United States of Europe and Autism Insurance
Bilderberg meeting 2008 was attended by another Czech politician, Prince Karel Schwarzenberg (full name: Karl Johannes Nepomuk Josef Norbert Friedrich Antonius Wratislaw Mena von Schwarzenberg; they call him Karel for short). The Prince is a title, not a nickname.
There was an interview with Jiri Pehe, a big shot involved with New York University in Prague, Freedom House and such. Pehe attended the Bilderberg conference in 2001. He recalled discussions about the economic rise of China and increasing conflict between western and islamic culture (before 9/11). He confirmed that there are no publications, no notes from these conferences, simply they are not meant for poor white trash like us.
Out of the 140 attendees, 2/3 were money movers, not politicians. Oh, and Obama.
According to the all knowing conspiracy theory, if Ireland does not ratify the Lisbon Treaty, they will do it again so they can get it right this time.
Where is the connection to autism? Is one of these heavy hitters at Bilderberg, or better still, back in the Czech, interested in us?
And the Bilderbergers think *they're* going to take over the world...
Posted by: KamaAina | 15 June 2008 at 08:37 PM
Sorry, I did not get to the Autistic part, got to fix that...
Louisiana approved a bill according which employers have to cover Autism therapy. I have to look up the details but there is only like 9 states who have done it so Louisiana is not as backwardly as in some other areas.
Posted by: Hana | 16 June 2008 at 11:01 AM
Oh yeah chere! That's in the pipeline here, too, but the insurance industry dredged up some obscure regulation that says that the state auditor has to study any such mandate. So parents will have to keep on taking out second mortgages on their homes (I'm not kidding!) for another year at least. (rolls eyes)
Of course, what we really need is an effective intervention that doesn't cost as much as four years of private college tuition. I suspect the answer may lie in acquiring a deeper understanding of what exactly autism is. If someone is blind, they can read Braille. If someone is Deaf, they can use American Sign Language. But for me? I can see, I can hear, but clearly there's something else I can't do (particularly well). We just don't have a name for it yet.
Posted by: KamaAina | 16 June 2008 at 01:29 PM