Diane Sare, the independent candidate for U.S. President in 2028, intervened yesterday into the chaotic and partisan celebration of America’s 250th anniversary, which has reflected America’s founding ideals more in the breach than the observance.
Sare’s intervention was in gifting an audience of nearly 100 at Philadelphia’s Villanova University, and many more watching on line, with an extended lesson, involving more than a dozen expert speakers, in the true history of the American republic. Sare did this because, as she said in keynoting the conference, “By the Grace of God, our nation has survived 250 years; but it may no longer be recognizable.” She cited her mentor, the great economist and statesman Lyndon LaRouche: “Lyndon LaRouche told you this would happen. Now, he said, let’s get rid of Wall Street!”
Diane Sare took down some of the might-makes-right power-fantasies being offered to Americans to induce them to welcome the degeneration of the nation toward the status of a new British Empire. “Russia has no intention of being defeated today. China has no intention of being humiliated again,” as in its hated “century of humiliation.”
She offered, instead, these steps toward recovering America’s productive identity:
Restoring the Glass-Steagall Act separating deposit-and-lending banks from speculating investment banks; the Act kept financial peace for 60 years before it was thrown out by Wall Street in the 1990s, leading to the 2007-08 global financial crash.
Forming a national bank to issue credit for great projects of infrastructure.
Building the Bering Strait Tunnel, a joint project with Russia to join the transport network of Eurasia with that of the Americas;
Building the North American Water and Power Alliance, designed 60 years ago to tap Alaskan and Arctic fresh water rivers and end the centuries of drought in the West;
Escalate the space program to colonize the Moon and then Mars;
In the process, develop thermonuclear fusion energy and its production technologies.
Sare concluding by urging the audience that a strong political shift is underway in America: “We are at a boundary condition. At such a time the actions of individuals, if they are in accord with natural law, can move mountains.” And she concluded by citing the words associated with Gottfried Leibniz and Cotton Mather, that “Every obstacle is an opportunity to do good.”
Following her keynote, the nation’s true history, beginning well before that Declaration 250 years ago, was presented throughout the remaining hours of Sunday, into the evening.
The event was introduced and accompanied by songs, both Classical and patriotic; and memorialized by a new issue of the LaRouche movement’s historical and cultural publication(https://schillerinstitute.com/leonore-magazine-art-science-and-statecraft/), Leonore Magazine. Many of the day’s expert speakers had published articles in this issue.