Post by account_disabled on Mar 6, 2024 0:04:03 GMT -6
Be Slower – and Sometimes Even More Ineffective – but That is Still a Price to Pay. What It is About, Perhaps, is to Rethink That Efficiency, That Speed and That Capacity to Resolve in Democracy. A New Political Imagination «major Disruptions, Like the Current Coronavirus Pandemic, Can Often Reduce Inequality. The First and Most Immediate Reason is That They Tend to Hurt Almost Everyone Economically, and the Rich Have More Wealth to Lose. The Decline in the Fortunes of These Well-off People Brings Them Relatively Closer to Where Everyone Else is,” Says Adam Rasmi , a Journalist for Quartz and the Financial Times . His Perspective.
Like That Put Forward by Branko Milanovic , is Symptomatic of These Times: Inequality Becomes More Visible When an Unexpected Phenomenon Knocks on the Doors of the Homes of Those Who Benefit Most. Rasmi Takes UK Mobile Database Over the Position of Stanford University Professor Walter Scheidel. In His Book the Great Leveler: Violence and the History of Inequality From the Stone Age to the Twenty-first Century , Scheidel Points Out Four Brutally Equalizing Phenomena. : Epidemics, Revolutions, Massive Wars and State Collapses. The Great Equalizer, for Scheidel, is Always Catastrophe. Now, the World Lives One. The Coronavirus Takes Human Lives Wherever It Arrives. And It Reaches Everyone. Fear Takes.
Over Millions of Human Beings. The Question About the Future of the Global Order is Once Again on the Table. Some Claim That We Are Going Through Another of the Great Crises in Systemic History. There Are Those Who Claim That This is the True Beginning of the St Century and That We Will Soon Enter a Scenario in Which We Will Have to Shuffle the Cards With Which We Want to Play. Others Venture That We Will Experience a Situation Analogous to That of the Second Post-war Context: the Recovery of an Agreement That Will Have the State as a Central Actor, but With Problems and Circumstances Very Different From Those of the Past. In the Midst of the Maelstrom, It is Very Likely That Some Think Like This.
Like That Put Forward by Branko Milanovic , is Symptomatic of These Times: Inequality Becomes More Visible When an Unexpected Phenomenon Knocks on the Doors of the Homes of Those Who Benefit Most. Rasmi Takes UK Mobile Database Over the Position of Stanford University Professor Walter Scheidel. In His Book the Great Leveler: Violence and the History of Inequality From the Stone Age to the Twenty-first Century , Scheidel Points Out Four Brutally Equalizing Phenomena. : Epidemics, Revolutions, Massive Wars and State Collapses. The Great Equalizer, for Scheidel, is Always Catastrophe. Now, the World Lives One. The Coronavirus Takes Human Lives Wherever It Arrives. And It Reaches Everyone. Fear Takes.
Over Millions of Human Beings. The Question About the Future of the Global Order is Once Again on the Table. Some Claim That We Are Going Through Another of the Great Crises in Systemic History. There Are Those Who Claim That This is the True Beginning of the St Century and That We Will Soon Enter a Scenario in Which We Will Have to Shuffle the Cards With Which We Want to Play. Others Venture That We Will Experience a Situation Analogous to That of the Second Post-war Context: the Recovery of an Agreement That Will Have the State as a Central Actor, but With Problems and Circumstances Very Different From Those of the Past. In the Midst of the Maelstrom, It is Very Likely That Some Think Like This.