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LaRouche and Kronberg
In 2009, Molly Kronberg, widow of Kenneth Kronberg, sued LaRouche in federal court for the Eastern District of Virginia, in Alexandria, alleging that he and his associates libelled and harassed her on account of her compelled testimony in the 1988 case which led to his conviction.

LaRouche and with
He served time in the Federal Medical Center, Rochester, in Rochester, Minnesota, sharing a cell with activist Lyndon LaRouche and skydiver Roger Nelson.
Proponents of Bilderberg conspiracy theories in the United States include individuals and groups such as the John Birch Society, political activist Phyllis Schlafly, writer Jim Tucker, political activist Lyndon LaRouche, radio host Alex Jones, and politician Jesse Ventura, who made the Bilderberg group a topic of a 2009 episode of his TruTV series Conspiracy Theory with Jesse Ventura.
It has also published editorials comparing the attacks by Seymour Hersh, and The New York Times on Leo Strauss and his alleged influence in the George W. Bush administration with those of Lyndon LaRouche, a fringe conspiracy theorist and perennial presidential candidate.
Journalists and government officials in China, Italy and Russia have credited LaRouche with forecasting that unrestricted financial speculation would cause the late-2000s financial crisis.
For six months, LaRouche worked with American Healyite leader Tim Wohlforth, who later wrote that LaRouche had a " gargantuan ego ," and " a marvelous ability to place any world happening in a larger context, which seemed to give the event additional meaning, but his thinking was schematic, lacking factual detail and depth.
In 1984 he founded the Schiller Institute in Germany with his second wife, and three political parties there — the Europäische Arbeiterpartei, Patrioten für Deutschland, and Bürgerrechtsbewegung Solidarität — and in 2000 the Worldwide LaRouche Youth Movement.
LaRouche's critics such as Dennis King and Antony Lerman allege that in 1973 and with little warning, LaRouche adopted more extreme ideas, a process accompanied by a campaign of violence against his opponents on the left, and the development of conspiracy theories and paranoia about his personal safety.
A two-part article in The New York Times in 1979 by Howard Blum and Paul L. Montgomery alleged that LaRouche had turned it — at that point with 1, 000 members in 37 offices in North America, and 26 in Europe and Latin America — into an extreme-right, anti-Semitic organization, despite the presence of Jewish members.
LaRouche would question spouses about their partner's sexual habits, the Times said, and in one case reportedly ordered a member to stop having sex with his wife because it was making him " politically impotent.
* U. S. Labor Party – for the mid-1970s party run by Lyndon LaRouche which has no connections with the current Labor Party.
Another United States politician, Lyndon LaRouche, has attempted an entryist strategy in the Democratic Party since 1980, but with little success.
He has other family member interviewers who show the same behavior, such as " Lyndon " ( which plays off wacky political figure Lyndon LaRouche ), " Geek ", " Giddy ", " Gip ," " Goon ", " Gawp ", and " Gawk ", along with females named " Gay ", " Grandma ", " Gab ", " Gin ", " Gidget ", and " Gal ".
* Dennis King's LaRouche Watch site includes full text of Lyndon LaRouche and the New American Fascism with history of NCLC / ICLC through late 1980s.
The reason Fred Newman and his colleagues provided for leaving the NCLC was a disagreement between LaRouche and Newman over what to do with the National Unemployed and Welfare Rights Organization ( NUWRO ), which the LaRouchians had founded the previous year ( Newman wanted to build it up, while LaRouche wanted to concentrate on more rarefied issues ).
However, the differences in life style between LaRouchians and Newmanites were equally important in triggering the split, with the notably puritanical LaRouche writing that there was no room in the NCLC for the CFC's unconventional ( by LaRouchian standards ) sexual practices.
Newman's Centers for Change not only did not join in this condemnation ( or in the self-defense coalition that protected leftist meetings at the height of the violence ) but they began working enthusiastically with LaRouche.
Furthermore, Newman and his closest associates expelled and harassed members of Centers for Change, such as Jim Retherford and David Socholitsky, who opposed the alliance with LaRouche.
In a dramatic public confrontation at a forum on New York's Upper West Side and in a series of mimeographed broadsides, they accused Newman of running a psychotherapy cult and of encouraging his followers to provide the FBI with false information on a dissident member of the former CFC, Jim Retherford, who had denounced Newman's alliance with LaRouche.
Lyndon LaRouche, leader of a controversial movement on the political fringe, describes a wide-ranging historical phenomenon, starting with Alexandre Saint-Yves d ' Alveydre and the Martinist Order followed by important individuals, organizations, movements and regimes that are alleged to have been synarchist, including the government of Nazi Germany.
The Schiller Institute is an international political and economic think tank, one of the primary organizations of the LaRouche movement, with headquarters in Germany and the United States, and supporters in Australia, Canada, Russia, and South America, among others, according to its website.
This is interesting because Fulani works closely with Fred Newman, a former affiliate of LaRouche who broke from the National Caucus of Labor Committees to start his own political activities.

LaRouche and him
Bobby Ray Inman, the CIA's deputy director in 1981 and 1982, said LaRouche and his wife had visited him offering information about the West German Green Party, and a CIA spokesman said LaRouche met Deputy Director John McMahon in 1983 to discuss one of LaRouche's trips overseas.
Nevertheless, the Newman group, after their split from LaRouche, did denounce him and continued to do so over the years.
According to detailed descriptions by LaRouche, White had been brainwashed by the CIA and KGB to kill him.
Frankhouser warned LaRouche in 1977 that, according to his claimed CIA contact " Mr. Ed ", he was being considered for assassination, and introduced him to Mitchell WerBell III, a noted Office of Strategic Services ( OSS ) and Central Intelligence Agency ( CIA ) operative, mercenary, operator of a counterterrorism school, accused drug trafficker, firearms engineer, and arms dealer who said he had an ongoing connection to the CIA.
LaRouche developed close ties with WerBell, hiring him as a security consultant for protection against the assumed assassination threat and to train his security staff.
Frankhouser cultivated a contact with a media source in New York, enabling him to tip off LaRouche about upcoming stories before they became public.
) To oppose this, LaRouche argued for a " reindustrialization " of the United States with himself at the vanguard of the effort allowing him to personally resolve the crisis of capitalism.
According to one candidate, supporters viewed LaRouche as " the greatest political leader and economist of the 20th century, and they're proud to be associated with him.
In August 1982, former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger sent a memo to Webster requesting an investigation of the LaRouche movement due to their " increasingly obnoxious " harassment of him, which was raised at a meeting that day of the President's Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board by senior member David Abshire.
While surrounded, LaRouche sent a telegram to President Ronald Reagan saying that an attempt to arrest him " would be an attempt to kill me.
Frankhouser became a security consultant for LaRouche after convincing him that he was actively connected to U. S. intelligence agencies.
Frankhouser told LaRouche that the CIA wanted him to destroy evidence and hide witnesses.
Frankhouser claimed that on another occasion LaRouche sent him to Boston to check on the grand jury investigation.
Outside of court, LaRouche denied all the charges, calling them " an all-out frame-up by a state and federal task force ," and said that the federal government was trying to kill him.
One, by Albert Bleckmann, director of the Institute for Public Law and Political Sciences at the University of Münster, objected to the lack of voir dire, the exclusion of evidence under the motion in limine, the fact that the government did not approach LaRouche about his tax situation before indicting him for tax violations, and concerns about double jeopardy because of the nearly identical charges in the Boston and Alexandria trials.
However, according to the Federal Election Commission statistics, LaRouche had more individual contributors to his 2004 Presidential Campaign than any other candidate, until the final quarter of the primary season, when John Kerry surpassed him.
His mother said he became interested in politics after 9 / 11, and told his parents he felt it was important to protest against the Iraq war, which is what led him to take an interest in the LaRouche movement.
In 1999 a LaRouche publication said Britain's Secret Intelligence Service ( MI6 ) was threatening to assassinate him, probably with backing from the royal household.
The man who sold him the paper was Benoit Chalifoux, the editor of Nouvelle Solidarité, the LaRouche movement's French-language newspaper, and one of the movement's recruiters.
" According to Witt, LaRouche has been concerned since the 1970s that his members might be brainwashed by intelligence agencies to harm him.
She writes that The New York Times obtained a tape recording in 1973 of the so-called de-programming of a 26-year-old British activist, Christopher White, who LaRouche believed had been programmed to kill him.

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