The chairman of the Polish Peasant Party Club in the Polish Parliament discusses the prospects for his nation’s economic survival, and hails Lyndon LaRouche’s proposals for reorganizing global financial policy.
“If you can keep it.”
by Jonathan Tennenbaum
From all indications, the U.S.-China negotiations have utterly failed to address the real, life-and-death issue confronting the two countries: the bankruptcy of the existing international financial system. Survival will require more than good intentions; it will require the New Bretton Woods System that Lyndon LaRouche has proposed.
by Rainer Apel
Mannesman, one of Germany’s core industrial and machine-building companies, has entered the “post-industrial society.” The construction firm Philipp Holzmann is close to bankruptcy. And the German banks are no longer interested in giving credit to small and medium-sized industrial companies.
Comments from Switzerland’s Neue Zürcher Zeitung and French Prime Minister Lionel Jospin.
by Frank Hahn
An interview with Janusz Dobrosz.
by Michael O. Billington
Excerpts from the Malaysian Prime Minister’s speech to the World Economic Forum East Asian Summit.
by Jeffrey Steinberg
Don’t worry so much about the media hype over whether George “Dubya” Bush ever sniffed cocaine; look at the much bigger drug story: his father’s role as the drug kingpin of the 1980s.
by Edward Spannaus
A draft indictment of Bush and ten others for conducting a drug-trafficking enterprise, first published by EIR in September 1996.
by Dennis Small, Gretchen Small, and Valerie Rush
by Jeffrey Steinberg
The airport in Mena, Arkansas; Loudoun County, Virginia; and other places where very peculiar things have been going on.
by Joseph Brewda
by Michele Steinberg and Marcia Merry Baker
by Jeffrey Steinberg
Top terrorist organizations, including Osama bin Laden’s International Islamic Front, operate from bases in London, with the complicity of the British Foreign Office.
by William Jones
by Rubén Cota Meza
Francisco Labastida Ochoa won the PRI party’s internal vote to choose its candidate for the July 2000 Presidential elections.
by Sergei Vasiliadis
A guest commentary by Sergei Vasiliadis, a political scientist from the Scientific Council of the Georgian Diplomatic Academy, in Tbilisi.
A report from Baghdad on the 16th general conference of the General Federation of Iraqi Women, with international representatives in attendance.
Certain members of the Democratic National Committee, aided by their attorney John C. Keeney, Jr., are supporting an anti-civil rights, implicitly pro-racist argument against the Voting Rights Act of 1965, urging that the Act be thrown out as unconstitutional.
Attorneys for Lyndon LaRouche and associates have denounced the Justice Department’s use of secret evidence as an excuse not to disclose vital documents in the case of Lyndon LaRouche et al. v. Louis Freeh and Janet Reno.
by Edward Spannaus
by Jeffrey Steinberg
by Michele Steinberg
by Valerie Rush
by Carl Osgood