"The Post-American World"

(((You think "cyberpunk is dead"? Check this baby out – a cogent argument that AMERICA is dead.)))

(((Except, you know, what do you do with the corpse?
"The ruins of the unsustainable are the 21st century's frontier."
Ever since visiting Italy I've adopted a serene attitude to the retrofit. "Plunder the past to reinvent the future,"
as the head of design for FIAT has been known to say.)))

http://www.flickr.com/photos/brucesterling/2338073106/in/set-72157604097482343/
http://www.flickr.com/photos/brucesterling/2338073106/in/set-72157604097482343/

http://www.newsweek.com/id/135380

Link: Excerpt: Fareed Zakaria’s ‘The Post-American World’ | Newsweek International | Newsweek.com.

"Look around. The world's tallest building is in Taipei, and will soon be in Dubai. Its largest publicly traded company is in Beijing. Its biggest refinery is being constructed in India. Its largest passenger airplane is built in Europe. The largest investment fund on the planet is in Abu Dhabi; the biggest movie industry is Bollywood, not Hollywood.

(((Okay, Bollywood's been bigger than Hollywood for probably fifty years, but that whole paragraph is like a mix-up of BEYOND THE
BEYOND posts. Yana Gupta, now there's a star who's seriously post-American.)))

"Once quintessentially American icons have been usurped by the natives. The largest Ferris wheel is in Singapore. The largest casino is in Macao, which overtook Las Vegas in gambling revenues last year. America no longer dominates even its favorite sport, shopping. The Mall of America in Minnesota once boasted that it was the largest shopping mall in the world. Today it wouldn't make the top ten. In the most recent rankings, only two of the world's ten richest people are American. These lists are arbitrary and a bit silly, but consider that only ten years ago, the United States would have serenely topped almost every one of these categories.

"These factoids reflect a seismic shift in power and attitudes. It is one that I sense when I travel around the world. In America, we are still debating the nature and extent of anti-Americanism. One side says that the problem is real and worrying and that we must woo the world back. The other says this is the inevitable price of power and that many of these countries are envious—and vaguely French—so we can safely ignore their griping. But while we argue over why they hate us, "they" have moved on, and are now far more interested in other, more dynamic parts of the globe. The world has shifted from anti-Americanism to post-Americanism...."

(((After that part it gets even better!)))

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