|
.
|
|
|
LPAC-TV Weekly Report:
The Economics of Extinction And The Principle of Progress
This is an edited transcript of the Jan. 26 LaRouchePAC TV Weekly Report, hosted by John Hoefle; his guests were Lyndon LaRouche, and Ben Deniston and Sky Shields from the LPAC Basement Team of scientific researchers.
Lyndon LaRouche: This is going to be a very unusual experience for most people viewing this business, because there is a scientific principle of great importance involved in this whole program, and that will become clear at the close of the presentations. My associates, flanking me on either side, have put together a piece which is of remarkable significance, of not only historic significance, but of scientific significance. And the best way to go with this, is to follow what they have to say in sequence, starting with Sky, and then Ben; they will discuss what they've done, commenting on it, and then I will enter with happy remarks on what they have accomplished, to close it out.
Sky Shields: Okay. So we want to tackle, as you said, a question of core economic scientific principle. Now, what we'll discuss here, will be a very specific case study, actually a set of case studies. It won't be a substitute for the full breadth of everything you've laid out, but I think it'll give a good guide to the meat, to the core of the matter. We're going to address a couple of things: One is, what's come up a lot recently, which is the texture of economic time; but then, we'll get at what the ontology of this is....
|
|
|
|
This Week's Cover
- LPAC-TV Weekly Report:
The Economics of Extinction and the Principle of Progress
Lyndon LaRouche introduced the Jan. 26 Weekly Report with the following words: 'This is going to be a very unusual experience for most people viewing this business, because there is a scientific principle of great importance involved in this whole program, and that will become clear at the close of the presentations.' Sky Shields then laid out an agenda: 'the texture of economic time': 'What exactly is the ontology of these key developmental processes, that are shared in common between overall human development, economic development, and the creative antientropic development of the universe as a whole.' Ben Deniston then proposed, 'the first step is to just immediately state outright that you're looking at the development of the biosphere system as a whole, looking at the question of what's actually governing that process.'
Economics
International
National
- Would You Trust These Bozos with Our Endangered Planet?
Recent warnings of a major earthquake on the West Coast of the United States, and the total repudiation of a competent scientific outlook by every declared candidate for the Presidency, leaves the LaRouche Slate of Six candidates for Congress to provide the leadership that the country so desperately needs and wants.
Investigation
- Destabilizing Russia:
The 'Democracy' Agenda of McFaul and His Oxford Masters
The new U.S. ambassador to Russia, Michael McFaul, has pursued a narrow ideological agenda throughout his career. It is not an American agenda, Rachel Douglas reports, but a British one: 'the cynical cultivation of 'democratic' movements for geopolitical purposes, all the way up to and including the overthrow of governments deemed uncooperative with recent decades' globalization agenda.'
|
|
|
Subscribe to EIR Online
For all questions regarding your subscription to EIR Online, or questions or comments regarding the EIR Online website's contents or design, please contact eironline@larouchepub.com.
All rights reserved © 2012, EIRNS |
|
|