Selasa, 30 Agustus 2016

PDF Download Has the West Lost It?

PDF Download Has the West Lost It?

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Has the West Lost It?

Has the West Lost It?


Has the West Lost It?


PDF Download Has the West Lost It?

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Has the West Lost It?

Product details

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Audible Audiobook

Listening Length: 2 hours and 21 minutes

Program Type: Audiobook

Version: Unabridged

Publisher: Penguin Books Ltd

Audible.com Release Date: April 5, 2018

Whispersync for Voice: Ready

Language: English, English

ASIN: B07BMDHQTN

Amazon Best Sellers Rank:

It’s finally good to hear the story from point of view of rest of the world. Unfortunately, we are so overwhelmed my western point of view both in academia and public discourse that it’s easy to ignore other voices. I think western intellectuals would be well served to heed the points raised by the author and try to look at the world by removing the glasses of western universalism over their eyes.It’s so nice to read a former diplomat raising such provocative points in very simple and candid way and yet being very delicate at the same time.

What Kishore Mahbubani brings to the Western reader is a very different perspective on the developments occurring in the 21st century and how the leadership of the Western world, and America in particular missed a major shift in world history. He has an explanation and it rings true for this reviewer that the ideology that sweep over the prevailing mind set of leading intellectuals was not reflective of real events occurring around them. The result was a disconnect between politics, cooperating media, and the citizenry -- particularly the Middle Class that was falling away with no hope of foreseeable return, the working people as he refers to them. “Many societies, from Sweden to Singapore, have devised various social safety nets to help the working classes handle the disruptions of globalization. The solution is not to close the doors to free trade. The theory of comparative advantage still holds true. Asia is rising because it remains committed to this theory. The Western elites need to regain their intellectual confidence and explain again to the masses how it works. To do so, however, they have to overcome their current bitter divisiveness.”He praises Western leading publications but notes they are not yet seeing clearly what is occurring using The New York Times and the New Yorker as examples with Trump ruling the headlines. But the very recent victory of a young Social Democrat in the Bronx – Queens congressional district over a long term Democratic Congressman in a primary seems to have sent both publications into a broader outlook rather quickly.He notes that it was not the attack of 9/11 that was the major event of the new century but the entry of China, with its billion wide workforce, into the World Trade Organization, and here he is displaying a broader perspective of a Singapore leading diplomat and United Nations Ambassador, that is the core of his presentation; his suggestion that we stop bombing Muslim countries and why also a wise one.It is a short work but insightful and may be a preparation for what is to come. A good read.

If you're the type of person that regularly goes to the salon and submits yourself to the incoherent musings of intellectuals, this book might be for you. Gets 2 stars because it's so bad, it's provocative, and that could be good.

An easy read that kept me engaged with a wonderfully analytical narrative of the evolving global order and what can be expected in the decades to come.

Good thought on the de hay of fue west against the rest and eastern civilization well balanced thought on the subject .

Very interesting study

I found this book a complete chore to read, though the relative shortness of it at least let me off the hook in under 2 hours. The book is about the change in the global landscape since the end of the Cold War and how the hubris of the West with respect to ideology, power, moral authority, geographic reach needs to be fundamentally reversed. The need for reflection by western political elites is without question, especially if their is a belief that the past offers good lessons for future policy considerations but the tone of this book is quite ridiculous. The author frames much of his initial perspective on the deluded optimism that was in the minds of western academics when Francis Fukuyama published The End of History.The author discusses how the world has been changing. How China and India have reemerged and the global order of the 20th century has totally changed. The author discusses how the West fails to recognize that and that its actions with respect to the global community are neither wanted nor needed by many. The author discusses how the West humiliated many countries and invasions like Iraq were catastrophic and how western elites should self reflect. That there exist some "western elites" who can't see the strategic errors committed both through the cold war era as well as obvious choices in the last decade or so most certainly does not mean that western elites have not self reflected. The author's tone is pretty childishly us vs them with the them as extremely hazy. Europeans who are blanketed with the western elites are very much non-interventionist in their state policy. So the author really is in a thinly veiled term talking about the US. That in and of itself isn't too problematic, but with respect to colonial history, clearly Europe has far more culpability in that realm than the US in which case what is the point of all of this historical reflection. It seems like this book is about settling some score, which frankly being a diplomat from Singapore has little substantial credibility in terms of the agony of western imperialism. The author's understanding of economics is non-existent; the author highlights Turkey as an example of how the West humiliated Turkey by not letting it in rather than even focusing on the lack of fiscal or monetary reform by Turkey; just considering the challenges Greece has highlighted that come with a monetary union and considering what would have happened had Turkey joined with current events starkly reinforces the author's perspective is from some geopolitical status based mentality. The author repeatedly refers to the humiliation of Russia and how the US should stop bombing the Middle East. I too would like the US to stop involving itself in other nation's affairs as well as to have never have invaded Iraq, but the issues we face today are not solely due to such actions and the affect of things like smartphones and their ability to catalyze coordination that led to the toppling of other Middle Eastern regimes cant be blamed on the US and Iraq. The author's analysis is weak, used to support his own arguments in isolation, and argued to some audience that apparently wants to cheerlead his anger.The main lesson from the book is that the world has changed, the rules of changed as has the power structure and the west must recognize and change too. That is most certainly true and there is a great need for structural reform. That being said, that the book has a valid lesson doesn't change that its tone is condescending and steeped in aggressive language that serves no productive purpose. The author's target in terms of his criticism is totally different than the target audience and as a consequence reading this can be tiresome as I learned literally nothing. I gained no perspective, I gained no policy ideas that are at all substantial and I got some confused narrative for the world is one but the rhetoric is all the West vs the Rest. Some of the policy ideas are so unimpressively trivializing real issues that the book loses all credibility. The author highlighting how Singapore has living wage policies to combat the challenges of globalization as an example, is a total joke. The economics of a city state vs a country are incomparable; I am certain NY could support a living wage if the tax and service provisions were restricted to the city... The author can't be that naïve.. In any case, the book is really not worth reading as the existential issues that face the West are far better addressed, partially, in more thoughtful books. The author's hawkishness is not convincing beyond the initial obvious criticism he posed, which one could read in the first chapter.

Interesting perspective worth learning about and well informed

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