Another 25 Books You Should Read

by | Dec 14, 2020 | Newsletter | 32 comments

Since books are so central to the work that I do here at The Corbett Report, it should be no surprise that one of the most frequent requests I get is for a recommended reading list. In response to those requests, I compiled a New World Order Reading List back in 2015.

But that obviously wasn’t enough so in 2017 I gave people a tour of my bookshelf.

But that obviously wasn’t enough so in 2019 I got together with Liberty Weekly to compile a list of another couple dozen books to have in any respectable research library.

But that obviously wasn’t enough so I followed up my WWI documentary with a recommended reading list of a dozen books on the First World War.

But that obviously wasn’t enough so I just had a conversation with Richard Grove on the Grand Theft World podcast where we recommended another dozen books to read on finance, geopolitics and the New World Order.

But that obviously wasn’t enough because the very first response to that conversation was a request for a definitive list of 25 books that “comprehensively explain the geopolitical and societal history as it actually is.”

And you know what I say to that? Sure! . . . Well, kind of. You see, of course there is no definitive list of 25 books that will comprehensively explain the world. But I can keep recommending books as long as people keep requesting me to. (Wanna try me? I could easily whip up another list after this one!)

So, without further ado, here in no particular order is another list of 25 books that people who are interested in The Corbett Report should probably read.

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The Corbett Report Subscriber
vol 10 issue 39 (December 13, 2020)

by James Corbett
corbettreport.com
December 12, 2020

Since books are so central to the work that I do here at The Corbett Report, it should be no surprise that one of the most frequent requests I get is for a recommended reading list. In response to those requests, I compiled a New World Order Reading List back in 2015.

But that obviously wasn’t enough so in 2017 I gave people a tour of my bookshelf.

But that obviously wasn’t enough so in 2019 I got together with Liberty Weekly to compile a list of another couple dozen books to have in any respectable research library.

But that obviously wasn’t enough so I followed up my WWI documentary with a recommended reading list of a dozen books on the First World War.

But that obviously wasn’t enough so I just had a conversation with Richard Grove on the Grand Theft World podcast where we recommended another dozen books to read on finance, geopolitics and the New World Order.

But that obviously wasn’t enough because the very first response to that conversation was a request for a definitive list of 25 books that “comprehensively explain the geopolitical and societal history as it actually is.”

And you know what I say to that? Sure! . . . Well, kind of. You see, of course there is no definitive list of 25 books that will comprehensively explain the world. But I can keep recommending books as long as people keep requesting me to. (Wanna try me? I could easily whip up another list after this one!)

So, without further ado, here in no particular order is another list of 25 books that people who are interested in The Corbett Report should probably read.


Technopoly: The Surrender of Culture to Technology by Neil Postman (more info)

Although better known for his equally indispensable 1985 treatise on Amusing Ourselves to Death, Neil Postman was a prophet of the cyber age whose 1993 book on Technopoly might as well have been written yesterday. I was reading this book last winter and was very excited to begin an in-depth exploration of its insights through a series of podcasts on technology and society that I hoped to release in 2020 . . . and then 2020 hit, so that plan got completely derailed. But for those who are at all interested in the way media and technology are shaping society in profoundly worrying ways, this book is absolutely essential reading. Postman was far ahead of his time, and essentially foresaw the advent of the world wide web before it was even a twinkle in Al Gore’s eye.


The Most Dangerous Superstition by Larken Rose (text / audio)

My audience will already have heard me implore them to read this book 100 times by now, so here’s the 101st appeal! I defy any statist to read this book and not have a significantly different conception of government and its moral worth than when they started.


The Bible (text / audio)

Yes, the Bible. It is incredible to think that there are those who live or have grown up in a Western country that have not read the Bible. As Tom Holland has emphatically argued, it is nearly impossible for a Westerner (or, to some extent, a human being) not to have been influenced by some of the ideas set forth in this book—even a self-described progressive agnostic like Holland. Anyway, maybe don’t read it all in one sitting, but a familiarity with the text is essential to basic cultural and philosophical literacy.


COVID-19: The Great Reset by Klaus Schwab and Thierry Malleret (PDF)

Well, you knew this one was going to pop up on this list somewhere. (But right after the Bible? Really?) Yes, as unpalatable as it may be, we do owe it to ourselves to become familiar with the openly stated intentions of the Great Resetters and Fourth Industrial Revolutionists. Luckily for us, since this is (as I’ve been at pains to point out) an “open conspiracy,” it is relatively straightforward to become acquainted with these plans. Here in black and white are Schwab and the gang’s plans for how to transition us into the Brave New Normal of our transhuman future. And speaking of authoritarian sociopaths . . .


Authoritarian Sociopathy by Davi Barker (more info)

This slender volume from Davi Barker sets out to accomplish a simple task: design a psychological experiment that could actually be performed in real life “to show the world beyond a shadow of a doubt, that power corrupts absolutely, and corrupt authority deserves no obedience.” Along the way, the reader learns about some of the previous psychological research that has demonstrated the public’s propensity to aid and abet tyrants and how those impulses can be subverted. A fascinating, informative and quick read.


Hidden History by Gerry Docherty and Jim MacGregor (website)

As I lamented in my recent conversation about books with Richard Grove, viewers of The WWI Conspiracy only have the very thinnest layer of the surface details of the incredibly detailed story that Docherty and MacGregor present in Hidden History: The Secret Origins of the First World War. Unless you’ve ever tried to condense a copiously footnoted, intricate 500-page story into a two-hour documentary, you have no idea how painful such an experience is or how much valuable information has to be left out of such a presentation. If you are at all interested in the story of the WWI conspiracy, you need to read this book.


Conjuring Hitler by Guido Preparata (website / text)

In the same way that someone who is not familiar with the thesis of Docherty and MacGregor’s work on WWI can’t be said to really understand the origins of the First World War, so, too, can someone who is not familiar with Preparata’s work on WWII not truly claim to understand the origins of the Second World War. Read this book.


War Against the Weak by Edwin Black (text / website)

You may have noticed that eugenics is one of those topics that I keep going back to as a bedrock of the modern elitists’ worldview. It is, in a very real sense, their religion. So, if you want to know your enemy, it is extremely important to understand this idea, its origins and development, and I know of no better single-volume exploration of the development of the American branch of this pernicious ideology than this book by Edwin Black.


No Treason: The Constitution of No Authority by Lysander Spooner (text / audio)

Another essential work of anarchist thought, Spooner’s The Constitution of No Authority is the perfect stocking stuffer for the dyed-in-the-wool American constitutionalist who believes a document signed a couple of hundred years ago by a bunch of men who are centuries in the grave somehow binds everyone born within an arbitrarily defined (and changing) geographical area. If that sounds inflammatory, it is; but Spooner writes it in a perfectly logical way that makes the argument seem like obvious common sense. And speaking of Common Sense . . .


Common Sense by Thomas Paine (text / audio)

Readers of my recent editorial on How To Save The World will already know that Thomas Paine’s Common Sense was the absolute smash hit blockbuster must-read pamphlet of its day. But, unlike a Harry Potter book or some Dan Grisham yarn, this treatise changed the course of world history. While some will dismiss the work based on the biography of its author, it is impossible to dismiss the power of Paine’s argument, or how instrumental that argument was in reframing the battle against the British as a War for Independence. As an added bonus, reading the language of popular 18th-century political tracts and contrasting that with what passes for “learned writing” today is enough to make anyone appreciate just how far we’ve fallen in our post-literate society.


The Plot to Kill King by William Pepper (website)

You may have heard my initial interview with Dr. Pepper and you may have seen my MLK documentary, but as I was at pains to stress, merely knowing the name of the person who actually pulled the trigger (hint: it wasn’t James Earl Ray) tells you nothing of substance about the actual plot to kill MLK or its historical significance. The fruit of decades of painstaking research, Pepper’s tour de force not only answers the question of who killed MLK, but how and why, thus indicting the agents of the state and of the military-industrial complex who benefited from that assassination.


Tower of Basel by Adam Lebor (website)

What do you know about the Bank for International Settlements? If you’re like the majority of the population, the answer is: absolutely nothing! The banksters who control the lifeblood of the world monetary order would prefer it to stay that way, obviously, which is why this well-written book by Adam Lebor is the easiest introduction for the average non-monetary historian to the world’s most secretive (and most powerful) banking institution. Lebor has one foot planted firmly in the mainstream, but there is plenty of solid documentation and well-researched evidence for true conspiracy researchers to sink their teeth into here.


The New World Order by H. G. Wells (text)

Perhaps you are under the impression that H. G. Wells was just a writer of sci-fi yarns like The War of the Worlds and The Time Machine. If so, then shame on you; as I’ve pointed out many times over the years, Wells was an influential eugenicist and proto-technocrat who was very much in the inner circle of the British Fabians and New World Order co-conspirators of the early 20th century. In case you need any evidence for that fact, I present to you The New World Order by H. G. Wells, in which he lays out his vision of a global socialist revolution to impose a technocratic order upon the world. Seriously.


The 2001 Anthrax Deception by Graeme MacQueen (website)

If you have seen, read or watched COVID-911 or False Flags and the Dawn of Bioterrorism by now, you’ll already know that the anthrax false flag of 2001 is the foundational event of the Age of Biosecurity that we are currently sleepwalking into. So if you don’t know about those events (or you just need a refresher), you are highly encouraged to pick up this slender, well-documented and logically clear book by Dr. Graeme MacQueen. And after reading the book you can listen to my interview with the author and our follow-up conversation on the enduring importance of this American conspiracy.


Another Nineteen by Kevin Ryan (website)

We’re all familiar with the photographic line-up of the nineteen alleged hijackers who supposedly perpetrated the events of 9/11 at the bidding of KSM and OBL. But as those who have followed the money trail of 9/11 or looked into the 9/11 war games or the many other anomalies of that day will know, these nineteen patsies were not the perpetrators of that false flag terror event. In Another Nineteen (the inspiration for my own 9/11 Suspects series), Kevin Ryan lays out the case for the involvement of a very different nineteen suspects in the 9/11 terror plot.


The Moon is a Harsh Mistress by Robert Heinlein (text)

This is the book for anyone who has ever wondered what an anarchist revolution might look like or how it might come about. In a riveting piece of science-fiction, Heinlein manages to paint a plausible blueprint for the deconstruction of the state and offers many fascinating insights into the political world we live in along the way. And after you’re done reading, you can always go check out my conversation about the book with David D. Friedman in a previous edition of FLNWO.


Technocracy Rising by Patrick Wood (website)

If you’ve somehow managed to miss my many previous conversations with Patrick Wood, then you are missing out on one of the missing puzzle pieces that will help you to understand the world that we are living in: Technocracy. In Technocracy Rising, Wood documents the origins and development of the technocracy movement and shows how this ideology is the blueprint for where the would-be rulers of the world are trying to take humanity in the 21st century.


Surveillance Valley: The Secret Military History of the Internet by Yasha Levine (website)

If you were interested in my report on The Secrets of Silicon Valley: What Big Tech Doesn’t Want You to Know, you won’t want to miss this book on the not-so-hidden but seldom-mentioned connections between the military and the development of the internet.


All The Presidents’ Bankers by Nomi Prins (website)

In my recent podcast on Bretton Woods 2.0 I noted that a lot can be learned by viewing historical events through the lens of monetary history. This is precisely what Prins does in methodical detail as she explains and documents the relationship of each president to the bankster oligarchs, from Wilson and the creation of the Fed to Obama and the response to the 2008 crisis. A must-read for anyone interested in monetary history.


Walden Two by B. F. Skinner (text)

In the spirit of “listening to the enemy,” I suggest it is worth your while to read this book by behaviourist B. F. Skinner. It’s a “fictional” account of a perfectly planned experimental community where children are raised from birth to accept their allotted station in the social pecking order. Be sure to follow it up with a listen to my FLNWO podcast on the subject for a thorough dissection of the propaganda embedded therein!


Wall Street and the Rise of Hitler by Antony C. Sutton (text)

Another essential work by the always essential Sutton, Wall Street and the Rise of Hitler does exactly what its title suggests: meticulously documents the essential role that Wall Street played in aiding, abetting and bankrolling the rise of Hitler, and, ultimately, helping to bring about World War Two.


The Anglo-American Establishment by Carroll Quigley (text)

Let’s face it: most people don’t have the time (or inclination) to read Quigley’s oft-cited (but intimidatingly weighty) 1,000+ page tome, Tragedy and Hope. If you are in that position, you might want to start with his considerably slimmer (but still very important) book, The Anglo-American Establishment, in which Quigley lays out the key players in the Rhodes round table and its subsequent offshoots, and talks about some of their major accomplishments in the first half of the 20th century. And, if you’re still hankering for some more inside skinny on the Rhodes round table, the Royal Institute of International Affairs, the Council on Foreign Relations and other such matters, you might want to turn to . . .


Tragedy and Hope 101 by Joe Plummer (website and free text)

If you want to familiarize yourself with the essential passages of Tragedy and Hope without reading every page of the infamously large book, Tragedy and Hope 101 is for you. In this no-nonsense book, Plummer gets straight to the point, quoting important passages of Quigley and then explaining their background, meaning and context in easily digestible, bite-sized chunks. Consider it a Cole’s Notes for an educated conspiracy researcher without a lot of time on their hands. (Watch my interview with Plummer about the book if you’re still on the fence.)


Against Intellectual Property by Stephan Kinsella (text and audio)

I used to be a muddle-headed, blue-pilled normie about IP before I encountered the work of Stephan Kinsella on this issue. Don’t be a muddle-headed, blue-pilled normie. Read this book.


A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens (text / audio / Muppets)

‘Tis the season, after all. I mean, it doesn’t have to be all doom and gloom and politics all the time, does it. Besides, “more of gravy than of grave about you”? Come on! Don’t be a Scrooge! (Oh, OK, you can read some politics into this text if you really must bring everything back to that.)

Recommended Listening and Viewing

Recommended Listening

Episode 509: The Path Forward w/ Dave Smith

Recommended Viewing

Next Crisis Bigger than COVID + 2003 Blackout flashback
Orwell’s Review of Hitler’s “Mein Kampf”: A Lesson for Today

Just For Fun

It’s Beginning to Look A Lot Like Lockdown (The Great Perry Covid Karaoke Flying Circus Reset)

(Feel free to share any other seasonally-appropriate parodies in the comments if you know them!)

 

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32 Comments

  1. ineluctable
    /ˌɪnɪˈlʌktəb(ə)l/

    unable to be resisted or avoided; inescapable.
    “the ineluctable facts of history”

    I’ll posit that it’s not about the technology, but what you do with it. The source of this mire is interwoven with deliberate poisoning through the education system.

    • mkey
      “..I’ll posit that it’s not about the technology, but what you do with it. ..”

      Its not enough to stop the poisoning of education, you need to ACTIVELY TRAIN wild humans to be free- who’s going to pay for that?

      If you read the Unabombers manifesto, he makes a good point that even good hearted people JUST DOING THEIR JOB will always tend to use technology in ways that reduce freedom.

      Free humans are a historical rarity that only exist when a)The weaponry deficit between normal people and their rulers is not huge (Or… like Greece its HARD to a single powers will due to terrain or other restrictions)
      and
      B)its economically viable for normies to own property and exist without the ‘good graces’ of a master class

  2. RE: Tragedy and Hope 101 by Joe Plummer

    I highly recommend this relatively short but important book. I had read both the original Tragedy and Hope (yes all aproximatly1400 pages or so) and several of the other works sited in Mr Plummer’s book. When I listed to Mr Corbett’s interview. And was interested to see if it would be a resource I could give to someone who was trying to come up to speed on these issues. So I looked at the book. Well I should say I combed through it and checked every footnote that I could. And I can say that I was very impressed with his work.

    Hence I can’t recommend it enough. Besides the free text, he also sells an ebook addition at: ( https://www.smashwords.com/profile/view/josephplummer )

  3. Well there ya have it: an intriguing, one-among-many book recommendations offered by our good host, followed up and confirmed by your own personal and fascinating review which sealed the deal for me – this shall be the one I read first. Thank you, Fact Checker.

    All this prompts me to say that daily I’m grateful for the commenters who frequent here.

  4. The Dave Woods video on George Orwells thoughts on Mein Kampf is interesting but “1924 the year that made Hitler” By Peter Ross Range has a far better explanation of why people chose Hitler over constant threat of German Communist revolution- only a crazy German would want their own version of the perverted and murderous Hungarian Soviet.

    The idea that Hitler was anything but a predictable phenomenon when you have constant threat of revolution, economic and social upheaval and folks in the middle class being reduced to prostituting themselves to survive is weird… IMO its a cultivated falsehood as odd as the idea that a bunch of people woke up racist and elected Trump because of hate…rather then that they thought he was Promising them some kind of benefit and improvement in their lives.

    The Nazi’s (a term that means something like “Yokle” or “redneck” as I understand it https://www.warhistoryonline.com/instant-articles/the-origin-of-the-term-nazi.html ) were every bit as socialistically revolutionary as the the Communists and not at all conservative, as James Sidney Lucas book “Reich:WW2 thru German Eyes” shows.

    On Orwell saying people need passion, I am reminded of the 1st “left behind” type book, Lord Of The World, where the same is noted in the comfortable socialistic society that replaces Christendom in the fictionalized version of history…. a void filled by the antichrist

      • n4x5
        “..I don’t believe his interpretation of National Socialism is a complete or wholly accurate treatment…”

        Well.. I kinda think his ‘history’ itself is ok and I trust his ‘facts’ even his take on it is skewed by his ‘fuhrer love’ thing.

        Thanks for the recommendation on the Mengele book- I’ll grab it if I see it but tbh I over did it on the holocaust as a teenager and tend to stay off ww2 subjects these days.

        As to “Elie Wiesel” I’m pretty sure a guy who goes around using someone else KZ number is not reliable…. the first time I realized people lie about that stuff like that was a memoir that claimed a meeting between a survivor of the Katyn massacre in a camp ….. a couple of years later it comes out that the SOVIETS did that one not the nazis so SOMEONE was lying.

    • According to Mark Passio’s explanation, in green (alchemical) language that word would be read like “not see”.

  5. n4x5
    I just bought that a couple of days ago… it is VERY interesting, but you will want to spend the day drunk after reading a little.
    The first couple of chapters appear pretty well sourced so far and he appears to be ALMOST as good as Mr Corbett at citing where he gets his ideas from.

    Rather depressing to see people having their IQ’s measurably lowered and their life outcomes tanking because some creeps take advantage of autism and social anxiety to push an agenda

    • n4x5
      “..The targeting of children in particular should trigger the defensive instincts of virtually any sane adult..”

      One would hope so, yet Desmond is ‘still’ amazing and Netfix still shows Cuties and the agenda of weakening and creating social and sexual anxiety in children still goes on.

      I hate to say it but most of the middle class has utterly cucked out and betrayed even their own kids in return for ‘sweeties’
      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DhrdSylKQ-Q

  6. Grateful for the list James, and I’m glad to know Richard Grove is back doing content, I enjoyed very much is Peace Revolution Podcast.

    I would also recommend a “meta-book”, that being the “How To Read A Book” by Mortimer Adler.

    One also very important is the “Underground History Of The American Education” by John Taylor Gatto. A kind of condensed version of it can be seen in his interview with Richard Grove https://youtu.be/YQiW_l848t8?list=PL463AA90FD04EC7A2

    Cheers

  7. “….one particular, flamboyantly gay, audience member lecture and browbeat this wise elder on how he just needed to “accept” that “WE ARE LIVING IN A DIGITAL AGE!” was perhaps my first observation of the militant, cultish mentality of the tech-fetishism that is characterizing the dehumanized World that has dawned….”

    These are destroyed people, they are created by the “Culture of Narcissism” Christopher Lasch predicted before anyone knew what a Personal Computer was. The tech just feeds their sickness and allows them to keep their delicate ego’s inflated by the steady feed of others who agree with them… I recall the Professional Narcissist Sam Vankin saying that in the old days such people would just hang out in the equivalent of Gin Lane and bother each other rather then normal people…the internet changed that
    hmn… cant find that but here is is on similar stuff WELL worth listening to him even if he is creepy as F…ried chicken
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-gjmR3e-leo

  8. too many books to recommend!!!!!!!!

    1) hitchhikers guide to the galaxy. ultimate survival guide. i don’t get in the canoe without it. bonus content reveals the meaning of life.

    2) walden

    3) the razors edge. is this the sweetest book of all time? yes. read it.

    thanks to all.

  9. Thanks James. Quite a few already in possession as a result of your various interviews. Now Tower of Babel as a probably unwelcome Christmas present to a family member. Fupi

  10. tho i dont retain a whole lotta what i read anymore due to brain damage, i still learn stuff. thanks James for the lists & for all your excellent hard work!!

    not that i remember any better what i hear, but i do benefit & am now listening to Tower of Basel audiobook

  11. Navigating the publisher’s website or the top reviewers(Occidental Observer, Vanguard News, etc.), this work does not seem to come from the traditional conservative circles, I don’t know if I’m being clear. Not that it matters for me, it seems like a great book, the topic is very important and the trans agenda is one that disgusts me profoundly. I may buy it, eventually. Thanks for the suggestion.

  12. Here’s a couple to add to the list on a rarely covered topic here, by historian Richard Dolan:

    UFOs and the National Security State: Chronology of a Coverup, 1941-1973
    https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/98887.UFOs_and_the_National_Security_State

    UFOs and the National Security State: The Cover-up Exposed 1973-1991
    https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/6818096-ufos-and-the-national-security-state

    Dolan does have a degree in history and funnily enough only got into the UFO space by *reading a book* whilst doing his studies. Having entered the rabbit hole he then has spent decades gathering verifiable documentation initially focusing on the question “Does the US Military consider UFOs a serious topic, and if so, a threat?”. The answer he provides by quoting *their* documents is yes, to both questions.

    These two books serve as a mini-library on verified documents on the topic. They are scholarly in presentation rather than narrative or whimsical.

    Back in 2017 a series of articles at the (bloody horrible) New York Times gave a public airing to the US Naval Intelligence’s effort to “look into this”. This was very interesting to the UFO research community. Were they testing the waters about a disclosure of the existence of extra-terrestrial beings who have a technology that allows them to do crazy things we cannot?

    And before you start going all “its just some crazy stuff from the Skunkworks” no, its not. The US Military have been very concerned (and very protective and secretive) about this topic since the 1940s.

    Anyway, its a very interesting topic, and many of the researchers, Dolan amongst them, have been scratching their heads and pencils trying to work out what is going on. Anything that can be discounted a falsehood, misidentification etc. is. Then you get whats left and what the military have to say about it. These researchers even consider the “well, the military could be making this up to advance their own interests” on a case/person by case/person basis just as any decent researcher would.

    Finally, if one accepts that these craft and aliens do exist it creates a whole raft of interesting questions. The ‘cover up’ is the least interesting; of course they would. More interesting is what have they learned from the technology obtained at crash sites. The weeds get deep here. But, those are not the topics of these two tomes. They are primarily bibliographic reference material of the source documents, which are important to have if you are interested in the topic.

    Addendum: the old story about showing a new US president a not publicly available recording of the Kennedy assassination is nothing compared to the UFO version. Mr President, welcome to the Pentagon, we’d like to show you some highly classified, securely compartmentalised information; just a few videos and pictures. If the new president doesn’t freak out, you then ask “Would you like to meet one of them?”. 🙂

  13. Wow! Thanks so much James for this list – and for responding to my request, this is highly appreciated. Even more so, because I only have read four of those up until now (and heard discussions about two more). So I am very excited to check my favorite (real life) library for some and put some others on my shopping list. Since I am a rather new (regular) follower of your work, I also have to check out your previous book recommendations. Absolutely fantastic!!!

  14. I am currently reading “The Accidental Superpower” by Peter Zeihan as it was strongly recommended to me by a customer who I respect. I know very little about the author except that he claims in the opening pages to lean libertarian.
    Does anyone who has read it have an opinion about the conclusions that he draws in this book?
    Thanks.

    Oh, and thanks JC for including the Bible in your list. A book owned and usually ignored more often than any other in history I would guess.

    • SteveSmith
      NOT read the book but the goodreeds review makes me raise an eyebrow… I’ll go see if i can find him talking but 1st impressions (not worth much, I know) are

      ” The shale revolution allows Americans to sidestep an increasingly dangerous energy market…”

      Shale has been a sink for free money which has to go somewhere…it ends up being uneconomic AT CURRENT energy prices- if prices go up then that changes

      “… Only the United States boasts a youth population large enough to escape the sucking maw of global aging….”

      Much of the younger cohort are either foreign born or are 1st generation immigrants. The current assimilation of such people into ‘U.S.’ American culture is public school which is PATHETIC
      A mass of low education poorly assimilated people are a recipe for 3rd world sweat shops…in competition with China and India both of whom value education much more

      “…Most important, geography will matter more than ever in a de-globalizing world, and America’s geography is simply sublime….”

      Meh… as “the coming war with japan” by friedman said years ago, its good IF the US can be the biggest land power on the continent and IF they can field a Navy to control the oceans and IF they can keep at least semi friendly coasts facig them on the other side of those oceans.

      • I’m still less than a quarter of the way through. But my eyebrows are quivering a bit too. I do agree with the points that he is making about how important geography is in the development of countries but I am not sure if things like ICBMs and nuclear weapons haven’t shrunk the world enough to negate some of those advantages.
        I am finding it to be well written and engaging. Certainly informative.
        I am looking forward to seeing how he develops his ideas.
        Thank you for your reply Duck.

  15. Fact Checker,

    “Now the inhumanity is dominant, because humans are pathologically trusting creatures.

    What a…bold statement.
    I would really like to see some elaboration for this profoundly sick idea.

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