The British people have long had it drilled into their
minds that the Prime Minister after Tony Blair will be
Gordon Brown. It has been widely reported by every major
media outlet for years and is well known within government
that the pair had established a "working
assumption" that would enable Mr Brown
to take over the reins. A television
drama was even made about the so called "deal"
made between the two before Blair became Prime Minister.
The deal has now been done.The current chancellor of the Exchequer, Brown
has been the financial brainpower behind the New Labour
agenda since it was kick started by globalist connections
in the early 1990s. He is and always has been personally
determined to be Prime Minister of Britain though, many
believe every decision he has taken as chancellor has
been with his prime ministerial ambition in mind.
As a young politician Brown was a staunch Socialist within
the Scottish Labour party. When John Smith became leader
of the Labour Party shortly before his premature death,
he appointed Brown as Shadow Chancellor. Smith was a member
of the steering committee, the inner core of the Bilderberg
Group. He got Gordon Brown invited to the
1991
Bilderberg meeting where he was effectively
groomed along with Blair as the next big thing in British
politics. Incidentally this was the same meeting at which
Arkansas Governor Bill Clinton was in attendance, he became
President a matter of months later.
Brown has also, as far back as 1998 been listed
in the "Global Leaders group" at the World Economic
forum (otherwise known as the DAVOS group) . He has often
been touted for high ranking IMF positions.
Brown was a traditional Labour figure, the economic
spokesman who doesn't¹t know much about economics.
He took on an advisor - Ed Balls, a Financial Times leader
writer - an ideologist for globalization, in effect -
who learned his economic trade at Harvard. Balls is a
regular Bilderberg attendee, his name can be found on
the attendance lists almost every year since 2001. Brown
soon started going to New England regularly for his summer
holidays and became a true believer in the the neo-liberal
line from Harvard - Globalization, the Washington consensus.
Brown's Bilderberg connections were most recently highlighted
by Norman
Baker, MP for Lewes, who officially requested
that Gordon Brown provide details of Bilderberg meetings
he has attended.
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Brown's takeover from Blair has been in effect for the
last two years. He began concentrating less on his role
as chancellor and more on over all policy a long time
ago. Recent major speeches have seen Brown demonstrating
his "personal commitment" to tough anti-terrorism
laws and methods to reduce crime and make the country
safer.
Brown has called for police to be allowed to hold terrorist
suspects for longer than 28 days, a move that was rejected
by Parliament in 2005. He has also championed
the Big brother state, suggesting that biometric technology
be implemented in banks and supermarkets, and that it
made sense to extend the use of the technology into the
public sector for use in an ID scheme.
Brown even quoted George Orwell, to equate these authoritarian
ideas with the struggle for freedom: "writing in
the thirties, at democracy's darkest hour in Europe, when
the threat was fascism, "the thing that I saw in
your face no power can disinherit, no bomb that ever burst
shatters the crystal spirit".
Brown has continually equated 7/7 with 9/11 as historical
turning points, even though on 7/7 the attack in London
was on a very small scale with only 52 fatalities.
In perhaps the most hypocritical fashion you can imagine,
though continuing the Blair like use of newspeak and spin,
the next Prime minister is also heavily drawing on British
heritage, defence of hard earned freedom and dignified
British military history. Yet he is doing so in order
to tout prison without trial, biometrics, ID cards and
citizen databases.
As Chancellor Brown has introduced
more forms of taxation in Britain than anyone
who has gone before him, often by stealth. Interest rates
have sky rocketed under Brown and continue to rise.
Last month it was revealed that Brown disregarded advice
from the Bank of England before he sold
off more than half the country's gold reservesat the bottom of the market. Since then the price
has almost trebled, meaning the decision cost British
taxpayers an estimated $4.8 billion.
Columnist Brendan
O'Neill sums up the shift from Blair to Brown
and the turn in British politics quite neatly,
"Brown wants to go a step further than Blair
in ratcheting up fear of an overblown terror threat and
reorganising British politics and society around suspicion
and security. In short, he plans to apply the accountant's
instinctive caution to life, liberty and politics in the
twenty-first century, which is likely to make even the
Blair era look like a hotbed of political principle."