Résumé du livre
Anand Giridharadas is a best-selling writer and journalist. He’s an editor-at-large for Time magazine and has worked as a foreign correspondent and columnist for the New York Times. His writing has been published in the Atlantic, the New Republic, and the New Yorker. He is also the author of The True American and India Calling.
The future envisioned by influential leaders often reflects their own interests, portraying scenarios like universal entrepreneurship or technological efficiency as inevitable while masking the power dynamics at play. This narrative allows elites to maintain control, reframe exploitation as innovation, and avoid accountability. For instance, companies like Uber exploit workers under the guise of disruption, while the win-win ideology, popularized by the upper class, justifies inequality by presenting elite gains as universally beneficial. Similarly, optimization strategies and business-driven solutions to social issues prioritize profits over addressing systemic problems, as seen in initiatives like TechnoServe. Even philanthropy, such as the Sackler family’s museum donations, serves to obscure the unethical origins of wealth, like Purdue Pharma’s role in the opioid crisis. Meanwhile, thought leaders promote surface-level fixes, such as Amy Cuddy’s power pose for gender inequality, which appeal to elites by preserving the status quo. This dynamic reflects a broader societal divide between globalists, who thrive on borderless capitalism, and locals, who face stagnant wages and declining opportunities. As resentment grows, the question remains whether the elite will ever confront the structural inequities they perpetuate.
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