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Six maps that will make you rethink the world
Washington Post ^ | April 29, 2016 | Ana Swanson

Posted on 06/29/2016 8:35:55 AM PDT by lulu16

"We don’t often question the typical world map that hangs on the walls of classrooms — a patchwork of yellow, pink and green that separates the world into more than 200 nations. But Parag Khanna, a global strategist, says that this map is, essentially, obsolete.

Khanna is the author of the new book “Connectography: Mapping the Future of Global Civilization,” in which he argues that the arc of global history is undeniably bending toward integration. Instead of the boundaries that separate sovereign nations, the lines that we should put on our maps are the high-speed railways, broadband cables and shipping routes that connect us, he says. And instead of focusing on nation-states, we should focus on the dozens of mega-cities that house most of the world’s people and economic growth..."

(Excerpt) Read more at washingtonpost.com ...


TOPICS: Books/Literature; Society
KEYWORDS: 2016election; anaswanson; bookreview; connectography; demagogicparty; districtofcolumbia; election2016; globalism; maps; memebuilding; moron; newyork; paragkhanna; partisanmediashill; partisanmediashills; plagiarist; propagandist; trump; washingtoncompost; washingtonpost; world
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Another excerpt;

"This is the most accurate map that’s ever been made of where people are and the economic value of what they do. Our team took the entire world’s population and plotted it by density, and they superimposed the largest urban archipelagos, the mega-cities, with those ovals to show the value of those cities vis-à-vis the national economy. [Note: You can click on the maps to enlarge them.] The map tells us that the world economy is much more structured according to the gravity of these 40 or 50 megacities than the world’s 200 sovereign nations. In almost all countries, cities have all the economic mass and most of the population, and people are moving to cities by the hundreds of millions.

The example of Johannesburg and Pretoria, the capital cluster of South Africa, is revealing. It represents something like 35 to 40 percent of the country’s gross domestic product, and South Africa is a very large country, with more than 50 million people. So much of the population is there, and the country’s connectivity depends on that city, because that’s where all the multinational corporations are headquartered. It’s the same logic in Lagos — there is practically no Nigeria without Lagos. It applies to Sao Paulo in Brazil, Jakarta in Indonesia, Moscow in Russia, Istanbul in Turkey, and every single dot and oval you see on the map..."

1 posted on 06/29/2016 8:35:55 AM PDT by lulu16
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To: lulu16

W hen I read through to the comments I thought FR had been transplanted.


2 posted on 06/29/2016 8:37:06 AM PDT by lulu16 (May the Good Lord take a liking to you!)
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To: lulu16; MeganC

What absolute Gobbledygook!


3 posted on 06/29/2016 8:38:46 AM PDT by KC_Lion (Never Killary!)
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To: lulu16

So how would all these mega cities fare if the the people in flyover country decided to just produce enough food, fiber and fish for their own families and villages to live on?


4 posted on 06/29/2016 8:40:38 AM PDT by Vigilanteman (ObaMao: Fake America, Fake Messiah, Fake Black man. How many fakes can you fit into one Zer0?)
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To: lulu16

The world is getting crowded. Time to blow the top off the yeast bottle.


5 posted on 06/29/2016 8:40:46 AM PDT by marron
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To: lulu16
"So hydrological engineering may need to take place between Canada and the United States."

Umm, no. I think the US has plenty of water, its called the Atlantic and the Pacific. Technology can make it potable.

6 posted on 06/29/2016 8:48:03 AM PDT by Former Proud Canadian
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To: Vigilanteman

[ So how would all these mega cities fare if the the people in flyover country decided to just produce enough food, fiber and fish for their own families and villages to live on? ]

been there, done that, look up “Holodomor”

They (the cities) will clamp down and force the country people to produce and starve them at the same time.


7 posted on 06/29/2016 8:49:02 AM PDT by GraceG (Only a fool works hard in an environment where hard work is not appreciated...)
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To: lulu16

Ana Swanson, the author of this article, is a member of Wonkblog.

No kidding.

This is a wonk’s idea of an unworkable utopia.


8 posted on 06/29/2016 8:49:24 AM PDT by SatinDoll (A NATURAL BORN CITIZEN IS BORN IN THE USA OF TWO USA CITIZENS)
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To: lulu16
"When we get piled upon one another in large cities, as in Europe, we shall become as corrupt as Europe."

-- Thomas Jefferson

9 posted on 06/29/2016 8:50:26 AM PDT by pgyanke (Republicans get in trouble when not living up to their principles. Democrats... when they do.)
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To: Vigilanteman

Bingo!


10 posted on 06/29/2016 8:58:28 AM PDT by Yulee (Village of Albion)
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To: lulu16

And when everyone lives in the teeming urban areas, where will the food come from? Also, all one has to do in a war is knock out the electric grid, destroy the water treatment plants, and bomb the bridges and major highways leading to the cities, and the war is over. Think about it.


11 posted on 06/29/2016 9:05:36 AM PDT by txrefugee
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To: lulu16
"...We have the ability to do this. I hate to make the punch line something that’s so banal, which is “It’s all Congress's’ fault,” but it’s all Congress’s fault. All Congress has to do is to make sure that instead of district- and state-level pork barrel project spending, projects have some kind of cross-border dimensions, so that American citizens, whatever state they live in, can be better connected to the big cities. And if you do that, the laws of economics will take over, and people will more freely engage in commerce. A map like this would enable Americans to flow more freely around the country. That is the difference between America and the European Union. We are a United States; you don’t need to go through a border check to cross state lines. And yet we’re not taking advantage of that freedom of mobility across this incredible geography..."

What a bunch of crap. This is a complete Federalist point of view. Because hey, if we get rid of all those nasty, hard to control states and only have eight "states", things will be so much easier to control.

These people make me want to puke.

12 posted on 06/29/2016 9:06:44 AM PDT by rlmorel (Orwell described Liberals when he wrote of those who "repudiate morality while laying claim to it.")
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To: SatinDoll

Yep. You know what this is? Someone who took Sociology, and then tried to apply those concepts to the USA.

This person is enamored of urban living, and thinks the rubes in the flyover states are just in the way of really getting things done.


13 posted on 06/29/2016 9:10:24 AM PDT by rlmorel (Orwell described Liberals when he wrote of those who "repudiate morality while laying claim to it.")
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To: lulu16

I moved OUT of the city five years ago. I’m much happier, by an order of magnitude.


14 posted on 06/29/2016 9:10:27 AM PDT by cuban leaf (The US will not survive the obama presidency. The world may not either.)
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To: pgyanke

Uh.....is that how old Tom talked back in the day? He always struck me as having a better command of the language.


15 posted on 06/29/2016 9:14:06 AM PDT by BenLurkin (The above is not a statement of fact. It is either satire or opinion. Or both.)
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To: lulu16

“Comments are now closed.”

Hahahahahaha!


16 posted on 06/29/2016 9:15:01 AM PDT by rlmorel (Orwell described Liberals when he wrote of those who "repudiate morality while laying claim to it.")
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To: lulu16

“Parag Khanna” sounds like a fecal-borne bacteria that kills 3rd worlders.


17 posted on 06/29/2016 9:20:21 AM PDT by T-Bone Texan (n't be a lone wolf. Form up small leaderlesss cells ASAP !)
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To: lulu16
No, I looked at your maps and my thinking hasn't changed.

God bless America and everyone else can go to hell.

By the way this point you make is sweet:

The good news for America is we have so many major cities that we have a distributed economy.

That is good news. It means that it is time for a limited nuclear war that blows all the Second and Third world Mega-cities off the map (if you'll excuse the expression) . The USA will come out the winner

18 posted on 06/29/2016 9:22:17 AM PDT by BenLurkin (The above is not a statement of fact. It is either satire or opinion. Or both.)
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To: lulu16
Oh, dear. Combine a proggie with a New Age Thinker and this is the sort of howler that results:

Canada is going to potentially be the world’s largest food producer in 20-25 years as a result of climate change.

I'd like to be on hand to collect on that bet. Four degrees Celsius is 7.2 degrees Fahrenheit. Does anyone who has ever actually farmed expect that is going to turn the frozen tundra into Kansas?

This isn't new thinking, it's ancient thinking with a new coat of paint. City-states have been around for millennia. They succeed insofar as their supporting resources can manage: water, soil, and energy. Against the advantages of urbanization are the disadvantages of an increasing need to gather resources, which is where city/states tend to employ things such as armies. We've been dancing this dance since ancient Sumeria.

I haven't actually seen this big a mess of New Age megalomania outside the realm of 19th-century science fiction. Powered dirigibles with wooden ship hulls have been replaced by that monument to high-cost, low-value transportation miracles, high-speed rail. This, in the Internet age? Willy Green, where are you now?

Yes, I suppose it's Congress's fault that the country is yet to be re-sculpted along the lines of urban power centers, meaning a certain dereliction in tossing the Constitution out and reorganizing the whole place without so much as a vote - not happening - linking the governments of three different societies such that if La Raza needs a public swimming pool in Mexico City (there will be no private ones) they will cheerfully pipe the water down from the Canadian Rockies. Urban big-thinkers in Los Angeles have already displayed a dismaying propensity for solving their own resource issues by expropriating those resources - water, electricity - from neighboring states. The solution to this is not to dissolve the local government of the intended victims.

The year 2050 or 2100 seems like light-years away.

I digress for a pet peeve - a light-year is a unit of DISTANCE, and in an article whose science the author apparently hopes we'll take seriously that's a pretty bonehead freshman error.

Oh, there's more to this Big Thought:

They play a very significant role in geopolitics. The world has four significant maritime choke points, three of which are geopolitically sensitive — the Suez Canal, the Strait of Hormuz and the Strait of Malacca.

There are more, the straits of Gibraltar being one, but the only one really worth mentioning in the context of geopolitical sensitivity is none of those, it's the stretch of geography now known as the Turkish straits connecting the Black Sea to the Aegean/Mediterranean. Which body of water has been fought over by city-states for four millennia of recorded history. We know how that story came out. Perhaps what they really needed was high-speed rail.

I'll have to pass on the book, thanks.

19 posted on 06/29/2016 9:29:54 AM PDT by Billthedrill
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To: BenLurkin
It's a genuine quote... so is this one:

The problem with internet quotes is that you can't always depend on their accuracy."

-- Abraham Lincoln, 1864

20 posted on 06/29/2016 9:30:21 AM PDT by pgyanke (Republicans get in trouble when not living up to their principles. Democrats... when they do.)
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