Open main menu

Changes

Globalization

609 bytes removed, 07:02, 29 October 2003
m
no edit summary
:"Negotiated behind closed doors between the Bush administration and America's most toxic industry, this outrageous reversal directs the government to quit enforcing existing federal law," said Steve D'Esposito of [http://www.mineralpolicy.org/ Mineral Policy Center].
Also see [[Pax Americana]].
-----------
'''Globalization of Latin America'''
'''Globalization of the Middle East'''
Since U.S. and U.K. forces, the "[[coalition of the willing]]," began the campaign ([[Gulf War II]]) to oust Saddam Hussein and his "repressive" and "malignant" Iraqi leadership, other challenges for globalization may be on the horizon. Some are seeing Iraq's -- and the Middle East's -- future through other definitions like '''Americanization'''. , or [[Pax Americana]] (i.e. | the Pax Americana doctrine) has attached to the Bushite neo-cons ([[neo-conservative]]s). The Chinese Communist Party has apparently suggested this is U.S. '''<i>neo-imperialism</i>''', what Eric Alterman calls "the new American empire".[http://www.noutopia.com/index.html#anchor690808][http://www.thenation.com/doc.mhtml?i=20030127&s=alterman]
An increasingly popular view is that [[Islamist]] activity is more [[anti-imperialist]] than religiously motivated. [[Olivier Roy]] of the [[Open Society Institute]] has broached the view that any model of an [[Islamic caliphate]] would almost certainly be defined by its resistance to economic globalization, rather than any religious ideal. The religious motivation, in this view, may come from the [[Fellowship]] and other nominally Christian groups based in the USA since the [[Cold War]], whose names constantly change, but whose vision of a Protestant private property order, and a crusade against outsiders, do not.
------------
'''[[Globalization of Iraq]]'''
*[[International Occupation Watch Center]] in Iraq
*[[population control]]
*[[Pax Americana]]
*[[Privatization]]
*[[Rothschild family]]
5,744

edits