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- Newsgroups: bit.listserv.seasia-l
- Path: sparky!uunet!mcsun!fuug!anon
- From: an4215@anon.penet.fi
- Subject: Steven Scholosstein's
- Message-ID: <1992Dec30.092548.20827@fuug.fi>
- Sender: anon@fuug.fi (The Anon Administrator)
- Organization: Anonymous contact service
- X-Anonymously-To: bit.listserv.seasia-l
- Date: Wed, 30 Dec 1992 07:21:05 GMT
- Lines: 62
-
-
- Steven Scholossstein, the writer of "The end of the American Century"
-
- ...This book is about America, a nation uncompromisingly committed to
- freedom and liberty and open markets. Yet it is a nation that has seen
- its standard of living decline, itslevel of industrial dominance
- threatened by foreign competition, its political system infected by the
- narrowness (and money) of special interests, its public education
- systems plugued by low achievement, its families and children seared by
- the emotional trauma of single parenthood and divorce, its society
- ripped apart by drugs, its national defense weakened by fraud and mis-
- management, and its position of global leadership increasingly open
- to challenge-all in less than a generation's time....
-
- ...This book also about Asia; inevitably, Japan and the Little Dragons-
- Korea, Taiwan, Hongkong, and Singapore-whose dramatic rates of economic
- growth, soaring personal incomes, and aggressive trade and investment
- strategies are forcing America to rethink its own free-market ideology....
-
- ...Indonesia...., aligning itself economically with East Asia rather than
- politically with the Arabs. Together with Thailand and Malaysia,
- Indonesia was industrializing rapidly now, to become one of Asia's
- three new dragons....
-
- ...Not long ago, when President Reagan was on a state visit to the Vatican,
- he spent considerable time, one-on-one, with the pope when he noticed
- a gold telephone on the papal desk and asked what it was for.
- Pope John Paul II told him it was his hot line to Heaven.
- "I must talk with Him five or six times a day, " he said.
- Intrigued, Reagan asked if he could give it a try.
- "Of course," said the pope. "It's a direct dial, and we can arrange a
- call immediately. But I should warn you, it costs $10,000 for the first
- three minutes."
- Reagan's eyebrows shot up.
- "Since Americans have such strong feelings about the separation of
- church (baca religion) and state, "the president said, "I had best decline.
- I could get myself into real trouble spending taxpayers' money on a
- phone call to God...."
-
- ...On visit to Tokyo, the president noticed a gold telephone on Nakasone's
- desk, too, and asked him about it. He told Reagan it was his hot line to
- Heaven. "Our rapid economic growth has created international problems that
- only God can solve, "the prime minister said. "I must talk Him five or
- six times a day."
- Intrigued, President Reagan asked if he could give it a try.
- "But of course, Nakasone said. "It's a direct dial, and we can arrange
- a call immediately. The nice thing is, it's only fifty yen for the
- first three minutes."
- "Only fifty yen!" the president exclaimed. "Why, from the Vatican it
- costs $10,000."
- "Yes, Mr. President,"said the PM softly. But from Japan it's just a local
- call...."
-
- Resource: The end of the American Century, Steven Schlossstein, 1989
-
- Wassalam,
- SS
-
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