Sunday, May 11, 2014

Here's the entire list

Subject: Here's the entire list

 

List R-oA2014

The following 728 individuals all actively and knowingly conspire in well-planned efforts and constructions to consolidate power and resources – with the intention to establish a world government which would provide them with full immunity from any form of prosecution regarding their past and future crimes – and are therefore, according to Round-op Alpha, collectively guilty of crimes against the sovereignty of their respective nations and against humanity as a whole, i.e.:

  • High-level brigandage: Looting of public wealth; oppressing of populations; attacking the rights to good health, education, personal/national sovereignty and real security; the murdering in name of corporate profits; democide; psychological warfare; (eco-) terrorism – which deliberately jeopardizes any attempts for world peace and causes regional, cultural tensions, armed conflicts, forced poverty and the decay of the public’s health, the public order and society as a whole.

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UNITED NATIONS
  1. Ki-moon, Ban /SOUTH KOREA/ PDF
  2. Eliasson, Jan /SWEDEN/ PDF
  3. Malcorra, Susana /ARGENTINA/ PDF
  4. Ashe, John W. /ANTIGUA AND BARBUDA/ PDF
  5. Sajdik, Martin /AUSTRIA – USA/ PDF
  6. Tomka, Peter /SLOVAKIA/ PDF
  7. Sepúlveda-Amor, Bernardo /MEXICO/ PDF
  8. Pachauri, Rajendra K. /INDIA/ PDF
  9. Lee, Hoesung /SOUTH KOREA/ PDF
  10. van Ypersele, Jean-Pascal /BELGIUM/ PDF
  11. El Gizouli, Ismail A.R. /SUDAN/ PDF
  12. Bokova, Irina /BULGARIA/ PDF
  13. da Silva, José Graziano /BRAZIL/ PDF
  14. Aliu, Olumuyiwa Benard /NIGERIA/ PDF
  15. Nwanze, Kanayo F. /NIGERIA/ PDF
  16. Sekimizu, Koji /JAPAN/ PDF
  17. Lagarde, Christine /FRANCE/ PDF
  18. Lipton, David /USA/ PDF
  19. Viñals, José /SPAIN/ PDF
  20. Blanchard, Olivier /FRANCE/ PDF
  21. Touré, Hamadoun /MALI/ PDF
  22. Zhao, Houlin /CHINA/ PDF
  23. Yong, Li /CHINA/ PDF
  24. Chan, Margaret /CHINA/ PDF
  25. Halton, Jane /AUSTRALIA/PDF
  26. Grimes, David /CANADA/ PDF
  27. Moura, Antonio Divino /BRAZIL/ PDF
  28. Ostojski, Mieczyslaw S. /POLAND/ PDF
  29. Mokssit, Abdalah /MOROCCO/ PDF
  30. Zerbo, Lassina /BURKINA FASO/ PDF
  31. Dubourg, Thierry /FRANCE/ PDF
  32. Li, Genxin /CHINA/ PDF
  33. Bell, W. Randy /USA/ PDF
  34. Maryssael, Vorian /MEXICO/ PDF
  35. Rozhkov, Oleg /RUSSIA/ PDF
  36. Ozawa, Toshiro /JAPAN/ PDF
  37. Azeez, Aliyar Lebbe Abdul /SRI LANKA/ PDF
  38. Haak, Hein [1, 2] /THE NETHERLANDS/ PDF
  39. Weston, Michael [1, 2] /UK/ PDF
  40. Amano, Yukiya /JAPAN/ PDF
  41. Dunn Lee, Janice /USA/ PDF
  42. Mohamad, Daud /MALAYSIA/ PDF
  43. Aning, Kwaku /GHANA – USA/ PDF
  44. Varjoranta, Tero /FINLAND/ PDF
  45. Bychkov, Alexander /RUSSIA/ PDF
  46. Flory, Denis /FRANCE/ PDF
  47. Horin, Olexandr [1, 2] /UKRAINE/ PDF
  48. Azevêdo, Roberto /BRAZIL/ PDF
  49. Agah, Yonov Frederick [1, 2] /NIGERIA/ PDF
  50. Brauner, Karl [1, 2] /GERMANY/ PDF
  51. Shark, David [1, 2] /USA/ PDF
  52. Xiaozhun, Yi [1, 2] /CHINA/ PDF
  53. Gore, Al /USA/ PDF
  54. Buffett, Warren [2] /USA/ PDF
WORLD BANK GROUP
  1. Kim, Jim Yong [1, 2] /USA – SOUTH KOREA/ PDF
  2. Indrawati, Sri Mulyani /INDONESIA – USA/ PDF
  3. Badré, Bertrand /FRANCE/ PDF
  4. Mohieldin, Mahmoud /EGYPT/ PDF
  5. Basu, Kaushik [1, 2] /INDIA/ PDF
  6. Leroy, Anne-Marie /FRANCE/ PDF
  7. Kyte, Rachel /USA/ PDF
  8. De Villeroche, Hervé /FRANCE/ PDF
  9. Hines, Gwen /UK/ PDF
  10. Hoven, Ingrid G. /GERMANY/ PDF
  11. Aviel, Sara Margalit [1, 2] /USA/ PDF
  12. Suzuki, Hideaki /JAPAN/ PDF
  13. Chen, Shixin /CHINA/ PDF
BILDERBERG
  1. Rothensteiner, Walter /AUSTRIA/ PDF
  2. Treichl, Andreas /AUSTRIA/ PDF
  3. Sigurgestsson, Hörður /ICELAND/ PDF
  4. Lundestad, Geir /NORWAY/ PDF
  5. de Oliveira, Manuel Ferreira /PORTUGAL/ PDF
  6. Salgado, Ricardo /PORTUGAL/ PDF
  7. Silva, Artur Santos /PORTUGAL/ PDF
  8. Mazzie, Mark G. /USA/ PDF
  9. McKinnon, Neil /CANADA/ (status unknown) PDF
  10. Sikora, Sławomir /POLAND/ PDF
  11. Bon, Michel /FRANCE/ PDF
  12. Lévy-Lang, André /FRANCE/ PDF
  13. Schrempp, Jürgen Erich /GERMANY/ PDF
  14. Szwajcowski, Jacek /POLAND/ PDF
  15. Barnevik, Percy Nils /SWEDEN/ PDF
  16. Stråberg, Hans /SWEDEN/ PDF
  17. Uǧur, Agah [2] /TURKEY/ PDF
  18. Browne, Edmund John Philip /UK/ PDF
  19. Gerstner, Louis Vincent /USA/ PDF
  20. Bergsten, C. Fred /FRANCE/ PDF
  21. Pipes, Richard Edgar [2] /USA/ PDF
  22. Black, Conrad Moffat /CANADA/ PDF
  23. Frum, David J. /CANADA/ PDF
  24. Beytout, Nicolas /FRANCE/ PDF
  25. Rossella, Carlo /ITALY/ PDF
  26. Ringier, Michael /SWITZERLAND/ PDF
  27. Kohen, Sami [2] /TURKEY/ PDF
  28. Hutton, William Nicolas /UK/ PDF
  29. Knight, Andrew Stephen Bower /UK/ PDF
  30. Stephanopoulos, George Robert /USA/ PDF
  31. Scheel, Walter /GERMANY/ PDF
  32. Eliot, Theodore L. /USA/ PDF
  33. Yost, Casimir A. /USA/ PDF
  34. Allaire, Paul Arthur /USA/ PDF
  35. Rockefeller, Sharon Percy /USA/ PDF
BILDERBERG [2010, 2011, 2012, 2013]
  1. Davignon, Etienne /BELGIUM/ Vice Chairman, Suez-Tractebel PDF
  2. Achleitner, Paul M. /GERMANY/ Chairman of the Supervisory Board, Deutsche Bank AG PDF
  3. Ackermann, Josef /GERMANY/ Chairman of the Management Board and the Group Executive Committee, Deutsche Bank AG PDF
  4. Agius, Marcus /UK/ Former Chairman, Barclays Bank PLC PDF
  5. Ajami, Fouad /USA/ Senior Fellow, The Hoover Institution, Stanford University PDF
  6. Alexander, Helen /UK/ Chairman, UBM plc PDF
  7. Alexander, Keith B. /USA/ Commander, USCYBERCOM; Director, National Security Agency PDF
  8. Alierta, César /SPAIN/ Chairman and CEO, Telefónica PDF
  9. Almunia, Joaquín /SPAIN/ Commissioner, European Commission PDF
  10. Altman, Roger C. /USA/ Chairman, Evercore Partners Inc. PDF
  11. Amado, Luís /PORTUGAL/ Chairman, Banco Internacional do Funchal (BANIF) PDF
  12. Andresen, Johan H. /NORWAY/ Owner and CEO, FERD PDF
  13. Apunen, Matti /FINLAND/ Director, Finnish Business and Policy Forum EVA PDF
  14. Arrison, Sonia /USA/ Author and policy analyst PDF
  15. Athey, Susan /USA/ Professor of Economics, Stanford Graduate School of Business PDF
  16. Aydıntaşbaş, Aslı /TURKEY/ Columnist, Milliyet Newspaper PDF
  17. Babacan, Ali /TURKEY/ Deputy Prime Minister for Economic and Financial Affairs PDF
  18. Bäckström, Urban /SWEDEN/ Director General, Confederation of Swedish Enterprise PDF
  19. Balls, Edward M. /UK/ Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer PDF
  20. Balsemão, Francisco Pinto /PORTUGAL/ Chairman and CEO, IMPRESA, S.G.P.S.; Former Prime Minister PDF
  21. Barré, Nicolas /FRANCE/ Managing Editor, Les Echos PDF
  22. Barroso, José M. Durão /PORTUGAL/ President, European Commission PDF
  23. Baverez, Nicolas /FRANCE/ Partner, Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher LLP PDF
  24. Bavinchove, Olivier de /FRANCE/ Commander, Eurocorps PDF
  25. Bazire, Nicolas /FRANCE/ Managing Director, Groupe Arnault /LVMH PDF
  26. Béchu, Christophe /FRANCE/ Senator, and Chairman, General Council of Maine-et-Loire PDF
  27. Bell, John /UK/ Regius Professor of Medicine, University of Oxford PDF
  28. Berberoğlu, Enis /TURKEY/ Editor-in-Chief, Hürriyet Newspaper PDF
  29. Bernabè, Franco /ITALY/ CEO, Telecom Italia S.p.A. PDF
  30. Bezos, Jeff /USA/ Founder and CEO, Amazon.com PDF
  31. Bildt, Carl /SWEDEN/ Minister of Foreign Affairs PDF
  32. Björling, Ewa /SWEDEN/ Minister for Trade PDF
  33. Blåfield, Antti /FINLAND/ Senior Editorial Writer, Helsingin Sanomat PDF
  34. Boles, Nick /UK/ Member of Parliament PDF
  35. Bolland, Marc J. /THE NETHERLANDS/ Chief Executive, Marks and Spencer Group plc PDF
  36. Bonnier, Jonas /SWEDEN/ President and CEO, Bonnier AB PDF
  37. Borg, Anders /SWEDEN/ Minister for Finance PDF
  38. Botín, Ana P. /SPAIN/ Executive Chairman, Banesto PDF
  39. Boxmeer, Jean François van /THE NETHERLANDS/ Chairman of the Executive Board and CEO, Heineken N.V. PDF
  40. Brabeck-Letmathe, Peter /SWITZERLAND/ Chairman, Nestlé S.A. PDF
  41. Brandtzæg, Svein Richard /NORWAY/ CEO, Norsk Hydro ASA PDF
  42. Bredow, Vendeline von /UK/ Business Correspondent, The Economist PDF
  43. Bronner, Oscar /AUSTRIA/ Publisher and Editor, Der Standard PDF
  44. Çakir, Ruşen /TURKEY/ Journalist PDF
  45. Cameron, David /UK/ Prime Minister PDF
  46. Campbell, Gordon /CANADA/ Premier of British Columbia PDF
  47. Carlsson, Gunilla /SWEDEN/ Minister for International Development Cooperation PDF
  48. Carney, Mark J. /CANADA/ Governor, Bank of Canada PDF
  49. Carvajal Urquijo, Jaime /SPAIN/ Managing Director, Advent International PDF
  50. Castries, Henri de /FRANCE/ Chairman of the Management Board and CEO, AXA PDF
  51. Cebrián, Juan Luis /SPAIN/ CEO, PRISA PDF
  52. Cernko, Willibald /AUSTRIA/ CEO, UniCredit Bank Austria AG PDF
  53. Chalendar, Pierre André de /FRANCE/ Chairman and CEO, Saint-Gobain PDF
  54. Chavannes, Marc E. /THE NETHERLANDS/ Political Columnist, NRC Handelsblad; Professor of Journalism, University of Groningen PDF
  55. Christiansen, Jeppe /DENMARK/ CEO, Maj Invest PDF
  56. Chubais, Anatoly B. /RUSSIA/ CEO, OJSC RUSNANO PDF
  57. Ciliv, Süreyya /TURKEY/ CEO, Turkcell Iletisim Hizmetleri A.S. PDF
  58. Cisneros, Gustavo A. /SPAIN/ Chairman and CEO, Cisneros Group of Companies PDF
  59. Clark, W. Edmund /CANADA/ President and CEO, TD Bank Financial Group PDF
  60. Clarke, Kenneth /UK/ Member of Parliament, Lord Chancellor and Secretary of Justice PDF
  61. Coene, Luc /BELGIUM/ Governor, National Bank of Belgium PDF
  62. Collins, Timothy C. /USA/ Senior Managing Director and CEO, Ripplewood Holdings, LLC PDF
  63. Conti, Fulvio /ITALY/ CEO and General Manager, Enel SpA PDF
  64. Corydon, Bjarne /DENMARK/ Minister of Finance PDF
  65. Cospedal, María Dolores de /SPAIN/Secretary General, Partido Popular PDF
  66. Cowper-Coles, Sherard /UK/ Business Development Director, International, BAE Systems plc PDF
  67. Cucchiani, Enrico Tommaso /ITALY/ CEO, Intesa Sanpaolo SpA PDF
  68. Daele, Frans van /BELGIUM/ Chief of Staff to the President of the European Council PDF
  69. Daniels, Jr., Mitchell E. /USA/ Governor of Indiana PDF
  70. David, George A. /GREECE/ Chairman, Coca-Cola H.B.C. S.A. PDF
  71. Davis, Ian /UK/ Chairman, Rolls-Royce plc PDF
  72. DeMuth, Christopher /USA/ Distinguished Fellow, Hudson Institute PDF
  73. Dijkgraaf, Robbert H. /THE NETHERLANDS/ Director and Leon Levy Professor, Institute for Advanced Study PDF
  74. Dinçer, Haluk /TURKEY/ President, Retail and Insurance Group, Sabancı Holding A.S. PDF
  75. Donilon, Thomas E. /USA/ National Security Advisor, The White House PDF
  76. Dudley, Robert /UK/ Group Chief Executive, BP plc PDF
  77. Eberstadt, Nicholas N. /USA/ Henry Wendt Chair in Political Economy, American Enterprise Institute PDF
  78. Eide, Espen Barth /NORWAY/ Minister of Foreign Affairs PDF
  79. Ekholm, Börje /SWEDEN/ President and CEO, Investor AB PDF
  80. Eldrup, Anders /DENMARK/ CEO, DONG Energy PDF
  81. Elkann, John /ITALY/ Chairman, Fiat S.p.A. PDF
  82. Enders, Thomas /GERMANY/ CEO, Airbus SAS PDF
  83. Entrecanales, José Manuel /SPAIN/ Chairman, Acciona PDF
  84. Evans, J. Michael /USA/ Vice Chairman, Global Head of Growth Markets, Goldman Sachs & Co. PDF
  85. Faymann, Werner /AUSTRIA/ Federal Chancellor PDF
  86. Federspiel, Ulrik /DENMARK/ Vice President Global Affairs, Haldor Topsøe A/S PDF
  87. Feldstein, Martin S. /USA/ George F. Baker Professor of Economics, Harvard University PDF
  88. Ferguson, Niall /USA/ Laurence A. Tisch Professor of History, Harvard University PDF
  89. Ferreira Alves, Clara /PORTUGAL/ CEO, Claref LDA; writer [1, 2, 3] PDF
  90. Fillon, François /FRANCE/ Former Prime Minister PDF
  91. Fischer, Heinz /AUSTRIA/ Federal President PDF
  92. Fishman, Mark C. /USA/ President, Novartis Institutes for BioMedical Research PDF
  93. Flint, Douglas J. /UK/ Group Chairman, HSBC Holdings plc PDF
  94. Fu, Ying /CHINA/ Vice Minister of Foreign Affairs PDF
  95. Gallagher, Paul /IRELAND/ Attorney General PDF
  96. Gates, William H. /USA/ Co-chair, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and Chairman, Microsoft Corporation PDF
  97. Gephardt, Richard A. /USA/ President and CEO, Gephardt Group PDF
  98. Gfoeller, Michael /USA/ Political Consultant PDF
  99. Giannitsis, Anastasios /GREECE/ Former Minister of Interior; Professor of Development and International Economics, University of Athens PDF
  100. Goolsbee, Austan D. /USA/ Professor of Economics, University of Chicago Booth School of Business PDF
  101. Gordon, Philip H. /USA/ Assistant Secretary of State for European and Eurasian Affairs PDF
  102. Graham, Donald E. /USA/ Chairman and CEO, The Washington Post Company PDF
  103. Groth, Hans /SWITZERLAND/ Senior Director, Healthcare Policy & Market Access, Oncology Business Unit, Pfizer Europe PDF
  104. Gruber, Lilli /ITALY/ Journalist – Anchorwoman, La 7 TV PDF
  105. Gucht, Karel de /BELGIUM/ Commissioner, European Commission PDF
  106. Guindos, Luis de /SPAIN/ Minister of Economy and Competitiveness PDF
  107. Gülek Domac, Tayyibe /TURKEY/ Former Minister of State [1, 2] PDF
  108. Gürel, Z. Damla /TURKEY/ Special Adviser to the President on EU Affairs [1, 2] PDF
  109. Gutzwiller, Felix /SWITZERLAND/ Member of the Swiss Council of States PDF
  110. Halberstadt, Victor /THE NETHERLANDS/ Professor of Economics, Leiden University; Former Honorary Secretary General of Bilderberg Meetings PDF
  111. Hardouvelis, Gikas A. /GREECE/ Chief Economist and Head of Research, Eurobank EFG PDF
  112. Harris, Britt /USA/ CIO, Teacher Retirement System of Texas PDF
  113. Heinonen, Olli /FINLAND/ Senior Fellow, Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs, Harvard Kennedy School of Government PDF
  114. Henry, Simon /UK/ CFO, Royal Dutch Shell plc PDF
  115. Hermelin, Paul /FRANCE/ Chairman and CEO, Capgemini Group PDF
  116. Hoffman, Reid /USA/ Co-founder and Executive Chairman, LinkedIn PDF
  117. Hommen, Jan H.M. /THE NETHERLANDS/ Chairman, ING Group PDF
  118. Hormats, Robert D. /USA/ Under Secretary for Economic, Energy and Agricultural Affairs PDF
  119. Huang, Yiping /CHINA/ Professor of Economics, China Center for Economic Research, Peking University PDF
  120. Hughes, Chris R. /USA/ Co-founder, Facebook PDF
  121. Huntsman, Jr., Jon M. /USA/ Chairman, Huntsman Cancer Foundation PDF
  122. Huyghebaert, Jan /BELGIUM/ Chairman of the Board of Directors, KBC Group PDF
  123. Ischinger, Wolfgang /GERMANY/ Chairman, Munich Security Conference; Global Head Government Relations, Allianz SE PDF
  124. Isla, Pablo /SPAIN/ Chairman and CEO, Inditex Group PDF
  125. Ivanov, Igor S. /RUSSIA/ Associate member, Russian Academy of Science; President, Russian International Affairs Council PDF
  126. Jacobs, Kenneth M. /USA/ Chairman & CEO, Lazard PDF
  127. Janom Steiner, Barbara /SWITZERLAND/ Head of the Department of Justice, Security and Health, Canton Grisons PDF
  128. Johansson, Ole /FINLAND/ Chairman, Confederation of the Finnish Industries EK PDF
  129. Johnson, James A. /USA/ Vice Chairman, Perseus, LLC PDF
  130. Jordan, Thomas J. /SWITZERLAND/ Chairman of the Governing Board, Swiss National Bank PDF
  131. Jordan, Jr., Vernon E. /USA/ Senior Managing Director, Lazard Frères & Co. LLC PDF
  132. Kaplan, Robert D. /USA/ Chief Geopolitical Analyst, Stratfor PDF
  133. Karp, Alexander /USA/ CEO, Palantir Technologies PDF
  134. Karsner, Alexander /USA/ Executive Chairman, Manifest Energy, Inc PDF
  135. Karvar, Anousheh /FRANCE/ Inspector, Inter-ministerial Audit and Evaluation Office for Social, Health, Employment and Labor Policies PDF
  136. Kasparov, Garry /RUSSIA/ Chairman, United Civil Front (of Russia) PDF
  137. Katainen, Jyrki /FINLAND/ Minister of Finance PDF
  138. Keane, John M. /USA/ Senior Partner, SCP Partners PDF
  139. Kerr, John /UK/ Member, House of Lords; Deputy Chairman, Royal Dutch Shell plc. PDF
  140. Kerry, John /USA/ Senator for Massachusetts PDF
  141. Keyman, E. Fuat /TURKEY/ Director, Istanbul Policy Center and Professor of International Relations, Sabanci University PDF
  142. King Philippe of Belgium PDF
  143. Kissinger, Henry A. /USA/ Chairman, Kissinger Associates, Inc. PDF
  144. Kleinfeld, Klaus /USA/ Chairman and CEO, Alcoa PDF
  145. Knot, Klaas H.W. /THE NETHERLANDS/ President, De Nederlandsche Bank PDF
  146. Koç, Mustafa V. /TURKEY/ Chairman, Koç Holding A.Ş. PDF
  147. Koch, Roland /GERMANY/ CEO, Bilfinger Berger SE PDF
  148. Kodmani, Bassma /SYRIA/ Member of the Executive Bureau and Head of Foreign Affairs, Syrian National Council PDF
  149. Kravis, Henry R. /USA/ Founding Partner, Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co. PDF
  150. Kravis, Marie-Josée /USA/ Senior Fellow, Hudson Institute, Inc. PDF
  151. Kroes, Neelie /THE NETHERLANDS/ Commissioner, European Commission PDF
  152. Krupp, Fred /USA/ President, Environmental Defense Fund PDF
  153. Kudelski, André /SWITZERLAND/ Chairman and CEO, Kudelski Group SA PDF
  154. Kyriacopoulos, Ulysses /GREECE/ Chairman, S&B Industrial Minerals S.A. PDF
  155. Lambert, Richard /UK/ Independent Non-Executive Director, Ernst & Young PDF
  156. Lamy, Pascal /FRANCE/ Director General, World Trade Organization PDF
  157. Lander, Eric S. /USA/ President and Director, Broad Institute of Harvard and MIT PDF
  158. Lauk, Kurt J. /GERMANY/ Chairman of the Economic Council to the CDU, Berlin PDF
  159. Lauvergeon, Anne /FRANCE/ Chairman of the Executive Board, AREVA PDF
  160. León Gross, Bernardino /SPAIN/ Secretary General, Office of the Prime Minister PDF
  161. Lessig, Lawrence /USA/ Roy L. Furman Professor of Law and Leadership, Harvard Law School; Director, Edmond J. Safra Center for Ethics, Harvard University PDF
  162. Letta, Enrico /ITALY/ Deputy Leader, Democratic Party (PD) PDF
  163. Leuthard, Doris /SWITZERLAND/ Federal Councillor PDF
  164. Levite, Ariel E. /ISRAEL/ Nonresident Senior Associate, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace PDF
  165. Lévy, Maurice /FRANCE/ Chairman and CEO, Publicis Groupe S.A. PDF
  166. Leysen, Thomas /BELGIUM/ Chairman, Umicore, Chairman of the Board of Directors, KBC Group PDF
  167. Li, Cheng /USA/ Senior Fellow and Director of Research, John L. Thornton China Center, Brookings Institution PDF
  168. Lindner, Christian /GERMANY/ Party Leader, Free Democratic Party (FDP NRW) PDF
  169. Lipsky, John /USA/ Distinguished Visiting Scholar, Johns Hopkins University PDF
  170. Liveris, Andrew N. /USA/ President, Chairman and CEO, The Dow Chemical Company PDF
  171. Löfven, Stefan /SWEDEN/ Party Leader, Social Democratic Party (SAP) PDF
  172. Löscher, Peter /GERMANY/ Chairman of the Board of Management, Siemens AG PDF
  173. Lynn, William J. /USA/ Chairman and CEO, DRS Technologies, Inc. PDF
  174. Magnus, Birger /NORWAY/ Chairman, Storebrand ASA PDF
  175. Mandelson, Peter /UK/ Member, House of Lords; Chairman, Global Counsel PDF
  176. Mansbridge, Peter /CANADA/ Chief Correspondent, Canadian Broadcasting Corporation PDF
  177. Mathews, Jessica T. /USA/ President, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace PDF
  178. McDowell, Michael /IRELAND/ Senior Counsel, Law Library; Former Deputy Prime Minister PDF
  179. Mchangama, Jacob /DENMARK/ Director of Legal Affairs, Center for Political Studies (CEPOS) PDF
  180. McKenna, Frank /CANADA/ Deputy Chair, TD Bank Financial Group PDF
  181. Mehlman, Kenneth B. /USA/ Partner, Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co. PDF
  182. Micklethwait, John /UK/ Editor-in-Chief, The Economist PDF
  183. Montbrial, Thierry de /FRANCE/ President, French Institute for International Relations PDF
  184. Monti, Mario /ITALY/ President, Universita Commerciale Luigi Bocconi PDF
  185. Mordashov, Alexey A. /RUSSIA/ CEO, Severstal PDF
  186. Moreira da Silva, Jorge /PORTUGAL/ First Vice-President, Partido Social Democrata (PSD) PDF
  187. Moyo, Dambisa F. /ZAMBIA/ Economist and Author PDF
  188. Mundie, Craig J. /USA/ Chief Research and Strategy Officer, Microsoft Corporation PDF
  189. Myklebust, Egil /NORWAY/ Former Chairman of the Board of Directors SAS, Norsk Hydro ASA PDF
  190. Nagel, Alberto /ITALY/ CEO, Mediobanca PDF
  191. Naím, Moisés /USA/ Editor-in-Chief, Foreign Policy PDF
  192. Nass, Matthias /GERMANY/ Chief International Correspondent, Die Zeit PDF
  193. Ng, Andrew Y. /USA/ Co-Founder, Coursera PDF
  194. Nin Génova, Juan María /SPAIN/ President and CEO, La Caixa PDF
  195. Nogueira Leite, António /PORTUGAL/ Member of the Board, José de Mello Investimentos, SGPS, SA PDF
  196. Noonan, Michael /IRELAND/ Minister for Finance PDF
  197. Noonan, Peggy /USA/ Author, Columnist, The Wall Street Journal PDF
  198. Nyrup Rasmussen, Poul /DENMARK/ Former Prime Minister PDF
  199. Oldham, John /UK/ National Clinical Lead for Quality and Productivity PDF
  200. Ollila, Jorma /FINLAND/ Chairman, Royal Dutch Shell plc PDF
  201. Omand, David /UK/ Visiting Professor, King’s College London PDF
  202. Orbinski, James /CANADA/ Professor of Medicine and Political Science, University of Toronto PDF
  203. Orszag, Peter R. /USA/ Director, Office of Management and Budget PDF
  204. Osborne, George /UK/ Chancellor of the Exchequer PDF
  205. Ottersen, Ole Petter /NORWAY/ Rector, University of Oslo PDF
  206. Ottolenghi, Emanuele /USA/ Senior Fellow, Foundation for Defense of Democracies PDF
  207. Özel, Soli /TURKEY/ Senior Lecturer, Kadir Has University; Columnist, Habertürk Newspaper PDF
  208. Özilhan, Tuncay /TURKEY/ Chairman, Anadolu Group PDF
  209. Papaconstantinou, George /GREECE/ Minister of Finance PDF
  210. Papahelas, Alexis /GREECE/ Executive Editor, Kathimerini Newspaper PDF
  211. Papalexopoulos, Dimitri /GREECE/ Managing Director, Titan Cement Co. PDF
  212. Parker, Sean /USA/ Managing Partner, Founders Fund PDF
  213. Pavey, Şafak /TURKEY/ Member of Parliament (CHP) PDF
  214. Pechtold, Alexander /THE NETHERLANDS/ Parliamentary Leader, Democrats ’66 (D66) PDF
  215. Pécresse, Valérie /FRANCE/ Member of Parliament (UMP) PDF
  216. Pekin, Şefika /TURKEY/ Founding Partner, Pekin & Bayar Law Firm [1, 2] PDF
  217. Pentikäinen, Mikael /FINLAND/ Publisher and Senior Editor-in-Chief, Helsingin Sanomat PDF
  218. Perle, Richard N. /USA/ Resident Fellow, American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research PDF
  219. Petraeus, David H. /USA/ General, U.S. Army (Retired) PDF
  220. Polanco, Ignacio /SPAIN/ Chairman, Grupo PRISA PDF
  221. Polman, Paul /THE NETHERLANDS/ CEO, Unilever PLC PDF
  222. Portas, Paulo /PORTUGAL/ Minister of State and Foreign Affairs PDF
  223. Prichard, J. Robert S. /CANADA/ President and CEO, Metrolinx PDF
  224. Prince Haakon of Norway PDF
  225. Princess Beatrix of the Netherlands PDF
  226. Queen Sofía of Spain PDF
  227. Rabinovich, Itamar /ISRAEL/ Global Distinguished Professor, New York University PDF
  228. Rachman, Gideon /UK/ Chief Foreign Affairs Commentator, The Financial Times PDF
  229. Ramanantsoa, Bernard /FRANCE/ Dean, HEC Paris Group PDF
  230. Rangel, Paulo /PORTUGAL/ Member, European Parliament PDF
  231. Rattner, Steven /USA/ Chairman, Willett Advisors LLC PDF
  232. Redford, Alison M. /CANADA/ Premier of Alberta PDF
  233. Reding, Viviane /LUXEMBOURG/ Vice President and Commissioner for Justice, Fundamental Rights and Citizenship, European Commission PDF
  234. Reisman, Heather M. /CANADA/ Chair and CEO, Indigo Books & Music Inc. PDF
  235. Reitzle, Wolfgang /GERMANY/ CEO & President, Linde AG PDF
  236. Renström, Lars /SWEDEN/ President and CEO, Alfa Laval PDF
  237. Rey, Hélène /FRANCE/ Professor of Economics, London Business School PDF
  238. Rinnooy Kan, Alexander H.G. /THE NETHERLANDS/ Chairman, Social and Economic Council of the Netherlands (SER) PDF
  239. Robertson, Simon /UK/ Partner, Robertson Robey Associates LLP; Deputy Chairman, HSBC Holdings PDF
  240. Rocca, Gianfelice /ITALY/ Chairman, Techint PDF
  241. Rockefeller, David /USA/ Former Chairman, Chase Manhattan Bank PDF
  242. Rodriguez Inciarte, Matías /SPAIN/ Executive Vice Chairman, Grupo Santander PDF
  243. Rogoff, Kenneth S. /USA/ Professor of Economics, Harvard University PDF
  244. Rompuy, Herman van /BELGIUM/ President, European Council PDF
  245. Rose, Charlie /USA/ Producer, Rose Communications PDF
  246. Rosenthal, Uri /THE NETHERLANDS/ Minister of Foreign Affairs PDF
  247. Ross, Dennis B. /USA/ Counselor, Washington Institute for Near East Policy PDF
  248. Rostowski, Jacek /POLAND/ Minister of Finance PDF
  249. Roy, Olivier /FRANCE/ Professor of Social and Political Theory, European University Institute PDF
  250. Rubin, Robert E. /USA/ Co-Chairman, Council on Foreign Relations; Former Secretary of the Treasury PDF
  251. Rutte, Mark /THE NETHERLANDS/ Prime Minister PDF
  252. Sabanci Dinçer, Suzan /TURKEY/ Chairman, Akbank PDF
  253. Sáenz de Santamaría Antón, Soraya /SPAIN/ Vice President and Minister for the Presidency PDF
  254. Scaroni, Paolo /ITALY/ CEO, Eni S.p.A. PDF
  255. Scheffer, Paul /THE NETHERLANDS/ Professor of European Studies, Tilburg University PDF
  256. Schieder, Andreas /AUSTRIA/ State Secretary of Finance PDF
  257. Schmid, Martin /SWITZERLAND/ President, Government of the Canton Grisons PDF
  258. Schmidt, Eric /USA/ CEO and Chairman of the Board, Google PDF
  259. Scholten, Rudolf /AUSTRIA/ Member of the Board of Executive Directors, Oesterreichische Kontrollbank AG PDF
  260. Scholz, Olaf /GERMANY/ Vice Chairman, SPD PDF
  261. Schütze, Peter /DENMARK/ Member of the Executive Management, Nordea Bank AB PDF
  262. Schweiger, Rolf /SWITZERLAND/ Member of the Swiss Council of States PDF
  263. Seguro, António José /PORTUGAL/ Secretary General, Socialist Party PDF
  264. Senard, Jean-Dominique /FRANCE/ CEO, Michelin Group PDF
  265. Shambaugh, David /USA/ Director, China Policy Program, George Washington University PDF
  266. Sheeran, Josette /USA/ Executive Director, United Nations World Food Programme PDF
  267. Siilasmaa, Risto /FINLAND/ Chairman of the Board of Directors, Nokia Corporation PDF
  268. Skogen Lund, Kristin /NORWAY/ Director General, Confederation of Norwegian Enterprise PDF
  269. Slaughter, Anne-Marie /USA/ Bert G. Kerstetter ’66 University Professor of Politics and International Affairs, Princeton University PDF
  270. Soiron, Rolf /SWITZERLAND/ Chairman of the Board, Holcim Ltd., Lonza Ltd. PDF
  271. Solana Madariaga, Javier /SPAIN/ Former Secretary General, Council of the European Union PDF
  272. Solberg, Erna /NORWAY/ Leader of the Conservative Party PDF
  273. Speyer, Jerry I. /USA/ Chairman and Co-CEO, Tishman Speyer PDF
  274. Steinberg, James B. /USA/ Deputy Secretary of State PDF
  275. Steinbrück, Peer /GERMANY/ Member of the Bundestag; Former Minister of Finance PDF
  276. Stewart, Rory /UK/ Member of Parliament PDF
  277. Stigson, Björn /SWEDEN/ President, World Business Council for Sustainable Development PDF
  278. Summers, Lawrence H. /USA/ Director, National Economic Council PDF
  279. Supino, Pietro /SWITZERLAND/ Chairman and Publisher, Tamedia AG PDF
  280. Sutherland, Peter D. /IRELAND/ Chairman, Goldman Sachs International PDF
  281. Taylor, J. Martin /UK/ Chairman, Syngenta International AG PDF
  282. Teixeira dos Santos, Fernando /PORTUGAL/ Minister of State and Finance PDF
  283. Thiam, Tidjane /UK – IVORY COAST/ Group CEO, Prudential plc PDF
  284. Thiel, Peter A. /USA/ President, Clarium Capital Management, LLC PDF
  285. Thompson, Craig B. /USA/ President and CEO, Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center PDF
  286. Timuray, Serpil /TURKEY/ CEO, Vodafone Turkey PDF
  287. Topsøe, Jakob Haldor /DENMARK/ Partner, AMBROX Capital A/S PDF
  288. Tremonti, Giulio /ITALY/ Minister of Economy and Finance PDF
  289. Trichet, Jean-Claude /FRANCE/ President, European Central Bank PDF
  290. Trittin, Jürgen /GERMANY/ Parliamentary Leader, Alliance 90/The Greens PDF
  291. Tsoukalis, Loukas /GREECE/ President, ELIAMEP PDF
  292. Tumpel-Gugerell, Gertrude /AUSTRIA/ Member of the Executive Board, European Central Bank PDF
  293. Urpilainen, Jutta /FINLAND/ Minister of Finance PDF
  294. Varney, Christine A. /USA/ Assistant Attorney General for Antitrust PDF
  295. Vasella, Daniel L. /SWITZERLAND/ Chairman, Novartis AG PDF
  296. Vaupel, James W. /USA/ Founding Director, Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research PDF
  297. Vimont, Pierre /FRANCE/ Executive Secretary General, European External Action Service PDF
  298. Volcker, Paul A. /USA/ Chairman, Economic Recovery Advisory Board PDF
  299. Voser, Peter /UK – SWITZERLAND/ CEO, Royal Dutch Shell plc PDF
  300. Wahlroos, Björn /FINLAND/ Chairman, Sampo plc PDF
  301. Waldvogel, Francis A. /SWITZERLAND/ Chairman, Novartis Venture Fund PDF
  302. Wall, Brad /CANADA/ Premier of Saskatchewan PDF
  303. Wallenberg, Jacob /SWEDEN/ Chairman, Investor AB PDF
  304. Warsh, Kevin /USA/ Former Governor, Federal Reserve Board PDF
  305. Wellink, Nout /THE NETHERLANDS/ President, De Nederlandsche Bank PDF
  306. West, F.J. Bing /USA/ Author PDF
  307. Weston, Galen G. /CANADA/ Executive Chairman, Loblaw Companies Limited PDF
  308. Williams of Crosby, Shirley /UK/ Member, House of Lords PDF
  309. Winter, Jaap W. /THE NETHERLANDS/ Partner, De Brauw Blackstone Westbroek PDF
  310. Witmer, Jürg /SWITZERLAND/ Chairman, Givaudan SA and Clariant AG PDF
  311. Wolf, Martin H. /UK/ Chief Economics Commentator, The Financial Times PDF
  312. Wolfensohn, James D. /USA/ Chairman, Wolfensohn & Company, LLC PDF
  313. Wooldridge, Adrian D. /UK/ Business Correspondent, The Economist PDF
  314. Wright, Nigel S. /CANADA/ Chief of Staff, Office of the Prime Minister PDF
  315. Yergin, Daniel /USA/ Chairman, IHS Cambridge Energy Research Associates PDF
  316. Zapatero, José Luis Rodríguez /SPAIN/ Prime Minister PDF
  317. Zetsche, Dieter /GERMANY/ Chairman, Daimler AG PDF
  318. Zoellick, Robert B. /USA/ President, The World Bank Group PDF
CFR
  1. Hills, Carla A. /USA/ PDF
  2. Rubenstein, David Mark /USA/ PDF
  3. Haass, Richard Nathan /USA/ PDF
  4. Abizaid, John P. /USA/ PDF
  5. Ackerman, Peter /USA/ PDF
  6. Albright, Madeleine K. /USA/ PDF
  7. Baird, Zoë /USA/ PDF
  8. Blinder, Alan S. /USA/ PDF
  9. Boies, Mary McInnis /USA/ PDF
  10. Bradley, David G. /USA/ PDF
  11. Brokaw, Tom /USA/ PDF
  12. Burns, R. Nicholas /USA/ PDF
  13. Denning, Steven A. /USA/ PDF
  14. Fink, Laurence D. /USA/ PDF
  15. Friedman, Stephen /USA/ PDF
  16. Fudge, Ann M. [2] /USA/ PDF
  17. Gann, Pamela /USA/ PDF
  18. Glocer, Thomas H. /USA/ PDF
  19. Henry, Peter B. /USA/ PDF
  20. Hill, J. Tomilson /USA/ PDF
  21. Hrinak, Donna J. /USA/ PDF
  22. Jackson, Shirley Ann /USA/ PDF
  23. Kent, Muhtar /USA/ PDF
  24. Miscik, Jami /USA/ PDF
  25. Owens, James W. /USA/ PDF
  26. Padrón, Eduardo J. /USA/ PDF
  27. Peterson, Peter G. /USA/ PDF
  28. Porat, Ruth /USA/ PDF
  29. Smith, Frederick W. /USA/ PDF
  30. Warner, Margaret /USA/ PDF
  31. Weber, Vin /USA/ PDF
  32. Whitman, Christine Todd /USA/ PDF
  33. Zakaria, Fareed /USA/ PDF
  34. Olson, Keith [photo unconfirmed!] /USA/ PDF
  35. Lindsay, James M. /USA/ PDF
  36. Faskianos, Irina A. /USA/ PDF
  37. Gelb, Leslie H. /USA/ PDF
  38. Greenberg, Maurice R. /USA/ PDF
  39. Annan, Kofi /GHANA – USA/ PDF
  40. Belo-Osagie, Hakeem /NIGERIA/ PDF
  41. Desmarais Jr., Paul /CANADA/ PDF
  42. Döpfner, Mathias /GERMANY/ PDF
  43. Carbajal, José Antonio Fernández /MEXICO/ PDF
  44. Halonen, Tarja /FINLAND/ PDF
  45. Ibrahim, Mohamed /SUDAN – UK/ PDF
  46. Jameel, Mohammed Abdul Latif /SAUDI ARABIA/ PDF
  47. Kelly, Gail /AUSTRALIA/ PDF
  48. Kojima, Yorihiko /JAPAN/ PDF
  49. Mahindra, Anand /INDIA/ PDF
  50. Mansour, Mohamed /EGYPT/ PDF
  51. de Margerie, Christophe /FRANCE/ PDF
  52. Masiyiwa, Strive /ZIMBABWE/ PDF
  53. Ofer, Idan /ISRAEL/ PDF
  54. Olayan, Lubna /SAUDI ARABIA/ PDF
  55. Potanin, Vladimir /RUSSIA/ PDF
  56. Powell, Charles David /UK/ PDF
  57. Walujo, Patrick /INDONESIA/ PDF
  58. Xin, Zhang /CHINA/ PDF
NATO
  1. Rasmussen, Anders Fogh /DENMARK/ PDF
  2. Vershbow, Alexander /USA/ PDF
  3. Lungescu, Oana /BELGIUM – ROMANIA/ PDF
  4. Høeg-Jensen, Kasper /DENMARK/ PDF
  5. Stamatopoulos, Thrasyvoulos Terry /GREECE/ PDF
  6. Ducaru, Sorin /ROMANIA/ PDF
  7. Auroy, Patrick /FRANCE/ PDF
  8. Brauss, Heinrich /GERMANY/ PDF
  9. Bush, Wayne J. /USA/ PDF
  10. Grabar-Kitarović, Kolinda /CROATIA/ PDF
  11. Evans, Stephen /UK/ PDF
  12. Smith, Stephen F. /USA/ PDF
  13. Hill, Steven /USA/ PDF
  14. Chagnot, Stéphane /FRANCE/ PDF
EU
  1. Ashton, Catherine /UK/ PDF
  2. Kallas, Siim /ESTONIA/ PDF
  3. Tajani, Antonio /ITALY – FRANCE/ PDF
  4. Šefčovič, Maroš /SLOVAKIA/ PDF
  5. Rehn, Olli /FINLAND/ PDF
  6. Potočnik, Janez /SLOVENIA/ PDF
  7. Piebalgs, Andris /LATVIA/ PDF
  8. Barnier, Michel /FRANCE/ PDF
  9. Vassiliou, Androulla /CYPRUS/ PDF
  10. Šemeta, Algirdas /LITHUANIA/ PDF
  11. Geoghegan-Quinn, Máire /IRELAND/ PDF
  12. Lewandowski, Janusz /POLAND/ PDF
  13. Damanaki, Maria /GREECE/ PDF
  14. Georgieva, Kristalina /BULGARIA/ PDF
  15. Oettinger, Günther /GERMANY/ PDF
  16. Hahn, Johannes /AUSTRIA/ PDF
  17. Hedegaard, Connie /DENMARK/ PDF
  18. Füle, Štefan /CZECH REPUBLIC/ PDF
  19. Andor, László /HUNGARY/ PDF
  20. Malmström, Cecilia /BELGIUM – SWEDEN/ PDF
  21. Cioloş, Dacian /ROMANIA/ PDF
  22. Borg, Tonio /MALTA/ PDF
  23. Mimica, Neven /CROATIA/ PDF
  24. Guy Verhofstadt /BELGIUM – ITALY/ PDF
  25. Draghi, Mario /ITALY/ PDF
  26. Constâncio, Vítor Manuel Ribeiro /PORTUGAL/ PDF
  27. Cœuré, Benoît /FRANCE/ PDF
  28. Lautenschläger, Sabine /GERMANY/ PDF
  29. Mersch, Yves /LUXEMBOURG/ PDF
  30. Praet, Peter /BELGIUM/ PDF
  31. O’Mahoney, John [1, 2] /IRELAND/ PDF
  32. Esteban Perez, Francisco /SPAIN/ PDF
  33. Bolkestein, Frederik /THE NETHERLANDS/ PDF
  34. de Hoop Scheffer, Jakob Gijsbert /THE NETHERLANDS/ PDF
OSCE
  1. Krivokapic, Ranko /MONTENEGRO/ PDF
  2. Burkhalter, Didier /SWITZERLAND/ PDF
  3. Voridis, Makis /GREECE/ PDF
  4. Guliyev, Azay /AZERBAIJAN/ PDF
  5. Kauma, Pia /FINLAND/ PDF
  6. Aknazarova, Roza /KYRGYZSTAN/ PDF
  7. Sena, Nilza /PORTUGAL/ PDF
  8. Williams, Roger /UK/ PDF
  9. Santos, Isabel /PORTUGAL/ PDF
  10. Kulkuloglu, Mehmet Sevki /TURKEY/ PDF
  11. Comic, Gordana /SERBIA/ PDF
AIPAC
  1. Kohr, Howard /USA/ PDF
  2. Fishman, Richard /USA/ PDF
  3. Kern, Chrystal [1, 2, 3, 4] /USA/ PDF
ADL
  1. Foxman, Abraham H. /USA/ PDF
  2. Curtiss-Lusher, Barry /USA/ PDF
CFI
  1. Polak, Stuart [1, 2] /UK/ PDF
  2. Tamam, Nathalie [1, 2] /UK/ PDF
  3. Gurd, James [1, 2] /UK/ PDF
  4. Stark, Leetal [1, 2] /UK/ PDF
  5. Akademir, Sedef [1 ,2, 3] /UK/ PDF
  6. Murkes, Tanyah [1, 2, 3] /ISRAEL/ PDF
BICOM
  1. Zabludowicz, Chaim Poju [1, 2] /UK/ PDF
  2. Kehoe, Dermot /UK/ PDF
  3. Fineberg, Tony /UK/ PDF
  4. Pater, Richard /ISRAEL/ PDF
MAGNA BSP
  1. Siboni, Haim /ISRAEL/ PDF
AIJAC
  1. Leibler, Marc /AUSTRALIA/ PDF
  2. Keen, Paul /AUSTRALIA/ PDF
  3. Rubenstein, Colin /AUSTRALIA/ PDF
OSF
  1. Soros, George /USA/ PDF
  2. Stone, Christopher /USA/ PDF
RIT CAPITAL PARTNERS
  1. Rothschild, Nathaniel Charles Jacob [1, 2, 3] /UK/ PDF
GENEL ENERGY
  1. Rothschild, Nathaniel Philip Victor James [1, 2] /SWITZERLAND – UK/ PDF
(FORMER) HEADS OF STATE / GOVERNMENT OFFICIALS
  1. Bush, George H. W. /USA/ PDF
  2. Clinton, William J. /USA/ PDF
  3. Clinton, Hillary Diane Rodham /USA/ PDF
  4. Bush, George W. /USA/ PDF
  5. Obama, Barack H. /USA/ PDF
  6. Peres, Shimon /ISRAEL/ PDF
  7. Netanyahu, Benjamin /ISRAEL/ PDF
  8. Queen Elizabeth Alexandra Mary /UK/ PDF
  9. Prince Charles, Prince of Wales /UK/ PDF
  10. Prince Phillip, Duke of Edinburgh /UK/ PDF
  11. Blair, Tony /UK/ PDF
  12. Di Rupo, Elio /BELGIUM/ PDF
  13. Harper, Stephen /CANADA/ PDF
  14. Queen Margrethe Alexandrine Þórhildur Ingrid /DENMARK/ PDF
  15. Thorning-Schmidt, Helle /DENMARK/ PDF
  16. Sarkozy, Nicolas /FRANCE/ PDF
  17. Hollande, François /FRANCE/ PDF
  18. Valls, Manuel /FRANCE/ PDF
  19. Ayrault, Jean-Marc /FRANCE/ PDF
  20. Napolitano, Giorgio /ITALY/ PDF
  21. Renzi, Matteo /ITALY/ PDF
  22. Berlusconi, Silvio /ITALY/ PDF
  23. King Harald V /NORWAY/ PDF
  24. Stoltenberg, Jens /NORWAY/ PDF
  25. Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani /QATAR/ PDF
  26. Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani /QATAR/ PDF
  27. Juan Carlos Alfonso Víctor María de Borbón y Borbón-Dos Sicilias /SPAIN/ PDF
  28. Rajoy Brey, Mariano /SPAIN/ PDF
  29. Willem-Alexander of the Netherlands PDF
  30. Gusenbauer, Alfred /AUSTRIA/ PDF
  31. Kamov, Nikolai /BULGARIA/ PDF
  32. Harris, Mike /CANADA/ PDF
  33. Lord, Bernard /CANADA/ PDF
  34. Chrétien, Joseph Jacques Jean /CANADA/ PDF
  35. Martin, Paul Edgar Philippe /CANADA/ PDF
  36. Heinäluoma, Eero Olavi /FINLAND/ PDF
  37. Niinistö, Sauli Väinämö /FINLAND/ PDF
  38. Vanhanen, Matti Taneli /FINLAND/ PDF
  39. Westerwelle, Guido /GERMANY/ PDF
  40. Schmidt, Helmut Heinrich Waldemar /GERMANY/ PDF
  41. Merkel, Angela Dorothea /GERMANY/ PDF
  42. Fischer, Joseph Martin Joschka /GERMANY/ PDF
  43. Alogoskoufis, George /GREECE/ PDF
  44. Bakoyannis, Dora /GREECE/ PDF
  45. Diamantopoulou, Anna /GREECE/ PDF
  46. Papakonstantinou, Giorgos /GREECE/ PDF
  47. Stournaras, Yiannis /GREECE/ PDF
  48. Papathanasiou, Yannis /GREECE/ PDF
  49. Bjarnason, Björn /ICELAND/ PDF
  50. Oddsson, Davíð /ICELAND/ PDF
  51. Haarde, Geir Hilmar /ICELAND/ PDF
  52. Sigurðsson, Jón /ICELAND/ PDF
  53. Gleeson, Dermot /IRELAND/ PDF
  54. Noonan, Michael /IRELAND/ PDF
  55. Bonino, Emma /ITALY/ PDF
  56. Tanaka, Nobuo /JAPAN/ PDF
  57. Lubbers, Ruud /THE NETHERLANDS/ PDF
  58. Kok, Wim /THE NETHERLANDS/ PDF
  59. Balkenende, Jan Peter /THE NETHERLANDS/ PDF
  60. Verhagen, Maxime Jacques Marcel /THE NETHERLANDS/ PDF
  61. Jensen, Siv /NORWAY/ PDF
  62. Clemet, Kristin /NORWAY/ PDF
  63. de Pinho, Manuel António Gomes de Almeida /PORTUGAL/ PDF
  64. Sócrates Carvalho Pinto de Sousa, José /PORTUGAL/ PDF
  65. Aguiar-Branco, José Pedro /PORTUGAL/ PDF
  66. de Santana Lopes, Pedro Miguel /PORTUGAL/ PDF
  67. Sarmento, Nuno Morais /PORTUGAL/ PDF
  68. da Costa, António Luís dos Santos /PORTUGAL/ PDF
  69. Rio, Rui Fernando da Silva /PORTUGAL/ PDF
  70. Leite, Maria Manuela Dias Ferreira /PORTUGAL/ PDF
  71. Silva, Augusto Santos /PORTUGAL/ PDF
  72. de Sousa, Marcelo Rebelo /PORTUGAL/ PDF
  73. Guterres, António Manuel de Oliveira /PORTUGAL/ PDF
  74. Rodrigues, Eduardo Luís Barreto Ferro /PORTUGAL/ PDF
  75. de Sampaio, Jorge Fernando Branco /PORTUGAL/ PDF
  76. Amaral, Luís Mira /PORTUGAL/ PDF
  77. Constâncio, Vítor Manuel Ribeiro /PORTUGAL/ PDF
  78. Ferreira, José Medeiros /PORTUGAL/ PDF
  79. do Amaral, Joaquim Ferreira /PORTUGAL/ PDF
  80. Barreto, António Miguel de Morais /PORTUGAL/ PDF
  81. Cravinho, João Cardona Gomes /PORTUGAL/ PDF
  82. Nabo, Francisco Luís Murteira /PORTUGAL/ PDF
  83. Olechowski, Andrzej Marian /POLAND/ PDF
  84. Suchocka, Hanna /POLAND/ PDF
  85. Moratinos Cuyaubé, Miguel Ángel /SPAIN/ PDF
  86. Solbes Mira, Pedro /SPAIN/ PDF
  87. Fälldin, Nils Olof Thorbjörn /SWEDEN/ PDF
  88. Olofsson, Maud Elisabeth /SWEDEN/ PDF
  89. Reinfeldt, John Fredrik /SWEDEN/ PDF
  90. Sahlin, Mona Ingeborg /SWEDEN/ PDF
  91. Blocher, Christoph /SWITZERLAND/ PDF
  92. Ashdown, Paddy /UK/ PDF
  93. Carington, Peter Alexander Rupert /UK/ PDF
  94. Gascoyne-Cecil, Robert Michael James /UK/ PDF
  95. Healey, Denis Winston /UK/ PDF
  96. Monks, John Stephen /UK/ PDF
  97. Owen, David Anthony Llewellyn /UK/ PDF
  98. Rifkind, Malcolm Leslie /UK/ PDF
  99. Hannay, David Hugh Alexander /UK/ PDF
  100. Brown, Gordon /UK/ PDF
  101. Berger, Samuel Richard /USA/ PDF
  102. Geithner, Timothy Franz /USA/ PDF
  103. Hamilton, Lee Herbert /USA/ PDF
  104. Powell, Colin Luther /USA/ PDF
  105. Rice, Condoleezza /USA/ PDF
  106. Shultz, George Pratt /USA/ PDF
  107. Daschle, Thomas Andrew /USA/ PDF
  108. Edwards, Johnny Reid /USA/ PDF
  109. Hagel, Charles Timothy /USA/ PDF
  110. Nunn, Samuel Augustus Jr. /USA/ PDF
  111. Perry, James Richard /USA/ PDF
  112. Sanford, Marshall Clement Jr. /USA/ PDF
  113. Sebelius, Kathleen /USA/ PDF
  114. Arapoglou, Takis /GREECE/ PDF
  115. McDonough, William Joseph /USA/ PDF
  116. Bernanke, Ben Shalom /USA/ PDF
  117. Yousfi, Youcef /ALGERIA/ PDF
  118. Boudou, Amado /ARGENTINA/ PDF
  119. Sargsyan, Serzh /ARMENIA/ PDF
  120. Bishop, Julie /AUSTRALIA/ PDF
  121. Aliyev, Ilham /AZERBAIJAN/ PDF
  122. Temer, Michel /BRAZIL/ PDF
  123. Valenzuela, Heraldo Muñoz /CHILE/ PDF
  124. Jinping, Xi /CHINA/ PDF
  125. Bělobrádek, Pavel /CZECH REPUBLIC/ PDF
  126. Loza, Hamdi Sanad /EGYPT/ PDF
  127. Ondimba, Ali Bongo /GABON/ PDF
  128. Garibashvili, Irakli /GEORGIA/ PDF
  129. Martonyi, János /HUNGARY/ PDF
  130. Khurshid, Salman /INDIA/ PDF
  131. Boediono /INDONESIA/ PDF
  132. Noble, Ronald Kenneth /USA/ PDF
  133. Steinitz, Yuval /ISRAEL/ PDF
  134. Abe, Shinzō /JAPAN/ PDF
  135. ibn al-Hussein, Abdullah II /JORDAN/ PDF
  136. Nazarbayev, Nursultan Äbishuly /KAZAKHSTAN/ PDF
  137. Grybauskaitė, Dalia /LITHUANIA/ PDF
  138. bin Yassin, Muhyiddin /MALAYSIA/ PDF
  139. Gómez-Robledo, Juan Manuel /MEXICO/ PDF
  140. Mezouar, Salaheddine /MOROCCO/ PDF
  141. Key, John Phillip /NEW ZEALAND/ PDF
  142. Jonathan, Goodluck Ebele Azikiwe /NIGERIA/ PDF
  143. Sharif, Mian Muhammad Nawaz /PAKISTAN/ PDF
  144. Sikorski, Radosław Tomasz /POLAND/ PDF
  145. Băsescu, Traian /ROMANIA/ PDF
  146. Lavrov, Sergey Viktorovich /RUSSIA/ PDF
  147. Yamani, Hashim [1, 2] /SAUDI ARABIA/ PDF
  148. Hsien Loong, Lee /SINGAPORE/ PDF
  149. Nkoana-Mashabane, Maite Emily /SOUTH AFRICA/ PDF
  150. Geun-hye, Park /SOUTH KOREA/ PDF
  151. Phuangketkeow, Sihasak /THAILAND/ PDF
  152. Gül, Abdullah /TURKEY/ PDF
  153. Yatsenyuk, Arseniy Petrovych /UKRAINE/ PDF
  154. bin Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan, Mohammed /ABU DHABI – UAE/ PDF
  155. Nguyễn, Tấn Dũng /VIETNAM/ PDF
  156. Erdoğan, Recep Tayyip /TURKEY/ PDF
  157. Putin, Vladimir /RUSSIA/ PDF
  158. Prince William, Duke of Cambridge /UK/ PDF
  159. Medvedev, Dmitry Anatolyevich /RUSSIA/ PDF
CATHOLIC CHURCH
  1. Ratzinger, Joseph Aloisius /VATICAN – ITALY/ PDF
  2. Bergoglio, Jorge Mario /VATICAN – ITALY/ PDF
  3. Tauran, Jean-Louis /VATICAN – ITALY/ PDF
  4. von Freyberg, Ernst [1, 2] /VATICAN – ITALY – GERMANY/ PDF
  5. Castelló, Santos Abril y /VATICAN – ITALY/ PDF
  6. Ricca, Battista Mario Salvatore /VATICAN – ITALY/ PDF
  7. Marranci, Rolando /VATICAN – ITALY/ PDF
RELIGIOUS ZIONIST MOVEMENT
  1. Lior, Dov [1, 2] /ISRAEL/ PDF
  2. Dahan, Eli Ben [1, 2] /ISRAEL/ PDF

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DISNEY'S SATANIC SYMBOLISM/SUBLIMINAL SEXUAL PERVERSION HIDDEN IN PLAIN SIGHT

DISNEY'S SATANIC SYMBOLISM/SUBLIMINAL SEXUAL PERVERSION HIDDEN IN PLAIN SIGHT




DISNEY'S SATANIC SYMBOLISM/SUBLIMINAL SEXUAL PERVERSION HIDDEN IN PLAIN SIGHT

Everything you wanted to know about the Anti-Christ

Subject: Everything you wanted to know about the Anti-Christ


 
Everything you wanted to know about the Anti-Christ (except his name) and where to find it:
He will appear on the scene in the “latter times” of Israel’s history (Dan. 8:23). He will not appear until the Day of the Lord has begun (2 Thess. 2:2). His manifestation is being hindered by the Restrainer (2 Thess. 2:6-7). This appearance will be preceded by a departure (2 Thess. 2:3), which may be interpreted either as a departure from the faith or a departure of the saints to be with the Lord or both (2 Thess. 2:1). He is a Gentile since he arises from “the sea” (Rev. 13:1) a symbolic representation of the Gentile nations. (Rev. 17:15). He arises from the Roman Empire, since he is a ruler of the people who destroyed Jerusalem (Dan. 9:26). He is the head of the last form of gentile world dominion, since he is like a leopard, a bear, and a lion. (Rev. 13:1). (Cross reference Dan. 7:7-8, 20, 24; Rev. 17:9-11) As such he is a political leader. The seven heads and ten horns (Rev. 13:1; 17:12) are federated under his authority. His influence is world-wide, for he rules over all nations (Rev. 13:8). This influence comes through the alliance which he makes with other nations. (Dan. 8:24; Rev. 17:12). He has eliminated three rulers in his rise to power (Dan 7:8, 24). One of the kingdoms over which he has authority has been revived for one of the heads, representing a kingdom or king (Rev. 17:10), has been “healed” (Rev 13:3). His rise comes through his peace program (Dan 8:25). He personally is marked by his intelligence and persuasiveness (Dan 7:8, 20; 8:23) and also by his subtlety and craft (Ezek. 28:6) so that his position over the nations is by their own consent (Rev. 17:13). He rules over the nations in his federation with absolute authority (Dan. 11:36), where he is depicted as doing his own will. This authority is manifested through the change in laws and customs (Dan. 7:25). His chief interest is in might and power (Dan. 11:38). As the mead of the federated empire he makes (confirms) a seven year covenant with Israel (Dan. 9:27), which is broken after three and one-half years (Dan. 9:27). He introduces an idolatrous worship (Dan. 9:27) in which he sets himself up as God (Dan. 11:36-37; 2 Thess. 2:4; Rev. 13:5). He bears the characterization of a blasphemer because of the assumption of deity (Ezek. 28:2; Dan. 7:25; Rev. 13:1, 5-6). This one is energized by Satan (Ezek. 28:: 9-12; Rev. 13:4), receives his authority from him, and is controlled by the pride of the devil (Ezek. 28:2; Dan. 8:25). He is the head of Satan’s lawless system (2 Thess. 2:3) and his claim to power and to deity is proved by signs wrought through satanic power (2 Thess. 2:9-19). He is received as God and as ruler because of the blindness of the people (2 Thess. 2:11). This ruler becomes the great adversary of Israel (Dan. 7:21, 25; 8:24; Rev. 13:7). There will come an alliance against him (Ezek. 28:7; Dan. 11:40, 42) which will contest his authority. In the ensuing conflict he will gain control over Israel and adjacent territory (Dan. 11:42). And will make his headquarters in Jerusalem (Dan. 11:45). This ruler, at the time of his rise to power is elevated through the instrumentality of the harlot, the corrupt religious system, which consequently seeks to dominate him (Rev. 17:3). This system is destroyed by the ruler so that he may rule unhindered (Rev. 17:16-17). He becomes the special adversary of the Prince of Princes (Dan. 8:25), His program (2 Thess. 2:4; Rev. 17:14), and His people (Dan. 7:21, 25; 8:24; Rev. 13:7). While he continues in power for seven years (Dan. 9:27), his “satanic activity” is confined to the last half of the tribulation period (Dan. 7:25; 9:27, 11:26; Rev. 13:5). His rule will be terminated by a direct judgment from God (Ezek. 28:6; Dan. 7:22, 26; 8:25; 9:27; 11:45; Rev. 19:19-20). This judgment will take place as he is engaged in a military campaign in Israel (Ezek. 28:8-9; Rev. 19:19), and he will be cast into the lake of fire (Rev. 19:20; Ezek. 28:10). This judgment will take place at the second advent of Christ (2 Thess. 2:8; Dan 7:22) and will constitute a manifestation of His Messianic authority (Rev. 11:15). The kingdom over which he ruled will pass to the authority of the Messiah and will become the kingdom of the saints (Dan. 7:27).


#1955: Marine Links Serco’s Aggreko Crossed Keys Power to WTC7 Bottom-Up Bombs

Thursday, May 8, 2014

#1955: Marine Links Serco’s Aggreko Crossed Keys Power to WTC7 Bottom-Up Bombs

Plum City – (AbelDanger.net). United States Marine Field McConnell has linked Serco director Maureen Baginski’s apparent use of Aggreko Crossed Keys power generators for the special effects witnessed during a Québec New York 2001 event on 9/11, to the bottom-up demolition of World Trade Center Building #7 with incendiary bombs allegedly triggered from a simulation-tracking war room in the ConEd substation at its base.

McConnell alleges that S­­­erco – fined in U.K. for fraudulently tagging Crossed Keys prisoners – brought Aggreko sabotage teams to New York to supply temporary power to the WTC buildings slated for demolition under cover of une démonstration d'effets spéciaux pendant Québec New York 2001 avec nanotechnologies organisée avec l'Université Columbia.

McConnell notes that while Serco Aggreko Power teams demolished the World Trade Center with effets spéciaux – special effects – for the first live-broadcast mass snuff film in history, airport managers from around the world at a bogus aviation conference, had to watch the attempt to overthrow the government of the United States from their Crossed Keys Hotels in Montreal.

Prequel 1:
#1954: Marine Links Serco’s Crony Bailout Bank to WTC7 Crossed Keys Pass Through Fraud 

Prequel 2:
#1871: Marine Links BBC MI-3 Mycroft to Serco Aggreko Soames, Fukushima Skynet Bomb 

Mr Soames to the rescue

The Biggest Company You've Never Heard Of

Aggreko - What we do

PROOF BBC & CNN Knew WTC 7 Would Collapse https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S-ARvjQOZH4

New: Fox News 5 reports WTC 7 collapse BEFORE it happens http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rHFdcPv3XXI

Résumé d'affaires Aggreko Canada, Inc. est un Compagnie en Quebec, Canada le April 11, 1990. Leur entreprise est enregistrée comme location d'équipement, de matériel et d'outils. La société a été constituée, il y a 24 années. Informations sur l'entreprise Nom de l'entreprise Aggreko Canada, Inc. Numéro d'identification:

1167282376”
CEO Interview | Raul Regalado
with MARGARET REYNOLDS in May 2013
RAUL REGALADO
Raul Regalado & Associates
Interview with Raul Regalado, Principal Consultant, Raul Regalado & Associates Raul, why did you choose to get involved in the airport business?

As a youngster I was always interested in airplanes and used to build airplane models. During Vietnam, I chose to enlist in Aviation Army flight school. I learned to fly helicopters and completed 2 tours in Vietnam. After 5 years of active duty I was searching for what was next and just happened to go see Burt Lancaster in Airport and I realized I wanted to be an airport manager. So I got a degree in Aviation Management. Since then, I have worked at a number of airports and gotten involved in the parking business as well as consulting. In the spring of 2001, I came to Nashville as head of their airport authority. I am still a pilot and the proud owner of a 1962 Comanche 250.

So you came to Nashville six months before 9/11?

Yes. On 9/11/01 I was in Montreal Canada, along with many of my executive staff attending an aviation conference. Airport management from all over the world were there as well. We have never discovered if that was a significant coincidence or part of the plan to hit when airports didn’t have leadership on site [Dead on – SACK Power]. We immediately set up an Ops center in the Montreal airport. We had a CNN feed, the internet and phone lines. Soon after we were able to set up a mini ops center in the hotel. There was a short window of civilian open air space a few days later and the Airport Authority chartered a private jet to bring us home. Partly as a result of getting home faster than many of the others, Nashville was one of first airports to reopen. We also had excellent staff able to move quickly and establish the procedures. But because other airports weren’t open yet it didn’t help a great deal.”

“30-05-2001 | 17h34 Les entreprises technologiques québécoises auront une occasion de se faire valoir à quelques pas de la Silicon Alley cet automne à l'occasion de l'événement «Québec New York 2001», qui durera environ un moos.

Organisé sous la supervision du Bureau des saisons du Québec, Québec New York 2001 sera composé à la fois d'un volet culturel et d'un volet affaires. Il s'agit du deuxième événement du genre organisé par le gouvernement québécois. Le premier, le Printemps du Québec à Paris, a été tenu en 1999 et ne comportait qu'un volet cultural.

Si la programmation du volet culturel est déjà ficelée et déterminée, de grandes parties de celle du volet affaires restent... à faire. C'est que contrairement au premier volet, le Bureau des saisons du Québec n'organise pas directement la plupart des activités du volet affaires, mais fait plutôt confiance à des «têtes de réseaux», nous a expliqué Marie-Pierre Dolbec, responsable des relations institutionnelles de l'événement. Qui plus est, le peu d'informations disponibles sur certains de ces événements n'a toujours pas été approuvé par le ministère de l'Industrie et du Commerce, de sorte qu'elle ne peut être dévoilée, selon ce que nous a révélé une autre relationniste chargée du dossier. 

On sait néanmoins que la programmation actuelle prévoit une exposition de produits (technos ou non), une démonstration des capacités des firmes d'effets spéciaux en cinéma québécoises par le collectif Quebec AnimFX (dont la version française du site n'est pas disponible...), une exposition scientifique et technologique baptisée Quebec Wise et une conférence sur les nanotechnologies organisée en collaboration avec l'Université Columbia [Obama incendiary bombs?]. Un événement sur le capital de risques dans le milieu des hautes technologies sera également tenu durant une journée au Nasdaq. On y vantera notamment les avantages fiscaux liés à l'investissement en capital de risque au Québec, en plus de favoriser la création de liens entre Québécois et New-Yorkais. Réseau Capital est impliqué dans son organisation.

My Virtual Model
, anciennement Public Technologies Multimedia, aura également l'occasion de démontrer les capacités de son mannequin virtuel à l'occasion d'une journée mode.

La liste des entreprises sélectionnées pour participer à ces événements n'est pas disponible, mais on sait néanmoins qu'elle n'est pas complétée.

Tous ces événements, ainsi que plusieurs autres de nature culturelle ou touristique, se tiendront dans le district financier de Manhattan, à quelques pas d'institutions comme le World Trade Center ou la Silicon Alley, réplique new-yorkaise à la Silicon Valley californienne. L'endroit sera fortement décoré et agrémenté de plusieurs oeuvres multimédias, selon les organisateurs. Ceux-ci ont également l'intention d'ouvrir leur site Web aux créateurs québécois afin qu'il puisse être utilisé comme galerie.”

Second Circuit on Consolidated Edison's 9/11 Tort Claims
24 January 2014 at 5:01 PM ETedited by Elizabeth Hand

JURIST Guest Columnist Alexis Campos, Stetson University College of Law Class of 2015, delves into the issues of duty, causation and proximate cause in regards to the September 11th attacks on the World Trade Centers and how this liability case was approached... 

Before the close of 2013, the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit decided that Consolidated Edison and its insurer would be unsuccessful in their claim against 7 World Trade Company, L.P. (7WTCo.) and others for the negligent design, construction, operation and maintenance of building 7 of the World Trade Center complex. This case, as the parties' names might indicate, addressed a series of tort claims — though not the only claims — that stem from the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center.

Consolidated Edison owned a substation at the base of building 7. This substation was responsible for the flow of energy to the various buildings and was ultimately destroyed upon the building's collapse. Although building 7 was not directly struck during the attacks, debris from the other buildings during their direct attacks and subsequent collapses caused building 7 to catch fire on various, nonconsecutive floors. For assorted reasons including, but not limited to, lack of available water with which to fight a fire and the New York Fire Department's belief that the building was properly evacuated, building 7 was designated as a collapse zone and was left to its own devices.” 

Transfer Truss Failure - TTF
by SanderO » Thu May 31, 2012 4:52 pm
One aspect of the building 7 discussion which struck me as odd is the absence of discussion of the structure of the tower from floor 8 to the foundations.

We've seen the typical floor plans and the discussions about the NIST col 79 failure... but for some reason aside from a few FEMA cartoons of the structure of flrs 6&7 showing the transfer trusses and cantilever girders there is a paucity of information about the building below floor 8.

There are some very unusual aspects to building 7 and 9/11.

1. It has no basement and is built over top of and existing Con Ed sub station which receives power from the Motthaven station in the Bronx and steps down the power to 13.8kv feeds to various buildings in the neighborhood including building 7 (4) and the WTC complex, Verizon, the WFC and so forth.

2. Building over the 3 story tall massive transformers did not permit all the columns of the tower built over it to be brought straight down to bed rock. Instead they were supported in some cases by 2 story tall massive transfer trusses and a series of 8 massive cantilever girders which supported the perimeter columns opposite the core on the north side. The transfer trusses and the cantilever girders were on the 6th and 7th floors.

3. The electrical power equipment for B7 switchgear and step down transformers were located on floors 4&5. This sort of equipment is often located in the basements of high rise towers and feeds additional step down transformers location on various floors providing *line* voltage to power office equipment and lighting.

4. After the tower was completed the Mayor lobbied for and got floor 23 for his office of emergency management OEM. The OEM had it's own emergency power which was from a diesel fueled generator. This generator was located on floors 6 or 7 where the building's HVAC machinery was located. Several other companies had back up generators located on these floors.

5. The diesel for the OEM was stored in massive tanks (20,000 gal) located below the loading dock for the building. The main 20,000 gal tanks supplied a 275 gal day tank located adjacent to the generators. There apparently was a system which would pump the fuel up from the main tank to the day tanks when the level or pressure in the day tank dropped. I don't think that the mechanics and specs of this system are available. This would be interesting to know.

6. The main elevator lobby was south of the sub station... flr 3 or 4 (I suppose)... with several freight cars running to the street level.

7. The east penthouse and column 79 (remember that one?) were connected to column 76 which was supported by transfer trusses 1.

8. The 8MG27 cantilever trusses were supported the portion of the north curtain wall which shows the inward bowing during the "descent* stage of the collapse.

9. There were two 8 story truss structures on the east and west perimeters. These apparently provided lateral stiffness to the base of the tower.

10. Con Edison reports open (shorted?) 13.8kv feeders beginning at 8:46am... the moment of the plane strike into tower 1.

11. William Rodriguez reported hearing a massive explosion and a second or so later the sound of the plane strike in tower 1's sub basement. The sub basement contained step down transformers and electrical switch gear, power supplied by the Con Ed sub station and to the 8 tower 1 sub stations located on mech floors 7-9, 42-43, 75-76 and 108-109. 12. Immediately after the plane strike to tower 1 thick black smoke is seen coming from floors 108-109. Was this a transformer explosion/fire?

13. NYC employees Jennings and Hess reported to the OEM when they heard of a plane hitting Tower 1. They arrived apparently before tower 2 was struck or shortly thereafter only to find that the OEM was abandoned. Apparently the elevators were working and they used them to ascend to flr 23 OEM.

14. Apparently upon calling someone in the city they learned of the 2nd plane strike and that it was believed to be part of a terrorist attack. They were told to leave the OEM and Bldg7... but discovered that now there was no elevator service. They took the stairs.

15. Jennings and Hess report that when they reached floor 7 (in the region of TT#1 and MG53) or so there was a massive explosion below them which destroyed the stairs (located within the core) and they barely managed to climb back up to the 8th floor. This apparently was before tower 1 had collapsed.

16. They could not get out and perhaps called for help and were eventually rescued by FDNY at about noon after tower 1 and tower 2 had collapsed.

17. The sprinkler system to Bldg 7 was disabled early in the AM... from an event before tower 1 came down or as a result of tower 1 coming down. There was no effort to fight any fires in the building that day.

18. There are unconfirmed reports of the Bldg 7 being surveyed with a transit during the day by the NYC DOB presumably to determine if the structure was distorted... damaged and in danger of collapse.

19. Con Edison claims to have shut the power going into the the Bldg 7 sub station at 4pm because it was believed that the tower was going to collapse. We don't know how this decisions was taken.

20. The building's owner Larry Silverstein said "pull it" late in the after noon before the collapse.

21. Jane Stanley of the BBC did a stand up with the Bldg 7 in the background announcing it HAD collapsed and it then came down. How was this possible? Was this a prepared text being read because the officials had told her the tower would not last another hour or two? How did they know?

22. There were no videos of the south side of Bldg 7 during the day as a result of the destruction of the WTC campus. There was one news video walk through at street level on the East side.

23. There are unconfirmed reports that virtually all the diesel fuel was recovered from two of the large tanks, but the amount of fuel consumed is indeterminate. No explanation of where it was recovered or how or when it was recovered.

24. The main Con Ed sub station transformers were oil cooled. This oil can burn and produced explosive gas. No reports about the fate of the cooling oil.

25. There was apparently steel recovered from Bldg 7 which shows eutectic burning and loss of material on one structural members web and perhaps flange.

26. NASA imaging shows a very high heat signature below the pile after days after the collapse 27. Bldg 7 had a non structural curtain wall bolted to light steel angles welded to the spandrels.

28. Bldg 7 was a column free open office space design from floors 8-47.

29. Building structural engineer Irwin Cantor stated that diesel fires destroyed the transfer trusses which caused the collapse of the tower.

30. NIST claims the tower's collapse was caused by a failure around column 79 on floor 13.

Questions:

Was the collapse of Bldg 7 triggered by failure of the transfer trusses and the cantilever girders?

Could the Con Ed substation short or explode if a plane shorted out main risers in Tower 1?

Could the Bldg 7 power equipment on flr 4&5 start fires on floors 6&7... Could an explosion in the Con Ed sub station or floors 6&7 crack the floors where the day tanks and the generators where located?

Could the pumps of the main diesel tank supply diesel all day to the generators on 6&7? Could this be controlled remotely? Or would this automatically operate if the main power feed was down? 

Could a breach in the diesel riser pipes from the main tank leak diesel onto flrs 6&7? Could that fuel ignite and burn for hours? Could that fire weaken a truss component and fail it... and then entire truss?

Can diesel fires weaken the structural steel on floors 6&7? Enough to fail it? 

Why don't we see more evidence of black smoke from diesel if it was in fact burning? What was the puff of smoke emanating from nw corner at floor 7 or so just before the descent?

Why did NIST decide that the floors below 8 were of no interest in their investigation?”

McConnell has been directed by Abel Danger Global to offer expert witness services to plaintiffs who decide to sue for damages in re Serco’s apparent use of Aggreko Crossed Keys power generators in the bottom-up demolition of WTC Building #7 on 9/11with incendiary bombs.

Yours sincerely,


Field McConnell, United States Naval Academy, 1971; Forensic Economist; 30 year airline and 22 year military pilot; 23,000 hours of safety; Tel: 715 307 8222

David Hawkins Tel: 604 542-0891 Forensic Economist; former leader of oil-well blow-out teams; now sponsors Grand Juries in CSI Crime and Safety Investigation 

http://www.abeldanger.net/2014/05/1955-marine-links-sercos-aggreko.html#more

URGENT ISSUE: This is Important for All

Since I began publishing on the Web, this is the most important article I've written. 

If you like videos, there are three excellent ones.

If you pray, this is a prayer alert.

If you think, here's some serious food for thought.

If you're an activist, please read and forward freely.

Thanks, Christopher

Net Neutrality for Global Justice
  www.heartcom.org/NetNeutrality.htm

  All geopolitical issues facing global humanity
  follow from this core issue of Net neutrality.

Google, Facebook and Amazon Write to FCC
Demanding True Net Neutrality

Guardian UK ~ May 8, 2014
Excerpt: "More than 100 technology companies including
           Google, Facebook, Twitter and Amazon have
written to US regulators to warn that
 proposed net neutrality rules pose a
‘grave threat to the Internet."
- READ MORE

Global freedom and justice for
Mother Earth and all thereon
is at stake... no kidding!

ARTICLE CONTINUES WITH 3 VIDEOS AT:
www.heartcom.org/NetNeutrality.htm

Yep….’Stupid is as Stupid does’!

Sharing w/ALL bcc herein Jimmy w/permission to forward,


  Yep….’Stupid is as Stupid does’!

  Al “let’s sell the station to Al Jazeera” Gore, but NOT before I make more money on another ‘Green-Fraud’ enterprise, said the same thing a couple of years back regarding the
Stars & Bars & The Battle Flag as being the ‘Same thing’.

  Strange how these STOOGES can have such ‘contempt’ for something THEY DON’T EVEN KNOW THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN?

  But that’s how things are here in the Land of the Usurped & the Home of the Un-Educated, once called the Free & the Brave who many DIED for….so that the FOLKS would know the DIFFERENCE between Bull-Shit & Pound-Cake so FREEDOM would NEVER become compromised as a result.

  California carries on in the Lincoln Tradition and 150 years has taken its TO$$. (TOLL)

  Now it has NOT only been ELIMINATED from their Revised History Books but, they now begin the BANNING in the Land of the Usurped and the Home of the UnEducated once known as America.
  Does this NOT all sound and look eerily familiar to what occurred in Germany during the 1930’s?

  Yes my Confederate Brother, WE, like OUR ancestors before us, WERE TOLD WHAT THE CONSEQUENCES WOULD BE SHOULD WE LOSE.

  General Thomas ‘Stonewall’ Jackson said he cared NOT to live should we lose because his Greatness and Military Victory’s resulted from his astute knowledge of the Bible…
He KNEW BACK THEN what would come from such a loss because the Bible wrote of those consequences.

  And today, We within The Confederate Society of America, having predicted & echoing the SAME that was told us with the same stealth accuracy since 1992 when we formed… like our Ancestors before us, have been ridiculed & laughed at by the COLLECTIVE Those People have created & spawned as was predicted.

  ‘Some’ are only NOW, after 150 years, just catching up to us and realizing the Plague is as Real as it is SERIOUS!

SEPARATION IS THE ONLY SOLUTION!
‘Played like a Fiddle and the Marxists in Washington remain the Riddle’

What comes NEXT- Occupancy in those FEMA Camps they claim do NOT exist that DO EXIST?
Craig Maus,
President, The Confederate Society of America

Hey California, just so you get this ‘ONE RIGHT’- this is our National Flag, but you get to guess which one it is-
(PS- Maybe YOUR Assembly can Figure Out how to Fix the Inordinate Debt they’ve accumulated at YOUR EXPENSE before they start ‘pointing fingers’ at others as has become the custom to defer attention from their Socialist Failures.
        They take their ‘cue’ from Their Masters in Washington!
______________________________________________

From: Jimmy Ward [mailto:grayguns@earthlink.net]
Sent: Saturday, May 10, 2014 6:18 PM
To: Shadow Patriots
Subject: California Assembly Moves To Ban Sale Or Display Of Confederate Flag

Well folks,

It looks like the granola State (the land of fruits and nuts) has finally figured out the poison causing all its woes. All this time I thought it was their liberal / Marxist policies.  

What I find amusing is that the amended bill reads, in part, "The State of California may not sell or display the Battle Flag of the Confederacy, also referred to as the Stars and Bars..." Many of you know that the Battle Flag and the Stars and Bars are two distinctly different flags. For those unaware, the Battle Flag was the Confederate soldiers flag used in the field for identification, also known as the "starry cross" as taken from the Scottish flag. The Stars and Bars was the National Flag of the Confederacy, closely resembling the US flag.

But who cares about that silly little detail? After all, California is the land of Hollywood, a place where so many, unfortunately, learn their history by way of the movie screen. For example, Tom Hanks as "Forrest Gump" states in that movie he got his name from Gen. Nathan Bedford Forrest, who started the Ku Klux Klan. Though purely mythical, most people believe it and perpetuate that myth because they are conditioned to accept nonsense from inconsequential sources.   

In the spirit of "Gump", I believe a famous quote from the movie is appropriate regarding this flag ban: "Stupid is as stupid does."

JW


Lost in the Fifties- Another Time, Another Place



OK all you oldies (60+), remember these
And all you younguns, sorry!
You really missed it!  What a era! 

Lost in the Fifties- Another Time, Another Place

Saturday, May 10, 2014

MarkZ

MarkZ] I will not make it in to chat with you all tonight. I just wanted to stop in and tell you that all the news today is excellent. 

Things actually do appear to be headed over the rainbow to the little guy and his pot o' gold.

I believe SQ is going to close the chat room tomorrow to honor all the wonderful mother's we have in here. I was blessed with a wonderful mother and would like to wish all the mother's in dinar/VND land the absolute best for Mother's Day, 

God bless everyone of you for everything you do.

[highhopes] MarkZ Could this be our week finally!!

[MarkZ] highhopes I fully expect it to be.

[MarkZ] I will miss you all tonight, see you soon. Any great updates tomorrow I will post to my FB or tweet to you all.

Enjoy the day tomorrow.

Tonight on History2 (H2) channel: "The Billionaire Agenda"

The Rumor Mill News Reading Room 

Tonight on History2 (H2) channel: "The Billionaire Agenda"
Posted By: hobie [Send E-Mail]
Date: Saturday, 10-May-2014 20:26:59

Hi, Folks -
Found here:
http://www.history.com/shows/americas-book-of-secrets/episodes
=====
The Billionaire Agenda
Premiere Date:May 10, 2014 - 10:00-11:00PM ET
This episode reveals the underground world of America's wealthiest citizens and the depths at which their power and influence take root. Do billionaires think they know better than the majority? Are the American masses just objects to control? Forbes Editor Luisa Kroll talks about the growing wealth of the super-rich and the exclusive billionaire communities that are forming around them. Former United States Secretary of Labor Robert Reich divulges how billionaires' "dark money" influences American politics in ways that are off-limits to public scrutiny. And Author Mark Dice discusses the Bilderberg Group, the world's most secretive society of billionaires and the extreme measures they take to ensure that what happens behind closed doors stays behind closed doors.
TVPG
Upcoming Airings: May 11, 2014 - 02:00-03:00AM ET