Signs Of A New World Order–China Speaks, EU Listens
NEW YORK–It’s as if the school principal spoke to a classroom of unruly kids. With euro-zone leaders bickering over a solution to Greece’s debt crisis, the vice governor of the People’s Bank of China, Zhu Min, gave them a stern talking to. Read more
Dystopia emerged as a way to criticize the impossibility of the utopia
“You cannot have utopia in a society where you have humans because there is always somebody greedy, somebody who is immoral, who wants to dominate the world,” says University of Calgary English professor Ruby Ramraj. “Utopia is an idea, an imagined place, and really I don’t think you can find utopia on earth ever, no matter how many idealists we have, how many visionaries we have.” Read more
World leaders tackle the seemingly intractable problems of ushering in a new world order
Inside the National Prayer Breakfast – Clinton repeatedly addressed the importance of prayer and faith as world leaders tackle the seemingly intractable problems of ushering in a new world order where the oppressed, especially women and girls, appear to be losing ground in terms of respect, justice, and equality. Speaking very sincerely, almost to the point of tears at times, Sec. Clinton quoted Methodist stalwart John Wesley: “Do all the good you can, to all the people you can, in all the ways you can.” Read more
China mildly rejected the idea of American-Chinese joint management of the world
During Obama’s visit to Beijing last year, China mildly rejected the idea of American-Chinese joint management of the world that is popular with the Obama team. It does not matter what was said during the visit. The real reasons are important: Washington still believes that “joint management” means that it will play first fiddle and China only second. China will wait for America to get rid of this illusion, which shouldn’t take very long. Read more
China’s tough tone causing concern among western leaders
A spokesman for the Chinese Embassy in Washington said China’s tone had not changed.
“China’s positions on issues like arms sales to Taiwan and Tibet have been consistent and clear,” Wang Baodong said, “as these issues bear on sovereignty and territorial integrity, which are closely related to Chinese core national interests.” Read more
World leaders find LUV for new world order
The buzzword here is interconnected, but differentiated. While all the blocs are aware that they are interlinked in a way that the global recession proved, they aren’t all in the same boat, or even in the same ocean. For instance, a key theme was the great shift East of global power, and ‘rebalancing’ the global economy — mainly pushing China to revalue its currency, and the prevalent Western view that China’s high savings rate and huge reserves were a key driver for the global crisis — a point the French President Nicolas Sarkozy hammered home. Read more
NY Times: Bush Faces the New World Order
What we didn’t see then from the high ground of Year One were any of the signal events of Year Two. The ill-fated deficit summit meeting at Andrews Air Force Base — a closed-door exercise that yielded the too-clever-by-180-I.Q.-points “tax revenue enhancements” as a substitute for the president’s “read my lips” no-new-taxes pledge — was three months away. In six months, Saddam Hussein would roll tanks into Kuwait. In eight months, we would hit what economists would later pinpoint as the beginning of a recession, at roughly the time the White House national security team was focused on reuniting East and West Germany. Working in the White House was a daily lesson in politics and policy, and the critical difference between the two. Read more
China is accused of a refusal to accept anything touching on its sovereignty
True, everyone has a different story about Copenhagen. Europeans are cross with America, India and others in a “low-ambition coalition”. But their strongest words are reserved for China, accused of a refusal to accept anything touching on its sovereignty and of secretly inciting small, poor allies to obstruct a deal. Read more
Freemason doctrine and U.S. foreign policy
Indeed, one can be fascinated by the striking similarities between Freemason doctrine and U.S. foreign policy. Out of the 5 million Freemasons around the world, approximately 2 million are from the United States. Who knows if they are secretly communicating using their clandestine symbols, dreaming of a better world where people can live in liberty, equality and fraternity? Professor Jin contends that even the French Revolution was inspired by Freemason principles of “Brotherly Love, Relief, and Truth.” Read more
China Has School Classes on the New World Order
Apart from the variety of modules available, I was also thoroughly impressed by their relevance to the current state of global affairs. It was my desire to gain a deeper understanding of global dynamics that prompted me to take an International Relations module – The New World Order: Asia, Europe, America.
My biggest takeaway from the 10-day LSE-PKU Summer School was an appreciation of active class participation. I had grown so used to the local Read more

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