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| | LaRouche Movement - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Lyndon LaRouche, who is based in Loudoun County, Virginia, United States, and his wife, Helga Zepp-LaRouche, who is based in Wiesbaden, Germany, regularly attend these international conferences and have met with foreign politicians, bureaucrats, and academicians. |
 | | Although the LaRouche movement is widely seen as a fringe political cult, the movement itself proclaims that Lyndon LaRouche is a central figure of international political and cultural importance, and that the movement is a necessary response to save the world from an ongoing and imminent global crisis. |
 | | Vitrenko's philosophy has been called a "post-Soviet Bolshevism, a histrionic concoction of Marx, Lenin and Lyndon LaRouche animated by an anger bordering on hatred for the new bourgeoisie and for multilateral international financial institutions." [14] She won 11% in the 1999 presidential election and 3% in the 2002 parliamentary elections. |
| en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Executive_Intelligence_Review (2024 words) |
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