Basing himself on the path-breaking scientific discovery of the Solar System itself by Johannes Kepler, Guest Editor Benjamin Deniston has just discovered an original breakthrough of his own—one which will revolutionize man’s ability to solve such problems as the crippling drought which has struck the Southwestern states of the U.S.
As to its profound implications for the Presidency: First of all, former Gov. Martin O’Malley is the only prospective nominee who has exhibited any relevant qualifications.
But the Presidency is not a single individual, however qualified. It is an institution comprising a closely coordinated team of experts who are also creative thinkers, under the President, as exemplified by Lyndon LaRouche’s vital participation in the Presidency, since the 1970s. That team must begin functioning now.
The major question before the Presidency, so defined, today, is whether the Western states of the United States must be shut down, and their populations killed off or exiled because of lack of water as California’s degenerate Gov. Jerry Brown demands. What question could be more important? But without consideration of what Deniston raises here, it is a question without an answer.
by Michael Steger
Deniston’s discovery in hand, we headed up to California’s State Capitol at Sacramento, to provide what we thought would be a welcome alternative to Gov. Jerry Brown’s diktat that 99% of the state’s inhabitants should die out or emigrate, because there is not enough water to provide for them or for their food-supply. But what we found instead, was a large, well-entrenched network of actual Nazis.
The still-open question before us is this: What is the ratio, what is the proportion of Americans who will fight to the end against these Nazis to preserve their lives and those of their families, as against those many, many others who will “negotiate” with the Nazis as the Germans did, pleading that “we must be practical, after all”? They may find their efforts rewarded when the executioners come for their neighbors, before finally coming for them. Or, not.
by Benjamin Deniston
by Benjamin Deniston
by Liona Fan-Chiang and Jason Ross
by Benjamin Deniston
by Marcia Merry Baker
by Ramtanu Maitra
by Ramtanu Maitra
by Dennis Small
by Paul Gallagher
by William F. Wertz, Jr.
by Marcia Merry Baker
by Marcia Merry Baker