Inequality isn’t only plaguing America—the Arab Spring flowered because international capitalism is broken. In From Cairo to Wall Street: Voices from the Global Spring, edited by Anya Schiffrin and Eamon Kircher-Allen, Nobel laureate Joseph Stiglitz says the world is finally rising up and demanding a democracy where people, not dollars, matter—the best government that money can buy just isn’t good enough.
There are times in history when people all over the world seem to rise up,
to say that something is wrong and to ask for change. This was true of
the tumultuous years of 1848 and 1968. It was certainly true in 2011. In
many countries there was anger and unhappiness about joblessness,
income distribution, and inequality and a feeling that the system is
unfair and even broken.
Both
1848 and 1968 came to signify the start of a new era. The year 2011 may
also. The modern era of globalization also played a role. It helped the
ferment and spread of ideas across borders. The youth uprising that
began in Tunisia, a little country on the coast of North Africa, spread to nearby Egypt, then to other countries of the Middle East, to Spain and Greece, to the United Kingdom and to Wall Street,
and to cities around the world. In some cases, the spark of protest
seemed, at least temporarily, quenched. In others, though, small
protests precipitated societal upheavals, taking down Egypt’s Hosni
Mubarak, Libya’s Muammar Qaddafi, and other governments and government
officials.
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