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Paperback The Next Century Book

ISBN: 0380717069

ISBN13: 9780380717064

The Next Century

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Book Overview

Opposition is designed for you to reach your potential. This book will challenge you to face your trials head on and provide insight as to why enemies are need in your life. This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

3 ratings

A different book was received.

THE FRUGAL GOURMET COOKS WITH WINE by Jeff Smith was received. Didn't order it. Don' want it. Where is book I ordered and want?

America in late twentieth century decline

If one substitues 'China' for 'Japan' in this work it will read as much more up-to-date. Halberstam wrote this work when the U.S. was suffering an economic decline in comparison to Japan. So Halberstam speaks a lot here about the superior discipline of the Japanese, their wonderful educational system, their superior work- ethic , and this in relation to lazy, declining America. This was before the Japanese economic bust, and the great U.S. tech boom take- off. Yet with the present credit and housing crises ( This review is written in late August 2008) much of Halbertam's criticism of American bad - habits economically seems correct, and even prescient. However the book advertises itself as being about the twenty- first century when it is in fact an interpretation of Post- Second World War American history. Halberstam writes a good deal about Vietnam and American government deception in regard to it. As one who spent a great deal of time there, and in fact made his reputation there Halberstam is an expert on the subject. He makes one very striking point about the actual fighting in Vietnam. He claims the Vietnamese understanding that they could not hope to compete with the U.S. technological superiority vitiated that superiority by making the 'contact' with the enemy at much closer range( thirty meters rather than the usual one- hundred fifty ordinary in military engagements. This work was informative in its way but did not give any kind of 'big picture' of what America could expect to do and be in the twenty- first century. A more modest title would have been appropriate.

History punishes those who come late to it

Was in Central Florida visiting my folks recently and came across this David Halberstam work while browsing in a used book store. Like most of mainstream America I hold David Halberstam in high esteem but must confess that somehow, "The Next Century," never hit my reading radar screen. Consequently, I decided to check it out and must immediately report this slim (159 pages) book is an outright jewel. Moreover, reading this 1991 publication in 2005 allowed me the luxury of examining Halberstam's appealing narrative during the infant steps of the new century. On that note, this book is primarily framed around the end of the Cold War and the excellence of the Japanese economic model. The author also makes a very strong point of declaring early on that the end of the Cold War provided the White House with a gigantic "Peace Dividend" opportunity. That because of the end of the Cold War the White House was finally fully capable of spending billions of dollars on domestic needs. Halberstam used J. Robert Oppenheimer's vivid description of the Cold War, "two scorpions in a jar, each able to give a nuclear sting to the other, but only at the price of its own death," to quantify the struggle between the world's two super powers. He also made a point of bashing Henry Kissinger's February 1989 "last speech of the old order" that the United States should be wary of the Gorbachev Revolution in the Soviet Union and that "if there was any weakness to American policy...it was American naivete." A Halberstam book with comments about Vietnam is always a bonus. Therefore I thought it was interesting how Halberstam warned of the supreme arrogance and trickery bookkeeping of the Johnson Administration that allowed the White House to deliberately lie to the people about Vietnam. He also stated that "empires are run by men who are not suited to telling the truth, they valued power over truth and they created their own truth." It was almost as if this astute observer of the Vietnam War could look into the future and advise us not to be duped by White House fiction of "weapons of mass destruction." Without a doubt...I wholeheardedly agree with this legendary American sage when he observes that...history punishes those who come late to it. Highly recommended. Bert Ruiz
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