You're really not grasping this thing, are you?
WE do not need to establish THAT they wish for a world government because WE do not necessarily believe that they do. YOU seem to. So YOU need to show us the interpretation that will sell this kettle of fish. I will state unequivocally that I do NOT believe that the Bilderburg group wants to set up a NWO/Global Dictatorship/World Government.
I also do not have the notes from the Mellons' family picnics at Latrobe. Am I supposed to assume that because I don't and because the Mellons don't invite in the tabloid press or Daniel Hopsicker that they are obviously plotting to overthrow the government of Pennsylvania and install Anton Scalia as the Czar of the Kingdom of Pennsylvania?
ME? I read the book. I read the ENTIRE interview with Healey. Frankly, Healey sounds a little pissed off at him during the interview (eff you would kinda give that away), but that's the sort of side effect you get if you practice gonzo journalism. The rich and powerful are used to being fawned on. But, then again, there's no guarantee that the interview is not being reported very subjectively.
The fact is that Jon controlled the pen. He could've put anything he wanted in that section's conclusion, in subequent articles, or in interviews. He seems quite capable of writing a declarative sentence. Why do we have to get clues like a deconstructivist class on WB Yeats? Why wouldn't he have just written or said, "And I have discovered that the Bilderberg Group have plans to take over the world and create a single government headed by the third cousin four times removed of Moishe Rothschild."
He didn't say this. So we're to parse his sentences and come to a conclusion as to what he meant? This is just patently absurd.
If you haven't read the book and cannot see that through the entirety of the section on Bilderburg, Ronson's much more interested in the mindset of the conspiracy lovers and even his own mindset in doing the investigation, then you have no reason to assume that a snippet of that interview (the entirety of which can be found on the web, I'm pretty certain) is more important than the whole interview.
The funniest aspect of the Bilderburg section (in a very funny book on several different types of conspiradroids) is when they realize that they started off on their big adventure to hunt down the secret cabal based on leads provided by a notorious anti-Jewish group and publication. Their reaction at the time is sort of "eh, what the hell, in for a penny, in for a pound". And I think he even quotes his partner or himself saying something to the effect, "Hey, just because our source material is a hate monger, that doesn't rule out that they really are a secret group out to take over the world."