A very bright spotlight is currently shining on the secret societies of the rich and famous – and it’s all because of a book that makes allegations involving British Prime Minister David Cameron and a dead pig.
There was a time when most of us thought of these “secret societies” as nothing more Grand Poobah kind of affairs, where men met in secret, donned silly hats and laughed about having a night off from the missus.
But extracts of the biography Call Me Dave, by Lord Ashcroft and Isabel Oakeshott, paint a picture of the Piers Gaveston dining club that’s anything but.
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According to Lord Ashcroft, Cameron was also a member of another infamous secret society called The Bullingdon Club. One Tory colleague invited to join the same club reportedly walked out in disgust after describing the scene as a highly select band of the super rich "getting drunk and standing on restaurant tables, shouting about 'f***ing plebs'."
"It was all about despising poor people."
Secret societies are nothing new and have existed for centuries, complete with secret passwords and handshakes, business deals in darkened backrooms and, more often than not, connections to power. But what draws the rich, famous and powerful to these clubs? And what's in it for them?
Let’s have a brief look at the most infamous secret societies throughout history.