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Threshold

The Crisis of Western Culture

ebook
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks
From America's #1 progressive radio host, the idealogical heir to his influential The Last Hours of Ancient Sunlight
More than three million listeners tune in every weekday to hear what Thom Hartmann has to say about the state of our world. Now, as the first decade of the twenty-first century closes amid economic collapse and the seeming ruin of the American Dream, America's #1 rated progressive radio host sounds an urgent call to arms for building a better, more sustainable world-while there's still time. Offering not just an indictment of the failures that have courted economic, demographic, and environmental ruin, Hartmann also outlines five critical personal and policy solutions to bring us back from the brink. Threshold-like Jared Diamond's Collapse-is radical but rooted in common sense, illuminating the necessary next steps in the evolution of mainstream thinking.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      May 4, 2009
      What begins as skillful (and scary) prognostications about climate change's impact devolve into an unfocused mishmash in this mélange of history, philosophy, science and anthropology. Air America Radio Network host Hartmann (The Last Hours of Ancient Sunlight
      ) marshals solid research to demonstrate how overpopulation, pernicious trade policies, rampant consumerism and other excesses are devastating the Earth. The utopia he envisions, which owes much to Scandinavian social democracies, is unimpeachable, what with its emphasis on gender equality, ecological consciousness and a renewed spirit of democracy. Unfortunately, the author cannot direct his ire, and the book buckles under breathless plaints that leap from the history of lacrosse to neurology to our relationships with animals in the span of a few pages. The result is a frustrating, hard-to-follow conclusion that obscures the valuable arguments that distinguish the book's striking opening.

    • Kirkus

      May 15, 2009
      Radio talk-show host Hartmann (Cracking the Code: How to Win Hearts, Change Minds, and Restore America's Original Vision, 2007, etc.) applies his gung-ho populism to the global ramifications of mankind's loss of balance with nature.

      The author begins with an awkward metaphor—that the world is"right now tottering atop three major thresholds." These include an overtaxed environment that cannot sustain human life; a"free market" economy, manipulated by"1 percent of us," that has"bled [the nation's] industrial base into the gutter of cheap labor countries"; and a population explosion. A big-picture thinker, Hartmann offers plenty of dire forecasts supported by swaths of impressive statistics, beginning with a bleak snapshot of the Darfur region of Sudan. Gripped by civil war and the greed that the discovery of oil has wrought, and barely breaking through the threshold from hunger to safety and protection, Darfur represents a microcosm of the larger issues that beset the world in terms of future survival. Man's self-removal from"the web of life" is the root cause of these respective crises, and Hartmann presents a series of remedies—reintroducing worms into the body for medicinal cleansing; rejecting the"sociopathic paychecks" of CEOs; embracing altruism over ownership; adopting the economic example of Denmark, where"higher taxes equals greater overall quality of life;" seeking agricultural answers through anthropological experiments among the Maori people of New Zealand and the ancient Peruvian civilization of Caral. Hartmann puts forth a wide-ranging collection of mostly engaging ideas, but his slogan-ridden, somewhat scattershot screed may not resonate with many readers beyond the disgruntled, armchair-pounding TV-news watchers.

      A mishmash of good intentions.

      (COPYRIGHT (2009) KIRKUS REVIEWS/NIELSEN BUSINESS MEDIA, INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.)

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  • English

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