A YEAR WITHOUT MADE IN CHINA
by Sara Bongiorni
©2007 On January 1, 2005 the author and her family embarked on a New Year’s resolution to boycott things made in China for the coming year. This decision was made after noticing that so many of their Christmas gifts were Chinese imports. With a light, humorous, easy-to-read style, she reports her experiences as she struggles with her husband and small children to keep the boycott going for an entire year.
The book definitely serves its purpose. It clearly proves Bongiorni’s point that it’s nearly impossible to avoid purchasing items “Made in China,” since that seems to be the country of origin for almost every item we purchase any more.
I didn't like this book for many reasons. Her motivation for the boycott, as she explained it to her small son, was simplistic and naive: “We like China, but it’s a very big place, with lots of factories and we want to give other countries a chance to sell things to us.” (What about all the
American jobs that have been lost to outsourcing to other countries besides China???)
The author’s 12-month boycott contained so many loopholes, it was ridiculous. I kept thinking, why bother? For example, they could accept gifts from other people that were made in China. So when the wife-mother couldn’t find a non-Chinese inflatable swimming pool for her husband and son, she suggested that her sister-in-law get a Chinese one for her husband’s birthday. Also, items made in Taiwan, Macau, Hong Kong were ok, because they weren’t made in China. Or were they? She had a hard time figuring out what was Chinese and what wasn’t.
This couple's parenting style was annoyingly overindulgent. Half the book was about the stress of finding enough cool, non-Chinese toys to satisfy their children's ever-changing demands. I think the author could have made better use of her time learning how to do without every little toy, gizmo and gadget that came on the market. These people could qualify as the poster family for the out-of-control consumerism that has driven jobs out of our country to places where people live and work in poverty, just because we gotta have it and it better be cheap!
In writing a "humorous" book about a very serious issue, Bongiorni trivializes the plight of the unemployed or under-employed American worker. She never really ponders how we happen to find ourselves in this increasingly hopeless situation. Her book calls attention to the problem, but offers no explanations or answers. Because of China's dominance of the global economy, and the fact that our government and big business have sold us out to them, we have abandoned American factories, closed stores blighting every American community, millions of Americans without employment, losing the homes they worked all their lives for. This seems to be our fate and our future, and sadly, we never saw it coming.
WHEN CHINA RULES THE WORLD: The End of the Western World & the Birth of a New Global Order
by Martin Jacques
©2009 One day last month, I came across this book while surfing the news channels. Fareed Zakaria was recommending it, and the title caught my attention. It’s been apparent to me for the past 15 years that we were headed in this direction, but I knew so little about the issue.
This ponderous book is like reading college textbooks for Chinese history, economics and political science all rolled into one. It’s packed full of data, facts, figures, charts, graphs, percentages, GDPs, etc., everything heavily annotated --- and it’s taken me 4 weeks to trudge through it all.
As I was reading it, I came to realize how little most of us know about China and the Chinese people. I learned a lot, but probably only scratched the surface in my understanding of our global situation. I think it’ll be worth a reread in a couple months.
BRAVE NEW WORLD REVISITED
by Aldous Huxley
© 1958 I find it very interesting that Aldous Huxley wrote
Brave New World in 1931 with America in mind. On an earlier trip to the United States, he had been disgusted by America’s rampant consumerism, newly-emerging youth culture, and sexual permissiveness, hallmarks of the Roaring 20s. The United States had been experiencing a manufacturing boom, science and technology were rapidly expanding, and truly, a “brave new world” was arriving on the scene.
His dystopian novel
Brave New World “predicts” what the world of the future might look like if things continued on as they were in the early part of the 20th century. The story is set six centuries in the future, in a totalitarian World State whose amusement-addicted citizenry is kept docile and perfectly content by various forms of entertainment, methodical conditioning, and a drug called
soma.
In 1958, Huxley published this non-fiction “look back” at his classic to see how far we’d come in 27 years. He admits here that
“the prophecies made in 1931 are coming true much sooner than I thought they would.”
The novel
Brave New World was written before the rise of Adolf Hitler to supreme power in Germany. In 1958, Huxley writes a very interesting essay on the terrifyingly effective mind control methods Hitler used to manipulate the German people. He also ponders the widespread use of drugs back then, both prescription and illegal recreational ones, that people relied on to help them get through their unhappy, hectic lives.
The book actually stunned me, as the things that Huxley explained were already happening in the 27 years between his novel and his commentary --- those things are also happening (times 10, times 20, times 100?) in today’s modern world. Our own amusement-addicted citizens have been kept clueless about the controlling role Big Business and Big Government have played in our lives, starting with the Baby Boomers.
We grew up being daily brainwashed by the advertisements on TV, which convinced us to desire all the things we didn’t need, probably didn’t even want, and definitely couldn’t afford as we let buy-now-pay-later take over our lives. New and improved, we were fed a steady stream of products pouring forth from the factories, and we over-consumed because we could --- we had JOBS back then.
Huxley’s fear was that people would become so comfortable and so self-centered, they wouldn’t see their enslavement coming, because they would docilely go along with the program as long as their desires were being fulfilled.
This book,
Brave New World Revisited, could very well be Huxley’s most important work, if people would only take the time to read it. I especially encourage those who are presently reading, or who have already read the original
BNW, to follow-up with Huxley’s 1958 commentary on the book as a harbinger of things yet to come --- events in the real world that are unfolding at this very moment.. It can be
read, for free, on-line at
http://www.huxley.net/bnw-revisited/index.html
ALSO RECOMMENDED:
THE NEW WORLD ORDER (1939) by H. G. Wells
and
THE NEW WORLD ORDER (1991) by Pat Robertson
Fascinating contrast --- two sides of a hot-button political topic, the POVs of a socialist from the distant past and a Christian 50 years later.