X

Tea Party: Elect Rick Perry Because He Belongs To World Domination Group

The Tea Party wants you to vote for Rick Perry because he belongs to the rumored world domination organization the Bilderberg Group. Yes, that’s right, members of Tea Party Nation, one of the largest national tea party groups, think that since the Texas Governor attends the annual, invitation-only Bilderberg Group meetings, that means you should vote for him.

“For those unfamiliar, the Bilderberg conference is an annual, unofficial, invitation-only conference of approximately 120 to 140 guests from around the world, most of whom are people of significant influence,” states a blog post at Tea Party Nation. “A great honor to be invited, really, Less than one in 20 million people around the world are invited to share their views, whatever they may be! An additional prerequisite for attendance is trust in the invitee’s honor: that all that is discussed shall be held in total confidence. That all may speak candidly within this tiny, select group.”

“I find Perry’s Bilderberg attendance to be a net positive, because:

“His views and thoughts are held in high regard by these most powerful people. You would prefer one who’s views are held in low regard?
“He is entrusted with important secrets, whatever they may be! You prefer one who cannot be entrusted with secrets, or invades the privacy of others?
“He holds influence that can affect the world at large, inside and outside of this country! Or, do you prefer the Great American Apologist’s approach?”

Right…

Wikipedia adds this about Bilderberg:

Politico journalist Kenneth P. Vogel reports that it is the “exclusive roster of globally influential figures that has captured the interest of an international network of conspiracists,” who for decades have seen the Bilderberg meetings as a “corporate-globalist scheme”, and are convinced powerful elites are moving the planet toward an oligarchic “new world order”. He goes on to state that these conspiracist’s “populist paranoid worldview”, characterized by a suspicion of the ruling class rather than any prevailing partisan or ideological affiliation, is widely articulated on overnight AM radio shows and numerous Internet websites. Proponents of Bilderberg conspiracy theories in the United States include individuals and groups such as the John Birch Society, political activist Phyllis Schlafly, writer Jim Tucker, political activist Lyndon LaRouche, radio host Alex Jones, and politician Jesse Ventura, who made the Bilderberg group a topic of a 2009 episode of his TruTV series Conspiracy Theory with Jesse Ventura.

The logic defies the senses.

Image: Hotel de Bilderberg (2007), name-giving location of the first conference in 1954.)

Related Post