In the chapter of Ellis Holly's "Seeking the Great War and the Modern Order" at home and abroad, we take up the vision of Herbert Hoover. In this chapter, I first explained about Herbert Hoover's view on "Lenovo state". After he saw the influence of World War I and the scandal accompanying the Coolidge regime, "Lenovo State" was Huber's vision for the United States. "Lenovo countries" is the idea that the public domain should cooperate with the private sector in the commercial sector.
Pakistani novelist Camilla Shamsi discovered "two Americas" - one in the country and one overseas -. The first one is Hollywood, ongoing democracy, civil rights movement and Ellis Island. The second is the US coup and occupation, military dictators and CIA conspiracy, economic intervention and contempt for foreign culture. Other parts of the world know the Americas. However, as Shamsie wrote, Americans do not seem to understand the second at all. Discussions on how America chose irresponsible nationalists like playing cards focused on why Americans, the so-called Americans, failed. From a foreign point of view, however, the cards are more reasonable - and more common with his predecessors and his compatriots -
When I was studying at Lutheran College in Nottingham, England, I was first introduced to Bret Easton Ellis' work. 67 Nuthall Road's house has a small library, one day I put American Psycho on the shelf, but it was definitely Ellis. Ellis' voice makes me feel better though it is a graphic and violent book with complicated bloody ethics (which is a very troublesome reading). I would like to read more about his work. Preferably, all of these
Lebovich spoke in his recent book "Free Speech and Freedomless News: American Press Freedom's Paradox" summarized. Lebovic's work has won him the Ellis W. Holly Award, an annual book award acknowledging the highest history of American political economy, politics or institution from civil war to present. Research "Lebovic began with a fundamental contradiction - widely believed that freedom of speech is an irreversible American right, but it is also" suffering from a series of crises ". These are all double, including the emergence of the economic crisis of newspapers and the emergence of state secrets after the advent of the Internet. His analysis dates these modern trends until mid-20th century