15 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
A conspiracy to sell a book, Aug 30 2009
By G. Nelson "GB" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Bilderberg Conspiracy (Paperback)
This is a major disappointment. While the book does set out in fair detail the founding and history of the Bilderbergers, it really never comes to a point. The reader is never brought "inside the world's most powerful secret society". It tells what others think of the group and its powerful members, where the group has met and the various individuals who have attended, it never arrives at a conclusion; it never connects the dots, one way or the other. The book could have done with better editing. Perhaps the book might be of value to someone coming to this topic for the first time, but no one else will benefit from it.
8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Disappointing II, Jan 1 2010
By T. Hegge - Published on Amazon.com
Save your money. I guarantee that you can find more and better stuff for free on Internet. The book is written as if some producer from National Geographic was behind it. "It may be that..." and "Some people think that....". I read the first 70 pages which felt like reading the same three pages over and over again, except for the part that it was very clear on how the group was created and why.
No footnotes, and really just poorly documented makes this a no-read.
7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
H Paul Jeffers Has Zero Credibility, April 17 2010
By BlackJack21 "BlackJack21" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Bilderberg Conspiracy (Paperback)
H. Paul Jeffers' book is nothing but rehashes of Daniel Estulin's "True Story of the Bilderberg Group", Jim Tucker's "The Bilderberg Diary" and Alex Jones' documentary film "The End Game." Plus, Jeffers manages to sneak in tidbits from James Perloff's well-known book " The Shadows of Power the Council on Foreign Relations and the American Decline" simply because he lacks the necessary research material to successfully pull "The Bilderberg Conspiracy" book together.
And unfortunately, H. Paul Jeffers doesn't introduce anything new to the discourse. To put it in layman's terms...there's nothing enlightening to read here folks!
So, if you've already read Estulin, Tucker and watched Jones' film then I implore you to give this book a pass, and even if you didn't, take a pass anyway.
Moreover, the fact that H. Paul Jeffers stated that the Six Day War took place in 1973 is downright comical. Mr. Jeffers should have known that The Six Days War was June 5th 1967. And what makes it even worse is that he makes this foolish statement/BLUNDER not once, but twice. And you can read it for yourself on pages 45 and 52 in Amazon previews.
And to properly end my review I must solemnly address Mr. Jeffers:
I'm sorry, I don't mean to embarrass you (H. Paul Jeffers), but the war you were trying to refer to was The Yom Kippur War of 1973. I think you should try to be cognizant when researching your subjects. Be more thorough in the future. Any mistakes you make causes one to question your credibility. And with that said I don't feel your book is a reliable source, and it's painfully obvious that none of the other Amazon reviewers thought much of the material you presented either.
I'm sorry if my criticism seems harsh, but that's entertainment my friend.
"The Bilderberg Conspiracy" receives a 1 Star rating.
Save your money folks!!!!