by Carlos Wesley
The former Foreign Minister of Guyana describes how terms of trade imposed on developing sector nations force them to expand their “black economies”—dope exports—to get the foreign exchange necessary for imports and debt payments. This growing dope trade, he states, is threatening the population of the advanced sector, while the malnourished populations of the Third World, growing dope rather than food, turn to cults.
by Carlos Wesley
The joint commander of the anti-Sandinista guerrilla group ARDE describes how the Jesuits—whom he describes as the “infiltrators of the Church”—are manipulating the population in a situation building towards a bloody civil war.
Worse than Jimmy Carter.
by Kathy Burdman
Passage puts U.S. political commitment behind bailing out the $700 billion debt Third World nations cannot pay.
by Richard Freeman, Renée Sigerson, and Dennis Small
A common currency, pegged to gold, could help resolve the debt crisis by setting parities at the nations’ real purchasing power.
by Charles B. Stevens
MIT’s Alcator C Reaches Breakeven Confinement
The Fed exposes itself in an attempt to answer a congressman’s inquiries on the fraudulent recovery statistics.
by Leif Johnson
Recovery weaker than 1934.
by Valerie Rush
A case of nerves.
by Marcia Merry
The scope of the world food crisis.
by Robyn Quijano
A new, “professional” dope trade is being built to generate the cash needed for debt payments.
by Luis Vásquez
by Timothy Rush
by Criton Zoakos
At stake in the votes on the Euromissiles is the survival of NATO, the decoupling of Europe from the United States, and a buildup to thermonuclear confrontation.
by Judith Wyer
by Thierry Lalevée
by Mark Burdman
by Linda de Hoyos
Documentation: Excerpts from the President’s joint press conference with Japanese Prime Minister Nakasone.
by Carlos Wesley
by Mark Sonnenblick and Blanca Gastelum
Peruvian mandate.
by Josefina Menéndez
Battle over the budget.
by Susan Maitra
Close but no cigar.
by Paul Gallagher
Despite the President’s commitment to defensive beam weapons, “pragmatism” is holding back a crash development program.
EIR’s Washington Bureau continues its exposé of the Mondale scandal.
by Anita Gallagher
Mondale reels under terror exposé.
by M.T. Upharson
Henry backs Mondale against the President.
by Ronald Kokinda and Susan Kokinda
by Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr.
Lyndon LaRouche’s speech at the EIR Nov. 9 conference in Rome.
Documentation: Izvestia attacks LaRouche and beam-weapons policy.