Dec. 9—Over the last two days, the LaRouche drumbeat is getting louder and louder.
The Schiller Institute’s Hussein Askary was interviewed by China’s CGTN on the alliance of China and the Arab world, with science, technology, populations, resources—and a rich history of interaction.
The Schiller Institute’s Karel Vereycken appeared on Iranian State TV, with a strategic overview that nothing short of a new paradigm and a New Bretton Woods economic arrangement would avert war.
U.S. Senate candidate Diane Sare, running as a LaRouche independent, had an hour-long interview with Lee Camp, with an exemplary performance for to how to outflank the otherwise crippling anti-LaRouche gossip.
And a day after the founder and chairwoman of the Schiller Institute Helga Zepp-LaRouche appeared on Russia’s top discussion program, SolovyovLive, with host Vladimir Solovyov, presenting her succinct and very compelling case. Her November article, “The Role of the Non-Aligned Movement in a New Paradigm,” for the Global South as the key new factor on the scene to rise up and make history—because there is such a thing as a punctum saliens—has appeared (pre-publication) in a new book—published by the Nov. 7-14 Bandung Spirit that she addressed online—entitled Bandung-Belgrade-Havana in Global History and Perspective.
The dialogue, the living development of ideas, needs to be experienced directly. But it was always possible for a real sovereign nation state to fight for the social, cultural and intellectual health of its population—the actual “general welfare” that is the real driver of scientific discoveries and of economic development. Figuring out ways to collaborate with lesser-developed countries was always the key for one’s own economy and one’s stable, peaceful existence—and, yes, the secret of making the extension of public credit work.
Almost on cue, China’s President Xi Jinping landed in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia (with China’s national colors spewing out of Saudi jets into the sky!), prepared to consolidate the Arab world into the Belt and Road developments. And, yes, “win-win” is the Chinese translation of collaborating with lesser-developed countries for the greater development of both.
A fun day. An outbreak of public sanity. Let’s do it again.
