by Laurent Murawiec
The chairman of the World Anti-Communist League and member of the Swiss Parliament advises that people in the West should stop listening to Henry Kissinger’s advice on China and the Soviet Union.
by Jaime García
Another Brady Plan Failure.
by Susan Maitra
Election Surprise.
by Isaías Amezcua
Corrupt Officials Slander Noriega.
by Carlos Wesley
CIA Chief Proposes “Murder, Inc.”
AIDS and Ecological Fascism.
by Peter Sawyer
Peter Sawyer has been branded in Australia as an “extremist threat,” because he had the courage to debunk the anti-technology mob’s campaigns to brainwash people into accepting the shutdown of modern industry. EIR reprints Sawyer’s humorous, step-by-step exposé, which first appeared in his own newspaper Inside News.
by Christopher White
The problem is national, and the political refusal to spend to save lives, while trillions are wasted on speculation and debt, is criminal.
by Stephen Parsons
by William Engdahl
by Cynthia R. Rush
by Christine Schier
Among the world’s nations, France seems the most determined to root out the money-laundering networks which sustain the drug traffickers.
by Nancy Spannaus
by Marcia Merry
A report on the annual conference of the Agriculture Council of America attack on farming.
by Marcia Merry
Funny Business in the Corn Harvest.
by Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr.
We present a portion of the electoral platform of Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr., who is campaigning not just for a seat in the next U.S. Congress, but for a fundamental shift in that body’s economic policies, away from its worship of Adam Smith’s hedonist immorality which had brought the economy to its knees, and back the mercantilist American System policies which are required to reverse the collapse. LaRouche lays out specific reforms needed in banking, agriculture, the composition of the labor force, and economic infrastructure.
by Helga Zepp-LaRouche
A major policy statement by Helga Zepp-LaRouche, chairman of the Patriots for Germany party.
by Konstantin George
by Rainer Apel
by Göran Haglund
by Lydia Cherry
by José Restrepo
by Mark Burdman
by Luba George
by Ned Haliburton and Dr. Reuel A. Lochore
by Nicholas F. Benton
What kind of government allows a computer to dictate whom among its citizens lives or dies? Washington correspondent Nicholas Benton assesses the damage.
A judge, a prosecutor, and defense attorney have joined forces to secure the speedy conviction of an innocent man who faces 90 years in prison for political fundraising.
by Scott Thompson
by William Jones