Roanoke Times Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc. DATE: MONDAY, April 2, 1990 TAG: 9004020312 SECTION: VIRGINIA PAGE: A6 EDITION: EVENING SOURCE: Associated Press DATELINE: PORTSMOUTH LENGTH: Short
"We have got to wake people up as to where America is going, because believe me, brother, it's on the bottom," he said. "And I was definitely interested in seeing what I could do to get it squared away."
Williams, 64, became one of nine council candidates in five Hampton Roads cities to join a so-called Common Sense Slate organized by supporters of LaRouche, a four-time presidential hopeful and convicted felon whose apocalyptic views have made him America's best-known fringe candidate.
"I don't agree with everything he says," Williams said of LaRouche, who is serving 15 years on fraud charges. "But I like some of his ideas, and I'm an old, common-sense man, brought up the hard way."
Impending bedlam is a hallmark of LaRouche's philosophy, which paints the world economy as teetering on collapse and drug trafficking as the work of a Zionist conspiracy. He demands a return to "classical education" to counter the effects of the "rock-drug-sex counterculture."
LaRouche, who from his Minnesota jail cell is running for Congress in Northern Virginia's 10th District, argues for continued distrust of the Soviet Union, an ambitious defense buildup and federally backed reindustrialization.
The LaRouche group's nine Hampton Roads candidates - four in Norfolk, two in Virginia Beach, and one each in Chesapeake, Portsmouth and Hampton - are part of a campaign by LaRouche's National Democratic Policy Committee to seek hundreds of local offices throughout the country.
by CNB