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Alex Jones Believes Bilderberg Attendees Ship in Gold-Covered Roasted Babies to Eat
Image source: Reuters

Alex Jones Believes Bilderberg Attendees Ship in Gold-Covered Roasted Babies to Eat

"I'm not joking about that."

Last month, police in Thailand arrested a British citizen after six roasted fetal corpses were found in his luggage. The bodies were believed to be between two and seven months old, according to the Guardian. Some were plated in gold leaf, apparently for use in black magic rituals.

Outside the annual Bilderberg meeting in Virginia on Thursday, Alex Jones of Infowars accused attendees of possessing the same thing -- to eat.

Video posted online captured Jones shouting into a bullhorn outside the meeting place, claiming Bilderberg members "ship in roasted babies wrapped in gold foil for them to eat" -- and making it clear he wasn't kidding.

"Every week they catch them shipping little babies wrapped in gold foil for these guys to eat. They admit that's where it goes to, I'm not making this up," Jones said.

Watch below, transcript follows. (Content warning -- contains strong language.)

 

"Alright this is just a person going to pick somebody up, they're probably bringing him some child to rape or something in the trunk -- no I'm not kidding, these people are sick.

"Every week they catch them shipping little babies wrapped in gold foil for these guys to eat. They admit that's where it goes to, I'm not making this up.

"You think I'm talking about babies wrapped in gold foil for them to eat -- I'm not, I'm not joking about that.

"This officer's laughing at me -- $10,000 they try to ship in roasted babies wrapped in gold foil for them to eat, $10,000 right now. You will lose, you will lose the bet!"

The private, three-day meeting is taking place in Chantilly, Va., 25 miles outside the nation's capital. It has brought together protesters and conspiracy theorists convinced the secretive group runs the world. Officially, Bilderberg is a forum for a "broad cross-section of leading citizens" to discuss "topics of current concern especially in the fields of foreign affairs and the international economy."

The meeting concludes June 3.

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