The Secret Rulers of the World (TV Mini Series 2001– ) Poster

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9/10
Dances With Lizards
blubb0618 March 2008
British journalist-writer Jon Ronson takes a refreshing, entertaining and sometimes shocking view at the world of conspiracy theorists: Does the Bilderberg Group secretly run the world? Are the Powerful Elite sacrificing children at Bohemian Grove? What really happened at Ruby Ridge and the Oklahoma City Bombing? Who are David Icke, Alex Jones and the Anti-Defamation League? I highly recommend to watch his series "Crazy rulers of the world" as a complement, and read some of his essays at www.coldtype.net — he's a much better writer than Michael Moore.

The best of the five parts for me is "The legend of Ruby Ridge", an incident hardly known outside the US that exemplifies all the cultural differences between gun-controlled, "civilized" Europe and the wild, sometimes unfathomable West. In the 1980's, Randy Weaver, a gun-toting, non-conformist, white underdog with Neonazi ties took his family to live in a remote cabin on the hills of Ruby Ridge. According to interviews in the film, federal agents tricked Weaver into selling them illegal sawed-off shotguns, to coerce him to spy on the Nazi group. Weaver refused and was issued a court date, where he failed to appear and let it be known he would not be taken off his mountain alive. What ensued — after a whole year in which the Weavers had time to develop their paranoia — was a full-blown law enforcement assault. A police officer turned activist narrates how US marshals killed the family dog and shot 14-year old Samuel in the back with automatic weapons, after the boy had sprayed them with a shotgun for killing his dog. Weaver's daughter Rachel, then 10 years old, recalls how her mother was shot through the head by snipers while holding the baby. "They were everywhere", she describes the confusion and terror inside the Weaver house. This is contrasted with media snippets where the killing of dog and boy is ridiculed and sneered upon, while protesters rally outside the siege cordon with Nazi groups holding up "Death to ZOG" (Zionist Occupation Government) placards. The Ruby Ridge victims, dead and alive, were turned into martyrs with their very own protest song. Rachel, the only fully innocent and rational human being in front of the camera, had to endure a live performance for the film. I wanted to slap the artist, and Randy Weaver double.

US law enforcement, Randy Weaver, Alex Jones, "Big" Jim Tucker and numerous other protagonists offer a tunnel view into the depths of the American mind, while David Icke is a British creation. I had never heard of him. Like his American ilk, he is targeted by the Anti-Defamation league for alleged "Anti-Semitism" and hailed by extreme-right-wingers for code-talking about the Jewish elite as "lizards", while Icke himself insists he really, really, really means Alien Beings From the Nth Dimension that have somehow infiltrated humanity. Once again, given the reptilian behavior of our leaders, many would agree they must be extremely cold-blooded and/or in dire need of burning an effigy of conscience in Bohemian Grove once every year. Icke is the perfect example how groups all across the spectrum can read their paranoid fears into almost everything. The spooky thing — watch the very worldly "Crazy rulers" series —, is how ideas mutate and spawn new ideas, or may be reinterpreted along the lines of very old ideas. So the ADL, with all the history of Jewish suffering in mind, may have a right to jump at shadows. On the other hand, they fit the description "conspiracy theorists" perfectly.

The true followers of Icke or Jones may be few, but much of what these two say and experience in the movie strikes a true chord. And Jones is sexier than Noam Chomsky — I've watched Jones's documentaries as enjoyable attacks on my wits, until I got to the water fluoridation part. Jones is arguably the most intelligent of the bunch. There is a real conspiracy, and it's been going on since time immemorial and involves all of us, to a degree. Call it human nature. The Germans bore Hitler — whom American right-wingers can only twist into an idol of freedom because the basic concepts of solidarity have been so thoroughly demonized in this one-man's country —, like people bear evil all over the world. It's only when they themselves become outcasts that they speak up. With few, but remarkable exceptions like Chomsky, John Pilger, Ilan Pappé, Ramsey Clark, the Ploughshares groups or any whistle-blower who paid with his career. Ordinary people pay the heaviest price, they are usually denied their share of glory or even recognition.

Jon Ronson deserves credit for braving controversy and going out to investigate the fringes of society, and thereby shed reflected light-beams on the attitudes of the whole.
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Sometimes we are sheep watching wars and intrigue far above us.
velvoofell1 August 2005
This was an excellent documentary programme where faux naif investigative journalist Jon Ronson hung out with various extremists and would-be political activists in an attempt to gain understanding of the world of conspiracy theorists. Everyone from Islamic fundamentalists to Racist American survivalists were covered, with some unique personalities uncovered in between. Alex Jones and David Icke were given a fairly objective treatment, if slightly mocking - Jon Ronson gave Jones the opportunity to film his now infamous Bohemian Grove video and proved he had aspirations to be like his namesake, Indiana. Icke is depicted as a world-weary family man who may or may not have ended up with his highly successful new-age/conspiracy theory writing career and coterie of varying extremists through the simple need to earn a living, his sporting journalism career having crashed so spectacularly when he had a very public, possibly psychotic, breakdown in the early nineties. Ronson uncovers some truths that have been dismissed as conspiracy theorist fodder. He seems to have established beyond doubt that the Bilderberger group is a real one and empowers its members - anyone following the career of Bilderberger Peter Mandelson must wonder at how such a man remained in British politics. Ronson also establishes that America's survivalist lobby have been moved to their dogma by very real, very tragic and unforgivable intrusions of America's police force into their lives. The series is due a DVD release, not least in order to counter the belief that conspiracy theorist polemicists are infallible and beyond criticism. As long as Icke has his lizards and Alex Jones and Omar Bakri their fundamentalist religious views, we need a Ronson to provide us with pinches of salt.
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10/10
An awakening call
morcap6 March 2008
Till is not to late – as it seems to be – the humanity has to rise above its self-destructive nature; born selfish we are blind by our inner desire to achieve power and we forget that this is a illusionary and a temporary feeling that the 'iluminati' ones are marveling a state-of-art life manipulation project. They are by far the best of us in dealing with surviving of the strongest as they keep feeding and engorging the human like with the self-poison beliefs. And the best of all is the nurture of the worst of the action: indifference. Stimulating our craving for an endless comfort – as the Pavlov's dog – our mental laziness is scientifically cultivated and actively sustained throughout all of our existence on this earth. The question is not what is there for us to stand up and fight – is not gonna be easy, of course – but what's left behind after our sparkling and meteoric life path; is about how we are going to survive in time through our descendants, how we are going to protect the minimum that the nature gifted us with. There will always be the same rhetoric to choose from: "They are many but stupid" or "They are stupid but many".

We all shall remember that: "For the evil to triumph, it is only necessary that the good people to do nothing".
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The underworld of conspiracy theories turns out to be true
parasrrpp26 January 2005
Warning: Spoilers
Jon Ronson tries to get into the Bilderberg group and shows that the conspiracy theorists are not as wrong as hey seem to be. You get freaked out as what it appeared to be as a mad theory about world leaders and international financiers meeting secretly and this organisation taking crucial decisions on world policy turns out to be possible. Many strange things happen in the process of trying to sneak into the meeting, which turns out to be impossible. An interesting fact is that many of the members of the group admit they are members, claiming its just a private organisation that does not want to go on papers. I have to admit i was freaked out. Just watch it, its freely distributed over the web and take your own conclusions.
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