The imprisoned statesman and economist tells why Phil Gramm is the “duck-billed platypus of the Senate.”
by Muriel Mirak-Weissbach
An Islamist and an independent member of the Jordanian Parliament, Mr. Shubeilat is one of the most popular political figures in Jordan. He was the subject of a sensational trial last autumn.
by Cynthia R. Rush and Peter Rush
The presidential candidate of the Colombian M-19 Democratic Alliance promotes a plea-bargain for the drug cartels.
by Peter Rush
The Presidential candidate of Mexico’s Revolutionary Democratic Party (PRD) is against the free trade agreement—but won’t do anything to protect Mexican industry.
by Rainer Apel
Little People Face Big Depression.
by Silvia Palacios
“Lula,” Another Collor in ’94?
by Hugo López Ochoa
Bishops Condemn Foreign Debt.
Time Is Running Out.
by Prof. Taras V. Muranivsky
The rector of the Ukrainian University in Moscow, shows how the work in physical economy of several 19th- and 20th-century Russian and Ukrainian scientists is coherent with the economic concepts of Lyndon LaRouche. A presentation to a seminar of Russian and Ukrainian representatives meeting in Kiedrich, Germany.
by Sanford Roberts
Dream Makers, Dream Breakers: The World of Justice Thurgood Marshall, by Carl Rowan.
by Daniel Platt
Der Fall Charles Manson, Mörder aus der Retorte (Test-Tube Murders, the Case of Charles Manson), by Carol Greene.
by Christopher White
With the defeat of the President’s “economic stimulus package,” the sharks of international finance—George Soros, Jimmy Goldsmith, and company—are circling in the waters.
by Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr.
From the weekly radio interview “EIR’s Talks with Lyndon LaRouche.”
by Michael Liebig
by Philip Ulanowsky
Phylloxera Spreads in California Vineyards.
by John Hoefle
They’re Not Banks Any More.
by Jeffrey Steinberg
As officials of the Anti-Defamation League are facing imminent indictment for illegal espionage activities, EIR documents the history of two past cases of ADL spying, through archive material from congressional hearings and court documents. ADL foreign espionage didn’t start with Jonathan Jay Pollard, and ADL domestic spying didn’t start with Roy Bullock and Tom Gerard.
by Joseph Brewda
by Jeffrey Steinberg
by Valerie Rush
Tanks rolled through the streets of Lima, in a demonstration by the Armed Forces that it would not accept the efforts of the self-proclaimed international human rights lobby to smash Peruvian sovereignty and wreck the war on the Shining Path terrorists.
by Konstantin George
by Elke Fimmen and Klaus Fimmen
A report from Dubrovnik, Croatia.
by Maurizio Blondet
by Muriel Mirak-Weissbach
An interview with Laith Shubeilat.
by Cynthia R. Rush
by Peter Rush
by Harley Schlanger
The perpetrators of the disaster are scrambling to cover their tracks. Said Lyndon LaRouche, “If Clinton allows these swine—the ADL, CAN, and their friends—to get by with this, and to try to put the blame on the victims who can no longer defend themselves, then Clinton is finished.”
by William Jones
Corporations and individuals associated with Lyndon LaRouche are seeking to dismiss indictments against them in the Commonwealth of Virginia, citing new evidence of massive misconduct by government officials.
by William Jones and Carl Osgood