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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
7 pages in length. The United States is built upon a solid foundation of three primary elements: peace, democracy and the free market; to eliminate any one of these factors would remove the synergistic composition that has resulted over the past century. Michael Mandelbaum's "The Ideas That Conquered the World: Peace, Democracy, and Free Markets in the Twenty-First Century" heralds these three critical components as being the saving grace to a nation that might otherwise not be what it is today without their integrated impact. To Mandelbaum (2004), the manner by which "…peace as the preferred basis for relations among countries; democracy as the optimal way to organize political life within them; and the free market as the indispensable vehicle for producing wealth" (p. Intro) has protected and progressed America is like nothing else in the entire world. No additional sources cited.
Page Count:
7 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCMandelbm.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
one of these factors would remove the synergistic composition that has resulted over the past century. Michael Mandelbaums The Ideas That Conquered the World: Peace, Democracy, and Free Markets
in the Twenty-First Century heralds these three critical components as being the saving grace to a nation that might otherwise not be what it is today without their integrated impact.
To Mandelbaum (2004), the manner by which "...peace as the preferred basis for relations among countries; democracy as the optimal way to organize political life within them; and the
free market as the indispensable vehicle for producing wealth" (p. Intro) has protected and progressed America is like nothing else in the entire world. "The commanding position of free
markets and, to a lesser extent, democracy, the dramatic devaluation of war, and the absence of a plausible alternative to the global order of which these are the main elements
characterize the conduct of human affairs at the outset of the third millennium" (Mandelbaum, 2004, p. Intro). Johns Hopkins foreign policy professor
and Newsday columnist, Mandelbaum (2004) offers this point of view from a perspective of personal and professional expertise; while some consider his estimation more encouraging than realistic, others appreciate his
ability to look beyond the dark cloud looming over contemporary global society and see how peace, democracy and the free market will serve as the three-prong approach to political and
social restoration. The crux of Mandelbaums (2004) book lies within what the author calls the Liberal Theory of History credited to Woodrow Wilson
and perpetuated by every American president since then. The "mutually reinforcing" (Mandelbaum, 2004, p. PG) aspect of these three components have been incessantly challenged yet overwhelmingly victorious in upholding
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