by Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr.
“The presently ongoing crash of the world’s present financial system, defines a breaking-point in the century of the preceding, post-McKinley-assassination, cultural and political history of our planet as a whole. The fact, that the present financial system is beyond saving, requires our acceptance of the available new system waiting in the wings. In that new system, economic policy is no longer controlled by the financial system, but is coming under the influence of an axiomatic change.”
by Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr.
In a webcast address on “The Bush Administration: The First 60 Days,” Lyndon LaRouche warned of the factor of “insanity in high places” toward the presently ongoing economic crash and the measures need to solve it. These General Welfare measures must nevertheless be taken, LaRouche insisted—even under the Presidency of George W. Bush.
An interview with Tatyana Koryagina.
by Rachel Douglas
by Rosa Tennenbaum
by William F. Wertz
by John Hoefle
An interview with Carl Wood.
by Gerardo Terán Canal and Cynthia R. Rush
The new Finance Minister, the international bankers’ boy, is aware that imposition of IMF austerity plans requires dictatorial measures, because such looting is provoking a social explosion.
by Kathy Wolfe
by Valerie Rush
by Michael Billington
by Muriel Mirak-Weissbach
by Umberto Pascali
by Paul Gallagher
A unique Congressional briefing on the principle of the General Welfare of the nation, was the latest fruit of the battle to save D.C. General Hospital from imminent shutdown by the financier oligarchy.
by Edward Spannaus
by Jeffrey Steinberg
by Michele Steinberg
by William Jones
by Carl Osgood
Professor Koryagina, an Academician of the Russian Academy of Natural Sciences and Senior Scientist of the Institute for Macroeconomic Research at the Ministry of Economics and Trade Development of the Russian Federation, is one of the leading Russian experts on the problems of the “shadow economy” and organized crime.
Carl Wood is a Public Utility Commissioner of California, appointed in 1999 by Gov. Gray Davis (D) to a six-year term.
Bush: Worse Collapse, Worse Provocations.