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Showing posts from March, 2012

Racing Madness

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The biggest body of water I've every raced on was the Chesapeake.  Racing around the British Isles or around the world solo is another mater.   Sport quickly becomes a fight for life.  Two stories of that here.   1.  Fastnet Force 10, John Rousmaniere (1979),   Force 10 is a mariner's scale to say a violent storm at sea.  In 1979, a force 10 storm ripped though a storm in the Irish Sea during the Fastnet race.  Forty foot waves damaged over half of the 300 boats.  Rousmaniere who was in the race, assembled the stories into a single riveting narrative.  Bought used at the State Department book store with a book plate from "Jane Murdoch." 2.  Godforsaken Sea: Racing the World's Most Dangerous Waters, Derek Lundy (1999).   The world's most dangerous race is the Globe Vendee, a single-handed sailor around the world with no stops.  During the 1996 race, sailor Derek Lundy, a contender for the lead, turned his ...

Think Globally

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Books on globalization aren't new.  There is just more of them.  Here's a few: 1.  The Clash of Civilizations: Remaking of World Order, Samuel Huntington (1996) .  Huntington analyzes the world through 9 civilizations. Bought new.  2.  The World is Flat: A Brief History of the Twenty-First Century, Thomas Friedman (2005).   Friedman's examination of how technology is connecting the world.  Bought used somewhere. 3.  The J Curve: A New Way to Understand Why Nations Rise and Fall, Ian Bremmer (2006) . Bremmer presents a helpful theory to understand how nations transition from totalitarian states to democracies.  Received from book signing. 4.  America Alone: The End of the World as We Know It, Mark Steyn (2006).   Steyn sees Europe in decline from its falling birth rate and welfare state, and America still able to survive through its ideas but just barely. Bought new.  5.  Democratic Ideals and...