"It ought to be morbidly embarrassing for a writer to discover that the central character of her narrative turns out to oppose what she identifies as the apotheosis of his own movement. And Klein's mistake exposes the deeper flaw of her thesis. Friedman opposed the war because he was a libertarian, and libertarian conservatism is not the same thing as neoconservatism. Nor are the interests of corporations always, or even usually, served by war."
Jonathan Chait reviews Naomi Klein's The Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism in The New Republic.
Sunday, July 20, 2008
Disaster Logic
Labels:
1970s,
2000s,
books,
economic history,
George W. Bush,
Iraq War,
Phillips-Fein,
political history,
politics
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