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Rushkoff (Nothing Sacred) offers a shrill condemnation of how corporate culture has disconnected human beings from each other. An engaging history of commerce and corporatism devolves into an extended philippic on how increasing personal wealth and the rise of nuclear families constituted a failure of community-whose services are now provided by products and professionals. While he makes some good points-for instance, about how some laws are now written to favor the rights of corporations above the rights of human beings, and the phenomenon of pro-wealth spirituality as espoused by The Secret, Creflo Dollar and Joel Osteen-he skews wildly off-course lamenting how "basic human activity... has been systematically robbed of its naturally occurring support mechanisms by a landscape tilted toward the market's priorities." His unsupported and flawed assumption that societal interdependence is a natural or even preferable state for all people, everywhere, his disdain for filthy lucre and joyless recasting of independence as "selfishness" will leave readers weary long before the end. (June)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.What do fundamentalist Christians, Margaret Thatcher, and the Rand Corporation all have in common? They are all part of a vast conspiracy that began during the Renaissance when the British East India Company began indoctrinating Europe in corporatism, the belief that corporations should be venerated. So successful were they that we now unknowingly live in a corporatist state, argues Rushkoff; the world is so slanted toward rewarding self-interested, short-term decisions that we have lost all autonomy and humanity, devolving from citizens into consumers. Rushkoff advocates for sustainable, bottoms-up activism, but many of his suggestions (including garden shares and "complimentary credit" bartering) seem like willful amnesia; history has proven that a commune by any other name remains unviable. Still, Rushkoff's prose is eminently readable, and he weaves together a colorful fabric of facts and anecdotes more than interesting enough to carry the reader past a little kookiness; the first 200 pages are truly conspiracy theorizing at its best. The last 50 pages do suffer from excessive moralizing, unsupported idealism, and a limp call to pseudoaction, but otherwise this is an entertaining screed for those who agree with Rushkoff's position.
—Robert Perret
BBraverman
Posted August 1, 2009
Douglas Rushkoff has written a carefully researched history of the modern corporation and its impact on our social structure. His alternate point of view - there is more to life that free market capitalism - is an important contribution to any discussion of what direction we should go in next. His is a powerful voice that deserves to be part of the mainstream.
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Posted January 16, 2012
It's may not be simple to understand how we got to where we are but this book does the mighty job of revealing the definitive history of corporatism. This is everything the business textbooks didn't tell you about how Corporations and Governments have been working together throughout history. It could be the history of the 1% has always maintained power by using the military, the government and corporations while enriching themselves. You will read this excellent book and somehow say " Of course, I should have known that all along" . And now you know.
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Posted March 12, 2011
Easy to read. I felt this guy had put together many loose ideas of my own.
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Posted August 14, 2009
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Overview
Now includes “The Life Inc. Guide to Reclaiming the Value You Create”In Life Inc, award-winning writer Douglas Rushkoff traces how corporations went from being convenient legal fictions to being the dominant fact of contemporary life. The resulting ideology, corporatism, has infiltrated all aspects of civics, commerce, and culture—from the founding of the first chartered monopoly to the branding of the self, from the invention of central currency to the privatization of banking, from the Victorian Great Exhibition to the solipsism of Facebook. Life Inc explains why we see our homes as investments rather than places to live, our ...