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Hall of Famer |
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Numbers Retired and hangs in the rafters |
Spending yourself broke and starting willy nilly wars and making sure your people live in fear tends to have the result your article alludes too
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Outta Work Pimp Ring of Honor |
Fareed Zakaria | NEWSWEEK
This guy is a good writer. |
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AFC North Player of the Month |
Zakaria's a good writer, but he's got a bad habit that many talented writers share: he lets one poetic-sounding, almost incomprehensible sentence take the place of a sound, coherent argument.
I found two examples of that in his article:
Um, how do we know this? We have a lot of evidence that globalization can exacerbate intrastate ethno-religious tensions (see Amy Chua's World on Fire: How Exporting Free Market Democracy Breeds Ethnic Hatred and Global Instability). So how do we know that interstate rivalries won't be reignited as well?
I'm not even sure what "systemic stability" means. WTO & IMF aside, does anybody think our global supply chains make our economy less fragile? Barry C. Lynn's written a great book on this subject (End of the Line: The Rise and Coming Fall of the Global Corporation). I strongly recommend it. To be fair, Zakaria brings up the Israel example, but how is that a good model for what would happen if, say, China suffered a natural disaster or was hit by a biochemical terrorist attack? If a major earthquake hit Beijing, the global economic response would be frenzied, like Kobe on crystal meth. So while the article is thought-provoking and (mostly) well-written, I didn't find it very convincing. |
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AFC North Player of the Month |
Ross Douthat has a good take on Zakaria's article:
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Numbers Retired and hangs in the rafters |
I really like Zakaria, and haven't read his book yet, so I won't comment on it too much.
But someone who I respect was picking up on his metric system argument the other day and I was thinking to myself, "Really? The metric system?" It sounded like a headline from the Onion: 'Area Social Studies Teacher Still Demands US Convert to Metric System' I don't get why this is a big deal. At all. Or even a small deal. I did read Gingrich's piece, though, and thought about posting it on here so you could all laugh at his latest attempt at a Contract For America. If that's what passes for visionary leadership in the GOP these days, boy, are you guys f'cked. It reminds me of the story that went around in the 90s: Newt's staff had two boxes in his office. One was large and was labeled "Newt's ideas", the other was a smaller shoebox. It was labeled "Newt's good ideas." That about says it all. |
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AFC North Player of the Month |
And when talking about our decline as an economic superpower, Jim Manzi is right: this graph suggests something entirely different:
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Pro Bowl Player |
good article. thanks danamal
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AFC North Player of the Month |
John Ikenberry has some interesting thoughts on a similar subject:
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Skipper of the Lake Erie Booze Patrol Ring of Honor |
Empires rise and fall.
Look at the shift just in the last century. (not to mention the last few thousand....) WSS |
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AFC North Player of the Month |
True, Steve.
But what Ikenberry is saying is that we can build strong international institutions so that we won't be abused by the next superpower fifty to one-hundred years down the line. I think that's a pretty good idea. |
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Skipper of the Lake Erie Booze Patrol Ring of Honor |
It doesn't matter what he's saying Alo. All that matters is that the slide takes a lot longer than the years I have left. As Plato said eventually a democratic society will vote itself more than those who produce can provide. Germany and England used to be manufacturing superpowers. WW2 came along and then it was us. We regulated and taxed and unionized the manufacturing to places where poor people work cheap. Enter China on the upswing. Like we did when we imported Chinese and Irish and Polish and Italians and Hungarians and Mexicans and the rest. The strongest countries have the best weapons. Ghengis Khan had the bow and arrow. We had the atom bomb. Soon enough every jerkwater psychotic with a few acres of sand or jungle will have one. We can bully, bribe or kiss the asses of whatever other countries we want and in less than a century it's gonna be somebody else on top. We have food and weapons right now. Spices tea cotton gold oil, all worthy of wars in days gone Wheat next? If we don't keep up with the food and develop weapons a lot worse than what we have, someone brutal enough will wipe us out. Caesar got complacent. The barbarians didn't. WSS |
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