Iran, Ukraine, Israel, a primary shock in California — the map looked like it was burning everywhere at once. Barbara and Susan stop counting the fires and name the arsonist: one imperial machine, and a president who won't take the bait.
For decades America managed decline. Now a new spirit is emerging—one focused on solving problems, rebuilding communities, and reviving the principles that built the nation.
Donald Trump had a far ranging discussion with Vladimir Putin on Wednesday about ending the Ukraine war and many other topics. At the same time, Trump's representatives were kicking the Europeans and the Brits to the curb as irrelevant to discussions between sovereign great power nation states.
Is something like Lyndon LaRouche's Four Powers agreement for a new gold reserve backed monetary system and massive economic development on the horizon? Join us for Saturday's class where William Wertz will discuss LaRouche's proposal and its efficacy right now.
Worked with LaRouche's political movement since 1971. Translated works of Schiller and Cusa into English. Former editor of Fidelio magazine. Author of "Beware the British East India Company!"
Founding member of the LaRouche movement in the 1960s. Former editor of LaRouche’s writings and EIR magazine. Regular host of our Saturday class series.
Every leading astronomer in Europe tried to find the lost asteroid Ceres with statistics. Every one failed. An unknown 24-year-old, Carl Gauss, found it from 41 days of data — by refusing to calculate and insisting on principle. Bruce Director on why that method is the cure for the age of AI.
No class this Memorial Day weekend. A short note on the origins of the holiday, a thank you to our supporters, and a look at next Saturday — Bruce Director returns.
The centuries-long fight over tuning, the British- and Wall Street-funded "American sound" that hollowed out our culture, and why the renaissance Trump is unleashing has to start with classical music.
The flood of information is making you a worse citizen. Bruce Director on Kepler's New Astronomy — how a 17th-century astronomer broke the empire's two-cage dogma of perfect circles and uniform motion, and what that fight has to do with 2026.