Barbara traces the DSA candidates backed by Mayor Mamdani — and the Council on Foreign Relations' "post-Trump" project — to one dead communist, Antonio Gramsci, and the British imperial networks that have always used communism against their rivals.
A reversal on Iran, a DOJ probe into gas-price gouging, and the DonRoe Doctrine turning South America our way. Barbara and Susan on the home-front fight that decides the midterms — and Bessent's open embrace of Hamilton.
Saturday Class - Science: The World Wants to be Turned Upside-Down - March 29, 2026
The universe isn't a machine — it's a creative process. Bruce Director traces the concept of "potential" from Plato through Cusa to Gauss, and shows why top-down thinking is the key to science, economics, and politics.
The universe isn't a machine — it's a creative process. And the proof has been hiding in plain sight since Plato.
That's the revolution Bruce Director is walking you through.
In part two of his "Pedagogicals for a Golden Age" series, Bruce — a 50-year collaborator of Lyndon LaRouche on questions of science and epistemology — takes on the deepest question in science: What is potential?
Not potential energy. Not "human potential" as a self-help slogan. The real thing — the power that makes all creation possible in the first place.
Bruce traces this idea from its roots to its explosive implications:
Plato's Meno dialogue — where Socrates demonstrates that a slave boy can discover a universal geometric truth through reason alone, proving that creative discovery is intrinsic to every human mind.
The Delian problem — doubling the cube — which required the invention of entirely new mathematics (cylinder, cone, and torus intersecting in three dimensions), anticipating the concept of an analog computer by two millennia.
Nicholas of Cusa's revolutionary proof that the curved and the straight are incommensurable — that the circle represents a higher type of power than any polygon can approximate — overturning the foundations of ancient geometry.
Cusa's final work, On the Summit of Vision — where he argues that the most important thing to understand is not what exists, but what makes existence possible: "The summit of vision is the potential itself — the potential of every potential."
What unites these discoveries? They all demonstrate that the universe operates top-down, not bottom-up. You can't explain life by smashing it into molecules. You can't explain the mind by mapping synapses. And you can't explain human progress by adding up transactions.
Bruce connects this directly to the work of modern scientists — Dr. Michael Levin's research on goal-oriented regeneration in biological organisms, and the broader revolution underway in physics and cosmology — showing that the framework LaRouche developed is now being vindicated across every domain of science.
The connection to our political fight is direct.
The same materialist worldview that told scientists "consciousness doesn't matter" told economists "industry doesn't matter." The same top-down revolution needed in science — replacing dead mechanism with living creativity — is the revolution Trump's economic program represents in political economy. Understanding potential isn't abstract philosophy — it's the key to understanding why nations rise and fall.
This is not a class for specialists. It's for anyone who wants to understand the idea that has powered every great civilization in history.
Watch the class and discover the idea that has powered every great civilization in history.
—Promethean Action Editorial Staff
PS: The 2026 midterms will determine whether President Trump's agenda survives and accelerates — or gets reversed and crushed.
Our Midterm Bootcamp is a semi-monthly training series equipping activists, candidates, and grassroots leaders with the ideas and messaging to win.
Next session: Friday, April 3 at 8 PM EST. Sign up and check your email for the Zoom link.
Philosopher and expert in anti-entropic science (dynatropy), Cusa and Leibniz. 50 year collaborator of Lyndon LaRouche. Author of “Riemann for Anti-Dummies.” Classical double bass player.
Everyone "knows" the American Revolution was a tax revolt. It wasn't. Bob Ingraham tells the untold story of the "Black Regiment" — the Christian ministers Britain marked as enemy number one, who rallied their congregations from Lexington Green to Bunker Hill.
Modern science is built from the bottom up — math, then physics, then life, then mind. Every great discovery was made the other way. Bruce Director on how music exposes what your mind can do that no machine ever will — and why it's the key to a new revolution in science.
The chip in your phone, the guidance in your car — all of it came from the race to the Moon. Kesha Rogers on how Apollo ignited the digital age, and why Trump's Artemis Moon base is about to do it again.
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.