The press liaison for New York City Councilman Enoch Williams urges the importance of fighting the privatization of the city’s public hospital system.
A frequent EIR interlocutor, this official of Bosnia’s ruling party and director of TWRA Press Agency in Zagreb, argues that only serious reconstruction of Bosnia will stop the shaky peace accords from crumbling into new warfare.
General Beg, the former Chief of Staff of the Pakistani Army and presently chairman of the Foundation for Research on National Development and Security, is the founder of a new political party.
by Michael J. Minnicino
Machiavelli, Leonardo, and the Science of Power, by Roger Masters.
by Allen Douglas
Billionaire consolidates press empire.
by Silvia Palacios
The MST’s monarchical ties.
Africa, conscience of the world.
by Dennis Small and Carlos Cota Meza
The policies adopted since the December 1994 meltdown have failed to address the fact that global monetary and financial aggregates have expanded hyperbolically, out of all proportion to the physical economic activity which ultimately must sustain them. An EIR study shows how this new disaster is taking shape in Mexico.
by Dennis Small and Carlos Cota Meza
Adding to those “officially” unemployed, free-trade policies have shrunk the manufacturing sector employment to less than 5% of the labor force, while slashing the number of those who do have productive employment, by one-third.
by Richard Freeman
Some 40 million Americans have taken their money out of savings and gambled it in a teetering stock market, mostly through the vehicle of mutual funds. Those who stay in the market, despite numerous warnings of an imminent crash, are going to lose a lot.
by John Hoefle
The House Banking Committee is contemplating further deregulating banks to solve the problems created by deregulation, in the first place.
by Marianna Wertz
Medical care for the working poor is being threatened by plans by Republican Mayor Rudolph Giuliani to hand the city’s public hospitals over to for-profit privateers.
In December 1995, New York City Councilman Enoch Williams (D-Brooklyn), chairman of the City Council’s Health Committee, released a policy document prepared in conjunction with 12 organizations, repudiating the privatization drive against the New York’s public hospital system.
by Marcia Merry Baker
Meeting with collaborators from five continents, Lyndon LaRouche issued a declaration of war against the international Monetary Fund, delineating a threefold program: A new “Bretton Woods” conference; large-scale infrastructure projects, led by the Eurasian Land-Bridge; and development of the strategic machine-tool design sector of national economies.
by Jeffrey Steinberg
FDR-PAC hosted prominent Russian economist Tatyana Koryagina, and Ukrainian members of parliament Natalya Vitrenko and Volodymyr Marchenko, to brief U.S. and international policymakers about IMF decimation of their nations.
by William Engdahl
by Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr.
by Umberto Pascali
IMF and World Bank policies are destroying the region. The United States must initiate a serious economic development effort to keep this powder-keg from exploding.
An interview with Fans Nanic.
by Hugo López Ochoa
Her Majesty’s minions write a new page for the “Bush Manual,” on how to eliminate the armed forces of Ibero-America.
An interview with Gen. Mirza Aslam Beg.
by Marianna Wertz
The traditional winter convention was anything but traditional: As he did at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, President John Sweeney ripped into the economic policies that “paint an ugly portrait of a country that has lost respect for workers and the jobs they do.”
by Edward Spannaus
The British attack on the President promises to continue.
The foundation’s first-ever U.S. conference will focus on two items: attacking the U.S. policy of bringing peace to the Balkans, and assembling a new Southern Confederacy to secede from the Union.
by Edward Spannaus
A profile of Thomas Fleming, founder of the Southern League and editor of Chronicles, the unofficial organ of all “Lost Causes.”
by Umberto Pascali
Documentation: From the remarks of the Byron Foundation’s Michael Martin Stenton to a Moscow press conference, on Oct. 6, 1995, warning the Russians not to trust American-led peace efforts in Bosnia.