by Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr.
The belated official admission, that the U.S. government has been faking its official inflation statistics, plus the surfacing of a ten-year-old letter, in which Ford executives described how they covered up a willful and deadly design-failure in the firm’s best-selling Sport Utility Vehicle, “tell us much, if not quite all, about the administrative reasons for the presently onrushing collapse of the global, Anglo- American-dominated financial system.” The root of the problem is deeper: the influence of recent trends in popular opinion, which have tolerated such lunacies in the name of what might appear to be an accountant’s definition of profit.
by Richard Freeman
by Lothar Komp
The myth of the “New Economy” has been shattered, and the dream of quickly made fortunes has come to an end. Millions of small investors, as well as wheeler-dealer marketeers, are out in the cold.
by John Hoefle
Forget the populist posturing, the single issues, the obsessions with “my money,” and turn your attention to the question which counts: When this system collapses, what will replace it?
by Rainer Apel
by Liliana Gorini
by Mary Burdman
The global financial crisis is hitting Asia again, and diplomacy is focussed on protecting the physical economy.
by Nina Ogden
by Michele Steinberg
President Clinton’s failure to make cooperation around water and related economic infrastructure into the crucial issue for Mideast peace, is a blunder on a tragic scale, which has unleashed the full lunacy of Ariel Sharon and his Wall Street and London backers, moving the region to the edge of all-out war.
by Dean Andromidas
by Muriel Mirak-Weissbach
by Christine Bierre
by Mark Burdman
by Mark Burdman
by Jeffrey Steinberg
by Gretchen Small
by Edward Spannaus
The President’s personal role in the Mideast peace process must be put back on track if a horrific regional war is to be averted.
by Debra Hanania Freeman
by Marianna Wertz
by Carl Osgood
Today’s American Tragedy.