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| Contents of Other Recent Issues |
Rough
awakening to war danger.
How
insane are the American people?
The
IMF has done "nothing to strengthen the real sectors of the economy," a former
minister told IMF officials at a conference in March. "When industries operate
at 50% capacity, common sense tells us that these industries can't service
their debt. . . . I'm worried that our economic problems will quickly
transform into social problems."
The
former Presidential candidate of Brazil, an advocate of Hamiltonian economic
policies, received a warm reception.
The
illusion that the crisis is solved is not likely to last long, because the
physical state of the economy is one enormous calamity.
Jeffrey
Steinberg introduces a dossier on the oligarchical grouping that is steering
the world toward war and economic collapse.
An
historical overview of the battle between two factions that has defined
American political life since the Revolution.
The
Hamiltonian system of national banking was overturned, with the 1913 creation
of the Federal Reserve.
The
British monarchy is not the merely ceremonial group that most people think it is.
By
Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr. "The most extensive and horrid violations of human
rights of the present decade, have been . . . the British use of its
Museveni puppet-dictator for orchestrating currently the long-standing Rhodes
Plan, a Holocaust now reaching beyond 6 millions African victims." Americans
have not acted to replace the bankrupt global financial system, which is
fuelling the oligarchs drive toward war and genocide, writes LaRouche, because
they are too concerned about "my money!"
In
the face of the "new NATO" aggression in the Balkans, which is designed to
disrupt U.S.-China relations, the decision to allow Prime Minister Zhu Rongji
to come to the United States had not been taken lightly by the Chinese
leadership. It was important in getting President's China policy, to build a
strategic partnership with China in the 21st century, back on track.
After
more than 27 years under Federal jurisdiction, Texas prisons are still in
violation of the U.S. Constitution's prohibition against the use of "cruel and
unusual punishment."
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