What Does Culture Do?
What we know as 20th-Century fascism, or synarchism as we fought against it under President Franklin Roosevelt’s leadership lies in a persisting effort to overturn those principles of civilized relations among sovereign nation-states which were adopted by the 1648 Treaty of Westphalia.
As we have documented this fact in locations published earlier, the turn in direction of pathway, away from President Franklin Roosevelt’s leadership, toward the catastrophe which is our nation’s terrible condition today, was begun as part of an operation in which the later head of our Central Intelligence Agency, John Foster Dulles’ brother Allen, played a key role, toward the close of World War II. This is a role he played together, and over the later decades of his life, with accomplices, including his James Jesus Angleton. Dulles and Angleton, typify those who played a key role in bringing a key part of the Nazi SS intelligence apparatus into the inside of what becam
EIR LEAD EDITORIAL FOR THURSDAY, MAY 20, 2021
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by Ruchira Paul
Travelers to India came from all corners of the world through the ages for different reasons. The very first modern humans probably came there in order to escape harsh climate conditions elsewhere in the world. Latter day visitors arrived with varied objectives in mind. Some came seeking material fortune, some for spiritual enlightenment and others merely out of curiosity. A few who came, took what they wanted and left. Others came to conquer and decided to stay and make India their home. Then there were mercenary visitors who looked at India as a vast revenues source for enriching themselves and their own native lands while also seeing an opportunity to instill their religious and “civilizing” values on a foreign nation. They too decided to stay but never thought of India as home. India still attracts visitors from across the world. Most come as tourists to check out its numerous and varied natural and historical vistas (there is always the Taj Mahal). Some may
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If you are not from her home state of Minnesota, your first inkling that Sen. Amy Klobuchar is a serious lawmaker may have come during Brett Kavanaugh’s confirmation hearings in 2018. The hearings were a circus. Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse spun conspiracy theories about dark money. Sen. Patrick Leahy demanded to know who hacked his email in 2001. Protesters in Halloween costumes howled from the gallery. But Klobuchar asked Kavanaugh to defend two antitrust rulings he had made as a judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit.
Antitrust: Taking on Monopoly Power from the Gilded Age to the Digital Age, by Amy Klobuchar. Knopf, 624 pp., $32.50.