Keynoted by Lyndon LaRouche and Helga Zepp-LaRouche, the conference in Rüsselsheim, Germany, was attended by about 350 people from 25 nations.
by Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr.
As the planet faces a plunge into the worst civilizational crisis since the 14th-Century New Dark Age, European nations have been stripped of their sovereignty, LaRouche said. That means the solution has to come from an alliance of four powers: the United States, Russia, China, and India. “The United States, whatever you think about it, is crucial. Without the United States’ cooperation, there will be no recovery of this planet.”
by Helga Zepp-LaRouche
“Our job in the next period,” said the Schiller Institute’s founder, “is to catalyze in Europe, the kinds of alliances which will work together with the United States, Russia, China, and India, and then I think there is hope. If not—you’d better get accustomed to live in the bushes.”
by Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr.
“The current behavior of most among the present governments is to be compared to a driver accelerating down a very steep hill into a crossing below, without knowing that the vehicle’s brakes have already ceased to function. He, like most of the world’s presently installed governments, is certain that he might be able to manage the situation, and would probably never discover that he had failed.” Such is the delusion of the British oligarchy, which will itself be destroyed, by the very policies with which it hopes to destroy the United States. “Oscar Wilde would have been sadly amused.”
by Claudio Celani
On the initiative of Sen. Oskar Peterlini, the Italian Senate was called on Feb. 24 to discuss and vote on Lyndon LaRouche’s New Bretton Woods/bankruptcy reorganization policy.
Documentation: From Senator Peterlini’s introduction of his motion for bankruptcy reorganization.
by John Hoefle
by William Jones
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s choice of Asia for her first tour, was the signal of new ideas on foreign policy. The Obama Administration seems keen on raising the level of the U.S. relationship to China to that of a multifaceted partnership, while making it clear to Japan and others that this will not mean abandoning old friends.
by Nina Ogden
by Ramtanu Maitra
by Debra Hanania-Freeman
Some observers, listening to Felix Rohatyn’s speech to the National Governors’ Conference on Feb. 27, thought he had “come around to Lyndon LaRouche’s point of view” on solving the financial-economic crisis. Were they right?
by Jeffrey Steinberg