Observer, London - reprint
Tuesday, August 23, 2005
by Greg Palast        www.GregPalast.com.

Palast was nominated "Business Journalist of the Year
by Britain's Press Association for his investigation
of Robertson.

It's time someone told you the truth. There is an
Invisible Cord that can be traced from the European
bankers who ordered the assassination of President
Lincoln, to Karl Marx, to the British bankers who
funded the Soviet KGB. They are members of the
'tightly knit cabal whose goal is nothing less than a
new order for the human race under the domination of
Lucifer'.

If you don't know about the Invisible Cord, then you
have not read New World Order by Dr Marion 'Pat'
Robertson. This is the same Pat Robertson that the
Bank of Scotland recently named chairman of its new
American consumer-bank holding company. Interestingly,
the Scottish bank's biography of Robertson failed to
mention New World Order, the 1991 bestseller that the
Wall Street Journal, in a mean-spirited review,
described as written by 'a paranoid pinhead with a
deep distrust of democracy'.

There is so much the Bank of Scotland forgot to
include in its profile of Robertson that it is left to
this newspaper to describe this man of wealth and
taste. The bank, for example, failed to note that he
is best known to Americans as leader of the 1.2
million-strong ultra-right political front, Christian
Coalition.

It may seem a bit odd for the Bank of Scotland to
choose as its spokesman a man who has been compared to
Ian Paisley. But bank officials say they are not
concerned with Robertson's religious beliefs. Nor,
apparently, is Robertson concerned with theirs.

He said: 'You're supposed to be nice to Episcopalians,
Presbyterians and Methodists ... Nonsense. I don't
have to be nice to the spirit of the Antichrist.'

Why would the Bank of Scotland want to join up with a
figure whose unpalatable views on women, gays,
Democrats and others led one unkind civil liberties
organisation to describe him as 'the most dangerous
man in America'?

Someone more cynical than me might suspect that the
Bank of Scotland covets Robertson's fiercely loyal
following, the 2 million conspiracy wonks and
charismatic evangelicals who, a former business
partner says, 'would give him their life savings'.
'These people believe he has a hot-line to God.'

In an exclusive interview with The Observer, Robertson
swears he will keep bank commerce, Christianity and
the Coalition completely separate. But our look into
the Robertson empire, including interviews with his
former and current business associates, reveals a
history of mixing God, gain and Republican campaign.

The combination of ministry and Mammon has provided
Robertson with a net worth estimated at between $200m
and $1 billion. He himself would not confirm his
wealth, except to tell me that his share of the
reported $50m start-up capital for the bank is 'just a
small investment for me'.

Neil Volder, president of Robertson Financial and
director of the new bank venture, emphasises that
Robertson selflessly donated between 65 and 75 per
cent of his salary as head of International Family
Entertainment. But that amounted to only a few hundred
thousand dollars a year - pocket change for a man of
Robertson's means.

There was also, says Volder, the $7m he gave to
'Operation Blessing' to alleviate the woes of refugees
fleeing genocide in Rwanda. Robertson's press
operation puts the sum at only $1.2m. More interesting
is the way the Operation Blessing funds were used in
Africa. Through an emotional fundraising drive on his
TV station, Robertson raised several million dollars
for the tax-free charitable trust. Operation Blessing
bought planes to shuttle medical supplies in and out
of the refugee camp in Goma, Congo (then Zaire).

But investigative reporter Bill Sizemore of the
Virginian Pilot discovered that over a six-month
period - except for one medical flight - the planes
were used to haul equipment for something called
African Development Corporation, a diamond mining
operation a long way from Goma. African Development is
owned by Pat Robertson.

Did Robertson know about the diversion of the relief
planes? According to pilots' records, he actually flew
on one plane ferrying equipment to his mines.

One of Robertson's former business partners recalled
that, although he often travelled in the minister's
jet, he never saw Robertson crack open a Bible.
'Everywhere we were flying he had the Wall Street
Journal and Investors' Daily.'

Volder counters that by diverting the planes for
diamond mining, Robertson was actually carrying out
God's work. The planes proved unfit for hauling
medicine, so Robertson salvaged them for the diamond
hunt which, if successful, would have 'freed the
people of the Congo from lives of starvation and
poverty'. The Virginia State Attorney General is
conducting an investigation into Operation Blessing
that is looking into the use of the charity's
equipment.

Volder asserts that Robertson was 'not trying to earn
a profit, but to help people'. As it turned out, he
did little of either. The diamond safari went bust, as
did Robertson's ventures in vitamin sales and
multi-level marketing. These disastrous investments
added to his losses in oil refining, the Founders Inn
Hotel and a jet- leasing fiasco. One cannot term a
demi-billionaire a poor businessman - but, outside of
the media, Robertson could not cite for me any
commercial success.

It is too early to tell whether his board membership
of Laura Ashley will improve the company's fortunes.
But, undeniably, Robertson is a master salesman. To
this I can attest after joining the live audience in
Virginia Beach for 700 Club, his daily television
broadcast to raise money for the Christian Broadcast
Network.

That week, he was selling miracles. Following a mildly
bizarre 'news' segment (reporting, for example, that
the Kosovo Liberation Army sells heroin), Robertson
shut his eyes and went into a deep trance.

After praying for divine assistance for his visions,
he announced: 'There is somebody who has cancer of the
intestines ... God is healing that right now and you
will live! ... Somebody named Michael has a deep chest
cough ... God is healing you right now!'

It is not clear why the Lord needs the intervention of
an expensive cable TV operation to communicate to
Michael. But more intriguing theological issues are
raised by the programme hosts' linking of miracles to
donations made to Robertson's organisation.

In a taped segment, a woman's facial scars healed
after her sister joined the 700 Club (for a donation
of $20 a month). A voice intoned: 'She didn't realise
how close to home her contribution would hit.' It
ended: 'Carol was so grateful God healed her sister,
she increased her pledge.'

The miracles add up. In 1997, Christian Broadcast
Network, Robertson's 'ministry', took in $164m in
donations plus an additional $34m in other income. The
tidal wave of tax-deductible cash generated by this
daily dose of holiness paid for the cable channel -
which was sold in 1997 to Rupert Murdoch, along with
the old sitcoms that filled the remaining broadcast
hours, for $1.82bn.

But seven years prior to the sale of this media
bonanza, the tax-exempt group 'spun it off' to a
for-profit corporation, in which Robertson held a
controlling interest.

Robertson donated hundreds of millions of dollars from
the Murdoch deal to both CBN and CBN University (now
Regent University). That still left Robertson burdened
with a heavy load of cash to carry through the eye of
the needle.

In his younger days, Robertson gave up worldly wealth
to work in the ghettos of New York. But, says a former
Coalition executive, 'Pat's changed'. She noted that
he gave up his ordination as a Baptist minister in
1988. (He is still, incorrectly, called 'Reverend Pat'
by the media.) His change in 1988 was accelerated
when, according to his former television co-host
Danuta Soderman Pfeiffer, 'he was ensnared by the idea
that God called him to run for President of the United
States'.

The 1988 run for the Oval Office, which began with
Robertson announcing his endorsement by Highest
Authority, was not some quixotic adventure. The race
generated a mailing list of 3 million sullen Americans
of the heartland, whose rage against the establishment
was given voice by Robertson forming, out of defeat,
the Christian Coalition.

Volder offers that it may in fact have been the Lord's
stratagem to create a mailing list of good Christians.
Such mailing lists, like the CBN lists, are worth
their weight in gold. Robertson swears they shall not
be used for the banking business. But abuse of these
lists lies at the heart of charges by government and
former partners. These are, of course, denied by CBN
and the Christian Coalition.

Two former top executives in the for-profit
operations, who have never previously spoken to the
media, state that the tax-exempt religious group's
lists and the Christian Coalition lists were used to
build what became Kalo-Vita, the pyramid sales
enterprise that sold vitamins and other products. The
company collapsed in 1992.

A former officer of the company alleges some
operations were funded, without compensation,
including offices, phones and secretarial help, by the
ministry. When questions arose about using donations
for a commercial enterprise, Robertson produced
minutes of board meetings that characterised as
'loans' the start-up capital obtained from CBN.

Not all board members were made aware of these
meetings until months after they were held.
Robertson's spokesman responds that they are
unfamiliar with the facts of the allegation.

The US Federal Election Commission has charged
Robertson's groups with misusing lists.

Federal courts are reviewing internal documents,
including a 15 September 1992 memo from the
Coalition's then president, Ralph Reed, to the
co-ordinator of President George Bush's re-election
campaign that says Pat Robertson 'is prepared to
assist ... [by] the distribution of 40 million voter
guides ... This is a virtually unprecedented level of
cooperation and assistance ... from Christian
leaders.'

Unprecedented and illegal, says the FEC, which is
taking legal action against the Christian Coalition,
technically a tax-exempt educational corporation, for
channelling campaign support worth tens of millions of
dollars to Republican candidates.

The action is extraordinary because it was brought by
unanimous vote of the bi-partisan commission. It
cited, among other things, the Coalition supplying
Colonel Ollie North with copies of its lists for
North's failed run for the US Senate, which followed
his famed appearance at the congressional hearings on
the Iran-Contra scandal.

The Coalition is defending the action. Records
subpoenaed from the Christian Coalition contain a
carefully scripted set of questions and answers by the
Coalition and the Republican Party for a 1992
'interview' with Bush by Robertson broadcast on 700
Club.

This caught my eye: first because it appears to
constitute a prohibited campaign commercial; and
second because Robertson had months earlier claimed in
New World Order that Bush was 'unwittingly carrying
out the mission of Lucifer'. With Bush running behind
Bill Clinton, Robertson must have decided to stick
with the devil he knew.

But the government will never see all of the
documents. Judy Liebert, formerly chief financial
officer for the Christian Coalition, told me that she
was present when Coalition president Reed personally
destroyed crucial documents.

When Liebert complained to Robertson about 'financial
shenanigans' at the Coalition, 'Pat told me I was
"unsophisticated". Well, that is a strange thing for a
Christian person to say to me.'

The Coalition has attacked Liebert as a disgruntled
ex-employee whom it fired. She responds that she was
sacked only after she went to government authorities -
and after she refused an $80,000 severance fee that
would have required her to remain silent about the
Coalition and Robertson.

Liebert also claimed that her evidence about the
Coalition's illegal printing of Republican campaign
literature, stored on the hard drive of her computer,
had been removed. Indeed, the entire hard drive had
been mysteriously pulled from her machine - but not
before she had made secret copies of the files.

The Feds, notes the Coalition, have never acted on
Liebert's charge of tampering with evidence.

Little of this information has been reported in the
press. Why? The three-hour dog and pony show I was put
through at the CBN-Robertson Financial headquarters in
Virginia Beach culminated in an hour-long diatribe by
Volder about how Robertson was sure to sue any paper
that did not provide what he called a 'balanced' view.


He boasted that by threatening use of Britain's
draconian libel laws and Robertson's bottomless
financial treasure chest, one of his lawyers
'virtually wrote' a laudatory profile in a UK
newspaper.

As in the days when the Inquisition required
recalcitrants to view instruments of torture, I was
made to understand in detail the devastation that
would be befall me if this paper did not report what
was 'expected' of us. This was said, like all of the
Robertson team's damning anthems, in a sweet, soft
Virginia accent.

Robertson's banking chief, Volder, laid out a plan to
reach the faithful, including appearances of bank
members on 700 Club and 'infomercials' just after the
religious broadcasts - although he said Robertson may
object.

This is just the type of mixing that has so upset the
election commission and the Internal Revenue Service,
and last March Christian Broadcasting Network agreed
to be stripped of its tax-exempt status for 1986 and
1987.

Furthermore, despite grimacing and grunts from Volder,
Robertson told me he could imagine tying his Chinese
Internet firm ('The Yahoo of China', he calls it) into
the banking operation. Picking up Volder's body
shakes, Robertson added: 'Though I'm not supposed to
talk about Internet banking.'

And he wasn't supposed to mention China. His fellow
evangelists are none too happy about his contacts with
Zhu Rongi, the communist dictator who gleefully jails
Christian ministers. Volder defends Robertson's
meetings with Zhu - and his association with deposed
Congo strongman Sese Seko Mobutu - on the grounds that
'Pat would meet with the Devil if that is the only way
to help suffering people'. The fact that the
connections assisted in obtaining diamond and Internet
concessions is secondary.

Let us return to the point on which we began: the Bank
of Scotland's US consumer-bank holding company, which
Robertson will head. When the bank gets going, it will
launch through Robertson's accustomed routes: phone
and mail solicitations.

This deal could make Pat Robertson the biggest
financial spider on the World Wide Web. The Wall
Street Journal believes the bank will be worth $3bn.

Yet Robertson's choice of the Bank of Scotland as
partner is surprising because, until this year, he
boasted of his English, not Scottish, heritage.

Moreover, in New World Order, he singled out as the
apotheosis of Satan's plan for world domination the
British-chartered central banks conceived by Scottish
banker William Paterson.

In the book Robertson explains that Rothschild
interests carried on the Paterson plan, financing
diamond mines in Africa which, in turn, funded the
'satanic' secret English Round Table directed by Lord
Milner, 'one-time editor' of The Observer. (Ah-ha!)

Furthermore, the Scottish banker's charter became the
pattern for the US Federal Reserve Board, a 'diabolic'
agency created and nurtured by the US Senate Finance
Committee, whose chairman was the 'Money Trust's'
dependable friend, Senator A. Willis Robertson - Pat
Robertson's father.

Are you following this? That's right. Pat is the scion
of the New World Order, who gave up its boundless
privileges to denounce it.

Or did he? As I drove away from the chapel/TV studio/
university/ ministry/banking complex, I realised I,
too, had a vision of an Invisible Cord that went from
Scottish bankers to African diamonds to the Senate
Finance Committee to Christian conservatives to the
communist dictators to the World Wide Web...

Originally published in The Guardian (UK) May 1999
Hear Al Franken play Pat Robertson in the recording of
this story, updated, on the audio version of Greg
Palast's New York Times bestseller, The Best Democracy
Money Can Buy (Penguin 2004). Subscribe to his
commentaries or view his investigative reports for BBC
Television at www.GregPalast.com.
__________________________End___________________________


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