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| Contents of Other Recent Issues |
The president of the Lombardy region in Italy speaks about his recent visit
to Iraq.
The president of the Union of Constitutional Rights, a longtime friend of
the LaRouche movement, has been elected to the Parliament of Armenia.
The bubble will soon pop.
German diplomacy pays off.
More massacres in the Kivus.
Even the BIS is worried.
Under the parasitic "managed care" insurance system, the Hill-Burton Act's
high standard of health care, established in 1946, is being replaced with
Auschwitz methods of cost-accounting.
Market-driven "reforms" have forced hospitals to replace registered nurses
with untrained "aides." Are you feeling better, now?
Most of the 360 million people within the European Union are unaware that
the tiny handful of people who ultimately determine policy concerning their
economic well-being, do so with no accountability to the citizenry.
By Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr. "The British monarchy and that monarchy's
American lackeys . . . were prepared to go to extremes to launch this
war, and are prepared, if permitted, to go to extremes in their efforts to
prevent U.S. President Bill Clinton from bringing it to the truly peaceful
conclusion which he proposed in his San Francisco address," LaRouche writes.
"My subject in this report, is the issues of global economic policy posed by
any serious effort to conduct `A New Marshall Plan' of economic reconstruction
in the region of southeastern Europe."
The peace accords are resting on a very fragile foundation, and the key now
is to move swiftly with a reconstruction program--and to outflank the
inevitable geopolitical counterattack by the British oligarchy.
LaRouche's co-thinkers are the only party talking about the opportunity for
hope after the Balkans war.
New signers on the Schiller Institute's call for a "Marshall Plan" for the
Balkans.
The assault on Iraq, and Blair's bloodthirsty pursuit of the bombing against
Yugoslavia, and his relentless demands for a ground invasion, have done much to
expose London's strategic aims to China's leaders.
The ouster of Russian Prime Minister Yevgeny Primakov was the product of a
secret meeting at New York's Four Seasons restaurant.
An interview with Roberto Formigoni.
An interview with Hrant Khachatrian.
Olusegun Obasanjo has been sworn in as the new President of the Federal
Republic of Nigeria.
The Republican-controlled Congress has passed two resolutions toeing the
British line against reconstruction. But policy has not yet been decided, and,
as the LaRouche movement has been emphasizing, a Marshall Plan-style program
for the Balkans must become the catalyst for shifting the world away from the
momentum toward World War III, and toward building a new world monetary system,
based on infrastructure development.
Demands for better U.S. relations with China dominated a seminar in
Washington hosted by the Cato Institute.
Robertson's plans to establish a U.S. telephone-based bank with the Bank of
Scotland have fallen through.
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