Description

American society is angrier, more fragmented, and more polarized than at any time since the Civil War. We harbor deep insecurities about our economic future, our place in the world, our response to terrorism, and our deeply dysfunctional government. Over the next several years, Benjamin Shobert says, these four insecurities will be perverted and projected onto China in an attempt to shift blame for errors entirely of our own making. These misdirections will be satisfying in the short term but will eventually destabilize the global world that businesses, consumers, and governments have taken for granted for the last forty years and will usher in an age of geopolitical uncertainty characterized by regional conflictand increasing economic dislocation.

Shobert, a senior associate at the National Bureau of Asian Research, explores how America’s attitudes towardChina have changed and how our economic anxieties and political dysfunction have laid the foundation for turn

Blaming China

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£23.99

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Hardback by Benjamin Shobert

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American society is angrier, more fragmented, and more polarized than at any time since the Civil War. We harbor deep... Read more

    Publisher: Potomac Books Inc
    Publication Date: 9/1/2018
    ISBN13: 9781612349954, 978-1612349954
    ISBN10: 1612349951

    Non Fiction , Politics, Philosophy & Society

    Description

    American society is angrier, more fragmented, and more polarized than at any time since the Civil War. We harbor deep insecurities about our economic future, our place in the world, our response to terrorism, and our deeply dysfunctional government. Over the next several years, Benjamin Shobert says, these four insecurities will be perverted and projected onto China in an attempt to shift blame for errors entirely of our own making. These misdirections will be satisfying in the short term but will eventually destabilize the global world that businesses, consumers, and governments have taken for granted for the last forty years and will usher in an age of geopolitical uncertainty characterized by regional conflictand increasing economic dislocation.

    Shobert, a senior associate at the National Bureau of Asian Research, explores how America’s attitudes towardChina have changed and how our economic anxieties and political dysfunction have laid the foundation for turn

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