by Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr.
Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr. takes up the theme of Sir Julian’s work on the subject of “neoteny,” in which a certain lower species spins off a variety which does not develop into the normal adult phase, but reproduces itself sexually in the childhood phase of what had been the parent species’ standard metagenesis.
“Some might to wish to think of an image of twins copulating and reproducing within the womb,” LaRouche writes.
“Copulation among co-inhabitants of the particular womb, is not exactly what happened to the post-World War II ‘Baby Boomer’ generation, but, in a certain sense, the idea is a provocatively relevant near miss. This is key for understanding what is recognizable as ‘The Baby Boomer’ syndrome in both North America and western and central Europe today.”
by Jeffrey Steinberg
The climate is being set for an Israeli military raid on Iran’s purported nuclear weapons sites, which would lead to a mobilization of support for a larger attack on Iran, involving the United States and other nations—with the quiet backing of Sunni Arab regimes, which are being stampeded by the Cheneyacs in Washington into this suicidal stance.
by Muriel Mirak-Weissbach
by Cynthia R. Rush
by Lawrence K. Freeman
The U.S. Special Envoy to Sudan indicated a possible U.S. policy shift, which would undercut the effort to get the United States entangled in a war against that African nation.
by Marcia Merry Baker
by Marcia Merry Baker
A review of a book by Rushdi Said, who was on the Industrialization Commission for Gen. Gamal Abdel Nasser, President of Egypt (1954 to 1970).
by Richard Freeman
How Alan Greenspan blew up the housing bubble in 2001, after the collapse of the dot.com bubble, to attempt to cover over the collapse of the productive economy. Now Greenspan’s bubble is deflating.
by Mary Burdman
The signing of the International Agreement on the Trans-Asian Railway Network puts the Eurasian Land-Bridge on the front burner again. But the question of financing remains to be solved.
by Rainer Apel
by Debra Hanania-Freeman
Sweet as the Democratic election victory may be, the fact is that Howard Dean’s Democratic National Committee bungled a critical opportunity to make the kind of historic gains that would have provided Democrats with an overwhelming—perhaps even veto-proof—majority in the House and a more stable majority in the Senate. Outspoken Democratic strategist James Carville placed the blame where it belongs.
by William F. Wertz, Jr.
by Carl Osgood
by Patricia Salisbury
by Wesley Irwin
The LaRouche Youth Movement tours with the 95-year-old civil rights heroine in Alabama and Georgia.
by Mark Samet
by Marcia Merry Baker
Science and Politics in Egypt; A Life’s Journey, by Rushdi Said.
by Stuart Rosenblatt
Father Abraham Lincoln’s Relentless Struggle To End Slavery, by Richard Striner.