Book 46 📚
I don‘t know if I just wasn‘t in the mood for this type of read or what, but I couldn‘t get into in😐
Maybe I‘ll try it as an audio book instead! 🤷🏼♀️👍🏼
Book 46 📚
I don‘t know if I just wasn‘t in the mood for this type of read or what, but I couldn‘t get into in😐
Maybe I‘ll try it as an audio book instead! 🤷🏼♀️👍🏼
I have such mixed feelings about this book. On one hand, Zakaria looks at the myriad aspects of global life, international relations, economics and more which have been and will be impacted by the pandemic as well as providing opportunities for change when we are able to move forward. And thinking about those things is valuable and necessary. But he‘s so premature, especially given what‘s currently happening in his native India and the world.
😬 it‘s not that this book doesn‘t make some good points; it‘s more that it makes so many points that I‘d forget the main “lesson.” I wanted to #reread this book to see how I felt now that we‘re closer to being in a post-pandemic world, and I just feel overwhelmed by Zakaria‘s endless pontificating! He needs some lessons in brevity from Timothy Snyder.
#Two4Tuesday ☆ @TheSpineView
📚 My kids are definitely both fiction readers. They both read every day without any prodding from me. Husband likes nonfiction and reads mostly articles. He loved the Fareed Zakaria book tagged.
📚 My kids seem to not count anything I read or suggest as real options. 🤷♀️ My middle schooler son reads Webtoons (online manga) almost exclusively lately.
Happy Sunday #NFN20 Don't.forget to get your point numbers in!
Here's the link: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1YgraCMDM7h7k73ahJFhXYOqVRUrH2qsNdt_-MecklPU/edi...
Zakaria ponders where the world will be like post-pandemic in the short and long term. He compares various nations‘ responses to the pandemic and how their leaders, industry, penetration of tech, GDP, and income inequality affected it. He looks at historical trends as well, even back to the bubonic plague.
While I didn‘t agree with all his “lessons” nor conclusions, it was a good jump off for further exploration.
Tagging some nonfiction crew.
@Sace This is the best answer to your question that I‘ve found. I think some of it is not just education, because I know several people in my town that have post-graduate degrees and are Trump/Republican supporters, but probably the exchange and reinforcement of ideas among groups in these areas. I definitely grew up on a steady diet of southern strategy republicanism and didn‘t really change my mind...until I got my degree and moved to a city ⬇️
The book goes on to talk about the continued dismantling of the state and the effect that has on life in America. Honestly, in the midst of this crisis of Covid, I think Biden would do well to expand the reach of government. I think this Reaganomics thinking has led to a lot of the problems most millennials and younger are facing. I realize this is very debatable, and there are many opinions, but this has been my POV since 2010.