by Robert Barwick
The end of an industrial era.
President Clinton must fire Albright!
by Mary Burdman
The Road to Democracy: Taiwan’s Pursuit of Identity, by Lee Teng-hui.
by Stu Rosenblatt
The Color of Truth, by Kai Bird.
Stu Rosenblatt’s third review cataloguing the perfidious careers of some of the 20th century’s leading British agents-of-influence within the U.S. political establishment. Here he takes up McGeorge and William Bundy, who were responsible for many of the wretched, British-steered turns in American foreign policy and national outlook, during the period between the end of World War II and the beginning of the Reagan Presidency.
by Lothar Komp
The traditional partnership between Germany’s banks and small and medium-sized industry is crumbling, as the large private banks, operating on the “Anglo-Saxon” model, cut off funding to industry in favor of financial speculation.
by Helga Zepp-LaRouche
An open letter to German Chancellor Gerhard Schröder from the president of the Schiller Institute in Germany.
by Richard Freeman
by Rainer Apel
by Laurence Hecht
The Malaysian Prime Minister is conducting diplomacy in order to bolster national economies against the International Monetary Fund and the financial speculators.
by Linda de Hoyos
by Ignacio Mondaca
by Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr.
Lyndon LaRouche addresses a conference of the Civil Rights Movement Solidarity (BüSo) party in Germany, on Oct. 17. “We must undertake no lesser objective globally now,” he says, “than launching a new renaissance, a new Classical renaissance, in which people become happy through being—sometimes reluctantly—impelled to realize they have something within them which is beautiful: the experience of a validatable act of discovery of a universal principle, whether as a scientific principle, a physical principle, or as an artistic principle.”
by Muriel Mirak-Weissbach
Iranian President Seyyed Mohammad Khatami’s visit to France was a giant step forward in the Islamic Republic’s stride toward normalization of relations with the West, and will boost stability, in the Persian Gulf and Central Asia.
by Ramtanu Maitra
by Mark Burdman
The French Finance Minister’s resignation has weakened France’s “political clout,” according to the London Financial Times.
by Claudio Celani
by Scott Thompson
by Hussein Al-Nadeem
by Carlos Cota Meza
by Linda de Hoyos
by Edward Spannaus
by Carl F. Bernard
A guest commentary by retired Army Colonel Carl F. Bernard.
by Debra Hanania Freeman
Lyndon LaRouche was the first to file in Kansas and New Hampshire, and petitioning is under way to put him on the ballot in at least 48 states. Meanwhile, Al Gore can’t figure out how to act like an “alpha male,” while labor is walking away from his campaign in droves.
Documentation: Statement by Lyndon LaRouche’s Presidential campaign on the Democratic National Committee’s attack on the Voting Rights Act; endorsements of LaRouche by former South Carolina State Senator Theo Mitchell and Austrian diplomat Prof. Ernst Florian Winter.
by Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr.
Excerpts from the candidate’s Nov. 4 live campaign webcast.
by Edward Spannaus
by Carl Osgood