Confucius chapter T.R. Lead living in a neighboring country Chapter 1: Other miracles 1) Even after years of recession Japan still has the world's largest reserve reserve. This fact is important. It was because everyone in Japan had money and later explained that it was evenly distributed over people in the east. 2) East Asia was a great success. They have the safest streets in the world, the most powerful families, and the best schools. This sentence is important as it shows how the country exceeds other countries, especially the United States.
Analysis of Confucius living next to me Reading a new book by T.R. Reed, I returned to that conversation. The name 'Confucius lives next door' is just right. Reed was a longtime journalist and Asian journalist in the Washington Post, and he pinned a copy of Analect to Male. In his family's life experience in Tokyo and other East Asian regions, he wrote an article that praises what he called "a miracle of East Asian society" - how Asians are the most secure Town good school and the most stable family He has Asians "Harmony with civilizations you can feel" and I believe they achieved this goal.
In the 1990s, T. R. Reid and his family were eradicated in Colorado State and moved to the center of Tokyo in Japan. At the time, the press rider of the Washington Post talks about the lesson learned from immigration in Asia in a book named "Life of next neighbor Confucius". In this book Reid's attitude towards Asia is vaguely disdainful and elitistic like his devotion to the book "his oldest Asian friend". Lead sometimes ignores the widely generalized or suspicious language choice and provides rich insight into the success of Confucian culture. He thinks there are many ways to learn the philosophy of "inspiring all East Asian countries and becoming a spiritual cornerstone of the oldest civilization with the most population on Earth". (Lead, 99)
Successful, affordable health care system tour around the world, T.R. Reed also tried to find out what was the first world country that provided a view of the alternative system for broken Americans and why the United States continued denying universal medical care of its citizens. An easy, witty touch of lead makes it easy to understand the interpretation of this complex problem. This famous New York Times book is exploring how affordable medical law (also known as Obamacare Reform Act) will change instead of changing abuse and corruption in the US healthcare system. Mr. Brill also introduced about the struggle through ACA and the failure made after recruitment.