That Used to Be Us
How America Fell Behind in the World It Invented and How We Can Come Back
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- نقد و بررسی
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نقد و بررسی
September 5, 2011
Reflecting on America's past greatness and its slipping position among global powers, Pulitzer-Prize winning New York Times columnist Friedman (The World is Flat) and foreign policy expert Mandelbaum (The Frugal Superpower) warn against the United States' "dangerous complacency" in the face of increasingly complex global challenges. They repeat a question first posed by Bill Gates ("What was all that good stuff we had that other people copied?") and prescribe a set of sensible government practices for prosperity: invest in public education and infrastructure, foster immigration and scientific research, and set up effective financial regulation. The rapid upheaval of the Arab Spring exemplifies the dynamism of today's intertwined world ("Flat World 2.0"), where ideas and innovationânot goods or skillsâare an individual or country's top economic commodities. American workers must approach the global marketplace with creativity in order to remain globally competitive. To that end, they also support reigning in the national debt and committing to the use of alternative energy sources. Broad ranging in its anecdotes and research, conversational (if pedantic) in its tone, and hopeful in its patriotism, they look the challenges of the 21st century squarely in the eye.
Audiobooks dealing with complex political and economic issues can sometimes be a listening challenge because of the level of detail they present. In this work narrator Jason Culp keeps listeners engaged and on track in following the arguments presented by leading thinkers Friedman and Mandelbaum. Culp's tone is both concerned and hopeful as he guides listeners through the authors' diagnosis of the problems plaguing the United States, including the education challenge, policies that have led to a burgeoning national deficit, failure to implement scientific and energy policies with regard to climate change, and increasingly divided partisan politics. Although the problems are indeed big, Friedman and Mandelbaum prescribe some tactics to get us back on track. S.E.G. (c) AudioFile 2011, Portland, Maine
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