Join participants from all over the world—the first live panel is
starting for the Schiller Institute's international online conference
(10 am EDT start time).
Decades ago, Lyndon LaRouche warned that the imposition of
monetarist policies would lead to the collapse of economies and the
outbreak of pandemics, and he devoted his life to developing the
policies needed to reverse those disasters and to establish the basis
for durable survival. This Schiller Institute conference will address
the failure of the old paradigm, and the fight for the adoption of a
new one, guided by the ideas of Lyndon LaRouche.
Got a question for one of the speakers on the opening panel?
Send your questions to,
[email protected]
Additional information about how to watch and/or participate is
listed below, followed by a partial list of the speakers.
To listen by phone
The conference audio will be available on the following telephone
conference numbers. To call in you'll need the meeting id: 864
9630 6464 and the pass code: 580709
+1(646)876-9923, +1(312)626-6799, +1(669)900-6833, +1(253)215-8782,
+1(301)715-8592, +1(346)248-7799, +1(408)638-0968
(For the best quality, select the area code closest to
you)
We invite you to be part of this
extraordinary dialogue. You can direct questions to the speakers
at:
For simultaneous translation
There will be simultaneous translations into
Spanish, German,
French, Italian, and
Chinese, available through a Zoom video broadcast
(languages can be selected from the "interpretation" button in the
Zoom meeting options).
Zoom broadcast link (not for English
broadcast)
Pass code: 580709
Partial list of speakers
Panel 1: The Urgent Need to Replace Geopolitics with a New
Paradigm in International Relations
Saturday, April 25, 10:00 a.m. U.S. EDT [16:00 CEST]
Keynote Address, Helga Zepp-LaRouche,
founder and chairwoman, Schiller Institute
Jacques Cheminade, Former French
Presidential Candidate; Chair, Solidarite et Progres
Plus other important guest speakers
Panel 2: For a Better Understanding of How Our Universe
Functions
Saturday, April 25, 3:00 p.m. U.S. EDT [21:00 CEST]
LaRouchePAC Science Team: Megan Beets,
Benjamin Deniston, Jason Ross: "In Defense of the Human Species"
Jean-Pierre Luminet, PhD,
Astrophysicist; emeritus researcher at National Center of Scientific
Research: "Free Invention in Creative Discovery"
Michel Tognini, Astronaut; Association
of Space Explorers founding member Friendship Between
Astronauts: "An Exemplary Precedent for International Cooperation"
Marie Korsaga, Ph.D., Astrophysicist,
Burkina Faso: "The Necessity of Science Education for African
Youth"
Plus additional experts
Panel 3: Creativity as the Distinctive Characteristic of Human
Culture: The Need for a Classical Renaissance
Sunday, April 26, 11:00 a.m. U.S. EDT [17:00 CEST]
Beethoven, An die ferne
Geliebte, John Sigerson accompanied by Margaret Greenspan
Lyndon LaRouche "I Have Insisted that
Music is Intelligible!"
Helga Zepp-LaRouche, founder and and
chairwoman, Schiller Institute
William Warfield, "A Poetic Musical
Offering"
Willis Patterson, "The Presence of the
Classical Principle in Folk Music"
John Sigerson, "The Physical Power of
Classical Poetry and Music"
Eugene Simpson, Hall Johnson and the
Dvorak Dream, "From Spiritual to Art Song"
Diane Sare, "On the Employment of
Chorus in Politics"
Panel 4: The Science of Physical Economy
Sunday, April 26, 3:00 p.m. U.S. EDT [21:00 CEST]
Dennis Small, United States, Schiller
Institute Director for Ibero-America: "LaRouche’s Legacy: Foundation
of the Modern Science of Physical Economy."
Sébastien Périmony, France, Schiller
Institute representative: "When Africa Looks to the Stars."
Cédric Mbeng Mezui, Gabon, author of
"Unlocking the Potential of Africa – Ideas by Alexander Hamilton,"
financial sector expert, think tank FinanceAfrika.
Phillip Tsokolibane, South Africa,
leader of LaRouche South Africa.
Bob Baker, United States: "Feed the
Future: Eating Is a Moral Right—A Dialogue With American Farmers."
Prof. Mario Roberto Morales, Guatemala,
professor, writer, and recipient of Guatemala’s Miguel Angel Asturias
National Prize for Literature, 2007: "The Productive vs. the
Speculative Economy: A View from Central America."
Daisuke Kotegawa, former Executive
Director for Japan at IMF.
Ellen Brown, United States, President
of the Public Banking Institute: "Productive Credit, not Predatory
Debt."
If you have questions for any of the speakers, send them to:
[email protected]
Susan Kokinda LaRouchePAC, Midwest
http://action.larouchepac.com/
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