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Must-Read Book: The Shock Doctrine

by rcs1

--maybe even the decade. "THE SHOCK DOCTRINE: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism" by Naomi Klein has just been published in Canada, which means I can finally talk about it.  I've been reading the galleys for weeks--which brings up a second ethical problem, because I'm reviewing it for a U.S. metro daily, and I shouldn't scoop that.  But my review won't be out for a few weeks, and I know I'm going to be blogging from the content of this book well before then.

Though THE SHOCK DOCTRINE will be officially published in the U.S. and Europe later in September, it may be in some bookstores soon. Naomi Klein is traveling and talking about it, starting today.  And there's a short film about it, by Klein and "Children of Men" director Alfonso Cuaron, at the Toronto Film Festival this Friday, and she's showing it at some of her appearances.

Before I say a little more about the book, my disclaimers: I have no personal or business relationship with the author (I've never met her) or the publisher.  I just think this is a very important book, and one that Kossacks should be aware of--and consider getting behind, in case corporte media ignores it (a good bet.)    


commentary :: :: :: buzz-it!
(Also in Orange.)

  Some of you probably know Naomi Klein as an activist, journalist and filmmaker, who writes for The Nation and The Guardian, often about globalization issues, and who wrote the book, "No Logo" as well as a collection of columns, " Fences and Windows." Her writing career started in Canada, and here in the U.S. especially, she's not generally well known, and that's one reason I'm blogging on this book right now. Her interview in Publisher's Weekly said she didn't at that point have any firm media bookings in the U.S.  I'd like to see that change, and Kossacks could help make it happen. She deserves a hearing more than a whole lot of people we hear too much from.

As for the book, it puts together a lot of what you might know and suspect (and a lot most people missed or don't know) into a powerful framework based on a central idea that she believes has governed American foreign policy for decades, but particularly now: THE SHOCK DOCTRINE.

She relates neocon (also known as "neoliberal" outside the U.S.) economic theories of "free market fundamentalism" and the resulting economic "shock therapy" many nations endured, to the actual (and horrific) theories and practice of early actual electroshock therapy, and shows how they relate to torture, and the "shock and awe" bombing of Iraq, and an overall pattern of taking advantage of disaster or creating it, for corporate profit.  

She shows for example that Iraq and New Orleans were not the result of incompetence, but examples of disaster capitalism, which requires the destruction and privatization of the public and non-profit sectors, replaced by crony capitalism.  She shows that torture is not an accident, but a tool of economic and political shock therapy.  

The book's web site has more information, including access to many of  her sources.  But the book is the thing--it's very well written, and very important. It begins with Milton Friedman and Pinochet in Chile in the 70s, and brings together most of what has happened since (in South America, Russia, Asia,etc.), culminating in Iraq and, in the U.S., the homeland security state and post-Katrina New Orleans.

This book has the potential to be Very Big. The Guardian has named it one of the ten must-reads of the fall.  But it could also be overlooked--intentionally, because of its content.  That's where you come in.  

Every book arrives with blurbs, but not necessarily like the ones for this book from  Arundhati Roy, John Le Carre, Howard Zinn and Sy Hersh. I join them in urging you to read and support this book. It could be one of those rare books that everyone reads and talks about, and that focuses the debate, and promotes needed change.

I'll feel much more comfortable about blogging on topics within the book, and I hope to do that--several times--soon.      

Update [2007-9-12 13:58:49 by Cho]: Some other links and more information associated with Klein's book Disaster Capitalism, The Shock Doctrine and Naomi Klein

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This is so perfect a book and timing, thanks for the headsup, gotta read about it.


by luaptifer on Thu Sep 06, 2007 at 12:00:18 AM EST

And it appears to match circumstances quite well -- not all "Pearl Harbor type events" have to involve attacks or explosives; NOLA is and remains a perfect example.

Another good example is the 30-year bridge contract that Max Blunt (Roy's relative, if I'm not mistaken) awarded to a company in MO, particularly in the wake of the recent bridge disaster...is a 30 year contract that puts all the bridges of a state infrastructure under private control a good idea...?

Given that I believe the Family Blunt to be as corrupt throughout as the Family Bush, I strongly suspect that the answer is "no."

by GreyHawk on Thu Sep 06, 2007 at 07:29:03 AM EST

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