They meet in secret. Their membership is by invitation only. Their discussions are never made public. And their attendees include the most powerful people on Earth.
"Conspiracy: The World Elite" is Nick Razer's investigation into the organizations and networks that critics claim constitute a hidden world government—from the Bilderberg Group to the Trilateral Commission, from the Council on Foreign Relations to the World Economic Forum.
Razer approaches the subject with journalistic rigor, separating what's documented from what's alleged, what's plausible from what's paranoid fantasy. Yes, these organizations exist. Yes, their members wield extraordinary power. But do they constitute a unified conspiracy? Or something more mundane—an elite social network where the powerful coordinate their interests?
The book examines the evidence for coordinated global governance, the history of organizations accused of pulling strings behind the scenes, and the psychological appeal of conspiracy theories in an age of genuine elite power concentration.
Whether you believe in the global elite or not, understanding the claims—and the evidence behind them—is essential for navigating contemporary politics.