The Real American Presidency: How Lincoln and LaRouche Would Fight the “Principalities and Powers” of Today

The “Epstein E-Mails” have taken the cloak off of what American economist Lyndon LaRouche pointed to for over fifty years as the moral depravity and bankruptcy of the trans-Atlantic political, financial, and cultural establishment. To achieve real justice for those victimized, abused, and exploited as chattel slavery for the "principalities and powers, forces of darkness, and wickedness in high places” which the Epstein Files hint at, one must be willing to go through Great Britain, and the City of London and particular, which involves the entire Anglo-American ruling elite inside both so-called U.S. political parties, stretching from Silicon Valley, Wall Street, to the Military-Financial Complex. 

One must also rediscover, in the 250th year of America’s Declaration of Independence, the true American Revolution, which fought against imperialism, colonialism, and all the satanic practices associated with the British Empire then, and has been continued up to this time in a different form. Both Lyndon LaRouche, who passed away on this day, 7 years ago, and Abraham Lincoln understood the true nature of the American Presidency, as an instrument which was to be used by the American Citizenry, for the general welfare. That approach must be adopted by the American people today, who have generally been unconfident, pessimistic, or complacent in replacing the process called the Democratic and Republican Parties, which have both been completely discredited now. 

The absolute pit of human depravity of the Epstein Affair is a wake-up call for all people in the United States, and elsewhere in the West, to reverse course and reject this wicked behavior on behalf of all peoples of the world, especially in the Global South, who have largely risen and rejected this behavior for a better alternative. That requires returning to our better traditions, to our revolutionary heritage, and to the physical-economic ideas of Alexander Hamilton, George Washington, Abraham Lincoln and others, who extended science, technology, and manufacturing to other nations in the hope that they would be free from colonialism. 

Today’s Fireside Chat will locate that mission within the context of the American Presidency, as applied for the good by Lyndon LaRouche and Abraham Lincoln.