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- BILDERBERG SUPER SECURITY CRACKED AGAIN
-
- SPOTLIGHT reporter Jim Tucker describes the difficulties he faced in
- penetrating the heavily guarded Bilderberg meeting. The jobs of the hotel
- staffers mentioned in this story have been changed to protect their identity.
-
- By James P. Tucker Jr.
-
-
- VOULIAGMENI, Greece--Never has security been so extensive and yet had
- so many holes. As a result, I was able to penetrate Bilderberg every night.
- And I received oral reports from the "committee" daily. Sometimes they spoke
- from notes as I made notes, which is why I am able to use so many direct
- quotes.
-
- It was about 7 pm on Monday April 19 by the time I had checked into
- the sister hotel, the Arion Astir Palace. But it was 2 am in Washington
- according to my body clock, so I took a loving look at my bed, then headed
- outside. There was still daylight, and there were no signs of security yet.
-
- I knew that in two days--on Wednesday--armed guards would surround the
- Nafsika Astir Palace, barely 100 yards away. But tonight and tomorrow, I
- would have free run of the place. It was time to "case the joint."
-
- About 30 yards to my right, as I faced the entrance to the Nafsika, I
- observed a playground for children. I judged this to be my most likely
- penetration point so I rehearsed. There was an entrance and I was able to
- walk among the trees until I reached the far side of the Nafsika. By emerging
- at that point, I was obviously a hotel guest enjoying a pleasant walk.
-
- Inside the Nafsika lobby, the first signs of the approaching
- Bilderberg meeting greeted me: an L-shaped table holding computers manned by
- several young women. Noticing that there were no documents to acquire, I
- feigned indifference.
-
- Down about eight steps was a second lobby, lushly furnished with
- chairs. There was not a soul in sight, so I took some photos. It was at this
- location where I was to hear George Ball tell colleagues about approaching
- Ross Perot.
-
- BUSTLING
-
- Down a few more steps, which put me one full floor down, in a lounge,
- I found a solitary hotel employee. I observed an open door across the room
- where more Bilderberg staffers were bustling about.
-
- The employee spoke fluent English, and we talked about the important
- "economic conference" that was to take place. I told him it was a group
- called Bilderberg and something of its history. He was fascinated to learn
- exactly who these people were. I gave him a copy of The SPOTLIGHT, which
- contained a detailed story on the meeting. He read it completely, commenting
- from time to time. I told him to keep the paper.
-
- "I am an American journalist, and I wrote that story, and I'm here to
- find out what these characters are up to," I told him.
-
- "Don't take any chances for me; you will be fired if we are caught
- collaborating," I continued. "Don't answer yet; you must think it over. But
- I hope you will be my eyes and ears and, if safe opportunity arises, grab any
- documents for me."
-
- Heavy silence.
-
- "Meet me for lunch or dinner tomorrow, at some safe place away from
- here, and we can talk more freely," I said. "You will be my guest, of
- course."
-
- He remained silent, expressionless. Was I losing him? Would he be a
- good company man and report my presence?
-
- He wrote something on a piece of paper and handed it to me. It was
- the name and address of a restaurant in downtown Athens. Would I meet him
- there at noon tomorrow? Of course I would.
-
- "Sir, my name is..."
-
- "Don't tell me; I don't want to know. That way, I couldn't give your
- name even if they catch me and put me on the rack. I will call you 'Charlie.'
- If you need to call me at the Arion, just identify yourself as 'Charlie from
- New York.'"
-
- I took out a business card and wrote "Arion, room 410" on it and
- handed it to Charlie.
-
- COMMITTEE FORMED
-
- At noon the next day, we closed the deal. Charlie told me he would
- form a "committee" and report daily. Did I have more SPOTLIGHTs? I gave him
- all but two of the bundle in my briefcase. The other two would be left in the
- hotel lobby when I departed early Sunday, my traditional calling card.
-
- "My boss is all for the staff helping you as long as we are discreet
- and the Bilderberg people never know," Charlie said. "He was glad to get the
- [Bilderberg] contract because it is a lot of money, but he was suspicious of
- their demands for clearing any other guests out of the hotel and sealing it
- off with police. He said he thought it may be the Mafia.
-
- "I told him that you said they never meet at the same place twice, so
- future business is not at risk."
-
- "I'm very glad and grateful to hear that," I said, "But we must be
- careful anyway."
-
- It was agreed to hold daylight meetings at one of three quaint
- restaurants about a mile down the hill from the Arion-Nafsika complex.
-
- To my surprise, he suggested that nighttime meetings be held at a bar
- in the Arion, less than 100 yards from the scene of the crime.
-
- "Isn't that terribly risky?" I asked.
-
- "No, there is no commingling of the two staffs. When I walk into the
- Arion in my business suit, I am another customer. As you know there are two
- other groups meeting at the Arion now, and in the evening we will be just two
- of many sitting around a table talking and taking notes."
-
- Of course, this arrangement was convenient, and the idea of talking to
- sources right under Bilderberg noses amused me.
-
- * * * *
-
- The nightly penetrations were uneventful. I would stroll the beach
- behind the Arion, in shirtsleeves, to a point where I could observe the
- children's playground without being seen by police.
-
- Greek police heavily manned the main entrance to the Nafsika, of
- course, and posted one officer at the outside footpath entrance to the
- playground. But, utterly bored by so many uneventful hours, the cop would
- stroll over to the main gate to chat a bit. As he headed that way, I would
- slip in and begin my circuitous route to the opposite end of the Nafsika.
-
- Of these balmy evenings, even some Billderberg people were in
- shirtsleeves, which nicely accounted for my lack of a name tag.
-
- With external security so heavy, Bilderberg people inside the Nafsika
- relaxed. I deliberately kept at long range from Bilderberg staffers and
- others, such as Henry Kissinger, who might recognize me. (I once went eyeball
- to eyeball with Kissinger about Bilderberg and have confronted him and David
- Rockefeller a number of times.)
-
- Still, as has been their rule in recent years, Bilderberg men would
- never let their documents leave their hands, never carelessly leave a paper on
- a table.
-
- At Thursday's penetration, I nursed a beer at the downstairs bar
- across from the Bilderberg office. The room was empty, except for the
- bartender and one Bilderberg staffer at a deesk just outside their office.
-
- I had earlier noted through the open door that there were no people
- inside the office, and no one had entered in the hour I had been sitting
- there.
-
- I kept the Bilderberg staffer in my peripheral vision so she would not
- feel that she was being observed. She seemed somewhat agitated and made two
- phone calls. Moments later she darted into the ladies' room. Once the door
- was closed behind her, I grabbed the only two papers on her desk, slipped them
- into my briefcase and began my journey to the Arion.
-
- It turned out to be the first page of an alphabetical listing of
- Bilderberg participants and a separate page listing Bilderberg staff.
-
- The participants listing began with Giovanni Agnelli, Fiat's mogul,
- and ended with Kenneth Dam. Such regulars as George Ball, Dwayne Andreas and
- Lord Carrington were listed.
-
- The only name on the "personal staff" listing that meant anything to
- me was "W. Muller." Charles Muller has been Bilderberg's North American
- functionary, operating out of his "Murden Co." office in New York, for at
- least a decade. But "W." Muller?
-
- Nor did I see my friend, "Rog," who made me feel so unwelcome so many
- times at the Harrison Conference Center on Long Island in 1990.
-
- Don't Bilderberg people live forever?
- --
- With Explicit Reservation of all Rights (U.C.C. 1-207),
- -A. J. Teel-, Sui Juris (ae359@Freenet.HSC.Colorado.EDU)
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- From: F_GAUTJW@CCSVAX.SFASU.EDU ("Joe Gaut, Math/Stat Dept., SFASU")
- To: ae359@freenet.HSC.Colorado.EDU
- Date: Fri, 14 May
-
- From THE SPOTLIGHT May 10, 1993
-
- GLOBALISTS BEG: 'LEAVE US ALONE'
-
- The Bilderberg group made a direct plea to our correspondent to
- cease and desist.
-
- By James P. Tucker Jr.
-
- VOULIAGMENI, Greece--"Good evening, Mr. Tucker," said the dark-haired,
- medium-built man of about 40, as he settled himself onto the next stool at a
- bar in the Arion Astir Palace.
-
- "Good evening," I replied. "You apparently know me. May I have the
- privilege of knowing who you are?"
-
- "I'm sorry, I am under instructions to be discreet, but may we talk
- off the record for a few moments?"
-
- "I don't usually talk to people who have no name, and I never talk off
- the record," I responded. "We can talk, but nothing is off the record. Every
- word I say you can tell Henry, David or any of your Bilderberg cronies."
-
- He sat in stony silence on this Friday night, April 23, Day Five of my
- penetrations of the Bilderberg group, which was meeting behind the guarded
- walls of the Nafsika Astir Palace, the brother hotel barely 100 yards away
- from where we were staring each other down.
-
- "I wish we could reach an understanding, some kind of accommodation,"
- the Bilderberg staff man finally said. "Every year, wherever in the world we
- meet, you are there. Why do you press so hard? Why do you write such angry
- stuff? It causes us a great deal of embarrassment, especially those in
- government who hear from your readers."
-
- "First, you tell me," I said. "In the 18 years we at the SPOTLIGHT
- have been covering the Bilderberg group, has there been any time--even
- once--when there were any factual errors? Has the publisher, Liberty Lobby,
- ever said anything about Bilderberg that was in any way untrue?"
-
- "No, I am not saying that at all," the Bilderbergers' envoy said.
- "But you report in an angry way that inflames your readers, and that causes
- problems for our members. And, as you know, it is a private meeting, and they
- very much prefer it to stay that way. Privacy is a right you take away."
-
- The entire dialog was being conducted in a quiet, low-key way, neither
- of us exhibiting anger or hostility.
-
- "There are many answers to your claim of the privilege of privacy," I
- said. "I will give them to you, one at a time, and invite your response.
-
- "First, American taxpayers finance, to a significant extent, these
- Bilderberg meetings."
-
- "No, you are wrong," he said. "Members pay their own costs for
- travel."
-
- "No, you are wrong," I insisted. "The American taxpayers pay the cost
- of congressmen, and the high officials of the White House, State, Defense, and
- Treasury departments gathered here."
-
- "Now, how could you know that?"
-
- DOCUMENTARY EVIDENCE
-
- "I have held in my hand a copy of a memo signed 'DDE'--as in
- 'President Dwight David Eisenhower'--ordering his administrative assistant,
- Gabriel Hauge, to attend the Bilderberg meeting in 1955. On the margin of the
- typed memo, the president had written 'at gov't expense.' When Henry Kissinger
- was secretary of state, I examined a copy of his travel voucher--at government
- expense. I could go on, but you get the idea."
-
- "How could you possibly have come into possession of such papers?" the
- Bilderberg man asked.
-
- "I didn't, personally," I explained. "I am backed in these ventures
- by, of course, The SPOTLIGHT and Liberty Lobby, its publisher. This is no
- one-man crusade; the whole institution is committed to exposing the
- Bilderbergers."
-
- A momentary silence followed.
-
- "So, if everybody in government paid their own costs, would you be
- satisfied?"
-
- "Of course not--I told you there are many reasons, and I have only
- give you one," I said.
-
- "Please continue," he said.
-
- BEHIND CLOSED DOORS
-
- "Bilderberg and the Trilateral Commission--and you need no lessons
- from me on the interlocking leadership involved--conduct public business
- behind closed doors. They make decisions that affect the lives of every
- American and have the power and influence, in most cases, to impose their
- policies on the United States and other nations."
-
- "For example?"
-
- This came with the slightest hint of a challenge in his voice.
-
- "Here's a few examples for you:
-
- "In 1983, The SPOTLIGHT reported the secret pledge the Bilderbergers
- extracted from President Reagan, to provide $50 billion to Third World and
- communist countries. That pledge was more than kept and became known as the
- Brady plan.
-
- "We've reported the Bilderberg decision to throw Margaret Thatcher out
- as prime minister of Britain because she opposed surrendering British
- sovereignty to the European super state, which the Bilderberg group crafted.
- And we watched as her own party dumped Mrs. Thatcher in favor of one of your
- parrots, John Major.
-
- "We reported your secret dealings with [Mikhail] Gorbachev when he was
- head of what was then the Soviet Union, and foretold the weighty political
- shifts that transpired. We reported your order to President [George] Bush to
- increase taxes in 1990 and watched him sign off on the tax-hiking 'budget
- agreement' that lost him the election. There's more, but I think you can
- understand why we insist that Bilderberg business is our business too."
-
- ANNOUNCE YOUR MEETING
-
- "Tell me, Mr. Tucker. If Bilderberg should agree to meet only in a
- way that satisfies you, what would that be?
-
- "First, you would announce your meetings, the time and location, and
- provide the press with a copy of the agenda and a complete list of
- participants.
-
- "Then you would set up a press table where reporters could observe
- your meetings and listen to the proceedings, taking notes and using recorders
- if they desired.
-
- "Finally, instead of sealing off an entire hotel, there would be no
- guards at all. Reporters would interview participants between sessions and
- during the evenings."
-
- The Bilderberg man shook his head, a resigned look on his face. "You
- know we can't do that," he said.
-
- "Then you may as well become accustomed to my annual visits," I
- replied.
-
- "Good night," he said.
-
- "Good night."
- --
- With Explicit Reservation of all Rights (U.C.C. 1-207),
- -A. J. Teel-, Sui Juris (ae359@Freenet.HSC.Colorado.EDU)
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- From: F_GAUTJW@CCSVAX.SFASU.EDU ("Joe Gaut, Math/Stat Dept., SFASU")
- To: ae359@freenet.HSC.Colorado.EDU
- Date: Fri, 14 May
-
- From THE SPOTLIGHT May 10, 1993
-
- BALL TALKS ABOUT PEROT
-
- By James P. Tucker Jr.
-
- "I tried to reason with Perot," George Ball told a group of Bilderberg
- colleagues sitting in a lush lobby a few steps down from the Nafsika Astir's
- main lobby in Greece.
-
- "Of course, I was circumspect," said the under secretary of state for
- presidents John Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson.
-
- "I never used the word 'Bilderberg,' because I didn't want Ross to
- have license to run around the country helping about some 'secret society'
- trying to influence him.
-
- "No, I told Ross that we had a small, informal group of men
- influential in government and business and that we met privately each year so
- we would freely exchange ideas without worrying about tomorrow's headlines,"
- Ball said.
-
- "How did he react, George?"
-
- "Well, I told Ross that I hoped he could join us, because we would
- welcome his views. And do you know what the little bastard said to me?"
-
- Imitating his high-pitched, Texas-twang, Ball quoted Perot: "'You
- boys don't want to hear my views; you want to impose your views on me. If any
- of 'em have anything to tell me, tell 'em to call or write.'
-
- "Perot is a loose cannon, and we'd better leave him alone," Ball said.
- --
- With Explicit Reservation of all Rights (U.C.C. 1-207),
- -A. J. Teel-, Sui Juris (ae359@Freenet.HSC.Colorado.EDU)
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- From: F_GAUTJW@CCSVAX.SFASU.EDU ("Joe Gaut, Math/Stat Dept., SFASU")
- To: ae359@freenet.HSC.Colorado.EDU
- Date: Fri, 14 May
-
- From THE SPOTLIGHT May 10, 1993
-
- NEWS BLACKOUT BY US PRESS
-
- Secret Bilderberg Meeting - Elite Cabal Decides Your Future
-
- The secret meeting of the Bilderberg group, which took place this year
- in Greece, determined many of the headlines and news developments you will
- read about in the coming months. But the Establishment media completely
- blacked it out.
-
- By James P. Tucker, Jr.
-
- VOULIAGMENI, Greece--Behind the guarded walls of the elite Nafsika
- Astir Palace Hotel, situated high on a hill a few miles south of Athens, the
- secret Bilderberg group plotted to exploit the rich natural resources of the
- former Soviet Union and Indochina.
-
- Also high on the Bilderberg agenda is establishment of a new, huge
- United Nations bureaucracy on the environment, so the industrialists can reap
- immense profits from new technology to clean the world's air and water.
-
- They also celebrated the collaboration of one of their own, President
- Bill Clinton.
-
- "It's really a direct message to us through the newspapers," said
- Dwayne Andreas, referring to reports that Clinton promised to sign the Rio
- Treaty, which calls for billions of American tax dollars to be circulated
- around the world in the name of 'clean environment'.
-
- "Yes, and he's doing it early in his first term," said Andreas's
- companion. "George [Bush] wanted to wait until his second term, make a few
- changes to pacify the American right. Bill seems to understand that if
- certain things go undone in a first term, there may be no second term."
-
- It was the first indication that there may have been a Bilderberg
- "tilt" toward Clinton to punish Bush for stalling on the Rio Treaty and
- resisting more new taxes after his broken pledge of 1990 turned into political
- suicide.
-
- LONGTIME MEMBER BUSH
-
- Bush is a longtime member of the Trilateral Commission, which also
- holds annual closed-door meetings and has interlockng leadership with the
- senior Bilderberg group. Clinton had been a Trilateralist for seven years and
- was promoted to the Bilderberg in 1991. Thus, the world shadow government
- owned both presidential candidates in a typical win-win race.
-
- If George [had had] a second term, he [might] have moved on health
- care and new taxes, since he would not have worried about re-election. And he
- certainly would have signed the Rio Treaty, possibly with a little political
- posturing by insisting on nit-picking changes," Andreas said.
-
- "But we would not have fast action, as with Clinton," said the other.
-
- The Rio Treaty calls for establishing a UN commission on the
- environment. Americans will pay most of a multibillion-dollar program to
- clean the air and water, preserve topsoil and prevent erosion in undeloped
- countries. The rationale is that Americans consume and pollute more than the
- rest of the world.
-
- Adding a new UN agency to police the environment among once-sovereign
- nations also advances the Bilderberg goal of turning the UN into a de jure--
- rather than de facto--world government.
-
- FOREIGN COMMANDER IN CHIEF
-
- Thus, Bilderberg also celebrated public acceptance of a permanent UN
- army, in which Americans would fight under a foreign commander who would be
- accountable only to the Security Council, not the president or Congress.
-
- They found it significant that Americans remaining in Somalia are
- serving under a Turkish general under UN command and, contrary to the
- Constitution, the president is not their commander in chief.
-
- There will be "more and more Somalias to help the world become
- accustomed to UN supremacy," said one. "There must be at least five places on
- earth so full of misery that we can break American hearts whenever we choose."
-
- There was much discussion of the fighting in Bosnia, but most
- Europeans urged Americans to shun air strikes and simply enforce the economic
- embargo.
-
- "It would not be like Somalia, with few casualties and pictures of
- soldiers feeding starving children," one said. "Planes will be shot down,
- airmen will die. And if you get into ground action, there will be many
- casualties."
-
- "You can't compare it to the Persian Gulf, either, where the terrain
- made it easy to deploy an overwhelming force, bomb Iraq into rubble, take few
- casualties and proclaim a great victory," said another. "Your people will not
- see this as some sort of sporting contest."
-
- AIR STRIKES IN BOSNIA
-
- Nevertheless, Bilderberg sources said Americans from the State and
- Defense departments joined NATO Secretary-General Manfred Woerner in calling
- for the UN to authorize air strikes.
-
- "There will be much for the UN forces to do in the years ahead, of the
- type that will gain public acceptance for its role anywhere in the world,"
- said another. "UN troops could go into Sudan with food supplies if we made an
- issue of the people starving there and spread films of misery on the network
- news."
-
- Bilderberg men expressed some nervousness about getting all West
- European states to surrender their national sovereignty to a European super
- state under the terms of the Maastricht Treaty but were confident the North
- American Free Trade Agreement would be ratified. This too is important to the
- Bilderberg goal of a world government.
-
- A third "regional government" is to be formed in the Pacific Rim, and
- the UN is to be the seat of the world government.
-
- To exploit the natural resources of the former Soviet Union and in
- Indochina, Bilderberg agreed to establish a "High Council" of 12 members. A
- committee was named to select the 12.
-
- Members must be "of such status that they have instant access to heads
- of state and parliamentary leaders throughout the world," a Bilderberg speaker
- said.
-
- The 12 will pressure Western nations to send more and more billions to
- the former Soviet Union. They will claim credit for this help in talking with
- the leaders of the former Soviet republics.
-
- The 12 will demand of the republics the right, at an absurdly low
- price, to extract oil, gold and other precious metals. "The gold in the
- ground, the oil undrilled, do you no good," the 12 will argue. "Cooperating
- on this will mean that we continue to use our influence to get more financial
- assistance from the West."
-
- It is a typical Bilderberg project: Use public funds--the lion's share
- coming from American taxpayers--to "pay" for the right to extract oil and
- precious metals from the former Soviet Union and reap immense profits.
-
- The only barrier to exploiting the resources in Indochina is America's
- refusal to "normalize" relations with Vietnam until the POW-MIA issue is
- resolved.
-
- The Bilderbergers are considering urging the Vietnamese government to
- take a dramatic step: Admit that some communist troops held some Americans
- after the war ended and shot them all a few months later. Hanoi is to say,
- under this scenario, that the officer who ordered the executions was shot as
- punishment, it was done against the orders from the communist regime, that
- Vietnam apologizes and wants normal relations.
-
- "It may take something dramatic like this," one said. Otherwise, the
- issue may never go away."
-
- The Bilderberg group's concern is oil, not American soldiers being
- held as slaves in filthy prison camps.
-
- With Explicit Reservation of all Rights (U.C.C. 1-207),
- -A. J. Teel-, Sui Juris (ae359@Freenet.HSC.Colorado.EDU)
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- From: F_GAUTJW@CCSVAX.SFASU.EDU ("Joe Gaut, Math/Stat Dept., SFASU")
- To: ae359@freenet.HSC.Colorado.EDU
- Date: Fri, 14 May
-
- From THE SPOTLIGHT May 10, 1993
-
- NEWS BLACKOUT BY US PRESS
-
- Cowardice of Media Obvious
-
- Who's afraid of the Bilderbergers? You decide.
-
- By Lawrence Wilmot
-
- New York City--Mainstream news organizations boastful about their
- no-holds barred investigative exploits, have been strangely reluctant to
- lift the blackout curtain hiding a major event: the Bilderberg group's
- secret annual meeting for the world's most powerful financiers,
- industrialists, and political figures.
-
- At the United Nations where 50 or more journalists gather for even a
- routine conference, there was ironic laughter in the press room when this
- populist newspaper's diplomatic correspondent raised a question about the
- silence surrounding this conspiratorial conclave.
-
- "The Bilderbergers have been removed from our assignment list years
- ago by executive order," said Anthony Holder, a former UN correspondent for
- the [London] Economist, the leading international business weekly.
-
- "Our policy seems to be that if the Bilderbergers want to parley in
- private, leave them alone," added Holder, now a reporter for the 'European'.
-
- The reason why this imperious assembly should be granted the sort of
- secrecy for its deliberations the mass media would never accord to any
- government--not even to Europe's reigning royalty--was, in the consensus of UN
- correspondents, simple: "The Bilderbergers are too powerful and omnipresent to
- be exposed," as French broadcaster Thierry de Segonzac put it.
-
- SIMILAR VIEWS
-
- On Wall Street, experienced American economic analysts voiced similar
- views.
-
- Says Michael Thomas, the patrician Wall Street investment banker who
- has won wide acclaim as an author and as the Reagan-Bush era's most incisive
- commentator: "If the Bilderbergers seem more publicity shy than ever, that is,
- among other reasons, because their proposals, implemented by subservient
- agencies such as the IMF [International Monetary Fund], have caused more mass
- devastation in recent years than World War II ever did."
-
- Commercial news organizations have become more interested in managing
- their own corporate debt and occasionally even sharing a financial coup with
- successful speculators than in exposing the seamy realty of manipulated
- markets, Thomas suggested.
-
- There is, moreover, concern among the megabankers and corporate
- magnates that the worldwide tide of frenzied speculation "may end up eroding
- the power of even such established economic elites as the Bilderbergers
- themselves," Thomas, known among financial columnists as "the last truth
- teller," told a Sun Radio news correspondent.
-
- For the present, however, the extraordinary influence wielded by the
- Bilderberg elite is apparent even in the reluctance of some leading journalists
- to discuss it.
-
- "We are barely aware of the [Bilderbergers'] existence, and we don't
- report on their activities," asserted William Glasgow, the senior writer
- responsible for covering such international organizations at 'Business Week.'
-
- Attempting to explain why his magazine, a leadng US business
- publication, would avert its eyes from such a strategic, trend-setting event
- as the Bilderberg conference, veteran newsman Glasgow sounded embarrassed:
- "Maybe it is a question of cost cutting," he told a SPOTLIGHT interviewer.
- "After all, we can't afford to cover everything, can we?"
-