August 1999 • Volume 10, NO. 7
The South Asian province of Kashmir has become a nuclear flash point.
In the wake of nato’s bombing of the Chinese Embassy in Kosovo and recent accusations by China against American “meddling” in Chinese affairs (as the U.S. has recently pushed for stronger ties with Taiwan, including supporting Taiwan’s developing military), China now feels the twist of another old thorn in its side—suggestions of Taiwanese independence by the Taiwan president himself.
Latin exports are catching on in the U.S. these days, and not just in the entertainment industry. But perhaps they are nowhere more sought after than in Europe.
The World Health Organization (who) reports that aids now causes more deaths than any other infectious disease. The scary part is that who maintains that the aids pandemic is still nowhere near its peak.
Events unfolding in Europe are going to cause World War III very soon. And yet most people are blind to the great crisis that is about to explode. You need to understand so you can escape the coming nightmare.
As the dust of war settles over Kosovo and Serbia licks its bleeding wounds, the most profound effect of this latest Balkan crisis is beginning to dawn on some observers of the European scene. This Kosovo crisis has simply quickened the pace, dramatically, of the rise of imperial Europe.
A little nation presents a big challenge to American superpower.
At the end of World War II, Europe lay in rubble. One man warned for over 50 years that Germany would again rise to lead a united Europe, and that Britain would not be a part of that European Union. Thirteen years after his death, it appears Herbert W. Armstrong will be proven right.
Once again the infamous Irish “peace process” has failed. This shoddy, unworkable compromise came crashing down on the very day that was to mark its greatest step forward.
Some laud the theology of Star Wars. But does Star Wars reflect a true religion?
Despite an eight-year economic boom in America, personal bankruptcy filings for the last three years have hit record highs. Experts predict that by 2002, the U.S. will see a 43 percent increase to the astounding level of 2 million personal bankruptcies a year. Why are so many Americans experiencing the curse of such financial worries?