in a in a steep but linear fashion.
The Infowars article, arguably, says the same thing, except that it attributes the unfolding oil price scheme to a top-down master plan of a lever pulling command structure. Let’s say infowars is overstating the degree of elite control and cohesion but not incorrect about an elite-class interest in oil market fluctuations and knowledge about how these will mold political and economic developments. It could be that certain statements by high level functionaries accurately portend the future, but this accuracy is due to access to good information and predictive methods on a par with those of Jeffrey Brown. The ability to predict oil prices should not be confused with the ability directly to cause the predicted result.
Infowars should modify its position on this, first by accepting the work of Brown and admitting there is a good quantitative and qualitative basis for peak oil (which Alex Jones contests), then by acknowledging that there is a very high level of confidence in predictions made using Brown’s methods.
The gripe with the elite becomes not that they are pulling levers to manipulate oil prices to achieve their master plan, but that they are using the methods and information they have (and we don’t) to know where the situation is going on its own. If not inside information, it is akin to it.
Those with this information can and will use it to gain an unfair advantage over the rest of us. If they are people in high positions, they may use it to justify certain military and political interventions.