For nearly 45 minutes, independent U.S. Senate candidate in New York Diane Sare held a dialogue with Celeste Sáenz, the head of Mexico’s Journalists’ Club, in a wide-ranging interview that was broadcast late in the afternoon of Oct. 21 over Radio Canion of Mexico City. That station has about 600,000 listeners, and the audience of the sister stations across Mexico that re-broadcast the programs is in the range of 3-4 million.
Sáenz, who has signed the Schiller Institute call for a new international security and development architecture, as well as the petition demanding that the CCD and Myrotvorets hit lists be shut down, enthusiastically supported Sare’s “courage, clarity and intellect” throughout the interview. She said “I hope that the U.S. has the privilege of having her in the Senate, because her leadership is needed for New York, the United States, and the world.” The two discussed the economic ideas of Lyndon LaRouche; Helga Zepp-LaRouche’s world leadership role with the Schiller Institute; and the need for patriots of all nations to act like world citizens in the face of the imminent danger of nuclear war.
Sáenz’s question included: 1) How did you overcome the obstacles to getting on the ballot? 2) Why doesn’t Chuck Schumer want to debate you? 3) Does the U.S. population understand the danger of war against Russia, and does the U.S. Congress understand the responsibility it has to stop the drive to nuclear war? 4) Why is the Congress financing hit lists like the CCD and Myrotvorets, with people like you and Helga Zepp-LaRouche at the top of the list? 5) For the electorate, you are the voice of Lyndon LaRouche, who was persecuted and jailed by then-President George Bush. What has happened to the U.S., when in the last World War it fought against the very fascism which it now embodies? And 6) You call for a new paradigm of cooperation among nations. How would that work?
After the program aired, Sáenz’s team told this news service that they had received many calls from listeners with greetings and congratulations, and thanking them for speaking up when so many remain silent. “The rejection of war is palpable,” they reported.