Sunday, February 3, 2008

I Hate The Strep Throat Test

Free Books: Hitler won the war by Walter Graziano

Free Books: Hitler won the war by Walter Graziano

need to start talking about this book by a warning to potential readers: either by attraction or repulsion, not be guided either by the cover or by its title. The author is not a neo-Nazi freaks with a triumphant image of the Fuhrer, or anything like it. Moreover, the book deals with Hitler and Nazism just in a few paragraphs.

This book is actually a thorough and documented research on the oligarchic elite that controls power in the United States from its origins as a state. But it is not a history book, although many the problems of dealing with its origins in the nineteenth century.
The book deals with the current state of the global power structure led by the United States, and therefore the current President Bush and his family become the focus of the investigation of Graziano. Since the importance that Bush had for the CIA, even the weight of the oil oligopoly in political decisions, the Bushes are disastrously recurrent characters in this story.

The central subject of this book is the "Anglo-American elite," and shows how the American establishment comes from the English oligarchy who conquered this land centuries ago. As an economist he is, Graziano focuses on the economic power and as this becomes political elitism. There is nothing in the Foucauldian conception of power, is neither scattered nor blur in different social strata. The power spoken Graziano has a name, locations and dates, amounts and numbers. It is a power monolithic and omnipotent cabal. Hence the analogy with the type of power that Hitler exercised, and that the author suggests that American society today is a triumphant version of the defeated Nazi model, always in relation to the organization of state and relations of collusion between corporations economic relations with the rulers.

There are also some specific relationships between Nazism and the Anglo-American elite United States, especially in terms of U.S. business investment in the Third Reich (oil and industry), ideological points in common (especially racism) or shelter that gave prestigious Nazis after the war. But not much else is on the Nazis, in a book where the close relationship between the American and British oligarchies offers many more points of support to understand the conflict under study.

By specializing in economics, the first two chapters of cutting Graziano are almost technical. Perhaps the first chapter devoted much space to macroeconomic subtlety is actually already evidence that the search- the pure individual benefit in subjects leading to the destruction of society to which they belong, "and scare off readers who are not skilled in the art, but that could well be interested in the issues addressed below. This first chapter is a very important barrier for the average reader, not university, that you may not want to keep reading after so much macroeconomic theory, though the rest of the book is very appealing to a much wider audience. Maybe the title and the cover of the book, cutting marketers, are a way to compensate for this, and encourage readers to move forward.

Those who do have the luck to find important information about the Sept. 11 attacks on the Bush dynasty and the consortium which handles global power and its mechanisms (such as the IMF or World Bank).
The final chapter on secret societies from American universities support this perverse mechanism, it leaves a bitter taste conspiracy. At the end of the book, if someone feels a little paranoid, are within their rights. The stifling oppressive power network that draws Graziano family is composed of millionaires clans under their control the oil, banking, pharmaceutical laboratories, arms companies, universities and the media in the world. But the book has the merit of addressing complex issues from a global perspective and comprehensive.

structure is concerned, despite the number of names that parade, and history is imposed on the situation of this U.S. election year As summarized in the back, "who think that many of the major problems of the world begin to be solved if you change the president of the United States is seriously mistaken."

To download, click here .

Password to open the file: Dls @ 2007

0 comments:

Post a Comment