The Palace of Crystal: A World Without WarArena books, 2007 - 248 páginas War has blighted the security and happiness of humanity from time immemorial, but when two hundred years ago the colonies in North America broke away from British rule and established the United States, it was seen as a hopeful promise for the peoples of the world. A new democracy had been launched wherein all (or at least, the majority) were deemed to be created equal in respect of their rights, and were citizens and not subjects, in a land of self-confident individualism, which was not only free of the hereditary-based authoritarianism of the Old World, but more significantly, seemed destined to live at peace with the great nation states beyond their frontiers. It was a nation where government was minimised to ensure freedom in the spheres of commerce, religion, and private life, but the ideals of universal concord were not so easily to be achieved by either the efforts of this new people, or by the world at large. |
Índice
Consequences | 9 |
Chapter Two The Changing face of War | 17 |
Chapter Three Stony Ground | 29 |
Chapter Four The Scourge of War | 38 |
Chapter Five The Emergence of Democracy | 46 |
Chapter Six On the Inefficiency of Hierarchies | 59 |
Chapter Seven The Cult of personality | 70 |
Chapter Eight Rubber Stamp Democracies | 76 |
Chapter Fourteen Our Need for a Führer | 144 |
Chapter Fifteen The Man in the White Coat | 154 |
The Palace of Crystal | 160 |
Chapter Seventeen Work in Progress | 169 |
Chapter Eighteen The Palace of Crystal | 175 |
Chapter Nineteen Uniting the Nations | 197 |
Chapter Twenty Fighting Terrorism | 205 |
Chapter Twenty One Coping With Terror | 215 |
PART | 90 |
Chapter Ten How to Influence People | 106 |
Chapter Eleven The Leader | 113 |
Chapter Twelve Man and Superman | 126 |
Chapter Thirteen View from the Top | 138 |
Chapter Twenty Three Democracy in Action | 225 |
Chapter Twenty Four The People versus the Mob | 237 |
247 | |
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