by Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr.
In a May 4 speech at Central Connecticut State University, Lyndon LaRouche stressed that it is a mistake to talk about Middle East policy, without situating it in the context of a global conflict dating to at least the end of the 19th Century. The British Empire, which sparked World War I in order to destroy Europe’s continental powers, then carved up Southwest Asia (with the French), in the infamous Sykes-Picot Treaty of 1918. The legacy of ethnic and religious hatreds fostered by that secret accord continues to fan the flames of conflict in the region to this day. There will be no peace between Israelis and Palestinians until the British manipulation is exposed and its agents driven from power and influence.
by Jeffrey Steinberg
White House economic advisor, wannabe White House Chief of Staff Larry Summers, is at odds with the sane elements of the Obama Administration.
by Anton Chaitkin
by Richard Freeman
by Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr.
LaRouche was interviewed on April 26 by Columbus, Ohio talk show host Khari Enaharo on a broad range of subjects, from the crash of the financial system, to why Nancy Pelosi has got to go.
by John Hoefle
The Obama Administration’s current policies will lead to genocide—yet there is a readily available, and urgently needed, alternative.
by Dean Andromidas
by Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr.
With Peter Orszag’s “Quality Adjusted Life Years,” the Nazi doctors have crawled out of their crypts, this time into the White House.
by Michele Steinberg
by Anton Chaitkin
Excerpts from a 1938 speech by FDR’s principal relief administrator and close advisor, entitled, “What Is the American Way?”
Appendix: From Henry C. Carey’s The Harmony of Interests.
by Ramtanu Maitra
Pakistan is not only slipping into the hands of British-sponsored jihadists, but the powers-that-be are tacitly accepting these forces as partners, even at the danger of breaking up the country. Similar scenarios are unfolding throughout the Subcontinent.
by Ramtanu Maitra
A statement by the LaRouche Youth Movement in Mexico.
by Michelle Rasmussen
Visiting Copenhagen for the first time in 18 years, Mrs. LaRouche held a public meeting, a diplomatic seminar, a press conference, as well as private meetings with Danish politicians, Schiller Institute activists, and others.
ITAR-TASS reports from Copenhagen on Helga Zepp-LaRouche’s call for a “new international financial architecture.”