Common courtesy and respect runs a little deeper than vanity.
That’s a nice utopian ideal, but we’re in Atwood territory.
Common courtesy and respect runs a little deeper than vanity.
there have been historical periods where the reigning hegemonic power has abdicated...the outcomes have tended to be disastrous for all parties...if you want to read up on the thinking in this field Charles Kindleberger is a good place to start
The last true hegemon prior to the United States was Great Britain and their losing of status was delivered by Herr Hitler.
actually no...by the interwar period Great Britain no longer had the capacity to provide the kind of stabilizing services required of a hegemon (one of which is acting as lender of last resort in economic crises)...this accounts for some of the severity of the Great Depression and general economic instability of the interwar period
A hegemon's utility goes far beyond financial wherewithal though.
Anyways, what exactly are you suggesting? That the United States acceded to the hegemony prior to WWII? That the British hegemony was fatally wounded during the Great Depression?
My contention is that the British hegemony ended in 1939, for all practical purposes.
I don't think we had the capability, the national unity, or the international respect.
(until after WWII)
The money question is: would the hegemonic transition (from Great Britain to the United States) have naturally occured in the absence of a second World War?
also we were not psychologically ready...isolationism and all that...i think WWII accelerated a transition that would have happened anyhow
I think Germany could just as easily have stepped into that void. Maybe even the better choice. Talking purely in terms of power structures, economic largesse, and regional import.
Anyways, this is digressing a bit. I am curious as to what other hegemons/disasters you were (are) talking about (in reference to 'abdicating'). Not being familiar with Kindleberger in that light.
Well aware of it, but any leader can get more done with some basic people skills. Trump didn't just dis world leaders with the sudden tariff idea, he dissed his own people. He needs those people desperately. He has no one else.That’s a nice utopian ideal, but we’re in Atwood territory.
Well aware of it, but any leader can get more done with some basic people skills. Trump didn't just dis world leaders with the sudden tariff idea, he dissed his own people. He needs those people desperately. He has no one else.
Trump's praise and envy of Xi's power grab shows he has no respect for democracy and is exactly who we all said he was, a dictator wannabe.
I'm afraid you're the one not paying attention. He made a lot of pledges during the campaign. He dissed his people in the WH and the REPs by not giving them warning he was going to suddenly do this now and by not letting them present the policy change in a normal way so that the stock market wouldn't go haywire and the headlines wouldn't be filled with the phrase "trade war". He disrespected his staff by taking them out of the process and leaving them with the mess. Do you think they appreciate having to answer questions from the press about something they knew nothing about?First of all, I feel like we're going in circles here (either that, or you are just choosing not to pay attention).
This is not a "sudden tariff idea" - this was an explicit campaign pledge.
See:
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...s-loaded-with-caveats/?utm_term=.da184ac03a09
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/ct-donald-trump-tariffs-20161201-story.html
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...rk-trade-wars-with-china-mexico-idUSKCN0WQ0WG
That Reuters report is from March 2016. Two years ago.
Now, how is this policy "dissing" the American people?
LOL.
I don't recall you getting your dander up when Obama said he really was from Kenya in October.
I think Germany could just as easily have stepped into that void. Maybe even the better choice. Talking purely in terms of power structures, economic largesse, and regional import.