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Hot, Flat, and Crowded: Why We Need a Green Revolution--and How It Can Renew America

Thomas L. Friedman’s no. 1 bestseller The World Is Flat has helped millions of readers to see globalization in a new way. Now Friedman brings a...more
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Showing 10 of 246 reviews
Tom
few weeks ago
Another great dissertation from a modern day Paul Revere. This picks up right where The World Is Flat left off. The vision is both scary and motivating. If you are not doing something about this crisis now, you will after reading this book. I hope that Obama will be able to deliver on some of these ideas. I know something has to give...health care, the economy, taxes, etc. But we cannot...more
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few weeks ago
Friedman scores again! You cannot read this book and remain skeptical or apathetic about our environmental future. His research is (as always) impeccable and he presents his findings in ways that will compel you to not only think but act on all things energy related. I like the way he challenges us all to step up and take the lead in showing the world a better way to live...more
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few weeks ago
I would give it a lukewarm recommendation perhaps because I was already in agreement with the tenents of the book. It didn't really surprise or inform me that much. I particularly liked the chapter on petropolitics, the politics of energy. And some of the musings if America could be like China for "just a day" with regard to top down mandates regarding sweeping energy...more
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few weeks ago
Friedman can be a bit too slick at times - he finds his own voice and insights a little too fascinating for my tastes - but this is a powerful, steady, and well-written book that deserves a wide audience. Most compelling is Friedman's ability to lift the contentious issue of climate change out of many of its familiar ruts and produce a narrative that stresses, among other things,...more
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few weeks ago
This book is a slow read, but I think it is worthwhile. It won't change the mind of anyone who is firmly in the creationist- apocalyptic camp still doubting the facts of climate change or many coal or oil industry executives. But for reasonable people who are concerned about the world that we leave to our children and grandchildren, Tom Friedman presents the case for abandoning our...more
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few weeks ago
Thomas L, nice from you to try to teach the basic environmental rules to your folk. It may have the same effect as singing a muezzin in a gurdwara... Please re-read Middle East history from 70s to now too: your comments about Iran in 79 and Iraq in the last 5 years are just pathetic.
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few weeks ago
A typical American economist style book with some great points to ponder, and a few points solely about politics. Global warming is rather global weirding, climate crisis, biodiversity loss, petro dictatorships, human freedom, oil politics and how energy technology/ clean energy will change things in the world, or simply a practical future scenario is portrayed very well. A well researched...more
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few weeks ago
This book discusses the effect of climate change, the greening of the planet, over-population while we are more connected than ever before by the internet and other means. It is clearly focussed on USA and its lack of adequate response to climate change. Some solutions are proposed and various warnings to leades in the USA. This is the third book I read by this author. His books are...more
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few weeks ago
I greatly anticipated reading this book, but gave up on it about halfway through. It contains some great, pointed observations and good ideas, but the bottom line is Thomas Friedman is a pompous fuckwit. How many times do you need to mention the title of your own book – in your book? I feel like his M.O. is to introduce terms, then bore those terms into your head, i.e. "the world is...more
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few weeks ago
Too long. Too much details.
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