Talking about 'stopping globalization' is unrealistic - and probably not what anti-globalization protesters actually want.
“Talking about 'stopping globalization' is unrealistic - and probably not what anti-globalization protesters actually want.”
The World Motivation
Talking about 'stopping globalization' is unrealistic - and probably not what anti-globalization protesters actually want.
“Talking about 'stopping globalization' is unrealistic - and probably not what anti-globalization protesters actually want.”
Talking about 'stopping globalization' is unrealistic - and probably not what anti-globalization protesters actually want.
Reading the text of my blog itself is not really the interesting part. The exciting part is how the Internet allows me to be the eyes and ears for the people sending me postings from Africa.
Wikipedia is a victory of process over substance.
Increasingly, I'm inspired by entrepreneurs who run nonprofit organizations that fund themselves, or for-profit organizations that achieve social missions while turning a profit.
The Internet has become a bunch of interlinked but linguistically distinct and culturally specific spaces. There's some interface between them, but there's a lot less than there was years back when we were sort of pretending that this was one great global space.
We must take care that globalization does not become something people become afraid of.
I don't think massification and globalization and all those other 'izations' are necessarily hostile to regionalism.
In this age of globalization, instant real time media and television, everyone all over the world realizes that high energy usage equates with a high standard of living and wealth.
It's trite to say that the world has gotten smaller in the age of globalization, but my travels have told me that it's wrong to think this means there is some kind of uniform world culture.
Greed and globalization aren't just America's fault.