by Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr.
Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr. emphasizes that understanding the validity of his outstanding record in economic forecasting, and understanding the method he used to make those forecasts, “is pretty much a life-or-death matter for our own and the world’s economy.” This is the only way, in the little time remaining, that the citizens of the U.S.A., and the world at large, will be equipped with the ability to decide on a new journey into the future, instead of continuing with the old failed ways, on the road to doom.
Lyndon LaRouche’s legislative proposal is the only way, at this late date, to stop millions of home foreclosures this year and next.
by Lewis Whilden
by Harley Schlanger
by John Hoefle
The financial system today is based on the fraud of treating debt as a financial asset. The current crisis can only be understood from the standpoint of LaRouche’s Triple Curve pedagogy, with a decline in physical assets and hyperbolic growth in financial and monetary aggregates.
by Claudio Celani
by Dennis Small
On the 25th anniversary of the late Mexican President’s historic address to the United Nations, we print excerpts from that speech, plus his remarks to a 1998 seminar with Helga Zepp-LaRouche.
by Marcia Merry Baker and Christine Craig
by Rachel Douglas
by Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr.
by Jeremy Beck and Allen Douglas
by Gregory Murphy
In discussion with Chinese journalists, Lyndon LaRouche makes the case for a four-nation alliance of the United States, China, Russia, and India, to set the stage for a new global financial-monetary system. Despite the insanity of the current Bush Administration, U.S. objective interests have always been in favor of friendship with China.
by Michele Steinberg and Jeffrey Steinberg
Serious thinkers in Southwest Asia believe that the U.S.A. will attack Iran—without justification. British think-tanks and other geopolitical manipulators are stoking the fires.
by Dean Andromidas
by Muriel Mirak-Weissbach
Members of the LYM from South Africa, Zimbabwe, Denmark, and the United States are interviewed on The LaRouche Show, as the movement begins to take shape in several African countries.
by Jeffrey Steinberg
Alberto Gonzales’s departure creates a dangerous vacuum for Bush and Cheney, at the top of the Justice Department. With several investigations ongoing, of which the BAE scandal is potentially the most explosive, they are looking for someone reliable there to protect them from impeachment.
by Edward Spannaus