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Strategies & Market Trends : VOLTAIRE'S PORCH-MODERATED -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: stockman_scott who wrote (45085)12/13/2001 7:07:00 AM
From: Clappy  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 65232
 
Thanks for highlighting Thomas Friedman.
When the Washington Post is praising a columnist from the
NY Times, you know there is something special about him.
His book called "The Lexus and the Olive Tree" looks interesting.
lexusandtheolivetree.com

Amazon had a review:
One day in 1992, Thomas Friedman toured a Lexus factory in Japan and marveled at the
robots that put the luxury cars together. That evening, as he ate sushi on a Japanese bullet
train, he read a story about yet another Middle East squabble between Palestinians and
Israelis. And it hit him: Half the world was lusting after those Lexuses, or at least the brilliant
technology that made them possible, and the other half was fighting over who owned which
olive tree.

Friedman, the well-traveled New York Times foreign-affairs columnist, peppers The Lexus
and the Olive Tree with stories that illustrate his central theme: that globalization--the
Lexus--is the central organizing principle of the post-cold war world, even though many
individuals and nations resist by holding onto what has traditionally mattered to them--the olive
tree.

Problem is, few of us understand what exactly globalization means. As Friedman sees it, the
concept, at first glance, is all about American hegemony, about Disneyfication of all corners of
the earth. But the reality, thank goodness, is far more complex than that, involving international
relations, global markets, and the rise of the power of individuals (Bill Gates, Osama Bin
Laden) relative to the power of nations.

No one knows how all this will shake out, but The Lexus and the Olive Tree is as good an
overview of this sometimes brave, sometimes fearful new world as you'll find. --Lou Schuler


I'll pay more attention to him.

I also appreciated the article you posted on global warming.
It further emphasises that we need to get the world in balance.

-Clappy