You want to read The Global Economic Crisis The Great Depression of
the XXI Century, edited by Michel Chossudovsky and Andrew Gavin
Marshall, if you meet these criteria: you welcome information and
analysis about critically important issues that come from great thinkers
outside the mainstream media and publishing world; you can handle brain
pain from detailed and brutally honest revelations; you are willing and
able to challenge your own biases and preconceptions to let in new
explanations of how the world really functions.
If millions of
Americans read this book, we would probably see a far stronger uprising
against the political establishment that has refused to severely punish
the countless guilty people in the financial, banking and mortgage
sectors that brought down the US and global economic system.
This
book ties together a large number of factors in twenty chapters that
reveal just how corrupt the world has become because of the power of
plutocratic, wealthy and corporate interests. From Wall Street corporate
boardrooms to the Federal Reserve and other central banks to the US
military and NATO, a multitude of threads get woven into a disturbing
tapestry of crimes against society that still have not been prosecuted.
This
book is truly an instrument of anti-brainwashing. If you are willing to
spend serious time reading it, then you surely will become much angrier
about the dismal state of the economy that is causing so much pain and
suffering to ordinary people worldwide. If you personally have escaped
the worst ravages of the economic meltdown, then you will have much more
compassion for those severely affected.
In all honesty, if the
current global economic crisis has made you angry, pessimistic, fearful,
paranoid, despairing and worse, then this book will most likely
exacerbate all such feelings. By revealing still more connections,
implications and causes, this book will motivate you to do anything you
can to fight the corporate, plutocratic forces devastating the lives of
ordinary people. If you already have little confidence in government, it
will only make things worse. Does all this mean you should avoid
reading it? Absolutely not.
Here are a few statements from the
book that resonated with me and that you can use to decide whether the
general philosophic orientation of it is compatible with your views:
"Wall Street's Ponzi scheme was used to manipulate the market and transfer billions of dollars into the pockets of banksters."
"Government
rescue packages around the world are corporatist in their very nature,
as they save the capitalists at the expense of the people."
"The
global political economy is being transformed into a global government
structure at the crossroads of a major financial crisis."
Just gin
up the courage to read it, get out several color markers to highlight
passages and expand your knowledge to overcome all the propaganda
constantly being hurled at you. We need more citizen unrest to energize
more public protests to overthrow the powers that have corrupted and
perverted our government. A key voice in the mainstream media that is in
sync with the painful messages in this book is Dylan Ratigan who has a
terrific daily show on MSNBC. He too should read this timely book.