Résumé du livre
Francis Wheen is an award-winning author and journalist. He is a regular contributor to The Guardian and is renowned for his writings on Karl Marx.
By the late 1980s, Tony Blair, a progressive British politician advocating for nuclear disarmament and opposing Margaret Thatcher’s neoliberal policies, rose to prominence. However, upon leading the Labour Party to victory in 1997, Blair’s economic strategies mirrored Thatcher’s, marking a shift from his earlier positions. Rebranding the party as “New Labour,” he introduced the “third way,” a political philosophy blending right- and left-wing rhetoric under a guise of progressive ideals. This approach, informed by research into youth priorities like “connectedness” and “empathy,” allowed Labour to adopt ambiguous stances appealing to diverse audiences. Meanwhile, the rise of neoliberalism in the 1980s, driven by Thatcher and Reagan, widened wealth gaps, devastated working-class communities, and fueled public disillusionment. This economic turmoil coincided with the popularity of self-help books, which often thrived on style over substance, as seen in figures like Tony Robbins and Deepak Chopra. Similarly, post-structuralist thought, with its rejection of fixed meaning, influenced academia and politics but faced criticism for enabling overinterpretation and moral relativism. Throughout history, irrational ideas—whether neoliberal, post-structuralist, or otherwise—have caused harm, underscoring the need for collaboration, rationality, and lessons from cultural and intellectual exchanges to guide humanity toward a better future.
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