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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
3 pages in length. The realism of Barber's description is clearly realized by the simple act of reading a contemporary newspaper. It matters not the city or country from which the paper comes, just that it has – on an almost daily basis – some literary marker that denounces globalization as being a veiled attempt toward global polarization. While the tenets of globalization are such that it is meant to bring together an otherwise fragmented world, the manner by which its objectives are being reach through stripping underdeveloped countries of their capacity to stand in the economic arena and then overpowering them to abide by Western and other developed ideology illustrates the two-faced tactic of an undemocratic operation and the validity of Barber's argument. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
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3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCbarber.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
has - on an almost daily basis - some literary marker that denounces globalization as being a veiled attempt toward global polarization. While the tenets of globalization are such
that it is meant to bring together an otherwise fragmented world, the manner by which its objectives are being reach through stripping underdeveloped countries of their capacity to stand in
the economic arena and then overpowering them to abide by Western and other developed ideology illustrates the two-faced tactic of an undemocratic operation and the validity of Barbers argument. Hardins
(1968) depiction of the fallout that comes from the perpetual and puzzling quest to save the entire world is one that illustrates how it is critical to know when the
act of saving some becomes detrimental to all. This insightful perspective speaks to the unyielding attempts to rescue those in underdeveloped nations who have no means by which to
save themselves, yet obscene amounts of money are spent, resources are squandered and people die for this illogical objective. Hardins (1968) analogy of a lifeboat provides a keen understanding
of just how unsound a concept it is to think everyone has the same right to gain entry to the lifeboat when it is already at its limit. Some
will have to forfeit their lives because there is no room; others will die because they are not the same social status as those already on the lifeboat. Such
is the tragedy of the commons, and such is the way to preserve the human species instead of eradicating it (Hardin, 1968), harsh concept to embrace but one that makes
sense. Spencers message is one that urges the global population to uphold the "survival of the fittest" mentality lest the tremendous weight of hangers-on ultimately eliminate every last person.
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