> Pour information :
> LE QUOTIDIEN SUISSE RECONNAIT QUE Lyndon LAROUCHE EST AU CENTRE DE
> L'ELAN ANTI-STRAUSSIAN. Deux tiers d'une page du Neue Zuercher Zeitung
sont
> occupé es
> par un article dont le titre est "Traditions de Conspiration dans
> Amérique - - Leo Strauss,
> LaRouche et le Neo - Conservatrice Cabale."
>
> Source: Neue Zuercher Zeitung, June 13]
> LEADING SWISS DAILY RECOGNIZES LAROUCHE AT CENTER OF ONGOING
> ANTI-STRAUSSIAN MOMENTUM. Over two thirds of a page in today's
> issue of the {Neue Zuercher Zeitung} are occupied with an article
> headlined, "Traditions of Conspiracy in America -- Leo Strauss,
> LaRouche and the Neo-Conservative Cabal."
> The author, the daily's former Washington DC correspondent
> Hans-Rudolf Kamer, notes that the Bush Administration is under
> the suspicion that it has gotten under the control of neo-con
> hardliners, who staged the war against Iraq and secretly aims for
> world domination. The current accusations over the missing WMD's
> in Iraq get interwoven with traditional conspiracy theories,
> Kamer writes, then going onto a whole convoluted piece of what
> neo-cons are and aren't, with the main claim that those that are
> said to be neo-cons in the Bush Administration allegedly are no
> neo-cons in the "classical" sense.
> As for the "conspiracy theory" trends, Kamer notes Hillary
> Clinton's lashing out against a rightwing conspiracy at the time
> when Bill came under impeachment threats. Thanks to coverage of
> such conspiracy theories in the {New York Times} and the {New
> Yorker}, these charges have resonance also in Europe now, Kamer
> says. Of course, there is also Lyndon LaRouche, he adds, who
> published a pamphlet called "The Children of Satan," just a few
> weeks before the NYT and the New Yorker ran their articles.
> LaRouche talks about the "Nietzschean fascism of Leo Strauss" and
> the "world government utopies" of Bertrand Russell and H.G.
> Wells, which he combines with the new American pre-emptive war
> strategy. Moreover, LaRouche claims that 9-11 was a new
> "Reichstagsbrand."
> LaRouche, Kamer says, is a mixture of Kant and
> anti-Semitism, paranoid tirades against everything from British
> empiricism to Ollie North. But isn't it strange, indeed, that
> politics currently makes strange bed-fellows, and of course,
> Prof. Strauss is not a fascist, Kamer claims, but a "good
> democrat," who now is under attack from "neo-socialists like
> LaRouche."
> [Source: Neue Zuercher Zeitung, June 13]
> LEADING SWISS DAILY RECOGNIZES LAROUCHE AT CENTER OF ONGOING
> ANTI-STRAUSSIAN MOMENTUM. Over two thirds of a page in today's
> issue of the {Neue Zuercher Zeitung} are occupied with an article
> headlined, "Traditions of Conspiracy in America -- Leo Strauss,
> LaRouche and the Neo-Conservative Cabal."
> The author, the daily's former Washington DC correspondent
> Hans-Rudolf Kamer, notes that the Bush Administration is under
> the suspicion that it has gotten under the control of neo-con
> hardliners, who staged the war against Iraq and secretly aims for
> world domination. The current accusations over the missing WMD's
> in Iraq get interwoven with traditional conspiracy theories,
> Kamer writes, then going onto a whole convoluted piece of what
> neo-cons are and aren't, with the main claim that those that are
> said to be neo-cons in the Bush Administration allegedly are no
> neo-cons in the "classical" sense.
> As for the "conspiracy theory" trends, Kamer notes Hillary
> Clinton's lashing out against a rightwing conspiracy at the time
> when Bill came under impeachment threats. Thanks to coverage of
> such conspiracy theories in the {New York Times} and the {New
> Yorker}, these charges have resonance also in Europe now, Kamer
> says. Of course, there is also Lyndon LaRouche, he adds, who
> published a pamphlet called "The Children of Satan," just a few
> weeks before the NYT and the New Yorker ran their articles.
> LaRouche talks about the "Nietzschean fascism of Leo Strauss" and
> the "world government utopies" of Bertrand Russell and H.G.
> Wells, which he combines with the new American pre-emptive war
> strategy. Moreover, LaRouche claims that 9-11 was a new
> "Reichstagsbrand."
> LaRouche, Kamer says, is a mixture of Kant and
> anti-Semitism, paranoid tirades against everything from British
> empiricism to Ollie North. But isn't it strange, indeed, that
> politics currently makes strange bed-fellows, and of course,
> Prof. Strauss is not a fascist, Kamer claims, but a "good
> democrat," who now is under attack from "neo-socialists like
> LaRouche."
> [Source: Neue Zuercher Zeitung, June 13]
> LEADING SWISS DAILY RECOGNIZES LAROUCHE AT CENTER OF ONGOING
> ANTI-STRAUSSIAN MOMENTUM. Over two thirds of a page in today's
> issue of the {Neue Zuercher Zeitung} are occupied with an article
> headlined, "Traditions of Conspiracy in America -- Leo Strauss,
> LaRouche and the Neo-Conservative Cabal."
> The author, the daily's former Washington DC correspondent
> Hans-Rudolf Kamer, notes that the Bush Administration is under
> the suspicion that it has gotten under the control of neo-con
> hardliners, who staged the war against Iraq and secretly aims for
> world domination. The current accusations over the missing WMD's
> in Iraq get interwoven with traditional conspiracy theories,
> Kamer writes, then going onto a whole convoluted piece of what
> neo-cons are and aren't, with the main claim that those that are
> said to be neo-cons in the Bush Administration allegedly are no
> neo-cons in the "classical" sense.
> As for the "conspiracy theory" trends, Kamer notes Hillary
> Clinton's lashing out against a rightwing conspiracy at the time
> when Bill came under impeachment threats. Thanks to coverage of
> such conspiracy theories in the {New York Times} and the {New
> Yorker}, these charges have resonance also in Europe now, Kamer
> says. Of course, there is also Lyndon LaRouche, he adds, who
> published a pamphlet called "The Children of Satan," just a few
> weeks before the NYT and the New Yorker ran their articles.
> LaRouche talks about the "Nietzschean fascism of Leo Strauss" and
> the "world government utopies" of Bertrand Russell and H.G.
> Wells, which he combines with the new American pre-emptive war
> strategy. Moreover, LaRouche claims that 9-11 was a new
> "Reichstagsbrand."
> LaRouche, Kamer says, is a mixture of Kant and
> anti-Semitism, paranoid tirades against everything from British
> empiricism to Ollie North. But isn't it strange, indeed, that
> politics currently makes strange bed-fellows, and of course,
> Prof. Strauss is not a fascist, Kamer claims, but a "good
> democrat," who now is under attack from "neo-socialists like
> LaRouche."
>
>
>