by Jonathan Tennenbaum and Rachel Douglas
Russian President Vladimir Putin’s address to the German Bundestag on Sept. 25 offered a precious opportunity, perhaps the last, to avert the worst catastrophe of modern times. Two weeks to the day after violent attacks on New York and Washington brought the world into a new, acute phase of crisis, Putin’s extraordinary intervention changed the axioms of policy, and challenged other world leaders to do likewise.
by Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr.
by Rainer Apel
by Marcia Merry Baker
Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan et al. are using the terror events as the cover-up excuse for the meltdown of the financial bubble, which Greenspan himself created in the first place.
by Mark Burdman
by Richard Freeman
by Carl Osgood
by Mary Jane Freeman
by Blagoje Babic
by Ron Castonguay
by Rosa Tennenbaum
by Jeffrey Steinberg
Two of Lyndon LaRouche’s leading adversaries, the “Tweedle-dee” and “Tweedle-dum” of Anglo-American geopolitics, Henry A. Kissinger and Zbigniew Brzezinski, would lead the United States into war.
by Jeffrey Steinberg
by Michele Steinberg
by Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr.
by Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr.
by Hussein al-Nadeem
by Cynthia R. Rush
by Muriel Mirak-Weissbach
On Nov. 4, 2000, Pope John Paul II declared St. Thomas More the Patron of Statesmen and Politicians. The declaration constitutes an extraordinary challenge to political leaders today; for, to declare Thomas More their Patron Saint, is to challenge them to become like the great humanist, to conceive and live politics as he did.
by Pope John Paul II
by Marianna Wertz
by Nancy Spannaus
John Adams, by David McCullough.
How It Happened, Back Then.
by Helga Zepp-LaRouche
“If it came to the infamous ‘clash of civilizations,’ which will be almost inevitable if U.S. military operations against Afghanistan and possibly other Islamic states occur, the world will be faced with the acute danger of a third world war. This horrible perspective, this danger of an abyss for mankind, makes it urgent, that some of the mythologies left over from the previous two world wars be addressed and corrected.”
by Edward Spannaus
by Michele Steinberg
by Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr.
by Carl Osgood