Hello
John
--
Please join us for today's special, two-session Schiller
Institute conference, directed to the younger generations, and
open to all.
The philosopher most responsible for the American Revolution,
Gottfried Leibniz, wrote: “We live in the best of all possible
worlds.” How could he write that in a world where poverty remains
unrelenting, where we are confronted with a pandemic, where a
potential war between the great powers looms on the horizon? Well,
Lyndon LaRouche would answer, because he believed fully in human
creativity aimed at increasing perfection of our understanding of the
laws of the universe and the ability of the human mind to create new
laws.
Today's conference will feature the world’s young people discussing
the ideas of LaRouche, and Mr. LaRouche’s chief collaborator, his
wife, Helga Zepp LaRouche. Like Leibniz, LaRouche was prosecuted and
defamed for his unrelenting fight to bring just such a “best of all
possible worlds” into being. The conference will feature a panorama of
LaRouche’s bold Leibnizian ideas about the types of projects and
thinking which can end poverty, create an alliance of nation states
dedicated to the common good, explore the Moon and Mars during our
lifetime, and advance and nurture the creativity at the center of
human identity, the force driving the creation of all true wealth. It
will also discuss LaRouche’s prosecution and the drive for his
exoneration.
Saturday,
September 26
10:00 AM - 1:00 PM EDT
- Helga Zepp-LaRouche, Founder and Chairman, Schiller Institute
- Jozef Mikloško, Former Deputy Prime Minister of the Czech and
Slovak Federative Republic
- Marino Elsevyf, Attorney-at-Law, Dominican Republic, Member of
1995 MLK Tribunal
- Paul Gallagher, EIR Economics Editor, Former Political
Prisoner
- Dennis Small, EIR Ibero-American Editor, Former Political
Prisoner
2:00 PM - 5:00 PM EDT
Presentations
on:
- The World Land-Bridge: Ending Poverty for Good
- The Bering Strait Tunnel: Connecting the World’s Continents
- A Presidential Alliance: LaRouche’s Policies for Ibero
America
- LaRouche’s Policies for Africa: Leaping into a New Paradigm
- Europe’s Development and a Mission for Youth
- Johannes Kepler and the Folly of the Senses
- Think Like Beethoven!
- Creativity in an Age of Artificial Intelligence
- Alexander Hamilton, LaRouche, and the Credit System
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